Frontier Folk

By George Booth in 1880

The Pioneer by Harper's Weekly

The Pioneer by Harper’s Weekly

What do we mean by the frontier? And what, by frontier folk? The terms came into vogue when tolerably well-defined lines marked the onset of civilization in the far West, and all beyond was wilderness. Yet today, with settlements scattered over all the Territories, the phrase loses none of its significance. It still has a geographical import, and another, deeper than the geographical one, suggesting a peculiar civilization and a particular characteristic mode of life. It does not bring to mind those prosperous colonies whose lands, surveyed, secured by good legal titles, and freed from the danger of savage inroads, have a permanent population busily engaged in founding homes. It takes us instead to the boundaries of the Indian reservations, along which scattered camps and settlements of white men are fringed; to lands which, though legally open for settlement, are constantly menaced by Indians; to those strange, shifting communities which sometimes, like Jonah’s gourd, spring up in a night only to wither away in a day.

The first element of success in a frontier settlement is that a sufficient number of nomads should be willing to sustain each other in the belief that “this spot is to be a city and a center.” The news that a considerable group is already gathered on any such foreordained and favored spot brings others; nor do the arrivals cease until a day comes when it is bruited abroad that some of the “first citizens” have revised their views of its glorious destiny, and have left it for a new Eden. The sojourner in such regions — he cannot be called an inhabitant — lives in expectation of the coming settler who will pay him cash for his “claim”; or else perhaps, he devotes himself to discovering a lode or a placer, which, if disposed of, may put him in funds for a year’s spree; or again he may be a trapper, perpetually shifting his place as the peltry grows scarce.

These indicate the respectable callings or expectancies of the solid men in frontier life; but they are surrounded by a larger throng of men, who hang about settlements with the possible hope of an honest El Dorado, but who, in the meantime, and until this shall come, take to the surreptitious borrowing of horses without leave, or to the industries of the faro table, or to the “road agency,” by which phrase is signified the unlawful collection of a highway toll usually amounting to whatever of value the traveler may have about him. There are no superfluous refinements and gradations in frontier society. The citizen is either “an elegant gentleman” or a liar and a horse thief. Yet, even people of the latter description are rarely molested unless taken in the actual practice of their profession, which they ply, to say the truth, with such discrimination as to interfere with them difficult; but, if caught in the very act and overpowered, their fate is sudden — they are “got rid of.”

Homicide on the frontier, as compared with horse-stealing, is a peccadillo. The horse has a positive value; the thief has a negative one. Justice does not pursue the man who slays his fellow in a quarrel, but if it grasps the stealer of a purse on the prairie or of a horse from the herd, his last day has come.

Yet he always has the chance of escaping capture and playing in other frontier cities the role of “elegant gentleman” on his earnings, professionally reimbursing himself. He may continue in this career even if suspected, provided he does not ply his vocation in those communities he honors with his presence when not engaged in prosecuting his business. Personal violence is, however, mostly confined to instances where it is for the profit of the aggressor. The traditional free-fight, or killing a man at sight, is rare, probably much rarer than in the Southwest. Benton, the head of navigation on the Missouri River, was where, according to the story, the early morning visitor at the bar-room, before it had been swept out, expressed his surprise. However, he knew the soil to be suitable for vegetables, at the excellence of its fruit, judging from the large size of the grapes he saw on the floor when he was informed, “Stranger, them’s eyes!” — the results of the preceding evening’s amusement. Yet, in two visits to Benton, the writer saw no sign of violence, even in amusement. However, he would be sorry to have some Bentonians around his camp at night if the horses were not well guarded or to meet them on the prairie without sufficient protection.

Trial of a horse thief, 1877

Trial of a horse thief, 1877

If a settlement becomes permanent and prosperous, whether through commerce, mining, or agriculture, the first settlers sell out as soon as they can get cash in hand and seek new domains. There are men who have passed their manhood in taking out claims, building ranches, and “realizing,” for better or worse, on a journey from Texas to Montana, sometimes taking in California. Very often, the wife, children, and stock of the pilgrim accompany him. Often a cabin is put up and inhabited by a family, with a retinue of cattle, horses, pigs, and poultry in the barn, only to be deserted the following year on the mere report of some better claim to be found further on. There never seems to be any real misery among these shiftless people. Their children grow up sturdy and ignorant, and their stock and chickens multiply as they journey on. It may be a new stage route that gives them a year’s sustenance, such as it is, by their squatting on good enough grassland to be able to fill a hay contract. Or, they may go to a point near which some new military post is about to be built, where they can raise some vegetables to sell to the troops before the company gardens become productive. Or, they may take out a claim on some really good spot, where permanent settlers speedily follow them. But, as soon as they can see flour, bacon, and tobacco and find a little in the pocket for whiskey and clothes sufficient to last for a year ahead, off, they go again, — not so much like gypsies, who will often revisit the same spot, as like the Wandering Jew, pursued by an avenging angel, driving them from contact with steady and methodical people. Their household stuff is packed in their “prairie schooners,” as their wagons are called, and on they move by easy stages, seldom taking the trouble to pitch a tent at night, the women sleeping in the wagons and the men on the ground beneath them. There is plenty of grass for the stock, and the weather is pleasant. There is no special hurry or worry: it is only necessary to reach somewhere in time to put up a log hut and a shed for the stock for the winter’s shelter. The little army of the United States, spread over a country as large as the Roman Empire, does its duty so well that there is only occasional danger from Indians roaming away from their reservations, and the military telegraphs are now so far extended that timely warning is usually given if war parties are out.

Nomadic habits, slight contact with anything human that is permanent, and freedom from the restraint caused by the propinquity of neighbors have fortified these people in self-conceit. Although they will in a few months desert all their acres for something more distant, yet the traveler who stops at their cabin and pays for bad food is required to “allow” that he has never seen a finer “claim” or tasted better victuals. In truth, never was good food so spoiled. The best venison in the country is sliced thin, put on cold grease in a frying pan (they never think of first boiling the grease), and fried until it is as tough as a chip and as full of grease as an Englishman’s crumpet. Once in Colorado, a request to have an egg boiled was encountered by the statement that “the lady knew how to cook eggs — she fried ’em.” And fried they were, being put in cold lard in proportions of three of lard to one of egg. Another “lady,” at the hint that a gridiron might be used instead of the frying pan for the venison, seeing an army officer present, remarked, “If you can’t eat what we eat, you can go without. Don’t see the use of troops anyhow. We pay for you. Understand Sitting Bull is going to Canada to fight Fenians. He will find somebody to fight there — never did here!” As the woman was paid five times the worth of her victuals, and as she, her “par” and her “mar” could not have remained twelve hours in their cabin had the military post nearby been withdrawn, her sarcasm was a little ill-considered. These much-isolated people look upon themselves as Nature’s aristocracy. Perhaps if Robinson Crusoe were a king, they might be feudal barons. Their social standing is sustained only by a lack of neighbors. But, on their own dunghill, they have none to over crow them.

Pioneer home, by Currier & Ives, 1867

Pioneer home, by Currier & Ives, 1867

The occasional traveler who may have been told that there were ranches on his trail and that he need not take tents or camp equipage for cooking will, if he is new to these people, or have regard for his digestion, finds to his disgust that during his stay he is a vassal at the castle of Giant Despair. He is alluded to by his host as a “tenderfoot,” — a word which is supposed to sum up everything that is contemptible. He may have scaled the Alps or marched with armies, but a “tenderfoot” he will be in the estimation of his host until circumstances may force him to live a hundred miles further out than anyone else or unless he learns to carry food to his mouth with his knife. On the other hand, the only term of opprobrium that these people can feel is that of “Missourian.” Why this should be so construed is difficult to say, but the name seems to imply all that is worthless and disagreeable. Settlers from Virginia and from Georgia are sure, on first acquaintance, to inform you of their place of nativity with pride which assumes that to have been born there furnishes them with blue blood; but the Missourian only mentions the last place he tarried at on his journey to “the setting sun” as the spot he hails from.

Some good people, particularly those who left Missouri during the Civil War, seem to forget that fifteen years have passed since that conflict ended. Their isolation has given them plenty of time and opportunity to brood over the wrongs of the South, with none to assuage their wrath, and they are still as bitter against “abolitionists” and “Lincoln’s hirelings” as in the days when such things were.

Prospector with burros by Detroit Photographic, about 1900

Prospector with burros by Detroit Photographic, about 1900

The miners and prospectors are a much more agreeable class. Their summer is passed amid wild scenery and in a country abounding in game, in pursuit of a fortune which may possibly be attained by one among a hundred. These men find a fascination in their way of life and, though in the main unsuccessful, continue it as long as health and age permit. They pass their winter in some town where they earn enough to purchase an outfit, namely, gunpowder, coffee, flour, sugar, and bacon sufficient for the summer’s campaign, and a jack, as the donkey is called, to carry the pack. Selecting a spot for their center of operations, a small shanty is soon built, and the summer passes with much climbing and much breaking of rock that suggests wealth, while they keep a keen eye for game and preserve a romantic belief in the speedy finding of a fortune. Such men cordially welcome the tourist and gladly share whatever they have with him, except blankets, which every man is expected to carry for himself.

They beguile his evening by relating quaint experiences and hint solemnly of a spot where wealth beyond description can be found. They usually work in couples, each calling the other “pard,” and very faithful each pard is to his fellow, becoming only more attached in case of sickness or disaster. They are, as a rule, an honest and manly race, leading a life that brings out many good qualities, especially hospitality and, in injury or illness, even of a stranger, care, kindness, and tenderness.

There is no monotony in their career. Each day brings its incidents, greater or less, and is cheered by the belief that the bonanza is near at hand. Geographical distances are nothing to them. Fear they have none. It is a common sight to see a couple of “pards” on foot, driving the two jacks which carry all their worldly possessions, trudging through an Indian country, and informing you, perhaps, in answer to your inquiry, that they have come from the San Juan country in Southern Colorado, and are bound for the Bear Paw Mountains in Northern Montana, as they have heard that gold can be panned there. Many of them have paced the line of the Rocky Mountains as far as they lie within the limits of the United States.

In gold-washings, towns spring up as rapidly as Leadville has done, but, the washings being simply on the surface and soon exhausted, the population migrates to other points. The once populous town of Georgia, in the Middle Park in Colorado, which was built by gold-washers, is still standing, with its Town Hall, two theatres, and streets of log houses, and is now without a solitary inhabitant. Of course, its Town Hall and theatres were of very simple wooden construction, but they were once really used for the purposes their names imply.

In a new town which is brevetted a “city” as soon as there is more than one house, the rum seller follows hard in the footsteps of the settler; then comes the lawyer, who immediately runs as a candidate for county offices, foments grievances and shows each man how he can get the better of his neighbor. If there be a military post nearby, the officers are good game for him, they being financially responsible and obliged to obey the laws, which seem to be so construed as to enable a sheriff to arrest a whole column of troops even if setting out on a campaign. The lawyer’s process of getting money out of the military officers is easy and very simple. A practitioner secures a witness who will depose to anything, perjury being looked on more as a joke than as a crime, and so never punished. The action or suit may be for pretty much anything; it was, in one case, for the alleged illegal detention of an animal which the learned judge described as a “Rhone ox,” further stating that such detention was a “penal” offense. But, the unfortunate officer who obeys the summons, however ridiculous may be the cause of action, must employ one of the hordes of lawyers to defend him so that, whichever way the suit may be decided, he at least is compelled to contribute something to the support of the frontier bar.

In the Territories, justice is enforced when the United States judge of the district comes on his circuit, but there is no redress or compensation for the worry and expense of litigation. If damages could be given against the concocter of the conspiracy, it would be difficult to find any property to satisfy the claim. A hint of punishment would only cause him to remove to some other place.

Frontier Justice, by Walter H. Gallaway, 1902

Frontier Justice, by Walter H. Gallaway, 1902

The army officer on the frontier has a soldier’s dread of legal complications and may be made thoroughly unhappy by suits, which in the East would only be laughed at. A general idea of law is taught at West Point, but not more than one-third of the commissions are held by graduates of the Military Academy, and these graduates find their general knowledge of law speedily growing rusty, while it never included the minute details of the kind of suits to which frontier pettifoggers subject them. With fewer opportunities than the businessman in the East to know the nature of court practice, they fall victim to any attorney who brazenly begins a prosecution founded on his own familiarity with legal tricks and the assumed wrongs of his client. Nothing, for example, is more common than for ranches to be damaged and hay or grain burned through the carelessness of emigrants, hunters, or other people who have camped nearby and on breaking camp have left the camp-fire to take care of itself: a wind springing up fans the embers into sparks, and these set fire to the dry grass.

Now, although troops on the march are by strict orders compelled, on breaking camp, to extinguish their fires with water or by covering them with earth, the ranchman who can show a burned fence or scorched barn (knowing that during the term of his natural life he might sue anybody else but, an army officer any number of times without ever actually recovering damages) immediately finds out what military command has been within some miles of his ranch during some days or weeks before the fire, and straightway goes to a lawyer and swears that the troops set the fire. He brings eager witnesses to show that the fire traveled just the requisite number of miles in the requisite number of days and that the barn or house, if burnt up, was magnificent in all its appointments and of palatial proportions.

Suit is begun before the nearest judge for real, imaginary, or consequential damages against the officer in command of the accused troops. This officer may know the charge to be trumped-up, but he is liable to be arrested and to have his property attached, and thus he is subjected to such worry as will usually induce him to submit to the most unjust drafts on his slender purse. If the writer has dwelt at length on this feature of frontier life, it is because army officers keenly feel the abuse, and yet are hardly suspected in the East.

It is a common mistake to suppose that an army officer on the frontier leads an idle life. Rarely is more than one of the three company officers present with it, and this one must accordingly attend every day to all the company duties. The other two officers may be detailed on particular services, such as commissary or quartermaster’s duties or attendance on the court-martial, or searching where lime can be found; or they may be on the sick list or guarding the wagon train which brings supplies to the post, or absent on the leaves which are granted after continuous service. It is not infrequent for the cavalry to be six or eight months on a campaign without seeing a permanent camp, much less a post where any of the comforts of civilization can be found. With small bodies of troops, where there are but few officers to form a society for one another, life becomes fearfully monotonous and dreary.

Fort Union, New Mexico

Old posts are deserted and new ones built so frequently that there is little danger of officers or men stagnating through idleness, even where Indian hostilities are less abundant. An appropriation by Congress for a new post does not represent more than a third of the actual expenditure. The other two-thirds are supplied “in kind,” that is to say, by soldiers’ labor. The money appropriation is only expended for things the soldiers cannot produce themselves. They cut the timber, run sawmills, dig drains, make bricks and mortar, carry hods, and plaster the inside houses. The cavalryman is fortunate if he can leave off digging long enough to groom his own horse. Frequently one man is detailed to groom, feed, and take to water the horses of several of his comrades. The American soldier on the frontier is undoubtedly a wonderful being. He is often a day laborer, slouchy in his bearing and slovenly in his dress. His one good suit must be saved for guard-mounting when his turn comes or for inspection, and the nature of his unmilitary vocations uses up his uniforms faster than his clothing allowance can furnish them. He has little or no real drill and has been known to go into action without previously having pulled the trigger of his rifle.

He has not the mien or bearing of a soldier, — in military parlance, he is not well set up. He performs the same manual labor for which the civilian who works beside him earns three times his wages. The writer has seen cavalry recruits, whose company was ordered to march, recalled from the woods, where they were employed at a saw-mill which supplied planks for some new buildings at the post and where they had passed all their time since their arrival. On joining their command, they were put on their horses for the first time and started off, armed with carbines they had never fired, on a march of over eight hundred miles. If the recruit gives his horse a sore back, he will have to foot it; if he encounters Indians, he must fight as best he can.

Frontier trooper by Frederic Remington

Frontier trooper by Frederic Remington

Yet, despite this treatment, — which is virtually a breach of contract by the Government, since the recruit is led to suppose on his enlistment that he is to be a soldier and not a hod-carrier, — despite his rarely being taught his profession or shown how to become skilled in arms or horsemanship, the American soldier is subordinate, quick to obey, ready in expedients, uncomplaining, capable of sustaining significant fatigue, brave and trustworthy in action. The previous lack of drill causes many difficulties for company officers in battle, as the recruit must then be taught on the spur of the moment what ought to have been drilled into him in camp, where his time has been spent wielding a trowel. But, history, even today, shows that the knight of the hod faces any odds of position or numbers at the command of his officer. If he dies firing a carbine in the use of which he is uninstructed (and even if he were skilled in it, it would still be a weapon inferior to that of his savage foe), he will be lucky if he has a pile of stones heaped up to mark his grave.

If he lives through the fight, he will have become somewhat more accustomed to using his carbine and in the next engagement, will do better work with it. The country feeds him very well, clothes him tolerably well, — if he can do his duty to satisfy his officer. If he does not catch inflammatory rheumatism from sleeping on the ground, he must be content. Generally, by the time a cavalry officer has reached middle age, his exposed life begins to tell upon him.

The cavalry, being mounted, are called upon to do most of the frontier scouting. Some of the infantry are also mounted, especially the Fifth Infantry. Infantry in such cases may simply be classed as cavalry, though armed with a better weapon, — the long Springfield rifle. Marches in the middle of winter occur only too often. In many instances, the troops must march with cooked rations and abstain from lighting fires, lest the smoke may warn the Indians they are pursuing, — and this with the thermometer many degrees below zero. As the Indian is as loath as a bear to leave his winter quarters and little expects the approach of his foe, such expeditions are often successful if a “blizzard” does not happen to blow. This blizzard, as it is termed in Montana and  Wyoming, or the norther, as it is known in New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas, is a strong, piercing wind from the North, which blows for some three days, and smites everything that is not undercover. If the troops are spared this blizzard, they may strike their wily foe, who has evaded them all summer and punish him with no other casualties than those incurred from frozen feet and fingers and in the fortune of battle. The quartermaster’s department furnishes excellent buffalo overcoats and fur caps, and men can march and can live on cold food in the middle of a bitter winter: but, when the blizzard comes, the troops must seek the nearest shelter and use every means to keep themselves alive. In many instances, their wagons are broken up for fuel, as there are vast areas on the Plains where no timber grows. In the sudden changes of station which the Government is forced to make with troops, because of the smallness of our army, much suffering is incurred, — as in the case of regiments sent, without halt for acclimation, from Georgia or Louisiana to the British line. But, after the troops have become acclimatized and have learned to be always prepared for the coldest weather, they like the northwestern climate, which is undoubtedly very invigorating.

Indian Scout showing a village, by R.F. Zogbaum, 1885

Indian Scout showing a village, by R.F. Zogbaum, 1885

On the occasion of any military expedition, scouts are hired to discover the position and circumstances of the “hostiles,” as Indians are called, for attacking whom, orders have been issued. Their rewards are usually regulated by the importance of the information they bring and the risks they have run. Many of these men will do excellent service, and sometimes modestly. Many more, on the other hand, will lie perdu until their rations are consumed and then come back with some startling but highly untrue information. They have proved themselves to be not too good to burn the grass, to efface the trail of the enormous body of Indians they pretended to have seen. These men usually don a costume like that of the hero of a dime novel. They wear long hair, occasionally neatly bound up into a queue with snakeskin. Sometimes they cut out the roof of their sombrero to permit their flowing topknots to wave forth like feathers.

They use much of the Indian’s ornament, often adorning themselves by sewing elk teeth on their garments; they also imitate some of the least excusable customs of the savage. All of them endeavor to adopt some prefix to their name.

A Mr. Johnston, drowned in the Yellowstone, acquired the soubriquet of  “Liver Eating” Johnston by eating and pretending to prefer his portion of liver in an uncooked condition. He was as well satisfied with this name and the notoriety it implied as are Indians with their zoological titles.

“Squaw-man” is the name given to a white man who has married one or more Indian wives and been regularly adopted by the tribe with whom he lives. Except for occasional use as an interpreter, he is utterly worthless. He has entirely left his own race and taken to the ways of the Indians and is equally despised by the whites and by his adopted brethren. Many woodcutters who supply fuel to steamboats on the upper Missouri River are Indian wives, but they do not form part of the tribal family, as does the “squaw-man.” Often it is the policy for them to take wives from tribes that are dangerous to their safety. A wife ensures protection from the depredations of her tribe, and when her lord and master is tired of her or wish to form other business relations, he simply tells her and her progeny to go home. These men have the reputation of being the most active agents in supplying ammunition to the Indians.

At the border of the British possessions, sometimes on our side and sometimes to the north, are several thousands of half-breeds who seem descended from French and Scotch fathers. They speak Cree and some other Indian tongues but, customarily, use a French patois that is easily understood. Their government seems to be founded on the old patriarchal system. They are strict Catholics and are duly married by a priest, who makes occasional visits to them, and insists upon legally uniting in wedlock such couples as he thinks have proved this ceremony to be necessary. They lead a nomadic life, trading between the whites and the Indians, supplying the latter with ammunition, and subsisting primarily on game and buffalo. The latter they make up into pemmican, — a large bundle of finely chopped fat and lean, seasoned with wild herbs, and tightly wrapped up in buffalo hide. This they sell or keep for winter use. They travel in curious one-horse carts, in the manufacture of which little or no iron is used, the pinning being done with wood, and the wheels bound together with thongs of green buffalo hide, which shrink as they dry. As these carts will float in water, an unfordable stream can be crossed by swimming the horses attached to the shafts. These people always camp with their carts in a circle, the shafts towards the center, and the carts prove an effective barricade against any enemy without cannon. Their stock is corralled every night inside the circle. These half-breeds must be classed more as Indians than as whites, as their actions, habits, and beliefs are inherited more from their mothers than from their fathers.

A great and always remunerative pursuit on the frontier is that of cattle-raising. A well-selected range, near streams which do not dry up in summer and with timber, or such undulations of the ground as would afford shelter for the beasts from the worst winter’s winds, together with a small capital and reasonable care and exertion, will in a few years produce a fortune, — and not only a fortune but, robust health for the herder. The season when he is away from his cabin, herding up his cattle, is mild enough to allow sleeping on the ground. He is not compelled, like the soldier, at times to endure the blizzard or to sleep in the snow. Many young men engaged in cattle-raising are of excellent education and social position and very much attached to the life they lead, and well they may be, as it gives them all the pleasure the frontier can afford with no more hardship than is good for them. Choosing congenial companions, they build a comfortable ranch, stock it well with books, and employ men to assist in the rougher duties, either by hiring them with fixed wages or giving them an interest in the herd. The day is passed in the saddle, the evening before a crackling wood fire. The only time when great exertion is necessary is during the “roundings up”; then, their whole property in cattle must be brought together, the young calves branded, and the brands of their parents retouched if effaced. There is no animal nearby powerful enough to destroy cattle, and there is nothing to prevent their yearly increase. The Indians may kill one now and then for food but cannot drive them off, as their movement is too slow. Cattle stealing is not as easy as horse stealing. Frontier folk eat, drink, and live, and after their manner, enjoy life. We can perceive that they have occasional hardships, but they have pleasures that may not be so easily understood by people who live in comfortable houses, drive in well-hung and well-cushioned carriages, or walk paved streets. Life in the open air, freedom from restraint, and a vigorous appetite, generally finding a hearty meal to satisfy it, make difficult a return to the humdrum of steady work and comparative respectability. They have their place in the drama of our national life, for better or worse, and their pursuits and character must be recognized and studied by anyone who would comprehend our great Western country.

 

Compiled and edited by Kathy Alexander/Legends of America, updated September 2022.

About the Article: This article was written by George Booth in 1880. It appeared in the International Review magazine published in New York, New York, from 1874 to 1883. The article as it appears here, is not verbatim as it has been truncated and edited for the modern reader.

Also See:

The American Frontier

The Frontier In History by Emerson Hough

Frontier Types by Theodore Roosevelt

Frontier Wars by Emerson Hough

The Great Plains