Read The Last Empty Places Online
Authors: Peter Stark
You don’t learn the lesson standing in the big-shouldered Loop of Chicago, or in the man-made canyons of Manhattan, or in the sinuous sprawl of LA, or in the long corridors of the Pentagon. You don’t learn it with a cell phone in your hand standing in line at the ATM or supermarket checkout. You do learn it in the middle of a wilderness during a
blizzard, or on foot in a desert, or alone on a mountaintop. The astrophysicist on the Plains of San Agostin surely knows. If you’re peering up with a giant radiotelescope from a high-desert plain seeking the ends of the universe, finding energy sources countless times more powerful than our own staggeringly powerful sun and discovering blank spots a billion light-years across…the truth is clear.
Creation is enormous and infinitely complex. Man is only the tiniest, tiniest, tiniest part of all Creation. And you—yes,
you—
are even tinier than that.
That’s what blank spots tell us.
In the Prologue, I’ve told the story of how I came to love the wild, empty places of the world, the blank spots on the map. There are many people who made this book possible, but in a deeper, familial sense, my first debt goes to my grandfather, who papered the walls of his upstairs hallways with maps from all over the world, and whose fire-lit library shelves groaned under the weight of bound leather volumes of
National Geographic;
and also to my late father, William F. Stark, who had a passion for the early history of the North American continent and wrote local history books on the settlement of Wisconsin.
This book had its most immediate inception during an editorial meeting with Nancy Miller, then editor in chief of Ballantine Books, as I described my fascination with wild, empty places.
“My son and I like to study maps together and search out the blankest spots,” she remarked.
“Blank spots!” I replied. “I love blank spots!”
And so this book was born.
Right at the outset, I contacted my friend Alex Philp, a historical geographer and partner in GCS Research in Missoula, Montana, which produces sophisticated map-based data systems. Philp, as I recount in the Prologue, showed me the way to find the blankest of the blank spots and different ways to think about them.
Philp’s partner at GCS, Michael Beltz, spent many hours designing the engrossing maps that appear in this book. It amazed me with what ease—and geniality—he could include whatever I wanted in the maps, change it in countless different ways, add or subtract “layers” of data to
accentuate the information that we wished to highlight as effectively as possible.
In each of the “empty places” I visited—despite, or perhaps because of, their lack of population—I found people who were very hospitable and willing to help bring this project along.
These include several “blank spots” I investigated in person but, for one reason or another, don’t appear in this book. In the East Dismal Swamp of North Carolina, Fred Willard of the Lost Colony Center for Science and Research graciously invited me on an archaeological excavation searching for traces of the “lost colony” of Roanoke Island. The colony disappeared in the late 1580s, and its settlers—including Virginia Dare, the first known British child born in North America—may have retreated to the fastness of the swamp. Phil McMullan Jr. also helped me with background during the excavation.
In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Neal and Ruth Beaver of Grand Marais told me vivid anecdotes of life on this remote stretch of the Lake Superior shoreline, known as the “Shipwreck Coast.”
Our canoe trip down the St. John River of Northern Maine was greatly helped by Betsy and Galen Hale, who not only supplied us with canoes and shuttling from their outfitting business, Nicatou Outfitters, but whose ancestral roots in the northern Maine area are fascinating and deep and connect to Henry David Thoreau’s visits there. David Shipper, as shuttle driver with the Hales, provided us good company on the road and an endless supply of local information. At Camden on Maine’s Penobscot Bay, Capt. Al Philbrick, who took us out on his lobster boat, was a useful source of information about coastal life and anecdotes of the Acadian migrations.
In Pennsylvania, Kim Mattern, amateur archaeologist and lifetime resident of the Penns Creek area, is an authority on the Le Roy Massacre. He personally guided me to the places where significant events occurred, shared his artifact collection, and provided me with a paper he has produced from his research on the Le Roy Massacre. Likewise, Bill Mattern provided information about the area. In Renovo and Tamarack, Richard Kugel, assistant district forester at the Sproul State Forest, and Doug D’Amore, district forester, took time out to speak with me about the forest and early land-use history. Eric and Peggy Lucas of Tamarack provided a great deal of local history, much of it compiled by Peggy’s late mother, Dorothy M. Bailey, a respected historian
of the area. Nancy and David Swanson helped sketch out the history of the Warren area, and their son, Carl, a friend of mine in Missoula, gave me an overview of Pennsylvania geography (especially advice on choice fly-fishing spots). Les McComber and Dennis Lytel showed me their hospitality on the Seneca Reservation and told me about the history of the Seneca people.
The huge empty spaces of Oregon proved to be populated, however thinly, with most welcoming people. At the enormous Roaring Springs Ranch, owner Rob Sanders graciously pointed the way to manager Stacy Davies, out in the desert at a branding, who, when I finally found him, was a fount of information and enthusiasm on ranch life and restoration of the rangelands and watersheds. His wife, Elaine, and sons, Erik, Jeff, and Scott, along with the other hands, all welcomed me at the branding and gave me a little hands-on experience, too. René Villagrana, at ranch headquarters, provided more background about seasonal ranch life.
Both the Frenchglen Hotel, and its manager, John Ross, and the Fields Station, and Sandy Downs and sister Gail, were hospitable, helpful and informative. At the Harney County Library, Karen Nitz of the Claire McGill Luce Western History Room extracted from various file drawers exactly the manuscripts and articles I needed to learn about the Lost Wagon Trains. The folks at the Alvord Ranch took time out from a busy day to talk to me, and John Wetzel, of Steens Mountain Outfitter and the Wildhorse Ranch, laid out the economics of ranching for me and, as an expert outfitter on the mountain, pointed the way to the summit of Steens Mountain. Gary Miller of the sprawling Rock Creek Ranch showed me a place that was still run in the old family way, while his young son rode by on horseback in the background, helping to round up bulls.
As Gary put it succinctly, which applies to so much of this arid region, “My grandfather witched for water and hit a well thirty-six-feet deep, and that’s the only reason the Millers survived, because we had water.”
In New Mexico and for help with our Gila Wilderness hike, thanks to Jay Hemphill at Gila Hike and Bike in Silver City for his route suggestions, Marcine Page for looking out for us, and to Matt Gardiner of the VLA (Very Large Array) for showing us around. Displayed in the hallway leading into the operators’ room was a poster that proclaimed
in large letters “VLA—Center of the Known Universe.” It felt that way. We stood surrounded by computers and looked out from the observation windows at sunset over the desert array of massive satellite dishes as they peered up through the twilight into deepest space.
While the Bibliography and Endnotes cite the many invaluable sources I used in my research for this book, I feel a particular debt to certain works that comprehensively made sense of difficult-to-follow periods of early North American history. These are especially
Crucible of War: The Seven Years’ War and the Fate of Empire in British North America
by Fred Anderson, and
A Great and Noble Scheme: The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland
by John Mack Farragher. Without them, I would have spent a long time floundering in the complicated historical thickets of the French and Indian War, the web of European diplomatic alliances of the mid-eighteenth century, and the many threads of the Acadian settlement and expulsion from Nova Scotia.
Christopher Preston, associate professor of philosophy at the University of Montana, and William Bevis, retired professor of English at the University of Montana, read the manuscript and brought to it their own very substantial knowledge of the literature—and the actuality—of wild places.
It’s been nothing but pure pleasure to work with the editors at Random House and Ballantine who made this book possible and nurtured it to fruition. I can’t express enough gratitude to Jennifer Hershey, editorial director at Random House, and Courtney Moran, assistant editor, who worked together on the manuscript and whose editorial suggestions invariably were graceful, thoughtful, and wise. Allison Dickens, formerly of Ballantine Books, originally commissioned the book and played an instrumental role in its conception and overall shape. John McGhee copyedited the manuscript in meticulous detail and, with a firsthand knowledge of Nova Scotia, clarified some blurry geography. I owe a huge debt to my agent, Stuart Krichevsky, for so many things both literary and business that I don’t even know where to begin except to express my deep gratitude for his tremendous knowledge, judgment, and support.
Finally, my gratitude and love to Amy, Molly, and Skyler, who accompanied me every paddle stroke and footstep of the way, even when I was alone.
1.
John Rudberg, one of the first Swedes to immigrate to Wisconsin Territory
William F. Stark,
Pine Lake
, p. 88.
2.
“For many years,” wrote Thoreau, “I was self-appointed inspector of rainstorms and snowstorms…”
From Thoreau’s
Journals
.
3.
Emerson, his friend and mentor, bought forty acres along the pond to save it from being logged
Walter Harding,
The Days of Henry Thoreau
, p. 179.
1.
All men and “lads”
John Mack Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 343.
2.
“They can do no harm at Baccalaos”
Francis Parkman,
Pioneers of France in the New World
, p. 223.
3.
Baccalaos was the Spanish and Portuguese name
Ibid., pp. 191–92.
4.
Cartier was put out to pasture
Ibid., p. 226.
5.
the region known to the French as “L’Acadie”
(and origins of the name Acadia). Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 6. Several different theories account for the name Acadia. It may have been given by the Italian seafarer Verrazano, who, exploring the North American coast in 1524 in the service of France, called the lush shorelines “Arcadia,” after the mythical pastoral region of ancient Greece, and the “r” was later dropped from maps and references. On the other hand, the name possibly derives from a Micmac Indian word meaning “place of abundance,”
akadie
. Or “Acadia” may have been a blending of these two words. Originally the French used it to refer to a huge part of North America but later the term “New France” came into more common use for the greater holdings and Acadia more specifically
defined the coastal and inland regions around present-day Maine, Nova Scotia, and the other Maritime provinces. (See the Acadian Genealogy Homepage for more theories of the origin of the word
Acadia
at
http://acadian.org/acadian.html
.)
6.
L’Acadie or La Cadie took in everything
Parkman,
Pioneers of France in the New World
, p. 247.
7.
King Henri IV had granted
Marc Lescarbot,
The History of New France
, vol. II, pp. 211–16.
8.
“From the Spanish settlements northward”
Parkman,
Pioneers of France in the New World
, p. 256.
9.
“fly from a corrupt world”
Ibid., p. 263.
10.
“…there came from the land odors”
Ibid., p. 266. (Translation differs slightly in Lescarbot, vol. II, p. 309.)
11.
St. John River
The St. John River, according to Marc Lescarbot, the Parisian lawyer who accompanied the earliest settlers, was so named because during their coastal explorations of Acadia, the French arrived at the mouth of this unknown river on June 24, the day of the Feast of Saint John the Baptist, naming it in his honor. (See Lescarbot,
History of New France
, vol. II, p. 239.)
12.
“as if we sucked at the very teats”
Henry David Thoreau, “Ktaadn,” in
The Maine Woods
, p. 35.
13.
“I do not recognize your authority”
Harding,
The Days of Henry Thoreau
, p. 41, quoting original Harvard report.
14.
Harvard’s new president, Josiah Quincy
Ibid., p. 33.
15.
The Romantic spirit was channeled
Max Oelschlaeger,
The Idea of Wilderness
, p. 116.
16.
“American Scholar” address
quoted from “The American Scholar” address given by Ralph Waldo Emerson at the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Cambridge, Massachusetts, August 31, 1837, as it appears at
www.emersoncentral.com/amscholar.htm
.
17.
“his grave Indian stride”
Harding,
The Days of Henry Thoreau
, p. 40, quoting John Weiss, “Thoreau” in
Christian Examiner
LXXIX (1865), p. 98.
18.
“…it was a wondrous sight”
Lescarbot,
The History of New France
, vol. II, p. 312.
19.
“Land of the Porcupine”
History of Madawaska
, reprinted on Acadian website at
http://acadian.org/Indians.html
.
20.
“the Beautiful River”
C. Gagnon, “Native Peoples in the Upper St. John River Valley,” at
www.upperstjohn.com/history/natives.htm
.
21.
hunting in the forest with the Micmac
Lescarbot,
The History of New France
, vol. II, p. 344.
22.
“Our sons will marry your daughters”
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 47.
23.
“The Nature Conservancy”
from oral interview 11.13.06 with Bruce Kidman of the Nature Conservancy staff and written history of St. John purchase, “The Defining Moment for Maine Conservation,” at
www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/maine/about/art22181.html
.
24.
Deacon Ball, of the school committee
Harding,
The Days of Henry Thoreau
, pp. 52–53.
25.
“‘What are you doing now?’”
Ibid., p. 70.
26.
“To the Maiden in the East”:
Ibid., p. 107.
27.
“short, explicit
and
cold
manner”
Ibid., p. 102.
28.
“a wild, irregular, Indian-like sort of character”
Ibid., p. 140.
29.
“traveling, trucking, and marrying with the savages”
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 41, quoting Richard Guthry, “A Relation of the Voyage and Plantation of the Scotts Colony in New Scotland under the conduct of Sir William Alexander the Younger” (1629).
30.
“Get thee behind me, Satan!”
Lescarbot,
History of New France
, vol. II, p. 67.
31.
soft, luxurious coats of marten and otter
M. A. MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, p. 12.
32.
The young Frenchmen learned
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 36.
33.
“wives, children, dogs, kettles, hatchets, matachias”
Lescarbot,
History of New France
, vol. III, p. 192.
34.
the supreme spirit was Manitou
MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, p. 14.
35.
“strange hissings”
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 36, quoting Champlain’s memoirs.
36.
“…[V]igorous and tough”
Intendant Jean Bochart de Champigny; the Marquis de Denonville; and a French officer, in W. J. Eccles,
The Canadian Frontier
(New York, 1969), pp. 90, 92, as quoted in MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, p. 12.
37.
[A] waste and howling wilderness
Roderick Frazier Nash,
Wilderness and the American Mind
, p. 36.
38.
Helen Leidy was the eldest of six children
Helen Hamlin,
Nine Mile Bridge
, p. x.
39.
“The ice is going out!”
Ibid., pp. 229–31.
40.
Thoreau traveled by steamship
Thoreau,
The Maine Woods
, p. 1.
41.
marked with the king’s sign
interview with Galen Hale, 6.18.06.
42.
a great knob of granite
from Maine Geologic Survey website at
www.maine.gov/doc/nrimc/mgs/explore/bedrock/katahdin/glacial.htm
.
43.
“most childlike, unconscious and unblushing egotist”
Harding,
The Days of Henry Thoreau
, p. 150, quoting Perry,
The Thought and Character of William James
, p 49.
44.
“I have had no help or relief”
MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, p. 18, quoting La Tour’s letter to the king, “Charles de la Tour au Roi, July 25, 1627.”
45.
Claude had risen from modest beginnings
Ibid., pp. 19–23.
46.
his ex-tutor William Alexander
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 39.
47.
“This answer,” writes Nicolas Denys
Nicolas Denys,
The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America (Acadia)
, pp. 133–36.
48.
richest source of furs in this entire region
MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, pp. 38–39.
49.
“good sense, discretion, fidelity, experience and great industry”
Ibid., p. 39.
50.
On the morning of September 7, 1846
Thoreau,
The Maine Woods
, p. 59.
51.
“…inhuman Nature has got him at a disadvantage”
Ibid., p. 85.
52.
“It is difficult to conceive of a region uninhabited by man”
Ibid., p. 94.
53.
A quart of arbor-vitae
Ibid., p. 55.
54.
La Tour agreed, in 1633, to split the fur-trade profits in half
MacDonald,
Fortune & La Tour
, p. 51.
55.
After the formal marriage ceremony
Ibid., p. 77.
56.
a paltry four hundred or so in New France’s
Ibid., p. 91.
57.
Françoise Jacquelin fell ill and died
Ibid., pp. 170–71.
58.
He died, probably at Port Royal
Ibid., p. 180.
59.
The Acadian population had soared
Faragher,
A Great and Noble Scheme
, p. 65.
60.
“They Lavish, Eat, Drink, and Play”
Ibid., p. 72.
61.
Six days later, on September 11, 1755
Ibid., p. 353.
62.
Le Grand Dérangement
from “Encyclopedia of Cajun Culture,” at
www.cajunculture.com
.
63.
probably escaped detection by the fledgling United States
“Deane and Kavanaugh’s Survey of the Madawaska Settlements, July–August 1831,” posted on
www.upperstjohn.com/aroostook/dkobservations.htm
.
1.
Early on October 16, 1755
Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger, “The Narrative of Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger,” p. 429.
2.
Karondinhah, as the Indians knew it
Paul A. W. Wallace,
Indian Paths of Pennsylvania
, p. 126.
3.
They either shot or tomahawked him
Kim Adair Mattern, “The Leroy Incident, and Observations.”
4.
“We are Allegheny Indians, and your enemies!”
Le Roy and Leininger, “Narrative,” p. 429.
5.
Far more than the Revolutionary War
Fred Anderson,
Crucible of War
, p. xvi. Anderson here addresses the significance of the Seven Years’ War on a continental and global scale.
6.
In the autumn of 1753
Ibid., p. 43.
7.
reached Fort Le Boeuf, near Lake Erie, on December 11, 1753
George Washington,
The Diaries of George Washington
, vol. I, pp. 148–52
8.
“The lands upon the River Ohio”
Anderson,
Crucible of War
, p. 44.
9.
what the Iroquois believed was only the Shenandoah Valley
Ibid., p. 23.
10.
“place of the setting of the sun”
Solon J. Buck and Elizabeth Hawthorn Buck,
The Planting of Civilization in Western Pennsylvania
, p. 56.
11.
The Ohio Company then gave stock to Lieutenant Governor Dinwiddie
Anderson,
Crucible of War
, p. 30.
12.
hile an older and more confident commander might have considered his options
Ibid., p. 51.