THE
BIG SANDY
One
night after supper, Father got his gun. "It's my turn
for guard duty," he said. "I don't much like the
man who is on the beat with me, either. He went to sleep
once when on guard. I'll have to do his job and mine too,
very likely."
The
wagons, of course, were corralled in a big circle with the
horses inside. At intervals around the outside were stationed
guards, each to watch over a certain section of the stockade
formed by the wagons.
Father
was slowly walking along his beat, his loaded gun in his
hands that night, when something moving caught his eye.
Hunched over like an Indian in a blanket, someone was slipping
toward him. He shouted "Halt!" but the man moved
on. Why he did not shoot, Father said he did not know, but
even in the darkness something told him the man was not
an Indian. A second time he spoke and the man straightened
up and asked, "What is the matter?"
"Matter
enough!" Father said. "Come with me." It
was the man who had been put on guard duty near Father's
beat. He had been walking in his sleep.
Father
marched him through the camp to Mr. Daily's tent and roused
Mr. Daily. "This man is not responsible, Mr. Daily,"
he said. "Don't put him on guard again. If he doesn't
get the train into trouble, someone will kill him. He had
a mighty close call this time." He told of his sleep-walking.
THE
DESERT
Long
before daylight one morning, we filled every available water
carrier not filled the night before, and trailed off through
the weird darkness, the only time but one that we broke
camp before daylight. We were starting across a desert,
seventy miles without water. In two days we were to cross,
thirty-five miles a day, fifteen miles farther than our
average distance. It was to be two long and terrible drives
for horses as worn and thin as ours. Only a bit of grass,
mowed and carried with us, we had to feed them those two
days. Out upon the lava beds we rumbled, the hollow, echoing,
metallic roar sounding as if we were upon a great bridge.
At daylight there lay around us a gray and desolate waste.
"Did
ever horses go so fast?" Florence gasped as we ran
breathlessly along the rocky road trying to overtake the
teams. We had tried walking but could not keep up with the
horses.
"I
don't believe they ever did," I answered. "We
never drove like this before." At last a wagon waited
for us and Uncle Isaac told us to stay in it. On no other
days did they ever drive the horses at a trot.
Many
skulls of big-horned sheep lay about on the lava bed. It
must have been a good hunting ground, for no place else
did we ever see many. Here and there we saw them set on
piles of rocks and often names were written on them. They
made wild-looking landmarks.
The
road, though winding around hummocks, was in the main nearly
straight. At noon we stopped but a few minutes for lunch,
gave the horses a handful of the dried grass and a swallow
of water, and then hastened on. We camped late that night,
worn out from the long drive, but were up again before daylight.
They were hard days, those two.
The
following night, after dark, we reached water. At the foot
of a mountain was a little trickling stream. The captain
ordered the water vessels filled before the horses drank.
It was necessary to hoard that water; there was so little
there. The next good spring was 15 miles away. Very carefully
the water was guarded to leave the stream clear for the
cattle train, the bushwhackers who were following behind
us.
After
our camps were made and the horses watered, the cattle train
arrived. We left the spring to them. Instead of using care
with the water they immediately turned the oxen loose to
drink. Three hundred or more cattle trampled and fought
over the water and far into the night their bellowing was
hideous. Neither the people nor the cattle had much use
of that spring. I don't know what they would have done had
not Mr. Daily set a guard over a tiny hill that trickled
down the hillside above where the cattle could climb. All
the drinking water they had they got there. It was well
for us that Mr. Daily had told us to fill our water casks.
Fifteen
miles of travel the next day took us to another spring.
Here we rested for the remainder of the day. The cattle
train passed us and we hoped once more that we were rid
of them.
THE
CONFEDERATE FLAG
The
third of July we made our camp at the foot of the Bannock
Mountains. Here in a circular valley was a regular camp
ground where every train cut a few more trees for the ring
of campfires that were built around the camps in the center,
always making the spot a little safer from Indian attack.
The next day we were not to travel but to rest our horses.
We were always glad for those rest days; they came so seldom.
Our camp was spoiled to me, however, for here in the beautiful
circle we found the cattle train. It was hard to endure
them, to find the stream of water trampled and dirty, as
well as all the other annoyances they could devise. "They
will go on tomorrow and we will be rid of them for a day
or two," we hoped once more and felt relieved at the
prospect.
The
next morning, however, we found a new scheme to anger us.
Very early in the morning they left, but hanging from a
flagpole that they had erected in the night was a Confederate
flag. An angry group of men surrounded the pole when Florence
and I ran out of our tent. One man had started to chop it
down.
Mr.
Daily was talking, "It's hard to take, boys, but we
have to get this train through. The Snake Indians are yet
to be passed and we can't weaken ourselves in a battle with
these people. If a lot of you fellows were killed, what
could we do with the families? They have to come first.
The train must go through. Let the flag alone."
It
was hard for northern eyes to see that flag flying, but
there it stayed all that day. When we left the next morning
it still hung from the top of the pole.
Just
before we started Win said, "Drive my team, won't you,
Philura? I'm not ready to go."
"Not
ready!" I said, "Why not?"
"Never
mind, I'll catch up." He and Henry ran away and I could
not see them when we started.
After
a while Win climbed up beside me. "We fixed their old
flag," he said; "chopped it down into the fire."
"That's
good!" I said. "I'm glad you did, but won't you
get into trouble."
"I
don't know," he answered, "but the flag is down."
Even
though I was glad to hear that, I couldn't help feeling
a little anxious. Captain Daily had been very emphatic.
Early
in the morning before we had started I had seen the men
of the train gathered around Mr. Daily. Later in the day
Father told us why the captain had called them together.
A message had come that the Snake Indians were on the war
path. They were even more to be feared, he said, than the
Sioux; they were more treacherous.
ANXIOUS
DAYS
That
day and the next one, crossing the Bannock Mountains, we
experienced the hardest traveling that we found on that
long trip from Iowa to Oregon. Even the lava desert had
been easier, for there the road had been comparatively level.
Here, though the wagons were lightened every pound that
could be removed, the horses struggled with difficulty up
the bed of a mountain stream.
As
far as possible, the captain had ordered, we were to make
no noise. Slipping along the mountain road, guards ahead,
guards behind, guards in the woods on either side of us,
all that day we walked. We children were afraid to speak
above whispers. Night came on before we reached the summit
of the mountains.
In
the darkness not a fire was built, nor a match lighted,
and we made our camp for a second time in the wagons. From
that mountaintop fires could be seen from a great distance.
Someone gave us food; someone brought us water, and we crept
into bed, all the women and children. Not a man, I think,
in the whole train but stood guard that night. So silent
were we that we did not know were the nearest wagon was
stationed. Not a child whimpered and, strangely enough,
not a horse neighed.
The
next morning, since we were still without fires, whatever
food was available was passed around, and just as the black
of night was changing to gray, the teams were hitched to
the wagons and we started down the mountain.
We
had crossed the higher Rockies with only distant peaks to
tell us we had reached the dividing of the waters. That
day, however, we found mountain travel of a kind of which
we had not dreamed. For several hours we wound along a nearly
level road, the descent being very gradual. About ten o'clock
we reached a place where the road abruptly leaves the mountain,
"the jumping-off place," we children called it,
a fearful piece of road to traverse.
We
stopped on the brow of the hill to prepare for the descent.
Four-horse teams were divided, as the leaders can not hold
back. Long ropes were tied to the axles of the wagons. Trees
were cut and tied by the tops to drag on the ground behind.
"My
team can hold this wagon," one man told the others.
"These trees are enough, I don't need a rope."
"They
can't do it. No team can hold a wagon on that last pitch,"
I heard an answer.
"They'll
make it all right. I'm going on." Though others tried
to dissuade him, he started down the hill.
"We'll
pick you up when we get there," someone called after
him.
Other
wagons followed, their wheels locked, weighted by the cumbersome
trees, and held in addition by long lines of braced and
straining men. In spite of the efforts of the men at the
ropes, it looked as if the wagons would surely pitch over
onto the horses. Wagon after wagon was lowered in this way
to the foot of the incline. A full half day was required
to move the train a short half mile.
When
after watching numbers of wagons pass we ran on down the
hill, we found at the bottom the man who had scorned the
ropes. He was at the bottom; there was no doubt of that,
but that last and steepest pitch had a turn that must be
followed to avoid disaster. It led to a level valley floor
and solid ground. If it were not followed, a marshy quagmire
made a soft landing place. Hopelessly mired in the swamp
rested the wagon and horses, right side up and uninjured,
but there for all time unless helped to dry land.
I
did not envy the man the chaffing he received as outfit
after outfit reached the foot of the incline and added its
trees to the huge pile already there.
After
the last wagon was down someone asked the man, "Do
you want a rope now? Perhaps you'd rather swim a while longer,
though!"
"Good
place you chose to land," another said, "There's
nothing like mud for cushions."
Unmercifully
they guyed him. It did not pay a man to be too independent
and knowing. He had little to say as they fastened ropes
to his outfit, hitched horses to the ropes and pulled him
out of the mire.
Greatly
relieved that the strain was over, we drove around the foot
of the mountain a short distance to a good camping spot.
The day was not spent, but the captain
BUSHWACKERS
AGAIN
As
we came in sight of the camping ground we saw something
that did not please us. The bushwhackers were there. Of
necessity we camped near them. Always they were a sullen,
disagreeable crowd that we avoided as much as possible,
but that afternoon they were worse than ever.
Scarcely
were our tents pitched when the men of the train slouched
into our camp muttering threats of "shooting"
and "cleaning out the train."
Mr.
Daily listened to them awhile, watching them closely and
in silence. They grew more and more blustering and threatening.
At last he said to some of them, "Just what do you
want? What is the matter with you?"
The
bushwhackers crowded closer and our men, sensing trouble,
drew near also. "We're goin' to clean out this train,"
they blustered, "Cut down our flag, ye did! You'll
pay fer it. We'll beat the life out o' ye."
"We'll
git a lot o' ye!" They went on with more talk of killing
and shooting up the crowd. Their manner was so ugly and
their threats so dreadful that I was thoroughly alarmed.
We had many more men than they but I did not want any of
our people to be hurt.
Mr.
Daily turned to his party. "Get your guns, men, every
one. We have had enough of this." Then to the bushwhackers,
he added:
"We
have had all we will take from you. You have gone far enough."
Our
men were soon back. Armed and ready they awaited the next
move. That move, however, was not the one we expected.
The
bushwhackers looked at the guns. While we stared in amazement,
they turned and slunk back to their wagons. Heads hanging,
they sat on the wagon tongues, whipped, beaten.
Finally
one man whined, "We'd fight if we had any guns."
"Any
guns!" For a moment words seemed to fail Mr. Daily.
"Any guns!" At last he went on: "You've held
onto us all though the Indian country, safe where you could
not have defended yourselves. And you! Every mean, contemptible
thing you could devise to make life miserable for us! A
fine sort you are! Listen to this: From now on, you get
behind our train and stay out of our way. We'll have no
more smartness from you!" More he said, much more,
to the great delight of us all. His speech was a great satisfaction
to at least a part of his audience.
The
next morning we passed their train, this time silent, and
we had no further trouble with them; in fact, we never saw
them again. We learned later that they were a band of border
ruffians who had carried on guerilla warfare until captured
by Union soldiers. They had been set across the Missouri
River and disarmed that they might not by joining the Indians
cause more trouble. It was well for the South to be rid
of them, but they were a poor type of people for the new
country to which they were going.
THE
PONTOON BRIDGE Our long line of wagons, now brown-topped
and dingy, trailing through the sagebrush did not much resemble
the shining white train which had stepped off so smartly
through the green grass of the Missouri Valley months before.
Neither did the ferry which carried us over the Snake River
much resemble the big steam ferry which carried us over
the Missouri.
One
day we reached a smaller stream crossed by a pontoon bridge
in which logs were used for pontoons. We stopped, planning
to spend a day there to rest our horses and give the people
a chance to do laundry work and make needed repairs.
"A
good chance to wash some bedding," Mother said. It
was very hard to keep our bedding nice. Try as we would
always to pitch our tents in clean spots and always to air
and shake the blankets carefully, they grew more and more
dingy. I wonder how the people who traveled in the dust
of the later summer managed to care for theirs.
While
Mother was looking over the bedding, the boys got out some
fishing tackle and to our joy were soon catching big beautiful
trout from a foot to eighteen inches in length.
Almost
before our camp was made, however, we were repacking, preparing
to go on. A man who had a sutler's camp beside the river
near where we stopped was quarreling with an Indian when
we arrived. Suddenly the Indian began to scream. I saw him
holding up his arm, from which blood was streaming. The
man, who had been drinking, had stuck him with a knife.
He jumped on a horse and rode away, still holding up his
arm and screaming. As he passed over a mound by the river
and away into the sagebrush, the captain sent a message
for the train to go on. The affair might cause trouble with
the Indians.
Win
and Henry put their fish into the wagon. "Drive for
me, won't you, Philura?" Win said. "I'll get a
few more." Every one was disappointed; we needed those
fish so badly. A change in our diet was rare in those days.
Bread, beans, dried peas, bacon, ham and dried fruit over
and over; no wonder we wanted something new. After what
seemed a long time the boys caught up with us. A long chase
they had had after the wagons, but they brought a dozen
more big trout with them.
BOISE
Father
was anxious to reach Boise. We had one team now that we
did not need. Of course the horse feed had been used long
since, and as we had used our provisions, the loads had
slowly grown lighter.
When
at last we reached the town the sight of houses, people,
and so many new faces was a real event to us. Boise was
a mining town, a town where Father was not anxious to keep
his family long. I heard him saying so when a group of miners
wanted him to go back along the trail to look for a mine.
Near
the Big Sandy, Father had broken from a ledge some pieces
of ore and dropped them into his pocket. He showed them
to some miners and immediately the men were interested.
Would he go back and show them the place? It would pay him
well. They argued long but Father would not consider leaving
us in Boise. As well as he could he described the place
where he had found the ore. I remember the party of young
men who had joined the train the evening we did; nearly
all went back to look for gold. Later we heard of a rich
mine located in that neighborhood and wondered if Father
had missed a fortune by not going back. As we also heard
of groups of miners being killed by the Indians, we did
not waste much time in regrets.
Many
of our party left us in Boise, some to stay there, others
to scatter far. From that point on, people continually dropped
out of the train. Not all, like us, were seeking the Pacific.
Father
sold three horses and a wagon at Boise and bought a riding
pony. We now had two wagons, one of them drawn by three
horses, which Win and Carrie took turns at driving. It was
fun to have the pony to ride, and as Florence's father allowed
her to ride one of his horses sometimes, we felt we had
riches. As we were getting out of the country, too, where
trouble might be expected from the Indians, when our turns
with the horses came we often left the train far behind.
Once
when we were riding ahead, I saw something shining in the
road. I slid from my horse to pick it up. It was a little
polished, sharp-pointed weapon, a Spanish stiletto, Father
said when we rode back to show it to the others and to find
out what it was. Of course they laughed at me as usual for
seeing everything, but what would be the use of taking a
trip like that and not keep one's eyes open? My collection
had to be sorted from time to time and many things discarded.
There were so many strange and interesting things to be
picked up. The men in the train were more interested than
I, however, in the vicious-looking little stiletto.
On
all the hundreds of miles we had traveled from Iowa, there
had not been in our train one real accident. The nearest
had been the man who was stuck in the mud at the foot of
the Bannock Mountains. One day, however, we passed a spot
at the foot of a hill where on a turn the road sloped sideways.
The place was not bad at all; the leading wagons passed
it almost without notice. yet when one man made the turn,
he rolled his wagon over, completely. Bottom side up it
lay, his family underneath.
Much
frightened, others ran to his assistance. The wagon was
righted and the family picked up, entirely unhurt. When
the team was untangled they went on quite as well off as
before.
While
traveling through the Blue Mountains we came upon a never-to-be-
forgotten treat. Ripe huckleberries grew in profusion. Never
before did fruit taste so good. For nearly four months we
had eaten no fresh fruit and now to find those berries growing
all about us was something to be remembered. Fresh raw berries,
sauce, pies - we could not eat enough to satisfy our craving.
I
remember seeing one man take his first bite of huckleberry
pie. He made a grand leap from his seat on the ground, cracked
his heels together and shouted, "Dipend alive! If I
don't be jumped up if that ain't good pie!" One would
have to be an emigrant to know how good it was.
INDIAN
WAYS
The
dress of the Indians was a never-ending source of entertainment
to us. The familiar costume of the Pawnees of the Kansas
Plains, moccasins, breechclouts and blankets, we saw wherever
we saw Indians. The wonderful feather headdresses of the
Sioux, or the glittering beadwork of the western tribes,
were varied at times, often with striking results. Whatever
articles of clothing an Indian had, he wore.
Walking
in the road ahead of us one day were three Indians. One
was dressed in the regulation Indian style, but I'm sure
he must have felt envious of the others, one of whom displayed
above his moccasins a soldier's long dress coat. Bare-legged
and shirtless he was a funny figure. The other's costume
we liked better yet. On his head was a high top hat; about
his neck was a stiff white celluloid collar but no shirt,
then a breechclout and moccasins. Very proud and important
they looked as they stalked along, unconscious of the laughter
they caused.
More
than one little girl we saw in clothing of strange materials.
Big, bright-colored silk handkerchiefs were very popular.
Sewed together they made a costume worthy of any chief's
daughter. At one camp we saw a wonderfully clad little girl,
a child of perhaps ten years. None of the white man's finery
save masses of beads was used to deck this little princess.
Around her head was a glittering beaded band. Flashing earrings
reached her shoulders. Her fringed dress of creamy buckskin
was ornamented in beautiful, strange designs, all of sparkling
beads. On her feet were the most exquisite beaded moccasins
imaginable, the prettiest little things I had ever seen.
Much I longed for a pair like them, though I really didn't
envy the little maid. So loaded was she, so weighted with
beads, that without help she couldn't carry them. Bead chains
graduated in length from her neck to her ankles, the longest
chain being a string of sleigh bells. That costume was probably
the pride of the tribe. Very carful of the little girl they
were too. It was well that she didn't have to carry that
weight alone. We were so delighted with her that we were
called many times before we heeded and had to run to overtake
the wagons.
At
another Indian camp a mother proudly displayed her two little
boys. She had dressed them like white children, had made
them some trousers. Evidently she had used a pattern. The
trousers were sewed to waistbands and the seams on the outside
of the legs were sewed, but that was all. With the other
necessary seams neglected, the little trousers flapped gaily.
The proud mother did not know how funny they looked.
Some
of the Indians left very pleasant memories. One morning
while Mother was getting breakfast and the children playing
about, I saw an Indian riding toward the camp. Tall and
straight he looked on a beautiful horse that gleamed lack
in the high yellow grass. One hand he carried across his
breast, evidently holding some object with great care. As
he came closer he looked about at the different groups of
children. At last he rode toward Darius, who had stopped
his play to watch him.
The
little fellow drew back shyly as he came closer, but the
Indian called to him saying, "Here, little boy, take
this."
As
Darius hesitated, looking at him uncertainly, he leaned
far down from his horse and said, "Poor bird. Take
it, little boy."
Darius
started toward him eagerly and took from his hand a robin,
a robin with a broken wing.
Delightedly
the little boy, always the friend of every animal, cuddled
the bird, cooing to it and holding it against his cheek.
The big Indian sat back on his horse for a moment, watching
him and smiling. Then throwing up his hands as if in a salute,
he said, "Good," laughed a little as if well pleased
and rode away through grass so high as to reach well up
on the sides of his horse. That Indian and his gift were
not among the things to be forgotten.
Poor
little Darius; try as we would to care for the bird we could
not save its life, and when it died a few days later, he
was heartbroken.
"We
have plenty of men we can depend upon," Mr. Daily said,
"I'll send you another man."
Though
in a way traveling was not very pleasant those days, it
was delightful to leave the Platte River and follow along
the Sweetwater where the Oregon Trail now led us. This was
one of the loveliest regions I ever saw. The road in places
touched the edge of high cliffs, where far below the beautiful
stream sparkled. In one place Father and I went to the rim
of the cliff to look down at the river. Some men from the
train were walking through the canyon, and very tiny they
looked in the distance. As I ran along the cliff, happy
in the beauty of the spot, right on the brink of the gorge
I found something that frightened me.
"Father,"
I called, "someone has been killed here." Father
looked at a pool of blood I had found. "No," he
said, "it isn't as bad as it looks. Someone has killed
an antelope." His explanations often made terrors seem
commonplace.
So
gradual had been the rise of land as we traveled westward
that it was hard to realize that we were in the Rocky Mountains.
When we went through South Pass, the greatest elevation
we were to reach, the land did not seem high. The country
was open, rolling prairies, but in the distance a few peaks
showed their snowy heads. Otherwise we might still have
been on the lowland plains.
At
the Big Sandy River we camped in a beautiful spot, a grassy
hollow left green by the waters of melted snows. Fresh grass,
willows, flowers, such as we had not seen for many a day,
grew in profusion along the stream banks. Overjoyed at the
wonder of the lovely place, we children wandered far up
the river. We had no thought of danger, though I wonder
that we were not afraid. We had passed fresh graves since
leaving Fort Laramie, graves that, so scouts told us, had
been made by soldiers from the Fort - the graves of people
killed by the Indians. Unheeding, careless of what might
happen to us, we rambled on that evening until dusk was
falling. We were to remember that walk and shiver, fearful
to think of what might have happened.
The
next morning, loath to leave the lovely spot, we forded
the river which we children had waded so many times the
evening before and went on. Not all of the Oregon Trail
was a joy to travel. We were not soon to forget that camp
ground; a tragedy was to make it memorable.
The
following day a man passed us, riding west. The news he
brought was one of those stories that chill the blood of
the emigrant. A big train that was following us one day
behind, a train of which we had heard frequent reports by
the scouts along the trail, had camped in the same spot
on the Big Sandy where we had been the previous night. The
Indians had fallen upon them and massacred them. Of about
three hundred people, the soldiers from the Ford had found
two living. One of these, a young girl, had been left by
the savages for dead, left lying on her face with an arrow
in her back. The other, a boy of eight or ten, had crawled
into the sagebrush and hidden from the Indians.
We
were a serious-faced party after that, nor did we children
stray far from camp again until we were far out of the Indian
country. Why had our train escaped? Was our turn coming?
Our camps were better guarded after that; a more careful
lookout was maintained.
Day
after day we passed graves freshly dug by the soldiers and
weighted with stones to protect them from marauding animals.
They were the graves of people killed by the Indians, mute
evidence of the red man's anger. Day and night we dreaded
an attack. Hastening on, however, we at length left the
Sioux country and no attack had come. There had been no
hint of trouble for us.
Why,
though other trains had suffered so severely, did we escape
attack? We wondered much. It seemed a guardian angel watched
over us, and if he could be called an angel, I believe one
did. The great Sioux Chief who had been so friendly at Fort
Laramie was proving his friendship. Father had given him
food wen he was hungry, and later had taken him at his word,
showing no fear. The lesser chiefs had seen him and his
family and he had shaken our hands. Now, though other trains
were attacked, each leaving its toll along the road, we
were unmolested. It was well for us that we had "entertained
royalty," when we gave our lunches to that wandering
Sioux.
THE
GRANDE RONDE
In
the Grande Ronde Valley we tasted our first green vegetables.
I went to a strange-looking house beside the road to buy
some peas for mother. It was the first sod house I ever
saw. A little girl was there, and while her mother was getting
the peas ready I talked to her and looked and looked at
the queer house with its brown earth walls and roof and
floor. It was all very neat and clean, the inside walls
covered as they were with white canvas. I would not have
thought a dirt floor could have been so hard and so clean.
"It is pretty in the spring," the little girl
said. "Then the whole house is covered with bright-green
grass. I wish it would stay that way all the time."
Those
vegetables were so good; one would have to take a journey
similar to ours to know how good they tasted.
Mother's
hope that I would start growing and Father's prophecy that
she would have to start sewing before we reached Oregon
were both fulfilled. My dresses became so short and so tight
that some of them I could not wear at all. One day Mother
opened a chest and from it took a beautiful piece of orange-and-black-checked
gingham. The checks were tiny and so pretty that I was delighted
when I learned that I was to have a new dress. She made
it evenings, sitting on the ground. We had brought one chair
with us for Mother, but only for a short time did she use
it. Long after we reached the new country, when we wanted
to rest we sat upon the floor.
Clothes
were a problem to us traveling. We wore linsey dresses most
of the time and I often wore little gingham aprons over
mine. The linsey dresses, woven from linen and wool, could
hardly be worn out, so they were good for the plains. Keeping
them clean was the great problem. Mother's and Carrie's
were so long and so wide and so much in the way that I could
not understand why they wore that kind.
There
was one party at which everyone looked askance. The women
did not wear dresses. Their clothes did look strange and
funny, but I could never see why all the women did not wear
that kind anyway. They wore long basque-like coats and ankle-length
trousers and climbed about as easily as I did in my short
dresses. But how they shocked the rest of the train! How
the poor women were snubbed!
Rarely
was there a day during that long trip but something interesting
or something alarming happened. When we were leaving the
Grande Ronde, Florence and I as we so often did were running
ahead of the wagons as they climbed the bluff. Lying in
the road, we found a pistol. We were looking at the queer
little one-shot weapon to see if it was loaded when suddenly
we heard rifle shots, and bullets began singing over our
heads. Sure that someone was shooting at us, we scurried
behind some big boulders and remained hidden, thoroughly
frightened, until the wagons reached us. Father told us
some men were having rifle practice and had been careless
enough to shoot toward the road. "It wasn't very decent
of them," I said. "They'd kill us just as dead
as if they shot at us."
Here
and there we passed Indian camps and rank-smelling places
they were. The tanning deerskins, the drying meat, the piles
of dried fish, the careless disposal of refuse, all in all
their camps were not pleasant places. Even long-deserted
camps where the floors of the lodges were grass-grown retained
the odor. We children insisted that we could smell an Indian
camp a mile.
A
QUEER WAGON
One
day in the road ahead we saw a wagon which had traveled
with us all the way from Iowa The wagon was so small that
it had seemed foolish to start on that tri p with such an
outfit.
"How
did Mr. Crump get so far ahead?" I asked Florence.
"He
was behind a while ago," she said. "When did he
pass?" We ran back and asked Win if he had seen Mr.
Crump pass.
"No,"
he said, "he's away behind."
"But
we saw his wagon in the road ahead," I insisted.
When
we reached the spot where we had seen the wagon we looked
about, surprised at what we saw. There in the road were
the immense tracks of some animal, tracks so big that when
Win turned a bucket used for watering horses over one, the
track was barely covered.
Puzzled
and wondering as to what creature could have made such tracks,
we waited for the other wagons.
"Mr.
Hampton," Win hailed the first to arrive, "look
at these tracks. What are they?"
"A
grizzly!" the man exclaimed, "A whopper, too."
A
group soon gathered. Some of the men wanted to go into the
swamp at once hunting the bear but were finally dissuaded.
I certainly did not want to hunt for that creature. A bear
big enough to look to me like a covered wagon was an animal
that I wanted to see only from a distance.
The
road we were following led us once more across great lava
beds, though here we found no lack of water. Our chief trouble
was the swarms of locusts. Everywhere the ground was covered.
We couldn't walk without stepping on them; the ruts of the
road were filled. For two days we were sickened by the sound
of the wheels crushing them, by the sight of the wriggling
masses.
The
Indians, however, did not show our squeamishness, for here
was a valuable source of food. Beside the road we saw pits
about three feet in depth. Squaws beating lightly on the
ground with bushes urged the locusts toward the pits. When
a trench was filled, they tossed dried grass and light bushes
over the top and set them afire. Killed by the quick heat
and partially roasted the grasshoppers were taken out and
dried. Such soups and stews they must have made! Many of
the insects, Uncle Isaac told us, were ground, mixed with
pond lily seeds and made into a meal, cakes of which were
great delicacies, but tidbits we were willing to leave to
the Indians.
MORE
MOUNTAIN ROAD
We
still had some hard stretches of road to travel. The Tigh
Valley grade was so steep that it seemed as if the horses
would fall over backward. Even the drivers walked. With
five horses hitched to each wagon, men ahead with ropes
to hold down the wagon tongues, and men behind to thrust
blocks of wood under the wheels should the wagons start
backward, they struggled up the awful grade. We climbed
the hill well to the side of the road so as not to be in
the way if anything about the wagons should slip. Glad we
were when at last all were at the top.
Later
we found ourselves winding along the Deschutes Road, a road
hewn from solid rock and so narrow that in places there
were but four inches outside the wheel track. Father was
nearly frantic. Carrie with her three-horse team was ahead,
and in no way could he pass the wagon to drive for her.
A three-horse team, hitched as these were with two wheel
horses and one leader, is a very hard team to handle. The
cliff was so steep that he could not climb past her on the
upper side and there was no room on the outside over the
precipice beneath which the river rushed. The wagon was
loaded in such a manner, with bedding, stove, everything,
piled high and the cover drawn tightly over all, that no
one could climb over it from behind. There was nothing to
do but watch her as she drove ahead, hugging the bank. The
horses, however, were no more anxious than she to take that
dreadful plunge.
Far
below, so far that they looked like toy people, I remember
seeing a band of Indians catching some salmon and drying
them about little smoky fires.
At
last we reached Barlow Bridge, high, high above the rugged
river. This was the end of the terrible canyon road. At
the gate on the farther side, Father paid the toll and we
drove through.
Here
for the first time on the journey, our right of way was
challenged. As we drove through the gate an old billy goat
disputed our right to pass. He looked so absurd, dancing
about, his head nodding up and down as he threatened the
big horses, that we all had to laugh. Evidently he did not
like our appearance. Finally, rather than be driven over,
he edged to the side of the road and we left him and his
little band of goats behind, and headed for Barlow Pass.
We
were now nearing our journey's end. Three days at the most
and we would reach Salem. Father and Mother would meet friends
from whom they had been separated long. We camped that night
near the summit of the Cascade Mountains, Mount Hood gleaming
near us.
About
our camp many of the trees had been felled. The stumps were
a puzzling sight to me. Fully twenty feet above the ground
they had been chopped off with axes. I asked Father how
it could have been done.
He
said they must have been cut in the winter when the snow
lay on the ground. "Probably it was done by miners
or prospectors," he said. "Wagons could not get
through the pass when the snow was deep."
That
night five men camped near us. When some of them came to
our fire, we were glad to hear them talk of the new country.
More and more anxious we were growing to hear of the place
that was to be home to us. New lands have strange tale to
tell and the people in them are often great storytellers.
Our meeting with these men was to give us a tale to tell
of our own.
In
the morning as we were preparing to leave the spot, one
of the men went to the back of Father's wagon and from it
took his heavy saddlebags. They were very heavy, too.
"Why
did you put those in there?" Father demanded.
"I
put them there so that I would find them this morning,"
said the man, "I'm hoping to reach Salem alive and
with them."
"You
had no right to put them there. If they had been stolen,
the blame would have fallen on me. You had no right to make
me responsible." The man laughed. "I'm not afraid
of you," he said, "but for days I haven't dared
get separated for one minute from that crowd of men. I'd
lose my life if one of those men had the ghost of a chance.
I knew he'd never think of your wagon, so I put my gold
in there."
Father
was very angry. "I have my family here," he said,
"and you endanger them in that way."
The
man shook his head. "The gold was as safe there as
if in a vault, and your family in no more danger. It was
the only safe place."We never heard of the man's being
robbed, so we always supposed he reached Salem with his
gold.
THE
END OF THE LONG TRAIL
The
Barlow Road wound around Mount Hood, then abruptly descended
into the Willamette Valley. The eastern slope had been gradual
but on the western we found an extreme example of the ruggedness
of the country. The road fairly dropped. Of course only
the wheel horses were used, as the leaders cannot hold back.
Again trees were tied by the tops to the coupling poles
and men strained back, holding to long ropes. With the heavier
wagons the ropes were snubbed around trees and the wagons
eased down. It would be hard to describe the feeling of
relief we had when we knew that the last bit of hard road
was behind us.
Before
we reached Salem, Florence and I were to have one more experience
to remember. As we were riding behind the train the next
day, busily talking, Florence said, "I wonder how far
behind we are? We must hurry." We rode fast but found
that all the wagons had forded a river before we reached
them. We rode into the stream, but not knowing that the
ford slanted across the river, we started straight for the
other shore. Almost immediately, our horses were swimming.
Florence's big horse swam high, but even so, her feet were
wet. My little pony fairly wallowed. Splashed and drenched,
not knowing how to manage a swimming horse, I had my hands
full. The people on the bank were excitedly trying to point
out the ford to us. At last we reached shallower water,
and with Uncle Isaac pointing the way, we gained the bank.
The
next day ended that summer's journey. Until the following
year we were to stay in the Willamette Valley. After four
long months of travel we were in the new land, a new country,
yes, a new world. To us children the journey had seemed
an interval of four months of play; then from the familiar
life of a long-settled region, we were dropped into the
barrenness, and the richness, of the new, the untried.