[quote] I
had been sick with inflammation of the lungs and rheumatism, and the
doctor told my uncle that a trip across the Plains to California would
be good for me – that it would either kill or cure me,
I heard
of a company that was to start shortly from Beloit, a town about 12
miles from Janesville, Wis., where I then lived with my uncle and
family. My aunt wrote to the head of the company, whose name was Cutts,
and who replied that they were going to start on the 15th of April and
that he would take me for 60 dollars, at that time considered quite a
sum of money. But I was anxious to go, so my trip was paid for, and I
was taken to Beloit in a buggy by a man named Martin. We arrived there
about 4 o’clock in the afternoon and found Tom Cutts fighting drunk,
swearing that he would not leave the town till he had licked the best
man in it.
That frightened me so that I wanted Martin to take
me back with him to Janesville. I did not want to go with a man like
that, but Martin told me not to mind – that Cutts would be all right the
next morning. So he started back to Janesville, leaving me very
dejected. Some friends of his took me to Tom Cutts’ home where I was
treated well. And the next morning he was all right.
There
were three white canvas covered wagons, one owned by a man named
Carroll, a two-seated light spring wagon into which I climbed and took
my seat on the back seat. Carroll had two small horses, and as he
jumped to his seat with his reins in the hand, his team gave one spring
into the air causing such a jerk that it landed me head-over-heels in
the street with the seat on top of me.
Thus was the inglorious start of my trip west.
It was half an hour before I came to and found myself in a drug store
with a big crowd in front. But when I got up from the lounge, the only
ill effects I felt was a pain in the back which left me after a few
days.
So, without further delay, we traveled on, and the first night
we slept in a hay loft. And, although I was doubled up with one of the
other passengers, I was cold and my teeth chattered. After a while I
fell asleep, but before daylight I was awakened by my bedfellow who I
saw in the dim light standing with a dagger in his hand. I thought
right away that he was going to kill me, you can bet that I was scared.
But it turned out that he had lain down with his belt and weapons on,
and was only trying to make himself more comfortable by removing them.
Nothing unusual happened in the next few days as we traveled westward.
The weather was fine and the early spring blossoms dotted the fields.
Toward evening we would begin looking for a good camping place with wood
and water the principal items to watch for. The pain in my back left
me. And although we had not tents, I did not seem to suffer from the
exposure. If it rained, the men would sleep in the covered wagons and I
would shift for myself. There was not room for all in the wagons, and
we would crawl underneath or into any other place for shelter.
One evening about camping time a storm came up and some of us ran for a
deserted old house some distance away. All night we lay on the floor
while the rain came down in torrents and the wind blew a hurricane,
taking off part of the roof.
In the morning it was calm and
beautiful. But our horses, covered wagons and contents, including men,
had suffered worse than we had.
We were now passing through
Iowa, and at noon, while crossing a creek, we came upon lots of big
frogs. We caught a large bucketful of them and fried the hind parts,
which to me tasted better than any other kind of meat I had ever eaten.
Our Mr. Cutts (we called him “Captain”) was an expert in preparing a
meal of that kind. He had but one failing – the love for whiskey. And
to get that, he would trade anything in the outfit.
That part
of Iowa through which we were passing was very bare of woods and there
were no railroads, so we saw very few settlers…
After a few
days we arrived at Council Bluffs, which was the outfitting point at
that time for westbound emigrants, for, after crossing the Missouri
River, there was no other place. So Captain Cutts bought our tent,
bacon, flour and other provisions and things supposed to be enough to
last us four months.
One night, while we were there it rained, and
not far from the camp was a vacant house which the people said was
haunted. It was open, so about eight of us braced up enough courage to
try it for the one night. We were all stretched out on the floor when
one of the inside doors blew open with such force that it scared me so
much that I pulled my blanket up over my head. There must have been a
cellar underneath, for very soon an unearthly sound came from below.
But being with a crowd I soon recovered enough to fall asleep. I slept
till the first peep of day, when I saw that I was all alone; the others
had all left. So you can bet I soon left, too.
We were camped
at the foot of the bluff. I remember that it was quite a distance from
the Missouri, which we had to cross by ferrying the old-fashioned way.
After crossing we proceeded up the road towards the little town of Omaha
and drove right through it without stopping, camping quite a distance
out and near a lot of Pawnee Indians. They were certainly not a very
clean-looking tribe.
They were the first Indians we had seen in
any great numbers. The next morning I lagged behind to buy a pair of
mocassins. After I bought them, the Pawnees held me up and pulled the
strings out of them, but I was glad to get away from them for by now my
company was nearly out of sight.
One morning, as we were
breaking out of camp, eight men on horses rode up and demanded a man who
had been passing counterfeit bank bills on the few settlers that we had
passed. But he must have seen them coming from a distance, for he was
gone when they rode up, hiding among the brush. The captain paid the
horsemen 50 dollars and they rode away. Shortly thereafter, the culprit
came sneaking back into camp, and we proceeded on our way.
One
bright, sunny morning we saw off in the distance quite a body of
Indians riding toward us. They proved to be a band of Sioux warriors on
the warpath against the Pawnees. When they rode up to our camp they
merely grunted a salute, then passed on. Seeing them at first at the
distance with the sun shining on their strings of silver breastplates
was a grand and inspiring sight.
We soon came to the Platte
River, which we followed for several weeks without much change. The
valley is quite wide and then in the month of May, the river was very
wide but shallow. Years later, going East in September on a trip, the
great Platte River had all but disappeared. A little stream was pointed
out to me, but seeing things from a railroad car window, and travelling
by horse and covered wagons at the rate of 24 or 25 miles a day is
quite different. Also, the season was different.
One night we
had a heavy wind and thunder storm. Four men had to hold down the four
corners of the tent. A horse staked outside was knocked down, and a man
was blinded.
The rain came down in torrents and sifted right
through our canvas tents. The flat lowland on which we were camped had
all of six inches of water on it.
But the next morning the
storm had passed and quite a lot of wild ducks were flying around. The
water soon subsided and we proceeded on our way.
We were on
the north side of the river. The valley is quite wide and the hills
seemed quite a distance away, beyond which I suppose were the homes of
the Indians. We did not see many – only an occasional one or two,
riding across the prairie on horseback without saddle or bridle, but
with different kinds of straps around them and Buffalo meat in strips
tied on to dry and cure as they rode along.
At night we had to
stake out our horses. The least thing would stampede them, for they
seemed to be more easily scared than ourselves. The wagons would form a
circle, creating a corral, inside of which the tents would be pitched
and the “house-work” done. A guard was stationed near the horses,
sometimes a little distance from the camp and where the best feed could
be found. I had to take my turn on watch with the men. One would be on
until midnight, then he would call another who would stand guard until
morning.
Despite the guard, once in a while, on a very dark
night, there would be a stampeded. And when they started, there was no
stopping them. The horses would jerk up the stakes and disappear into
the darkness. And the next morning it might be 10 o’clock before we got
started. It might have been the scent of some animal or possibly some
Indian some distance away that would startle them.
In the
distance along the Platte Valley we would see lots of antelope and
sometimes large herds of buffalo. The buffalo were sometimes stampeded
by the Indians, who would ride wildly down from the hills making loud
noises. The buffalo would then lower their heads and start running.
And when they came to the river, they would go right over a six-foot
embankment. In fact, nothing could stop them or even turn them once
they had started on their mad flight.
I suppose the Indians expected some of them to be killed or crippled, and it was one of their ways of getting food.
The coyote was a sly, sneaky animal. Just as it was getting dark, he
would make an appearance on the distant hills and howl. Sometimes he
would muster up courage enough to sneak into camp and grab anything it
could to eat without being noticed. One night the coyotes made off with
a man’s boot and he was in a bad fix, for he had no other.
We
came within sight of Chimney Rock on the south side of the river, and it
remained within sight for some days. Also on the south side we saw Ash
Hollow where, we learned, there had been an Indian massacre some years
before. And we soon came within sight of Pike’s Peak and remained
within sight of it for all of two weeks.
About that time the
Pike’s Peak gold excitement had started, for we saw one covered wagon
with a sign painted on it reading: “Pike’s Peak of Bust.” Two of our
men got the fever, and when we came to the nearest point opposite the
Peak, Captain Cutts outfitted them with a pony and provision. The Lord
knows where they got more, for from where we were, their destination
seemed a long distance away and they had the river to cross. But we bid
them God-speed, and never heard from them thereafter.
There
was no wood along the Platte River, so the only thing we had to use as
fuel for cooking was buffalo chips. Our captain would often recite:
“There’s not a log to make a seat along the river Platte, sir. So when
you eat, you’ve to stand, or sit down square and flat, sir.”
We
soon came within sight of Fort Laramie (not to be confused with the
town Laramie, although both are in Wyoming) and the Loop Fork of the
Platte River which we had to cross. There was an old-fashioned
ferryboat there which lowered an apron down, after drawing as close to
the shore as possible. Then the teams would climb up the apron, which
had cleats nailed across it. It was watching one particular team which
started upon the apron and, when they got near the top, the boat was
pushed right out from under them and the horses were dropped into deep
water. They had quite a time getting on, but finally crossed the river
safely except for being badly soaked.
Captain Cutts, more to
save money than for any other reason, decided to ford the river. There
were stakes driven into the river which the teams were to follow. The
water was muddy, and the bottom of quicksand you could feel drifting
away under your feet. One of our teams broke a double-tree, and as I
was wading along beside them, they sent me back ashore for another set.
But before starting back, one of the men gave me a drink of whiskey. I
got back with my load all right, and then started for shore again, but
got off the track and soon I was in deep water. I could see ripples
ahead where I knew the water was shallow, and by jumping and keeping my
footing, I soon reached the shallow place. Then I saw a man coming on
horseback for me. He had a job getting me out of the water onto the
horses, but finally succeeded. And I often thought it was the whiskey
which put me off the track.
We used to watch for the Pony
Express to pass along. We would see them coming for a long distance.
And, if the wagon road was crooked, the riders would cut across when
they could in order to save distance. When they came into a station, a
pony would be standing by, saddled and ready to receive the mailbag so
the rider could be off again at once.
After leaving Fort
Laramie, Pike’s Peak passed out of sight. We soon got into the Black
Hills. (More likely the Laramie Range or what amounts to southern
foothills of the Black Hills.) We often came to Indian villages, and we
often saw some nice looking little ones playing around, and maidens
combing and braiding each other’s hair. They were friendly, and I think
the name of that tribe was Blackfoot.
A little ways back from the road at intervals were the prairie dog villages.
These little animals would sit on the mounds by their holes and give
out little yelping barks. But at the least sign of danger they would
dodge into their holes, then soon bob up, seeming to peek around.
Along the trail we had no vegetables and some of the men began to
develop scurvy. So we cooked some kind of greens we found, and which
seemed to produce the desired effect.
We soon came to Fort
Bridger, and there we learned a soldier had been sent out after a horse
thief. Our road led right through the fort, through which we passed
into the hills. The next day we met the soldier on his way back to the
fort with the stolen horse. He told us he had shot the man and buried
him near the road. Later we passed by the very shallow grave in which
the body of the unknown man lay, and which we expect was soon taken by
wild animals.
We soon began to ascend the Rocky Mountains (the
Central Rockies, or Northern Wasatch Mountains), which did not seem to
be very steep. But in the distance we could see high snow-capped peaks,
and in a gully by the road we passed a deep bed of snow. On reaching
the summit and looking back, I could see what looked like a great
valley, and, nearby, two streams of water, one running east, the other
west. (Probably the Green River, which runs east there but later joins
the Colorado River in the south, and the Opal Fork.)
From then
on the descent was rugged and rocky. And in a few days we arrived at
the entrance of Echo Canyon, at night and I remember lying down on one
end of my blanket and rolling in it till I got to the other end
One side of the canyon is very precipitous, and along the edge on the
top, a wall of stones had been built, running for some distance; and on
the other side, rifle pits had been dug. A trench ran from one side to
the other, but it had been filled in at the road crossing. Those
preparations were made by the Mormons to combat Johnston’s army which
was sent to Salt Lake City by Uncle Sam two years prior to our trip –
1858. But the army found another way of getting in, and escaped the
trap which had been set for them.
After going through the
canyon we passed through some fine scenery, past some hot springs and
then cold springs within a short distance of each other, and then over
big and little mountains. We soon came within sight of the Great Salt
Lake Valley, and in the distance we could see the city and still further
away the Great Salt Lake.
We descended into the valley and
camped near the city. We had not been there long when women came out
from their nearby homes, trying to sell vegetables from their gardens
which were very acceptable to us because we had been so long without
that kind of food. The women seemed intelligent, but poorly dressed in
blue denim or the cloth that men’s overalls were made of. We were
camped there nearly two weeks, and some of our men went on a Sunday to
hear Brigham Young preach. I walked past his residences – two adjoining
mansions. The main entrance to the grounds was through large and high
gates, one mounted by a figure of a lion, the other by an American
eagle. An armed guard marched back and forth on the walk in front.
After leaving the city and traveling about 10 miles west we passed over
a bridge that spanned what was then called by the Mormons the River
Jordan, and soon we came to the Dead Sea (Great Salt Lake). Our road
was about 200 yards from the lake. Some of our men went down to the
beach which looked white from the distance, I suppose because of the
salt.
From there on we kept joining other wagon trains until
there were nearly 100 wagons in line, since the Indians were reported to
be “bad” between Salt Lake City and Carson Valley.
The Pony
Express stations were all enclosed by stone walls about seven feet high
with square holes for the occupants to see through and shoot through if
necessary. At one station we passed, three dead Indians were lying
outside, and the defender lay dead inside. It was supposed that many
Indians were wounded before the station keeper (or keepers) was killed.
Near one station where we camped one night were two small lakes fed by
hot springs. They were about 30 feet wide and about 50 feet long,
narrowing to about three feet in width where the water escaped. The
deepest part of the little lakes was between three and four feet. And
the bottoms of coarse sand and the pleasantly warm water made for ideal
bathing.
At the station that night we had dancing the music being furnished by a fiddler from the station.
At about 2 o’clock in the morning there was quite a lot of excitement.
Everyone was awakened by the sound of horses’ feet coming toward the
camp. In the still hours of the night the sound carried clearly. All
the men had their guns ready, supposing an attack from Indians was
impending. But very soon the Pony Express rider dashed up to the camp,
taking it to be the station, and as he saw his mistake, he hastily
hollered out: “Hold on, boys! Pony Express!”
He was leading an extra horse which had caused the excitement.
The next day we reached Deep Creek, a very narrow stream but quite
deep. Major Egan, an officer of some degree, came on the same road with
us in a light covered wagon, accompanied by the fiddler of the night
before. On coming through Egan Canyon, the fiddler was shot dead. And
his body was brought into Deep Creek Station by the major.
After leaving Deep Creek Station, we soon came onto the desert where
grass and water were very scarce. The poor horses soon began to suffer
for the want of those life savers.
Once we came to a waterhole –
that is a hole dug into the sand about six feet deep, from the bottom of
which we could dip up a cupful of water, then wait for another cupful
to seep in. We would carry water in cans or buckets, and give the
horses a little at a time.
One day a storm struck – it was a
regular cloudburst. The rain fell in torrents, and the whole valley was
knee-deep in water in half an hour. And in another half hour it was
clear and hot, and you could hardly tell that it had rained at all. The
water had sunk into the sand and the surface of the soil seemed bone
dry again.
Fortunately, the Pony Express stations had wells.
We could only make 10 or 15 miles a day, for it was very hard pulling
through the sand. And sometimes we would travel nights. The sand was
so deep and the horses so weak that they would have to stop every little
while. We would then walk on ahead and when we got a few miles ahead
of the teams, we would lie down and sleep until they caught up.
One night we were camped near a station and there were several Indians
around who performed an Indian war dance. They were all painted and
decorated up with their feathers and had their war implements. They
formed a large circle and began dancing around, shouting their war
whoops and getting more and more excited until they were completely
tired out.
It was a good exhibition of a regular Indian war dance, but, lucky for us, they were peaceful.
To me this side of Salt Lake seemed one range of hills after another
with valley between. Looking from one range across to the other, they
appeared to be only two or three miles apart, but it would take us all
day to cross the valleys which were nearly 30 miles in width.
We were now near what was called the Mountain Meadows were in 1858 more
than 200 emigrants, journeying peacefully toward their destination in
California, were attacked and brutally murdered by Indians and Mormons
disguised as Indians, led by a Mormon named, I think, Lee. He was
arrested several years afterwards and tried for the terrible crime by
the U. S. government, then taken out to where the atrocity was committed
and shot.
Brigham Young, head of the Mormon church, whom some also thought guilty, died before his trial came off.
There were a great many little children in the company of murdered emigrants.
One night while we were camped in a canyon, I crossed a gulch to gather
wood. I heard a terrible roar and looking up, saw a high wall of water
coming at me. I scrambled up high enough to be clear of it, but had to
wait till it passed before I could get back to camp on the other side.
It was the result of a cloudburst op the canyon.
We soon
arrived at the sink of the Carson River where there was plenty of good
feed for the horses, and better food for ourselves, being near Virginia
City. There our company disbanded and each individual was left to shift
for himself, as all had concluded that they could do better there at
the new silver mines than in California. [unquote]
(Editor’s note [by Marilyn Walker Vollmer]: This
concludes James P. Locke’s story of his journey west as a boy of 16 with
a wagon train in 1860. This was written in 1925 when he was 81and his
niece typed the story from his notes, James P. Locke went on to San
Francisco to make his home with his Uncle Guy Buckingham owner of
Buckingham & Hecht Shoe Co., where he lived for some time. He
married Bessie Bridget Regan July 17th 1867 in San Francisco. Around
1900 they moved to Marin (across the bay from San Francisco). He died
in 1982 at the age of 89 in Oakland, California, at the home of one of
his daughters.)
Sunday, February 23, 2014
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