Next in importance to the building of a winter camp was the
fixing of a place where salt could be made. Salt is absolutely necessary
for the comfort of man, and the supply brought out from the United States by the
explorers was now nearly all gone. They were provided with kettles in
which sea-water could be boiled down and salt be made. It would be needful
to go to work at once, for the process of salt-making by boiling in ordinary
kettles is slow and tedious; not only must enough for present uses be found, but
a supply to last the party home again was necessary. Accordingly, on the eighth
of December the journal has this entry to show what was to be done: -
“In order, therefore, to find
a place for making salt, and to examine the country
further, Captain Clark set out with five men, and pursuing
a course ’0 W., over a dividing ridge through
thick pine timber, much of which bad fallen, passed
the beads of two small brooks. In the neighborhood
of these the land was swampy and overflowed, and they
waded knee-deep till they came to an open ridgy prairie,
covered with the plant known on our frontier by the
name of sacacommis (bearberry). Here is a creek
about sixty yards wide and running toward Point Adams;
they passed it on a small raft. At this place
they discovered a large herd of elk, and after pursuing
them for three miles over bad swamps and small ponds,
killed one of them. The agility with which the
elk crossed the swamps and bogs seems almost incredible;
as we followed their track the ground for a whole
acre would shake at our tread and sometimes we sunk
to our hips without finding any bottom. Over the
surface of these bogs is a species of moss, among
which are great numbers of cranberries; and occasionally
there rise from the swamp small steep knobs of earth,
thickly covered with pine and laurel. On one of
these we halted at night, but it was scarcely large
enough to suffer us to lie clear of the water, and
had very little dry wood. We succeeded, however,
in collecting enough to make a fire; and having stretched
the elk-skin to keep off the rain, which still continued,
slept till morning.”
Next day the party were met by three
Indians who had been fishing for salmon, of which
they had a goodly supply, and were now on their way
home to their village on the seacoast. They, invited
Captain Clark and his men to accompany them; and the
white men accepted the invitation. These were
Clatsops. Their village consisted of twelve families
living in houses of split pine boards, the lower half
of the house being underground. By a small ladder
in the middle of the house-front, the visitors reached
the floor, which was about four feet below the surface.
Two fires were burning in the middle of the room upon
the earthen floor. The beds were ranged around
the room next to the wall, with spaces beneath them
for bags, baskets, and household articles.
Captain Clark was received with much attention, clean mats
were spread for him, and a repast of fish, roots, and berries was set before
him. He noticed that the Clatsops were well dressed and clean, and that they
frequently washed their faces and hands, a ceremony, he remarked, that is by no
means frequent among other Indians. A high wind now prevailed, and as the
evening was stormy, Captain Clark resolved to stay all night with his hospitable
Clatsops. The narrative proceeds: -
“The men of the village now
collected and began to gamble. The most common
game was one in which one of the company was banker,
and played against all the rest. He had a piece
of bone, about the size of a large bean, and having
agreed with any individual as to the value of the
stake, would pass the bone from one hand to the other
with great dexterity, singing at the same time to
divert the attention of his adversary; then holding
it in his hands, his antagonist was challenged to
guess in which of them the bone was, and lost or won
as he pointed to the right or wrong hand. To
this game of hazard they abandoned themselves with
great ardor; sometimes everything they possess is
sacrificed to it; and this evening several of the Indians
lost all the beads which they had with them.
This lasted for three hours; when, Captain Clark appearing
disposed to sleep, the man who had been most attentive,
and whose name was Cuskalah, spread two new mats near
the fire, ordered his wife to retire to her own bed,
and the rest of the company dispersed at the same
time. Captain Clark then lay down, but the violence
with which the fleas attacked him did not leave his
rest unbroken.”
Next morning, Captain Clark walked along the seashore, and he
observed that the Indians were walking up and down, examining the shore and the
margin of a creek that emptied here. The narrative says: -
“He was at a loss to understand
their object till one of them came to him, and explained
that they were in search of any fish which might have
been thrown on shore and left by the tide, adding in
English, ’sturgeon is very good.’
There is, indeed, every reason to believe that these
Clatsops depend for their subsistence, during the winter,
chiefly on the fish thus casually thrown on the coast.
After amusing himself for some time on the beach,
he returned towards the village, and shot on his way
two brant. As he came near the village, one of
the Indians asked him to shoot a duck about thirty
steps distant: he did so, and, having accidentally
shot off its head, the bird was brought to the village,
when all the Indians came round in astonishment.
They examined the duck, the musket, and the very small
bullets, which were a hundred to the pound, and then
exclaimed, Clouch musque, waket, commatax musquet:
Good musket; do not understand this kind of musket.
They now placed before him their best roots, fish,
and syrup, after which he attempted to purchase a
sea-otter skin with some red beads which he happened
to have about him; but they declined trading, as they
valued none except blue or white beads. He therefore
bought nothing but a little berry-bread and a few
roots, in exchange for fish-hooks, and then set out
to return by the same route he had come. He was
accompanied by Cuskalah and his brother as far as
the third creek, and then proceeded to the camp through
a heavy rain. The whole party had been occupied
during his absence in cutting down trees to make huts,
and in hunting.”
This was the occupation of all hands for several days,
notwithstanding the discomfort of the continual downpour. Many of the men were
ill from the effects of sleeping and living so constantly in water. Under date
of December 12, the journal has this entry: -
“We continued to work in the
rain at our houses. In the evening there arrived
two canoes of Clatsops, among whom was a principal
chief, called Comowol. We gave him a medal and
treated his companions with great attention; after
which we began to bargain for a small sea-otter skin,
some wappatoo-roots, and another species of root called
shanataque. We readily perceived that they were
close dealers, stickled much for trifles, and never
closed the bargain until they thought they had the
advantage. The wappatoo is dear, as they themselves
are obliged to give a high price for it to the Indians
above. Blue beads are the articles most in request;
the white occupy the next place in their estimation;
but they do not value much those of any other color.
We succeeded at last in purchasing their whole cargo
for a few fish-hooks and a small sack of Indian tobacco,
which we had received from the Shoshonees.”
The winter camp was made up of seven huts, and, although it
was not so carefully fortified as was the fort in the Mandan country (during the
previous winter), it was so arranged that intruders could be kept out when
necessary. For the roofs of these shelters they were provided with
shakes split out from a species of pine which they called balsam pine, and
which gave them boards, or puncheons, or shakes, ten feet long and two feet
wide, and not more than an inch and a half thick. By the sixteenth of
December their meat-house was finished, and their meat, so much of which had
been spoiled for lack of proper care, was cut up in small pieces and hung under
cover. They had been told by the Indians that very little snow ever fell in that
region, and the weather, although very, very wet, was mild and usually free from
frost. They did have severe hailstorms and a few flurries of snow in December
but the rain was a continual cause of discomfort. Of the trading habits of the
Clatsops the journal has this to say: -
“Three Indians came in a canoe
with mats, roots, and the berries of the sacacommis.
These people proceed with a dexterity and finesse in
their bargains which, if they have not learned it
from their foreign visitors, may show how nearly allied
is the cunning of savages to the little arts of traffic.
They begin by asking double or treble the value of
what they have to sell, and lower their demand in
proportion to the greater or less degree of ardor
or knowledge of the purchaser, who, with all his management,
is not able to procure the article for less than its
real value, which the Indians perfectly understand.
Our chief medium of trade consists of blue and white
beads, files, - with which they sharpen their
tools, - fish-hooks, and tobacco; but of all
these articles blue beads and tobacco are the most
esteemed.”
But, although their surroundings were not of a sort to make
one very jolly, when Christmas came they observed the day as well as they could.
Here is what the journal says of the holiday: -
“We were awaked at daylight
by a discharge of firearms, which was followed by
a song from the men, as a compliment to us on the return
of Christmas, which we have always been accustomed
to observe as a day of rejoicing. After breakfast
we divided our remaining stock of tobacco, which amounted
to twelve carrots (hands), into two parts; one of which
we distributed among such of the party as make use
of it, making a present of a handkerchief to the others.
The remainder of the day was passed in good spirits,
though there was nothing in our situation to excite
much gayety. The rain confined us to the house,
and our only luxuries in honor of the season were
some poor elk, so much spoiled that we ate it through
sheer necessity, a few roots, and some spoiled pounded
fish.
“The next day brought a continuation
of rain, accompanied with thunder, and a high wind
from the southeast. We were therefore obliged
to still remain in our huts, and endeavored to dry
our wet articles before the fire. The fleas,
which annoyed us near the portage of the Great Falls,
have taken such possession of our clothes that we are
obliged to have a regular search every day through
our blankets as a necessary preliminary to sleeping
at night. These animals, indeed, are so numerous
that they are almost a calamity to the Indians of
this country. When they have once obtained the
mastery of any house it is impossible to expel them,
and the Indians have frequently different houses, to
which they resort occasionally when the fleas have
rendered their permanent residence intolerable; yet,
in spite of these precautions, every Indian is constantly
attended by multitudes of them, and no one comes into
our house without leaving behind him swarms of these
tormenting insects.”
Although the condition of the exploring party was low, the
men did not require very much to put them in good spirits. The important and
happy event of finishing their fort and the noting of good weather are thus set
forth in the journal under date of December 30: -
“Toward evening the hunters
brought in four elk (which Drewyer had killed), and
after a long course of abstinence and miserable diet,
we had a most sumptuous supper of elk’s tongues
and marrow. Besides this agreeable repast, the
state of the weather was quite exhilarating. It
had rained during the night, but in the morning, though
the high wind continued, we enjoyed the fairest and
most pleasant weather since our arrival; the sun having
shone at intervals, and there being only three showers
in the course of the day. By sunset we had completed
the fortification, and now announced to the Indians
that every day at that hour the gates would be closed,
and they must leave the fort and not enter it till
sunrise. The Wahkiacums who remained with us,
and who were very forward in their deportment, complied
very reluctantly with this order; but, being excluded
from our houses, formed a camp near us. . . .
“January 1, 1806. We were
awaked at an early hour by the discharge of a volley
of small arms, to salute the new year. This was
the only mode of commemorating the day which our situation
permitted; for, though we had reason to be gayer than
we were at Christmas, our only dainties were boiled
elk and wappatoo, enlivened by draughts of pure water.
We were visited by a few Clatsops, who came by water,
bringing roots and berries for sale. Among this
nation we observed a man about twenty-five years old,
of a much lighter complexion than the Indians generally:
his face was even freckled, and his hair long, and
of a colour inclining to red. He was in habits
and manners perfectly Indian; but, though he did not
speak a word of English, he seemed to understand more
than the others of his party; and, as we could obtain
no account of his origin, we concluded that one of
his parents, at least, must have been white.”
A novel addition to their bill of fare was fresh blubber, or
fat, from a stranded whale. Under date of January 3 the journal says: -
“At eleven o’clock we
were visited by our neighbor, the Tia or chief, Comowool,
who is also called Coone, and six Clatsops. Besides
roots and berries, they brought for sale three dogs,
and some fresh blubber. Having been so long accustomed
to live on the flesh of dogs, the greater part of
us have acquired a fondness for it, and our original
aversion for it is overcome, by reflecting that while
we subsisted on that food we were fatter, stronger,
and in general enjoyed better health than at any period
since leaving the buffalo country, eastward of the
mountains. The blubber, which is esteemed by
the Indians an excellent food, has been obtained,
they tell us, from their neighbors, the Killamucks,
a nation who live on the seacoast to the southeast,
near one of whose villages a whale had recently been
thrown and foundered.”
Five men had been sent out to form a camp on the seashore and
go into the manufacture of salt as expeditiously as possible. On the fifth
of January, two of them came into the fort bringing a gallon of salt, which was
decided to be white, fine and very good, and a very agreeable addition to
their food, which had been eaten perfectly fresh for some weeks past.
Captain Clark, however, said it was a mere matter of indifference to him
whether he had salt or not, but he hankered for bread. Captain Lewis, on
the other hand, said the lack of salt was a great inconvenience; the want of
bread I consider trivial, was his dictum. It was estimated that the
salt-makers could turn out three or four quarts a day, and there was good
prospect of an abundant supply for present needs and for the homeward journey.
An expedition to the seashore was now planned, and the journal goes on to tell
how they set out: -
“The appearance of the whale
seemed to be a matter of importance to all the neighboring
Indians, and as we might be able to procure some of
it for ourselves, or at least purchase blubber from
the Indians, a small parcel of merchandise was prepared,
and a party of the men held in readiness to set out
in the morning. As soon as this resolution was
known, Chaboneau and his wife requested that they might
be permitted to accompany us. The poor woman
stated very earnestly that she had travelled a great
way with us to see the great water, yet she had never
been down to the coast, and now that this monstrous
fish was also to be seen, it seemed hard that she
should be permitted to see neither the ocean nor the
whale. So reasonable a request could not be denied;
they were therefore suffered to accompany Captain
Clark, who, January 6th, after an early breakfast,
set out with twelve men in two canoes.”
After a long and tedious trip, the camp of the saltmakers was
reached, and Captain Clark and his men went on to the remains of the whale, only
the skeleton being left by the rapacious and hungry Indians. The whale had been
stranded between two shore villages tenanted by the Killamucks, as Captain Clark
called them. They are now known as the Tillamook Indians, and their name is
preserved in Tillamook County, Oregon. The white men found it difficult to
secure much of the blubber, or the oil. Although the Indians had large
quantities of both, they sold it with much reluctance. In Clarks private diary
is found this entry: Small as this stock (of oil and lubber) is I prize it
highly; and thank Providence for directing the whale to us; and think him more
kind to us than he was to Jonah, having sent this monster to be swallowed by us
instead of swallowing us as Jonahs did. While here, the party had a startling
experience, as the journal says: -
“Whilst smoking with the Indians,
Captain Clark was surprised, about ten o’clock,
by a loud, shrill outcry from the opposite village,
on hearing which all the Indians immediately started
up to cross the creek, and the guide informed him
that someone had been killed. On examination one
of the men (M’Neal) was discovered to be absent,
and a guard (Sergeant Pryor and four men) despatched,
who met him crossing the creek in great haste.
An Indian belonging to another band, who happened to
be with the Killamucks that evening, had treated him
with much kindness, and walked arm in arm with him
to a tent where our man found a Chinnook squaw, who
was an old acquaintance. From the conversation
and manner of the stranger, this woman discovered
that his object was to murder the white man for the
sake of the few articles on his person; when he rose
and pressed our man to go to another tent where they
would find something better to eat, she held M’Neal
by the blanket; not knowing her object, he freed himself
from her, and was going on with his pretended friend,
when she ran out and gave the shriek which brought
the men of the village over, and the stranger ran
off before M’Neal knew what had occasioned the
alarm.”
The mighty hunter of the Lewis and Clark expedition was
Drewyer, whose name has frequently been mentioned in these pages. Under date of
January 12, the journal has this just tribute to the man: -
“Our meat is now becoming scarce;
we therefore determined to jerk it, and issue it in
small quantities, instead of dividing it among the
four messes, and leaving to each the care of its own
provisions; a plan by which much is lost, in consequence
of the improvidence of the men. Two hunters had
been despatched in the morning, and one of them, Drewyer,
had before evening killed seven elk. We should
scarcely be able to subsist, were it not for the exertions
of this most excellent hunter. The game is scarce,
and nothing is now to be seen except elk, which for
almost all the men are very difficult to be procured;
but Drewyer, who is the offspring of a Canadian Frenchman
and an Indian woman, has passed his life in the woods,
and unites, in a wonderful degree, the dexterous aim
of the frontier huntsman with the intuitive sagacity
of the Indian, in pursuing the faintest tracks through
the forest. All our men, however, have indeed
become so expert with the rifle that we are never
under apprehensions as to food; since, whenever there
is game of any kind, we are almost certain of procuring
it.”
The narrative of the explorers gives
this account of the Chinooks: -
“The men are low in stature,
rather ugly, and ill made; their legs being small
and crooked, their feet large, and their heads, like
those of the women, flattened in a most disgusting
manner. These deformities are in part concealed
by robes made of sea-otter, deer, elk, beaver or fox
skins. They also employ in their dress robes of
the skin of a cat peculiar to this country, and of
another animal of the same size, which is light and
durable, and sold at a high price by the Indians who
bring it from above. In addition to these are
worn blankets, wrappers of red, blue, or spotted cloth,
and some old sailors’ clothes, which are very
highly prized. The greater part of the men have
guns, with powder and ball.
“The women have in general handsome
faces, but are low and disproportioned, with small
feet and large legs, occasioned, probably, by strands
of beads, or various strings, drawn so tight above
the ankles as to prevent the circulation of the blood.
Their dress, like that of the Wahkiacums, consists
of a short robe and a tissue of cedar bark. Their
hair hangs loosely down the shoulders and back; and
their ears, neck, and wrists are ornamented with blue
beads. Another decoration, which is very highly
prized, consists of figures made by puncturing the
arms or legs; and on the arms of one of the squaws
we observed the name of J. Bowman, executed in the
same way. In language, habits, and in almost
every other particular, they resemble the Clatsops,
Cathlamahs, and, indeed, all the people near the mouth
of the Columbia, though they appeared to be inferior
to their neighbors in honesty as well as spirit.
No ill treatment or indignity on our part seemed to
excite any feeling except fear; nor, although better
provided than their neighbors with arms, have they
enterprise enough either to use them advantageously
against the animals of the forest, or offensively against
the tribes near them, who owe their safety more to
the timidity than the forbearance of the Chinooks.
We had heard instances of pilfering while we were
among them, and therefore gave a general order excluding
them from our encampment, so that whenever an Indian
wished to visit us, he began by calling out ‘No
Chinook.’ It is not improbable that this
first impression may have left a prejudice against
them, since, when we were among the Clatsops and other
tribes at the mouth of the Columbia, they had less
opportunity of stealing, if they were so disposed.”
The weeks remaining before the party set out on their return
were passed without notable incident. The journal is chiefly occupied with
comments on the weather, which was variable, and some account of the manners and
customs of the Indian tribes along the Columbia River. At that time, so few
traders had penetrated the wilds of the Lower Columbia that the Indians were not
supplied with firearms to any great extent. Their main reliance was the bow and
arrow. A few shotguns were seen among them, but no rifles, and great was the
admiration and wonder with which the Indians saw the white men slay birds and
animals at a long distance. Pitfalls for elk were constructed by the side of
fallen trees over which the animals might leap. Concerning the manufactures of
the Clatsops, they reported as follows: -
“Their hats are made of cedar-bark
and bear-grass, interwoven together in the form of
a European hat, with a small brim of about two inches,
and a high crown widening upward. They are light,
ornamented with various colors and figures, and being
nearly water-proof, are much more durable than either
chip or straw hats. These hats form a small article
of traffic with the whites, and their manufacture is
one of the best exertions of Indian industry.
They are, however, very dexterous in making a variety
of domestic utensils, among which are bowls, spoons,
scewers (skewers), spits, and baskets. The bowl
or trough is of different shapes - round,
semicircular, in the form of a canoe, or cubic, and
generally dug out of a single piece of wood; the larger
vessels have holes in the sides by way of handles,
and all are executed with great neatness. In
these vessels they boil their food, by throwing hot
stones into the water, and extract oil from different
animals in the same way. Spoons are not very
abundant, nor is there anything remarkable in their
shape, except that they are large and the bowl broad.
Meat is roasted on one end of a sharp skewer, placed
erect before the fire, with the other end fixed in
the ground.
“But the most curious workmanship
is that of the basket. It is formed of cedar-bark
and bear-grass, so closely interwoven that it is water-tight,
without the aid of either gum or resin. The form
is generally conic, or rather the segment (frustum)
of a cone, of which the smaller end is the bottom
of the basket; and being made of all sizes, from that
of the smallest cup to the capacity of five or six
gallons, they answer the double purpose of a covering
for the head or to contain water. Some of them
are highly ornamented with strands of bear-grass, woven
into figures of various colors, which require great
labor; yet they are made very expeditiously and sold
for a trifle. It is for the construction of these
baskets that the bear-grass forms an article of considerable
traffic. It grows only near the snowy region of
the high mountains; the blade, which is two feet long
and about three-eighths of an inch wide, is smooth,
strong, and pliant; the young blades particularly,
from their not being exposed to the sun and air, have
an appearance of great neatness, and are generally
preferred. Other bags and baskets, not waterproof,
are made of cedar-bark, silk-grass, rushes, flags,
and common coarse sedge, for the use of families.
In these manufactures, as in the ordinary work of
the house, the instrument most in use is a knife,
or rather a dagger. The handle of it is small,
and has a strong loop of twine for the thumb, to prevent
its being wrested from the band. On each side
is a blade, double-edged and pointed; the longer from
nine to ten inches, the shorter from four to five.
This knife is carried habitually in the hand, sometimes
exposed, but mostly, when in company with strangers,
is put under the robe.”
Naturally, all of the Columbia River Indians were found to be
expert in the building and handling of canoes. Here their greatest skill
was employed. And, it may be added, the Indians of the North Pacific coast
to-day are equally adept and skilful. The canoes of the present race of
red men do not essentially differ from those of the tribes described by Lewis
and Clark, and who are now extinct. The Indians then living above
tide-water built canoes of smaller size than those employed by the nations
farther down the river. The canoes of the Tillamooks and other tribes
living on the seacoast were upwards of fifty feet long, and would carry eight or
ten thousand pounds weight, or twenty-five or thirty persons. These were
constructed from the trunk of a single tree, usually white cedar. The bow
and stern rose much higher than the gunwale, and were adorned by grotesque
figures excellently well carved and fitted to pedestals cut in the solid wood of
the canoe. The same method of adornment may be seen among the aborigines
of Alaska and other regions of the North Pacific, to-day. The figures are made
of small pieces of wood neatly fitted together by inlaying and mortising,
without any spike of any kind. When one reflects that the Indians seen by Lewis
and Clark constructed their large canoes with very poor tools, it is impossible
to withhold ones admiration of their industry and patience. The journal says: -
“Our admiration of their skill
in these curious constructions was increased by observing
the very inadequate implements which they use.
These Indians possess very few axes, and the only tool
they employ, from felling the tree to the delicate
workmanship of the images, is a chisel made of an
old file, about an inch or an inch and a half in width.
Even of this, too, they have not learned the proper
management; for the chisel is sometimes fixed in a
large block of wood, and, being held in the right
hand, the block is pushed with the left, without the
aid of a mallet. But under all these disadvantages,
their canoes, which one would suppose to be the work
of years, are made in a few weeks. A canoe, however,
is very highly prized, being in traffic an article
of the greatest value except a wife, and of equal
value with her; so that a lover generally gives a
canoe to the father in exchange for his daughter.
. . .
“The harmony of their private
life is secured by their ignorance of spirituous liquors,
the earliest and most dreadful present which civilization
has given to the other natives of the continent.
Although they have had so much intercourse with whites,
they do not appear to possess any knowledge of those
dangerous luxuries; at least they have never inquired
after them, which they probably would have done if
once liquors bad been introduced among them.
Indeed, we have not observed any liquor of intoxicating
quality among these or any Indians west of the Rocky
Mountains, the universal beverage being pure water.
They, however, sometimes almost intoxicate themselves
by smoking tobacco, of which they are excessively
fond, and the pleasures of which they prolong as much
as possible, by retaining vast quantities at a time,
till after circulating through the lungs and stomach
it issues in volumes from the mouth and nostrils.”
A long period of quiet prevailed in
camp after the first of February, before the final
preparations for departure were made. Parties
were sent out every day to hunt, and the campers were
able to command a few days’ supply of provision
in advance. The flesh of the deer was now very
lean and poor, but that of the elk was growing better
and better. It was estimated by one of the party
that they killed, between December 1, 1805, and March
20, 1806, elk to the number of one hundred and thirty-one,
and twenty deer. Some of this meat they smoked
for its better preservation, but most of it was eaten
fresh. No record was kept of the amount of fish
consumed by the party; but they were obliged at times
to make fish their sole article of diet. Late
in February they were visited by Comowool, the principal
Clatsop chief, who brought them a sturgeon and quantities
of a small fish which had just begun to make its appearance
in the Columbia. This was known as the anchovy,
but oftener as the candle-fish; it is so fat that
it may be burned like a torch, or candle. The
journal speaks of Comowool as “by far the most
friendly and decent savage we have seen in this neighborhood.”