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Early
Traders - Page 4 |
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The virtual commencement of the
Santa Fe
trade dates from 1822, and one of the most remarkable events in its
history was the first attempt to introduce wagons in the expeditions. This was made in 1824 by a company of traders, about eighty in number,
among whom were several gentlemen of intelligence from
Missouri,
who contributed by their superior skill and undaunted energy to render the
enterprise completely successful. A portion of this company employed
pack-mules; among the rest were owned twenty-five wheeled vehicles, of
which one or two were stout road-wagons, two were carts, and the rest
Dearborn carriages, the whole conveying some twenty-five or thirty
thousand dollars' worth of merchandise.
Colonel Marmaduke, of
Missouri,
was one of the party. This caravan arrived at
Santa Fe
safely, experiencing much less difficulty than they anticipated from a
first attempt with wheeled vehicles. |

Pawnee Creek Crossing, a painting by Max
Gundloch
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Gregg continues:
The early voyageurs, having but seldom
experienced any molestation from the
Indians, generally crossed the plains in detached bands, each
individual rarely carrying more than two or three hundred dollars'
worth of stock. This peaceful season, however, did not last very
long; and it is greatly to be feared that the traders were not always
innocent of having instigated the savage hostilities that ensued in
after years. Many seemed to forget the wholesome precept, that
they should not be savages themselves because they dealt with savages. Instead of cultivating friendly feelings with those few who remained
peaceful and honest, there was an occasional one always disposed to
kill, even in cold blood, every
Indian that fell into their power, merely because some of the
tribe had committed an outrage either against themselves or friends.
As an instance of this, he relates the
following:
In 1826 two young men named McNess
and Monroe, having carelessly lain down to sleep on the bank of a
certain stream, since known as McNess Creek, were barbarously shot,
with their own guns, as it was supposed, in the very sight of the
caravan. When their comrades came up, they found McNess
lifeless, and the other almost expiring. In this state the
latter was carried nearly forty miles to the
Cimarron River, where he
died, and was buried according to the custom of the prairies, a very
summary proceeding, necessarily. The corpse, wrapped in a
blanket, its shroud the clothes it wore, is interred in a hole varying
in depth according to the nature of the soil, and upon the grave is
piled stones, if any are convenient, to prevent the wolves from
digging it up. Just as McNess's funeral ceremonies were about to
be concluded, six or seven
Indians appeared on the opposite side of the
Cimarron. Some of the
party proposed inviting them to a parley, while the rest, burning for
revenge, evinced a desire to fire upon them at once. It is more than
probable, however, that the
Indians were not only innocent but ignorant of the outrage that
had been committed, or they would hardly have ventured to approach the
caravan.
Being quick of perception, they very soon saw
the belligerent attitude assumed by the company, and therefore wheeled
round and attempted to escape. One shot was fired, which brought an
Indian
to the ground, when he was instantly riddled with balls. Almost
simultaneously another discharge of several guns followed, by which all
the rest were either killed or mortally wounded, except one, who escaped
to bear the news to his tribe.
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These wanton cruelties had a most disastrous
effect upon the prospects of the trade; for the exasperated children of
the desert became more and more hostile to the "pale-faces," against whom
they continued to wage a cruel war for many successive years. In
fact this party suffered very severely a few days afterward. They
were pursued by the enraged comrades of the slain savages to the
Arkansas
River, where they were robbed of nearly a thousand horses and mules.
The
author of this book, although having but little compassion for the
Indians,
must admit that, during more than a third of a century passed on the
plains and in the mountains, he has never known of a war with the hostile
tribes that was not caused by broken faith on the part of the United
States or its agents. I will refer to two prominent instances: that
of the outbreak of the
Nez Perce,
and that of the allied plains tribes. With the former a solemn
treaty was made in 1856, guaranteeing to them occupancy of the Wallola
valley forever. I. I. Stevens, who was governor of
Washington
Territory at the time, and ex-officio superintendent of
Indian
affairs in the region, met the
Nez Perce,
whose chief, "Wish-la-no-she," an octogenarian, when grasping the hand of
the governor at the council said: "I put out my hand to the white man when
Lewis and Clark crossed the continent, in 1805, and have never taken it
back since." The tribe kept its word until the white men took forcible
possession of the valley promised to the
Indians,
when the latter broke out, and a prolonged war was the consequence. In 1867 Congress appointed a commission to treat with the
Cheyenne,
Kiowas, and Arapahoes, appropriating four hundred thousand dollars for the
expenses of the commission. It met at Medicine Lodge in August of
the year mentioned, and made a solemn treaty, which the members of the
commission, on the part of the United States, and the principal chiefs of
the three tribes signed. Congress failed to make any appropriation
to carry out the provisions of the treaty, and the
Indians,
after waiting a reasonable time, broke out, devastated the settlements
from the Platte to the Rio Grande, destroying millions of dollars' worth
of property, and sacrificing hundreds of men, women, and children. Another war was the result, which cost more millions, and under
General Sheridan the hostile savages were whipped into a peace, which
they have been compelled to keep.
Compiled and
edited by
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated
November, 2010.
Also See:
Santa Fe
Trail - Highway to the Southwest
Pathways
To the West
Tales of
the Santa Fe Trail
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Wagon Train along the
Santa Fe
Trail, courtesy
Denver Public Library
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Excerpted from the book, The Old Santa Fe Trail, by Colonel Henry
Inman, 1897. (now in the public domain.)
Henry Inman was well known both as an officer
in the U.S. army and an author dealing with subjects of the Western
plains. During the Civil War, Inman was a Lieutenant Colonel and
afterwards he won distinction as a magazine writer. He wrote several
books including his Old Santa Fe Trail, Great Salt Lake Trail,
The Ranch on the Ox-hide and other similar books dealing with the
subjects he knew so well. Colonel Inman left a number of unfinished
manuscripts at his death in Topeka,
Kansas
on November 13, 1899.
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American history is longer,
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anyone has ever said about it.
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