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Opposition of the Missouri Fur Company
Opposition of the Missouri Fur Company.-Blackfeet
Indians.— Pierre Dorion, a Half-Breed Interpreter.—Old Dorion and
His Hybrid Progeny—Family Quarrels.—Cross Purposes Between Dorion
and Lisa.—Renegadoes From Nodowa.—Perplexities of a
Commander.—Messrs. Bradbury and Nuttall Join the Expedition.-Legal
Embarrassments of Pierre Dorion.— Departure From St. Louis.—Conjugal
Discipline of a Half-Breed.—Annual Swelling of the Rivers.-Daniel
Boone, the Patriarch of Kentucky.-John Colter.-His Adventures Among
the Indians.-Rumors of Danger Ahead.-Fort Osage.-An Indian
War-Feast.-Troubles in the Dorion Family.—Buffaloes and
Turkey-Buzzards.
ON this his second visit to St. Louis, Mr. Hunt was
again impeded in his plans by the opposition of the Missouri Fur
Company. The affairs of that company were, at this time, in a very
dubious state. During the preceding year, their principal
establishment at the forks of the Missouri had been so much harassed
by the Blackfeet Indians, that its commander, Mr. Henry, one of the
partners, had been compelled to abandon the post and cross the Rocky
Mountains, with the intention of fixing himself upon one of the
upper branches of the Columbia. What had become of him and his party
was unknown. The most intense anxiety was felt concerning them, and
apprehensions that they might have been cut off by the savages. At
the time of Mr. Hunt's arrival at St. Louis, the Missouri Company
were fitting out an expedition to go in quest of Mr. Henry. It was
to be conducted by Mr. Manuel Lisa, the partner already mentioned.
There being thus two expeditions on foot at the same moment, an
unusual demand was occasioned for hunters and voyageurs, who
accordingly profited by the circumstance, and stipulated for high
terms. Mr. Hunt found a keen and subtle competitor in Lisa, and was
obliged to secure his recruits by liberal advances of pay, and by
other pecuniary indulgences.
The greatest difficulty was to procure the Sioux interpreter. There
was but one man to be met with at St. Louis who was fitted for the
purpose, but to secure him would require much management. The
individual in question was a half-breed, named Pierre Dorion; and,
as he figures hereafter in this narrative, and is, withal, a
striking specimen of the hybrid race on the frontier, we shall give
a few particulars concerning him. Pierre was the son of Dorion, the
French interpreter, who accompanied Messrs. Lewis and Clark in their
famous exploring expedition across the Rocky Mountains. Old Dorion
was one of those French creoles, descendants of the ancient Canadian
stock, who abound on the western frontier, and amalgamate or cohabit
with the savages. He had sojourned among various tribes, and perhaps
left progeny among them all; but his regular, or habitual wife, was
a Sioux squaw. By her he had a hopeful brood of half-breed sons, of
whom Pierre was one. The domestic affairs of old Dorion were
conducted on the true Indian plan. Father and sons would
occasionally get drunk together, and then the cabin was a scene of
ruffian brawl and fighting, in the course of which the old Frenchman
was apt to get soundly belabored by his mongrel offspring. In a
furious scuffle of the kind, one of the sons got the old man upon
the ground, and was upon the point of scalping him. "Hold! my son,"
cried the old fellow, in imploring accents, "you are too brave, too
honorable to scalp your father!" This last appeal touched the French
side of the half-breed's heart, so he suffered the old man to wear
his scalp unharmed.
Of this hopeful stock was Pierre Dorion, the man whom it was now the
desire of Mr. Hunt to engage as an interpreter. He had been employed
in that capacity by the Missouri Fur Company during the preceding
year, and conducted their traders in safety through the different
tribes of the Sioux. He had proved himself faithful and serviceable
while sober; but the love of liquor, in which he had been nurtured
and brought up, would occasionally break out, and with it the savage
side of his character.
It was his love of liquor which had embroiled him with the Missouri
Company. While in their service at Fort Mandan, on the frontier, he
had been seized with a whiskey mania; and, as the beverage was only
to be procured at the company's store, it had been charged in his
account at the rate of ten dollars a quart. This item had ever
remained unsettled, and a matter of furious dispute, the mere
mention of which was sufficient to put him in a passion.
The moment it was discovered by Mr. Lisa that Pierre Dorion was in
treaty with the new and rival association, he endeavored, by threats
as well as promises, to prevent his engaging in their service. His
promises might, perhaps, have prevailed; but his threats, which
related to the whiskey debt, only served to drive Pierre into the
opposite ranks. Still he took advantage of this competition for his
services to stand out with Mr. Hunt on the most advantageous terms,
and, after a negotiation of nearly two weeks, capitulated to serve
in the expedition, as hunter and interpreter, at the rate of three
hundred dollars a year, two hundred of which were to be paid in
advance.
When Mr. Hunt had got everything ready for leaving St. Louis, new
difficulties arose. Five of the American hunters from the encampment
at Nodowa, suddenly made their appearance. They alleged that they
had been ill treated by the partners at the encampment, and had come
off clandestinely, in consequence of a dispute. It was useless at
the present moment, and under present circumstances, to attempt any
compulsory measures with these deserters. Two of them Mr. Hunt
prevailed upon, by mild means, to return with him. The rest refused;
nay, what was worse, they spread such reports of the hardships and
dangers to be apprehended in the course of the expedition, that they
struck a panic into those hunters who had recently engaged at St.
Louis, and, when the hour of departure arrived, all but one refused
to embark. It was in vain to plead or remonstrate; they shouldered
their rifles and turned their backs upon the expedition, and Mr.
Hunt was fain to put off from shore with the single hunter and a
number of voyageurs whom he had engaged. Even Pierre Dorion, at the
last moment, refused to enter the boat until Mr. Hunt consented to
take his squaw and two children on board also. But the tissue of
perplexities, on account of this worthy individual, did not end
here.
Among the various persons who were about to proceed up the Missouri
with Mr. Hunt, were two scientific gentlemen; one Mr. John Bradbury,
a man of mature age, but great enterprise and personal activity, who
had been sent out by Linnaean Society of Liverpool to make a
collection of American plants; the other, a Mr. Nuttall, likewise an
Englishman, younger in years, who has since made himself known as
the author of Travels in Arkansas, and a work on the Genera of
American Plants. Mr. Hunt had offered them the protection and
facilities of his party, in their scientific research up the
Missouri River. As they were not ready to depart at the moment of
embarkation, they put their trunks on board of the boat, but
remained at St. Louis until the next day, for the arrival of the
post, intending to join the expedition at St. Charles, a short
distance above the mouth of the Missouri.
The same evening, however, they learned that a writ had been issued
against Pierre Dorion for his whiskey debt, by Mr. Lisa, as agent of
the Missouri Company, and that it was the intention to entrap the
mongrel linguist on his arrival at St. Charles.
Upon hearing this, Mr. Bradbury and Mr. Nuttall set off a little
after midnight, by land, got ahead of the boat as it was ascending
the Missouri, before its arrival at St. Charles, and gave Pierre
Dorion warning of the legal toil prepared to ensnare him.
The knowing Pierre immediately landed and took to the woods,
followed by his squaw laden with their papooses, and a large bundle
containing their most precious effects, promising to rejoin the
party some distance above St. Charles. There seemed little
dependence to be placed upon the promises of a loose adventurer of
the kind, who was at the very time playing an evasive game with his
former employers; who had already received two-thirds of his year's
pay, and his rifle on his shoulder, his family and worldly fortunes
at his heels, and the wild woods before him. There was no
alternative, however, and it was hoped his pique against his old
employers would render him faithful to his new ones.
The party reached St. Charles in the afternoon, but the harpies of
the law looked in vain for their expected prey. The boats resumed
their course on the following morning, and had not proceeded far
when Pierre Dorion made his appearance on the shore. He was gladly
taken on board, but he came without his squaw. They had quarreled in
the night; Pierre had administered the Indian discipline of the
cudgel, whereupon she had taken to the woods, with their children
and all their worldly goods. Pierre evidently was deeply grieved and
disconcerted at the loss of his wife and his knapsack, whereupon Mr.
Hunt despatched one of the Canadian voyageurs in search of the
fugitive; and the whole party, after proceeding a few miles further,
encamped on an island to wait his return. The Canadian rejoined the
party, but without the squaw; and Pierre Dorion passed a solitary
and anxious night, bitterly regretting his indiscretion in having
exercised his conjugal authority so near home. Before daybreak,
however, a well-known voice reached his ears from the opposite
shore. It was his repentant spouse, who had been wandering the woods
all night in quest of the party, and had at length descried it by
its fires. A boat was despatched for her, the interesting family was
once more united, and Mr. Hunt now flattered himself that his
perplexities with Pierre Dorion were at an end.
Bad weather, very heavy rains, and an unusually early rise in the
Missouri, rendered the ascent of the river toilsome, slow, and
dangerous. The rise of the Missouri does not generally take place
until the month of May or June: the present swelling of the river
must have been caused by a freshet in some of its more southern
branches. It could not have been the great annual flood, as the
higher branches must still have been ice-bound.
And here we cannot but pause, to notice the admirable arrangement of
nature, by which the annual swellings of the various great rivers
which empty themselves into the Mississippi, have been made to
precede each other at considerable intervals. Thus, the flood of the
Red River precedes that of the Arkansas by a month. The Arkansas,
also, rising in a much more southern latitude than the Missouri,
takes the lead of it in its annual excess, and its superabundant
waters are disgorged and disposed of long before the breaking up of
the icy barriers of the north; otherwise, did all these mighty
streams rise simultaneously, and discharge their vernal floods into
the Mississippi, an inundation would be the consequence, that would
submerge and devastate all the lower country.
On the afternoon of the third day, January, 17th, the boats touched
at Charette, one of the old villages founded by the original French
colonists. Here they met with Daniel Boone, the renowned patriarch
of Kentucky, who had kept in the advance of civilization, and on the
borders of the wilderness, still leading a hunter's life, though now
in his eighty-fifth year. He had but recently returned from a
hunting and trapping expedition, and had brought nearly sixty beaver
skins as trophies of his skill. The old man was still erect in form,
strong in limb, and unflinching in spirit, and as he stood on the
river bank, watching the departure of an expedition destined to
traverse the wilderness to the very shores of the Pacific, very
probably felt a throb of his old pioneer spirit, impelling him to
shoulder his rifle and join the adventurous band. Boone flourished
several years after this meeting, in a vigorous old age, the Nestor
of hunters and backwoodsmen; and died, full of sylvan honor and
renown, in 1818, in his ninety-second year.
The next morning early, as the party were yet encamped at the mouth
of a small stream, they were visited by another of these heroes of
the wilderness, one John Colter, who had accompanied Lewis and
Clarke in their memorable expedition. He had recently made one of
those vast internal voyages so characteristic of this fearless class
of men, and of the immense regions over which they hold their lonely
wanderings; having come from the head waters of the Missouri to St.
Louis in a small canoe. This distance of three thousand miles he had
accomplished in thirty days. Colter kept with the party all the
morning. He had many particulars to give them concerning the
Blackfeet Indians, a restless and predatory tribe, who had conceived
an implacable hostility to the white men, in consequence of one of
their warriors having been killed by Captain Lewis, while attempting
to steal horses. Through the country infested by these savages the
expedition would have to proceed, and Colter was urgent in
reiterating the precautions that ought to be observed respecting
them. He had himself experienced their vindictive cruelty, and his
story deserves particular citation, as showing the hairbreadth
adventures to which these solitary rovers of the wilderness are
exposed.
Colter, with the hardihood of a regular trapper, had cast himself
loose from the party of Lewis and Clarke in the very heart of the
wilderness, and had remained to trap beaver alone on the head waters
of the Missouri. Here he fell in with another lonely trapper, like
himself, named Potts, and they agreed to keep together. They were in
the very region of the terrible Blackfeet, at that time thirsting to
revenge the death of their companion, and knew that they had to
expect no mercy at their hands. They were obliged to keep concealed
all day in the woody margins of the rivers, setting their traps
after nightfall and taking them up before daybreak. It was running a
fearful risk for the sake of a few beaver skins; but such is the
life of the trapper.
They were on a branch of the Missouri called Jefferson Fork, and had
set their traps at night, about six miles up a small river that
emptied into the fork. Early in the morning they ascended the river
in a canoe, to examine the traps. The banks on each side were high
and perpendicular, and cast a shade over the stream. As they were
softly paddling along, they heard the trampling of many feet upon
the banks. Colter immediately gave the alarm of "Indians!" and was
for instant retreat. Potts scoffed at him for being frightened by
the trampling of a herd of buffaloes. Colter checked his uneasiness
and paddled forward. They had not gone much further when frightful
whoops and yells burst forth from each side of the river, and
several hundred Indians appeared on either bank. Signs were made to
the unfortunate trappers to come on shore. They were obliged to
comply. Before they could get out of their canoe, a savage seized
the rifle belonging to Potts. Colter sprang on shore, wrestled the
weapon from the hands of the Indian, and restored it to his
companion, who was still in the canoe, and immediately pushed into
the stream. There was the sharp twang of a bow, and Potts cried out
that he was wounded. Colter urged him to come on shore and submit,
as his only chance for life; but the other knew there was no
prospect of mercy, and determined to die game. Leveling his rifle,
he shot one of the savages dead on the spot. The next moment he fell
himself, pierced with innumerable arrows.
The vengeance of the savages now turned upon Colter. He was stripped
naked, and, having some knowledge of the Blackfoot language,
overheard a consultation as to the mode of despatching him, so as to
derive the greatest amusement from his death. Some were for setting
him up as a mark, and having a trial of skill at his expense. The
chief, however, was for nobler sport. He seized Colter by the
shoulder, and demanded if he could run fast. The unfortunate trapper
was too well acquainted with Indian customs not to comprehend the
drift of the question. He knew he was to run for his life, to
furnish a kind of human hunt to his persecutors. Though in reality
he was noted among his brother hunters for swiftness of foot, he
assured the chief that he was a very bad runner. His stratagem
gained him some vantage ground. He was led by the chief into the
prairie, about four hundred yards from the main body of savages, and
then turned loose to save himself if he could. A tremendous yell let
him know that the whole pack of bloodhounds were off in full cry.
Colter flew rather than ran; he was astonished at his own speed; but
he had six miles of prairie to traverse before he should reach the
Jefferson Fork of the Missouri; how could he hope to hold out such a
distance with the fearful odds of several hundred to one against
him! The plain, too, abounded with the prickly pear, which wounded
his naked feet. Still he fled on, dreading each moment to hear the
twang of a bow, and to feel an arrow quivering at his heart. He did
not even dare to look round, lest he should lose an inch of that
distance on which his life depended. He had run nearly half way
across the plain when the sound of pursuit grew somewhat fainter,
and he ventured to turn his head. The main body of his pursuers were
a considerable distance behind; several of the fastest runners were
scattered in the advance; while a swift-footed warrior, armed with a
spear, was not more than a hundred yards behind him.
Inspired with new hope, Colter redoubled his exertions, but strained
himself to such a degree, that the blood gushed from his mouth and
nostrils, and streamed down his breast. He arrived within a mile of
the river. The sound of footsteps gathered upon him. A glance behind
showed his pursuer within twenty yards, and preparing to launch his
spear. Stopping short he turned round and spread out his arms. The
savage, confounded by this sudden action, attempted to stop and hurl
his spear, but fell in the very act. His spear stuck in the ground,
and the shaft broke in his hand. Colter plucked up the pointed part,
pinned the savage to the earth, and continued his flight. The
Indians, as they arrived at their slaughtered companion, stopped to
howl over him. Colter made the most of this precious delay, gained
the skirt of cotton-wood bordering the river, dashed through it, and
plunged into the stream. He swam to a neighboring island, against
the upper end of which the driftwood had lodged in such quantities
as to form a natural raft; under this he dived, and swam below water
until he succeeded in getting a breathing place between the floating
trunks of trees, whose branches and bushes formed a covert several
feet above the level of the water. He had scarcely drawn breath
after all his toils, when he heard his pursuers on the river bank,
whooping and yelling like so many fiends. They plunged in the river,
and swam to the raft. The heart of Colter almost died within him as
he saw them, through the chinks of his concealment, passing and
repassing, and seeking for him in all directions. They at length
gave up the search, and he began to rejoice in his escape, when the
idea presented itself that they might set the raft on fire. Here was
a new source of horrible apprehension, in which he remained until
nightfall. Fortunately the idea did not suggest itself to the
Indians. As soon as it was dark, finding by the silence around that
his pursuers had departed, Colter dived again and came up beyond the
raft. He then swam silently down the river for a considerable
distance, when he landed, and kept on all night, to get as far as
possible from this dangerous neighborhood.
By daybreak he had gained sufficient distance to relieve him from
the terrors of his savage foes; but now new sources of inquietude
presented themselves. He was naked and alone, in the midst of an
unbounded wilderness; his only chance was to reach a trading post of
the Missouri Company, situated on a branch of the Yellowstone River.
Even should he elude his pursuers, days must elapse before he could
reach this post, during which he must traverse immense prairies
destitute of shade, his naked body exposed to the burning heat of
the sun by day, and the dews and chills of the night season, and his
feet lacerated by the thorns of the prickly pear. Though he might
see game in abundance around him, he had no means of killing any for
his sustenance, and must depend for food upon the roots of the
earth. In defiance of these difficulties he pushed resolutely
forward, guiding himself in his trackless course by those signs and
indications known only to Indians and backwoodsmen; and after
braving dangers and hardships enough to break down any spirit but
that of a western pioneer, arrived safe at the solitary post in
question1.
Such is a sample of the rugged experience which Colter had to relate
of savage life; yet, with all these perils and terrors fresh in his
recollection, he could not see the present band on their way to
those regions of danger and adventure, without feeling a vehement
impulse to join them. A western trapper is like a sailor; past
hazards only stimulate him to further risks. The vast prairie is to
the one what the ocean is to the other, a boundless field of
enterprise and exploit. However he may have suffered in his last
cruise, he is always ready to join a new expedition; and the more
adventurous its nature, the more attractive is it to his vagrant
spirit.
Nothing seems to have kept Colter from continuing with the party to
the shores of the Pacific but the circumstances of his having
recently married. All the morning he kept with them, balancing in
his mind the charms of his bride against those of the Rocky
Mountains; the former, however, prevailed, and after a march of
several miles, he took a reluctant leave of the travellers, and
turned his face homeward.
Continuing their progress up the Missouri, the party encamped on the
evening of the 21st of March, in the neighborhood of a little
frontier village of French creoles. Here Pierre Dorion met with some
of his old comrades, with whom he had a long gossip, and returned to
the camp with rumors of bloody feuds between the Osages and the
loways, or Ayaways, Potowatomies, Sioux, and Sawkees. Blood had
already been shed, and scalps been taken. A war party, three hundred
strong, were prowling in the neighborhood; others might be met with
higher up the river; it behooved the travellers, therefore, to be
upon their guard against robbery or surprise, for an Indian
war-party on the march is prone to acts of outrage.
In consequence of this report, which was subsequently confirmed by
further intelligence, a guard was kept up at night round the
encampment, and they all slept on their arms. As they were sixteen
in number, and well supplied with weapons and ammunition, they
trusted to be able to give any marauding party a warm reception.
Nothing occurred, however, to molest them on their voyage, and on
the 8th of April they came in sight of Fort Osage. On their approach
the flag was hoisted on the fort, and they saluted it by a discharge
of fire-arms. Within a short distance of the fort was an Osage
village, the inhabitants of which, men, women, and children,
thronged down to the water side to witness their landing. One of the
first persons they met on the river bank was Mr. Crooks, who had
come down in a boat, with nine men, from their winter encampment at
Nodowa to meet them.
They remained at Fort Osage a part of three days, during which they
were hospitably entertained at the garrison by Lieutenant Brownson,
who held a temporary command. They were regaled also with a
war-feast at the village; the Osage warriors having returned from a
successful foray against the loways, in which they had taken seven
scalps. They were paraded on poles about the village, followed by
the warriors decked out in all their savage ornaments, and hideously
painted as if for battle.
By the Osage warriors, Mr. Hunt and his companions were again warned
to be on their guard in ascending the river, as the Sioux tribe
meant to lay in wait and attack them.
On the 10th of April they again embarked their party, being now
augmented to twenty-six, by the addition of Mr. Crooks and his
boat's crew. They had not proceeded far, however, when there was a
great outcry from one of the boats; it was occasioned by a little
domestic discipline in the Dorion family. The squaw of the worthy
interpreter, it appeared, had been so delighted with the
scalp-dance, and other festivities of the Osage village, that she
had taken a strong inclination to remain there. This had been as
strongly opposed by her liege lord, who had compelled her to embark.
The good dame had remained sulky ever since, whereupon Pierre,
seeing no other mode of exorcising the evil spirit out of her, and
being, perhaps, a little inspired by whiskey, had resorted to the
Indian remedy of the cudgel, and before his neighbors could
interfere, had belabored her so soundly, that there is no record of
her having shown any refractory symptoms throughout the remainder of
the expedition.
For a week they continued their voyage, exposed to almost incessant
rains. The bodies of drowned buffaloes floated past them in vast
numbers; many had drifted upon the shore, or against the upper ends
of the rafts and islands. These had attracted great flights of
turkey-buzzards; some were banqueting on the carcasses, others were
soaring far aloft in the sky, and others were perched on the trees,
with their backs to the sun, and their wings stretched out to dry,
like so many vessels in harbor, spreading their sails after a
shower.
The turkey-buzzard (vultur aura, or golden vulture), when on the
wing, is one of the most specious and imposing of birds. Its flight
in the upper regions of the air is really sublime, extending its
immense wings, and wheeling slowly and majestically to and fro,
seemingly without exerting a muscle or fluttering a feather, but
moving by mere volition, and sailing on the bosom of the air, as a
ship upon the ocean. Usurping the empyreal realm of the eagle, he
assumes for a time the port and dignity of that majestic bird, and
often is mistaken for him by ignorant crawlers upon the earth. It is
only when he descends from the clouds to pounce upon carrion that he
betrays his low propensities, and reveals his caitiff character.
Near at hand he is a disgusting bird, ragged in plumage, base in
aspect, and of loathsome odor.
On the 17th of April Mr. Hunt arrived with his party at the station
near the Nodowa River, where the main body had been quartered during
the winter.
1 Bradbury, Travels in America, p.
17.
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