Disasters many kept pace with the
unhappy explorers on their way back to Quamash flats
after their rebuff at the base of the Bitter Root
Mountains. One of the horses fell down a rough
and rocky place, carrying his rider with him; but
fortunately neither horse nor man was killed.
Next, a man, sent ahead to cut down the brush that
blocked the path, cut himself badly on the inside
of his thigh and bled copiously. The hunters
sent out for game returned empty-handed. The fishermen
caught no fish, but broke the two Indian gigs, or
contrivances for catching fish, with which they had
been provided. The stock of salt had given out,
the bulk of their supply having been left on the mountain.
Several large mushrooms were brought in by Cruzatte,
but these were eaten without pepper, salt, or any
kind of grease, - “a very tasteless,
insipid food,” as the journal says. To
crown all, the mosquitoes were pestilential in their
numbers and venom.
Nevertheless, the leaders of the expedition were determined
to press on and pass the Bitter Root Mountains as soon as a slight rest at
Quamash flats should be had. If they should tarry until the snows melted from
the trail, they would be too late to reach the United States that winter and
would be compelled to pass the next winter at some camp high up on the Missouri,
as they had passed one winter at Fort Mandan, on their way out. This is the
course of argument which Captain Lewis and Clark took to persuade each other as
to the best way out of their difficulties: -
“The snows have formed a hard,
coarse bed without crust, on which the horses walk
safely without slipping; the chief difficulty, therefore,
is to find the road. In this we may be assisted
by the circumstance that, though generally ten feet
in depth, the snow has been thrown off by the thick
and spreading branches of the trees, and from round
the trunk; while the warmth of the trunk itself, acquired
by the reflection of the sun, or communicated by natural
heat of the earth, which is never frozen under these
masses, has dissolved the snow so much that immediately
at the roots its depth is not more than one or two
feet. We therefore hope that the marks of the
baggage rubbing against the trees may still be perceived;
and we have decided, in case the guide cannot be procured,
that one of us will take three or four of our most
expert woodsmen, several of our best horses, and an
ample supply of provisions, go on two days’
journey in advance, and endeavor to trace the route
by the marks of the Indian baggage on the trees, which
we would then mark more distinctly with a tomahawk.
When they should have reached two days’ journey
beyond Hungry Creek, two of the men were to be sent
back to apprise the rest of their success, and if
necessary to cause them to delay there; lest, by advancing
too soon, they should be forced to halt where no food
could be obtained for the horses. If the traces
of the baggage be too indistinct, the whole party
is to return to Hungry Creek, and we will then attempt
the passage by ascending the main southwest branch
of Lewis’ River through the country of the Shoshonees,
over to Madison or Gallatin River. On that route,
the Chopunnish inform us, there is a passage not obstructed
by snow at this period of the year.”
On their return to Quamash flats the
party met two Indians who, after some parley, agreed
to pilot them over the mountains; these camped where
they were, and the party went on to the flats, having
exacted a promise from the Indians that they would
wait there two nights for the white men to come along.
When the party reached their old camp, they found that
one of their hunters had killed a deer, which was a
welcome addition to their otherwise scanty supper.
Next day, the hunters met with astonishing luck, bringing
into camp eight deer and three bears. Four of
the men were directed to go to the camp of the two
Indians, and if these were bent on going on, to accompany
them and so mark, or blaze, the trees that the rest
of the party would have no difficulty in finding the
way, later on.
Meanwhile, the men who had been sent back for guides
returned, bringing with them the pleasing information that three Indians whom
they brought with them had consented to guide the party to the great falls of
the Missouri, for the pay of two guns. Accordingly, once more (June 26), they
set out for the mountains, travelling for the third time in twelve days the
route between Quamash flats and the Bitter Root range. For the second time they
ran up against a barrier of snow. They measured the depth of the snow at the
place where they had left their luggage at their previous repulse and found it
to be ten feet and ten inches deep; and it had sunk four feet since they had
been turned back at this point. Pressing on, after they reached their old camp,
they found a bare spot on the side of the mountain where there was a little
grass for their horses; and there they camped for the night. They were fortunate
in having Indian guides with them; and the journal says: -
“The marks on the trees, which
had been our chief dependence, are much fewer and
more difficult to be distinguished than we had supposed.
But our guides traverse this trackless region with
a kind of instinctive sagacity; they never hesitate,
they are never embarrassed; and so undeviating is
their step, that wherever the snow has disappeared,
for even a hundred paces, we find the summer road.
With their aid the snow is scarcely a disadvantage;
for though we are often obliged to slip down, yet
the fallen timber and the rocks, which are now covered,
were much more troublesome when we passed in the autumn.
Travelling is indeed comparatively pleasant, as well
as more rapid, the snow being hard and coarse, without
a crust, and perfectly hard enough to prevent the horses
sinking more than two or three inches. After the
sun has been on it for some hours it becomes softer
than it is early in the morning; yet they are almost
always able to get a sure foothold.”
On the twenty-ninth of June the party were well out of the
snows in which they had been imprisoned, although they were by no means over the
mountain barrier that had been climbed so painfully during the past few days.
Here they observed the tracks of two barefooted Indians who had evidently been
fleeing from their enemies, the Pahkees. These signs disturbed the Indian
guides, for they at once said that the tracks were made by their friends, the
Ootlashoots, and that the Pahkees would also cut them (the guides) off on their
return from the trip over the mountains. On the evening of the day above
mentioned, the party camped at the warm springs which fall into Travellers-rest
Creek, a point now well known to the explorers, who had passed that way before.
Of the springs the journal says: -
“These warm springs are situated
at the foot of a hill on the north side of Traveller’s-rest
Creek, which is ten yards wide at this place.
They issue from the bottoms, and through the interstices
of a gray freestone rock, which rises in irregular
masses round their lower side. The principal
spring, which the Indians have formed into a bath by
stopping the run with stone and pebbles, is about
the same temperature as the warmest bath used at the
hot springs in Virginia. On trying, Captain Lewis
could with difficulty remain in it nineteen minutes,
and then was affected with a profuse perspiration.
The two other springs are much hotter, the temperature
being equal to that of the warmest of the hot springs
in Virginia. Our men, as well as the Indians,
amused themselves with going into the bath; the latter,
according to their universal custom, going first into
the hot bath, where they remain as long as they can
bear the heat, then plunging into the creek, which
is now of an icy coldness, and repeating this operation
several times, but always ending with the warm bath.”
Travellers-rest Creek, it will be recollected, is on the
summit of the Bitter Root Mountains, and the expedition had consequently passed
from Idaho into Montana, as these States now exist on the map; but they were
still on the Pacific side of the Great Divide, or the backbone of the continent.
Much game was seen in this region, and after reaching Travellers-rest Creek,
the hunters killed six deer; great numbers of elk and bighorn were also seen in
this vicinity. On the thirtieth of July the party were at their old camp
of September 9 and 10, 1805, having made one hundred and fifty-six miles from
Quamash flats to the mouth of the creek where they now camped. Here a plan to
divide and subdivide the party was made out as follows: -
“Captain Lewis, with nine men,
is to pursue the most direct route to the falls of
the Missouri, where three of his party (Thompson, Goodrich,
and McNeal) are to be left to prepare carriages for
transporting the baggage and canoes across the portage.
With the remaining six, he will ascend Maria’s
River to explore the country and ascertain whether
any branch of it reaches as far north as latitude
50’0, after which he will descend that river
to its mouth. The rest of the men will accompany
Captain Clark to the head of Jefferson River, which
Sergeant Ordway and a party of nine men will descend,
with the canoes and other articles deposited there.
Captain Clark’s party, which will then be reduced
to ten men and Sacajawea, will proceed to the Yellowstone,
at its nearest approach to the Three Forks of the
Missouri. There he will build canoes, go down
that river with seven of his party, and wait at its
mouth till the rest of the party join him. Sergeant
Pryor, with two others, will then take the horses
by land to the Mandans. From that nation he will
go to the British posts on the Assiniboin with a letter
to Mr. Alexander Henry, to procure his endeavors to
prevail on some of the Sioux chiefs to accompany him
to the city of Washington. . . .
“The Indians who had accompanied
us intended leaving us in order to seek their friends,
the Ootlashoots; but we prevailed on them to accompany
Captain Lewis a part of his route, so as to show him
the shortest road to the Missouri, and in the mean
time amused them with conversation and running races,
on foot and with horses, in both of which they proved
themselves hardy, athletic, and active. To the
chief Captain Lewis gave a small medal and a gun,
as a reward for having guided us across the mountains;
in return the customary civility of exchanging names
passed between them, by which the former acquired
the title of Yomekollick, of White Bearskin Unfolded.”