The
different Routes to California and Oregon. -- Their respective
Advantages. -- Organization of Companies. -- Elections of
Captains. -- Wagons and Teams. -- Relative Merits of Mules
and Oxen. -- Stores and Provisions. -- How packed. -- Desiccated
and canned Vegetables. -- Pemmican. -- Antiscorbutics. --
Cold Flour. -- Substitutes in case of Necessity. -- Amount
of Supplies. -- Clothing. -- Camp Equipage. -- Arms.
ROUTES
TO CALIFORNIA AND OREGON.
EMIGRANTS
or others desiring to make the overland journey to the Pacific
should bear in mind that there are several different routes
which may be traveled with wagons, each having its advocates
in persons directly or indirectly interested in attracting
the tide of emigration and travel over them.
Information
concerning these routes coming from strangers living or
owning property near them, from agents of steam-boats or
railways, or from other persons connected with transportation
companies, should be received with great caution, and never
without corroborating evidence from disinterested sources.
There
is no doubt that each one of these roads has its advantages
and disadvantages, but a judicious selection must depend
chiefly upon the following considerations, namely, the locality
form whence the individual is to take his departure, the
season of the year when he desires to commence his journey,
the character of his means of transportation, and the point
upon the Pacific coast that he wishes to reach.
Persons
living in the Northeastern States can, with about equal
facility and dispatch, reach the eastern terminus of any
one of the routes they may select by means of public transport.
And, as animals are much cheaper upon the frontier than
in the Eastern States, they should purchase their teams
at or near the point where the overland journey is to commence.
Those
living in the Northwestern States, having their own teams,
and wishing to go to any point north of San Francisco, will
of course make choice of the route which takes its departure
from the Missouri River.
Those
who live in the middle Western States, having their own
means of transportation, and going to any point upon the
Pacific coast, should take one of the middle routes.
Others,
who reside in the extreme Southwest, and whose destination
is south of San Francisco, should travel the southern road
running through Texas, which is the only one practicable
for comfortable winter travel. The grass upon a great portion
of this route is green during the entire winter, and snow
seldom covers it. This roads leaves the Gulf coast at Powder-horn,
on Matagorda Bay, which point is difficult of access by
land from the north, but may be reached by steamers from
New Orleans five times a week.
There
are stores at Powder-horn and Indianola where the traveler
can obtain most of the articles necessary for his journey,
but I would recommend him to supply himself before leaving
New Orleans with every thing he requires with the exception
of animals, which he will find cheaper in Texas.
This
road has received a large amount of travel since 1849, is
well tracked and defined, and, excepting about twenty miles
of "hog wallow prairie" near Powder-horn, it is
an excellent road for carriages and wagons. It passes through
a settled country for 250 miles, and within this section
supplies can be had at reasonable rates.
At
Victoria and San Antonio many fine stores will be found,
well supplied with large stocks of goods, embracing all
the articles the traveler will require.
The
next route to the north is that over which the semi-weekly
mail to California passes, and which for a great portion
of the way to New Mexico, I traveled and recommended in
1849. This road leaves the Arkansas River at Fort Smith,
to which point steamers run during the seasons of high water
in the winter and spring.
Supplies
of all descriptions necessary for the overland journey may
be procured at Fort Smith, or at Van Buren on the opposite
side of the Arkansas. Horses and cattle are cheap here.
The road, on leaving Fort Smith, passes through the Choctaw
and Chickasaw country for 180 miles, then crosses Red River
by ferry-boat at Preston, and runs through the border settlements
of northern Texas for 150 miles, within which distances
supplies may be procured at moderate prices.
This
road is accessible to persons desiring to make the entire
journey with their own transportation from Tennessee or
Mississippi, by crossing the Mississippi River at Little
Rock, and thence through Washington County, intersecting
the road at Preston. It may also be reached by taking steamers
up Red River to Shreveport or Jefferson, from either of
which places there are roads running through a populated
country, and intersecting the Fort Smith road near Preston.
This
road also unites with the San Antonio road at El Paso, and
from that point they pass together over the mountains to
Fort Yuma and to San Francisco in California.
Another
road leaves Fort Smith and runs up the south side of the
Canadian River to Santa Fe and Albuquerque in New Mexico.
This
route is set down upon most of the maps of the present day
as having been discovered and explored by various persons,
but my own name seems to have been carefully excluded from
the list. Whether this omission has been intentional or
not, I leave for the authors to determine. I shall merely
remark that I had the command and entire direction of an
expedition which in 1849 discovered, explored, located,
and marked out this identical wagon road from Fort Smith,
Arkansas, to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and that this road for
the greater portion of the distance, is the same that has
been since recommended for a Pacific railway.
This
road, near Albuquerque, unites with Captain Whipple's and
Lieutenant Beall's roads to California.
Another
road, which takes its departure from Fort Smith and passes
through the Cherokee country, is called the "Cherokee
Trail." It crosses Grand River at Fort Gibson, and
runs a little north of west to the Verdigris River, thence
up the valley of this stream on the north side for 80 miles,
when it crosses the river, and, taking a northwest course,
strikes the Arkansas River near old Fort Mann, on the Santa
Fe trace; thence it passes near the base of Pike's Peak,
and follows down Cherry Creek from its source to its confluence
with the South Platte, and from these over the mountains
into Utah, and on to California via Fort Bridger and Salt
Lake City.
For
persons who desire to go from the Southern States to the
gold diggings in the vicinity of Cherry Creek, this route
is shorter by some 300 miles than that from Fort Smith via
Fort Leavenworth. It is said to be an excellent road, and
well supplied with the requisites for encamping. It has
been traveled by large parties of California emigrants for
several years, and is well tracked and defined.
The
grass upon all the roads leaving Fort Smith is sufficiently
advanced to afford sustenance to animals by the first of
April, and from this time until winter sets in it is abundant.
The next route on the north leaves the Missouri River at
Westport, Leavenworth City, Atcheson, or from other towns
above, between either of which points and St. Louis steamers
ply during the entire summer season.
The
necessary outfit of supplies can always be procured at any
of the starting-points on the Missouri River at moderate
rates.
This
is the great emigrant route from Missouri to California
and Oregon, over which so many thousands have traveled within
the past few years. The track is broad, well worn, and can
not be mistaken. It has received the major part of the Mormon
emigration, and was traversed by the army in its march to
Utah in 1857.
At
the point where this road crosses the South Platte River,
Lieutenant Bryan's road branches off to the left, leading
through Bridger's Pass, and thence to Fort Bridger. The
Fort Kearney route to the gold region near Pike's Peak also
leaves the emigrant road at this place and runs up the South
Platte.
From
Fort Bridger there are two roads that may be traveled with
wagons in the direction of California; one passing Salt
Lake City, and the other running down Bear River to Soda
Springs, intersecting the Salt Lake City road at the City
of Rocks. Near Soda Springs the Oregon road turns to the
right, passing Fort Hall, and thence down Snake River to
Fort Wallah-Wallah. Unless travelers have business in Salt
Lake Valley, I would advise them to take the Bear River
route, as it is much shorter, and better in every respect.
The road, on leaving the Missouri River, passes for 150
miles through a settled country where grain can be purchased
cheap, and there are several stores in this section where
most of the articles required by travelers can be obtained.
Many
persons who have had much experience in prairie traveling
prefer leaving the Missouri River in March or April, and
feeding grain to their animals until the new grass appears.
The roads become muddy and heavy after the spring rains
set in, and by starting out early the worst part of the
road will be passed over before the ground becomes wet and
soft. This plan, however, should never be attempted unless
the animals are well supplied with grain, and kept in good
condition. They will eat the old grass in the spring, but
it does not, in this climate, as in Utah and New Mexico,
afford them sufficient sustenance.
The
grass, after the 1st of May, is good and abundant upon this
road as far as the South Pass, from whence there is a section
of about 50 miles where it is scarce; there is also a scarcity
upon the desert beyond the sink of the Humboldt. As large
numbers of cattle pass over the road annually, they soon
consume all the grass in these barren localities, and such
as pass late in the season are likely to suffer greatly,
and oftentimes perish from starvation. When I came over
the road in August, 1858, I seldom found myself out of sight
of dead cattle for 500 miles along the road, and this was
an unusually favorable year for grass, and before the main
body of animals had passed for that season.
Upon
the head of the Sweetwater River, and west of the South
Pass, alkaline springs are met with, which are exceedingly
poisonous to cattle and horses. They can readily be detected
by the yellowish-red color of the grass growing around them.
Animals should never be allowed to graze near them or to
drink the water.
ORGANIZATION
OF COMPANIES.
After
a particular route has been selected to make the journey
across the plains, and the requisite number have arrived
at the eastern terminus, their first business should be
to organize themselves into a company and elect a commander.
The company should be of sufficient magnitude to herd and
guard animals, and for protection against Indians.
From
50 to 70 men, properly armed and equipped, will be enough
for these purposes, and any greater number only makes the
movements of the party more cumbersome and tardy.
In
the selection of the captain, good judgment, integrity of
purpose, and practical experience are the essential requisites,
and these are indispensable to the harmony and consolidation
of the association. His duty should be to direct the order
of march, the time of starting and halting, to select the
camps, detail and give orders to guards, and, indeed, to
control and superintend all movements of the company.
An
obligation should then be drawn up and signed by all the
members of the association, wherein each one should bind
himself to abide in all cases by the orders and decisions
of the captain, and to aid him by every means in his power
in the execution of his duties; and they should also obligate
themselves to aid each other, so as to make the individual
interests of each member the common concern of the whole
company. To insure this, a fund should be raised for the
purchase of extra animals to supply the places of those
which may give out or die on the road; and if the wagon
or team of a particular member should fail and have to be
abandoned, the company should obligate themselves to transport
his luggage, and the captain should see that he has his
share of transportation equal with any other member. Thus
it will be made the interest of every member of the company
to watch over and protect the property of others as well
as his own.
In
case of failure on the part of any one to comply with the
obligations imposed by the articles of agreement after they
have been duly executed, the company should of course have
the power to punish the delinquent member, and, if necessary,
to exclude him from all the benefits of the association.
On
such a journey as this, there is much to interest and amuse
one who is fond of picturesque scenery, and of wild life
in its most primitive aspect, yet no one should attempt
it without anticipating many rough knocks and much hard
labor; every one must expect to do his share of duty faithfully
and without a murmur.
On
long and arduous expeditions men are apt to become irritable
and ill-natured, and oftentimes fancy they have more labor
imposed upon them than their comrades, and that the person
who directs the march is partial toward his favorites, etc.
That man who exercises the greatest forbearance under such
circumstances, who is cheerful, slow to take up quarrels,
and endeavors to reconcile difficulties among his companions
is deserving of all praise, and will, without doubt, contribute
largely to the success and comfort of an expedition.
The
advantages of an association such as I have mentioned are
manifestly numerous. The animals can be herded together
and guarded by the different members of the company in rotation,
thereby securing to all the opportunities of sleep and rest.
Besides, this is the only way to resist depredations of
the Indians, and to prevent their stampeding and driving
off animals; and much more efficiency is secured in every
respect, especially in crossing streams, repairing roads,
etc., etc.
Unless
a systematic organization be adopted, it is impossible for
a party of any magnitude to travel in company for any great
length of time, and for all the members to agree upon the
same arrangements in marching, camping, etc. I have several
times observed, where this has been attempted, that discords
and dissensions sooner or later arose which invariably resulted
in breaking up and separating the company.
When
a captain has once been chosen, he should be sustained in
all his decisions unless he commit some manifest outrage,
when a majority of the company can always remove him, and
put a more competent man in his place. Sometimes men may
be selected who, upon trial, do not come up to the anticipations
of those who have placed them in power, and other men will
exhibit, during the course of the march, more capacity.
Under these circumstances it will not be unwise to make
a change, the first election having been distinctly provisional.
WAGONS
AND TEAMS.
A
company having been organized, the first interest is to
procure a proper outfit of transportation and supplies for
the contemplated journey.
Wagons
should be of the simplest possible construction -- strong,
light, and made of well- seasoned timber, especially the
wheels, as the atmosphere, in the elevated and arid region
over which they have to pass, is so exceedingly dry during
the summer months that unless the wood-work is thoroughly
seasoned, they will require constant repairs to prevent
them from falling to pieces.
Wheels
made of the bois-d'arc, or Osage orangewood, are the best
for the plains, as they shrink but little, and seldom want
repairing. As, however, this wood is not easily procured
in the Northern states, white oak answers a very good purpose
if well seasoned.
Spring
wagons made in Concord, New Hampshire, are used to transport
passengers and the mails upon some of the routes across
the plains, and they are said, by those who have used them,
to be much superior to any others. They are made of the
close-grained oak that grows in a high northern latitude,
and well seasoned.
The
pole of the wagon should have a joint where it enters the
hounds, to prevent the weight from coming upon it and breaking
the hounds in passing short and abrupt holes in the road.
The
perch or coupling-pole should be shifting or movable, as,
in the event of the loss of a wheel, an axle, or other accident
rendering it necessary to abandon the wagon, a temporary
cart may be constructed out of the remaining portion. The
tires should be examined just before commencing the journey,
and if not perfectly snug, reset.
One
of the chief causes of accidents to carriages upon the plains
arises from the nuts coming off the numerous bolts that
secure the running gearing. To prevent this, the ends of
all the bolts should be riveted; it is seldom necessary
to take them off, and when this is required the ends of
the bolts may easily be filed away.
Wagons
with six mules should never, on a long journey over the
prairies, be loaded with over 2000 pounds, unless grain
is transported, when an additional thousand pounds may be
taken, provided it is fed out daily to the team. When grass
constitutes the only forage, 2000 pounds is deemed a sufficient
load. I regard our government wagons as unnecessarily heavy
for six mules. There is sufficient material in them to sustain
a burden of 4000 pounds, but they are seldom loaded with
more than half that weight. Every wagon should be furnished
with substantial bows and double osnaburg covers, to protect
its contents from the sun and weather.
There
has been much discussion regarding the relative merits of
mules and oxen for prairie traveling, and the question is
yet far from being settled. Upon good firm roads, in a populated
country, where grain can be procured, I should unquestionably
give the preference to mules, as they travel faster, and
endure the heat of the summer much better than oxen; and
if the journey be not over 1000 miles, and the grass abundant,
even without grain, I think mules would be preferable. But
when the march is to extend 1500 or 2000 miles, or over
a rough sandy or muddy road, I believe young oxen will endure
better than mules; they will, if properly managed, keep
in better condition, and perform the journey in an equally
brief space of time. Besides, they are much more economical,
a team of six mules costing six hundred dollars, while an
eight-ox team only costs upon the frontier about two hundred
dollars. Oxen are much less liable to be stampeded and driven
off by Indians, and can be pursued and overtaken by horsemen;
and, finally, they can, if necessary, be used for beef.
In
Africa oxen are used as saddle animals, and it is said that
they perform good service in this way. This will probably
be regarded by our people as a very undignified and singular
method of locomotion, but, in the absence of any other means
of transportation upon a long journey, a saddle-ox might
be found serviceable.
Andersson,
in his work on Southeastern Africa, says: "A short,
strong stick, of peculiar shape, is forced through the cartilage
of the nose of the ox and to either end of this stick is
attached (in bridle fashion) a tough leathern thong. From
the extreme tenderness of the nose he is now more easily
managed." "Hans presented me with an ox called
'Spring,' which I afterward rode upward of two thousand
miles. On the day of our departure he mounted us all on
oxen, and a curious sight it was to see some of the men
take their seats who had never before ridden on ox-back.
It is impossible to guide an ox as one would guide a horse,
for in the attempt to do so you would instantly jerk the
stick out of his nose, which at once deprives you of every
control over the beast; but by pulling both sides of the
bridles at the same time, and toward the side you wish his
to take, he is easily managed.*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*A
ring instead of the stick put through the cartilage so the
nose would obviate this difficulty. --AUTHOR.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Your
seat is not less awkward and difficult; for the skin of
the ox, unlike that of the horse, is loose, and notwithstanding
your saddle may be tightly girthed, you keep rocking to
and fro like a child in a cradle. A few days, however, enables
a person to acquire a certain steadiness, and long habit
will do the rest."
"Ox
traveling, when once a man becomes accustomed to it, is
not so disagreeable as might be expected, particularly if
one succeeds in obtaining a tractable animal. On emergencies,
an ox can be made to proceed at a tolerable quick pace;
for, though his walk is only about three miles an hour at
an average, he may be made to perform double that distance
in the same time. Mr. Galton once accomplished 24 miles
in four hours, and that, too, through heavy sand!"
Cows
will be found very useful upon long journeys when the rate
of travel is slow, as they furnish milk, and in emergencies
they may be worked in wagons. I once saw a small cow yoked
beside a large ox, and driven about six hundred miles attached
to a loaded wagon, and she performed her part equally well
with the ox. It has been by no means a unusual thing for
emigrant travelers to work cows in their teams.
The
inhabitants of Pembina, on Red River, work a single ox harnessed
in shafts like a horse, and they transport a thousand pounds
in a rude cart made entirely of wood, without a particle
of iron. One man drives and takes the entire charge of eight
and ten of these teams upon long journeys. This is certainly
a very economical method of transportation.
STORES
AND PROVISIONS.
Supplies
for a march should be put up in the most secure, compact
and portable shape.
Bacon
should be packed in strong sacks of a hundred pounds each;
or, in very hot climates, put in boxes and surrounded with
bran, which in a great measure prevents the fat from melting
away.
If
pork be used, in order to avoid transporting about forty
per cent. of useless weight, it should be taken out of the
barrels and packed like the bacon; then so placed in the
bottom of the wagons as to keep it cool. The pork, if well
cured, will keep several months in this way, but bacon is
preferable.
Flour
should be packed in stout double canvas sacks well sewed,
a hundred pounds in each sack.
Butter
may be preserved by boiling it thoroughly, and skimming
off the scum as it raises to the top until it is quite clear
like oil. It is then placed in canisters and soldered up.
This mode of preserving butter has been adopted in the hot
climate of southern Texas, and it found to keep sweet for
a great length of time, and its flavor is but little impaired
by the process.
Sugar
may be well secured in India-rubber or gutta-percha sacks,
or so placed in the wagon as not to risk getting wet.
Desiccated
or dried vegetables are almost equal to the fresh, and are
put up in such a compact and portable form as easily to
be transported over the plains. They have been extensively
used in the Crimean war, and by our own army in Utah, and
have been very generally approved. They are prepared by
cutting the fresh vegetables into thin slices and subjecting
them to a very powerful press, which removes the juice and
leaves a solid cake, which, after having been thoroughly
dried in an oven, becomes almost as hard as a rock. A small
piece of this, about half the size of a man's hand, when
boiled, swells up so as to fill a vegetable dish, and is
sufficient for four men. It is believed that the antiscorbutic
properties of vegetables are not impaired by the desiccation,
and they will keep for years if not exposed to dampness.
Canned vegetables are very good for campaigning, but are
not so portable as when put up in the other form. The desiccated
vegetables used in our army have been prepared by Chollet
and Co., 46 Rue Richer, Paris. There is an agency for them
in New York. I regard these compressed vegetables as the
best preparation for prairie traveling that has yet been
discovered. A single ration weighs, before being boiled,
only an ounce, and a cubic yard contains 16,000 rations.
In making up their outfit for the plains, men are very prone
to overload their teams with a great variety of useless
articles. It is a good rule to carry nothing more than is
absolutely necessary for use upon the journey. One can not
expect, with the limited allowance of transportation that
emigrants usually have, to indulge in luxuries upon such
expeditions, and articles for use in California can be purchased
there at less cost than that of overland transport.
The
allowance of provisions for men in marching should be much
greater than when they take no exercise. The army ration
I have always found insufficient for soldiers who perform
hard service, yet it is ample for them when in quarters.
The
following table shows the amount of subsistence consumed
per day by each man of Dr. Rae's party, in his spring journey
to the Arctic regions of North America in 1854:
Pemmican
1.25 lbs. Biscuit 0.25 " Edward's preserved potatoes
0.10 " Flour 0.33 " Tea 0.03 " Sugar 0.14
" Grease or alcohol, for cooking 0.25 "
This
allowance of a little over two pounds of the most nutritious
food was found barely sufficient to subsist the men in that
cold climate.
The
pemmican, which constitutes almost the entire diet of the
Fur Company's men in the Northwest, is prepared as follows:
The buffalo meat is cut into thin flakes, and hung up to
dry in the sun or before a slow fire; it is then pounded
between two stones and reduced to a powder; this powder
is placed in a bag of the animal's hide, with the hair on
the outside; melted grease is then poured into it, and the
bag sewn up. It can be eaten raw, and many prefer it so.
Mixed with a little flour and boiled, it is a very wholesome
and exceedingly nutritious food, and will keep fresh for
a long time.
I
would advise all persons who travel for any considerable
time through a country where they can procure no vegetables
to carry with them some antiscorbutics, and if they can
not transport desiccated or canned vegetables, citric acid
answers a good purpose, and is very portable. When mixed
with sugar and water, with a few drops of the essence of
lemon, it is difficult to distinguish it from lemonade.
Wild onions are excellent as antiscorbutics; also wild grapes
and greens. An infusion of hemlock leaves is also said to
be an antidote to scurvy.
The
most portable and simple preparation of subsistence that
I know of, and which is used extensively by the Mexicans
and Indians, is called "cold flour." It is made
by parching corn, and pounding it in a mortar to the consistency
of coarse meal; a little sugar and cinnamon added makes
it quite palatable. When the traveler becomes hungry or
thirsty, a little of the flour is mixed with water and drunk.
It is an excellent article for a traveler who desires to
go the greatest length of time upon the smallest amount
of transportation. It is said that half a bushel is sufficient
to subsist a man thirty days.
Persons
undergoing severe labor, and driven to great extremities
for food, will derive sustenance from various sources that
would never to occur to them under ordinary circumstances.
In passing over the Rocky Mountains during the winter of
1857-8, our supplies of provisions were entirely consumed
eighteen days before reaching the first settlements in New
Mexico, and we were obliged to resort to a variety of expedients
to supply the deficiency. Our poor mules were fast failing
and dropping down from exhaustion in the deep snows, and
our only dependence for the means of sustaining life was
upon these starved animals as they became unserviceable
and could go no farther. We had no salt, sugar, coffee,
or tobacco, which, at a time when men are performing the
severest labor that the human system is capable of enduring,
was a great privation. In this destitute condition we found
a substitute for tobacco in the bark of the red willow,
which grows upon many of the mountain streams in that vicinity.
The outer bark is first removed with a knife, after which
the inner bark is scraped up into ridges around the sticks,
and held in the fire until it is thoroughly roasted, when
it is taken off the stick, pulverized in the hand, and is
ready for smoking. It has the narcotic properties of the
tobacco, and is quite agreeable to the taste and smell.
The sumach leaf is also used by the Indians in the same
way, and has a similar taste to the willow bark. A decoction
of the dried wild or horse mint, which we found abundant
under the snow, was quite palatable, and answered instead
of coffee. It dries up in that climate, but does not lose
its flavor. We suffered greatly for the want of salt, but,
by burning the outside of our mule steaks, and sprinkling
a little gunpowder upon them, it did not require a very
extensive stretch of the imagination to fancy the presence
of both salt and pepper. We tried the meat of horse, colt,
and mules, all of which were in a starved condition, and
of course not very tender, juicy, or nutritious. We consumed
the enormous amount of from five to six pounds of this meat
per man daily, but continued to grow weak and thin, until,
at the expiration of twelve days, we were able to perform
but little labor, and were continually craving for meat.
The
allowance of provisions for each grown person, to make the
journey from the Missouri River to California, should suffice
for 110 days. The following is deemed requisite, viz.: 150
lbs. of flour, or its equivalent in hard bread; 25 lbs.
of bacon or pork, and enough fresh beef to be driven on
the hoof to make up the meat component of the ration; 15
lbs. of coffee, and 25 lbs. of sugar; also a quantity of
saleratus or yeast powders for making bread, and salt and
pepper.
These
are the chief articles of subsistence necessary for the
trip, and they should be used with economy, reserving a
good portion for the western half of the journey. Heretofore
many of the California emigrants have improvidently exhausted
their stocks of provisions before reaching their journey's
end, and have, in many cases, been obliged to pay the most
exorbitant prices in making up the deficiency.
It
is true that if person choose to pass through Salt Lake
City, and the Mormons happen to be in an amiable mood, supplies
may sometimes be procured from them; but those who have
visited them well know how little reliance is to be placed
upon their hospitality or spirit of accommodation.
I
once traveled with a party of New Yorkers en route to California.
They were perfectly ignorant of every thing relating to
this kind of campaigning, and had overloaded their wagons
with almost every thing except the very articles most important
and necessary; the consequence was, that they exhausted
their teams, and were obliged to throw away the greater
part of their loading. They soon learned that Champagne,
East India sweetmeats,,olives, etc., etc., were not the
most useful articles for a prairie tour. CLOTHING.
A
suitable dress for prairie traveling is of great import
to health and comfort. Cotton or linen fabrics do not sufficiently
protect the body against the direct rays of the sun at midday,
nor against rains or sudden changes of temperature. Wool,
being a non-conductor, is the best material for this mode
of locomotion, and should always be adopted for the plains.
The coat should be short and stout, the shirt of red or
blue flannel, such as can be found in almost all the shops
on the frontier: this, in warm weather, answers for an outside
garment. The pants should be of thick and soft woolen material,
and it is well to have them re- enforced on the inside,
where they come in contact with the saddle, with soft buckskin,
which makes them more durable and comfortable.
Woolen
socks and stout boots, coming up well at the knees, and
made large, so as to admit the pants, will be found the
best for horsemen, and they guard against rattlesnake bites.
In
traveling through deep snow during very cold weather in
winter, moccasins are preferable to boots or shoes, as being
more pliable, and allowing a freer circulation of the blood.
In crossing the Rocky Mountains in the winter, the weather
being intensely cold, I wore two pairs of woolen socks,
and a square piece of thick blanket sufficient to cover
the feet and ankles, over which were drawn a pair of thick
buckskin moccasins, and the whole enveloped in a pair of
buffalo-skin boots with the hair inside, made open in the
front and tied with buckskin strings. At the same time I
wore a pair of elkskin pants, which most effectually prevented
the air from penetrating to the skin, and made an excellent
defense against brush and thorns.
My
men, who were dressed in the regulation clothing, wore out
their pants and shoes before we reached the summit of the
mountains, and many of them had their feet badly frozen
in consequence. They mended their shoes with pieces of leather
cut from the saddle-skirts as long as they lasted, and,
when this material was gone, they covered the entire shoe
with green beeve or mule hide, drawn together and sewed
upon the top, with the hair inside, which protected the
upper as well as the sole leather. This sewing was done
with an awl and buckskin strings. These simple expedients
contributed greatly to the comfort of the party; and, indeed,
I am by no means sure that they did not, in our straitened
condition, without the transportation necessary for carrying
disabled men, save the lives of some of them. Without the
awl and buckskins we should have been unable to have repaired
the shoes. They should never be forgotten in making up the
outfit for a prairie expedition.
We
also experienced great inconvenience and pain by the reflection
of the sun's rays from the snow upon our eyes, and some
of the party became nearly snow-blind. Green or blue glasses,
inclosed in a wire net-work, are an effectual protection
to the eyes; but in the absence of these, the skin around
the eyes and upon the nose should be blackened with wet
powder or charcoal, which will afford great relief.
In the summer season shoes are much better for footmen than
boots, as they are lighter, and do not cramp the ankles;
the soles should be broad, so as to allow a square, firm
tread, without distorting or pinching the feet.
The
following list of articles is deemed a sufficient outfit
of one man upon a three months' expedition, viz.:
2
blue or red flannel overshirts, open in front, with buttons.
2 woolen undershirts. 2 pairs thick cotton drawers. 4 pairs
woolen socks. 2 pairs cotton socks. 4 colored silk handkerchiefs.
2 pairs stout shoes, for footmen. 1 pair boots, for horsemen.
1 pair shoes, for horsemen. 3 towels. 1 gutta percha poncho.
1 broad-brimmed hat of soft felt. 1 comb and brush. 2 tooth-brushes.
1 pound Castile soap. 3 pounds bar soap for washing clothes.
1 belt-knife and small whetstone. Stout linen thread, large
needles, a bit of beeswax, a few buttons, paper of pins,
and a thimble, all contained in a small buckskin or stout
cloth bag.
The
foregoing articles, with the coat and overcoat, complete
the wardrobe.
CAMP
EQUIPAGE.
The
bedding for each person should consist of two blankets,
a comforter, and a pillow, and a gutta percha or painted
canvas cloth to spread beneath the bed upon the ground,
and to contain it when rolled up for transportation.
Every
mess of six or eight persons will require a wrought-iron
camp kettle, large enough for boiling meat and making soup;
a coffee-pot and cups of heavy tin, with the handles riveted
on; tin plates, frying and bake pans of wrought iron, the
latter for baking bread and roasting coffee. Also a mess
pan of heavy tin or wrought iron for mixing bread and other
culinary purposes; knives, forks, and spoons; an extra camp
kettle; tin or gutta percha bucket for water -- wood, being
liable to shrink and fall to pieces, is not deemed suitable;
an axe, hatchet, and spade will also be needed, with a mallet
for driving picket-pins. Matches should be carried in bottles
and corked tight, so as to exclude the moisture.
A
little blue mass, quinine, opium, and some cathartic medicine,
put up in doses for adults, will suffice for the medicine
chest.
Each
ox wagon should be provided with a covered tar-bucket, filled
with a mixture of tar or resin and grease, two bows extra,
six S's, and six open links for repairing chains. Every
set of six wagons should have a tongue, coupling pole, king-bolt,
and pair of hounds extra.
Every
set of six mule wagons should be furnished with five pairs
of hames, two double trees, four whipple-trees, and two
pairs of lead bars extra.
Two
lariats will be needed for every horse and mule, as one
generally wears out before reaching the end of a long journey.
They will be found useful in crossing deep streams, and
in letting wagons down steep hills and mountains; also in
repairing broken wagons. Lariats made of hemp are the best.
One
of the most indispensable articles to the outfit of the
prairie traveler is buckskin. For repairing harness, saddles,
bridles, and numerous other purposes of daily necessity,
the awl and buckskin will be found in constant requisition.
ARMS.
Every
man who goes into the Indian country should be armed with
a rifle and revolver, and he should never, either in camp
or out of it, lose sight of them. When not on the march,
they should be placed in such a position that they can be
seized at an instant's warning; and when moving about outside
the camp, the revolver should invariably be worn in the
belt, as the person does not know at what moment they may
have a use for it.
A
great diversity of opinion obtains regarding the kind of
rifle that is the most efficient and best adapted to Indian
warfare, and the question is perhaps as yet from being settled
to the satisfaction of all. A large majority of men prefer
the breech-loading arm, but there are those who still adhere
tenaciously to the old-fashioned muzzle-loading rifle as
preferable to any of the modern inventions. Among these
may be mentioned the border hunters and mountaineers, who
can not be persuaded to use any other than the Hawkins rifle,
for the reason that they know nothing about the merits of
any others. My own experience has forced me to the conclusion
that the breech-loading arm possesses great advantages over
the muzzle-loading, for the reason that it can be charged
and fired with much greater rapidity.
Colt's
revolving pistol is very generally admitted, both in Europe
and America, to be the most efficient arm of its kind known
at the present day. As the same principles are involved
in the fabrication of his breech-loading rifle as are found
in the pistol, the conviction to me is irresistible, that,
if one arm is worthy of consideration, the other is equally
so. For my own part, I look upon Colt's new patent rifles
as a most excellent arm for border services. It gives six
shots in more rapid succession than any other rifle I know
of, and these, if properly expended, are oftentimes sufficient
to decide a contest; moreover, it is the most reliable and
certain weapon to fire that I have ever used, and I can
not resist the force of my conviction that, if I were alone
upon the prairies, and expected an attack from a body of
Indians, I am not acquainted with any arm I would as soon
have in my hands as this.
The
army and navy revolvers have both been used in our army,
but the officers are not united in opinion in regard to
their relative merits. I prefer the large army size, for
reasons which will be given hereafter.