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KS 66285
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Heroines of
the Rocky Mountains |
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"At first we imagined the parent, whether
male or female, had thus roughly buried the child--a consolatory
assumption which Augur-eye soon destroyed. Scraping away the sand
partially hiding the dead boy, he placed his finger on a deep cleft in
the skull, which told at once its own miserable tale. This discovery
clearly proved that the old guide was correct in his readings, that
the savages were following up the trail of the survivors. A man who
had escaped and just joined us, appeared so utterly terror-stricken at
this discovery, that it was with difficulty he could be supported on
his horse by the strong troopers who rode beside him. We tarried not
for additional signs, but pushed on with all possible haste. The trail
was rough, stony, and over a ledge of basaltic rocks, rendering
progression not only tedious but difficult and dangerous; a false step
of the horse, and the result might have proved fatal to the rider. The
guide spurs on his
Indian mustang, that like a goat scrambles over the craggy track;
for a moment or two he disappears, being hidden by a jutting rock; we
hear him yell a sort of 'war-whoop,' awakening the echoes in the
encircling hills; reckless of falling, we too spur on, dash round the
splintered point, and slide rather than canter down a shelving bank,
to reach a second sand-beach, over which the guide is galloping and
shouting. We can see the fluttering garments of a girl, who is running
with all her might towards the pine trees; she disappears amongst the
thick foliage of the underbrush ere the guide can come up to her, but
leaping from off his horse, he follows her closely, and notes the spot
wherein she has hidden herself amidst a tangle of creeping vines and
maple bushes. He awaited our coming, and, motioning us to surround the
place of concealment quickly, remained still as a statue whilst we
arranged our little detachment so as to preclude any chance of an
escape. Then gliding noiselessly as a reptile through the bushes, he
was soon hidden. It appeared a long time, although not more than a few
minutes had elapsed from our losing sight of him, until a shrill cry
told us something was discovered. Dashing into the midst of the
underbrush, a strange scene presented itself. The hardy troopers
seemed spell-bound, neither was I the less astonished.
"Huddled closely together, and partially
covered with branches, crouched two women and the little girl whose
flight had led to this unlooked-for discovery. In a state barely
removed from that of nudity, the unhappy trio strove to hide
themselves from the many staring eyes which were fixed upon them, not
for the purpose of gratifying an indecent curiosity, but simply
because no one had for the moment realized the condition in which the
unfortunates were placed.
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Soon, however, the fact was evident to the soldiers that the women were
nearly unclad, and all honor to their rugged goodness, they stripped off
their thick topcoats, and throwing them to the trembling females, turned
every one away and receded into the bush. It was enough that the faces of
the men were white which had presented themselves so unexpectedly. The
destitute fugitives, assured that the savages had not again discovered
them, hastily wrapped themselves in the coats of the soldiers, and,
rushing out from their lair, knelt down, and clasping their arms round my
knees, poured out thanks to the Almighty for their deliverance with a
fervency and earnestness terrible to witness. I saw, on looking round me,
streaming drops trickling over the sunburnt faces of many of the men,
whose iron natures it was not easy to disturb under ordinary
circumstances.
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Indian Warriors
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"It was soon explained to
the fugitives that they were safe, and as every hour's delay was a
dangerous waste of time, the rescued women and child were as carefully
clad in the garments of the men as circumstances permitted, and placed on
horses, with a hunter riding on either side to support them. Thus
reinforced, the cavalcade, headed by Augur-eye, moved slowly back to the
place where we had left the pack-train encamped, with all the necessary
supplies. I lingered behind to examine the place wherein the women had
concealed themselves. The boughs of the vine-maple, together with other
slender shrubs constituting the underbrush, had been rudely woven
together, forming, at best, but a very inefficient shelter from the wind,
which swept in freezing currents through the valley. Had it rained, they
must soon have been drenched, or if snow had fallen heavily, the 'wickey'
house and its occupants soon would have been buried. How had they existed?
This was a question I was somewhat puzzled to answer.
"On looking round I
observed a man's coat, pushed away under some branches, and on the few
smoldering embers by which the women had been sitting when the child
rushed in and told of our coming, was a small tin pot with a cover on it,
the only utensil visible. Whilst occupied in making the discoveries I was
sickened by a noisome stench, which proceeded from the dead body of a man,
carefully hidden by branches, grass, and moss, a short distance from the
little cage of twisted boughs. Gazing on the dead man a suspicion too
revolting to mention suddenly flashed upon me. Turning away saddened and
horror-stricken, I returned to the cage and removed the cover from the
saucepan, the contents of which confirmed my worst fears. Hastily quitting
the fearful scene, the like of which I trust never to witness again, I
mounted my horse and galloped after the party, by this time some distance
ahead.
"Two men and the guide
were desired to find the spot where the scouting parties were to meet each
other, and to bring them with all speed to the mule camp. It was nearly
dark when we reached our destination, the sky looked black and lowering,
the wind appeared to be increasing in force, and small particles of
half-frozen rain drove smartly against our faces, telling in pretty plain
language of the coming snowfall. Warm tea, a good substantial meal, and
suitable clothes, which had been sent in case of need by the officers'
wives stationed at the 'Post,' worked wonders in the way of restoring
bodily weakness; but the shock to the mental system time alone could
alleviate. I cannot say I slept much during the night. Anxiety lest we
might be snowed in, and a fate almost as terrible as that from which we
had rescued the poor women, should be the lot of all, sat upon me like a
nightmare. More than this, the secret I had discovered seemed to pall
every sense and sicken me to the heart, and throughout the silent hours of
the dismal darkness I passed in review the ghostly pageant of the fight
and all its horrors, the escape of the unhappy survivors, the finding of
the murdered boy and starving women, and more than all--the secret I had
rather even now draw a veil over, and leave to the imagination."
A fugitive woman in the wilds of the Rocky
Mountains is indeed an object of pity; but when she boldly faces the
dangers that surround her in such a position, and succeeds by her courage,
endurance, and ingenuity in holding her own, and finally extricating
herself from the perils by which she is environed, she may fairly
challenge our admiration. Such a woman was Miss Janette Riker, who proved
how strong is the spirit of self-reliance which animates the daughters of
the border under circumstances calculated to daunt and depress the
stoutest heart.
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Successful buffalo hunt, courtesy Library of
Congress
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The Riker family, consisting of Mr. Riker, his
two sons, and his daughter Janette, passed through the Dakota country in
1849, and late in September had penetrated to the heart of the mountains
in the territory now known as
Montana.
Before pursuing their journey from this point to their destination in
Oregon
,
they encamped for three days in a well-grassed valley for the purpose of
resting their cattle, and adding to their stock of provisions a few
buffalo-humps
and tongues.
On the second day after
their arrival at this spot, the father and his two sons set out on their
buffalo
hunt with the expectation of returning before nightfall. But the sun set
and darkness came without bringing them back to the lonely girl, who in
sleepless anxiety awaited their return all night seated beneath the white
top of the Conestoga wagon. At early dawn she started on their trail,
which she followed for several miles to a deep gorge where she lost all
trace of the wanderers, and was after a long and unavailing search
compelled in the utmost grief and distraction of mind, to return to the
camp.
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For a week she spent her
whole time in seeking to find some trace of her missing kinsmen, but
without success. As the lonely maiden gazed at the mighty walls which
frowned upon her and barred her egress east and west from her
prison-house, hope died away in her heart, and she prayed for speedy
death. This mood was but momentary; the love of life soon asserted its
power, and she cast about her for some means whereby she could either
extricate herself from her perilous situation, or at least prolong her
existence.
To attempt to find her
way over the mountains seemed to her impossible. Her only course was to
provide a shelter against the winter, and stay where she was until
discovered by some passing hunters, or by
Indians,
whom she feared less than an existence spent in such solitude and
surrounded by so many dangers.
Axes and spades among the
farming implements in the wagon supplied her with the necessary tools, and
by dint of assiduous labor, to which her frame had long been accustomed,
she contrived to build, in a few weeks, a rude hut of poles and small
logs. Stuffing the interstices with dried grass, and banking up the earth
around it, she threw over it the wagon-top, which she fastened firmly to
stakes driven in the ground, and thus provided a shelter tolerably
rain-tight and weather-proof.
Thither she conveyed the
stoves and other contents of the wagon. The oxen, straying through the
valley, fattened themselves on the sweet grass until the snow fell; she
then slaughtered and flayed the fattest one, and cutting up the carcass,
packed it away for winter's use. Dry logs and limbs of trees, brought
together and chopped up with infinite labor, sufficed to keep her in fuel.
Although for nearly three months she was almost completely buried in the
snow, she managed to keep alive and reasonably comfortable by making an
orifice for the smoke to escape, and digging out fuel from the drift which
covered her wood-pile. Her situation was truly forlorn, but still
preferable to the risk of being devoured by wolves or mountain lions,
which, attracted by the smell of the slaughtered ox, had begun to prowl
around her shelter before the great snow fall, but were now unable to
reach her beneath the snowy bulwarks. She suffered more, however, from the
effect of the spring thaw which flooded her hut with water and forced her
to shift her quarters to the wagon, which she covered with the cotton top,
after removing thither her blankets and provisions. The valley was
overflowed by the melting of the snows, and for two weeks she was unable
to build a fire, subsisting on uncooked Indian meal and raw beef, which
she had salted early in the winter.
Late in April, she was
found in the last stages of exhaustion, by a party of
Indians,
who kindly relieved her wants and carried her across the mountains with
her household goods, and left her at the Walla Walla station. This act on
the part of the savages, who were a wild and hostile tribe, was due to
their admiration for the hardihood of the "young white woman," who had
maintained herself through the rigors of the winter and early spring in
that awful solitude--a feat which, they said, none of their own women
would have dared perform. The fate of her father and brothers was never
ascertained, though it was conjectured that they had either lost their way
or had fallen from a precipice.
Miss Riker afterwards married, and, as a
pioneer wife, found a sphere of usefulness for which her high qualities of
character admirably fitted her.
Continued
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
The All-American Cowboy Grill
by Cheryl Rogers-Barnett, Ken Beck, and Jim Clark
The All-American Cowboy Grill will blaze a new trail through the
Old West
as it partners savory recipes from American cowboys and cowgirls of movie,
TV, rodeo, and music fame with dozens of photos and sidebars of related
interest.
The book will have 20 to 40 short sidebars with real western history as
well as western pop culture trivia from the movies and TV.
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