One day we were pushed for horses to work on our scrapers,
so I hitched up Brigham, to see how he would work. He was
not much used to that kind of labour, and I was about giving
up the idea of making a work horse of him, when one of the
men called to me that there were some buffaloes coming over
the hill. As there had been no buffaloes seen anywhere
in the vicinity of the camp for several days, we had become
rather short of meat. I immediately told one of our men
to hitch his horses to a wagon and follow me, as I was going
out after the herd, and we would bring back some fresh meat
for supper. I had no saddle, as mine had been left at camp
a mile distant, so taking the harness from Brigham I mounted
him bareback, and started out after the game, being armed
with my celebrated buffalo killer Lucretia Borgia—a newly
improved breech-loading needle-gun, which I had obtained
from the government.
While I was riding toward the buffaloes, I observed five
horsemen coming out from the fort, who had evidently seen
the buffaloes from the post, and were going out for a chase.
They proved to be some newly arrived officers in that part
of the country, and when they came up closer I could see
by the shoulder-straps that the senior was a captain,
while the others were lieutenants.
"Hello! my friend," sang out the captain; "I see you are
after the same game we are."
"Yes, sir; I saw those buffaloes coming over the hill,
and as we were about out of fresh meat I thought I would
go and get some," said I.
They scanned my cheap-looking outfit pretty closely, and
as my horse was not very prepossessing in appearance, having
on only a blind bridle, and otherwise looking like a work
horse, they evidently considered me a green hand at hunting.
"Do you expect to catch those buffaloes on that Gothic
steed?" laughingly asked the captain.
"I hope so, by pushing on the reins hard enough," was
my reply.
"You'll never catch them in the world, my fine fellow,"
said the captain. "It requires a fast horse to overtake
the animals on the prairie."
"Does it?" asked I, as if I didn't know it.
"Yes; but come along with us, as we are going to kill them
more for pleasure than anything else. All we want are the
tongues and a piece of tenderloin, and you may have all
that is left," said the generous man.
"I am much obliged to you, captain, and will follow you,"
I replied.
There were eleven buffaloes in the herd, and they were not
more than a mile ahead of us. The officers dashed on as if
they had a sure thing on killing them all before I could
come up with them; but I had noticed that the herd was
making toward the creek for water, and as I knew buffalo
nature, I was perfectly aware that it would be difficult
to turn them from their direct course. Thereupon, I started
toward the creek to head them off, while the officers
came up in the rear and gave chase.
The buffaloes came rushing past me not a hundred yards
distant, with the officers about three hundred yards in
the rear. Now, thought I, is the time to "get my work in,"
as they say; and I pulled off the blind bridle from my
horse, who knew as well as I did that we were out after
buffaloes, as he was a trained hunter. The moment the
bridle was off he started at the top of his speed, running
in ahead of the officers, and with a few jumps he brought me
alongside the rear buffalo. Raising old Lucretia Borgia
to my shoulder, I fired, and killed the animal at the
first shot. My horse then carried me alongside the next
one, not ten feet away, and I dropped him at the next fire.
As soon as one of the buffalo would fall, Brigham would
take me so close to the next that I could almost touch it
with my gun. In this manner I killed the eleven buffaloes
with twelve shots; and as the last animal dropped, my horse
stopped. I jumped off to the ground, knowing that he would
not leave me—it must be remembered that I had been riding
him without bridle, reins, or saddle—and, turning around
as the party of astonished officers rode up, I said to them:—
"Now, gentlemen, allow me to present to you all the tongues
and tenderloins you wish from these buffaloes."
Captain Graham, for such I soon learned was his name,
replied: "Well, I never saw the like before. Who under
the sun are you, anyhow?"
"My name is Cody," said I.
Captain Graham, who was considerable of a horseman,
greatly admired Brigham, and said: "That horse of yours
has running points."
"Yes, sir; he has not only got the points, he is a runner
and knows how to use the points," said I.
"So I noticed," said the captain.
They all finally dismounted, and we continued chatting
for some little time upon the different subjects of horses,
buffaloes, hunting, and Indians. They felt a little sore
at not getting a single shot at the buffaloes; but the way
I had killed them, they said, amply repaid them for their
disappointment. They had read of such feats in books,
but this was the first time they had ever seen anything
of the kind with their own eyes. It was the first time,
also, that they had ever witnessed or heard of a white man
running buffaloes on horseback without a saddle or bridle.
I told them that Brigham knew nearly as much about the
business as I did, and if I had twenty bridles they would
have been of no use to me, as he understood everything,
and all that he expected of me was to do the shooting.
It is a fact that Brigham would stop if a buffalo did not
fall at the first fire, so as to give me a second chance;
but if I did not kill the animal then, he would go on, as
if to say, "You are no good, and I will not fool away my
time by giving you more than two shots." Brigham was the
best horse I ever saw or owned for buffalo chasing.
At one time an old, experienced buffalo hunter was following at the heels
of a small herd with that reckless rush to which in the excitement of the
chase men abandon themselves, when a great bull just in front of him
tumbled into a ravine. The rider's horse fell also, throwing the old
hunter over his head sprawling, but with strange accuracy right between
the bull's horns! The first to recover from the terrible shock and to
regain his legs was the horse, which ran off with wonderful alacrity
several miles before he stopped. Next the bull rose, and shook himself
with an astonished air, as if he would like to know "how that was done?"
The hunter was on the great brute's back, who, perhaps, took the affair as
a good practical joke; but he was soon pitched to the ground, as the
buffalo commenced to jump "stiff-legged," and the latter, giving the
hunter one lingering look, which he long remembered, with remarkable good
nature ran off to join his companions. Had the bull been wounded, the
rider would have been killed, as the then enraged animal would have gored
and trampled him to death.
An officer of the old regular army told me many years ago that in crossing
the plains a herd of buffalo were fired at by a twelve-pound howitzer, the
ball of which wounded and stunned an immense bull. Nevertheless, heedless
of a hundred shots that had been fired at him, and of a bulldog belonging
to one of the officers, which had fastened himself to his lips, the
enraged beast charged upon the whole troop of dragoons, and tossed one of
the horses like a feather. Bull, horse, and rider all fell in a heap.
Before the dust cleared away, the trooper, who had hung for a moment to
one of the bull's horns by his waistband, crawled out safe, while the
horse got a ball from a rifle through his neck while in the air and two
great rips in his flank from the bull.
In 1839 Kit Carson and Hobbs were trapping with a party on the Arkansas
River, not far from Bent's Fort. Among the trappers was a green Irishman,
named O'Neil, who was quite anxious to become proficient in hunting, and
it was not long before he received his first lesson. Every man who went
out of camp after game was expected to bring in "meat" of some kind.
O'Neil said that he would agree to the terms, and was ready one evening to
start out on his first hunt alone. He picked up his rifle and stalked
after a small herd of buffalo in plain sight on the prairie not more than
five or six hundred yards from camp.
All the trappers who were not engaged in setting their traps or cooking
supper were watching O'Neil. Presently they heard the report of his rifle,
and shortly after he came running into camp, bareheaded, without his gun,
and with a buffalo bull close upon his heels; both going at full speed,
and the Irishman shouting like a madman,—
"Here we come, by jabers. Stop us! For the love of God, stop us!"
Just as they came in among the tents, with the bull not more than six feet
in the rear of O'Neil, who was frightened out of his wits and puffing like
a locomotive, his foot caught in a tent-rope, and over he went into a
puddle of water head foremost, and in his fall capsized several
camp-kettles, some of which contained the trappers' supper. But the
buffalo did not escape so easily; for Hobbs and Kit Carson jumped for
their rifles, and dropped the animal before he had done any further
damage.
The whole outfit laughed heartily at O'Neil when he got up out of the
water, for a party of old trappers would show no mercy to any of their
companions who met with a mishap of that character; but as he stood there
with dripping clothes and face covered with mud, his mother-wit came to
his relief and he declared he had accomplished the hunter's task: "For
sure," said he, "haven't I fetched the mate into camp? and there was no
bargain whether it should be dead or alive!"
Upon Kit's asking O'Neil where his gun was,—
"Sure," said he, "that's more than I can tell you."
Next morning Carson and Hobbs took up O'Neil's tracks and the buffalo's,
and after hunting an hour or so found the Irishman's rifle, though he had
little use for it afterward, as he preferred to cook and help around camp
rather than expose his precious life fighting buffaloes.
A great herd of buffaloes on the plains in the early days, when one could
approach near enough without disturbing it to quietly watch its
organization and the apparent discipline which its leaders seemed to
exact, was a very curious sight. Among the striking features of the
spectacle was the apparently uniform manner in which the immense mass of
shaggy animals moved; there was constancy of action indicating a degree of
intelligence to be found only in the most intelligent of the brute
creation. Frequently the single herd was broken up into many smaller ones,
that travelled relatively close together, each led by an independent
master. Perhaps a few rods only marked the dividing-line between them, but
it was always unmistakably plain, and each moved synchronously in the
direction in which all were going.
The leadership of a herd was attained only by hard struggles for the
place; once reached, however, the victor was immediately recognized, and
kept his authority until some new aspirant overcame him, or he became
superannuated and was driven out of the herd to meet his inevitable fate,
a prey to those ghouls of the desert, the gray wolves.
In the event of a stampede, every animal of the separate, yet
consolidated, herds rushed off together, as if they had all gone mad at
once; for the buffalo, like the Texas steer, mule, or domestic horse,
stampedes on the slightest provocation; frequently without any assignable
cause. The simplest affair, sometimes, will start the whole herd; a
prairie-dog barking at the entrance to his burrow, a shadow of one of
themselves or that of a passing cloud, is sufficient to make them run for
miles as if a real and dangerous enemy were at their heels.
Like an army, a herd of buffaloes put out vedettes to give the alarm in
case anything beyond the ordinary occurred. These sentinels were always to
be seen in groups of four, five, or even six, at some distance from the
main body. When they perceived something approaching that the herd should
beware of or get away from, they started on a run directly for the centre
of the great mass of their peacefully grazing congeners. Meanwhile, the
young bulls were on duty as sentinels on the edge of the main herd
watching the vedettes; the moment the latter made for the centre, the
former raised their heads, and in the peculiar manner of their species
gazed all around and sniffed the air as if they could smell both the
direction and source of the impending danger. Should there be something
which their instinct told them to guard against, the leader took his
position in front, the cows and calves crowded in the centre, while the
rest of the males gathered on the flanks and in the rear, indicating a
gallantry that might be emulated at times by the genus homo.
Generally buffalo went to their drinking-places but once a day, and that
late in the afternoon. Then they ambled along, following each other in
single file, which accounts for the many trails on the plains, always
ending at some stream or lake. They frequently travelled twenty or thirty
miles for water, so the trails leading to it were often worn to the depth
of a foot or more.
That curious depression so frequently seen on the great plains, called a
buffalo-wallow, is caused in this wise: The huge animals paw and lick the
salty, alkaline earth, and when once the sod is broken the loose dirt
drifts away under the constant action of the wind. Then, year after year,
through more pawing, licking, rolling, and wallowing by the animals, the
wind wafts more of the soil away, and soon there is a considerable hole in
the prairie.
Many an old trapper and hunter's life has been saved by following a
buffalo-trail when he was suffering from thirst. The buffalo-wallows
retain usually a great quantity of water, and they have often saved the
lives of whole companies of cavalry, both men and horses.
There was, however, a stranger and more wonderful spectacle to be seen
every recurring spring during the reign of the buffalo, soon after the
grass had started. There were circles trodden bare on the plains,
thousands, yes, millions of them, which the early travellers, who did not
divine their cause, called fairy-rings. From the first of April until the
middle of May was the wet season; you could depend upon its recurrence
almost as certainly as on the sun and moon rising at their proper time.
This was also the calving period of the buffalo, as they, unlike our
domestic cattle, only rutted during a single month; consequently, the cows
all calved during a certain time; this was the wet month, and as there
were a great many gray wolves that roamed singly and in immense packs over
the whole prairie region, the bulls, in their regular beats, kept guard
over the cows while in the act of parturition, and drove the wolves away,
walking in a ring around the females at a short distance, and thus forming
the curious circles.
In every herd at each recurring season there were always ambitious young
bulls that came to their majority, so to speak, and these were ever ready
to test their claims for the leadership, so that it may be safely stated
that a month rarely passed without a bloody battle between them for the
supremacy; though, strangely enough, the struggle scarcely ever resulted
in the death of either combatant.
Perhaps there is no animal in which maternal love is so wonderfully
developed as the buffalo cow; she is as dangerous with a calf by her side
as a she-grizzly with cubs, as all old mountaineers know.
The buffalo bull that has outlived his usefulness is one of the most
pitiable objects in the whole range of natural history. Old age has
probably been decided in the economy of buffalo life as the unpardonable
sin. Abandoned to his fate, he may be discovered, in his dreary isolation,
near some stream or lake, where it does not tax him too severely to find
good grass; for he is now feeble, and exertion an impossibility. In this
new stage of his existence he seems to have completely lost his courage.
Frightened at his own shadow, or the rustling of a leaf, he is the very
incarnation of nervousness and suspicion. Gregarious in his habits from
birth, solitude, foreign to his whole nature, has changed him into a new
creature; and his inherent terror of the most trivial things is
intensified to such a degree that if a man were compelled to undergo such
constant alarm, it would probably drive him insane in less than a week.
Nobody ever saw one of these miserable and helplessly forlorn creatures
dying a natural death, or ever heard of such an occurrence. The cowardly
coyote and the gray wolf had already marked him for their own; and they
rarely missed their calculations.
Riding suddenly to the top of a divide once with a party of friends in
1866, we saw standing below us in the valley an old buffalo bull, the very
picture of despair. Surrounding him were seven gray wolves in the act of
challenging him to mortal combat. The poor beast, undoubtedly realizing
the utter hopelessness of his situation, had determined to die game. His
great shaggy head, filled with burrs, was lowered to the ground as he
confronted his would-be executioners; his tongue, black and parched,
lolled out of his mouth, and he gave utterance at intervals to a
suppressed roar.
The wolves were sitting on their haunches in a semi-circle immediately in
front of the tortured beast, and every time that the fear-stricken buffalo
would give vent to his hoarsely modulated groan, the wolves howled in
concert in most mournful cadence.
After contemplating his antagonists for a few moments, the bull made a
dash at the nearest wolf, tumbling him howling over the silent prairie;
but while this diversion was going on in front, the remainder of the pack
started for his hind legs, to hamstring him. Upon this the poor brute
turned to the point of attack only to receive a repetition of it in the
same vulnerable place by the wolves, who had as quickly turned also and
fastened themselves on his heels again. His hind quarters now streamed
with blood and he began to show signs of great physical weakness. He did
not dare to lie down; that would have been instantly fatal. By this time
he had killed three of the wolves or so maimed them that they were
entirely out of the fight.
At this juncture the suffering animal was mercifully shot, and the wolves
allowed to batten on his thin and tough carcass.
Often there are serious results growing out of a stampede, either by mules
or a herd of buffalo. A portion of the Fifth United States Infantry had a
narrow escape from a buffalo stampede on the Old Trail, in the early
summer of 1866. General George A. Sykes, who commanded the Division of
Regulars in the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War, was ordered to
join his regiment, stationed in New Mexico, and was conducting a body of
recruits, with their complement of officers, to fill up the decimated
ranks of the army stationed at the various military posts, in far-off
Greaser Land.
The command numbered nearly eight hundred, including the subaltern
officers. These recruits, or the majority of them at least, were recruits
in name only; they had seen service in many a hard campaign of the
Rebellion. Some, of course, were beardless youths just out of their teens,
full of that martial ardour which induced so many young men of the nation
to follow the drum on the remote plains and in the fastnesses of the Rocky
Mountains, where the wily savages still held almost undisputed sway, and
were a constant menace to the pioneer settlers.
One morning, when the command had just settled itself in careless repose
on the short grass of the apparently interminable prairie at the first
halt of the day's march, a short distance beyond Fort Larned, a strange
noise, like the low muttering of thunder below the horizon, greeted the
ears of the little army.
All were startled by the ominous sound, unlike anything they had heard
before on their dreary tour. The general ordered his scouts out to learn
the cause; could it be Indians? Every eye was strained for something out
of the ordinary. Even the horses of the officers and the mules of the
supply-train were infected by something that seemed impending; they grew
restless, stamped the earth, and vainly essayed to stampede, but were
prevented by their hobbles and picket-pins.
Presently one of the scouts returned from over the divide, and reported to
the general that an immense herd of buffalo was tearing down toward the
Trail, and from the great clouds of dust they raised, which obscured the
horizon, there must have been ten thousand of them. The roar wafted to the
command, and which seemed so mysterious, was made by their hoofs as they
rattled over the dry prairie.
The sound increased in volume rapidly, and soon a black, surging mass was
discovered bearing right down on the Trail. Behind it could be seen a
cavalcade of about five hundred Cheyennes, Comanches, and Kiowas, who had
maddened the shaggy brutes, hoping to capture the train without an attack
by forcing the frightened animals to overrun the command.
Luckily, something caused the herd to open before it reached the foot of
the divide, and it passed in two masses, leaving the command between, not
two hundred feet from either division of the infuriated beasts.
The rage of the savages was evident when they saw that their attempt to
annihilate the troops had failed, and they rode off sullenly into the sand
hills, as the number of soldiers was too great for them to think of
charging.
Cody tells of a buffalo stampede which he witnessed in his youth on the
plains, when he was a wagon-master. The caravan was on its way with
government stores for the military posts in the mountains, and the wagons
were hauled by oxen.
He says: The country was alive with buffalo, and besides killing
quite a number we had a rare day for sport. One morning
we pulled out of camp, and the train was strung out to a
considerable length along the Trail, which ran near the foot
of the sand hills, two miles from the river. Between the
road and the river we saw a large herd of buffalo grazing
quietly, they having been down to the stream to drink.
Just at this time we observed a party of returning
Californians coming from the west. They, too, noticed
the buffalo herd, and in another moment they were dashing
down upon them, urging their horses to their greatest speed.
The buffalo herd stampeded at once, and broke down the sides
of the hills; so hotly were they pursued by the hunters
that about five hundred of them rushed pell-mell through
our caravan, frightening both men and oxen. Some of the
wagons were turned clear around and many of the terrified
oxen attempted to run to the hills with the heavy wagons
attached to them. Others were turned around so short
that they broke the tongues off. Nearly all the teams
got entangled in their gearing and became wild and unruly,
so that the perplexed drivers were unable to manage them.
The buffalo, the cattle, and the men were soon running
in every direction, and the excitement upset everybody
and everything. Many of the oxen broke their yokes and
stampeded. One big buffalo bull became entangled in one
of the heavy wagon-chains, and it is a fact that in his
desperate efforts to free himself, he not only snapped
the strong chain in two, but broke the ox-yoke to which
it was attached, and the last seen of him he was running
toward the hills with it hanging from his horns.
Stampedes were a great source of profit to the Indians of the plains. The
Comanches were particularly expert and daring in this kind of robbery.
They even trained their horses to run from one point to another in
expectation of the coming of the trains. When a camp was made that was
nearly in range, they turned their trained animals loose, which at once
flew across the prairie, passing through the herd and penetrating the very
corrals of their victims. All of the picketed horses and mules would
endeavour to follow these decoys, and were invariably led right into the
haunts of the Indians, who easily secured them. Young horses and mules
were easily frightened; and, in the confusion which generally ensued,
great injury was frequently done to the runaways themselves.
At times when the herd was very large, the horses scattered over the
prairie and were irrevocably lost; and such as did not become wild fell a
prey to the wolves. That fate was very frequently the lot of stampeded
horses bred in the States, they not having been trained by a prairie life
to take care of themselves. Instead of stopping and bravely fighting off
the blood-thirsty beasts, they would run. Then the whole pack were sure to
leave the bolder animals and make for the runaways, which they seldom
failed to overtake and despatch.
On the Old Trail some years ago one of these stampedes occurred of a band
of government horses, in which were several valuable animals. It was
attended, however, with very little loss, through the courage and great
exertion of the men who had them in charge; many were recovered, but none
without having sustained injuries.
Hon. R. M. Wright, of Dodge City, Kansas, one of the pioneers in the days
of the Santa Fe trade, and in the settlement of the State, has had many
exciting experiences both with the savages of the great plains, and the
buffalo. In relation to the habits of the latter, no man is better
qualified to speak.
He was once owner of Fort Aubrey, a celebrated point on the Trail, but was
compelled to abandon it on account of constant persecution by the Indians,
or rather he was ordered to do so by the military authorities. While
occupying the once famous landmark, in connection with others, had a
contract to furnish hay to the government at Fort Lyon, seventy-five miles
further west. His journal, which he kindly placed at my disposal, says:
While we were preparing to commence the work, a vast herd
of buffalo stampeded through our range one night, and
took off with them about half of our work cattle. The next
day a stage-driver and conductor on the Overland Route told
us they had seen a number of our oxen twenty-five miles east
of Aubrey, and this information gave me an idea in which
direction to hunt for the missing beasts. I immediately
started after them, while my partner took those that
remained and a few wagons and left with them for Fort Lyon.
Let me explain here that while the Indians were supposed to
be peaceable, small war-parties of young men, who could not
be controlled by their chiefs, were continually committing
depredations, and the main body of savages themselves were
very uneasy, and might be expected to break out any day.
In consequence of this unsettled state of affairs, there
had been a brisk movement among the United States troops
stationed at the various military posts, a large number of
whom were believed to be on the road from Denver to Fort Lyon.
I filled my saddle-bags with jerked buffalo, hardtack and
ground coffee, and took with me a belt of cartridges,
my rifle and six-shooter, a field-glass and my blankets,
prepared for any emergency. The first day out, I found a
few of the lost cattle, and placed them on the river-bottom,
which I continued to do as fast as I recovered them, for a
distance of about eighty-five miles down the Arkansas.
There I met a wagon-train, the drivers of which told me
that I would find several more of my oxen with a train
that had arrived at the Cimarron crossing the day before.
I came up with this train in eight or ten hours' travel
south of the river, got my cattle, and started next morning
for home.
I picked up those I had left on the Arkansas as I went
along, and after having made a very hard day's travel,
about sundown I concluded I would go into camp. I had
only fairly halted when the oxen began to drop down,
so completely tired out were they, as I believed. Just as
it was growing dark, I happened to look toward the west,
and I saw several fires on a big island, near what was
called "The Lone Tree," about a mile from where I had
determined to remain for the night.
Thinking the fires were those of the soldiers that I had
heard were on the road from Denver, and anticipating and
longing for a cup of good coffee, as I had had none for
five days, knowing, too, that the troops would be full of
news, I felt good and determined to go over to their camp.
The Arkansas was low, but the banks steep, with high,
rank grass growing to the very water's edge. I found
a buffalo-trail cut through the deep bank, narrow and
precipitous, and down this I went, arriving in a short time
within a little distance of my supposed soldiers' camp.
When I had reached the middle of another deep cut in the
bank, I looked across to the island, and, great Caesar!
saw a hundred little fires, around which an aggregation
of a thousand Indians were huddled!
I slid backwards off my horse, and by dint of great exertion,
worked him up the river-bank as quietly and quickly as
possible, then led him gently away out on the prairie.
My first impulse was not to go back to the cattle; but as
we needed them very badly, I concluded to return, put them
all on their feet, and light out mighty lively, without
making any noise. I started them, and, oh dear! I was
afraid to tread upon a weed, lest it would snap and bring
the Indians down on my trail. Until I had put several
miles between them and me, I could not rest easy for
a moment. Tired as I was, tired as were both my horse
and the cattle, I drove them twenty-five miles before
I halted. Then daylight was upon me. I was at what is
known as Chouteau's Island, a once famous place in the
days of the Old Santa Fe Trail.
Of course, I had to let the oxen and my horse rest and fill
themselves until the afternoon, and I lay down, and fell
asleep, but did not sleep long, as I thought it dangerous
to remain too near the cattle. I rose and walked up a big,
dry sand creek that opened into the river, and after I had
ascended it for a couple of miles, found the banks very
steep; in fact, they rose to a height of eighteen or twenty
feet, and were sharply cut up by narrow trails made by
the buffalo.
The whole face of the earth was covered by buffalo, and
they were slowly grazing toward the Arkansas. All at once
they became frightened at something, and stampeded pell-mell
toward the very spot on which I stood. I quickly ran into
one of the precipitous little paths and up on the prairie,
to see what had scared them. They were making the ground
fairly tremble as their mighty multitude came rushing on
at full speed, the sound of their hoofs resembling thunder,
but in a continuous peal. It appeared to me that they must
sweep everything in their path, and for my own preservation
I rushed under the creek-bank, but on they came like a
tornado, with one old bull in the lead. He held up a second
to descend the narrow trail, and when he had got about
halfway down I let him have it; I was only a few steps from
him and over he tumbled. I don't know why I killed him;
out of pure wantonness, I expect, or perhaps I thought
it would frighten the others back. Not so, however;
they only quickened their pace, and came dashing down in
great numbers. Dozens of them stumbled and fell over the
dead bull; others fell over them. The top of the bank
was fairly swarming with them; they leaped, pitched, and
rolled down. I crouched as close to the bank as possible,
but many of them just grazed my head, knocking the sand
and gravel in great streams down my neck; indeed I was
half buried before the herd had passed over. That old bull
was the last buffalo I ever shot wantonly, excepting once,
from an ambulance while riding on the Old Trail, to please
a distinguished Englishman, who had never seen one shot;
then I did it only after his most earnest persuasion.
One day a stage-driver named Frank Harris and myself started
out after buffalo; they were scarce, for a wonder, and
we were very hungry for fresh meat. The day was fine and
we rode a long way, expecting sooner or later a bunch would
jump up, but in the afternoon, having seen none, we gave
it up and started for the ranch. Of course, we didn't
care to save our ammunition, so shot it away at everything
in sight, skunks, rattlesnakes, prairie-dogs, and gophers,
until we had only a few loads left. Suddenly an old bull
jumped up that had been lying down in one of those
sugar-loaf-shaped sand hills, whose tops are hollowed out
by the action of the wind. Harris emptied his revolver
into him, and so did I; but the old fellow sullenly stood
still there on top of the sand hill, bleeding profusely
at the nose, and yet absolutely refusing to die, although
he would repeatedly stagger and nearly tumble over.
It was getting late and we couldn't wait on him, so Harris
said: "I will dismount, creep up behind him, and cut his
hamstrings with my butcher-knife." The bull having now
lain down, Harris commenced operations, but his movement
seemed to infuse new life into the old fellow; he jumped
to his feet, his head lowered in the attitude of fight,
and away he went around the outside of the top of the
sand hill! It was a perfect circus with one ring; Harris,
who was a tall, lanky fellow, took hold of the enraged
animal's tail as he rose to his feet, and in a moment his
legs were flying higher than his head, but he did not dare
let go of his hold on the bull's tail, and around and
around they went; it was his only show for life. I could
not assist him a particle, but had to sit and hold his horse,
and be judge of the fight. I really thought that old bull
would never weaken. Finally, however, the "ring" performance
began to show symptoms of fatigue; slower and slower the
actions of the bull grew, and at last Harris succeeded
in cutting his hamstrings and the poor beast went down.
Harris said afterward, when the danger was all over, that
the only thing he feared was that perhaps the bull's tail
would pull out, and if it did, he was well aware that he
was a goner. We brought his tongue, hump, and a hindquarter
to the ranch with us, and had a glorious feast and a big
laugh that night with the boys over the ridiculous adventure.
General Richard Irving Dodge, United States army, in his work on the big
game of America, says:
It is almost impossible for a civilized being to realize
the value to the plains Indian of the buffalo. It furnished
him with home, food, clothing, bedding, horse equipment—
almost everything.
From 1869 to 1873 I was stationed at various posts along
the Arkansas River. Early in spring, as soon as the dry
and apparently desert prairie had begun to change its coat
of dingy brown to one of palest green, the horizon would
begin to be dotted with buffalo, single or in groups of two
or three, forerunners of the coming herd. Thick and thicker,
and in large groups they come, until by the time the grass
is well up, the whole vast landscape appears a mass of
buffalo, some individuals feeding, others lying down, but
the herd slowly moving to the northward; of their number,
it was impossible to form a conjecture.
Determined as they are to pursue their journey northward,
yet they are exceedingly cautious and timid about it,
and on any alarm rush to the southward with all speed,
until that alarm is dissipated. Especially is this the case
when any unusual object appears in their rear, and so
utterly regardless of consequences are they, that an old
plainsman will not risk a wagon-train in such a herd,
where rising ground will permit those in front to get
a good view of their rear.
In May, 1871, I drove in a buggy from old Fort Zarah
to Fort Larned, on the Arkansas River. The distance is
thirty-four miles. At least twenty-five miles of that
distance was through an immense herd. The whole country
was one mass of buffalo, apparently, and it was only when
actually among them, that the seemingly solid body was
seen to be an agglomeration of countless herds of from
fifty to two hundred animals, separated from the surrounding
herds by a greater or less space, but still separated.
The road ran along the broad valley of the Arkansas.
Some miles from Zarah a low line of hills rises from the
plain on the right, gradually increasing in height and
approaching road and river, until they culminate in
Pawnee Rock.
So long as I was in the broad, level valley, the herds
sullenly got out of my way, and, turning, stared stupidly
at me, some within thirty or forty yards. When, however,
I had reached a point where the hills were no more than
a mile from the road, the buffalo on the crests, seeing an
unusual object in their rear, turned, stared an instant,
then started at full speed toward me, stampeding and
bringing with them the numberless herds through which
they passed, and pouring down on me, no longer separated
but compacted into one immense mass of plunging animals,
mad with fright, irresistible as an avalanche.
The situation was by no means pleasant. There was but
one hope of escape. My horse was, fortunately, a quiet
old beast, that had rushed with me into many a herd, and
been in at the death of many a buffalo. Reining him up,
I waited until the front of the mass was within fifty yards,
then, with a few well-directed shots, dropped some of
the leaders, split the herd and sent it off in two streams
to my right and left. When all had passed me, they stopped,
apparently satisfied, though thousands were yet within
reach of my rifle. After my servant had cut out the
tongues of the fallen, I proceeded on my journey, only to
have a similar experience within a mile or two, and this
occurred so often that I reached Fort Larned with twenty-six
tongues, representing the greatest number of buffalo that
I can blame myself with having murdered in one day.
Some years, as in 1871, the buffalo appeared to move
northward in one immense column, oftentimes from twenty
to fifty miles in width, and of unknown depth from front
to rear. Other years the northward journey was made
in several parallel columns moving at the same rate and
with their numerous flankers covering a width of a hundred
or more miles.
When the food in one locality fails, they go to another,
and toward fall, when the grass of the high prairies
becomes parched by the heat and drought, they gradually
work their way back to the south, concentrating on the
rich pastures of Texas and the Indian Territory, whence,
the same instinct acting on all, they are ready to start
together again on their northward march as soon as spring
starts the grass.
Old plainsmen and the Indians aver that the buffalo never
return south; that each year's herd was composed of animals
which had never made the journey before, and would never
make it again. All admit the northern migration, that
being too pronounced for any one to dispute, but refuse
to admit the southern migration. Thousands of young calves
were caught and killed every spring that were produced
during this migration, and accompanied the herd northward;
but because the buffalo did not return south in one vast
body as they went north, it was stoutly maintained that
they did not go south at all. The plainsman could give
no reasonable hypothesis of his "No-return theory" on which
to base the origin of the vast herds which yearly made
their march northward. The Indian was, however, equal
to the occasion. Every plains Indian firmly believed that
the buffalo were produced in countless numbers in a country
under ground; that every spring the surplus swarmed,
like bees from a hive, out of the immense cave-like opening
in the region of the great Llano Estacado, or Staked Plain
of Texas. In 1879 Stone Calf, a celebrated chief, assured
me that he knew exactly where the caves were, though he had
never seen them; that the good God had provided this
means for the constant supply of food for the Indian, and
however recklessly the white men might slaughter, they could
never exterminate them. When last I saw him, the old man
was beginning to waver in this belief, and feared that
the "Bad God" had shut the entrances, and that his tribe
must starve.
The old trappers and plainsmen themselves, even as early as the beginning
of the Santa Fe trade, noticed the gradual disappearance of the buffalo,
while they still existed in countless numbers. One veteran French
Canadian, an employee of the American Fur Company, way back in the early
'30's, used to mourn thus: "Mais, sacre! les Amarican, dey go to de
Missouri frontier, de buffalo he ron to de montaigne; de trappaire wid his
fusil, he follow to de Bayou Salade, he ron again. Dans les Montaignes
Espagnol, bang! bang! toute la journee, toute la journee, go de sacre
voleurs. De bison he leave, parceque les fusils scare im vara moche, ici
là de sem-sacré!"