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Scenes at Fort Laramie
Looking back, after the
expiration of a year, upon Fort Laramie and
its inmates, they seem less like a reality
than like some fanciful picture of the olden
time; so different was the scene from any
which this tamer side of the world can
present. Tall Indians, enveloped in their
white buffalo robes, were striding across
the area or reclining at full length on the
low roofs of the buildings which inclosed
it. Numerous squaws, gayly bedizened, sat
grouped in front of the apartments they
occupied; their mongrel offspring, restless
and vociferous, rambled in every direction
through the fort; and the trappers, traders,
and engages of the establishment were busy
at their labor or their amusements.
We were met at the gate, but by no means
cordially welcomed. Indeed, we seemed
objects of some distrust and suspicion until
Henry Chatillon explained that we were not
traders, and we, in confirmation, handed to
the bourgeois a letter of introduction from
his principals. He took it, turned it upside
down, and tried hard to read it; but his
literary attainments not being adequate to
the task, he applied for relief to the
clerk, a sleek, smiling Frenchman, named
Montalon. The letter read, Bordeaux (the
bourgeois) seemed gradually to awaken to a
sense of what was expected of him. Though
not deficient in hospitable intentions, he
was wholly unaccustomed to act as master of
ceremonies. Discarding all formalities of
reception, he did not honor us with a single
word, but walked swiftly across the area,
while we followed in some admiration to a
railing and a flight of steps opposite the
entrance. He signed to us that we had better
fasten our horses to the railing; then he
walked up the steps, tramped along a rude
balcony, and kicking open a door displayed a
large room, rather more elaborately finished
than a barn. For furniture it had a rough
bedstead, but no bed; two chairs, a chest of
drawers, a tin pail to hold water, and a
board to cut tobacco upon. A brass crucifix
hung on the wall, and close at hand a recent
scalp, with hair full a yard long, was
suspended from a nail. I shall again have
occasion to mention this dismal trophy, its
history being connected with that of our
subsequent proceedings.
This apartment, the best in Fort Laramie,
was that usually occupied by the legitimate
bourgeois, Papin; in whose absence the
command devolved upon Bordeaux. The latter,
a stout, bluff little fellow, much inflated
by a sense of his new authority, began to
roar for buffalo robes. These being brought
and spread upon the floor formed our beds;
much better ones than we had of late been
accustomed to. Our arrangements made, we
stepped out to the balcony to take a more
leisurely survey of the long looked-for
haven at which we had arrived at last.
Beneath us was the square area surrounded by
little rooms, or rather cells, which opened
upon it. These were devoted to various
purposes, but served chiefly for the
accommodation of the men employed at the
fort, or of the equally numerous squaws,
whom they were allowed to maintain in it.
Opposite to us rose the blockhouse above the
gateway; it was adorned with a figure which
even now haunts my memory; a horse at full
speed, daubed upon the boards with red
paint, and exhibiting a degree of skill
which might rival that displayed by the
Indians in executing similar designs upon
their robes and lodges. A busy scene was
enacting in the area. The wagons of Vaskiss,
an old trader, were about to set out for a
remote post in the mountains, and the
Canadians were going through their
preparations with all possible bustle, while
here and there an Indian stood looking on
with imperturbable gravity.
Fort Laramie is one of the posts established
by the American Fur Company, who well-nigh
monopolize the Indian trade of this whole
region. Here their officials rule with an
absolute sway; the arm of the United States
has little force; for when we were there,
the extreme outposts of her troops were
about seven hundred miles to the eastward.
The little fort is built of bricks dried in
the sun, and externally is of an oblong
form, with bastions of clay, in the form of
ordinary blockhouses, at two of the corners.
The walls are about fifteen feet high, and
surmounted by a slender palisade. The roofs
of the apartments within, which are built
close against the walls, serve the purpose
of a banquette. Within, the fort is divided
by a partition; on one side is the square
area surrounded by the storerooms, offices,
and apartments of the inmates; on the other
is the corral, a narrow place, encompassed
by the high clay walls, where at night, or
in presence of dangerous Indians, the horses
and mules of the fort are crowded for
safe-keeping. The main entrance has two
gates, with an arched passage intervening. A
little square window, quite high above the
ground, opens laterally from an adjoining
chamber into this passage; so that when the
inner gate is closed and barred, a person
without may still hold communication with
those within through this narrow aperture.
This obviates the necessity of admitting
suspicious Indians, for purposes of trading,
into the body of the fort; for when danger
is apprehended, the inner gate is shut fast,
and all traffic is carried on by means of
the little window. This precaution, though
highly necessary at some of the company's
posts, is now seldom resorted to at Fort
Laramie; where, though men are frequently
killed in its neighborhood, no apprehensions
are now entertained of any general designs
of hostility from the Indians.
We did not long enjoy our new quarters
undisturbed. The door was silently pushed
open, and two eyeballs and a visage as black
as night looked in upon us; then a red arm
and shoulder intruded themselves, and a tall
Indian, gliding in, shook us by the hand,
grunted his salutation, and sat down on the
floor. Others followed, with faces of the
natural hue; and letting fall their heavy
robes from their shoulders, they took their
seats, quite at ease, in a semicircle before
us. The pipe was now to be lighted and
passed round from one to another; and this
was the only entertainment that at present
they expected from us. These visitors were
fathers, brothers, or other relatives of the
squaws in the fort, where they were
permitted to remain, loitering about in
perfect idleness. All those who smoked with
us were men of standing and repute. Two or
three others dropped in also; young fellows
who neither by their years nor their
exploits were entitled to rank with the old
men and warriors, and who, abashed in the
presence of their superiors, stood aloof,
never withdrawing their eyes from us. Their
cheeks were adorned with vermilion, their
ears with pendants of shell, and their necks
with beads. Never yet having signalized
themselves as hunters, or performed the
honorable exploit of killing a man, they
were held in slight esteem, and were
diffident and bashful in proportion. Certain
formidable inconveniences attended this
influx of visitors. They were bent on
inspecting everything in the room; our
equipments and our dress alike underwent
their scrutiny; for though the contrary has
been carelessly asserted, few beings have
more curiosity than Indians in regard to
subjects within their ordinary range of
thought. As to other matters, indeed, they
seemed utterly indifferent. They will not
trouble themselves to inquire into what they
cannot comprehend, but are quite contented
to place their hands over their mouths in
token of wonder, and exclaim that it is
"great medicine." With this comprehensive
solution, an Indian never is at a loss. He
never launches forth into speculation and
conjecture; his reason moves in its beaten
track. His soul is dormant; and no exertions
of the missionaries, Jesuit or Puritan, of
the Old World or of the New, have as yet
availed to rouse it.
As we were looking, at sunset, from the
wall, upon the wild and desolate plains that
surround the fort, we observed a cluster of
strange objects like scaffolds rising in the
distance against the red western sky. They
bore aloft some singular looking burdens;
and at their foot glimmered something white
like bones. This was the place of sepulture
of some Dakota chiefs, whose remains their
people are fond of placing in the vicinity
of the fort, in the hope that they may thus
be protected from violation at the hands of
their enemies. Yet it has happened more than
once, and quite recently, that war parties
of the Crow Indians, ranging through the
country, have thrown the bodies from the
scaffolds, and broken them to pieces amid
the yells of the Dakotas, who remained pent
up in the fort, too few to defend the
honored relics from insult. The white
objects upon the ground were buffalo skulls,
arranged in the mystic circle commonly seen
at Indian places of sepulture upon the
prairie.
We soon discovered, in the twilight, a band
of fifty or sixty horses approaching the
fort. These were the animals belonging to
the establishment; who having been sent out
to feed, under the care of armed guards, in
the meadows below, were now being driven
into the corral for the night. A little gate
opened into this inclosure; by the side of
it stood one of the guards, an old Canadian,
with gray bushy eyebrows, and a dragoon
pistol stuck into his belt; while his
comrade, mounted on horseback, his rifle
laid across the saddle in front of him, and
his long hair blowing before his swarthy
face, rode at the rear of the disorderly
troop, urging them up the ascent. In a
moment the narrow corral was thronged with
the half-wild horses, kicking, biting, and
crowding restlessly together.
The discordant jingling of a bell, rung by a
Canadian in the area, summoned us to supper.
This sumptuous repast was served on a rough
table in one of the lower apartments of the
fort, and consisted of cakes of bread and
dried buffalo meat—an excellent thing for
strengthening the teeth. At this meal were
seated the bourgeois and superior
dignitaries of the establishment, among whom
Henry Chatillon was worthily included. No
sooner was it finished, than the table was
spread a second time (the luxury of bread
being now, however, omitted), for the
benefit of certain hunters and trappers of
an inferior standing; while the ordinary
Canadian engages were regaled on dried meat
in one of their lodging rooms. By way of
illustrating the domestic economy of Fort
Laramie, it may not be amiss to introduce in
this place a story current among the men
when we were there.
There was an old man named Pierre, whose
duty it was to bring the meat from the
storeroom for the men. Old Pierre, in the
kindness of his heart, used to select the
fattest and the best pieces for his
companions. This did not long escape the
keen-eyed bourgeois, who was greatly
disturbed at such improvidence, and cast
about for some means to stop it. At last he
hit on a plan that exactly suited him. At
the side of the meat-room, and separated
from it by a clay partition, was another
compartment, used for the storage of furs.
It had no other communication with the fort,
except through a square hole in the
partition; and of course it was perfectly
dark. One evening the bourgeois, watching
for a moment when no one observed him,
dodged into the meat-room, clambered through
the hole, and ensconced himself among the
furs and buffalo robes. Soon after, old
Pierre came in with his lantern; and,
muttering to himself, began to pull over the
bales of meat, and select the best pieces,
as usual. But suddenly a hollow and
sepulchral voice proceeded from the inner
apartment: "Pierre! Pierre! Let that fat
meat alone! Take nothing but lean!" Pierre
dropped his lantern, and bolted out into the
fort, screaming, in an agony of terror, that
the devil was in the storeroom; but tripping
on the threshold, he pitched over upon the
gravel, and lay senseless, stunned by the
fall. The Canadians ran out to the rescue.
Some lifted the unlucky Pierre; and others,
making an extempore crucifix out of two
sticks, were proceeding to attack the devil
in his stronghold, when the bourgeois, with
a crest-fallen countenance, appeared at the
door. To add to the bourgeois'
mortification, he was obliged to explain the
whole stratagem to Pierre, in order to bring
the latter to his senses.
We were sitting, on the following morning,
in the passage-way between the gates,
conversing with the traders Vaskiss and May.
These two men, together with our sleek
friend, the clerk Montalon, were, I believe,
the only persons then in the fort who could
read and write. May was telling a curious
story about the traveler Catlin, when an
ugly, diminutive Indian, wretchedly mounted,
came up at a gallop, and rode past us into
the fort. On being questioned, he said that
Smoke's village was close at hand.
Accordingly only a few minutes elapsed
before the hills beyond the river were
covered with a disorderly swarm of savages,
on horseback and on foot. May finished his
story; and by that time the whole array had
descended to Laramie Creek, and commenced
crossing it in a mass. I walked down to the
bank. The stream is wide, and was then
between three and four feet deep, with a
very swift current. For several rods the
water was alive with dogs, horses, and
Indians. The long poles used in erecting the
lodges are carried by the horses, being
fastened by the heavier end, two or three on
each side, to a rude sort of pack saddle,
while the other end drags on the ground.
About a foot behind the horse, a kind of
large basket or pannier is suspended between
the poles, and firmly lashed in its place on
the back of the horse are piled various
articles of luggage; the basket also is well
filled with domestic utensils, or, quite as
often, with a litter of puppies, a brood of
small children, or a superannuated old man.
Numbers of these curious vehicles, called,
in the bastard language of the country
travaux were now splashing together through
the stream. Among them swam countless dogs,
often burdened with miniature travaux; and
dashing forward on horseback through the
throng came the superbly formed warriors,
the slender figure of some lynx-eyed boy,
clinging fast behind them. The women sat
perched on the pack saddles, adding not a
little to the load of the already
overburdened horses. The confusion was
prodigious. The dogs yelled and howled in
chorus; the puppies in the travaux set up a
dismal whine as the water invaded their
comfortable retreat; the little black-eyed
children, from one year of age upward, clung
fast with both hands to the edge of their
basket, and looked over in alarm at the
water rushing so near them, sputtering and
making wry mouths as it splashed against
their faces. Some of the dogs, encumbered by
their loads, were carried down by the
current, yelping piteously; and the old
squaws would rush into the water, seize
their favorites by the neck, and drag them
out. As each horse gained the bank, he
scrambled up as he could. Stray horses and
colts came among the rest, often breaking
away at full speed through the crowd,
followed by the old hags, screaming after
their fashion on all occasions of
excitement. Buxom young squaws, blooming in
all the charms of vermilion, stood here and
there on the bank, holding aloft their
master's lance, as a signal to collect the
scattered portions of his household. In a
few moments the crowd melted away; each
family, with its horses and equipage, filing
off to the plain at the rear of the fort;
and here, in the space of half an hour,
arose sixty or seventy of their tapering
lodges. Their horses were feeding by
hundreds over the surrounding prairie, and
their dogs were roaming everywhere. The fort
was full of men, and the children were
whooping and yelling incessantly under the
walls.
These newcomers were scarcely arrived, when
Bordeaux was running across the fort,
shouting to his squaw to bring him his
spyglass. The obedient Marie, the very model
of a squaw, produced the instrument, and
Bordeaux hurried with it up to the wall.
Pointing it to the eastward, he exclaimed,
with an oath, that the families were coming.
But a few moments elapsed before the heavy
caravan of the emigrant wagons could be
seen, steadily advancing from the hills.
They gained the river, and without turning
or pausing plunged in; they passed through,
and slowly ascending the opposing bank, kept
directly on their way past the fort and the
Indian village, until, gaining a spot a
quarter of a mile distant, they wheeled into
a circle. For some time our tranquillity was
undisturbed. The emigrants were preparing
their encampment; but no sooner was this
accomplished than Fort Laramie was fairly
taken by storm. A crowd of broad-brimmed
hats, thin visages, and staring eyes
appeared suddenly at the gate. Tall awkward
men, in brown homespun; women with
cadaverous faces and long lank figures came
thronging in together, and, as if inspired
by the very demon of curiosity, ransacked
every nook and corner of the fort. Dismayed
at this invasion, we withdrew in all speed
to our chamber, vainly hoping that it might
prove an inviolable sanctuary. The emigrants
prosecuted their investigations with
untiring vigor. They penetrated the rooms or
rather dens, inhabited by the astonished
squaws. They explored the apartments of the
men, and even that of Marie and the
bourgeois. At last a numerous deputation
appeared at our door, but were immediately
expelled. Being totally devoid of any sense
of delicacy or propriety, they seemed
resolved to search every mystery to the
bottom.
Having at length satisfied their curiosity,
they next proceeded to business. The men
occupied themselves in procuring supplies
for their onward journey; either buying them
with money or giving in exchange superfluous
articles of their own.
The emigrants felt a violent prejudice
against the French Indians, as they called
the trappers and traders. They thought, and
with some justice, that these men bore them
no good will. Many of them were firmly
persuaded that the French were instigating
the Indians to attack and cut them off. On
visiting the encampment we were at once
struck with the extraordinary perplexity and
indecision that prevailed among the
emigrants. They seemed like men totally out
of their elements; bewildered and amazed,
like a troop of school-boys lost in the
woods. It was impossible to be long among
them without being conscious of the high and
bold spirit with which most of them were
animated. But the FOREST is the home of the
backwoodsman. On the remote prairie he is
totally at a loss. He differs much from the
genuine "mountain man," the wild prairie
hunter, as a Canadian voyageur, paddling his
canoe on the rapids of the Ottawa, differs
from an American sailor among the storms of
Cape Horn. Still my companion and I were
somewhat at a loss to account for this
perturbed state of mind. It could not be
cowardice; these men were of the same stock
with the volunteers of Monterey and Buena
Vista. Yet, for the most part, they were the
rudest and most ignorant of the frontier
population; they knew absolutely nothing of
the country and its inhabitants; they had
already experienced much misfortune, and
apprehended more; they had seen nothing of
mankind, and had never put their own
resources to the test.
A full proportion of suspicion fell upon us.
Being strangers we were looked upon as
enemies. Having occasion for a supply of
lead and a few other necessary articles, we
used to go over to the emigrant camps to
obtain them. After some hesitation, some
dubious glances, and fumbling of the hands
in the pockets, the terms would be agreed
upon, the price tendered, and the emigrant
would go off to bring the article in
question. After waiting until our patience
gave out, we would go in search of him, and
find him seated on the tongue of his wagon.
"Well, stranger," he would observe, as he
saw us approach, "I reckon I won't trade!"
Some friend of his followed him from the
scene of the bargain and suggested in his
ear, that clearly we meant to cheat him, and
he had better have nothing to do with us.
This timorous mood of the emigrants was
doubly unfortunate, as it exposed them to
real danger. Assume, in the presence of
Indians a bold bearing, self-confident yet
vigilant, and you will find them tolerably
safe neighbors. But your safety depends on
the respect and fear you are able to
inspire. If you betray timidity or
indecision, you convert them from that
moment into insidious and dangerous enemies.
The Dakotas saw clearly enough the
perturbation of the emigrants and instantly
availed themselves of it. They became
extremely insolent and exacting in their
demands. It has become an established custom
with them to go to the camp of every party,
at it arrives in succession at the fort, and
demand a feast. Smoke's village had come
with the express design, having made several
days' journey with no other object than that
of enjoying a cup of coffee and two or three
biscuits. So the "feast" was demanded, and
the emigrants dared not refuse it.
One evening, about sunset, the village was
deserted. We met old men, warriors, squaws,
and children in gay attire, trooping off to
the encampment, with faces of anticipation;
and, arriving here, they seated themselves
in a semicircle. Smoke occupied the center,
with his warriors on either hand; the young
men and boys next succeeded, and the squaws
and children formed the horns of the
crescent. The biscuit and coffee were most
promptly dispatched, the emigrants staring
open-mouthed at their savage guests. With
each new emigrant party that arrived at Fort
Laramie this scene was renewed; and every
day the Indians grew more rapacious and
presumptuous. One evening they broke to
pieces, out of mere wantonness, the cups
from which they had been feasted; and this
so exasperated the emigrants that many of
them seized their rifles and could scarcely
be restrained from firing on the insolent
mob of Indians. Before we left the country
this dangerous spirit on the part of the
Dakota had mounted to a yet higher pitch.
They began openly to threaten the emigrants
with destruction, and actually fired upon
one or two parties of whites. A military
force and military law are urgently called
for in that perilous region; and unless
troops are speedily stationed at Fort
Laramie, or elsewhere in the neighborhood,
both the emigrants and other travelers will
be exposed to most imminent risks.
The Ogallalla, the Brules, and other western
bands of the Dakota, are thorough savages,
unchanged by any contact with civilization.
Not one of them can speak a European tongue,
or has ever visited an American settlement.
Until within a year or two, when the
emigrants began to pass through their
country on the way to Oregon, they had seen
no whites except the handful employed about
the Fur Company's posts. They esteemed them
a wise people, inferior only to themselves,
living in leather lodges, like their own,
and subsisting on buffalo. But when the
swarm of MENEASKA, with their oxen and
wagons, began to invade them, their
astonishment was unbounded. They could
scarcely believe that the earth contained
such a multitude of white men. Their wonder
is now giving way to indignation; and the
result, unless vigilantly guarded against,
may be lamentable in the extreme.
But to glance at the interior of a lodge.
Shaw and I used often to visit them. Indeed,
we spent most of our evenings in the Indian
village; Shaw's assumption of the medical
character giving us a fair pretext. As a
sample of the rest I will describe one of
these visits. The sun had just set, and the
horses were driven into the corral. The
Prairie Cock, a noted beau, came in at the
gate with a bevy of young girls, with whom
he began to dance in the area, leading them
round and round in a circle, while he jerked
up from his chest a succession of monotonous
sounds, to which they kept time in a rueful
chant. Outside the gate boys and young men
were idly frolicking; and close by, looking
grimly upon them, stood a warrior in his
robe, with his face painted jet-black, in
token that he had lately taken a Pawnee
scalp. Passing these, the tall dark lodges
rose between us and the red western sky. We
repaired at once to the lodge of Old Smoke
himself. It was by no means better than the
others; indeed, it was rather shabby; for in
this democratic community, the chief never
assumes superior state. Smoke sat
cross-legged on a buffalo robe, and his
grunt of salutation as we entered was
unusually cordial, out of respect no doubt
to Shaw's medical character. Seated around
the lodge were several squaws, and an
abundance of children. The complaint of
Shaw's patients was, for the most part, a
severe inflammation of the eyes, occasioned
by exposure to the sun, a species of
disorder which he treated with some success.
He had brought with him a homeopathic
medicine chest, and was, I presume, the
first who introduced that harmless system of
treatment among the Ogallalla. No sooner had
a robe been spread at the head of the lodge
for our accommodation, and we had seated
ourselves upon it, than a patient made her
appearance; the chief's daughter herself,
who, to do her justice, was the best-looking
girl in the village. Being on excellent
terms with the physician, she placed herself
readily under his hands, and submitted with
a good grace to his applications, laughing
in his face during the whole process, for a
squaw hardly knows how to smile. This case
dispatched, another of a different kind
succeeded. A hideous, emaciated old woman
sat in the darkest corner of the lodge
rocking to and fro with pain and hiding her
eyes from the light by pressing the palms of
both hands against her face. At Smoke's
command, she came forward, very unwillingly,
and exhibited a pair of eyes that had nearly
disappeared from excess of inflammation. No
sooner had the doctor fastened his grips
upon her than she set up a dismal moaning,
and writhed so in his grasp that he lost all
patience, but being resolved to carry his
point, he succeeded at last in applying his
favorite remedies.
"It is strange," he said, when the operation
was finished, "that I forgot to bring any
Spanish flies with me; we must have
something here to answer for a
counter-irritant!"
So, in the absence of better, he seized upon
a red-hot brand from the fire, and clapped
it against the temple of the old squaw, who
set up an unearthly howl, at which the rest
of the family broke out into a laugh.
During these medical operations Smoke's
eldest squaw entered the lodge, with a sort
of stone mallet in her hand. I had observed
some time before a litter of well-grown
black puppies, comfortably nestled among
some buffalo robes at one side; but this
newcomer speedily disturbed their enjoyment;
for seizing one of them by the hind paw, she
dragged him out, and carrying him to the
entrance of the lodge, hammered him on the
head till she killed him. Being quite
conscious to what this preparation tended, I
looked through a hole in the back of the
lodge to see the next steps of the process.
The squaw, holding the puppy by the legs,
was swinging him to and fro through the
blaze of a fire, until the hair was singed
off. This done, she unsheathed her knife and
cut him into small pieces, which she dropped
into a kettle to boil. In a few moments a
large wooden dish was set before us, filled
with this delicate preparation. We felt
conscious of the honor. A dog-feast is the
greatest compliment a Dakota can offer to
his guest; and knowing that to refuse eating
would be an affront, we attacked the little
dog and devoured him before the eyes of his
unconscious parent. Smoke in the meantime
was preparing his great pipe. It was lighted
when we had finished our repast, and we
passed it from one to another till the bowl
was empty. This done, we took our leave
without further ceremony, knocked at the
gate of the fort, and after making ourselves
known were admitted.
One morning, about a week after reaching
Fort Laramie, we were holding our customary
Indian levee, when a bustle in the area
below announced a new arrival; and looking
down from our balcony, I saw a familiar red
beard and mustache in the gateway. They
belonged to the captain, who with his party
had just crossed the stream. We met him on
the stairs as he came up, and congratulated
him on the safe arrival of himself and his
devoted companions. But he remembered our
treachery, and was grave and dignified
accordingly; a tendency which increased as
he observed on our part a disposition to
laugh at him. After remaining an hour or two
at the fort he rode away with his friends,
and we have heard nothing of him since. As
for R., he kept carefully aloof. It was but
too evident that we had the unhappiness to
have forfeited the kind regards of our
London fellow-traveler.
The Oregon Trail, Francis Parkman, 1847
The Oregon Trail |