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The Partners Displeased With M'Dougal
The Partners Displeased With M'Dougal.—Equivocal
Conduct of That Gentleman—Partners Agree to Abandon Astoria.—Sale of
Goods to M'Tavish.—Arrangements for the Year.—Manifesto Signed by
the Partners—Departure of M'Tavish for the Interior.
THE partners found Mr. M'Dougal in all the bustle of
preparation; having about nine days previously announced at the
factory, his intention of breaking up the establishment, and fixed
upon the 1st of July for the time of departure. Messrs. Stuart and
Clarke felt highly displeased at his taking so precipitate a step,
without waiting for their concurrence, when he must have known that
their arrival could not be far distant.
Indeed, the whole conduct of Mr. M'Dougal was such as to awaken
strong doubts as to his loyal devotion to the cause. His old
sympathies with the Northwest Company seem to have revived. He had
received M'Tavish and his party with uncalled for hospitality, as
though they were friends and allies, instead of being a party of
observation, come to reconnoitre the state of affairs at Astoria,
and to await the arrival of a hostile ship. Had they been left to
themselves, they would have been starved off for want of provisions,
or driven away by the Chinooks, who only wanted a signal from the
factory to treat them as intruders and enemies. M'Dougal, on the
contrary, had supplied them from the stores of the garrison, and had
gained them the favor of the Indians, by treating them as friends.
Having set his mind fixedly on the project of breaking up the
establishment at Astoria, in the current year, M'Dougal was sorely
disappointed at finding that Messrs. Stuart and Clarke had omitted
to comply with his request to purchase horses and provisions for the
caravan across the mountains. It was now too late to make the
necessary preparations in time for traversing the mountains before
winter, and the project had to be postponed.
In the meantime, the non-arrival of the annual ship, and the
apprehensions entertained of the loss of the Beaver and of Mr. Hunt,
had their effect upon the minds of Messrs. Stuart and Clarke. They
began to listen to the desponding representations of M'Dougal,
seconded by M'Kenzie, who inveighed against their situation as
desperate and forlorn; left to shift for themselves, or perish upon
a barbarous coast; neglected by those who sent them there; and
threatened with dangers of every kind. In this way they were brought
to consent to the plan of abandoning the country in the ensuing
year.
About this time, M'Tavish applied at the factory to purchase a small
supply of goods wherewith to trade his way back to his post on the
upper waters of the Columbia, having waited in vain for the arrival
of the Isaac Todd. His request brought on a consultation among the
partners. M'Dougal urged that it should be complied with. He
furthermore proposed, that they should give up to M'Tavish, for a
proper consideration, the post on the Spokan, and all its
dependencies, as they had not sufficient goods on hand to supply
that post themselves, and to keep up a competition with the
Northwest Company in the trade with the neighboring Indians. This
last representation has since been proved incorrect. By inventories,
it appears that their stock in hand for the supply of the interior
posts, was superior to that of the Northwest Company; so that they
had nothing to fear from competition.
Through the influence of Messrs. M'Dougal and M'Kenzie, this
proposition was adopted, and was promptly accepted by M'Tavish. The
merchandise sold to him amounted to eight hundred and fifty-eight
dollars, to be paid for, in the following spring, in horses, or in
any other manner most acceptable to the partners at that period.
This agreement being concluded, the partners formed their plans for
the year that they would yet have to pass in the country. Their
objects were, chiefly, present subsistence, and the purchase of
horses for the contemplated journey, though they were likewise to
collect as much peltries as their diminished means would command.
Accordingly, it was arranged that David Stuart should return to his
former post on the Oakinagan, and Mr. Clarke should make his sojourn
among the Flatheads. John Reed, the sturdy Hibernian, was to
undertake the Snake River country, accompanied by Pierre Dorion and
Pierre Delaunay, as hunters, and Francis Landry, Jean Baptiste
Turcotte, Andre la Chapelle, and Gilles le Clerc, Canadian
voyageurs.
Astoria, however, was the post about which they felt the greatest
solicitude, and on which they all more or less depended. The
maintenance of this in safety throughout the coming year, was,
therefore, their grand consideration. Mr. M'Dougal was to continue
in command of it, with a party of forty men. They would have to
depend chiefly upon the neighboring savages for their subsistence.
These, at present, were friendly, but it was to be feared that, when
they should discover the exigencies of the post, and its real
weakness, they might proceed to hostilities; or, at any rate, might
cease to furnish their usual supplies. It was important, therefore,
to render the place as independent as possible, of the surrounding
tribes for its support; and it was accordingly resolved that
M'Kenzie, with four hunters, and eight common men, should winter in
the abundant country of Wollamut, from whence they might be enabled
to furnish a constant supply of provisions to Astoria.
As there was too great a proportion of clerks for the number of
privates in the service, the engagements of three of them, Ross Cox,
Ross, and M'Lennan, were surrendered to them, and they immediately
enrolled themselves in the service of the Northwest Company; glad,
no doubt, to escape from what they considered a sinking ship.
Having made all these arrangements, the four partners, on the first
of July, signed a formal manifesto, stating the alarming state of
their affairs, from the non-arrival of the annual ship, and the
absence and apprehended loss of the Beaver, their want of goods,
their despair of receiving any further supply, their ignorance of
the coast, and their disappointment as to the interior trade, which
they pronounced unequal to the expenses incurred, and incompetent to
stand against the powerful opposition of the Northwest Company. And
as by the 16th article of the company's agreement, they were
authorized to abandon this undertaking, and dissolve the concern, if
before the period of five years it should be found unprofitable,
they now formally announced their intention to do so on the 1st day
of June, of the ensuing year, unless in the interim they should
receive the necessary support and supplies from Mr. Astor, or the
stockholders, with orders to continue.
This instrument, accompanied by private letters of similar import,
was delivered to Mr. M'Tavish, who departed on the 5th of July. He
engaged to forward the despatches to Mr. Astor, by the usual winter
express sent overland by the Northwest Company.
The manifesto was signed with great reluctance by Messrs. Clarke and
D. Stuart, whose experience by no means justified the discouraging
account given in it of the internal trade, and who considered the
main difficulties of exploring an unknown and savage country, and of
ascertaining the best trading and trapping grounds, in a great
measure overcome. They were overruled, however, by the urgent
instances of M'Dougal and M'Kenzie, who, having resolved upon
abandoning the enterprise, were desirous of making as strong a case
as possible to excuse their conduct to Mr. Astor and to the world.
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Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
Rocky Mountains
Astoria |