The Great Salt Lake Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about The Great Salt Lake Trail.

The Great Salt Lake Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about The Great Salt Lake Trail.

While they were cutting up the animals another herd appeared in sight.  The Indians were preparing to surround it, when I asked Major North to keep them back and let me show them what I could do.  He accordingly informed the Indians of my wish, and they readily consented to let me have the opportunity.  I had learned that Buckskin Joe was an excellent buffalo horse, and felt confident that I would astonish the natives; galloping in among the buffaloes, I certainly did so, by killing thirty-six in less than a half-mile run.  At nearly every shot I killed a buffalo, stringing the animals out on the prairie, not over fifty feet apart.  This manner of killing was greatly admired by the Indians, who called me a big chief, and from that time on I stood high in their estimation.

On leaving camp, the command took a westward course up the Republican, and Major North with two companies of his Pawnees and two or three companies of cavalry, under the command of Colonel Royall, made a scout to the north of the river.  Shortly after we had gone into camp, on the Black Tail Deer Fork, we observed a band of Indians coming over the prairie at full gallop, singing and yelling and waving their lances and long poles.  At first we supposed them to be Sioux, and all was excitement for a few moments.  We noticed, however, that our Pawnee Indians made no hostile demonstrations or preparations toward going out to fight them, but began swinging and yelling themselves.  Captain Lute North stepped up to General Carr and said:—­

“General, those are our men who are coming, and they have had a fight.  That is the way they act when they come back from a battle and have taken any scalps.”

The Pawnees came into camp on the run.  Captain North calling to one of them—­a sergeant—­soon found out that they had run across a party of Sioux who were following a large Indian trail.  These Indians had evidently been in a fight, for two or three of them had been wounded, and they were conveying the injured persons on travois.[65] The Pawnees had “jumped” them and killed three or four after a sharp fight, in which much ammunition was expended.

Next morning the command, at an early hour, started out to take up this Indian trail which they followed for two days as rapidly as possible, it becoming evident from the many camp-fires which we passed that we were gaining on the Indians.  Wherever they had encamped we found the print of a woman’s shoe, and we concluded that they had with them some white captive.  This made us all the more anxious to overtake them, and General Carr accordingly selected all his best horses, which could stand a hard run, and gave orders for the wagon-train to follow as fast as possible, while he pushed ahead on a forced march.  At the same time I was ordered to pick out five or six of the best Pawnees, and go on in advance of the command, keeping ten or twelve miles ahead on the trail, so that when we overtook the Indians we could find out the location of their camp, and send word to the troops before they came in sight, thus affording ample time to arrange a plan for the capture of the village.

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The Great Salt Lake Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.