Authors: Peter Stark
Northwest Coast Art—
Yéil X’eenh
(Raven Screen), ca. 1810, from Klukwan village, Tlingit people. Screens like this stood in traditional longhouses separating family living quarters. From the house of a clan associated with the Raven, this screen shows the Raven’s head looking straight ahead at the very top, center. Its tail feathers appear below the round opening at the bottom, which served as the ceremonial entrance to the “house master’s” treasure room. The Raven’s wings drape down the sides of the screen.
It was images like this one that gave Wilson Price Hunt pause when choosing a route across the continent for Astor’s Overland Party. Robert McGee (
pictured here),
like Edward Robinson—the trapper and survivor who advised Hunt to avoid hostile Blackfeet territory—was a survivor of scalping.
I
N FACT
H
UNT WAS ABLE TO SHAME THREE
S
HOSHONE INTO
guiding his party. Those three now led them from the safety of the large Shoshone village down the small tributary river westward, back to the banks of the Mad River. As there were no native reed canoes to ferry across the river’s swirling current, Hunt killed two of the horses he’d bought from the village and crafted a horsehide canoe, delicately ferrying the party a few at a time across the channel, four hundred yards wide and running with spinning chunks of ice. They felt cheered finally to put to their backs the river they had followed for two months and whose unexplored, mile-and-a-half-deep crack in the earth—Hells Canyon—had for weeks blocked their westward progress to the Pacific.
“
La maudite riviêre enragée,”
the voyageurs called it, bidding farewell. “The accursed mad river.”
On the far bank, Hunt and company met the remaining thirteen men of Crooks’s ragtag party, still waiting, after their struggles in the great gorge, for food and leadership.
“[They] told me that since we had left they had not seen either Mr. Crooks or the two men who were with him,” wrote Hunt. “All of Mr. Crooks’s men were extremely weak and exhausted, four of them even more than the others.”
Three of these weakened voyageurs told Hunt they didn’t have the strength to go onward. It’s a measure of their deprivation and extreme exertion along
La maudite riviêre enragée
that these workhorse-like men, routinely happy to paddle canoes eighteen hours per day and haul two-hundred-pound loads over portages, singing all the way, had simply stopped. Frail, spectral versions of their former selves, they had decided to stay in the wilds rather than with their companions, taking their chances of survival at the Shoshone villages. The fourth frail and exhausted man, Michael Carriere, opted to proceed westward into the mountains with Hunt as best he could.
It may have been easier for Hunt to go on while Crooks was still out of sight in the canyon than to have to say goodbye to his friend and weakened business partner before heading west toward the Pacific. Hunt was torn by the tension between the unity of the group and the success of the mission. He had hesitated in the gorge: Should he stay with his good but failing man beside the trail? Was his devotion to his men or to the success of the mission? But in many ways the success of the mission depended on the loyalty of the men, and the loyalty of the men depended on Hunt taking care of them. It was a dilemma that offered only difficult answers.
Hunt had, however, now irrevocably made the decision: The success of Mr. Astor’s enterprise trumped the welfare of the straggling men. He had provided as best he could for Crooks, leaving two men by his side in the gorge, including John Day, the lanky, friendly, forty-year-old Virginian hunter. Hunt had also sent horse meat back to his failing friend. Should he make it out of the gorge alive, Crooks could take shelter in the same Shoshone village and recover his strength. But it was also true that Hunt could have chosen to stay all winter in the Shoshone village and let Crooks and the others catch up and recover. Instead, he chose to go on.
Mr. Astor’s Overland Party, once sixty strong, had splintered again. On Christmas Eve, 1811, Hunt left his weakest men and the Mad River and headed west over big, rolling country toward distant mountains.
“My group,” Hunt recorded, “was now made up of thirty-two white men, a woman eight months pregnant, her two children, and three Indians. We had only five puny horses to feed us during our trip over the mountains.”
For three days they trudged westward, led by the Shoshone guides. The trail proved a good one that was well traveled by Indians in the warmer months. They could make about fifteen miles per day walking through intermittent showers of rain and snow, as they crossed up and down over dry, open hills and rounded grassy ridges not quite sharp enough to be called mountains. But the trudging climbs and descents still took their toll. On the third day the exhausted voyageur, Carriere, simply lay down, unable to walk anymore. Hunt gave Carriere one of the five scrawny horses to ride.
They worked their way westward from valley to valley. Skiffs of snow clung to the steep, shady north faces. They followed winding stream bottoms bordered by fringes of dwarfed cottonwoods and waded through the frigid water. Strained beyond endurance by yet another set of hills, the voyageur La Bonté, once capable of hauling inhuman weights but now too emaciated to hold his own body upright, also “broke down.” Hunt propped him up on another of the horses. When he realized the horse didn’t have the strength to carry both La Bonté and La Bonté’s twenty-five-pound pack, Hunt added La Bonté’s pack to his own.
The rolling terrain gradually rose. They crossed a taller ridge that topped out in pine groves and snow. As they descended the far side, a broad, snowless valley opened up where six Shoshone tipis clustered. Trading two old guns, a tomahawk, and a cooking pot for four horses, three dogs, and edible roots, Hunt’s party feasted with immediate relish, preferring dog meat to all else. The Shoshone people in the camp pointed toward a snowy ridge of mountains rising to the west. This was the barrier. They indicated a gap where Hunt would find a pass. They told Hunt he had three more nights to cross those mountains before reaching the camp of the Sciatogas. On the pass, they told him, he would not find much snow.
Hunt remained skeptical.
“They . . . had so often given me erroneous reports that I did not take this news seriously,” wrote Hunt. “On every side of us snow blanketed the mountains.”
While still in camp early the next morning, December 30, Marie Dorion, at eight months pregnant, went into labor. She was an Iowan woman with a part-Sioux husband and about to give birth in a Shoshone camp; whatever the exact tribal tradition she followed, pregnancy in traditional Native American culture was considered a sacred state for a woman and giving birth a sacred act.
“Silence and isolation are the rule of life for the expectant mother,” wrote Charles Alexander Eastman, or Ohíye S’a, a Santee Sioux born in the mid-1800s on the plains who eventually studied Western medicine at Dartmouth College and Boston University. “She wanders prayerful in the stillness of great woods, or on the bosom of the untrodden prairie, and to her poetic mind the immanent [
sic
] birth of her child prefigures the advent of a master-man—a hero, or the mother of heroes. . . . And when the day of days in her life dawns—the day in which there is to be a new life, the miracle of whose making has been intrusted to her, she seeks no human aid. She has been trained and prepared in body and mind for this her holiest duty, ever since she can remember. The ordeal is best met alone. . . .”
Marie Dorion, however, was on something of a forced march in Hunt’s party during her pregnancy. How had she been thinking about the life gestating inside her? Were the endless walks and climbs, the hardships and privations, all contributing to her unborn child’s spiritual power? Had she even assumed extra hardships to give her child power? The men on the expedition were constantly amazed at how much, and how easily and uncomplainingly, pregnant Marie Dorion walked instead of rode a horse.
The six-tipi Shoshone camp in the broad valley offered a convenient place to give birth before the Hunt party embarked over the snowy mountains. Perhaps it was induced. Meriwether Lewis reported in his journal how Sacagawea underwent a difficult and painful labor at the Mandan villages with her first child. A Mandan medicine man was enlisted, who, saying the method had worked many times before, took two rings from the rattle of a rattlesnake that Lewis possessed, crumpled them into water, and gave it to Sacagawea to drink. She gave birth within ten minutes. (Lewis admitted to some skepticism that the rattle made the difference.)
As Marie went into labor early that morning at the six Shoshone tipis, Pierre Dorion told Hunt to go on ahead.
*
The Hunt party set out again across the broad and open valley. The following day the Dorion family overtook the main group. Hunt was stunned to see them so soon and so relaxed, Pierre walking in front.
“His wife rode horseback with her newly born child in her arms,” wrote Hunt. “Another child, two years old and wrapped in a blanket, was fastened by her side. One would have thought, from her behavior, that nothing had happened to her.”
It was New Year’s Eve, 1811. Voyageurs typically rang in New Year’s Day with singing, dancing, drinking, and feasting.
“My people asked me not to travel on the 1st of January without first celebrating the new year,” wrote Hunt. “I agreed to the idea willingly because most of them were very tired from having daily no more than a meager meal of horse meat and from carrying packs on their shoulders while crossing the mountains.”
On January 2 they resumed their march, climbing steadily into the mountain range that rose like a long blue wall to the west, first ascending a small river valley, then the fork of a creek. Leaving the creek’s head, their Shoshone guides led them clambering up snowy ridges, forested with pine trees, that rose to mountain peaks—today’s Blue Mountains in northeastern Oregon. On the heights, the trees thinned and the snow lay deeper. They plowed through it, halfway up their legs, to break a trail. In places they plunged through wind drifts or dropped into hollows, sinking up to their waists.
With two days of climbing in the deep snow, on January 4, 1812, Hunt’s party dragged themselves to the frigid crest of the range, capped with icy gray cloud.
“[W]e were at a point as high as the mountains that surrounded us, some wooded, but all covered with snow,” Hunt wrote.
For two more days they worked along the crest, heading generally west, traversing high, rolling ridges, struggling through deep snow and pine forests. On January 6 a crack of sunlight broke through the frigid cloud cap. Looking westward from the heights, just beneath the gray cloud ceiling, they spotted what looked like a wide, sunny, shimmering valley. Could this be the broad Columbia River plain? Was this shaft of sunlight the first waft of the milder Pacific climate that lay beyond the last mountains? They had been wrong so many times before in thinking they were almost there.
The next day, January 7, their Shoshone guides led them to a narrow stream defile that notched the mountain crest. Starting as a small valley on the mountain ridge, it twisted lower all day, dropping, deepening, snaking between immense hillsides that now rose high on each side as the stream fell in elevation. Many of the men, stumbling, dropped behind the main group. Another tragedy befell them.
“The Dorion baby died,” Hunt recorded tersely.
There was no mention of a ceremony for the week-old infant. On the same cold night, a number of the stragglers failed to appear in camp. Hunt didn’t wait. It was now a staggering dash for a rescue, a race to stay ahead of the starvation and exhaustion that had begun felling the rearmost members of the group, one by one.
The snow thinned as they descended the twisting, deepening defile and disappeared. They noticed deer tracks and horse trails along the streambank and the hillsides. Then the narrow defile suddenly opened up. As if exiting a doorway from the mountains, they emerged into a broad valley etched gently with meandering streams. Its floor shone bright green with grass even in the winter, while the bottomlands along the streams were like oases—microclimates—sheltered from winter’s north winds and exposed to warm southern sun. Their three Shoshone guides led them onto the valley floor. They spotted a sprawling Indian encampment. With rising joy, they counted thirty-four tipis. An astounding number of horses grazed contentedly in the meadows around the camp—at least two thousand of them—an indication of the richness and abundance of the place. Hunt spotted copper kettles simmering over cook fires. Here was another encouraging sign—an indication of nearby trade with the Pacific Coast. The Columbia River, the Indians told him, lay an easy two days’ travel away.
After two months of wandering lost in search of the Columbia, they’d arrived. They had just crossed the final range of the mountains and descended the far side to the Pacific.
“I cannot thank Providence enough for our having reached this point,” wrote Hunt, “for we were excessively tired and weak.”
The Indians, once again, had rescued Hunt. He and his party stayed in the Sciatoga camp for six days to recuperate, some men gorging on meat and roots until they sickened themselves. It “pleased me greatly,” Hunt recorded, to hear reports from the Sciatogas that another party of white men—Mackenzie’s or McClellan’s group, no doubt—had recently passed down the Columbia. All of Hunt’s stragglers of the last few days eventually showed up in the Sciatoga camp, except one, Carriere, who’d been weakest and riding on horseback. Also missing were Ramsay Crooks and the four others left far back at the Mad River. The journal accounts say that Carriere apparently turned onto the wrong hunting trail. Hunt’s men searched briefly for him from the Sciatoga camp before giving up the debilitated voyageur for lost. In the aftermath, however, suspicions of cannibalism hung around his disappearance.