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The disappearance of the buffalo from all the country east of the
Mississippi was one of the inevitable results of the advance of
civilization. To the early pioneers who went forth into the
wilderness to wrestle with nature for the necessities of life, this
valuable animal might well have seemed a gift direct from the hand
of Providence. During the first few years of the early settler's
life in a new country, the few domestic animals he had brought with
him were far too valuable to be killed for food, and for a long
period he looked to the wild animals of the forest and the prairie
for his daily supply of meat. The time was when no one stopped to
think of the important part our game animals played in the
settlement of this country, and even now no one has attempted to
calculate the lessened degree of rapidity with which the star of
empire would have taken its westward way without the bison, deer,
elk, and antelope. The Western States and Territories pay little
heed to the wanton slaughter of deer and elk now going on in their
forests, but the time will soon come when the "grangers" will enter
those regions and find the absence of game a very serious matter.
Although the bison was the first wild species to disappear before
the advance of civilization, he served a good purpose at a highly
critical period. His huge bulk of toothsome flesh fed many a hungry
family, and his ample robe did good service in the settler's cabin
and sleigh in winter weather. By the time game animals had become
scarce, domestic herds and flocks had taken their place, and hunting
became a pastime instead of a necessity.
As might be expected, from the time the bison was first seen by
white men he has always been a conspicuous prize, and being the
largest of the land quadrupeds, was naturally the first to
disappear. Every man's hand has been against him. While his
disappearance from the eastern United States was, in the main, due
to the settler who killed game as a means of subsistence, there were
a few who made the killing of those animals a regular business. This
occurred almost exclusively in the immediate vicinity of salt
springs, around which the bison congregated in great numbers, and
made their wholesale slaughter of easy accomplishment. Mr. Thomas
Ashe62 has recorded some
very interesting facts and observations on this point. In speaking
of an old man who in the latter part of the last century built a log
house for himself "on the immediate borders of a salt spring," in
western Pennsylvania, for the purpose of killing buffaloes out of
the immense droves which frequented that spot, Mr. Ashe says:
"In the first and second years this old man, with some companions,
killed from six to seven hundred of these noble creatures merely for
the sake of their skins, which to them were worth only 2 shillings
each; and after this 'work of death' they were obliged to leave the
place till the following season, or till the wolves, bears,
panthers, eagles, rooks, ravens, etc., had devoured the carcasses
and abandoned the place for other prey. In the two following years
the same persons killed great numbers out of the first droves that
arrived, skinned them, and left their bodies exposed to the sun and
air; but they soon had reason to repent of this, for the remaining
droves, as they came up in succession, stopped, gazed on the mangled
and putrid bodies, sorrowfully moaned or furiously lowed aloud, and
returned instantly to the wilderness in an unusual run, without
tasting their favorite spring or licking the impregnated earth,
which was also once their most agreeable occupation; nor did they
nor any of their race ever revisit the neighborhood.
"The simple history of this spring is that of every other in the
settled parts of this Western World; the carnage of beasts was
everywhere the same. I met with a man who had killed two thousand
buffaloes with his own hand, and others no doubt have done the same
thing. In consequence of such proceedings not one buffalo is at this
time to be found east of the Mississippi, except a few domesticated
by the curious, or carried through the country on a public show."
But, fortunately, there is no evidence that such slaughter as that
described by Mr. Ashe was at all common, and there is reason for the
belief that until within the last forty years the buffalo was
sacrificed in ways conducive to the greatest good of the greatest
number.
From Coronado to General Frémont there has hardly been an explorer
of United States territory who has not had occasion to bless the
bison, and its great value to mankind can hardly be overestimated,
although by many it can readily be forgotten.
The disappearance of the bison from the eastern United States was
due to its consumption as food. It was very gradual, like the march
of civilization, and, under the circumstances, absolutely
inevitable. In a country so thickly peopled as this region speedily
became, the mastodon could have survived extinction about as easily
as the bison. Except when the latter became the victim of wholesale
slaughter, there was little reason to bemoan his fate, save upon
grounds that may be regarded purely sentimental. He served a most
excellent purpose in the development of the country. Even as late as
1875 the farmers of eastern Kansas were in the habit of making trips
every fall into the western part of that State for wagon loads of
buffalo meat as a supply for the succeeding winter. The farmers of
Texas, Nebraska, Dakota, and Minnesota also drew largely upon the
buffalo as long as the supply lasted.
The extirpation of the bison west of the Rocky Mountains was due to
legitimate hunting for food and clothing rather than for marketable
peltries. In no part of that whole region was the species ever
numerous, although in the mountains themselves, notably in Colorado,
within easy reach of the great prairies on the east, vast numbers
were seen by the early explorers and pioneers. But to the westward,
away from the mountains, they were very rarely met with, and their
total destruction in that region was a matter of easy
accomplishment. According to Prof. J. A. Allen the complete
disappearance of the bison west of the Rocky Mountains took place
between 1838 and 1840.
The Period Of Systematic
Slaughter, From 1830 To 1838.
We come now to a history which I would gladly leave unwritten. Its
record is a disgrace to the American people in general, and the
Territorial, State, and General Government in particular. It will
cause succeeding generations to regard us as being possessed of the
leading characteristics of the savage and the beast of prey-cruelty
and greed. We will be likened to the blood-thirsty tiger of the
Indian jungle, who slaughters a dozen bullocks at once when he knows
he can eat only one.
In one respect, at least, the white men who engaged in the
systematic slaughter of the bison were savages just as much as the
Piegan Indians, who would drive a whole herd over a precipice to
secure a week's rations of meat for a single village. The men who
killed buffaloes for their tongues and those who shot them from the
railway trains for sport were murderers. In no way does civilized
man so quickly revert to his former state as when he is alone with
the beasts of the field. Give him a gun and something which he may
kill without getting himself in trouble, and, presto! he is
instantly a savage again, finding exquisite delight in bloodshed,
slaughter, and death, if not for gain, then solely for the joy and
happiness of it. There is no kind of warfare against game animals
too unfair, too disreputable, or too mean for white men to engage in
if they can only do so with safety to their own precious carcasses.
They will shoot buffalo and antelope from running railway trains,
drive deer into water with hounds and cut their throats in cold
blood, kill does with fawns a week old, kill fawns by the score for
their spotted skins, slaughter deer, moose, and caribou in the snow
at a pitiful disadvantage, just as the wolves do; exterminate the
wild ducks on the whole Atlantic seaboard with punt guns for the
metropolitan markets; kill off the Rocky Mountain goats for hides
worth only 50 cents apiece, destroy wagon loads of trout with
dynamite, and so on to the end of the chapter.
Perhaps the most gigantic task ever undertaken on this continent in
the line of game-slaughter was the extermination of the bison in the
great pasture region by the hide-hunters. Probably the brilliant
rapidity and success with which that lofty undertaking was
accomplished was a matter of surprise even to those who participated
in it. The story of the slaughter is by no means a long one.
The period of systematic slaughter of the bison naturally begins
with the first organized efforts in that direction, in a
business-like, wholesale way. Although the species had been steadily
driven westward for a hundred years by the advancing settlements,
and had during all that time been hunted for the meat and robes it
yielded, its extermination did not begin in earnest until 1820, or
thereabouts. As before stated, various persons had previous to that
time made buffalo killing a business in order to sell their skins,
but such instances were very exceptional. By that time the bison was
totally extinct in all the region lying east of the Mississippi
River except a portion of Wisconsin, where it survived until about
1830. In 1820 the first organized buffalo hunting expedition on a
grand scale was made from the Red River settlement, Manitoba, in
which five hundred and forty carts proceeded to the range. Previous
to that time the buffaloes were found near enough to the settlements
around Fort Garry that every settler could hunt independently; but
as the herds were driven farther and farther away, it required an
organized effort and a long journey to reach them.
The American Fur Company established trading posts along the
Missouri River, one at the mouth of the Tetón River and another at
the mouth of the Yellowstone. In 1826 a post was established at the
eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, at the head of the Arkansas
River, and in 1832 another was located in a corresponding situation
at the head of the South Fork of the Platte, close to where Denver
now stands. Both the latter were on what was then the western border
of the buffalo range. Elsewhere throughout the buffalo country there
were numerous other posts, always situated as near as possible to
the best hunting ground, and at the same time where they would be
most accessible to the hunters, both white and red.
As might be supposed, the Indians were encouraged to kill
buffaloes for their robes, and this is what Mr. George Catlin wrote
at the mouth of the Tetón River (Pyatt County, Dakota) in 1832
concerning this trade:63
"It seems hard and cruel (does it not?) that we civilized people,
with all the luxuries and comforts of the world about us, should be
drawing from the backs of these useful animals the skins for our
luxury, leaving their carcasses to be devoured by the wolves; that
we should draw from that country some one hundred and fifty or two
hundred thousand of their robes annually, the greater part of which
are taken from animals that are killed expressly for the robe, at a
season when the meat is not cured and preserved, and for each of
which skins the Indian has received but a pint of whisky! Such is
the fact, and that number, or near it, are annually destroyed, in
addition to the number that is necessarily killed for the
subsistence of three hundred thousand Indians, who live chiefly upon
them."
The author further declared that the fur trade in those "great
western realms" was then limited chiefly to the purchase of buffalo
robes.
The Red River half-breeds.-In
June, 1840, when the Red River half-breeds assembled at Pembina for
their annual expedition against the buffalo, they mustered as
follows:
Carts |
1,210 |
Hunters |
620 |
1,630 |
Women |
650 |
Boys and girls |
360 |
Horses (buffalo runners) |
|
403 |
Dogs |
|
542 |
Cart horses |
|
655 |
Draught oxen |
|
586 |
Skinning knives |
|
1,240 |
The total value of the property employed in this expedition and
the working time occupied by it (two months) amounted to the
enormous sum of £24,000.
Although the bison formerly ranged to Fort Garry (near Winnipeg),
they had been steadily killed off and driven back, and in 1840 none
were found by the expedition until it was 250 miles from Pembina,
which is situated on the Red River, at the international boundary.
At that time the extinction of the species from the Red River to the
Cheyenne was practically complete. The Red River settlers, aided, of
course, by the Indians of that region, are responsible for the
extermination of the bison throughout northeastern Dakota as far as
the Cheyenne River, northern Minnesota, and the whole of what is now
the province of Manitoba. More than that; as the game grew scarce
and retired farther and farther, the half-breeds, who despised
agriculture as long as there was a buffalo to kill, extended their
hunting operations westward along the Qu'Appelle until they
encroached upon the hunting-grounds of the Plain Crees, who lived in
the Saskatchewan country.
Thus was an immense inroad made in the northern half of the herd
which had previously covered the entire pasture region from the
Great Slave Lake to central Texas. This was the first visible
impression of the systematic killing which began in 1820. Up to 1840
it is reasonably certain, as will be seen by figures given
elsewhere, that by this business-like method of the half-breeds, at
least 652,000 buffaloes were destroyed by them alone.
Even as early as 1840 the Red River hunt was prosecuted through
Dakota southwestwardly to the Missouri River and a short distance
beyond it. Here it touched the wide strip of territory, bordering
that stream, which was even then being regularly drained of its
animal resources by the Indian hunters, who made the river their
base of operations, and whose robes were shipped on its steam-boats.
It is certain that these annual Red River expeditions into Dakota
were kept up as late as 1847, and as long thereafter as buffaloes
were to be found in any number between the Cheyenne and the
Missouri. At the same time, the White Horse Plains division, which
hunted westward from Fort Garry, did its work of destruction quite
as rapidly and as thoroughly as the rival expedition to the United
States.
In 1857 the Plains Cree, inhabiting the country around the
headwaters of the Qu'Appelle River (250 miles due west from
Winnipeg), assembled in council, and "determined that in consequence
of promises often made and broken by the white men and half-breeds,
and the rapid destruction by them of the buffalo they fed on, they
would not permit either white men or half-breeds to hunt in their
country, or travel through it, except for the purpose of trading for
their dried meat, pemmican, skins and robes."
In 1858 the Cree reported that between the two branches of the
Saskatchewan buffalo were "very scarce." Professor Hind's expedition
saw only one buffalo in the whole course of their journey from
Winnipeg until they reached Sand Hill Lake, at the head of the
Qu'Appelle, near the south branch of the Saskatchewan, where the
first herd was encountered. Although the species was not totally
extinct on the Qu'Appelle at that time, it was practically so.
The country of the
Sioux. - The next territory completely
depopulated of buffaloes by systematic hunting was very nearly the
entire southern half of Dakota, southwestern Minnesota, and northern
Nebraska as far as the North Platte. This vast region, once the
favorite range for hundreds of thousands of buffaloes, had for many
years been the favorite hunting ground of the Sioux Indians of the
Missouri, the Pawnees, Omaha, and all other tribes of that region.
The settlement of Iowa and Minnesota presently forced into this
region the entire body of Mississippi Sioux from the country west of
Prairie du Chien and around Fort Snelling, and materially hastened
the extermination of all the game animals which were once so
abundant there. It is absolutely certain that if the Indians had
been uninfluenced by the white traders, or, in other words, had not
been induced to take and prepare a large number of robes every year
for the market, the species would have survived very much longer
than it did. But the demand quickly proved to be far greater than
the supply. The Indians, of course, found it necessary to slaughter
annually a great number of buffaloes for their own wants-for meat,
robes, leather, teepees, etc. When it came to supplementing this
necessary slaughter by an additional fifty thousand or more every
year for marketable robes, it is no wonder that the improvident
savages soon found, when too late, that the supply of buffaloes was
not inexhaustible. Naturally enough, they attributed their
disappearance to the white man, who was therefore a robber, and a
proper subject for the scalping-knife. Apparently it never occurred
to the minds of the Sioux that they themselves were equally to
blame; it was always the paleface who killed the buffaloes; and it
was always Sioux buffaloes that they killed. The Sioux seemed to
feel that they held a chattel mortgage on all the buffaloes north of
the Platte, and it required more than one pitched battle to convince
them otherwise.
Up to the time when the great Sioux Reservation was established in
Dakota (1875-'77), when 33,739 square miles of country, or nearly
the whole southwest quarter of the Territory, was set aside for the
exclusive occupancy of the Sioux, buffaloes were very numerous
throughout that entire region. East of the Missouri River, which is
the eastern boundary of the Sioux Reservation, from Bismarck all the
way down, the species was practically extinct as early as 1870. But
at the time when it became unlawful for white hunters to enter the
territory of the Sioux nation there were tens of thousands of
buffaloes upon it, and their subsequent slaughter is chargeable to
the Indians alone, save as to those which migrated into the hunting
grounds of the whites.
Western railways, and their
part in the extermination of the buffalo.
- The building of a
railroad means the speedy extermination of all the big game along
its line. In its eagerness to attract the public and build up "a big
business," every new line which traverses a country containing game
does its utmost, by means of advertisements and posters, to attract
the man with a gun. Its game resorts are all laid bare, and the
market hunters and sportsmen swarm in immediately, slaying and to
slay.
Within the last year the last real retreat for our finest game, the
only remaining stronghold for the mountain sheep, goat, caribou,
elk, and deer-northwestern Montana, northern Idaho, and thence
westward-has been laid open to the very heart by the building of the
St. Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railway, which runs up the valley
of the Milk River to Fort Assinniboine, and crosses the Rocky
Mountains through Two Medicine Pass. Heretofore that region has been
so difficult to reach that the game it contains has been measurably
secure from general slaughter; but now it also must "go."
The marking out of the great overland trail by the Argonauts of '49
in their rush for the gold fields of California was the
foreshadowing of the great east-and-west breach in the universal
herd, which was made twenty years later by the first
transcontinental railway.
The pioneers who "crossed the plains" in those days killed buffaloes
for food whenever they could, and the constant harrying of those
animals experienced along the line of travel, soon led them to
retire from the proximity of such continual danger. It was
undoubtedly due to this cause that the number seen by parties who
crossed the plains in 1849 and subsequently, was surprisingly small.
But, fortunately for the buffaloes, the pioneers who would gladly
have halted and turned aside now and then for the excitement of the
chase, were compelled to hurry on, and accomplish the long journey
while good weather lasted. It was owing to this fact, and the
scarcity of good horses, that the buffaloes found it necessary to
retire only a few miles from the wagon route to get beyond the reach
of those who would have gladly hunted them.
Mr. Allen Varner, of Indianola, Illinois, has kindly furnished me
with the following facts in regard to the presence of the buffalo,
as observed by him during his journey westward, over what was then
known as the Oregon Trail.
"The old Oregon trail ran from Independence, Missouri, to old Fort
Laramie, through the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains, and thence
up to Salt Lake City. We left Independence on May C, 1849, and
struck the Platte River at Grand Island. The trail had been traveled
but very little previous to that year. We saw no buffaloes whatever
until we reached the forks of the Platte, on May 20, or thereabouts.
There we saw seventeen head. From that time on we saw small bunches
now and then; never more than forty or fifty together. We saw no
great herds anywhere, and I should say we did not see over five
hundred head all told. The most western point at which we saw
buffaloes was about due north of Laramie Peak, and it must have been
about the 20th of June. We killed several head for meat during our
trip, and found them all rather thin in flesh. Plainsmen who claimed
to know, said that all the buffaloes we saw had wintered in that
locality, and had not had time to get fat. The annual migration from
the south had not yet begun, or rather had not yet brought any of
the southern buffaloes that far north."
In a few years the tide of overland travel became so great, that the
buffaloes learned to keep away from the dangers of the trail, and
many a pioneer has crossed the plains without ever seeing a live
buffalo.
The division of the universal
herd. - Until the building of the first transcontinental
railway made it possible to market the "buffalo product," buffalo
hunting as a business was almost wholly in the hands of the Indians.
Even then, the slaughter so far exceeded the natural increase that
the narrowing limits of the buffalo range was watched with anxiety,
and the ultimate extinction of the species confidently predicted.
Even without railroads the extermination of the race would have
taken place eventually, but it would have been delayed perhaps
twenty years. With a recklessness of the future that was not to be
expected of savages, though perhaps perfectly natural to civilized
white men, who place the possession of a dollar above everything
else, the Indians with one accord singled out the cows for
slaughter, because their robes and their flesh better suited the
fastidious taste of the noble redskin. The building of the Union
Pacific Railway began at Omaha in 1865, and during that year 40
miles were constructed. The year following saw the completion of 265
miles more, and in 1867 245 miles were added, which brought it to
Cheyenne. In 1868, 350 miles were built, and in 1869 the entire line
was open to traffic.
In 1867, when Maj. J. W. Powell and Prof. A. H. Thompson crossed the
plains by means of the Union Pacific Railway as far as it was
constructed and thence onward by wagon, they saw during the entire
trip only one live buffalo, a solitary old bull, wandering aimlessly
along the south bank of the Platte River.
The completion of the Union Pacific Railway divided forever the
buffaloes of the United States into two great herds, which
thereafter became known respectively as the northern and southern
herds. Both retired rapidly and permanently from the railway, and
left a strip of country over 50 miles wide almost uninhabited by
them. Although many thousand buffaloes were killed by hunters who
made the Union Pacific Railway their base of operations, the two
great bodies retired north and south so far that the greater number
were beyond striking distance from that line.
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Source:
The
Extermination of the American Bison,
1886-’87, By William T. Hornaday, Government Printing Office,
Washington, 1889
Extermination of the American Bison
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