Dedicated to My Nephew and Niece,
George Cody Goodman, Anna Bond Goodman,
and family.
CHAPTER I
I am about to take the back-trail through the Old West—the
West that I knew and loved. All my life it has been a pleasure
to show its beauties, its marvels and its possibilities to those
who, under my guidance, saw it for the first time.
Now, going back over the ground, looking at it through the
eyes of memory, it will be a still greater pleasure to take with
me the many readers of this book. And if, in following me
through some of the exciting scenes of the old days, meeting
some of the brave men who made its stirring history, and
listening to my camp-fire tales of the buffalo, the Indian, the
stage-coach and the pony-express, their interest in this vast
land of my youth, should be awakened, I should feel richly
repaid.
The Indian, tamed, educated and inspired with a taste for
white collars and moving-pictures, is as numerous as ever, but
not so picturesque. On the little tracts of his great
inheritance allotted him by civilization he is working out his
own manifest destiny.
The buffalo has gone. Gone also is the stagecoach whose
progress his pilgrimages often used to interrupt. Gone is the
pony express, whose marvelous efficiency could compete with the
wind, but not with the harnessed lightning flashed over the
telegraph wires. Gone are the very bone-gatherers who
laboriously collected the bleaching relics of the great herds
that once dotted the prairies.
But the West of the old times, with its strong characters,
its stern battles and its tremendous stretches of loneliness,
can never be blotted from my mind. Nor can it, I hope, be
blotted from the memory of the American people, to whom it has
now become a priceless possession.
It has been my privilege to spend my working years on the
frontier. I have known and served with commanders like Sherman,
Sheridan, Miles, Custer and A.A. Carr—men who would be leaders
in any army in any age. I have known and helped to fight with
many of the most notable of the Indian warriors.
Frontiersmen good and bad, gunmen as well as inspired
prophets of the future, have been my camp companions. Thus, I
know the country of which I am about to write as few men now
living have known it.
Recently, in the hope of giving permanent form to the history
of the Plains, I staged many of the Indian battles for the
films. Through the courtesy of the War and Interior Departments
I had the help of the soldiers and the Indians.
Now that this work has been done I am again in the saddle and
at your service for what I trust will be a pleasant and perhaps
instructive journey over the old trails. We shall omit the
hazards and the hardships, but often we shall leave the iron
roads over which the Pullman rolls and, back in the hills, see
the painted Indians winding up the draws, or watch the more
savage Mormon Danites swoop down on the wagon-train. In my later
years I have brought the West to the East—under a tent. Now I
hope to bring the people of the East and of the New West to the
Old West, and possibly here and there to supply new material for
history.
I shall try to vary the journey, for frequent changes of
scenes are grateful to travelers. I shall show you some of the
humors as well as the excitements of the frontier. And our last
halting-place will be at sunrise—the sunrise of the New West,
with its waving grain-fields, fenced flocks and splendid cities,
drawing upon the mountains for the water to make it fertile, and
upon the whole world for men to make it rich.
I was born on a farm near Leclair, Scott County, Iowa,
February 26, 1846. My father, Isaac Cody, had emigrated to what
was then a frontier State. He and his people, as well as my
mother, had all dwelt in Ohio. I remember that there were
Indians all about us, looking savage enough as they slouched
about the village streets or loped along the roads on their
ponies. But they bore no hostility toward anything save work and
soap and water.
We were comfortable and fairly prosperous on the little farm.
My mother, whose maiden name was Mary Ann Leacock, took an
active part in the life of the neighborhood. An education was
scarce in those days. Even school teachers did not always
possess it. Mother's education was far beyond the average, and
the local school board used to require all applicants for
teachers' position to be examined by her before they were
entrusted with the tender intellects of the pioneer children.
But the love of adventure was in father's blood. The
railroad—the only one I had ever seen—extended as far as Port
Byron, Illinois, just across the Mississippi. When the discovery
of gold in California in 1849 set the whole country wild, this
railroad began to bring the Argonauts, bound for the long
overland wagon journey across the Plains. Naturally father
caught the excitement. In 1850 he made a start, but it was
abandoned—why I never knew. But after that he was not content
with Iowa. In 1853 our farm and most of our goods and chattels
were converted into money. And in 1854 we all set out for
Kansas, which was soon to be opened for settlers as a Territory.
Two wagons carried our household goods. A carriage was
provided for my mother and sisters. Father had a trading-wagon
built, and stocked it with red blankets, beads, and other goods
with which to tempt the Indians. My only brother had been killed
by a fall from a horse, so I was second in command, and proud I
was of the job.
My uncle Elijah kept a general store at Weston, Missouri,
just across the Kansas line. He was a large exporter of hemp as
well as a trader. Also he was a slave-owner.
Weston was our first objective. Father had determined to take
up a claim in Kansas and to begin a new life in this stirring
country. Had he foreseen the dreadful consequences to himself
and to his family of this decision we might have remained in
Iowa, in which case perhaps I might have grown up an Iowa
farmer, though that now seems impossible.
Thirty days of a journey that was a constant delight to me
brought us to Weston, where we left the freight-wagons and
mother and my sisters in the care of my uncle.
To my great joy father took me with him on his first trip
into Kansas—where he was to pick out his claim and incidentally
to trade with the Indians from our wagon. I shall never forget
the thrill that ran through me when father, pointing to the
block-house at Fort Leavenworth, said:
"Son, you now see a real military fort for the first time in
your life." And a real fort it was. Cavalry—or dragoons as they
called them then—were engaged in saber drill, their swords
flashing in the sunlight. Artillery was rumbling over the parade
ground. Infantry was marching and wheeling. About the Post were
men dressed all in buckskin with coonskin caps or broad-brimmed
slouch hats—real Westerners of whom I had dreamed. Indians of
all sorts were loafing about—all friendly, but a new and
different kind of Indians from any I had seen—Kickapoos,
Possawatomies, Delawares, Choctaws, and other tribes, of which I
had often heard. Everything I saw fascinated me.
These drills at the Fort were no fancy dress-parades. They
meant business. A thousand miles to the west the Mormons were
running things in Utah with a high hand. No one at Fort
Leavenworth doubted that these very troops would soon be on
their way to determine whether Brigham Young or the United
States Government should be supreme there.
To the north and west the hostile Indians, constantly
irritated by the encroachments of the white man, had become a
growing menace. The block-houses I beheld were evidences of
preparedness against this danger. And in that day the rumblings
of the coming struggle over slavery could already be heard.
Kansas—very soon afterward "Bleeding Kansas"—was destined to be
an early battleground. And we were soon to know something of its
tragedies.
Free-soil men and pro-slavery men were then ready to rush
across the border the minute it was opened for settlement.
Father was a Free-soil man. His brother Elijah who, as I have
said, was a slave-owner, was a believer in the extension of
slavery into the new territory.
Knowing that the soldiers I saw today might next week be on
their way to battle made my eyes big with excitement. I could
have stayed there forever. But father had other plans, and we
were soon on our way. With our trading-wagon we climbed a
hill—later named Sheridan's Ridge for General Philip Sheridan.
From its summit we had a view of Salt Creek Valley, the most
beautiful valley I have ever seen. In this valley lay our future
home.
The hill was very steep, and I remember we had to "lock" or
chain the wagon-wheels as we descended. We made camp in the
valley. The next day father began trading with the Indians, who
were so pleased with the bargains he had to offer that they sent
their friends back to us when they departed. One of the first
trades he made was for a little pony for me—a
four-year-old—which I was told I should have to break myself. I
named him Prince. I had a couple of hard falls, but I made up my
mind I was going to ride that pony or bust, and—I did not bust.
The next evening, looking over toward the west, I saw a truly
frontier sight—a line of trappers winding down the hillside with
their pack animals. My mother had often told me of the trappers
searching the distant mountains for fur-bearing animals and
living a life of fascinating adventure. Here they were in
reality.
While some of the men prepared the skins, others built a fire
and began to get a meal. I watched them cook the dried venison,
and was filled with wonder at their method of making bread,
which was to wrap the dough about a stick and hold it over the
coals till it was ready to eat. You can imagine my rapture when
one of them—a pleasant-faced youth—looked up, and catching sight
of me, invited me to share the meal.
Boys are always hungry, but I was especially hungry for such
a meal as that. After it was over I hurried to camp and told my
father all that had passed. At his request I brought the young
trapper who had been so kind to me over to our camp, and there
he had a long talk with father, telling him of his adventures by
land and sea in all parts of the world.
He said that he looked forward with great interest to his
arrival in Weston, as he expected to meet an uncle, Elijah Cody.
He had seen none of his people for many years.
"If Elijah Cody is your uncle, I am too," said my father.
"You must be the long-lost Horace Billings."
Father had guessed right. Horace had wandered long ago from
the Ohio home and none of his family knew of his whereabouts. He
had been to South America and to California, joining a band of
trappers on the Columbia River and coming with them back across
the Plains.
When I showed him my pony he offered to help break him for
me. With very little trouble he rode the peppery little creature
this way and that, and at last when he circled back to camp I
found the animal had been mastered.
In the days that followed Horace gave me many useful lessons
as a horseman. He was the prettiest rider I had ever seen. There
had been a stampede of horses from the Fort, and a reward of ten
dollars a head had been offered for all animals brought in. That
was easy money for Horace. I would gallop along at his side as
he chased the fugitive horses. He had a long, plaited lariat
which settled surely over the neck of the brute he was after.
Then, putting a "della walt" on the pommel of his saddle, he
would check his own mount and bring his captive to a sudden
standstill. He caught and brought in five horses the first day,
and must have captured twenty-five within the next few days,
earning a sum of money which was almost a small fortune in that
time.
Meanwhile the Territory had been opened for settlement. Our
claim, over which the Great Salt Lake trail for California
passed, had been taken up, and as soon as father and I, assisted
by men he hired, could get our log cabin up, the family came on
from Weston. The cabin was a primitive affair. There was no
floor at first. But gradually we built a floor and partitions,
and made it habitable. I spent all my spare time picking up the
Kickapoo tongue from the Indian children in the neighborhood,
and listening with both ears to the tales of the wide plains
beyond.
The great freighting firm of Russell, Majors & Waddell was
then sending its twenty-five wagon trains out from the Plains to
carry supplies to the soldiers at the frontier forts.
Leavenworth was the firm's headquarters. Russell stayed on the
books, and Majors was the operating man on the Plains. The
trains were wonderful to me, each wagon with its six yoke of
oxen, wagon-masters, extra hands, assistants, bull-whackers and
cavayard driver following with herds of extra oxen. I began at
once making the acquaintance of the men, and by the end of 1854
I knew them all.
Up to this time, while bad blood existed between the
Free-soilers and the pro-slavery men, it had not become a
killing game. The pro-slavery Missourians were in the great
majority. They harassed the Free-soilers considerably and
committed many petty persecutions, but no blood was shed.
Father's brother, Elijah, who kept the store at Weston, was
known to be a pro-slavery man, and for a time it was taken for
granted that father held the same views. But he was never at any
pains to hide his own opinions, being a man who was afraid of
nothing. John Brown of Ossawatomie, later hanged, for the
Harper's Ferry raid, at Charlestown, Va., was his friend. So
were Colonel Jim Lane and many other Abolitionists. He went to
their houses openly, and they came to his. He worked hard with
the men he had hired, cutting the wild hay and cordwood to sell
to the Fort, and planting sod corn under the newly turned sod of
the farm. He also made a garden, plowing and harrowing the soil
and breaking up the sods by hitching horses to branching trees
and drawing them over the ground. He minded his own business and
avoided all the factional disputes with which the neighborhood
abounded.
In June, 1856, when I was ten years old, father went to the
Fort to collect his pay for hay and wood he had sold there. I
accompanied him on my pony. On our return we saw a crowd of
drunken horsemen in front of Riveley's trading-post—as stores
were called on the frontier. There were many men in the crowd
and they were all drunk, yelling and shooting their pistols in
the air. They caught sight of us immediately and a few of them
advanced toward us as we rode up. Father expected trouble, but
he was not a man to turn back. We rode quietly up to them, and
were about to continue on past when one of them yelled:
"There's that abolition cuss now. Git him up here and make
him declar' hisself!"
"Git off that hoss, Cody!" shouted another.
By this time more than a dozen men were crowding about
father, cursing and abusing him. Soon they tore him from his
horse. One of them rolled a drygoods box from the store.
"Now," he said, "git up on that thar box, and tell us whar'
ye stand."
Standing on the box, father looked at the ringleaders with no
sign of fear.
"I am not ashamed of my views," he said, quietly. "I am not
an Abolitionist, and never have been. I think it is better to
let slavery alone in the States where it is now. But I am not at
all afraid to tell you that I am opposed to its extension, and
that I believe that it should be kept out of Kansas."
His speech was followed by a wild yell of derision. Men began
crowding around him, cursing and shaking their fists. One of
them, whom I recognized as Charlie Dunn, an employee of my Uncle
Elijah, worked his way through the crowd, and jumped up on the
box directly behind father. I saw the gleam of a knife. The next
instant, without a groan, father fell forward stabbed in the
back. Somehow I got off my pony and ran to his assistance,
catching him as he fell. His weight overbore me but I eased him
as he came to the ground.
Dunn was still standing, knife in hand, seeking a chance for
another thrust.
"Look out, ye'll stab the kid!" somebody yelled. Another man,
with a vestige of decency, restrained the murderer. Riveley came
out of the store. There was a little breaking up of the crowd.
Dunn was got away. What happened to him later I shall tell you
in another chapter.
With the help of a friend I got father into a wagon, when the
crowd had gone. I held his head in my lap during the ride home.
I believed he was mortally wounded. He had been stabbed down
through the kidneys, leaving an ugly wound. But he did not die
of it—then. Mother nursed him carefully and had he been spared
further persecution, he might have survived. But this was only
the beginning.
The pro-slavers waited a few days, and finding there was no
move to molest them, grew bold. They announced that they were
coming to our house to finish their work.
One night we heard that a party was organized to carry out
this purpose. As quietly as possible mother helped take father
out into the sod corn, which then grew tall and thick close
about the cabin. She put a shawl round him and a sun-bonnet on
his head to disguise him as he was taken out.
There in the sod corn we made him a bed of hay and blankets
and there we kept him for days, carrying food to him by night.
These were anxious days for my mother and her little family. My
first real work as a scout began then, for I had to keep
constantly on the watch for raids by the ruffians, who had now
sworn that father must die.
As soon as he was able to walk we decided that he must be got
away. Twenty-five miles distant, at Grasshopper Falls, were a
party of his friends. There he hoped one day to plant a colony.
With the help of a few friends we moved him thither one night,
but word of his whereabouts soon reached his enemies.
I kept constantly on the alert, and, hearing that a party had
set out to murder him at the Falls, I got into the saddle and
sped out to warn him.
At a ford on the way I ran into the gang, who had stopped to
water their horses.
As I galloped past, one of them yelled: "There's Cody's kid
now on his way to warn his father. Stop, you, and tell us where
your old man is."
A pistol shot, to terrify me into obedience, accompanied the
command. I may have been terrified, but it was not into
obedience. I got out of there like a shot, and though they rode
hard on my trail my pony was too fast for them. My warning was
in time.
We got father as quickly as we could to Lawrence, which was
an abolition stronghold, and where he was safe for the time
being. He gradually got back a part of his strength, enough of
it at any rate to enable him to take part in the repulse of a
raid of Missourians who came over to burn Lawrence and lynch the
Abolitionists. They were driven back across the Missouri River
by the Lawrence men, who trapped them into an ambush and so
frightened them that for the present they rode on their raids no
more.
When father returned to Salt Creek Valley the persecutions
began again. The gangsters drove off all our stock and killed
all our pigs and even the chickens. One night Judge Sharpe, a
disreputable old alcoholic who had been elected a justice of the
peace, came to the house and demanded a meal. Mother, trembling
for the safety of her husband, who lay sick upstairs, hastened
to get it for him. As the old scoundrel sat waiting he caught
sight of me.
"Look yere, kid," he shouted, "ye see this knife?"
He drew a long, wicked bowie. "Well, I'm going to sharpen
that to finish up the job that Charlie Dunn began the other
day." And scowling horribly at me he began whetting the knife on
a stone he picked up from the table.
Now, I knew something about a gun, and there was a gun handy.
It was upstairs, and I lost no time in getting it. Sitting on
the stairs I cocked it and held it across my knees. I am sure
that I should have shot him had he attempted to come up those
stairs.
He didn't test my shooting ability, however. He got even with
me by taking my beloved pony, Prince, when he left. Mother
pleaded with him to leave it, for it was the only animal we had,
but she might as well have pleaded with a wildcat.
We had now been reduced to utter destitution. Our only food
was what rabbits and birds I could trap and catch with the help
of our faithful old dog Turk, and the sod corn which we grated
into flour. Father could be of no service to us. His presence,
in fact, was merely a menace. So, with the help of Brown, Jim
Lane and other Free-soilers, he made his way back to Ohio and
began recruiting for his Grasshopper Falls colony.
He returned to us in the spring of '57 mortally ill. The
wound inflicted by Dunn had at last fulfilled the murderer's
purpose. Father died in the little log-house, the first man to
shed his blood in the fight against the extension of slavery
into the Northern Territories.
I was eleven years old, and the only man of the family. I
made up my mind to be a breadwinner.
At that time the Fort was full of warlike preparations. A
great number of troops were being assembled to send against the
Mormons. Trouble had been long expected. United States Judges
and Federal officers sent to the Territory of Utah had been
flouted. Some of them never dared take their seats. Those who
did asked assistance. Congress at last decided to give it to
them. General Harney was to command the expedition. Col. Albert
Sidney Johnston, afterward killed at Shiloh, where he fought on
the Confederate side, was in charge of the expedition to which
the earliest trains were to be sent.
Many of the soldiers had already pushed on ahead. Russell,
Majors & Waddell were awarded the contract for taking them
supplies and beef cattle. The supplies were forwarded in the
long trains of twenty-five wagons, of which I have told you. The
cattle were driven after the soldiers, the herds often falling
many miles behind them.
I watched these great preparations eagerly, and it occurred
to me that I ought to have a share in them. I went to Mr.
Majors, whom I always called Uncle Aleck, and asked him for a
job. I told him of our situation, and that I needed it very
badly for the support of my mother and family.
"But you're only a boy, Billy," he objected. "What can you
do?"
"I can ride as well as a man," I said. "I could drive
cavayard, couldn't I?" Driving cavayard is herding the extra
cattle that follow the wagon train.
Mr. Majors agreed that I could do this, and consented to
employ me. I was to receive a man's wages, forty dollars a month
and food, and the wages were to be paid to my mother while I was
gone. With forty dollars a month she would be able to support
her daughters and my baby brother in comfort. Before I was
allowed to go to work Uncle Aleck handed me the oath which every
one of his employees must sign. I did my best to live up to its
provisions, but I am afraid that the profanity clause at least
was occasionally violated by some of the bull-whackers. Here is
the oath:
"We, the undersigned wagon-masters, assistants,
teamsters and all other employees of the firm of Russell, Majors
& Waddell, do hereby sign that we will not swear, drink whisky,
play cards or be cruel to dumb beasts in any way, shape or form.
X (his mark)
(Signed) "WILLIAM FREDERICK CODY."
I signed it with my mark, for I could not write then. After
administering this ironclad oath Mr. Majors gave each man a
Testament.
My first job was that of accompanying a herd of cattle
destined for beef for the troops that had gone on ahead. Bill
McCarthy, boss of the outfit, was a typical Westerner, rough but
courageous, and with plenty of experience on the frontier.
We progressed peacefully enough till we made Plum Creek,
thirty-six miles west of Fort Kearney, on the South Platte. The
trip had been full of excitement for me. The camp life was
rough, the bacon often rusty and the flour moldy, but the hard
work gave us big appetites. Plainsmen learn not to be
particular.
I remember that on some of our trips we obtained such
"luxuries" as dried apples and beans as part of our supplies. We
could only have these once every two or three days, and their
presence in the mess was always a glad occasion.
We were nooning at Plum Creek, the cattle spread out over the
prairie to graze in charge of two herders. Suddenly there was a
sharp Bang! Bang! Bang! and a thunder of hoofs.
"Indians! They've shot the herders and stampeded the cattle!"
cried McCarthy. "Get under the banks of the river, boys—use 'em
for a breastwork!"
We obeyed orders quickly. The Platte, a wide, shallow, muddy
stream, flows under banks which vary from five to thirty feet in
height. Behind them we were in much the position of European
soldiers in a trench. We had our guns, and if the Indians showed
over the bank could have made it hot for them.
McCarthy told us to keep together and to make our way down
the river to Fort Kearney, the nearest refuge. It was a long and
wearying journey, but our lives depended on keeping along the
river bed. Often we would have to wade the stream which, while
knee-deep to the men, was well-nigh waist-deep to me. Gradually
I fell behind, and when night came I was dragging one weary step
after another—dog-tired but still clinging to my old Mississippi
Yaeger rifle, a short muzzle-loader which carried a ball and two
buckshot.
Darkness came, and I still toiled along. The men ahead were
almost out of hearing. Presently the moon rose, dead ahead of
me. And painted boldly across its face was the black figure of
an Indian. There could be no mistaking him for a white man. He
wore the war-bonnet of the Sioux, and at his shoulder was a
rifle, pointed at someone in the bottom below him. I knew well
enough that in another second he would drop one of my friends.
So I raised my Yaeger and fired. I saw the figure collapse, and
heard it come tumbling thirty feet down the bank, landing with a
splash in the water.
McCarthy and the rest of the party, hearing the shot, came
back in a hurry.
"What is it?" asked McCarthy, when he came up to me.
"I don't know," I said. "Whatever it is, it is down there in
the water."
McCarthy ran over to the brave. "Hi!" he cried. "Little
Billy's killed an Indian all by himself!"
Not caring to meet any of this gentleman's friends we pushed
on still faster toward Fort Kearney, which we reached about
daylight. We were given food and sent to bed, while the soldiers
set out to look for our slain comrades and to try to recover our
cattle.
Soldiers from Fort Leavenworth found the herders, killed and
mutilated in the Indian fashion. But the cattle had been
stampeded among the buffalo and it was impossible to recover a
single head.
We were taken back to Leavenworth on one of the returning
freight wagon-trains. The news of my exploit was noised about
and made me the envy of all the boys of the neighborhood. The
Leavenworth Times, published by D.B. Anthony, sent a
reporter to get the story of the adventure, and in it my name
was printed for the first time as the youngest Indian slayer of
the Plains.
I was persuaded now that I was destined to lead a life on the
Plains. The two months that our ill-fated expedition had
consumed had not discouraged me. Once more I applied to Mr.
Majors for a job.
"You seem to have a reputation as a frontiersman, Billy," he
said; "I guess I'll have to give yon another chance." He turned
me over to Lew Simpson, who was boss of a twenty-five
wagon-train just starting with supplies for General Albert
Sidney Johnston's army, which was then on its way to Great Salt
Lake to fight the Mormons, whose Destroying Angels, or Danites,
were engaged in many outrages on Gentile immigrants.
Simpson appeared to be glad to have me. "We need Indian
fighters, Billy," he told me, and giving me a mule to ride
assigned me to a job as cavayard driver.
Our long train, twenty-five wagons in a line, each with its
six yoke of oxen, rolled slowly out of Leavenworth over the
western trail. Wagon-master assistants, bull-whackers—thirty men
in all not to mention the cavayard driver—it was an imposing
sight. This was to be a long journey, clear to the Utah country,
and I eagerly looked forward to new adventures.
The first of these came suddenly. We were strung out over the
trail near the Platte, about twenty miles from the scene of the
Indian attack on McCarthy's outfit, watching the buffalo
scattered to right and left of us, when we heard two or three
shots, fired in rapid succession.
Before we could find out who fired them, down upon us came a
herd of buffalo, charging in a furious stampede. There was no
time to do anything but jump behind our wagons. The light
mess-wagon was drawn by six yoke of Texas steers which instantly
became part of the stampede, tearing away over the prairie with
the buffalo, our wagon following along behind. The other wagons
were too heavy for the steers to gallop away with; otherwise the
whole outfit would have gone.
I remember that one big bull came galloping down between two
yoke of oxen, tearing away the gooseneck and the heavy chain
with each lowered horn. I can still see him as he rushed away
with these remarkable decorations dangling from either side.
Whether or not his new ornaments excited the admiration of his
fellows when the herd came to a stand later in the day, I can
only guess.
The descent of the buffalo upon us lasted only a few minutes,
but so much damage was done that three days were required to
repair it before we could move on. We managed to secure our
mess-wagon, again, which was lucky, for it contained all our
provender.
We learned afterward that the stampede had been caused by a
returning party of California gold-seekers, whose shots into the
herd had been our first warning of what was coming. Twice before
we neared the Mormon country we were attacked by Indians. The
army was so far ahead that they had become bold. We beat off the
attacks, but lost two men.
It was white men, however, not Indians, who were to prove our
most dangerous enemies. Arriving near Green River we were
nooning on a ridge about a mile and a half from a little creek,
Halm's Fork, where the stock were driven to water. This was a
hundred and fifteen miles east of Salt Lake City, and well
within the limits of the Mormon country.
Most of the outfit had driven the cattle to the creek, a mile
and a half distant, and were returning slowly, while the animals
grazed along the way back to camp. I was with them. We were out
of sight of the wagons.
As we rose the hill a big bearded man, mounted and surrounded
by a party of armed followers, rode up to our wagon-master.
"Throw up your hands, Simpson!" said the leader, who knew
Simpson's name and his position.
Simpson was a brave man, but the strangers had the drop and
up went his hands. At the same time we saw that the wagons were
surrounded by several hundred men, all mounted and armed, and
the teamsters all rounded up in a bunch. We knew that we had
fallen into the hands of the Mormon Danites, or Destroying
Angels, the ruffians who perpetrated the dreadful Mountain
Meadows Massacre of the same year. The leader was Lot Smith, one
of the bravest and most determined of the whole crowd.
"Now, Simpson," he said, "we are going to be kind to you. You
can have one wagon with the cattle to draw it. Get into it all
the provisions and blankets you can carry, and turn right round
and go back to the Missouri River. You're headed in the wrong
direction."
"Can we have our guns?" asked Simpson.
"Not a gun."
"Six-shooters?"
"Not a six-shooter. Nothing but food and blankets."
"How are we going to protect ourselves on the way?"
"That's your business. We're doing you a favor to spare your
lives."
All Simpson's protests were in vain. There were thirty of us
against several hundred of them. Mormons stood over us while we
loaded a wagon till it sagged with provisions, clothing and
blankets. They had taken away every rifle and every pistol we
possessed. Ordering us to hike for the East, and informing us
that we would be shot down if we attempted to turn back, they
watched us depart.
When we had moved a little way off we saw a blaze against the
sky behind us, and knew that our wagon-train had been fired. The
greasy bacon made thick black smoke and a bright-red flame, and
for a long time the fire burned, till nothing was left but the
iron bolts and axles and tires.
Smith's party, which had been sent out to keep all supplies
from reaching Johnston's army, had burned two other wagon-trains
that same day, as we afterward learned. The wagons were all
completely consumed, and for the next few years the Mormons
would ride out to the scenes to get the iron that was left in
the ashes.
Turned adrift on the desert with not a weapon to defend
ourselves was hardly a pleasant prospect. It meant a walk of a
thousand miles home to Leavenworth. The wagon was loaded to its
full capacity. There was nothing to do but walk. I was not yet
twelve years old, but I had to walk with the rest the full
thousand miles, and we made nearly thirty miles a day.
Fortunately we were not molested by Indians. From passing
wagon-trains we got a few rifles, all they could spare, and with
these we were able to kill game for fresh meat. I wore out three
pairs of moccasins on that journey, and learned then that the
thicker are the soles of your shoes, the easier are your feet on
a long walk over rough ground.
After a month of hard travel we reached Leavenworth. I set
out at once for the log-cabin home, whistling as I walked, and
the first to welcome me was my old dog Turk, who came tearing
toward me and almost knocked me down in his eagerness. I am sure
my mother and sisters were mighty glad to see me. They had
feared that I might never return.
My next journey over the Plains was begun under what, to me,
were very exciting circumstances. I spent the winter of '57-'58
at school. My mother was anxious about my education. But the
master of the frontier school wore out several armfuls of hazel
switches in a vain effort to interest me in the "three R's."
I kept thinking of my short but adventurous past. And as soon
as another opportunity offered to return to it I seized it
eagerly.
That spring my former boss, Lew Simpson, was busily
organizing a "lightning bull team" for his employers, Russell,
Majors & Waddell. Albert Sidney Johnston's soldiers, then moving
West, needed supplies, and needed them in a hurry. Thus far the
mule was the reindeer of draft animals, and mule trains were
forming to hurry the needful supplies to the soldiers.
But Simpson had great faith in the bull. A picked bull train,
he allowed, could beat a mule train all hollow on a long haul.
All he wanted was a chance to prove it.
His employers gave him the chance. For several weeks he had
been picking his animals for the outfit. And now he was to begin
what is perhaps the most remarkable race ever made across the
Plains.
A mule train was to start a week after Simpson's lightning
bulls began their westward course. Whichever outfit got to Fort
Laramie first would be the winner. No more excitement could have
been occasioned had the contestants been a reindeer and a
jack-rabbit. To my infinite delight Simpson let me join his
party.
My thousand-mile tramp over the Plains had cured me of the
walking habit and I was glad to find that this time I was to
have a horse to ride—part of the way, anyhow. I was to be an
extra hand—which meant that by turns I was to be a bull-whacker,
driver and general-utility man.
I remember that our start was a big event. Men, women and
children watched our chosen animals amble out of Salt Creek. The
"mule skinners," busy with preparations for their own departure,
stopped work to jeer us.
"We'll ketch you in a couple of days or so!" yelled Tom
Stewart, boss of the mule outfit.
But Simpson only grinned. Jeers couldn't shake his confidence
either in himself or his long-horned motive power.
We made the first hundred and fifty miles easily. I was glad
to be a plainsman once more, and took a lively interest in
everything that went forward. We were really making speed, too,
which added to the excitement. The ordinary bull team could do
about fifteen miles a day. Under Simpson's command his specially
selected bulls were doing twenty-five, and doing it right along.
But one day, while we were nooning about one hundred and
fifty miles on the way, one of the boys shouted: "Here come the
mules!"
Presently Stewart's train came shambling up, and a joyful lot
the "mule skinners" were at what they believed their victory.
But it was a short-lived victory. At the end of the next
three hundred miles we found them, trying to cross the Platte,
and making heavy work of it. The grass fodder had told on the
mules. Supplies from other sources were now exhausted. There
were no farms, no traders, no grain to be had. The race had
become a race of endurance, and the strongest stomachs were
destined to be the winners.
Stewart made a bad job of the crossing. The river was high,
and his mules quickly mired down in the quicksand. The more they
pawed the deeper they went.
Simpson picked a place for crossing below the ford Stewart
had chosen. He put enough bulls on a wagon to insure its easy
progress, and the bulls wallowed through the sand on their round
bellies, using their legs as paddles.
Steward pulled ahead again after he had crossed the river,
but soon his mules grew too feeble to make anything like their
normal speed. We passed them for good and all a few days farther
on, and were far ahead when we reached the North Platte.
Thus ended a race that I shall never forget. Since that time
the stage-coach has outdistanced the bull team, the pony express
has swept past the stage-coach, the locomotive has done in an
hour what the prairie schooner did in three or four days. Soon
the aeroplane will be racing with the automobile for the
cross-country record.
But the bull team and the mule team were the continental
carriers of that day, and I am very glad that I took part—on the
winning side—in a race between them.
We soon began meeting parties of soldiers, and lightening our
loads by issuing supplies to them. When at last we reacted Fort
Laramie, the outfit was ordered to Fort Walback, located in
Cheyenne Pass, twenty-five miles from where Cheyenne stands
today, and ninety miles from Fort Laramie.
This was in the very heart of the Indian country. Our animals
were to haul in plows, tools and whatever was necessary in the
constructing of the new fort then building. The wagon-beds were
taken from the wagons to enable the hauling of greater loads.
The beds were piled up at Fort Laramie, and I was assigned to
watch them. It was here that I had abundant time and opportunity
to study the West at first hand. Heretofore I had been on the
march. Now I was on fixed post with plenty of time for
observation.
Fort Laramie was an old frontier post, such as has not
existed for many years. Nearby, three or four thousand Sioux,
Northern Cheyennes and Northern Arapahoes were encamped, most of
them spending much of the time at the post. Laramie had been
established by a fur-trading company in 1834. In 1840 or
thereabouts the Government bought it and made it a military
post. It had become the most famous meeting-place of the Plains.
Here the greatest Indian councils were held, and here also came
the most celebrated of the Indian fighters, men whose names had
long been known to me, but whom I never dared hope to see.
Kit Carson, Jim Bridger, Baker, Richards and other of the
celebrated hunters, trappers and Indian fighters were as
familiar about the post as are bankers in Wall Street. All these
men fascinated me, especially Carson, a small, dapper, quiet man
whom everybody held in profound respect.
I used to sit for hours and watch him and the others talk to
the Indians in the sign language. Without a sound they would
carry on long and interesting conversations, tell stories,
inquire about game and trails, and discuss pretty much
everything that men find worth discussing.
I was naturally desirous of mastering this mysterious medium
of speech, and began my education in it with far more interest
than I had given to the "three R's" back at Salt Creek. My
wagon-beds became splendid playhouses for the Indian children
from the villages, who are very much like other children,
despite their red skins.
I joined them in their games, and from them picked up a fair
working knowledge of the Sioux language. The acquaintance I
formed here was to save my scalp and life later, but I little
suspected it then.
I spent the summer of '58 in and about Laramie. I was getting
to be a big, husky boy now, and felt that I had entered on what
was to be my career—as indeed I had.
In January, '59, Simpson was ordered back to Missouri as
brigade train-master of three wagon-trains, traveling a day
apart. Because of much travel the grass along the regular trail
was eaten so close that the feed for the bulls was scanty.
Instead of following the trail down the South Platte,
therefore, Simpson picked a new route along the North Platte.
There was no road, but the grass was still long, and forage for
the cattle was necessary.
We had accomplished about half our journey with no sign of
hostile Indians. Then one day, as Simpson, George Woods and I
were riding ahead to overtake the lead train, a party of Sioux
bore down on us, plainly intent on mischief. There was little
time to act. No cover of any kind was to be had. For us three,
even with our rifles, to have stood up against the Sioux in the
open would have been suicide. Simpson had been trained to think
quickly. Swinging the three mules so that they formed a
triangle, he drew his six-shooter and dropped them where they
stood.
"Now there's a little cover, boys," he said, and we all made
ready for the attack.
Our plan of defense was now made for us. First rifles, then,
at closer quarters, revolvers. If it came to a hand-to-hand
conflict we had our knives as a last resort.
The Sioux drew up when they saw how quickly Simpson's wit had
built a barricade for us. Then the arrows began to fly and among
them spattered a few bullets. We were as sparing as possible
with our shots. Most of them told. I had already learned how to
use a rifle, and was glad indeed that I had. If ever a boy stood
in need of that kind of preparedness I did.
Down came the Indians, with the blood-curdling yell which is
always a feature of their military strategy. We waited till they
got well within range. Then at Simpson's order we fired. Three
ponies galloped riderless over the prairie, and our besiegers
hesitated, then wheeled, and rode out of range. But our rest was
short. Back they came. Again we fired, and had the good fortune
to stop three more of them.
Simpson patted me encouragingly on the shoulder. "You're all
right, Billy!" he said, and his praise was music to my ears.
By this time our poor dead mules, who had given their lives
for ours, were stuck full of arrows. Woods had been winged in
the shoulder. Simpson, carefully examining the wound, expressed
his belief that the arrow which inflicted it had not been
poisoned.
A Shower of Arrows Rained On Our
Dead Mules From the Closing Circle of Red-Men.
But we had little time to worry about that or anything else.
Our enemies were still circling, just out of range. Here and
there when they grew incautious we dropped a man or a pony. But
we were still heavily outnumbered. They knew it and we knew it.
Unless help came it was only a question of time till it was all
over.
Daylight came and they still held off. Eagerly we looked to
the westward, but no wagon-train appeared. We began to fear that
something had happened to our friends, when, suddenly one of the
Indians jumped up, and with every evidence of excitement
signaled to the others. In an instant they were all mounted.
"They hear the crack of the bull-whip," said Woods.
He was right. Without another glance in our direction the
Sioux galloped away toward the foot-hills, and as they
disappeared we heard the welcome snap of the long bull-whip, and
saw the first of our wagons coming up the trail. In that day,
however, the plainsman was delivered out of one peril only to be
plunged into another. His days seldom dragged for want of
excitement.
When we got to Leavenworth, Simpson sent three of us ahead
with the train-book record of the men's time, so that their
money would be ready for them when they arrived at Leavenworth.
Our boss's admonition to ride only at night and to lie under
cover in daytime was hardly needed. We cared for no more Indian
adventures just then.
We made fairly good progress till we got to the Little Blue,
in Colorado. It was an uncomfortable journey, finding our way by
the stars at night and lying all day in such shelters as were to
be found. But the inconvenience of it was far preferable to
being made targets for Indian arrows.
We were sheltered one night from one of the fearful prairie
blizzards that make fall and winter terrible. We had found a
gulley washed out by an autumn storm, and it afforded a little
protection against the wind. Looking down the ravine I saw
ponies moving. I knew there were Indians near, and we looked
about for a hiding-place.
At the head of the ravine I had noticed a cave-like hollow. I
signaled to the two men to follow me, and soon we were snug in a
safe hiding-place. As we were settling down to rest one of the
men lit his pipe. As the cave was illuminated by the glow of the
match there was a wild yell. I thought all the Indians in the
world had jumped us. But the yell had come from my companions.
We were in the exact center of the most grew-some collection
of human skulls and bones I have ever seen. Bones were strewn on
the floor of the cave like driftwood. Skulls were grinning at us
from every corner of the darkness. We had stumbled into a big
grave where some of the Indians had hidden their dead away from
the wolves after a battle. It may be that none of us were
superstitious, but we got out of there in a hurry, and braved
the peril of the storm and the Indians as best we could.
I was a rich boy when I got to Leavenworth. I had nearly a
thousand dollars to turn over to my mother as soon as I should
draw my pay. After a joyful reunion with the family I hitched up
a pair of ponies, and drove her over so that she could witness
this pleasing ceremony. As we were driving home, I heard her
sobbing, and was deeply concerned, for this seemed to me no
occasion for tears. I was quick to ask the reason, and her
answer made me serious.
"You couldn't even write your name, Willie," she said. "You
couldn't sign the payroll. To think my boy cannot so much as
write his name!"
I thought that over all the way home, and determined it
should never happen again.
In Uncle Aleck Majors' book, "Seventy Years on the Frontier,"
he relates how on every wagon-sheet and wagon-bed, on every tree
and barn door, he used to find the name "William F. Cody" in a
large, uncertain scrawl. Those were my writing lessons, and I
took them daily until I had my signature plastered pretty well
over the whole of Salt Creek Valley.
I went to school for a time after that, and at last began
really to take an interest in education. But the Pike's Peak
gold rush took me with it. I could never resist the call of the
trail. With another boy who knew as little of gold-mining as I
did we hired out with a bull-train for Denver, then called
Aurora.
We each had fifty dollars when we got to the gold country,
and with it we bought an elaborate outfit. But there was no
mining to be done save by expensive machinery, and we had our
labor for our pains. At last, both of us strapped, we got work
as timber cutters, which lasted only until we found it would
take us a week to fell a tree. At last we hired out once more as
bull-whackers. That job we understood, and at it we earned
enough money to take us home.
We hired a carpenter to build us a boat, loaded it with grub
and supplies, and started gayly down the Platte for home. But
the bad luck of that trip held steadily. The boat was overturned
in swift and shallow water, and we were stranded, wet and
helpless, on the bank, many miles from home or anywhere else.
Then a miracle happened. Along the trail we heard the
familiar crack of a bull-whip, and when the train came up we
found it was the same with which we had enlisted for the outward
journey, returning to Denver with mining machinery. Among this
machinery was a big steam-boiler, the first to be taken into
Colorado. On the way out the outfit had been jumped by Indians.
The wagon boss, knowing the red man's fear of cannon, had swung
the great boiler around so that it had appeared to point at
them. Never was so big a cannon. Even the 42-centimeter
howitzers of today could not compare with it. The Indians took
one look at it, then departed that part of the country as fast
as their ponies could travel.
We stuck with the train into Denver and back home again, and
glad we were to retire from gold-mining.
Soon after my return to Salt Creek Valley I decided on
another and, I thought, a better way to make a fortune for
myself and my family.
During my stay in and about Fort Laramie I had seen much of
the Indian traders, and accompanied them on a number of
expeditions. Their business was to sell to the Indians various
things they needed, chiefly guns and ammunition, and to take in
return the current Indian coin, which consisted of furs.
With the supplies bought by the money I had earned on the
trip with Simpson, mother and my sisters were fairly
comfortable. I felt that I should be able to embark in the fur
business on my own account—not as a trader but as a trapper.
With my friend Dave Harrington as a companion I set out.
Harrington was older than I, and had trapped before in the
Rockies. I was sure that with my knowledge of the Plains and his
of the ways of the fur-bearing animals, we should form an
excellent partnership, as in truth we did.
We bought a yoke of oxen, a wagon-sheet, wagon, traps of all
sorts, and strychnine with which to poison wolves. Also we laid
in a supply of grub—no luxuries, but coffee, flour, bacon and
everything that we actually needed to sustain life.
We headed west, and about two hundred miles from home we
struck Prairie Creek, where we found abundant signs of beaver,
mink, otter and other fur-bearing animals. No Indians had
troubled us, and we felt safe in establishing headquarters here
and beginning work. The first task was to build a dugout in a
hillside, which we roofed with brush, long grass, and finally
dirt, making everything snug and cozy. A little fireplace in the
wall served as both furnace and kitchen. Outside we built a
corral for the oxen, which completed our camp.
Our trapping was successful from the start, and we were sure
that prosperity was at last in sight.
We set our steel traps along the "runs" used by the animals,
taking great care to hide our tracks, and give the game no
indication of the presence of an enemy. The pelts began to pile
up in our shack. Most of the day we were busy at the traps, or
skinning and salting the hides, and at night we would sit by our
little fire and swap experiences till we fell asleep. Always
there was the wail of the coyotes and the cries of other animals
without, but as long as we saw no Indians we were not worried.
One night, just as we were dozing off, we heard a tremendous
commotion in the corral. Harrington grabbed his gun and hurried
out. He was just in time to see a big bear throw one of our oxen
and proceed with the work of butchering him.
He fired, and the bear, slightly wounded, left the ox and
turned his attention to his assailant. He was leaping at my
partner, growling savagely when I, gun in hand, rounded the
corner of the shack. I took the best aim I could get in the
dark, and the bear, which was within a few feet of my friend,
rolled over dead.
Making sure that he was past harming us we turned our
attention to the poor bull, but he was too far gone to recover,
and another bullet put him out of his misery.
We were now left without a team, and two hundred miles from
home. But wealth in the shape of pelts was accumulating about
us, and we determined to stick it out till spring. Then one of
us could go to the nearest settlement for a teammate for our
remaining steer, while the other stayed in charge of the camp.
This plan had to be carried out far sooner than we expected.
A few days later we espied a herd of elk, which meant plentiful
and excellent meat. We at once started in pursuit. Creeping
stealthily along toward them, keeping out of sight, and awaiting
an opportunity to get a good shot, I slipped on a stone in the
creek bed.
"Snap!" went something and looking down I saw my foot hanging
useless. I had broken my leg just above the ankle and my present
career as a fur-trapper had ended.
I was very miserable when Harrington came up. I urged him to
shoot me as he had the ox, but he laughingly replied that that
would hardly do.
"I'll bring you out all right!" he said. "I owe you a life
anyway for saving me from that bear. I learned a little
something about surgery when I was in Illinois, and I guess I
can fix you up."
He got me back to camp after a long and painful hour and with
a wagon-bow, which he made into a splint, set the fracture. But
our enterprise was at an end. Help would have to be found now,
and before spring. One man and a cripple could never get through
the winter.
It was determined that Harrington must go for this needful
assistance just as soon as possible. He placed me on our little
bunk, with plenty of blankets to cover me. All our provisions he
put within my reach. A cup was lashed to a long sapling, and
Harrington made a hole in the side of the dugout so that I could
reach this cup out to a snow-bank for my water supply.
Lastly he cut a great pile of wood and heaped it near the
fire. Without leaving the bunk I could thus do a little cooking,
keep the fire up, and eat and sleep. It was not a situation that
I would have chosen, but there was nothing else to do.
The nearest settlement was a hundred and twenty-five miles
distant. Harrington figured that he could make the round trip in
twenty days. My supplies were ample to last that long. I urged
him to start as soon as possible, that he might the sooner
return with a new yoke of oxen. Then I could be hauled out to
where medical attendance was to be had.
I watched him start off afoot, and my heart was heavy. But
soon I stopped thinking of my pain and began to find ways and
means to cure my loneliness. We had brought with us a number of
books, and these I read through most of my waking hours. But the
days grew longer and longer for all that. Every morning when I
woke I cut a notch in a long stick to mark its coming. I had cut
twelve of these notches when one morning I was awakened from a
sound sleep by the touch of a hand on my shoulder.
Instantly concluding that Harrington had returned, I was
about to cry out in delight when I caught a glimpse of a
war-bonnet, surmounting the ugly, painted face of a Sioux brave.
The brilliant colors that had been smeared on his visage told
me more forcibly than words could have done that his tribe was
on the warpath. It was a decidedly unpleasant discovery for me.
While he was asking me in the Sioux language what I was doing
there, and how many more were in the party, other braves began
crowding through the door till the little dugout was packed as
full of Sioux warriors as it could hold.
Outside I could hear the stamping of horses and the voices of
more warriors. I made up my mind it was all over but the
scalping.
And then a stately old brave worked his way through the crowd
and came toward my bunk. It was plain from the deference
accorded him by the others that he was a chief. And as soon as I
set eyes on him I recognized him as old Rain-in-the-Face, whom I
had often seen and talked with at Fort Laramie, and whose
children taught me the Sioux language as we played about the
wagon-beds together. Among these children was the son who
succeeded to the name of Rain-in-the-Face, and who years later,
it is asserted, killed General George A. Custer in the massacre
of the Little Big Horn.
I showed the chief my broken leg, and asked him if he did not
remember me. He replied that he did. I asked him if he intended
to kill the boy who had been his children's playmate. He
consulted with his warriors, who had begun busily to loot the
cabin. After a long parley the old man told me that my life
would be spared, but my gun and pistol and all my provisions
would be regarded as the spoils of the war.
Vainly I pointed out that he might as well kill me as leave
me without food or the means to defend myself against wolves. He
said that his young men had granted a great deal in consenting
to spare my life. As for food, he pointed to the carcass of a
deer that hung from the wall.
The next morning they mounted their ponies and galloped away.
I was glad enough to see them go. I knew that my life had hung
by a thread while I had been their involuntary host. Only my
friendship with the children of old Rain-in-the-Face had saved
me.
But, even with the Indians gone, I was in a desperate
situation. As they had taken all my matches I had to keep the
fire going continuously. This meant that I could not sleep long
at a time, the lack of rest soon began to tell on me. I would
cut slices from the deer carcass with my knife, and holding it
over the fire with a long stick, cook it, eating it without
salt. Coffee I must do without altogether.
The second day after the departure of the Indians a great
snow fell. The drifts blocked the doorway and covered the
windows. It lay to a depth of several feet on the roof over my
head. My woodpile was covered by the snow that drifted in and it
was with great difficulty that I could get enough wood to keep
my little fire going. And on that fire depended my life. Worse
than all these troubles was the knowledge that the heavy snow
would be sure to delay Harrington.
I would lie there, day after day, a prey to all sorts of dark
imaginings. I fancied him killed by Indians on the trail, or
snowbound and starving on the Plains. Each morning my notches on
my calendar stick were made. Gradually their number grew till at
last the twentieth was duly cut. But no Harrington came.
The wolves, smelling meat within, had now begun to gather
round in increasing numbers. They made the night hideous with
their howlings, and pawed and scratched and dug at the snow by
the doorway, determined to come in and make a meal of everything
the dugout contained, myself included.
How I endured it I do not know. But the Plains teach men and
boys fortitude. Many and many a time as I lay there I resolved
that if I should ever be spared to go back to my home and
friends, the frontier should know me no more.
It was on the twenty-ninth day, as marked on stick, when I
had about given up hope, that I heard a cheerful voice shouting
"Whoa!" and recognized it as the voice of Harrington. A criminal
on the scafford with the noose about his neck and the trap
sagging underneath his feet could not have welcomed a pardon
more eagerly than I welcomed my deliverance out of this
torture-chamber.
I could make no effort to open the door for him. But I found
voice to answer him when he cried "Hello, Billy!" and in
response to his question assured him that I was all right. He
soon cleared a passageway through the snow, and stood beside me.
"I never expected to see you alive again," he said; "I had a
terrible trip. I didn't think I should ever get through—caught
in the snowstorm and laid up for three days. The cattle wandered
away and I came within an ace of losing them altogether. When I
got started again the snow was so deep I couldn't make much
headway."
"Well, you're here," I said, giving him a hug.
Harrington had made a trip few men could have made. He had
risked his life to save mine. All alone he had brought a yoke of
oxen over a country where the trails were all obscured and the
blinding snow made every added mile more perilous.
I was still unable to walk, and he had to do all the work of
packing up for the trip home. In a few days he had loaded the
pelts on board the wagon, covered it with the wagon-sheet we had
used in the dugout, and made me a comfortable bed inside. We had
three hundred beaver and one hundred otter skins to show for our
work. That meant a lot of money when we should get them to the
settlements.
On the eighth day of the journey home we reached a ranch on
the Republican River, where we rested for a couple of days. Then
we went on to the ranch where Harrington had obtained his cattle
and paid for the yoke with twenty-five beaver skins, the
equivalent of a hundred dollars in money.
At the end of twenty days' travel we reached Salt Creek
Valley, where I was welcomed by my mother and sisters as one
returned from the dead.
So grateful was my mother to Harrington for what he had done
for me that she insisted on his making his home with us. This he
decided to do, and took charge of our farm. The next spring,
this man, who had safely weathered the most perilous of journeys
over the Plains, caught cold while setting out some trees and
fell ill. We brought a doctor from Lawrence, and did everything
in our power to save him, but in a week he died. The loss of a
member of our own family could not have affected us more.
I was now in my fifteenth year and possessed of a growing
appetite for adventure. A very few months had so dulled the
memory of my sufferings in the dugout that I had forgotten all
about my resolve to forsake the frontier forever. I looked about
me for something new and still more exciting.
I was not long in finding it. In April, 1860, the firm of
Russell, Majors & Waddell organized the wonderful "Pony
Express," the most picturesque messenger-service that this
country has ever seen. The route was from St. Joseph, Missouri,
to Sacramento, California, a distance of two thousand miles,
across the Plains, over a dreary stretch of sagebrush and alkali
desert, and through two great mountain ranges.
The system was really a relay race against time. Stations
were built at intervals averaging fifteen miles apart. A rider's
route covered three stations, with an exchange of horses at
each, so that he was expected at the beginning to cover close to
forty-five miles—a good ride when one must average fifteen miles
an hour.
The firm undertaking the enterprise had been busy for some
time picking the best ponies to be had for money, and the
lightest, most wiry and most experienced riders. This was a life
that appealed to me, and I struck for a job. I was pretty young
in years, but I had already earned a reputation for coming safe
out of perilous adventures, and I was hired.
Naturally our equipment was the very lightest. The messages
which we carried were written on the thinnest paper to be found.
These we carried in a waterproof pouch, slung under our arms. We
wore only such clothing as was absolutely necessary.
The first trip of the Pony Express was made in ten days—an
average of two hundred miles a day. But we soon began stretching
our riders and making better time. Soon we shortened the time to
eight days. President Buchanan's last Presidential message in
December, 1860, was carried in eight days. President Lincoln's
inaugural, the following March, took only seven days and
seventeen hours for the journey between St. Joseph and
Sacramento.
We soon got used to the work. When it became apparent to the
men in charge that the boys could do better than forty-five
miles a day the stretches were lengthened. The pay of the rider
was from $100 to $125 a month. It was announced that the further
a man rode the better would be his pay. That put speed and
endurance into all of us.
Stern necessity often compelled us to lengthen our day's work
even beyond our desires. In the hostile Indian country, riders
were frequently shot. In such an event the man whose relief had
been killed had to ride on to the next station, doing two men's
ride. Road-agents were another menace, and often they proved as
deadly as the Indians.
In stretching my own route I found myself getting further and
further west. Finally I was riding well into the foothills of
the Rockies. Still further west my route was pushed. Soon I rode
from Red Buttes to Sweetwater, a distance of seventy-six miles.
Road-agents and Indians infested this country. I never was quite
sure when I started out when I should reach my destination, or
whether I should never reach it at all.
One day I galloped into the station at Three Crossings to
find that my relief had been killed in a drunken row the night
before. There was no one to take his place. His route was
eighty-five miles across country to the west. I had no time to
think it over. Selecting a good pony out of the stables I was
soon on my way.
I arrived at Rocky Ridge, the end of the new route, on
schedule time, and turning back came on to Red Buttes, my
starting-place. The round trip was 320 miles, and I made it in
twenty-one hours and forty minutes.
Excitement was plentiful during my two years' service as a
Pony Express rider. One day as I was leaving Horse Creek, a
party of fifteen Indians jammed me in a sand ravine eight miles
west of the station. They fired at me repeatedly, but my luck
held, and I went unscathed. My mount was a California roan pony,
the fastest in the stables. I dug the spurs into his sides, and,
lying flat on his back, I kept straight on for Sweetwater Bridge
eleven miles distant. A turn back to Horse Creek might have
brought me more speedily to shelter, but I did not dare risk it.
Pursued by Fifteen Bloodthirsty
Indians, I Had a Running Fight of Eleven Miles.
The Indians came on behind, riding with all the speed they
could put into their horses, but my pony drew rapidly ahead. I
had a lead of two miles when I reached the station. There I
found I could get no new pony. The stock-tender had been killed
by the Indians during the night. All his ponies had been stolen
and driven off. I kept on, therefore, to Plonts Station, twelve
miles further along, riding the same pony—a ride of twenty-four
miles on one mount. At Plonts I told the people what had
happened at Sweetwater Bridge. Then, with a fresh horse, I
finished my route without further adventure.
CHAPTER II
About the middle of September the Indians became very
troublesome on the line of the stage along the Sweetwater,
between Split Rock and Three Crossings. A stage had been robbed
and two passengers killed outright. Lem Flowers, the driver, was
badly wounded. The thievish redskins also drove stock repeatedly
from the stations. They were continually lying in wait for
passing stages and Pony Express riders. It was useless to keep
the Express going until these depredations could be stopped. A
lay-off of six weeks was ordered, and our time was our own.
While we were thus idle a party was organized to carry the
war into the Indians' own country, and teach them that the white
man's property must be let alone. This party I joined.
Stage-drivers, express-riders, stock-tenders and ranchmen,
forty in number, composed this party. All were well armed; all
were good shots, and brave, determined men. "Wild Bill" Hickock,
another of the Western gunmen of whom I shall have something to
tell later, was captain of the expedition. He had come recently
to our division as a stage-driver and had the experience and
courage necessary to that kind of leadership.
Twenty miles out from Sweetwater Bridge, at the head of Horse
Creek, we found an Indian trail running north toward Powder
River. We could see that the horses had been recently shod,
conclusive proof that they were our stolen stock. We pushed on
as fast as we could along the trail to the Powder, thence down
this stream to within forty miles of where old Fort Reno now
stands. Farther on, at Crazy Woman's Fork, we saw evidence that
another party had joined our quarry. The trail was newly made.
The Indians could be hardly more than twenty-four hours ahead of
us. And plainly there was a lot of them.
When we reached Clear Creek, another tributary of the Powder,
we saw horses grazing on the opposite bank. Horses meant
Indians. Never before had the redskins been followed so far into
their own country. Not dreaming that they would be pursued they
had failed to put out scouts.
We quickly got the "lay" of their camp, and held a council to
decide on how to attack them. We knew that they outnumbered us
three to one—perhaps more. Without strategy, all we would get
for our long chase would be the loss of our scalps.
"Wild Bill," who did not know the meaning of fear, made our
plan for us. We were to wait till nightfall, and then, after
creeping up as close as possible on the camp, make a grand ride
right through it, open a general fire upon them, and stampede
their horses.
It was a plan that called for nerve, but we were full of
spirit, and the more danger there was in an enterprise the more
we relished it. At our captain's signal we rushed pell-mell
through their camp. Had we dropped from the clouds the Indians
could not have been more astonished. At the sound of our shots
they scattered in every direction, yelling warnings to each
other as they fled.
Once clear of the camp we circled to the south and came back
to make sure that we had done a thorough job. A few parting
shots stampeded the stragglers. Then, with one hundred captured
ponies—most, if not all of them, stolen from the Express and
State stations—we rode back to Sweetwater Bridge.
The recovered horses were placed on the road again, and the
Express was resumed. Slade, who was greatly pleased with our
exploit, now assigned me as special or supernumerary rider.
Thereafter while I was with him I had a comparatively easy time
of it, riding only now and then, and having plenty of
opportunity for seeking after the new adventures in which I
delighted.
Alf Slade, stage-line superintendent, frontiersman, and
dare-devil fighting man, was one of the far-famed gunmen of the
Plains. These were a race of men bred by the perils and hard
conditions of Western life. They became man-killers first from
stern necessity. In that day the man who was not quick on the
trigger had little chance with the outlaws among whom he had to
live. Slade and "Wild Bill," with both of whom I became closely
associated, were men of nerve and courage. But both, having
earned the reputation of gun-fighters, became too eager to live
up to it. Eventually both became outlaws.
Slade, though always a dangerous man, and extremely rough in
his manner, never failed to treat me with kindness. Sober, he
was cool and self-possessed, but never a man to be trifled with.
Drunk, he was a living fury. His services to the company for
which he worked were of high value. He was easily the best
superintendent on the line. But his habit of man-killing at last
resulted in his execution.
Another man who gained even greater notoriety than Slade was
"Wild Bill" Hickock, a tall, yellow-haired giant who had done
splendid service as a scout in the western sector of the Civil
War.
"Wild Bill" I had known since 1857. He and I shared the
pleasure of walking a thousand miles to the Missouri River,
after the bull-train in which we both were employed had been
burned by Lot Smith, the Mormon raider. Afterward we rode the
Pony Express together.
While an express rider, Bill had the fight with the
McCandless gang which will always form an interesting chapter in
the history of the West.
Coming into his swing station at Rock Creek one day, Bill
failed to arouse any one with his shouts for a fresh mount. This
was a certain indication of trouble. It was the stock-tender's
business to be on hand with a relief pony the instant the rider
came in. The Pony Express did not tolerate delays.
Galloping into the yard, Bill dismounted and hurried to the
stable. In the door he saw the stock-tender lying dead, and at
the same instant a woman's screams rang from the cabin near by.
Turning about, Bill found himself face to face with a ruffian
who was rushing from the house, brandishing a six-shooter. He
asked no questions, but pulled one of the two guns he carried
and fired. No sooner had the man fallen, however, than a second,
also armed, came out of the house. Hickock disposed of this
fellow also, and then entered the place, where four others
opened a fusillade on him.
Although the room was thick with smoke, and Bill had to use
extreme care to avoid hitting the woman, who was screaming in
the corner, he managed to kill two of his assailants with his
revolvers and to ward off a blow with a rifle a third had
leveled at him.
The blow knocked the weapon from his hand, but his knife was
still left him, and with it he put the man with the rifle out of
the way. His troubles were not at an end, however. Another man
came climbing in the window to avenge his fellow gangsters. Bill
reached for a rifle which lay on the floor and shot first.
When he took count a few minutes later he discovered that he
had killed five men and wounded a sixth, who escaped in the
thick of the fight.
The woman, who had been knocked unconscious by one of the
desperadoes, was soon revived. She was the stock-tender's wife,
and had been attacked the by gang as soon as they had slain her
husband.
The passengers of the Overland stage, which rolled in as Bill
was reviving the terrified woman, were given a view of Western
life which none of them ever forgot.
Bill was the hero of the occasion, and a real hero he was,
for probably never has a man won such a victory against such
terrific odds in all the history of the war against the ruffians
of the West.
It was at Springfield, Missouri, that Bill had his celebrated
fight with Dave Tutt. The fight put an end to Tutt's career. I
was a personal witness to another of his gun exploits, in which,
though the chances were all against him, he protected his own
life and incidentally his money. An inveterate poker player, he
got into a game in Springfield with big players and for high
stakes. Sitting by the table, I noticed that he seemed sleepy
and inattentive. So I kept a close watch on the other fellows.
Presently I observed that one of his opponents was occasionally
dropping a card in his hat, which he held in his lap, until a
number of cards had been laid away for future use in the game.
The pot had gone around several times and was steadily raised
by some of the players, Bill staying right along, though he
still seemed to be drowsy.
The bets kept rising. At last the man with the hatful of
cards picked a hand out of his reserves, put the hat on his head
and raised Bill two hundred dollars. Bill came back with a raise
of two hundred, and as the other covered it he quietly shoved a
pistol into his face and observed:
"I am calling the hand that is in your hat!"
He Shoved a Pistol in the Man's
Face and Said:
"I'm Calling the Hand That's in Your Hat".
Gathering in the pot with his left hand, he held the pistol
with his right and inquired if any of the players had any
objections to offer. They hastened to reply that they had no
objections whatever and we went away from there.
"Bill," I said, when we were well outside the place, "I had
been noticing that fellow's play right along, but I thought you
hadn't. I was going to get into the game myself if he beat you
out of that money."
"Billy," replied Hickock, "I don't want you ever to learn it,
but that is one of my favorite poker tricks. It always wins
against crooked players."
Not all of the gunmen of the West began straight. Some of
them—many, in fact—were thieves and murderers from the
beginning. Such were the members of the McCandless gang, which
Hickock disposed of so thoroughly. All along the stage route
were robbers and man-killers far more vicious than the Indians.
Very early in my career as a frontiersman I had an encounter
with a party of these from which I was extremely fortunate to
escape with my life.
I employed the leisure afforded me by my assignment as an
extra rider in hunting excursions, in which I took a keen
delight. I was returning home empty-handed from a bear hunt,
when night overtook me in a lonely spot near a mountain stream.
I had killed two sage-hens and built a little fire over which to
broil them before my night's rest.
Suddenly I heard a horse whinny farther up the stream.
Thinking instantly of Indians, I ran quickly to my own horse to
prevent him from answering the call, and thus revealing my
presence.
Filled with uneasiness as to who and what my human neighbors
might be, I resaddled my horse, and, leaving him tied where I
could reach him in a hurry if need be, made my way up-stream to
reconnoiter. As I came around a bend I received an unpleasant
shock. Not one horse, but fifteen horses, were grazing just
ahead of me.
On the opposite side of the creek a light shone high up the
mountain bank—a light from the window of a dugout. I drew near
very cautiously till I came within, sound of voices within the
place, and discovered that its occupants were conversing in my
own language. That relieved me. I knew the strangers to be white
men. I supposed them to be trappers, and, walking boldly to the
door, I knocked.
Instantly the voices ceased. There ensued absolute silence
for a space, and then came-whisperings, and sounds of men
quietly moving about the dirt floor.
"Who's there?" called someone.
"A friend and a white man," I replied.
The door opened, and a big, ugly-looking fellow stood before
me.
"Come in," he ordered.
I accepted the invitation with hesitation, but there was
nothing else to do. To retreat would have meant pursuit and
probably death.
Eight of the most villainous-appearing ruffians I have ever
set eyes upon sat about the dugout as I entered. Two of them I
recognized at once as teamsters who had been employed by Simpson
a few months before. Both had been charged with murdering a
ranchman and stealing his horses. Simpson had promptly
discharged them, and it was supposed that they had left the
country.
I gave them no sign of recognition. I was laying my plans to
get out of there as speedily as possible. I was now practically
certain that I had uncovered the hiding-place of a gang of
horse-thieves who could have no possible reason to feel anything
but hostility toward an honest man. The leader of the gang
swaggered toward me and inquired menacingly:
"Where are you going, young man, and who's with you?"
"I am entirely alone," I returned. "I left Horseshoe Station
this morning for a bear hunt. Not finding any bears, I was going
to camp out till morning. I heard one of your horses whinnying,
and came up to your camp."
"Where is your horse?"
"I left him down the creek."
They proposed going for the horse, which was my only means of
getting rid of their unwelcome society. I tried strategy to
forestall them.
"I'll go and get him," I said. "I'll leave my gun here."
This, I fancied, would convince them that I intended to
return, but it didn't.
"Jim and I will go with you," said one of the thieves. "You
can leave your gun here if you want to. You won't need it."
I saw that if I was to get away at all I would have to be
extremely alert. These were old hands, and were not to be easily
fooled. I felt it safer, however, to trust myself with two men
than with six, so I volunteered to show the precious pair where
I had left the horse, and led them to my camp.
The animal was secured, and as one of the men started to lead
him up the stream I picked up the two sage-hens I had intended
for my evening meal. The more closely we approached the dugout
the less I liked the prospect of reëntering it. One plan of
escape had failed. I was sure the ruffians had no intention of
permitting me to leave them and inform the stage people of their
presence in the country.
One more plan suggested itself to me, and I lost no time in
trying it. Dropping one of the sage-hens, I asked the man behind
me to pick it up. As he was groping for it in the darkness, I
pulled one of my Colt's revolvers, and hit him a terrific blow
over the head. He dropped to the ground, senseless.
Wheeling about, I saw that the other man, hearing the fall,
had turned, his hand upon his revolver. It was no time for
argument. I fired and killed him. Then, leaping on my horse, I
dug the spurs into his sides, and back down the trail we went,
over the rocks and rough ground toward safety.
It Was No Time for
Argument. I Fired and Killed Him.
My peril was far from past. At the sound of the shot the six
men in the dugout tumbled forth in hot haste. They stopped an
instant at the scene of the shooting, possibly to revive the man
I had stunned and to learn from him what had happened.
They were too wise to mount their horses, knowing that,
afoot, they could make better time over the rocky country than I
could on horseback. Steadily I heard them gaining, and soon made
up my mind that if I was to evade them at all I must abandon my
horse.
Jumping off, I gave him a smart slap with the butt of my
revolver which sent him down the valley. I turned and began to
scramble up the mountainside.
I had climbed hardly forty feet when I heard them pass,
following the sound of my horse's feet. I dodged behind a tree
as they went by, and when I heard them firing farther down the
trail I worked my way up the mountainside.
It was twenty-five miles to Horseshoe Station, and very hard
traveling the first part of the way. But I got to the station,
just before daylight, weary and footsore, but exceedingly
thankful.
Tired as I was, I woke up the men at the station and told
them of my adventure. Slade himself led the party that set out
to capture my former hosts, and I went along, though nearly beat
out.
Twenty of us, after a brisk ride, reached the dugout at ten
o'clock in the morning. But the thieves had gone. We found a
newly made grave where they had buried the man I had to kill,
and a trail leading southwest toward Denver. That was all. But
my adventure at least resulted in clearing the country of
horse-thieves. Once the gang had gone, no more depredations
occurred for a long time.
After a year's absence from home I began to long to see my
mother and sisters again. In June, 1861, I got a pass over the
stage-line, and returned to Leavenworth. The first rumblings of
the great struggle that was soon to be known as the Civil War
were already reverberating throughout the North; Sumter had been
fired upon in April of that year. Kansas, as every schoolboy
knows, was previously the bloody scene of some of the earliest
conflicts.
My mother's sympathies were strongly with the Union. She knew
that war was bound to come, but so confident was she in the
strength of the Federal Government that she devoutly believed
that the struggle could not last longer than six months at the
utmost.
Fort Leavenworth and the town of Leavenworth were still
important outfitting posts for the soldiers in the West and
Southwest. The fort was strongly garrisoned by regular troops.
Volunteers were undergoing training. Many of my boyhood friends
were enlisting. I was eager to join them.
But I was still the breadwinner of the family, the sole
support of my sisters and my invalid mother. Not because of
this, but because of her love for me, my mother exacted from me
a promise that I would not enlist for the war while she lived.
But during the summer of 1861 a purely local company, know as
the Red-Legged Scouts, and commanded by Captain Bill Tuff, was
organized. This I felt I could join without breaking my promise
not to enlist for the war, and join it I did. The Red-Legged
Scouts, while they coöperated with the regular army along the
borders of Missouri, had for their specific duty the protection
of Kansas against raiders like Quantrell, and such bandits as
the James Boys, the Younger Brothers, and other desperadoes who
conducted a guerrilla warfare against Union settlers.
We had plenty to do. The guerrillas were daring fellows and
kept us busy. They robbed banks, raided villages, burned
buildings, and looted and plundered wherever there was loot or
plunder to be had.
But Tuff was the same kind of a fighting man as they, and
working in a better cause. With his scouts he put the fear of
the law into the hearts of the guerrillas, and they notably
decreased their depredations in consequence.
Whenever and wherever we found that the scattered bands were
getting together for a general raid we would at once notify the
regulars at Fort Scott or Fort Leavenworth to be ready for them.
Quantrell once managed to collect a thousand men in a hurry, and
to raid and sack Lawrence before the troops could head them off.
But when we got on their trail they were driven speedily back
into Missouri.
In the meantime we took care that little mischief was done by
the gangs headed by the James Boys and the Youngers, who
operated in Quantrell's wake and in small bands.
In the spring of '63 I left the Red-Legged Scouts to serve
the Federal Government as guide and scout with the Ninth Kansas
Cavalry. The Kiowas and Comanches were giving trouble along the
old Santa Fe trail and among the settlements of western Kansas.
The Ninth Kansas were sent to tame them and to protect
immigrants and settlers.
This was work that I well understood. We had a lively summer,
for the Indians kept things stirring, but after a summer of hard
fighting we made them understand that the Great White Chief was
a power that the Indians had better not irritate. November, '63,
I returned with the command to Leavenworth. I had money in my
pockets, for my pay had been $150 a month, and I was able to lay
in an abundant supply of provisions for my family.
On the twenty-third day of December my mother passed away.
Her life had been an extremely hard one, but she had borne up
bravely under poverty and privation, supplying with her own
teaching the education that the frontier schools could not give
her children, and by her Christian example setting them all on a
straight road through life.
Border ruffians killed her husband, almost within sight of
her home. She passed months in terror and distress and, until I
became old enough to provide for her, often suffered from direst
poverty. Yet she never complained for herself; her only thoughts
being for her children and the sufferings that were visited upon
them because of their necessary upbringing in a rough and wild
country.
My sister Julia was now married to Al Goodman, a fine and
capable young man, and I was free to follow the promptings of an
adventurous nature and go where my companions were fighting. In
January, 1864, the Seventh Kansas Volunteers came to Leavenworth
from the South, where they had been fighting since the early
years of the war. Among them I found many of my old friends and
schoolmates. I was no longer under promise not to take part in
the war and I enlisted as a private.
In March of that year the regiment was embarked on steamboats
and sent to Memphis, Tennessee, where we joined the command of
General A.J. Smith. General Smith was organizing an army to
fight the illiterate but brilliant Confederate General Forrest,
who was then making a great deal of trouble in southern
Tennessee.
While we were mobilizing near Memphis, Colonel Herrick of our
regiment recommended me to General Smith for membership in a
picked corps to be used for duty as scouts, messengers, and
dispatch carriers. Colonel Herrick recounted my history as a
plainsman, which convinced the commander that I would be useful
in this special line of duty.
When I reported to General Smith, he invited me into his tent
and inquired minutely into my life as a scout.
"You ought to be able to render me valuable service," he
said.
When I replied that I should be only too glad to do so, he
got out a map of Tennessee, and on it showed me where he
believed General Forrest's command to be located. His best
information was that the Confederate commander was then in the
neighborhood of Okolona, Mississippi, about two hundred miles
south, of Memphis.
He instructed me to disguise myself as a Tennessee boy, to
provide myself with a farm horse from the stock in the camp, and
to try to locate Forrest's main command. Having accomplished
this, I was to gather all the information possible concerning
the enemy's strength in men and equipment and defenses, and to
make my way back as speedily as possible.
General Smith expected to start south the following morning,
and he showed me on the map the wagon road he planned to follow,
so that I might know where to find him on my return. He told me
before we parted that the mission on which he was sending me was
exceedingly dangerous. "If you are captured," he said, "you will
be shot as a spy."
To this I replied that my Indian scouting trips had been
equally dangerous, as capture meant torture and death, yet I had
always willingly undertaken them.
"Do you think you can find Forrest's army?" he said. "Well,
if you can't find an army as big as that you're a mighty poor
scout," he said grimly.
General Smith then turned me over to the man who was in
charge of what was called "the refuge herd," from which I found
a mount built on the lines of the average Tennessee farm horse.
This man also provided me with a suit of farmer's clothing, for
which I exchanged my new soldier uniform, and a bag of
provisions. Leading me about a mile from camp, he left me with
the warning:
"Look out, young fellow. You're taking a dangerous trip."
Then we shook hands and I began my journey.
I had studied carefully the map General Smith had shown me,
and had a fairly accurate idea of the direction I was supposed
to take. Following a wagon road that led to the south, I made
nearly sixty miles the first night. The mare I had chosen proved
a good traveler.
When morning came I saw a big plantation, with the owner's
and negroes' houses, just ahead of me. I was anxious to learn
how my disguise was going to work, and therefore rode boldly up
to the house of the overseer and asked if I could get rest and
some sort of breakfast.
In response to his inquiries I said I was a Tennesseean and
on my way to Holly Springs. I used my best imitation of the
Southern dialect, which I can still use on occasion, and it was
perfectly successful. I was given breakfast, my mare was fed,
and I slept most of the day in a haystack, taking up my journey
again immediately after dinner.
Thereafter I had confidence in my disguise, and, while making
no effort to fall into conversation with people, I did not put
myself out to evade anyone whom I met. None of those with whom I
talked suspected me of being a Northern spy.
At the end of a few days I saw that I was near a large body
of troops. It was in the morning after a hard day-and-night
ride. Fearing to approach the outposts looking weary and fagged
out, I rested for an hour, and then rode up and accosted one of
them. To his challenge I said I was a country boy, and had come
in to see the soldiers. My father and brother, I said, were
fighting with Forrest, and I was almost persuaded to enlist
myself.
My story satisfied the guard and I was passed. A little
farther on I obtained permission to pasture my horse with a herd
of animals belonging to the Confederates and, afoot, I proceeded
to the camp of the soldiers. By acting the part of the rural
Tennesseean, making little purchases from the negro food-stands,
and staring open-mouthed at all the camp life, I picked up a
great deal of information without once falling under suspicion.
The question now uppermost in my mind was how I was going to
get away. Toward evening I returned to the pasture, saddled my
mare and rode to the picket line where I had entered. Here, to
my dismay, I discovered that the outposts had been recently
changed.
But I used the same story that had gained admission for me.
In a sack tied to my saddle were the food supplies I had bought
from the negroes during the day. These, I explained to the
outposts, were intended as presents for my mother and sisters
back on the farm. They examined the sack, and, finding nothing
contraband in it, allowed me to pass.
I now made all possible speed northward, keeping out of sight
of houses and of strangers. On the second day I passed several
detachments of Forrest's troops, but my training as a scout
enabled me to keep them from seeing me.
Though my mare had proven herself an animal of splendid
endurance, I had to stop and rest her occasionally. At such
times I kept closely hidden. It was on the second morning after
leaving Forrest's command that I sighted the advance guard of
Smith's army. They halted me when I rode up, and for a time I
had more trouble with them than I had had with any of Forrest's
men. I was not alarmed, however, and when the captain told me
that he would have to send me to the rear, I surprised him by
asking to see General Smith.
"Are you anxious to see a big, fighting general?" he asked in
amazement.
"Yes," I said. "I hear that General Smith can whip Forrest,
and I would like to see any man who can do that."
Without any promises I was sent to the rear, and presently I
noticed General Smith, who, however, failed to recognize me.
I managed, however, to draw near to him and ask him if I
might speak to him for a moment.
Believing me to be a Confederate prisoner, he assented, and
when I had saluted I said:
"General, I am Billy Cody, the man you sent out to the
Confederate lines."
"Report back to your charge," said the general to the officer
who had me in custody. "I will take care of this man."
My commander was much pleased with my report, which proved to
be extremely accurate and valuable. The disguise he had failed
to penetrate did not deceive my comrades of the Ninth Kansas,
and when I passed them they all called me by name and asked me
where I had been. But my news was for my superior officers, and
I did not need the warning Colonel Herrick gave me to keep my
mouth shut while among the soldiers.
General Smith, to whom I later made a full detailed report,
had spoken highly of my work to Colonel Herrick, who was
gratified to know that his choice of a scout had been justified
by results.
It was not long before the whole command knew of my return,
but beyond the fact that I had been on a scouting expedition,
and had brought back information much desired by the commander,
they knew nothing of my journey. The next morning, still riding
the same mare and still wearing my Tennessee clothes, I rode out
with the entire command in the direction of Forrest's army.
Before I had traveled five miles I had been pointed out to
the entire command, and cheers greeted me on every side. As soon
as an opportunity offered I got word with the general and asked
if he had any further special orders for me.
"Just keep around," he said; "I may need you later on."
"But I am a scout," I told him, "and the place for a scout is
ahead of the army, getting information."
"Go ahead," he replied, "and if you see anything that I ought
to know about come back and tell me."
Delighted to be a scout once more, I made my way forward. The
general had given orders that I was to be allowed to pass in and
out the lines at will, so that I was no longer hampered by the
activities of my own friends. I had hardly got beyond the sound
of the troops when I saw a beautiful plantation house, on the
porch of which was a handsome old lady and her two attractive
daughters.
They were greatly alarmed when I came up, and asked if I
didn't know that the Yankee army would be along in a few minutes
and that my life was in peril. All their own men folks, they
said, were in hiding in the timber.
"Don't you sit here," begged the old lady, when I had seated
myself on the porch to sip a glass of milk for which I had asked
her. "The Yankee troops will go right through this house. They
will break up the piano and every stick of furniture, and leave
the place in ruins. You are sure to be killed or taken
prisoner."
By this time the advance guard was coming up the road.
General Smith passed as I was standing on the porch. I saw that
he had noticed me, though he gave no sign of having done so. As
more troops passed, men began leaving their companies and
rushing toward the house. I walked out and ordered them away in
the name of the general. They all knew who I was, and obeyed,
much to the astonishment of the old lady and her daughter.
Turning to my hostess, I said:
"Madam, I can't keep them out of your chicken-house or your
smoke-house or your storerooms, but I can keep them out of your
home, and I will."
I remained on the porch till the entire command had passed.
Nothing was molested. Much pleased, but still puzzled, the old
lady was now convinced that I was no Tennessee lad, but a
sure-enough Yankee, and one with a remarkable amount of
influence. When I asked for a little something to eat in return
for what I had done, the best there was in the house was spread
before me.
My hostess urged me to eat as speedily as possible, and be on
my way. Her men folks, she said, would soon return from the
timber, and if they learned that I was a Yank would shoot me on
the spot. As she was speaking the back door was pushed open and
three men rushed in. The old lady leaped between them and me.
"Don't shoot him!" she cried. "He has protected our property
and our lives." But the men had no murderous intentions.
"Give him all he wants to eat," said the eldest, "and we will
see that he gets back to the Yankee lines in safety. We saw him
from the treetops turn away the Yanks as he stood on the porch."
While I finished my meal they put all manner of questions to
me, being specially impressed that a boy so young could have
kept a great army from foraging so richly stocked a plantation.
I told them that I was a Union scout, and that I had saved their
property on my own responsibility.
"I knew you would be back here," I said. "But I was sure you
wouldn't shoot me when you learned what I had done."
"You bet your life we won't!" they said heartily.
After dinner I was stocked Tip with all the provisions I
wanted, and given a fine bottle of peach brandy, the product of
the plantation. Then the men of the place escorted me to the
rear-guard of the command, which I lost no time in joining. When
I overtook the general and presented him with the peach brandy,
he said gruffly:
"I hear you kept all the men from foraging on that plantation
back yonder."
"Yes, sir," I said. "An old lady and her two daughters were
alone there. My mother had suffered from raids of hostile
soldiers in Kansas. I tried to protect that old lady, as I would
have liked another man to protect my mother in her distress. I
am sorry if I have disobeyed your orders and I am ready for any
punishment you wish to inflict on me."
"My boy," said the general, "you may be too good-hearted for
a soldier, but you have done just what I would have done. My
orders were to destroy all Southern property. But we will forget
your violation, of them."
General Smith kept straight on toward Forrest's stronghold.
Ten miles from the spot where the enemy was encamped, he wheeled
to the left and headed for Tupedo, Mississippi, reaching there
at dark. Forrest speedily discovered that Smith did not intend
to attack him on his own ground. So he broke camp, and, coming
up to the rear, continued a hot fire through the next afternoon.
Arriving near Tupedo, General Smith selected, as a
battleground, the crest of a ridge commanding the position
Forrest had taken up. Between the two armies lay a plantation of
four or five thousand acres. The next morning Forrest dismounted
some four thousand cavalry, and with cavalry and artillery on
his left and right advanced upon our position.
Straight across the plantation they came, while Smith rode
back and forth behind the long breastworks that protected his
men, cautioning them to reserve their fire till it could be made
to tell. All our men were fighting with single shotguns. The
first shot, in a close action, had to count, or a second one
might never be fired.
I had been detailed to follow Smith as he rode to and fro.
With an eye to coming out of the battle with a whole skin I had
picked out a number of trees, behind which I proposed to drop my
horse when the fighting got to close quarters. This was the
fashion I had always employed in Indian fighting. As the
Confederates got within good range, the order "Fire!" rang out.
At that instant I wheeled my horse behind a big oak tree.
Unhappily for me the general was looking directly at me as this
maneuver was executed. When we had driven back and defeated
Forrest's men I was ordered to report at General Smith's tent.
"Young man," said the General, when I stood before him, "you
were recommended to me as an Indian fighter. What were you doing
behind that tree!"
"That is the way we have to fight Indians, sir," I said. "We
get behind anything that offers protection." It was twelve years
later that I convinced General Smith that my theory of Indian
fighting was pretty correct.
After the consolidation of the regular army, following the
war, Smith was sent to the Plains as Colonel of the Seventh
Cavalry. This was afterward known as Custer's regiment, and we
engaged in the battle of the Little Big Horn, in which that
gallant commander was slain. Smith's cavalry command was moving
southward on an expedition against the Kiowas and Comanches in
the Canadian River country, when I joined it as a scout.
Dick Curtis, acting as guide for Smith, had been sent on
ahead across the river, while the main command stopped to water
their horses. Curtis's orders were to proceed straight ahead for
five miles, where the troops would camp. He was followed
immediately by the advance guard, Smith and his staff following
on. We had proceeded about three miles when three or four
hundred Indians attacked us, jumping out of gullies and ravines,
where they had been securely hidden. General Smith at once
ordered the orderlies to sound the recall and retreat, intending
to fall back quickly on the main command.
He was standing close beside a deep ravine as he gave the
order. Knowing that the plan he proposed meant the complete
annihilation of our force, I pushed my horse close to him.
"General," I said, "order your men into the ravine, dismount,
and let number fours hold horses. Then you will be able to stand
off the Indians. If you try to retreat to the main command you
and every man under you will be killed before you have retreated
a mile."
He immediately saw the sense of my advice. Issuing orders to
enter the ravine, he dismounted with his men behind the bank.
There we stood off the Indians till the soldiers in the rear,
hearing the shots, came charging to the rescue and drove the
Indians away. The rapidity with which we got into the ravine,
and the protection its banks afforded us, enabled us to get away
without losing a man. Had the general's original plan been
carried out none of us would have come away to tell the story. I
was summoned to the general's tent that evening.
"That was a brilliant suggestion of yours, young man," he
said. "This Indian fighting is a new business to me. I realize
that if I had carried out my first order not a man of us would
ever have reached the command alive."
I said: "General, do you remember the battle of Tupedo?"
"I do," he said, with his chest expanding a little. "I was in
command at that battle." The whipping of Forrest had been a
particularly difficult and unusual feat, and General Smith never
failed to show his pride in the achievement whenever the battle
of Tupedo was mentioned.
"Do you remember," I continued, "the young fellow you caught
behind a tree, and sent for him afterward to ask him why he did
so?"
"Is it possible you are the man who found Forrest's command!"
he asked in amazement. "I had often wondered what became of
you," he said, when I told him I was the same man. "What have
you been doing since the war!"
I told him I had come West as a scout for General Sherman in
1865 and had been scouting ever since. He was highly delighted
to see me again, and from that time forward, as long as he
remained on the Plains, I resumed my old position as his chief
scout.
After the battle of Tupedo, Smith's command was ordered to
Memphis, and from there sent by boat up the Mississippi. We of
the cavalry disembarked at Cape Jardo, Smith remaining behind
with the infantry, which came on later. General Sterling Price,
of the Confederate army, was at this time coming out of Arkansas
into southern Missouri with a large army. His purpose was to
invade Kansas.
Federal troops were not then plentiful in the West. Smith's
army from Tennessee, Blunt's troops from Kansas, what few
regulars there were in Missouri, and some detachments of Kansas
volunteers were all being moved forward to head off Price. Being
still a member of the Ninth Kansas Cavalry, I now found myself
back in my old country—just ahead of Price's army, which had now
reached the fertile northwestern Missouri.
In carrying dispatches from General McNeil to General Blunt
or General Pleasanton I passed around and through Price's army
many times. I always wore the disguise of a Confederate soldier,
and always escaped detection. Price fought hard and
successfully, gaining ground steadily, till at Westport,
Missouri, and other battlefields near the Kansas line, the
Federal troops checked his advance.
At the Little Blue, a stream that runs through what is now
Kansas City, he was finally turned south, and took up a course
through southern Kansas.
Near Mound City a scouting party of which I was a member
surprised a small detachment of Price's army. Our advantage was
such that they surrendered, and while we were rounding them up I
heard one of them say that we Yanks had captured a bigger prize
than we suspected. When he was asked what this prize consisted
of, the soldier said:
"That big man over yonder is General Marmaduke of the
Southern army."
I had heard much of Marmaduke and greatly admired his dash
and ability as a fighting man. Going over to him, I asked if
there was anything I could do to make him comfortable. He said
that I could. He hadn't had a bite to eat, and he wanted some
food and wanted it right away.
He was surrounding a good lunch I had in my saddle-bag, while
I was ransacking the saddle-bag of a comrade for a bottle of
whisky which I knew to be there.
When we turned our prisoners over to the main command I was
put in charge of General Marmaduke and accompanied him as his
custodian to Fort Leavenworth. The general and I became fast
friends, and our friendship lasted long after the war. Years
after he had finished his term as Governor of Missouri he
visited me in London, where I was giving my Wild West Show. He
was talking with me in my tent one day when the Earl of Lonsdale
and Lord Harrington rode up, dismounted, and came over to where
we were sitting.
I presented Marmaduke to them as the governor of one of
America's greatest States and a famous Confederate general.
Lonsdale, approaching and extending his hand, smiled and said:
"Ah, Colonel Cody, another one of your Yankee friends, eh?"
Marmaduke, who had risen, scowled. But he held out his hand.
"Look here," he said, "I am much pleased to meet you, sir, but I
want you first to understand distinctly that I am no Yank."
When I left General Marmaduke at Leavenworth and returned to
my command, Price was already in retreat. After driving him
across the Arkansas River I returned with my troop to
Springfield, Missouri. From there I went, under General McNeil,
to Fort Smith and other places on the Arkansas border, where he
had several lively skirmishes, and one big and serious
engagement before the war was ended.
The spring of 1865 found us again in Springfield, where we
remained about two months, recuperating and replenishing our
stock. I now got a furlough of thirty days and went to St.
Louis, where I invested part of a thousand dollars I had saved
in fashionable clothes and in rooms at one of the best hotels.
It was while there that I met a young lady of a Southern family,
to whom I paid a great deal of attention, and from whom I
finally extracted a promise that if I would come back to St.
Louis at the end of the war she would marry me.
On my return to Springfield I found an expedition in process
of fitting out for a scouting trip through New Mexico and into
the Arkansas River country, to look after the Indians. With this
party I took part in a number of Indian fights and helped to
save a number of immigrant trains from destruction. On our
return to Fort Leavenworth we found General Sanborn and a number
of others of the former Union leaders who had come to the border
to make peace with the Indians.
The various tribes that roamed the Plains had heard of the
great war, and, believing that it had so exhausted the white man
that he would fall an easy prey to Indian aggression, had begun
to arm themselves and make ready for great conquests. They had
obtained great stores of arms and ammunition. During the last
two years of the war they had been making repeated raids and
inflicting vast damage on the settlers.
At the close of the war, when the volunteers were discharged,
I was left free to return to my old calling. The regular army
was in course of consolidation. Men who had been generals were
compelled to serve as colonels and majors. The consolidated
army's chief business was in the West, where the Indians formed
a real menace, and to the West came the famous fighting men
under whose command I was destined to spend many of the eventful
years to come.
CHAPTER III
At the close of the war, General William Tecumseh Sherman was
placed at the head of the Peace Commission which had been sent
to the border to take counsel with the Indians. It had become
necessary to put an end to the hostility of the red man
immediately either by treaty or by force. His raids on the
settlers could be endured no longer.
The purpose of the party which Sherman headed was to confer
with the greatest of the hostile chiefs. Treaties were to be
agreed upon if possible. If negotiations for peace failed, the
council would at least act as a stay of hostilities. The army
was rapidly reorganizing, and it would soon be possible to
mobilize enough troops to put down the Indians in case they
refused to come to terms peaceably.
The camp of the Kiowas and Comanches—the first Indians with
whom Sherman meant to deal—was about three hundred miles
southwest of Leavenworth, in the great buffalo range, and in the
midst of the trackless Plains.
By ambulance and on horseback, with wagons to carry the
supplies, the party set out for its first objective—Council
Springs on the Arkansas River, about sixty miles beyond old Fort
Zarrah.
I was chosen as one of the scouts or dispatch carriers to
accompany the party. The guide was Dick Curtis, a plainsman of
wide experience among the Indians.
When we arrived at Fort Zarrah we found that no road lay
beyond, and learned that there was no water on the way. It was
determined, therefore, to make a start at two o'clock in the
morning. Curtis said this would enable us to reach our
destination, sixty-five miles further on, by two o'clock the
next afternoon.
The outfit consisted of two ambulances and one Government
wagon, which carried the tents and supplies. Each officer had a
horse to ride if he chose. If he preferred to ride in the
ambulance his orderly was on hand to lead his horse for him.
We traveled steadily till ten o'clock in the morning, through
herds of buffalo whose numbers were past counting. I remember
that General Sherman estimated that the number of buffalo on the
Plains at that time must have been more than eleven million. It
requir |