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KANSAS
LEGENDS
Indian Attacks at Pawnee Rock |
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By Colonel Henry Inman,
1897 |
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That portion of the great central plains which radiates from
Pawnee
Rock, including the Big Bend of the
Arkansas,
thirteen miles distant, where that river makes a sudden sweep to the
southeast, and the beautiful valley of the Walnut, in all its vast area of
more than a million square acres, was from time immemorial a sort of
debatable land, occupied by none of the
Indian
tribes, but claimed by all to hunt in; for it was a famous pasturage of
the
buffalo.
None of the various bands had the temerity to
attempt its permanent occupancy; for whenever hostile tribes met there,
which was of frequent occurrence, in their annual hunt for their winter's
supply of meat, a bloody battle was certain to ensue. The region
referred to has been the scene of more sanguinary conflicts between the
different
Indians
of the plains, perhaps, than any other portion
of the continent. Particularly was it
the arena of war to the death, when the
Pawnees met
their hereditary enemies, the
Cheyennes.
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Early
Pawnee
Rock, courtesy
Kansas
State Library
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Pawnee Rock was a spot well calculated by nature to form, as it
has done, an important rendezvous and ambuscade for the prowling
savages of the prairies, and often afforded them, especially the
once powerful and murderous
Pawnees
whose name it perpetuates, a pleasant little retreat or eyrie from
which to watch the passing
Santa Fe
traders, and dash down upon them like hawks, to carry off
their plunder and their scalps.
Through this once dangerous region, close
to the silent
Arkansas,
and running under the very shadow of the
Rock,
the Old Trail wound its course. Now, at this point, it is the
actual road-bed of the
Atchison, Topeka, and
Santa Fe
Railroad, so strangely are the past and present transcontinental
highways connected here.
Who, among bearded and grizzled old
fellows like myself, has forgotten that most sensational of all the
miserably executed illustrations in the geographies of fifty years
ago, "The
Santa Fe Traders attacked
by
Indians"? The picture located the scene of the fight at
Pawnee Rock, which formed a sort of nondescript shadow in the
background of a crudely drawn representation of the dangers of the
Trail.
If this once giant sentinel of the plains
might speak, what a story it could tell of the events that have
happened on the beautiful prairie stretching out for miles at its
feet!
In the early fall, when the
Rock
was wrapped in the soft amber haze which is a distinguishing
characteristic of the incomparable
Indian summer on the plains; or in the spring, when the mirage
weaves its mysterious shapes, it loomed up in the landscape as if it
were a huge mountain, and to the inexperienced eye appeared as if it
were the abrupt ending of a well-defined range. But when the
frost came, and the mists were dispelled; when the thin fringe of
timber on the Walnut, a few miles distant, had doffed its emerald
mantle, and the grass had grown yellow and rusty, then in the golden
sunlight of winter, the
Rock
sank down to its normal proportions, and cut the clear blue of the sky
with sharply marked lines.
In the days when the
Santa Fe
trade was at its height, the
Pawnees
were the most formidable tribe on the eastern central plains, and the
freighters and trappers rarely escaped a skirmish with them
either at the crossing of the Walnut,
Pawnee Rock the Fork of the
Pawnee,
or at Little and Big Coon creeks.
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Today what is left of the historic hill looks
down only upon peaceful homes and fruitful fields, whereas for hundreds of
years it witnessed nothing but battle and death, and almost every yard of
brown sod at its base covered a skeleton. In place of the horrid
yell of the infuriated savage, as he wrenched off the reeking scalp of his
victim, the whistle of the locomotive and the pleasant whirr of the
reaping-machine is heard; where the death-cry of the painted warrior rang
mournfully over the silent prairie, the waving grain is singing in
beautiful rhythm as it bows to the summer breeze.
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Kit
Carson, photo courtesy Library of Congress.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Pawnee
Rock received its name in a baptism of blood, but there are many
versions as to the time and sponsors. It was there that
Kit Carson
killed his first
Indian,
and from that fight, as he told me
himself, the broken mass of red sandstone was
given its distinctive title.
It was late in the spring of 1826;
Kit was
then a mere boy, only seventeen years old, and as green as any boy of his
age who had never been forty miles from the place where he was born. Colonel Ceran St. Vrain, then a prominent agent of one of the great fur
companies, was fitting out an expedition destined for the far-off Rocky
Mountains, the members of which, all trappers, were to obtain the skins of
the
buffalo, beaver, otter, mink, and other valuable fur-bearing animals
that then roamed in immense numbers on the vast plains or in the hills,
and were also to trade with the various tribes of
Indians
on
the borders of Mexico.
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Carson
joined this expedition, which was composed of twenty-six mule wagons, some
loose stock, and forty-two men. The boy was hired to help drive the
extra animals, hunt game, stand guard, and to make himself generally
useful, which, of course, included fighting
Indians
if any were met with on the long route.
The expedition left Fort Osage one bright
morning in May in excellent spirits, and in a few hours turned abruptly to
the west on the broad Trail to the mountains. The great plains in
those early days were solitary and desolate beyond the power of
description; the
Arkansas
River sluggishly followed the tortuous windings of its treeless banks with
a placidness that was awful in its very silence; and whoso traced the
wanderings of that stream with no companion but his own thoughts, realized
in all its intensity the depth of solitude from which Robinson Crusoe
suffered on his lonely island. Illimitable as
the ocean, the weary waste stretched away
until lost in the purple of the horizon, and the mirage created weird
pictures in the landscape, distorted distances and objects which
continually annoyed and deceived. Despite its loneliness, however, there
was then, and ever has been for many men, an infatuation for those
majestic prairies that once experienced is never lost, and it came to the
boyish heart of
Kit,
who left them but with life, and full of years.
There was not much variation in the eternal
sameness of things during the first two weeks, as the little train moved
day after day through the wilderness of grass, its ever-rattling wheels
only intensifying
the surrounding monotony. Occasionally,
however, a herd of
buffalo
was discovered in the distance, their brown, shaggy sides contrasting with
the never-ending sea of verdure around them. Then young
Kit,
and two or three others of the party who were detailed to supply the
teamsters and trappers with meat, would ride out after them on the best of
the extra horses which were always kept saddled and tied together behind
the last wagon for services of this kind.
Kit,
who was already an excellent horseman and a splendid shot with the rifle,
would soon overtake them, and topple one after another of their huge fat
carcasses over on the prairie until half a dozen or more were lying dead. The tender humps, tongues, and other choice portions were then cut out and
put in a wagon which had by that time reached them from the train, and the
expedition rolled on.
Continued
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Native
American Photo Prints -
Vintage photographs of famous chiefs, heroes, and
Indian
life in the 19th century.
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There is no Sunday west of St. Louis – and no God west of Fort Smith.
--
Old adage used to describe the Western frontier |
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