The Young Alaskans on the Missouri by Emerson Hough (world best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Emerson Hough
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âThey were not very far from the Mandan villages. Quite a settlement this was, in these partsânot mentioning nine deserted villages inside of sixty miles belowâtwo Mandan villages, built with the Mandan dirt-covered lodges, like those of the Rees; and besides that, villages of Sioux and Gros Ventres, and of a band they called the Watasoons, and seventy lodges of Crees and Assiniboines who came in later and the fierce Minnetareesâplenty of savages to warrant the expedition in taking no chances.â
âIâve read that the Indians at first were not so friendly,â said Rob. âThere were British traders among them, werenât there?â
âOh yes, the Northwest Fur Company was in there, and an Irishman by the name of McCracken was on the ground at the time. Alexander Henry got there in 1806, you know. Now, Lewis sent out a note by McCracken to the agent at Fort Assiniboine. Those traders were none too friendly, and tried to stir up trouble. Two more of the Norâwesters, Larocque and McKenzie, came in, with an interpreter and four men, and the interpreter, LaFrance, took it on him to speak sneeringly of the Americans. It did not take Captain Lewis long to call him to account.â
âWell, our fellows were up in there all alone, werenât they?â exclaimed Jesse.
âThey certainly were, but they held their fort; and they held all the Northwestern country for us. As soon as the Northwest Fur Company found out that Lewis and Clark intended to cross the Rockies to the Columbia, they sent word East, and that company sent one of their best men, Simon Fraser, to ascend the Saskatchewan and beat the Americans in on the Columbia. But he himself was beaten in that great race by about a couple of years! So we forged the chain that was to hold the Oregon country to the United States afterward. Oh yes, our young captains had a big game to play, and they played it beautifully.
âThey always talked peace among these Mandans and others, because they wanted the Missouri River opened to the American fur trade. They waited around, and held talks, and swapped tobacco for corn, and the American blacksmiths made for them any number of axes and hatchets and other things. By and by the Indians began to figure that they were more apt to get plenty of goods up the Missouri from the Americans than overland from the British traders. Do you see how that began to work out? Oh, our boys knew what they were about, all right. And the result was that our fur trade swept up that river like an army with banners as soon as Lewis and Clark got back home. In a few years we had a hundred and forty fur trading posts on the Missouri and its upper tributaries, and from these our bold traders pushed out by pack train into every corner of the Rocky Mountains.â
âGee!â said Jesse, in his frequent and not elegant slang. âGee! Those were the days!â
âRight you areâthose were the days! Those were the great days of adventure and romance and exploration. It was through the fur trade that we explored the Rocky Mountains. Canât you see our men of the fur posts, paddling, rowing, sailing, trackingâgetting up the Missouri? Great days, yes, Jesseâgreat days indeed.â
âI wish we had a picture of that old stockade!â sighed John.
âNone exists. Not a splinter of it remains; it was burned down in 1805, and the ruins later engulfed by the river. But I fancy we can see it, from the description. So there our party spent that first winter, and long and cold enough it was.
âThey had to hunt or starve, but soon their buffalo and elk and deer and antelope got very thin, mere skin and bones. It was bitter cold, and the hunters came in frozen time and againâa hard, bare, bitter fight it was. From all accounts, it was an old-fashioned winter, for the mercuryâthey spelled it âmerkeryââfroze solid in a few minutes one day when they set the thermometer out of doors!â
âAnd it must have been cool inside the houses, too,â ventured John. âBut of course they had to do their writing and fix up their things.â
âQuite soâthey had to get their specimens ready to ship down the river in the spring. Then they had to make six canoes for use the next year, and as they found the timber unsuitable near the river, the men had to camp out where they found the trees, and then they carried the canoes by hand over to the river, a mile and a half.
âThey sent the big flatboat, or bateau, down the river, and thirteen men went with it. The two perogues and the six new cottonwood dugouts they took on west, up the river, when they started, on March 7, 1805, to finish their journey across the continent. Of these men, the party who went through, there were thirty-one; and there was one woman.â
âI know!â said Jesse. âSacĂĄgawea!â
âRight! SacĂĄgawea. Make it two words. âWeaâ means âwoman.â âBird Womanâ was her nameâSacĂĄga Wea. And of the entire party, that Indian girlâshe was only a girl, though lately married and though she started west with a very young babyâwas worth more than any man. If it had not been for her they never would have got across.
âYou see, up to this place, the Mandan towns, they had some idea of the country, and so also they had beyond here as far as the mouth of the Yellowstoneâthatâs two hundred and eighty-eight miles above here. But beyond the mouth of the Roâ Jauneâit even then was called Roche Jaune, or Yellow Stone, by the early French voyageursâit was said the foot of white man never then had passed. There was no map, no report or rumor to help them. If they had a guide, it couldnât be a white man.
âNow among the Mandans they found a man called Chaboneau, or Charboneau, a Frenchman, married to two Indian women, one of whom was SacĂĄgawea. He had bought her from the Minnetarees, where she was a captive.
âJust think how the natives traveled in those days! You know the Sioux hunted on the upper Platte, as far as the Rockies. Well, this Minnetaree war party had been west of the Rockies, or in the big bend of the Rockies, at the very head of the Missouri River, among the Shoshonis. They took SacĂĄgawea prisoner when she was a little girl, and brought her east, all the way over to Dakota, here. But she was Indianâshe did not forget what she saw. She knew about the Yellowstone, and the Three Forks of the Missouri.
âWell now, whether it was because Chaboneau, the new interpreter, wanted her along, or whether Lewis and Clark figured she might be useful, SacĂĄgawea went along, all the way to the Pacificâand all the way back to the Mandans again. Be sure, her husband did not beat her any more, while they were with the white captains. In fact, I rather think they made a pet of her. They found they could rely on her memory and her judgment.
âSo the real guide they had in the nameless and unknown country was a Shoshoni Indian girl. It looked almost like something providential, the way they found her here, ready and waiting for themâthe only possible guide in all that country. And to-day, such was the chivalry and justice of those two captains of our Armyâand such the chivalry and justice of the men of Oregon and the enthusiasm of the women of Oregonâyou may see in Portland, near the sea to which she helped lead our flag, the bronze statue of SacĂĄgawea, the Indian girl. That, at least, is one fine thing we have done in memory of the Indian.
âAnd within the last two or three years a bronze statue of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark has been erected at Charlotteville, Virginia, near the home of Meriwether Lewisâthat was at Ivy station, to-day only a scattered settlement. And away down in Tennessee, in the forest of Lewis County, named after him, I have stood by the monument that state erected over the little-known and tragic grave of Captain Meriwether Lewisâfar enough from the grave of the poor Indian girl who worshiped him more than she could her worthless husband.
âNo one knows where SacĂĄgawea was buried, though her history was traced a little way after the return to this country. She was buried perhaps in the air, on a scaffold, and left forgotten, as Indian women were, and we no more can stand by her grave than we can be sure we stand on the exact spot where Will Clark built his winter quarters among the Mandans.
âGreat days, boysâyes, great days, and good people in them, too. So now I want you to study a little here.
âLook back down the river, which has seemed so long for you. To-morrow will be the Fourth of July. It was Christmas that Lewis and Clark celebrated with their men in their stockade.â
Their new friend had for the most part been silent as he listened to this counselor of the party. He now spoke.
âThen I take it that you are going on up the river soon, sir?â said he. âI wish you good journey through the cow country. Youâll find the river narrower, with fewer islands, so I hear; and I should think it became swifter, butâI donât know.â
âI was going to come to that,â said Uncle Dick, turning to Rob, John, and Jesse. âWhat do you think? Iâd like you to get an idea of the river and all it meant, but we have only the summer and early fall to use. I donât doubt we could plug on up with the motors, and get a long way above Great Falls, but about the time we got to where we could have some fun fishing or maybe shooting, weâd have to start east by rail. So Iâd planned that we might make a big jump here.â
âHow do you mean, sir?â Rob asked.
âChange our transportation.â
âOhâbecause Lewis and Clark changed here?â
âNatural place for us to change, if we do at all,â said Uncle Dick. âWe ought to stick as close to the river as we can, and as a matter of fact we have covered the most monotonous part of it. But we had to do that, for there was no other way to get here and still hang anywhere near to the river. And until we got here we struck no westbound railroad that would advance us on our journey.
âHere we could get up the Yellowstone by rail, but we are working on the Missouri. If we run on by motor car up to Buford, there we can get by rail over to the Great Falls, and still hang closer to the river; although, of course, weâll not be following it.â
âBut whatâll we do with our boat?â began Jesse, ruefully. âHate to leave the little old Adventurer.â
âWell, now,â answered his uncle. âWe couldnât so well take her along, could we?â
âIâd like mighty well to buy her,â interrupted the editor. âThat is, if you care to sell her.â
âI never knew my boys to sell any of their sporting equipment,â said the other. âBut I expect theyâd give it to you, right enough. Eh, boys?â
They looked from one to another. âIf the gentleman wanted her,â began Rob, at last, âand if weâve done with her, I donât see why we couldnât. But I think we ought to take the motors along as far as we can, because we might need them.â
âGood idea,â Uncle Dick nodded. âWe can get a trailer here, canât we?â he asked of their friend.
âSure; and a good car; too. Iâll drive you up to Buford, myself, for the fun of
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