A quarter of a century’s experience
in frontier life, a great portion of which has been
occupied in exploring the interior of our continent,
and in long marches where I have been thrown exclusively
upon my own resources, far beyond the bounds of the
populated districts, and where the traveler must vary
his expedients to surmount the numerous obstacles
which the nature of the country continually reproduces,
has shown me under what great disadvantages the “voyageur”
labors for want of a timely initiation into those
minor details of prairie-craft, which, however apparently
unimportant in the abstract, are sure, upon the plains,
to turn the balance of success for or against an enterprise.
This information is so varied, and
is derived from so many different sources, that I
still find every new expedition adds substantially
to my practical knowledge, and am satisfied that a
good Prairie Manual will be for the young traveler
an addition to his equipment of inappreciable value.
With such a book in his hand, he will
be able, in difficult circumstances, to avail himself
of the matured experience of veteran travelers, and
thereby avoid many otherwise unforeseen disasters;
while, during the ordinary routine of marching, he
will greatly augment the sum of his comforts, avoid
many serious losses, and enjoy a comparative exemption
from doubts and anxieties. He will feel himself
a master spirit in the wilderness he traverses, and
not the victim of every new combination of
circumstances which nature affords or fate allots,
as if to try his skill and prowess.
I have waited for several years, with
the confident expectation that some one more competent
than myself would assume the task, and give the public
the desired information; but it seems that no one has
taken sufficient interest in the subject to disseminate
the benefits of his experience in this way. Our
frontier-men, although brave in council and action,
and possessing an intelligence that quickens in the
face of danger, are apt to feel shy of the pen.
They shun the atmosphere of the student’s closet;
their sphere is in the free and open wilderness.
It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that to our
veteran borderer the field of literature should remain
a “terra incognita.” It is
our army that unites the chasm between the culture
of civilization in the aspect of science, art, and
social refinement, and the powerful simplicity of
nature. On leaving the Military Academy, a majority
of our officers are attached to the line of the army,
and forthwith assigned to duty upon our remote and
extended frontier, where the restless and warlike
habits of the nomadic tribes render the soldier’s
life almost as unsettled as that of the savages themselves.
A regiment is stationed to-day on
the borders of tropical Mexico; to-morrow, the war-whoop,
borne on a gale from the northwest, compels its presence
in the frozen latitudes of Puget’s Sound.
The very limited numerical strength of our army, scattered
as it is over a vast area of territory, necessitates
constant changes of stations, long and toilsome marches,
a promptitude of action, and a tireless energy and
self-reliance, that can only be acquired through an
intimate acquaintance with the sphere in which we
act and move.
The education of our officers at the
Military Academy is doubtless well adapted to the
art of civilized warfare, but can not familiarize them
with the diversified details of border service; and
they often, at the outset of their military career,
find themselves compelled to improvise new expedients
to meet novel émergences.
The life of the wilderness is an art
as well as that of the city or court, and every art
subjects its votaries to discipline in preparing them
for a successful career in its pursuit. The Military
Art, as enlarged to meet all the requirements of border
service, the savage in his wiles or the elements in
their caprices, embraces many other special arts
which have hitherto been almost ignored, and results
which experience and calculation should have guaranteed
have been improvidently staked upon favorable chances.
The main object at which I have aimed
in the following pages has been to explain and illustrate,
as clearly and succinctly as possible, the best methods
of performing the duties devolving upon the prairie
traveler, so as to meet their contingencies under all
circumstances, and thereby to endeavor to establish
a more uniform system of marching and campaigning
in the Indian country.
I have also furnished itineraries
of most of the principal routes that have been traveled
across the plains, taken from the best and most reliable
authorities; and I have given some information concerning
the habits of the Indians and wild animals that frequent
the prairies, with the secrets of the hunter’s
and warrior’s strategy, which I have endeavored
to impress more forcibly upon the reader by introducing
illustrative anecdote.
I take great pleasure in acknowledging
my indebtedness to several officers of the Topographical
Engineers and of other corps of the army for the valuable
information I have obtained from their official reports
regarding the different routes embraced in the itineraries,
and to these gentlemen I beg leave very respectfully
to dedicate my book.