iBook ^ Vifw fF'AiiTTl Point)— Nkwhfkkv Ti.Km< h aM) Viminu Timilk well shown. IN AND ylRO UND the GRAND CANTON CHAPTER I THE COLORADO RIVER AND ITS CANYONS THE Colorado River is unlike any other great river in the world. For present purposes it seems to be almost useless. In a large part of its course it drains an arid country which needs every drop of water thus carried away. It is, therefore, a vampire curse instead of a fructi- fying blessing. It is inaccessible to the general traveller, who, standing on its banks and gazing upon its far-away stream, yet perishes with agoniz- ing thirst. No ordinary boat, whether propelled by oars, steam, or electricity, can live and either ascend or descend its turbulent waters. Practi- cally no fish are found in its undisturbed solitudes. Though the country through which it flows is dreadfully arid, it is so unaccommodating as to re- fuse to be piped or pumped by any simple method to relieve the Sahara above. Though its carrying power is enormous, no commerce can place useful loads upon its rudely tossing back. Though its electric potentiality is great, it refuses to yield a single volt for any useful purpose. It is the wild, untamed, fero- cious stallion of rivers, proud, self-willed, impetuous^ 2 IN AND AROUND powerful, wholly unrestrained and unrestrainable, yet attractive, grand, and majestic. And it is well that man finds such intractable forces in nature. It is good for him to be held in check occasionally. It is not beneficial for the human to imaoine that he is so divine that nothino- earthly can withstand him. It is good to be made to bow and to wait. This great river, named by the Spaniards " Colo- rado," or the " Red," either because of the color of its water or the striking red which is the predomi- nating color of its walls, has its rise in the far-awa)^ snowy mountains of Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico. Its upper branches are the Green and the Grand rivers. The former of these, which is the upper continuation of the Colorado, has its source in Alpine lakes, fed by the everlasting snows of the mountains. It heads approximately in lati- tude 43° 15' and longitude 109° 45'. " Thousands of these Httle lakes, with deep, cold, emer- ald waters, are embosomed among the crags of the Rocky Mountains. These streams, born in the cold, gloomy solitudes of the upper mountain region, have a strange, eventful history as they pass down through gorges, tum- bling in cascades and cataracts, until they reach the hot, arid plains of the Lower Colorado, where the waters that were so clear above, empty, as turbid floods, into the Gulf of California, in latitude 31° 53' and longitude 115°."- — J. W. P(nvELL. There are two distinct portions of the basin of the Colorado, — the lower third and the upper two- thirds. This upper portion rises from about four to eight thousand feet above the level of the sea, THE GRAND CANYON 3 and is set about with mountains ranging upwards to over fourteen thousand feet. " All winter long, on its mountain-crested rim, snow falls, filling the gorges, half burying the forests, and cover- ing the crags and peaks with a mantle woven by the winds from the waves of the sea, — a mantle of snow. When the summer sun comes, this snow melts, and tumbles down the mountain-sides in millions of cascades. Ten million cascade brooks unite to form ten thousand torrent creeks ; ten thousand torrent creeks unite to form a hundred rivers beset with cataracts ; a hundred roaring rivers unite to form the Colorado, which rolls a mad, turbid stream, into the Gulf of California." — J. \V. Powell. Measuring the distance from the head of the Green River, in the Wind River Mountains, to the mouth of the Colorado River in the Gulf of Cali- fornia, the whole length of the stream is about two thousand miles. " The area of country drained by the Colorado and its tributaries is about eight hundred miles in length, and varies from three to five hundred in width, containing about three hundred thousand square miles, — an area larger than all the New England and Middle States, with Maryland and Virginia added, or as large as Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri." — J. W. PowELL. It will readily be seen that these waters, dashing down to the sea, laden with rock debris, possess a power of corrasion far in excess of any ordinary river, and, as a result, each of these upper and side streams, as well as the Colorado itself, cuts deeper, and deeper, and deeper still into the rocks through which lie their beds, until their sides are towerinor 4 IN AND AROUND cliffs of solid rocks. And it is to these deep, narrow gorges that the name of canyons has been given. " For more than a thousand miles along its course, the Colorado has cut for itself such a can- yon; but at some few points, where lateral streams join it, the canyon is broken, and narrow, transverse valleys divide it properly into a series of canyons." These are all named from some distinctive feature possessed by each, such as Horseshoe Canyon — "where the river takes a course directly into the mountain, penetrating to its very heart, then wheels back upon itself, and runs out into the valley from which it started only half a mile below the point at which it entered, thus forming an elongated letter U, with the apex in the cePitre of the mountain;" Whirlpool Canyon ; Split Mountain Canyon ; Flam- ing Gorge ; Canyon of Desolation; Labyrinth Can- yon ; Stillwater Canyon ; Cataract Canyon ; Glen Canyon, and Marble Canyon ; and last and great- est, and most wonderful of all, THE Grand Canyon. The Grand Canyon begins at the mouth of the Colorado Chiquito (the Little Colorado) and ter- minates at the Grand Wash, a distance of two hun- dred and seventeen and a half miles; and were it not separated from the Marble Canyon alcove by the narrow canyon valley of the Little Colorado, it would be sixty-five and a half miles longer, and thus become possessed of additional grandeur. " The name, the Grand Canyon, has been repeatedh' in- fringed for purposes of advertisement. The Canyon of the Yellowstone has been called 'The Grand Canyon.' A more THE GRAND CANYON 5 flagrant piracy is the naming of the gorge of the Arkansas River in Colorado ' The Grand Canyon of Colorado,' and many persons who have visited it have been persuaded that they have seen the great chasm. These river valleys are certainly very pleasing and picturesque, but there is no more comparison between them and the mighty chasm of the Colorado River than there is between the Alleghanies or Trosachs and the Himalayas. " Those who have long and carefully studied the Grand Canyon of the Colorado do not hesitate for a moment to pronounce it by far the most sublime of all earthly spec- tacles. If its sublimity consisted only in its dimensions, it could be sufficiently set forth in a single sentence. It is more than two hundred miles long, from five to twelve miles wide, and from five thousand to six thousand feet deep. There are in the world valleys which are longer and a few which are deeper. There are valleys flanked by summits loftier than the palisades of the Kaibab. Still the Grand Canyon is the sublimest thing on earth. It is so not alone by virtue of its magnitudes, but by virtue of the whole — its to2it ensemble. " The common notion of a canyon is that of a deep, narrow gash in the earth, with nearly vertical walls, like a great and neatly cut trench. There are hundreds of chasms in the Plateau Country (the country drained by the Colorado River) which answer very well to this notion. Many of them are sunk to frightful depths and are fifty to a hundred miles in length. Some are exceedingly narrow, as the canyons of the forks of the Virgen, where the over- hanging walls shut out the sky. Some are intricately sculptured, and illuminated with brilliant colors; others are picturesque by reason of their bold and striking sculp- tures. A few of them are most solemn and impressive by reason of their profundity and the majesty of their walls. But, as a rule, the common canyons are neither grand nor even attractive upon first acquaintance. They are curious and awaken interest as a new sensation, but they soon grow tiresome for want of diversity, and become at last 6 IN AND AROUND mere bores. The impressions they produce are very transient because of their great simpHcity and the Hmited range of ideas they present. But there are some which are highly diversified, presenting many attractive features. These seldom grow stale or wearisome, and their presence is generally greeted with pleasure. " It is perhaps in some respects unfortunate that the stupendous pathway of the Colorado River through the Kaibabs was ever called a canyon, for the name identifies it with the baser conception. But the name presents as wide a range of signification as the word ' house.' The log-cabin of the rancher, the painted and vine-clad cottage of the mechanic, the home of the millionaire, the palaces where parliaments assemble, and the grandest temples of worship are all ' houses.' Yet the contrast between St. Mark's and the rude dwelling of the frontiersman is not greater than that between the chasm of the Colorado and the trenches in the rocks which answer to the ordinary conception of a canyon. And as a great cathedral is an immense development of the rudimentary idea involved in the four walls and roof of a cabin, so is the chasm an ex- pansion of the simple type of drainage channels peculiar to the Plateau Country. To the conception of its vast pro- portions must be added some notion of its intricate plan, the nobility of its architecture, its colossal buttes, its wealth of ornamentation, the splendor of its colors, and its wonderful atmosphere. All of these attributes combine with infinite complexity to produce a whole which at first bewilders and at length overpowers." — C. E. Dl'TTON. A canyon indeed it truly is, but entirely different from what all visitors expect to see. It is not a deep, narrow, gloomy gorge, into which the sun fails to shine even at midday. It is, in reaHty, a series of canyons one within and below the other. Picture one canyon, a thousand feet deep and ten or twelve miles across; below this, another canyon, but two miles THE GRAND CANYON 7 less in width and a thousand feet deeper than num- ber one ; then, still another, two thousand feet deeper and four miles narrower, followed by yet another, deeper still and more miles narrower, until the inner Cherty limestone. ^ Talus. Cross-bedded sandstone. .Talus. I Red [ sandstone. \^ Talus and interior plateau. y Steps of red sandstone. Marble wall. \ Talus and lower plateau. Steps of — r — precarboniferous. The inner gorge through which the Colorado River flows. Crude Sketch of Canyon Outline as seen from Paiuti, Hopi, OR Havasupai Points. gorge of granite is reached, through which the roar- ing river flows, and you will have a better idea than ever before. With these descriptions in mind the accom- panying crude outline sketch of the Canyon, as 8 IN AND AROUND seen from Paiuti, Hopi, or Havasupai Points will become perfectly clear. On the " rim " is a stratum of cherty limestone about six hundred feet thick. At its base the debris that has fallen from the face of the cliff forms a sloping talus, which leads to the eds:e of a stratum of cross-bedded sandstone, also about six hundred feet thick. Below this is the fiery red sandstone that leads to the upper plateau. Then, steps of an earlier deposit of red sandstone descend to the marble or red-wall limestone, — as Dutton calls it, — at the base of which there are more taluses and another plateau sloping towards the subcarbonifer- ous rocks, which are superposed upon the archaean schists, commonly called granites, of the "inner gorge," through the dark depths of which the river wends its winding way. The Grand Canyon District, which lies in the arid region of southern Utah and northern Arizona, contains an area which is roughly estimated at from thirteen thousand to sixteen thousand square miles, or about the size of the State of Maryland. In this district there are, in less than five hundred miles, five hundred and twenty falls, cataracts, and rapids. This district is arbitrarily divided into various canyons as before stated. " Cataract and Narrow Canyons arc woiulcrful, Glen Canyon is beautiful, Marble Can\'on is niii^lit}-; but it is left for the Grand Canyon, where the river has cut its way down through the sandstones, the marbles, and the granites of the Kaibab Mountains, to form those beautiful and awe- inspiring pictures that are seen from the bottom of the black granite gorge, where above us rise great wondrous mountains of bright red sandstone, capped with cathedral THE GRAND CANYON 9 domes and spires of white, with pinnacles, and turrets, and towers in such intricate form and flaming colors that words fail to convey any idea of their beauty and sublimity." — Robert Brewster StaiNTOn. It is interesting here to quote a few lines on the Colorado River from the gallant " Pathfinder," John C. Fremont. He says, in " Memoirs of my Life": — " Three hundred miles of its lower part, as it approaches the Gulf of California, is reported to be smooth and tran- quil ; but its upper part is manifestly broken into many falls and rapids. From many descriptions of trappers, it is probable that in its foaming course among its lofty precipices it presents many scenes of wild grandeur; and though offering many temptations, and often discussed, no trappers have been found bold enough to undertake a voyage which has so certain a prospect of a fatal termina- tion. The Indians have strange stories of beautiful valleys abounding with beaver, shut up among inaccessible walls of rock in the lower course of the river, and to which the neighboring Indians, in their occasional wars with the Spaniards, and among themselves, drive their herds of cattle and flocks of sheep, leaving them to pasture in perfect security." A singular geographical fact is connected with the Grand Canyon which well serves to illustrate the folly of some legislative boundary makers. " The Grand and Marble Canyons cut the northwestern corner of Arizona completely off from the rest of the Territory. Except by Lee's Ferry, and the long hot road which leads to it, or by a far western route, this corner is inaccessible from the south. It looks small enough on the map, but it is rather larger than the State of Connecticut, and, save for a few scattered cattle-shacks, has no human habitation." — T. MITCHELL Prudden. lo IN AND AROUND If papers are to be served upon any person, taxes assessed, or jurors summoned from this sliced-off portion of Arizona, the sheriff or his deputy must ride from Flagstaff to Lee's Ferry, and then out over the Buckskin Mountains upon the Kaibab ere he can discharge his duty. To assess taxes costs more than they amount to. When the legislative bodies of Arizona and Utah are composed of intelligent and thinking men this senseless man-made boundary- line will be abolished, and that of the Almighty — the great chasm of the Colorado River — stand in its ordained relationship between these two domains. THE GRAND CANYON ii CHAPTER II EXPLORATIONS FROM THE TIME OF THE SPANIARDS (1540) TO MAJOR J. W. POWELL (1869) I N less than fifty years after the landing of Columbus on the shores of the Western Hemi- sphere, Spanish explorers and missionaries were travelling upon the Colorado River, following its course a long way from its mouth, reaching it at various points, and even visiting it on the east side of its junction with the Colorado Chiquito, — the Little Colorado, — which, to this day, is one of its most inaccessible points. These Spanish explorations were largely the result of that never to be forgotten first transcon- tinental journey, made on foot by Don Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, the unfortunate treasurer of the ill-fated expedition of Panfilo de Narvaez to the coast of Florida. The stories of what he saw and heard aroused the viceroy of New Spain ( Northern Mexico) to send out a preliminary reconnoissance party under the direction of a trustworthy Fran- ciscan friar, Marcos de Niza. Marcos penetrated Arizona and went east as far as the now known pueblos of Zuni, in New Mexico. These, he was told, were the seven cities of Cibola. On his favor- able report being presented to the viceroy, a large and imposing expedition, under the command of 12 IN AND AROUND that young, handsome, adventurous, wealthy, and favored caballero, Don Vazquez de Coronado, was sent forward to explore, subjugate, and possess the new lands in the name of God and the King of Spain, After reaching Zuni, an expedition under Ensign Tobar was sent to Moki, where he and his soldiers learned of a " large river, " on the banks of which " there were some people with very large bodies. " " As Don Pedro de Tobar was not commissioned to go farther, he returned from there and gave this information to the general, who despatched Don Garcia Lopez de Car- denas with about twelve companions to go to see this river. He was well received when he reached Tusayan, and was entertained by the natives, who gave him guides for his journey. They started from here loaded with provisions, for they had to go through a desert country before reach- ing the inhabited region, which the Indians said was more than twentN' da}-s' journey. After the\' had gone twenty days they came to the banks of the river, which seemed to be more than three or four leagues above the stream which flowed between them." — Castenada. When Coronado started on his land expedition, Mendoza sent out a sea expedition, commanded to co-operate with it, placing two vessels under the direction of Hernando de Alarcon. " He was instructed to sail northward, following the coast as closely as possible. He was to keep near the army, and communicate with it at every opportunit\', trans- porting the heavy baggage and holding himself ready at all times to render any assistance which Coronado might desire. Alarcon sailed May 9, 1540, probabl}- from Acapulco. KW V SBHffSI**",'' ^'T'^^jT- < 2 O Q PL, >^ ^ < < D --* c s^ o d. f-> o CL, a o THE GRAND CANYON 13 " He followed the shore closely and explored many harbors, but he nowhere succeeded in obtaining any news of the army of Coronado." — GEORGE Parker Winship. At last, reachinor the sand-bars and shoals at the head of the Gulf of California, and investigation revealing that he was at the mouth of a great river, he resolved to explore it, and, — " taking twenty men in two boats, started upstream on Thursday, August 26, 1540, when white men for the first time floated on the waters of the Colorado. The Indians appeared on the river banks during the following day. The silence with which the strangers answered the threat- ening shouts of the natives, and the presence of the Indian interpreters in the boats, soon overcame the hostile attitude of the savages. The European trifles which had been brought for gifts and for trading completed the work of establishing friendly relations, and the Indians soon became so well disposed that they entirely relieved the Spaniards of the labor of dragging the boats up the stream. A crowd of Indians seized the ropes by which the boats were hauled against the current, and from this time on some of them were always ready to render this service to their vis- itors. In this fashion the Spaniards continued northward, receiving abundant supplies of corn from the natives, whose habits and customs they had many excellent opportunities for observing. Alarcon instructed these people dutifully in the worship of the cross, and continually questioned them about the places whose names Friar Marcos had heard. He met with no success until he had travelled a considerable distance up the river, when for the first time he found a man with whom his interpreter was able to converse," — George Parker Winship. Here he learned news of Coronado, but could get none of his men to go with a message across the 14 IN AND AROUND country to Cil:)ola, where he was assured his land coadjutor w^ould be found. Much to liis regret Alarcon was compelled to return to his vessels at the mouth of the river, but it was only to start up aofain with "three boats filled with wares of ex- change, with corne and other scedes, hennes and cockes of Castille." " Starting September 14, he found the Indians as friendly as before, and ascended the river, as he judged, about 85 leagues, which may have taken him to the point where the canyons begin. A cross was erected to inform Coronado, in case an expedition from Cibola should reach this part of the river, that he had tried to fulfil his duty, but nothing more was accomplished." — GEORGE PARKER WiNSIIIF. In September of the same year (1540) Melchior Diaz started from the valley of Corazones, or Hearts (where Coronado had left him in charge of seventy or eighty men), with twenty-five men to endeavor to reach the seacoast and find Alarcon. " Hurrying across the desert region, he travelled slowly up the coast until he reached the mouth of a river which was large enough for vessels to enter. The country was cold, and the Spaniards observed that when the natives hereabouts wished to keep warm, they took a burning stick and held it to their abdomens and shoulders. This curious habit led the Spaniards to name the river Fire- brand — Rio del Tizon. Near the mouth of the river was a tree on which was written, ' A letter is at the foot of this.' Diaz dug down and found a jar wrapped so care- fully that it was not even moist. The enclosed papers stated that ' Francisco dc Alarcon reached this place in the year '40 with three ships, having been sent in search of Fran- cisco Vazquez Coronado by the viceroy, D. Antonio dc Mendoza; and after crossing the bar at the mouth of the THE GRAND CANYON 15 river and waiting many days without obtaining any news, he was obliged to depart, because the ships were being eaten by worms,' the terrible Teredo navalis. " Diaz determined to cross the river, hoping that the country might become more attractive. The passage was accomplished, with considerable danger, by means of cer- tain large wicker baskets, which the natives coated with a sort of bitumen, so that the water could not leak through. Five or six Indians caught hold of each of these and swam across, guiding it and transporting the Spaniards with their baggage, and being supported in turn by the raft. Diaz marched inland for four days, but not finding any people in the country, which became steadily more barren, he decided to return to Corazones Valley. The party made its way back to the country of the giants without accident, and then one night, while Diaz was watching the camp, a small clog began to bark and chase the flock of sheep which the men had taken with them for food. Un- able to call the dog off, Diaz started after him on horse- back and threw his lance while on the gallop. The weapon stuck up in the ground, and before Diaz could stop or turn his horse, which was running loose, the socket pierced his groin. The soldiers could do little to relieve his suffer- ings, and he died before they reached the settlement, where they arrived January i8, 1541." — GEORGE Parker WiNSHlP. In 1746 Padre Consag explored the Gulf of Cal- ifornia as far as the rnouth of the Colorado River, and in 1776 Sylvestre Escalante, a Spanish priest, crossed the river in Glen Canyon, at a place still known as El Vado de los Padres, — the cross- ing of the fathers. About the same time, Padre Francisco Garces travelled extensively in the region of the canyon and visited the Havasupais in Cat- aract Canyon. i6 IN AND AROUND Early in this century Lieutenant Hardy of tlie British Navy made a limited survey of the lower waters of the Colorado, and in 1846-47 the United States " Army of the West " crossed on their way to California. In 1853 the Sitgreaves expedition — which left its sign in the name Mount Sitgreaves, a moun- The Colorado River and the Needles, California. tain near the San Francisco range — was organ- ized for the purpose of determining whether the Zuni River flowed into the Colorado. This party, after travelling below the Falls of the Little Col- orado, in its westward journeyings, struck the Colo- rado River about a hundred and fifty miles above Yuma. Three years later. Lieutenant Whipple's survey THE GRAND CANYON 17 for a practical railroad route to the Pacific Coast along the thirty-fifth parallel led him to the Col- orado River, and an exploration was made of the Black Canyon (below the Grand) and of the lower portion of the Grand Canyon as high up as Diamond Creek. It is possible there may have been expeditions through the Canyon made by adventurous white explorers even before the time of Powell, but this is only conjecture, based upon the fact that in the lower part of Cataract Canyon Mr. Stanton dis- covered the name of " I Julien, 1836," deeply carved in the face of the rock. Mr. F. A. Nims, the pho- tographer of the Stanton expedition, says of this inscription, which was six feet above what was then the bed of the river: — " As it could only have been done from the water by some one either in a boat or on a raft, the only solution we could arrive at was that it was done by one of a party of Canadian voyageurs, which is reported to have attempted to explore this part of the country in 1836 — thirty-three years before Major Powell and his party made their mem- orable trip, and fifty-three years before we followed. What became of them I have been unable to ascertain. No written account has ever been published of their journey." Dr. Parry, the distinguished botanist of the Mex- ican Boundary Commission, was once led into writ- ing an account of a trip supposedly made through the Canyon by James White, a Wisconsin miner. This man was afterwards employed by Major Powell, and it was then found that the published account of his trip was largely erroneous. He had some adventures in the Canyon, but they were small 1 8 IN AND AROUND and insignificant compared witli the stories circu- lated about them. In 1855, a party of several men, led b)' one Ash- ley, made an attempt to come through the can- yons, and they were soon wrecked, and all but Ashley and one companion drowned. Powell thus refers to Ashley in his " Explorations " : — " On a hii^h rock by which the trail passes we find the inscription: 'Ashley 18-5.' The third figure is obscure — some of the party reading it 1835, some 1855. "James Baker, an old-time mountaineer, once told me about a party of men starting down the riv^er, and Ashley was named as one. The story runs that the boat was swamped, and some of the party drowned in one of the canyons below. The word ' Ashley ' is a warning to us, and we resolve on great caution. " Ashley Falls is the name we give to the cataract we have just passed. Eight days later we discover an iron bake oven, several tin plates, a part of a boat, and many other fragments, which denote the spot where Ashley's party came to disaster and, possibly, death. " In 1857, Lieutenant Ives was placed in command of an expedition, organized by the War Depart- ment, for the purpose of discovering whether sup- plies for the military posts of New Mexico and Utah could be transported by water up the Colo- rado River. He was instructed to explore the river from its mouth as far as navigation was pos- sible. In a steamboat (which was specially con- structed in Philadelphia, shipped in sections via the Isthmus of Panama to San Francisco and thence around Cape St. Lucas into the Gulf of California to the mouth of the river, and there put together), he THE GRAND CANYON 19 ascended to the head of Black Canyon, a few miles below the confluence of the Virgen River in Nevada. At this point he decided that navigation could be pursued no farther, so, sending the vessel back to Fort Yuma, he crossed the country to the north- east, reaching the Colorado River again at Diamond Creek. Continuing his journey eastward he en- tered Cataract Canyon (briefly described in later pages of this book), visited the Havasupai Indians, then made a wide southward detour around the San Francisco Peaks, crossed the Little Colorado, and journeyed thence northeast to the pueblos of the Hopis. After a short stay there he went east- ward to Fort Defiance, and finally returned to eastern civilization. The report of Lieutenant Ives is a most fascina- ting large quarto volume, illustrated by marvellous pictures of the Grand Canyon and other scenes from the pencils of Mollhausen and Eggloffstein. Those of the latter artist are as artistic and attractive as they are untrue and belittling. Dutton, speaking of these sketches of the Kaibab region in his mon- ograph on the Grand Canyon, says : " Never was a great subject more artistically misrepresented or more charmingly belittled." Yet the report itself is remarkably interesting, and, being the first volume published on the wonders of the Grand Canyon, — though only a small portion of it, — it is invaluable both to the student and to those who would know in detail the difficulties that have beset the path- way of the pioneers who first trod the banks of the encanyoned river. 20 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER III EXPLORATIONS BY MAJOR J. W. POWELL (186972) UP to this time it will be seen that no adequate survey of the Colorado River or its canyons had been made. Exploring parties or individuals had touched it here and there, but there had been no thorough and satisfactory exploration. It was left to the untiring energy, persistent zeal, and scientific instincts of Major J. W. Powell to accom- plish the impossible ; for Indians, miners, pros- pectors, cowboys, Spanish explorers, and United States government of^cers were a unit in saying that it was a practical impossibility to ride down the Colorado River from its source to its mouth. Exaggerated stories of Ives' report reached the cars of the miners, prospectors, and hunters who wandered into the country, and these, in time, started other stories equally exciting, which aroused much interest and curiosity, although it is doubtful whether any of them had much, if any, foundation in fact. "Talcs were told of parties enteriiii; the gort^e in boats, and being carried down witli fearful velocity into whirl- pools, where all were overwhelmed in the abyss of waters; others, of underground passages for the great river, into which boats had passed never to be seen again. It was THE GRAND CANYON 21 currently believed that the river was lost under the rocks for several hundred miles. There were other accounts of great falls, whose roaring music could be heard on the dis- tant mountain summits. There were many stories current of parties wandering on the brink of the canyon, vainly endeavoring to reach the waters below, and perishing with thirst at last in sight of the river which was roaring its mockery into dying ears. The Indians, too, have woven the mysteries of the canyons into the myths of their religion. Long ago, there was a great and wise chief, who mourned the death of his wife, and would not be comforted until Ta- vwoats, one of the Indian gods, came to him, and told him she was in a happier land, and offered to take him there, that he might see for himself, if, upon his return, he would cease to mourn. The great chief Major Powell's Boat in Glen Canyon. mised. Then Ta-vwoats made a trail through the moun- tains that intervene between that beautiful land, the balmy region in the Great West, and this, the desert home of the poor Nu-ma. " This trail was the Canyon Gorge of the Colorado. Through it he led him ; and when they had returned, the deity exacted from the chief a promise that he would tell no one of the joys of that land, lest, through discontent with the circumstances of this world, they should desire to go to heaven. Then he rolled a river into the gorge, a mad, raging stream, that should engulf any that might attempt to enter thereby." — J. W. POWELL. 22 IN AND AROUND The wondrous daring of Powells expedition can well be understood when it is known that to this day it is a common thing for those whose work takes them to the " rim " to declare unhesitatingly that Powell never went through the whole of the Canyon. They say Stanton may have done so, but that was only because he had the information that Powell oleaned from the banks of the Canvon to aid him. The Indians also declare that it is a physical impossibility, and, as will be related later, it was their disbelief in the statements of Powell's men (those who left the expedition before its close) that led to the murder of those three unfortunates. To Powell, then, the honor and credit belong, and to him will freely be accorded the claim I have made in my dedication when it is known what in- credible dil^culties his daring, intrepidity, and cour-« age, backed by the same qualities in his faithful corps of assistants, overcame. In 1867 he began explorations of the canyons and gorges of the Upper Colorado, and as the result of these early efforts, a party was organized in 1869 for the complete exploration of the Colorado River from its source to its mouth. On the 24th of May, 1869, the party left Green River City, the prow of the boats turned to flow with the swift current into the unknown dangers and wonders ahead. Three of the boats were of oak, and one of i)ine, — each di\'ided into compartments, some of which were water-tight to make the boats buoyant. They were loaded with rations deemed sufficient to last ten months, — clothing, ammunition, tools, and all necessary scientific instruments. THE GRAND CANYON 23 Major Powell's report is eloquent and vivid, and the daily diary of this band of brave explorers is as fascinating and thrilling as any work of imagination ever written. As they started: — "Away to the south, the Uinta M o u n t a i n s stretch in a long line ; high peaks thrust into the sky, and snow-fields glittering like lakes of molten silver; and pine forests in sombre green ; and rosy clouds playing around the borders of huge, black masses ; and heights and clouds, and mountains and snow- fields, and forests and rock-lands are blended into one grand view." — J. W. Powell. Dellenbaugh Butte, Green River. In five days sixty-two miles are run, and Flaming Gorge reached, — then Horseshoe Canyon and Beehive Point. An excitins^ ride follows, throuoh a narrow gorge, where the water is rolled by the side-rocks into the centre in great waves, through which the boats go leaping and bounding as if gifted with life. Then the roar of a fall near by leads to the unloading of the boats to make a " portage " over the dangerous place. This is the Ashley Falls before referred to. " Seventy and one-third miles from Flaming Gorge the gate of the Canyon of Lodore is reached, in which a sue- 24 IN AND AROUND cession of rapids are found. This is our method of pro- cedure at such places. The Emma Dean goes in advance ; the other boats follow, in obedience to signals. When we approach a rapid, or what, on other rivers, n^ould often be called a fall, I stand on deck to examine it, while the oars- men back-water, and we drift on as slowly as possible. If I can see a clear chute between the rocks, away we go ; but if the channel is beset entirely across, we signal the other boats, pull to land, and I walk along the shore for closer examination. If this reveals no clear channel, hard work begins. We drop the boats to the very head of the dangerous place, and let them over by lines, or make a portage, frequently carrying both boats and cargoes over the rocks, or perhaps, only the cargoes, if it is safe to let the boats down. The waves caused by such falls in a river differ much from the waves of the sea. The water of an ocean wave merely rises and falls ; the form only passes on, and form chases form unceasingly. A body floating on such waves merely rises and sinks, — does not progress unless impelled by wind or some other power. But here, the water of the wave passes on, while the form remains. The waters plunge down ten or twenty feet, to the foot of the fall; spring up again in a great wave; then down and up, in a scries of billows, that gradually disappear in the more quiet waters below; but these waves are alwaj^s there, and you can stand above and count them. " A boat riding such, leaps and plunges along with great velocity. Now, the difficulty in riding over these falls, when the rocks are out of the way, is in the first wave at the foot. This will sometimes gather for a moment, heap- ing up higher and higher, imtil it breaks back. If the boat strikes it the instant after it breaks, she cuts through, and the mad breaker dashes its spray over the boat, and would wash us overboard did we not cling tight. If the boat, in going o\'er the falls, chances to get caught in some side current, and is turned from its course, so as to strike the wave " broad-side on," and the wave breaks at the same THE GRAND CANYON 25 instant, the boat is capsized. Still, we must cling to her, for, the water-tight compartments acting as buoys, she can- not sink ; and so we go, dragged through the waves, until still waters are reached. We then right the boat, and climb aboard." — J. W. P(3WELL. The next day ( June 9 ) a very exciting run is made, and the boat, the " No Name," makes a " bolt " and goes over two falls, — the first about ten or twelve feet, the next some forty or fifty feet — " in a channel filled with dangerous rocks that break the waves into whirlpools and beat them into foam. Look at them ! — the boat strikes a rock, rebounds from the shock, careens, and fills the open compartment with water. Two of the men lose their oars ; she swings around, and is carried down at a rapid rate, broadside on, for a few yards, and strikes amidships on another rock with great force, is broken quite in two, and the men are thrown into the river ; the larger part of the boat floating buoyantly, they soon seize it, and down the river they drift, past the rocks for a few hundred yards to a second rapid, filled with huge boulders, where the boat strikes again, and is dashed to pieces, and the men and fragments are soon carried beyond my sight. Running along, I turn a bend, and see a man's head above the water, washed about in a whirlpool below a great rock. It is Frank Goodman, clinging to it with a grip upon which life depends. Coming opposite, I see Howland trying to go to his aid from an island on which he has been washed. Soon, he comes near enough to reach Frank with a pole, which he extends toward him. The latter lets go the rock, grasps the pole, and is pulled ashore. Seneca Howland is washed farther down the island, and is caught by some rocks, and, though somewhat bruised, manages to get ashore in safety. This seems a long time, as I tell it, but it is quickly done. 26 IN AND AROUND "And now the three men are on the island, with a swift, dangerous river on either side, and a fall below." — Powell. After incredible efforts, the men are rescued, and in a day or two the party resumes its journey, but not until it has found a bake-oven, several tin BoNiTO Bend. plates, a part of a boat, and many other fragments which denote that this is the place where Ashley's party was wrecked. So the name " Disaster Falls " is given to this scene of so much peril and loss. More falls, rocks, and rapids, and a beautiful park is reached, and then a place where — "just before us, the canyon di\'itlcs, a little stream com- ing down on the right, and another on the left, and we can look away up either of these canyons, through an ascending vista, to cliffs and crags and towers, a mile back, and two thousand feet t)verhead. To the right, a dozen THE GRAND CANYON 27 gleaming cascades are seen. Pines and firs stand on the rocks, and aspens overhang the brooks. The rocks below are red and brown, set in deep shadows, but above, they are buff and vermilion, and stand in the sunshine. The light above, made more brilliant by the bright-tinted rocks, and the shadows below more gloomy by the sombre hues of the brown walls, increase the apparent depths of the canyons, and it seems a long way up to the world of sunshine and open sky, and a long way down to the bottom of the canyon glooms." — POWELL. Twenty and three-quarters miles bring the travellers to Echo Park, which ends the Canyon of Lodore, and from this point to the mouth of the Uinta River through Whirlpool Canyon, Island Park, and Split Mountain Canyon, they add ninety- eio-ht and one-fourth miles more to the distance. To the junction of the Grand and Green ( which together form the Colorado ), through the Canyon of Desolation, Gray Canyon, Gunnison's Valley, Labyrinth Canyon, and Stillwater Canyon, it is two hundred and eiohtv-six and one-fourth miles, all of which distance is safely travelled. And now^ they have reached the real Colorado River. Here much discussion takes place between the members of the party as to the probabilities of successfully navigating the river below. They arrive at the conclusion — " that there are great descents yet to be made, but, if they are distributed in rapids and short falls, as they have been hitherto, we shall be able to overcome them. But maybe we shall come to a fall in these canyons which we cannot pass, where the walls rise from the water's edge, so that we cannot land, and where the water is so 28 IN AND AROUND swift that we cannot return. Such places have been found except that the falls were not so great but that we could run them in safety. How will it be in the future? So the men speculate over the serious probabilities in a jesting mood, and 1 hear Sumner remark, ' My idea is, we had better go slow, and learn to paddle.' " — Powell. The very next day difficulties are so great that the distance made is only three-quarters of a mile, and the fall in the river in that short distance is seventy-five feet. Cataract and Glen Canyons are passed through, and now Marble Canyon is reached. " The scenery is on a grand scale. The walls of the Canyon, twenty-five hundred feet high, are of marble, of many beautiful colors, and often polished by the waves, or far up the sides, where showers have washed the sands over the cliffs. " At one place I have a walk, for more than a mile, on a marble pavement, all polished and fretted with strange devices, and embossed in a thousand fantastic patterns. Through a cleft in the wall the sun shines on this pavement, which gleams in iridescent beauty. " I pass up the cleft. It is very narrow, with a succes- sion of pools standing at higher levels as I go back. The water in these pools is clear and cool, coming down from springs. Then I return to the pavement, which is but a terrace or bench, over which the river runs at its flood, but left bare at present. Along the pavement, in many places, are basins of clear water, in strange contrast to the red mud of the river. At length I come to the end of this marble terrace, and take again to the boat. " Riding down a short distance, a beautiful view is pre- sented. The river runs sharply to the east, and seems enclosed by a wall, set with a million brilliant gems. What can it mean? Every eye is engaged, every one THE GRAND CANYON 29 wonders. On coming nearer, we find fountains bursting from the rock, high overhead, and the spray in the sun- shine forms the gems which bedeck the walk The rocks, below the fountain are covered with mosses, and ferns, and many beautiful flowering plants. We name it Vasey's Paradise, in honor of the botanist who travelled with us last year. " It rains again this afternoon. Scarcely do the first drops fall, when little rills run down the walls. As the storm comes on, the little rills increase in size, until great streams are formed. Although the walls of the canyon are chiefly limestone, the adjacent country is of red sand- stone ; and now the waters, loaded with these sands, come down in rivers of bright red mud, leaping over the walls in innumerable cascades. It is plain now how these walls are polished in many places." — PoWELL. The end of Marble Canyon is at the mouth of the Colorado Chiquito. The canyon through which this muddy, salt stream flows is on a scale quite as grand, although not so extensive, as that of the Colorado itself. Standing on Paiuti Point (Grand View) near the Grand View Trail, the clifTs above the mouth of the Little Colorado are distinctly to be seen; but to rightly enjoy it, one should ride around the rim, some thirty-five miles, and see the junction of the two rivers. The walls of Marble Canyon at its head are two hundred feet high, but as they approach the Grand Canyon they gradually increase in depth until they are thirty-five hundred feet high. And now the Grand Canyon itself is reached, and " we are ready to start on our way down the great unknown." And those who read this portion of Major Powell's Journal, published some years ago } 30 IN AND AROUND in " Scribner's," will remember how the pulses quick- ened, and the heart quivered often ere the end oi his thrilling- experiences was reached. " An unknown river we have )-et to explore What falls there are, we know not; what rocks beset the channel, we know not. What walls rise over the river, we know not. The water is swift, the walls rise from the very edge of the river. They are composed of tiers of irreg- ular shelves below, and above these, steep slopes to the foot of the marble cliffs. Soon after entering, the river runs across a dike. A dike is a fissure in the rocks, open to depths below, which has been filled with eruptive matter, and this, on cooling, was harder than the rocks through which the crevice was made, and, when these were washed away, the harder volcanic matter remained as a wall, and the river has cut a gateway through it several hundred feet high, and as many wide. " The very next day, the softer series of rocks are left behind, — newer and more dangerous experiences clearly are before us, for we now enter the granite. Here the can}'on is narrow and the water swifter. The walls are set on either side, with pinnacles and crags ; and sharp, angular buttresses, bristling with wind- and wave-polished spires, extend far out into the river. The walls, now, are a mile in height, — a vertical distance difficult indeed to appreci- ate. Stand in any street with which }'ou are familiar, lined with stores on either side for a full mile, and then imagine this immense mass of buildings extending this mile up- wards, — and you can then begin to comprehend the gran- deur of these rock walls." — Powell. The explorers gaze and take their fill and then journey on, and at length reach a part of the river which we can well imagine is the one just to the left of the foot of the Old Trail, where we have stood and gazed on the wildly dashing, lioarsely THE GRAND CANYON 31 raging, and ever-foaming waters as they madly gal- loped along to their rest in the Gulf of California. " The river is very deep, the canyon very narrow, and still obstructed, so that there is no steady flow of the stream; but the waters wheel, and roll, and boil, and we are scarcely able to determine where we can go. Now, the boat is carried to the right, perhaps close to the wall ; again, she is shot into the stream, and perhaps is dragged over to the other side, where, caught in a whirlpool, she spins about. We can neither land nor run as we please. The boats are entirely unmanageable ; no order in their running can be preserved; now one, now another is ahead, each crew laboring for its own preservation. In such a place we come to another rapid. Two of the boats run it perforce. One succeeds in landing, but there is no foothold by which to make a portage, and she is pushed out again into the stream. The next minute a great, reflex wave fills the open compartment; she is water-logged, and drifts unman- ageable. Breaker after breaker rolls over her, and one capsizes her. The men are thrown out ; but they cling to the boat, and she drifts down some distance, alongside of us, and we are able to catch her. She is soon bailed out, and the men are aboard once more. " One more day, and we come to a beautifully clear stream which we name Bright Angel Creek. This is nearly opposite the Bright Angel Trail." — POWELL. And now, provisions begin to "give out;" rain falls in torrents; the stream grows more and more rapid, dangerous, and threatening; not one of the party has a complete suit of clothes, and there is not a blanket each for them. Affairs begin to look desperate. All their bacon is so badly injured that it has to be thrown away, their flour is musty, and there is only enough to last for ten days, with 32 IN AND AROUND no baking-powder to raise it. This flour, a few dried apples, and plenty of coffee, are all they have left. And yet, in spite of these discouragements, and the unknown portion of the river full of dan- gers and perils before them, these brave men go on ; and although the next day they only make the small distance of two miles, the day following brings them brightness in the fact that after rushing madly down through a long, winding chute where they make ten miles in less than an hour, they emerge from the granite formation, and although the walls are still narrow and the river swift, they know that while this condition lasts they can meet with no more great falls or rapids. So they go gleefully on, and three or four days afterwards come to monuments of lava standing in the river. Most of them are low rocks, but some are shafts more than three hundred feet high. Two days later three of the party tell Major Powell they have decided to go no farther. Ex- postulation is found to be useless, and the next day, after sharing their provisions, the party divides, Howland, his brother, and William Dunn climbing- out of the Canyon, hoping to reach the Mormon settlements in Utah, and thus return to civilization, the others determined to complete their journey or perish in the attempt. And in order to remove misapprehension as far as possible as to the fate of these men, I will here quote Major PowelTs discovery of the cause of their death. It was in the fall of the following year that he (Powell) visited the camp of the Shi-vwits Indians, near to the place where the three men left the river. THE GRAND CANYON 33 " I then learned that they had come to the Indian village almost starved and exhausted with fatigue. They were supplied with food, and put on their way to the settle- ments. Shortly after they had left, an Indian from the east side of the Colorado arrived at the village, and told them (the Shi-vwits) about a number of miners having killed a squaw in a drunken brawl, and no doubt these were the men. No person had ever come down the can- yon ; that was impossible ; they were trying to hide their guilt. In this way he worked them into a great rage. They followed, surrounded the three unfortunate men in ambush, and filled them full of arrows." — POWELL. Three of their men gone, the party hurries on, leaving behind one of the remaining boats, — with barometers, fossils, minerals, and what ammunition they think they can spare. More difficulties and dangers are yet to be faced, and that afternoon they have adventures which would entirely daunt the hearts of less brave and determined men. Falls are encountered, over which they go dash- ing madly, it seems as if to sure and certain death. The first boat goes over with only one man — Bradley — in it. Breathlessly the others look on, and see the boat emero-e on the crest of a wave, whirl around behind some great rocks, and then they lose sight of it in the mad, white foam below. They stand frozen with fear, for neither boat nor man is to be seen ; but by and by he comes up again below, in a whirlpool, and in order that they may chance to help him they all jump into their boat, hurry down — over the falls — are capsized — and were it not for the efforts made by the man they go themselves to save, they, probably, some of them, would lose their lives. 3 34 IN AND AROUND At noon of the following day these brave-hearted explorers emerge from the Grand Canyon. Al- though they have still many miles to run, they are in waters which have been navigated some years previously by a party of Mormons. And what joy they feel at the cessation of their dangerous labors ! " The relief from danger and the joy of success are great. When he who has been chained by wounds to a hospital cot, until his canvas tent seems hke a dungeon cell, until the groans of those who lie about, tortured with probe and knife, are piled up, a weight of horror on his ears that he cannot throw off, cannot forget, and until the stench of festering wounds and anaesthetic drugs has filled the air with its loathsome burden, — when such an one at last goes out into the open field, what a world he sees! How beautiful the sky ! how bright the sunshine ! what ' floods of delicious music ' pour from the throats of birds! how sweet the fragrance of earth, and tree, and blossom ! The first hour of convalescent freedom seems rich recompense for all pain, gloom, terror. " Something like this are the feelings we experience to- night. Ever before us has been an unknown danger, heavier than immediate peril. Every waking hour passed in the Grand Canyon has been one of toil. \Vc have watched with deep solicitude the steady disappearance of our scant supply of rations, and from time to time have seen the river snatch a portion of the little left, while we were a-hungered. And danger and toil were endured in those gloomy depths, where ofttimes the clouds hid the sky by day, and but a narrow zone of stars could be seen at night. Only during the few hours of deep sleep, conse- quent on hard labor, has the roar of the waters been hushed. Now the danger is over ; now the toil has ceased ; now the gloom has disappeared ; now the firmament is bounded only by the horizon ; and what a vast expanse of constel- lations can be seen ! THE GRAND CANYON 35 "The river rolls by us in silent majesty; the quiet of the camp is sweet; our joy is almost ecstasy. We sit till long after midnight, talking of the Grand Canyon, talking of home, but chiefly talking of the three men who left us. Are they wandering in those depths, unable to find a way out? are they searching over the desert lands above for water? or are they nearing the settlements?" — Powell. Two or three days later they land, and on the first of September four of the men, with new sup- plies, go on down the Colorado to Fort Mohave, and Major Powell overland to Salt Lake City. Further explorations have since been made under the direction of the United States Geological Sur- vey while Major Powell was its director, and as a result Captain Clarence E. Dutton has published one of the most interesting monographs ever penned by a specialist. Its title is " The Tertiary History of the Grand Canyon District," and it is accom- panied with a large atlas containing admirable pic- tures, etc., of the Canyon region, — from sketches made by Mr. W. H. Holmes, the accomplished field geologist, artist, archaeologist, and writer, now in charge of the Anthropological Department of the United States National Museum. No praises be- stowed upon these gentlemen, for the fidelity with which they have described this marvellous rock region, can ever be adequate return for the pleasure they have afforded those who have enjoyed the fruit of their labors. 36 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER IV LATER EXPLORATIONS ON the 25th of May, 1889, Mr. Frank M. Brown, of Denver, Colorado, with Mr. Robert Brew- ster Stanton as cliief engineer, and a party of thir- teen men, started from a point in Utah, called by the Post Office Department Blake, and known in railroad circles as Green River. Mr. Brown " had conceived the idea of building a railroad through the canyons of the Colorado River, from some point in Colorado, by a water grade, down the Grand and Colorado Rivers to some point in Southern California, where the road could be feasibly taken across to the coast " of the Pacific. The early portions of the adventures of this party were very similar to those experienced by the Powell party. Up to the second day of June everything went along pleasantly, but from that time on there was disaster of some kind every day. One of the peculiar and dangerous features of the river was an up-shooting wave which they desig- nated a " fountain." " Where tlic river is broad, deep, and swift, the bottom seems to be covered with potholes in the sandstone, and to have c^reat heajis of constantb' chant^ing qnicksand mounds. This causes numberless cross-currents under- THE GRAND CANYON 37 neath the surface, and at times these seem tc combine, resulting in an enormous up-shooting wave, which breaks through the surface of the water with a swish and roar that are appalling, and tosses anything it may strike. The noise these ' fountains ' make is something between the boom of a cannon and the rush of an enormous sky-rocket, and they can be heard for a mile. They do not rise twice in the same place, but switch about so that it is impossible to avoid them." — E. REYNOLDS. Over and over again the boats were turned up- side down by these " fountains," and if the men were not " ducked " more than once a day, they considered themselves fairly fortunate. The party journeyed on, had their upsets, lost their provisions, had one of their boats smashed, but kept up brave hearts, and went manfully forward until July loth. On the previous evening Mr. Brown must have had a presentiment of disaster, for Mr. Stanton says he " seemed lonely and troubled, and asked me to sit by his bed and talk. We sat there late, smoking, and talking of our homes and our journey on the morrow." That morrow was a sad one for the expedition. Brown and a man named McDonald were ahead in a boat, and they — " undertook to run the first rapid, by the side of which was a great whirlpool. They were going safely along a neutral strip of water between the two, when an enormous up-shooting wave struck the boat in the middle, throwing it into the air, and pitching Brown into the whirlpool, and McDonald into the rapid. Both were powerful swimmers. McDonald struck out, calling to Brown, 'Come on.' Brown replied, ' All right,' and faced down the river. Mc- Donald had now all he could do to care for himself. 38 IN AND AROUND Three times lie was thrown under by the terrific tossings of the mad waters, but he managed to reach a rock about six hundred yards below the scene of the mishap. Drag- ging himself out, he was horrified to see Brown still in the whirlpool. Frantically he gestured to the following boat. It recognized his signals, and dashed for the whirlpool, but too late. Brown had disappeared a few seconds before it reached him, and that river never gives up its dead." — E. Reynolds. Now let Stanton take up the narrative. " In this world we are left but little time to mourn. We had work to do, and I determined if possible to complete the whole of that work. With this intention we started out next morning. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday we pushed on with our usual work, shooting through or por- taging round twenty-four bad rapids, getting deeper and deeper between the marble walls. After a quiet rest on Sunday, Monday morning found us at the head of two very rough and rocky rapids. We portaged both of them. While the photographer and myself took our notes and pictures, the boats were to go on through the lower end of the second rapid to a sandbar, a half-mile below. It was easy walking for us along the bank. The first boat got down with difficulty, as the current beat hard against the Icftclift". My boat was the next to start. I pushed it out from shore myself with a cheering word to the men> Hansbrough and Richards. It was the last they ever heard. The current drove them against the cliff, under an overhanging shelf In trying to push away from the cliff the boat was upset. Hansbrough was never seen to rise. Richards, a powerful man, swam some distance down stream. The first boat started out to the rescue, but he sank before it reached him. " Two more faithful and good men gone ! Astonished and crushed by our sad loss, our force too small to portage our boats, and our boats entirely unfit for such THE GRAND CANYON 39 work, I decided to abandon the trip, with then and there a determination, as soon as a new outfit could be secured, to return and complete our journey to the Gulf." — R. B. Stanton. This resolution was faithfully carried out. Mr. Stanton fitted out a second party, and on the loth of December, 1889, after having hauled their boats by wagon one hundred and twenty miles from Green River Station to the mouth of Crescent Creek, four miles above Dandy Crossing, embarked on the great river. On the ist of March, 1890, the mouth of Diamond Creek was reached ; they " emerged at the lower end of Grand Canyon March 17th, reached the end of the survey at tide-water April 26th, and, returning to Yuma, disbanded on April 30th. One boat was completely destroyed in Rapid No. 249; but only two sacks of provisions were lost in the whole journey. " Thus had the two expeditions, considered as one, travelled by boat a distance of over fourteen hundred miles, had passed over — running nearly all of them — five hun- dred and twenty rapids, falls, and cataracts in less than five hundred miles, making a total fall of forty-five hun- dred feet, and had passed successfully through the dark canyons of one of the most tempestuous rivers of the world." — R. B. Stanton. Mr. Stanton wrote an excellent popular account of this trip, which appeared in " Scribner's " for November, 1890, and a scientific report from the engineer's standpoint, which was published in the " Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers," April, 1892. In this report he discusses 4-0 IN AND AROUND the feasibility and practicability of building a rail way through the canyons of the Colorado with the object of connecting the coal fields of Colorado with the Pacific Coast. " It is hoped that in this description there has not only been shown the entire practicability of the canyons of the Colorado River for raihvay purposes, both from an eco- nomical as well as a purely engineering point of view, but that there has also been some light cast upon the nature and possibilities of a portion of our great Western empire, whicli, to many, has been less known than the heart of Africa." — R. B. Stanton. The popular narrative is exciting and entrancing. "On January 13th, we reached Point Retreat, where we left the canyon on our homeward march just six months before. We found our supplies, — blankets, flour, sugar, coffee, etc., which we had cached in the marble cave, all in good condition. From the head of the Colo- rado to Point Retreat we had encountered one hundred and forty-four rapids, not counting small draws, in a dis- tance of two hundred and forty miles. From Lee's Ferry to Point Retreat there are forty-four rapids, in a distance of thirty miles. With our new boats we ran nearly all of these, and portaged but few; over man)' of them our boats had danced and jumped at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, and over some, by actual measurement, at the rate of twenty miles per hour. To stand in the bow of one of these boats as she dashes through a great rapid, with first the bow and then the stern jumping into the air, and the spray of the breakers splashing over one's head, is an excitement the fascination of which can only be understood through experience. " Ten miles below Point Retreat, as we went into camp one evening, we discovered the body of Peter M. Ilans- THE GRAND CANYON 41 brough, one of the boatmen drowned on our trip last summer. His remains were easily recognized from the clothing that was still on them. The next morning we buried them under an overhanging cliff. The burial ser- vice was brief and simple. We stood around the grave while one short prayer was offered, and we left liim with a shaft of pure marble for his headstone, seven hundred feet high, with his name cut upon the base ; and in honor of his memory we named a magnificent point opposite — Point Hansbrough. "February 5th, we passed Bright Angel Creelc, in the Granite Gorge of the Grand Canyon, and on the 6th came to the most powerful and unmanageable rapid we had met on the river. We portaged our supplies, and fol- lowed our usual method of swinging the empty boats down by lines. My boat was to go first. The two hun- dred and fifty foot line was strung out ahead, and the boat was strung into the stream. She rode the huge waves with ease, and went below the rapid without injury. The men and the line worked well and payed out smoothly; but when the boat reached the foot of the fall, she acted like a young colt eager for play. " She turned her nose out toward the current, and as it struck her, she started like a shot for the other side of the river. The men held to her doggedly. After cross- ing the current she turned and came back into the eddy, and for a few moments stood still, just as a colt ready for another prance. The men rushed down along the rocks to get the line ahead, but before they could get far enough, she turned her head again to the stream. The men put their wills into their arms and held her once more; she did not cross the current, but on reaching the centre dipped her nose under as if trying her strength, came up at once, rose on a wave, and then, as if for a final effort to gain her liberty, dived her head under, filled with water, and went completely out of sight. In a few moments she rose to the surface, and slowly and leisurely 42 IN AND AROUND floated sidewise across the eddy toward shore, and quietly stopped alongside a shelving rock. " To prevent another such experience we adopted Major Powell's plan in such cases, of shooting the boat through and catching it below. " The ' Marie,' the rebuilt boat, was started first. She rode gracefully the high waves at the head of the rapid, but in the middle she turned, partially filled with water, shot to one side, struck against the cliff, sank in the worst part of the rapid, and came up in pieces about the size of toothpicks — our five days' labor and our boat gone togfether ! " — R. B. Stanton. This is the rapid just below the foot of Mystic Spring Trail. On the 1 2th of January, 1897, N. Galloway, a Mormon trapper, well versed in the upper canyons of the Green River, accompanied by William Rich- mond, left near the State line of Wyoming and Utah, in boats of Mr. Galloway's own construction, for the trip through the canyons. In those frail, rude boats they journeyed four- teen hundred miles, emerging through the steep canyon walls on the 3d day of February, and on the 17th of that month completing the trip at the Needles. Shortly prior to their trip, George Flavall, a Needles boatman, had, unaccompanied, accom- plished the same daring venture. As Galloway and Richmond reached the open country below the Grand Wash, they came upon the officers who had found the bodies of two men killed by a Paiuti Indian, named Mouse, This officer requested them to allow their boats to be THE GRAND CANYON 43 used to convey the bodies down to the Needles. They did so, and on their arrival sold the boats and returned to their homes in Utah. Some months later I was fortunate enough to arrive at Lee's Ferry, when Mr. Galloway was there with a new boat he had just built, with which he proposed going up the river to a placer gold claim he had located in Glen Canyon. After considerable persuasion he was prevailed upon to take me up the canyon to his gold claim, and also down Marble Canyon, to Soap Creek Rapids, one of the most dangerous rapids in the canyon and near which Frank Brown lost his life. A brief ac- count of this trip is given in a subsequent chapter. In the " Youth's Companion," some few years ago, A. Ellbrace wrote a wild and improbable story about a trip having been made through the Grand Canyon by a man named Robinson, and, in a footnote, states that doubtless the archives of Fort Mohave of the year 1867 will give authentica- tion to his narrative. 44 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER V FLAGSTAFF, THE SAN FRANCISCO MOUNTAINS, THE CLIFF AND CAVE DWELLINGS, AND THE DEAD VOLCANOES FOR several years the Grand Canyon was reached mainly by stages operated from Flagstaff, hence to many tourists this little town is inseparably asso- ciated with the Canyon. It is beautiful for situa- tion, tree-surrounded, mountain-shadowed, breeze- blown, healthful, and picturesque. At an elevation of about seven thousand feet it nestles at the base of the San Francisco Mountains, whose three rough, volcanic peaks stand guard, as giant Graces, over the cluster of homes at their feet. It is a typical Western town. The railway track lines one side of the main street, and business blocks, many of which are saloons, the other, fully justifying tlie af^rmation made in the town's adver- tising literature that " there is nothing puritanical about Flagstaff." It is the county seat of Coconino County, and has a population of about twenty-five hundred people. It possesses a fine stone court- house, high school, three churches, and the Territo- rial Normal School. It is the trading centre for the cattle, sheep, and mining men of a large surround- ing country. As a pleasant summer resort it has already acquired a reputation in the territory. THE GRAND CANYON 45 Whichever way the traveller approaches Flag- staff, whether from the western desert region or from the wild rockiness of New Mexico, he is en- chanted as the train enters the forest lands about fifteen miles before reach ins; Flao-staff. The tall pines, growing larger as the forest is penetrated, The Watering Troughs at Cedar Ranch ox the Way from Flagstaff to the Canyon. are a pleasant and welcome sight after passing over the arid lands of western New Mexico and the raoCTed, rock-ribbed dreariness of the continental divide. "The whole face of the country clianges at this point, as if you had been transported to another land. The mo- notony of the leafless undulating prairies gives place to picturesque mountains and fertile valleys, richly decked with green deciduous foliage, and the eye rests with plea- 46 IN AND AROUND sure upon long vistas of pine forest, where monarchs of the glades raise their towering crests hundreds of feet toward the sky, each tree standing solitary and straight, as if planted and trained by skilled hands, and with not a par- ticle of undergrowth to choke up the surface of the green- sward beneath. This grand woodland scene stretches away from the base of the San Francisco Mountains south- ward for a distance of nearly two hundred miles, and the forest averages over fifty miles in width. This enormous forest, which is the largest in the country outside of Mich- igan, Wisconsin, and Washington Territory, covers an area of over ten thousand square miles, and contains six million four hundred thousand acres. It is larger than the State of Massachusetts, is double the size of Connecticut, and covers more ground than the States of Delaware and New Jersey combined." — Tinkers " A Land of Suiishijic." Though it contains no trees equal to the Sequoia gigantea of California, many of them are giants in size, and there are over eighty varieties. " Among them are red and yellow juniper, cypress, walnut, oak, ash, hickory, sycamore, cedar, wild cherry, locust, ironwood, and other useful varieties, although the pine is the principal timber. " The Arizona Lumber and Timber Company own or control a considerable portion of the forest. They have a sawmill on the edge of the forest, about a half-mile from Flagstaff, with a capacity of thirty-five million feet a year, but are now only turning out at the rate of twelve million feet a year." — FUNSTON. Cave and Cliff Dwellings On the eastern side of the San Francisco Moun- tains, ten miles from Flagstaff, are the Cave Dwell- ings. They are dug out of the soft and porous THE GRAND CANYON 47 pumice stone or disintegrating basic lava of a volcanic region, and, as their name implies, are holes in the ground used by a wretched people as dwellings. Sometimes the larger and outer cham- bers communicate with inner and smaller chambers. There are many evidences of their having been in- habited, in the marks of fire in the caves, corn-cobs strewn about, and the masses of broken pottery scattered all over the mountain slopes. Surround- ing them, in many places, are walls built of lava, doubtless to protect themselves from the winds and their relentless enemies, the nomad Apaches, Nava- hos, Utes, and Comanches. Ten miles southeast from the Caves are the Cliff Dwellings of Walnut Canyon. This canyon is undoubtedly the work of corrasion and subse- quent erosion, as is the Grand Canyon, and forms a part of the canyon system which intersects this whole country for many miles. It is from six hundred to seven hundred feet deep where the Clif¥ Dwellers made their homes, and is a singularly picturesque and romantic site for such a purpose. The canyon is largely composed of cherty limestone, in shelves, on many of which the disintegrating forces of Nature have worn and carried away the floor and part of the solid walls, thus leaving immense hanging — or projecting — over-shelves, under which the Cliff Dwellers built their walls. The rear and upper walls afforded back and roof, and all that had to be done was to construct front and side walls, and the " houses " were complete. These walls are built of rude blocks of lime and sandstone cemented with adobe mud. As the shelves are at different 48 IN AND AROUND levels, the dwellings are found at various elevations, but invariably at a sufficient height to be safe from the rising of water in the canyon below, and from tlie attacks of enemies from above. The Bottomless Pit On the way out to Walnut Canyon a singular s:eolo"ical fault, not uncommon in this reo-ion, is passed, known to the people of the locality as the Bottomless Pit. The name is a western exaggera- tion, for it is possible to descend to the bottom of this great hole. Dante Descent, near Ashfork, is a similar fault, and one is passed on the south side of the railway between Flagstaff and Ashfork. There is another between Ashfork and Bass Camp at the Canyon, known to the Havasupais as Waimel. Sunset Crater and the Lava Fields About twenty miles northeast of Flagstaff, cir- clino^ from the town around Mt. Elden — the south- eastern offshoot of the San F^rancisco range — is Sunset Crater, so named from the fact that it al- ways presents the rich, peach-blow appearance of sunset. This is caused by the warm coloring of the oxydized rock of the summit, which, resting above the slopes covered with such intensely black volcanic cinders as to appear as if made of coarse gunpowder, makes a contrast so distinctly marked as to suggest a vivid sunset, even when seen on a cloudy day. A little to the northwest of Sunset Peak is O'Leary Peak, and between these is one THE GRAND CANYON 49 of the most desolate, harsh, jagged, cruel-looking, forbidding beds of lava I have ever seen. It is not of great extent, but what there is, is absolutely barren, awe-inspiring, and forsaken. Tossed, upheaved, split, seamed, torn, it has scarcely a living thing of green to relieve its awesome appearance of death. Nebu- chadnezzar's furnace, when cooled, was, even in miniature, a pleasing spectacle compared with this region of desolation and gloom. It is HelTs garden, for tlie uptossed lava masses look like huge black cauliflowers, fit food for demons. Here are caves within caves, made by the bubbling gases when this was a flowing river of blazing rock. Climb up the slope of O'Leary Peak and look over this dark, forbidding sea. Waves of blackness are there, just as they must hav^e tossed in the aw- fulness of that dread deluge of fire, but arrested in their mad leaps, and now cooled for centuries. Torrents of black horror, poured, deluge-like, over the once fertile land, and are now stopped, as by magic, and converted into cruel stone. And there to the southeast stands the great Sunset Peak, — itself, perhaps, the crater from wdiose richly tinted, peach- blossomy summit these waves of dire destruction came, — smiling and gay in midsummer glory all the year, regardless of the gruesome sight it has made below. When all else is dark and forbidding, it smiles and glows. When angry clouds lower and rage, it still smirks and gleams. It laughs at the desolation it has caused, and is glowingly happy in contemplation of the deaths petrified at its. feet. Type of devilish, wanton destructiveness ; fair to look upon, yet the source of misery, desolation, death. 4 50 IN AND AROUND With a companion 1 crossed this black field of horror. The lava soon cut our shoes almost to pieces. In the very heart of the field we came upon a level plain, covered with black ashes, of perhaps an acre or so in extent. My companion called my attention to a large hole he had discov- ered, and, on looking into it, we found we were standing on a thin shell, liable at any time to fall in and produce the rugged, jagged appearance elsewhere presented. I termed this Gunpowder Plateau. A little beyond is Beelzebub Creek, where the channel is made as if the melted limestone, of which it is formed, had been turned up on each side with a gigantic ploughshare. In places it is arched over with the twisted and overturned burnt rock, and has thus become a perfect " Devil's Avenue" — an under pathway to the Hades of the lost. The San Francisco Peaks A delightful experience while in Flagstaff is to take a survey of the country from the summit of the San Francisco Mountains. Mr. Al. Doyle has con- structed an easy trail to the summit, and the ride can be accomplished in a few hours. The United States Monument is on the highest peak, Mt. Humphreys. Far away before us to the north are the upper terrace and gray cliffs of the Grand Canyon, at its most elevated point. The Kaibab Plateau — the highest of all the Colorado River plateaus — stands out boldly above the sur- rounding country. The Kanab Plateau with the THE GRAND CANYON 51 Uinkaret Mountains, overtopped by Mt. Trumbull, are clearly outlined miles and miles away against the softened blue of the northwestern sky. Beyond them, but barely discernible, are the Virgen Moun- tains and the Pine Val Mountains. A little to our left, and seeming only a long footstep, is Mt. Ken- dricks, and a little farther on Mt. Sitgreaves, and still further the conical peak of Williams Mountain. Between the two first named mountains a shower is falling, whilst all around us is the most beautiful sunshine. Close by are a number of smaller hills, many having basins in the top, suggesting their vol- canic origin. Some of these basins contain beautiful lakes, — during the rainy season, — and there they lie, mirrors for the angels, and sweet reflectors of the many formed clouds above. We can see lakes in almost every direction, — over twenty being clearly visible from this point. Trees, also, are everywhere, — rich, heavy, thick, dense pines and fir balsams, and here and there streaks of silver, showing groves of quaking aspen or Cottonwood. The mountain is ribbed with snow all around, although it is the middle of July, — one bank here to my left being several hundred feet wide and over a mile long. Myriads of butterflies and other insects fly about in perpetual gayety, re- lieving these bare, rugged rocks of some of their forbidding aspect. Turning a little north of east we can clearly follow the outline of the canyon of the Little Colorado. Its nether wall is a striking fa9ade, and there are cliffs which tower up here and there, like the watch-towers of a gigantic castle. Beyond, 52 IN AND AROUND like a pale blue cloud closely anchored to the cliffs below, is the Navaho Mountain, nearly two hun- dred miles away. To the southeast the landscape is more open, with beautiful reliefs here and there of grassy slopes and tree-covered hills. Close at our feet are Sunset and O'Leary Peaks, whilst away off to the southeast is the wonderful Petrified Forest. The region to the south is one mass of verdure, — rugged slopes made entrancingly beautiful by a thick covering of pines, which seem black and purple under the influence of sunshine and clouds. Thirteen lakes of various forms and sizes give a peculiar charm and brilliancy to the scene. The rugged cliffs, spires, and pinnacles of Oak Creek Canyon shine out in the sunlight, and the circular panorama is one far more beautiful than the casual observer in Arizona could believe. THE GRAND CANYON 53 CHAPTER VI FROM THE SANTA FE RAILWAY TO THE CANYON BY STAGE WHILE most visitors to the canyon have jour- neyed on the stage from Flagstaff, my most enjoyable experiences have been from Aslifork, a small town at the junction of the main line and the Santa Fe, Prescott, and Phoenix Railway. Eight miles west is a peculiar geological fault well worth visiting, which I have named Dante Descent. It is about five hundred and fifty feet around, on the level ground, from which it gradually slopes for about thirty-five feet, when it makes a precipitous drop for nearly three hundred feet. As one approaches it on the level mesa where it is found, he has no idea of its existence, from any- thing visible. It is revealed in a moment in its weird awfulness ; for a dark, apparently bottomless hole, suddenly opening up before one, is apt to convey the impression implied in the words "weird " and "awful." The first fifty feet is of volcanic rock, then there is a small bed of red clay resting upon sandstone which extends to the bottom. This and all the similar holes found in the region were un- doubtedly formed by the dropping out of the bot- tom into some vast cave, which was made by the slow washing out of the limestone rock by water 54 IN AND AROUND chemically charged so as to rapidly decompose the limestone. Possibly one of the many subterranean rivers, of the existence of which there is plenty of evidence throughout Arizona, flows under Dante Descent. Through rolling hills, clothed with rich grama — • black and white — and other grasses, a profusion of hardy wild flowers and the smaller brush, the four- horse stao^e of Mr. W. W. Bass leaves Ashfork for the Canyon. In less than half a mile we are in the midst of a restful forest, not composed of lordly pines, but of cedars and junipers, whose gnarled, twisted, and contorted branches are made pictur- esque in their rich clothing of green. Many of the cedars present the appearance of being in blossom, decorated as they are with the great yellow parasitic bunches of mistletoe. The entire country is a rich pasture land. Everywhere is found the white grama grass, which grows in complete but irregular circles, leaving a little hollow in the centre, like a bird's nest. There is also the bunch, buffalo, mesquite, sand, and bear grasses, and even the beautiful blue grass. Besides the pinion and cedar there is the live oak, over whose acorns lively squirrels and gossiping jay-birds quarrel and chatter; the sage brush, grease wood, yucca, mes- quite, mescal, and many varieties of cactus. The road is fairly smooth and level, and a steady pace is kept up, which a slight run down hill scarcely interferes w^ith. Twelv^e miles out Indian tanks are reached, where the Havasupai Indians long years ago built a rude dam to catch rain-water, that they might not be waterless when out hunting THE GRAND CANYON 55 so far away from their lovely canyon home, of which the blue water — Hahavasu — gives its name to both canyon and people. To the left is Mount Picacho, and farther to the north, also on the left, Mount Floyd, an absolutely pure purple, almost black in its richness and in- ^ ^U^ 4^ i .*^*!5F /W. Copyright, IS'JH, by Otiz'er Lifpincott. The Flagstaff Stage in Sight of the San Francisco Mountains. tensity, — both with their memories of Lieutenant Beale, whose wagon road is crossed a little farther on, — while to the east and south are to be seen, now and again, as the hills open to permit the view, the more majestic piles of the San Francisco Moun- tains, Kendricks, Sitgreaves, and Williams. These mountains, at times, like masses of limpid purple velvet, are softly outlined against the cloud-flecked, 56 IN AND AROUND sunny sky, while beyond them the blue is shaded off into an amethystine violet by the cloud-hidden sun. To our right, in solitary stateliness, rises the "Red Butte," which the Havasupais call Hue-ga-da- wi-za. Williams Mountain they designate Hue-ga- woo-la, the mountain of the bear, and the San Franciscos, Hue-han-a-patch-a, the snow-clad moun- tains. From these three names it will be apparent that Hue signifies mountain or rock — to the Indian — and the remaining portion of the name gives some special description. For over twenty miles the road continues through Cedar Park, no more beautiful, gently rolling, tree- clad reoion existins; in Arizona or elsewhere, and then w^e enter the western section of that great Pintado Desierto, the boundaries of which no to- pographer has yet had the temerity to define. But at this time it is no " desert." The coloring is here, but after the summer rains it is a vast graz- ing ground, where a multiplicity of herds and flocks might find ample nourishment for long months. The uncertainty of the rains and the doubtful permanence of the fertility of these vast plateaus, however, render them hazardous locations for large bands of animals. But now they are charming in their green dress, and we laugh at the expression " desert " as applied to them. Many a time on the Painted Desert have I been deceived by a mirage in the glare of the midday sun, but seldom is it the good fortune of the trav- eller to see a moonlit mirage. One night, as 1 slept in the open near The Caves, I saw one and wrote as follows : About three miles away it appears. THE GRAND CANYON S>7 a city on a plain, between two ranges of hills which are as diverse as they can be. The one to the right is the exact counterpart of the richly clad slopes of MacGillicuddy Reeks in the Emerald Isle, whilst the others are the barren, sand-worn hills that fringe the Libyan Desert. The delusion *^>\?V:„. Looking for the Caves. is perfect. The city slowly forms itself, and domes, mosques, minarets, red-roofed houses, palaces with noble and imposing fa9ades appear, as if an oriental city — Cairo or Alexandria — were placed before us. Now the palaces change to buildings of a business character, and before them a long quay extends, be- fore which one can see the distinctive shipping of many nations. Waves caressed by silvery bands stretch to the riglit and left, whilst the two ranges of hills chano-e and seem as if made of living^ gold. 58 IN AND AROUND Another change, then haziness, and the mystic scene disappears. Ahnost midway between Ashfork and the Canyon we enter a sHght depression, where the waters of Cataract Creek flow in the season of rains. A turn in the road and Cataract Caves — the half- way station — is reached, where a commodious tent has been constructed over the " Caves," — called by the Havasupais Wai-niel, — caused by tlie drop- ping in of the surface to supply the never-satisfied Cataract Creek, which is here rasping out another and underground passage-way for its waters from Williams Mountain to the place of their emer- gence just above the Havasupai village. The Indians have a tradition that this stream, at one time, flowed entirely above ground from the moun- tains, down their canyon to the Colorado River, but that a long time ago " ground heap shake 'em, water he go down." Mr. Bass claims that here is a perfect illustration of the forces at actual work which account for the existence of the Grand Can- yon, the theory of whose creation as expounded by Major J. W. Powell and Captain C. A. Dutton, and briefly outlined in a later chapter, he rejects. He says : — " Hundreds of depressions, caves, and crevices arc found along this channel, indicating that the earth's crust has been shattered and broken. A subterranean stream of 2000 cubic inches of water is here rasping out another great canyon, while these rents are protected from the corrosive force of erosion by the soil and debris that cover them. The flood waters of the winter snow and summer rain have eaten out a channel through this basin THE GRAND CANYON 59 of the Cataract, and in man}' places uncovered the volcanic rents in the earth's crust, opening up channels through which thousands of tons of the surface deposits are an- nually carried down into this subterranean river to make new land, where the water has no longer the power to hold it. This ceaseless industry will continue until the lateral exposure to heat, frost, wind, and rain begins its work of destruction. Disintegration will then be rapid, and the walls of this gap in the earth, that now are only a few inches removed from each other, will recede farther and farther apart until they have reached the shore line of this hidden stream, thus forming a narrow defile of per- pendicular walls of immense depth." Passengers generally remain at The Caves over night, the easy ride for two clays being much pre- ferred to rushing through to the Canyon in one day, although with four relays of horses, the journey can easily be made in eight to nine hours. It is seldom that the second day's journey is made without seeing one or more bands of ante- lope. One morning, soon after we left The Caves, we saw, to the left, a herd of ten or twelve. The moment our attention was called to them, they began to run. They were not at all excited or alarmed, but, with easy, gentle motion moved from us, their short white tails distinctly contrasting with their whitey-brown bodies. Returning with a companion from the Canyon on horseback in September, 1895, ^^'^ saw four separate bands of antelope. In the first band were four, in the second thirteen, in the third sixteen, and in the fourth seventeen. They were all so tame and gentle that if one had been so minded, he could easily have shot one or more of each band. One band was in 6o IN AND AROUND the roadway about a quarter of a mile ahead of us and remained watching our approach with curiosity until we were within two or three hundred yards. On one occasion, 1898, we were driving in the coach from the head of the Bright Angel Trail along the rim of the Canyon to the Grand View Trail. The road is wooded nearly all the way. When nearly opposite the amphitheatre upon which Thor Hammer and Cleopatra Needle stand, a large doe ran across our roadway not fifty yards ahead of us, then continued parallel with the road twenty or thirty yards away, ran to our rear for perhaps a quarter of a mile, and then resumed browsing. We kept her in sight for a long distance. Many a time have I gone over this road in a heavy wagon in which were all our supplies for man and beast for a prolonged stay at the Canyon. We had to camp out and endure (or " enjoy," which- ever we felt like calling it) the hardships, or pleasures, of sleeping wherever a pool of water made camping possible. And on such trips how one learns things ! When I was a lad, a common, current expression was, " There 's nothing like leather." But to the Arizona pioneer and traveller it has become, " There 's nothino- like balinfj wire." A sinQ-le-tree breaks — tie it up with baling wire. A wagon pole snaps in two — make a splint and tie it on with baling wire. A tire comes off — slip it on and keep it in place with baling wire. Harness breaks — baling wire. Buttons come off — baling wire. Canteen-strap breaks — baling wire. Indeed, I am convinced that if some of the old-timers were left alone they w'ould replace each portion of wagon, harness, and their THE GRAND CANYON 6i own clothing with baHng wire, until, in the course of time, a new organization, constructed of nothing but baling wire, would come into existence. Then, too, the tenderfoot here learns something of that strange operation of " hobbling a horse." The faith of these Arizona drivers is marvellous. With a pasture fenced on the west by the Pacific, on the east by the Atlantic, on the south by the Isthmus of Panama, and on the north by the Arctic Circle, they will turn their horses loose, upon which their lives actually depend, — for, to be left to walk over some portions of these deserts would certainly mean a horrible death, — and calmly and content- edly go to sleep. The situation is just this : Horses must eat, but men must sleep. If the former are tied up without food, it will not be long before travel becomes impossible. To carry feed, except perhaps a little grain, is out of the question. The only thing to be done is to "hobble" the horses and "turn them loose." There are patent hobbles and primi- tive hobbles, white men's hobbles and Indian's hobbles. To hobble a horse is to tie his foreIeo:s together so that he cannot run swiftly, though he can hop with both forelegs raised at once, in a man- ner which makes him somewhat resemble a travel- ling kangaroo. Then in the early morning the horses must be trailed, unhobbled, and brought back to camp. Some men will be o;one half the morninor lookinfj for their stock. They are incapable of quick trail- ing. Others will have them in while you are still snoring, and you awake later without any knowl- edge of the early work that has been done on your 62 IN AND AROUND behalf. I have been out in compan}'^ with both kinds of " trailers," so know both experiences. From my first trip, when Mr. Bass brought in the horses soon after sunrise, to the present time, his skill in following "tracks" has aIwa3'S been a source of wonderment to me, for he is as expert in it as any- Indian it has ever been my good fortune to meet. On that first trip we were going to the Grand Canyon, and then to Havasupai village, with a special Indian commissioner. I had been told it seldom rained in Arizona, but that day how it did pour ! It came down in bucketfuls, and even the pockets of my linen duster were soon full of water. And as my horse loped on, I swashed in the water in every direction. But it was when he began to trot that the full misery of the situation was exposed. To be soaking wet, and to feel it as each bump of the saddle gave me a pressing and clinging reminder of the fact, was adding insult to injury. It was a situation for a Mark Tapley. Ahead drove Mr. Bass and the commissioner in the wagon, crouched over their knees and covered with a wildly waving um- brella; all conversation stopped. When I rode up and saw their countenances, I could believe them when they said they were as "miserable as sin." But over a rousing camp-fire, when night came, clear and beautiful, the discomforts were soon forgotten and pleasure resumed her sway. Soon after leaving The Caves the traveller's atten- tion is arrested by a striking view of a bold promon- tory to the north, which rises above all else in the landscape, looking as if it were thrust up for espe- cial observation. It is a Point Sublime, not the THE GRAND CANYON '3 Point Sublime of Captain Dutton, which is a few miles farther east, but apparently the highest point the northern wall of the Grand Canyon presents. It is directly opposite Bass Camp, at the head of the Mystic Spring Trail, whither our steeds are fast hastening us. I have named it Dutton Point in Copyright, ISO'J, by F . H. IMande. Button Point Forty Miles away. honor of the distinguished geologist and brilliant writer. We cross the Moki Trail, that solitary line ruled across the Painted Desert centuries ago by the pa- tient Pueblo Hopis as they passed and repassed to their trading with their friends of the " Down Below," the Kohoninos, as the Spaniards wrote the Kuhni-qui of the Zunis ; the Havasupai, as they call themselves. We recall the vivid description given by Lieutenant Frank Cashing of his trip from Zuni, via 64 IN AND AROUND Hopi and over this trail to these " younger brothers " of the tribe into which he had been adopted, and are thankful that the hardships he endured in his trip are not likely to be ours. When we strike the borders of the cedar and juniper forest on the northern end of our trip, we know we are not far away from the Canyon. Even our horses seem to find new life in that fact. A vast grassy field is entered, then the enclosed pasture, and after travelling: three miles farther the tents of Bass Camp gleam white before us, when, suddenly, without a moment's warning, the stage stops by the side and at the very brink of the Great Abyss. THE GRAND CANYON 65 CHAPTER VII THE GRAND CANYON RAILWAY AND EL TOVAR HOTEL IN the years 1 895-1 896 the Tusayan Development Company of New York became interested in a group of copper mines located at no great dis- tance from the head of the Bright Angrel Trail. The promoter of the proposition was " Bucky " O'Neill, a prominent Arizona citizen, since made world-famous by his tragic death, when charging with the Rough Riders at the assault on San Juan. The New York company expended considerable money in developing and opening up the mines, and also interested other people with them in the work. As the Bright Angel Trail and Indian Gardens were near to the mines, the capitalists soon became interested in the Grand Canyon from the scenic standpoint, and, foreseeing the never- ending attraction it would prove to transcontinental tourists when made easily accessible, they secured control of the trail, and made negotiations and petitions which eventuated in their securing from Congress a grant for a railway through the Grand Canyon Forest Reserve. This railway is now built. The mining company has already erected a large smelting plant at Williams, and it is from this point that the railway starts. Striking due north, it 5 66 IN AND AROUND passes over the masses of " malapais " until, when four miles out, it crosses one of the upper reaches of Havasu (Cataract) Creek. If the rains are just over, the whole country will be one mass of green and gorgeously beautiful wild flowers, with possibly here and there a healthful and interesting band of sheep. At other times the country may look rocky and barren, or be covered with a mantle of snow. After crossing Havasu, the railway enters the cedars and junipers, passes Red Lake, — a vol- canic sink-hole, which, at rare intervals, is filled with water, — and for ten or a dozen miles is in a series of charming parks where bands of deer and antelope are often seen. All the way along glimpses and fine full views are being presented of the majestic San Francisco, Ken- dricks, and Sitgreaves Mountains, while Williams Mountain, with its seven wooded and rounded peaks, appears to grow larger the farther away we travel. Twenty-nine miles out, near the station of Valle, is the big bridge, some fifty feet high and three hundred feet long, over a branch of the Spring Valley Wash; and here Red Butte becomes a prominent landmark to the right. This is known to the Havasupai Indians as Hue-ga-da-wi'-za, or the " Mountain of the Clenched Fist." It is upon this butte that a small fragment of the rich red of the Permian sandstone that once covered the whole Grand Canyon region is to be found ; and when this is brilliantly illuminated by the unrestrained Arizona sunlight, it eloquently explains why Red THE GRAND CANYON 67 Butte for so long has been regarded as a prominent landmark of this portion of the Painted Desert. For here the great plateau, stretching away to east and west, and once, undoubtedly, a portion of the vast Eocene Lake, is a part of that mysterious, unbounded, and alluring Painted Desert, the colors of which, seen under proper conditions, bewilder with their intensity while they attract by their rich- ness. Interesting stories might be told of Red Butte and its region. The Havasupais have a tradition that many years ago a large spring of water flowed from near its base, but that in a great convulsion of nature, which changed the current of the waters of Havasu (Cataract) Creek, the spring disappeared, and has never since been seen. The presence of a number of quaking aspens in the region, however, is reasonable indication that water is still there. I am also informed that it was recently discovered, in looking over some titles in the old registers at Tucson, that silver mining was extensively carried on near Red Butte by the Spaniards about the year 1650 and later. Crossing the Red Horse Wash, known to the Havasupais as Ha-i-ga-sa-jul'-ga, the line reaches Anita Junction. Here a spur three miles long connects the main line with the copper mines of the Anita, Cardenas, Nyack, and Five Friend com- panies. The grade of the spur has been so en- gineered that the loaded cars of ore from the mines are brought down by gravity. When discovered, the ore deposits of these mines were found to be oreat surface blankets, the mineral 68 IN AND AROUND mainly consisting of carbonates of copper of from io% to 20%. This ore was found in such large quantities as to justify extensive operations. Further developments incline the mining experts to the theory that these blanket deposits are out- flows from the interior of the earth made durino: some seismic disturbance, and that the main ore bodies will be found in dikes or chimneys through which the ejection took place. At present the miners are working upon an ore deposit which offers every indication of being one of these dikes. It has been excavated to a depth of over thirty feet, and the richness of the ore increases as the shaft descends. This supposed chimney is located on the " Hard Up" claim of the Anita group of mines. Relying upon this theory, a shaft 231 feet has already been sunk on the line of the Anita and Cardenas mines, from which it is the intention to tunnel out to the ore bodies which the experts are assured must exist. In May, 1900, I personally visited the mines, and saw the workings and the ore dumps. The former showed many hundreds of tons of high grade ore in sight, and the latter contained not less than fifteen hundred tons of average ore, ready for reduction. It is interesting to note that in Feb- ruary, 1899, a shipment of non-selected ore was made to El Paso for reduction from the Anita mines, and the result was 13% in copper. A later shipment of one hundred tons of selected ore from the same camp secured a return of 21%. Soon after leaving Anita Junction, the railway enters a most beautiful country of pine and juniper, THE GRAND CANYON 69 a stately prelude to the majesties and grandeurs of the Kohonino (Coconino) Forest. Here it seems as if one were suddenly transported to England, and were passing through a succession of landed estates, without, however, finding the accompanying man- sions. Aisles of stately trees, nature planted and grown, yet as perfectly in line as if set with mathe- matical precision, lead the eye into open glades where deer and antelope move to and fro, and one looks instinctively for the bold fa9ade of an his- toric dwellino- or the battlemented towers of some romantic castle. Now, bearing off in a westerly direction, the rail- way leaves the Kohonino Wash, and follows a pleas- ant little valley until within about two miles of Ha-ha-wai-i-tha-qual-ga, a natural well of clear, cold spring water, which is never dry, winter or summer. This well is reached up a well- wooded and pictur- esque "wash," and from tlience, four miles through the forest, the enchanted passenger is landed at the El Tovar Hotel. This hotel is located in latitude 35° 55' 30". From the hotel to a point over Indian Garden named station A, the horizontal distance is 8,588 feet, and to a rock in the Colorado River on the same line is 17,356 feet. The exact vertical descent from the hotel to Indian Garden is 3,108 feet, and from the garden to the Colorado River, 1,390, giving a total descent from hotel to river of 4,498 feet, — • practically, 5,000 feet. These are accurate measure- ments made by a skilled engineer. The entire length of the railway, including the spur to the mines, is seventy miles, and so easy is 70 IN AND AROUND the grade that nowhere does it exceed 3'^. The engineering work is without any distinctive fea- tures. The intelhgent visitor will not fail to remark, in riding toward the rim, that the Canyon itself is not the immediate watershed of its own banks. The country both north and south of the Canyon slopes back from the rim, so that the anomaly is presented of a river which does not drain the country con- tiguous to its own banks, except in an indirect way. The water ^o\ns from the rim many miles, and there empties, on the south, into either the Havasu (Cata- ract) Canyon or the Little Colorado, and these streams having rasped their way down, down, down, through the thousands of feet of solid strata, finally discharge the waters they have collected into the turbid stream of the Colorado Grande, which sullenly roars in the depths of the Grand Canyon. This fact, and many other indications found in the development of the mines, incline their pro- prietors to the seismic theory of the Canyon's formation rather than that of corrasion and slow uplift, as propounded by Powell and Dutton. It seems to them that the Canyon is located on the axis of a great uplift, that trends generally from the northeast to the southwest, and they claim that this slope of the country away from the Canyon, both north and south, helps to confirm their idea. Be this as it may, the fact is evident, and it is a source of regret that the government maps do not make it more plain to the tyro in map reading: for, several prospectors, trusting to the ordinary THE GRAND CANYON 71 reading of the maps, have gone out expecting water, only to be disappointed ahiiost to the point of death. El Tovar Hotel I doubt if the world can find a more wonderful natural location for a hotel than the Grand Canyon affords for El Tovar. It is built practically upon the very edge of the Canyon in the arc of a rude curve of an amphitheatre, the points of the walls of which are somewhat higher than the hotel. Within two minutes of stepping from the train one passes through the hotel, out upon its front porch, and the great abyss is stretched out at his feet. Had it not been for the Canyon and the perpetual lure of its attractions to the traveller from all parts of the world, El Tovar would never have been built. The Santa Fe Railway Company was compelled to build it in order to provide accommodations for the in- creasing number of travellers who demanded first- class accommodations while enjoying the sublime majesty and wonderfully diverse features of the Canyon. The building itself is admirably adapted to its environment. It is of the bungalow type of archi- tecture, and rugged enough in its exterior to not only be unobtrusive, but when seen from the distance, is found to sink into quiet harmony with the rocks and trees by which it is surrounded. Its base is of solid, native limestone-rock, well built up and continued in the massive outside chimneys, one of which stands at each end of the dining-room. 72 IN AND AROUND The Rendezvous or Nimrod s Cabin has already proven itself to be what its designers intended, a popular gathering place. Here, when the evenings are chilly, great pine knots burn cheerily in the huge, rocky fireplace, and the guests either assemble around it, listening to some interesting tale of adventure told by some world-wide traveller, or, perhaps, to the enjoyable, laughable, or adventurous experiences of some guest who has been down into the Canyon, out on the Plateau on the other side of the Canyon, or has just returned from a trip to the Havasupai, Hopi, Navaho, or other Indians. Bright Angel Camp To accommodate those desiring less expensive quarters. Bright Angel Camp — old Bright Angel Hotel remodelled — is operated on the European plan. The lodging and fare here are of a much simpler kind than at El Tovar, but clean, whole- some, and thoroughly comfortable. Livery Facilities at El Tovar El Tovar maintains one of the most completely equipped liveries of the western world. Here are carriages, wagons, buggies, tally hos, and vehicles of all descriptions for the use of the guests. The coaches are all painted in the original colors of the Ensign Pedro del Tovar, the lieutenant whom Coronado sent northward to continue his explora- tions when he himself was wounded in a conflict with the Zuni Indians. Scores of miles of first-class roads have been con- THE GRAND CANYON 73 structed on the Coconino Plateau, reaching some of the most scenic portions of the Canyon's rim, and over these roads the expert drivers of El Tovar daily take large numbers of guests, who thus enjoy at one and the same time the unique and unsur- passed scenic features of the Canyon and the Coconino Forest, with the health-giving advantages of the pure, stimulating, life-giving Arizona air and sunshine. For it should not be forgotten that the Coconino Plateau has an average elevation of con- siderably over six thousand feet. Its air-supply is the purest in the world, having been scrubbed free from all contamination by passage over the thou- sands of square miles of surrounding desert. There are no fogs, and very few clouds. There are no manufactories of any kind to pollute the air. Instead, it is pleasingly charged with the balsamic odors of pines, spruces, and junipers, and is thus rendered the most healthful and stimulating that the world can afford. The jaded city man hurrying across to California for a winter's rest finds himself in a new world of stimulating, soothing, invigorating restful- ness when he reaches this high Arizona plateau, and instead of remaining the mere day that he planned for, "just to get a look at the Canyon," he is wise if he decides — as so many thousands have done to the marvellous improvement of their health ^ — to remain for a week or a month before resuming his journey westward. 74 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER VIII FIRST IMPRESSIONS IN local parlance the upper edge of the precipice walls that hne the Canyon is called the " rim." We never speak of the "edge" of the Canyon, or the " banks " of the Colorado River. It is a popular idea that the Canyon is through a country of mountains. This is a mistake. In- stead, it cuts through a series of great plateaux, known on the north as the Kaibab, Powell, and Kanab Plateaux, and on the south as the Colorado Plateau. The singularity of this formation is such that one does not discover the existence of this vast waterway, as he journeys northward or south- ward, until he is on its very brink. Hence, the tremendous and startling surprise that awaits every visitor. The Canyon springs upon him with the leap of a panther, and, suggesting a deserted world, yawns at his feet before he is aware that he is within miles of it. It overwhelms him by its suddenness, and renders him speechless with its Sfrandeur and maonificence. No reading, no descriptions, no pictures, no warnings can prepare the mind for that one first stupendous, overwhelming impression. Here are the impressions of a few travellers: — Co/>v)-tg/it, IS'JS. by Oliver Lipfnicott. Ayek Peak, overlooking the Old Trail. THE GRAND CANYON j^ " Tired as we were, we could not wait. It was only to ascend the little steep, stony slope, — three hundred yards — and we should sec! Our party were straggling up the hill : two or three had reached the edge. I looked up. The duchess threw up her hands and screamed. We were not fifteen paces behind, but we saw nothing. We took the few steps, and the whole magnificence broke upon us. No one could be prepared for it. The scene is one to strike dumb with awe, or to unstring the nerves; one might stand in silent astonishment, another would burst into tears. " There are some experiences that cannot be repeated, — one's first view of Rome, one's first view of Jerusalem. But these emotions are produced by association, by the sudden standing face to face with the scenes most wrought into our whole life and education by tradition and reli- gion. This was without association, as it was without par- allel. It was a shock so novel that the mind, dazed, quite failed to comprehend it. All that we could grasp was a vast confusion of amphitheatres and strange architectural forms resplendent with color. The vastness of the view amazed us quite as niuch as its transcendent beauty. "We had expected a canyon, — two lines of perpendicular walls six thousand feet high, with the ribbon of a river at the bottom ; but the reader may dismiss all his notions of a canyon, indeed, of any sort of mountain or gorge scenery with which he is familiar. We had come into a new world. What we saw was not a canyon, or a chasm, or a gorge, but a vast area which is a break in the plateau. From where we stood it was twelve miles across to the opposite walls. We looked up and down for twenty to thirty miles. This great space is filled with gigantic archi- tectural constructions, with amphitheatres, gorges, preci- pices, walls of masonry, fortresses terraced up to the level of the eye, temples, mountain size, all brilliant with hori- zontal lines of color, — streaks of solid hues a few feet in width, streaks a thousand feet in width, — yellows, mingled 76 IN AND AROUND white and gray, orange, dull red, brown, blue, carmine, green, all blending in the sunlight into one transcendent suffusion of splendor. Afar off we saw the river in two places, a mere thread, as motionless and smooth as a strip of mirror, only we knew it was a turbid, boiling torrent, six thousand feet below us. Directly opposite the over- hanging ledge on which we stood was a mountain, the sloping base of which was ashy gray and bluish; it rose in a series of terraces to a thousand-feet wall of dark red sandstone, receding upward, with ranges of columns and many fantastic sculptures, to a finial row of gigantic opera-glasses six thousand feet above the river. The great San Francisco Mountain, with its snowy crater, which we had passed on the way, might have been set down in the place of this one, and it would have been only one in a multitude of such forms that met the eye whichever way we looked. Indeed, all the vast moun- tains in this region might be hidden in this canyon. " Wandering a little away from the group and out of sight, and turning suddenly to the scene from another point of view, I experienced for a moment an indescrib- able terror of nature, a confusion of mind, a fear to be alone in such a presence. With all this grotesqueness and majesty of form and radiance of color, creation seemed in a whirl. With our education in scenery of a totally differ- ent kind, I suppose it would need long acquaintance with this to familiarize one with it to the extent of perfect mental comprehension."— Charles Dudley Warner. " Suddenly the awful majesty of the Grand Canyon is revealed to his startled vision. There before him lies the mighty red rift in the earth, the most stupendous gorge within the knowledge of man. The mind is spellbound by the spectacle ; the voice is silent ; the heart is sub- dued ; the soul turns in profound reverence to the Al- mighty, whose handiwork is here seen on a colossal scale. No matter how many descriptions of the Grand Canyon may have been previously read by him who sees it for THE GRAND CANYON 'j'j the first time, its profound depths, its colossal heights, its myriad and matchless colors, its brilliant hues, its striking lights and shades, its mighty sinuosities, and its altogether grand ensemble will fill the beholder with a mingled sense of awe, wonder, admiration, and reverence. " I can well believe that the river took its name, Colo- rado (red) from the prevailing hue of its walls, rather than from the color of the water, which is not red.^ " Here is a mighty opening in the earth, whose capacity in cubic feet must be measured by some mathematician not yet born upon the earth, for the man does not live who can make the figures. Imagine, if you can, all the armies of all the nations of the earth, marching in solid columns from opposite sides of this appalling gorge to meet each other in battle array, unconscious of the ex- istence of this spot until too late to save themselves from being swallowed up in its abysmal depths; imagine all these vast bodies of men, with all the guns, all the horses, — infantry, cavalry, artillery, sappers, miners, and pon- toniers, — all the transportation trains, and all the impedi- menta of an army, together with all the buildings of all the cities of the world, — imagine all this vast aggrega- tion of men and material thrown into this immeasurable abyss, and the Grand Canyon would still remain unfilled for its entire length, and the Colorado River would con- tinue to flow unintercepted on its reckless course to the sea. In its measureless, cruel, insatiable maw all would be swallowed up." — Harrison Gray Otis. " The first impression is awful (in the true sense of the word). The party seemed to be standing in mid-air, while below, the dark depths were lost in blackness and mystery. They were within a few feet of what seemed to be a great bottomless pit. In the distance rocky peaks could be seen rising out of the vast nowhere. Several of the party 1 It is not a brilliant red, but it certainly is generally of a reddish tinge, owing to its being surcharged with so large a quantity of oxy- dized sandstone mud. — Note by the Author. 78 IN AND AROUND were convinced that the wind shook the overhanging rock on which they stood, and consequently all of them beat a hasty retreat. " The next morning a very different scene met the eyes of the early risers. Instead of blackness there were beauty and color of which they had hardly dreamed. The Canyon, at all times majestic and dreamy, spread forth so many Copyright by George Wharton Jatiies- Thic Three Castles, overlooking the Old Trail. hues of purple, red, and yellow softly blended together, that a new feeling of awe swept over the gazers, and they stood speechless. It would almost seem that Nature had accidentally dropped an armful of rainbows, and being so well pleased with the effect, had left them there, to charm our mortal eyes." — PAULINE CliRRAN. To see women burst into tears and in a tremble of ecstatic fear is a common sight. And to men and women alike impressions of -that first glimpse often follow them into the realms of sleep. One THE GRAND CANYON 79 lady confessed that " it haunted her in her dreams, and it was only by a fortunate awakening that she escaped going over a twenty-five hundred foot precipice during the night — in her dream." Another visitor wrote : — " There was nothing in the topography of the country, or the general surroundings, to indicate that we were within miles of Nature's greatest of wonders, until all of a sudden the low-browed forest of cedars vanished from our sight; the stage came suddenly to a halt within six or eight feet of a yawning depth two thousand or more feet to its bot- tom, and such a panorama as was presented to our view, words cannot describe. Fatigue and gloom were forgot- ten ; the fury of the storm and the merciless beating of the rain were unheeded, and there we sat and gazed awe- stricken, speechless, at the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. What emotions fill the soul ; what thoughts crowd the mind, as the eye conveys its first impress of this most marvellous of all wonders to the brain ! One's powers of articulation are paralyzed. Speech would be useless and language a mockery to attempt to describe one's emotions. They may, and even in some stout hearts often do, find vent in tears, but after the first ejaculation of surprised delight and admiration, seldom, or never, in words." Far more instantaneously than the fairy transfor- mation scenes in a pantomime emerge from the stage darkness the great view is unrolled. In this regard the approach to the Canyon by Bass Camp is im- measurably superior to any other. It is dramatic, awe-inspiring, overpowering. There is no waiting, no walking from hotel to rim. Instantly — more like magic than reality — the scene, which is magi- cal, mystical, ideal, and yet supremely natural, is in full view. 8o IN AND AROUND CHAPTER IX WHAT DOES ONE SEE? BUT what is it the spectator really sees that produces such impressions as those recorded above ? An easy question to ask, but far from easy to an- swer. There are so many factors to the sum of emotions, so many diverse powers working upon the more diverse minds of the diverse seers. Let some of them speak for themselves. " No poet's tale of joy or sorrow, love or death, casts its witchery over the picture; these silent mountain peaks and deep, impenetrable canyons are associated with no heroic action, no sublime despair. The Canyon stands out before you in its simple majesty; its wonderful beauty, vast dimensions, and untold ancientness appealing only to your aesthetic sense. All the colors of the rainbow combine to make a panoramic picture, fifty miles long, of vast forms, in which all known styles of human architecture are blended in profuse and chaotic magnificence, — Ionic, Corinthian, and Doric pillars, a wilderness of pyramids, towers, and temples, pinnacles, spires, domes, and Egyp- tian obelisks — a chaos of rock in all conceivable shapes. " Its chaotic immensity utterly bewilders the senses, and fills the soul to overflowing with awe and admiration for the marvellous achievements of the God of nature. Its matchless sublimity, divine grandeur, infinite beauty, are far beyond the comprehension of the finite mind. Man's o :ih z; o H H Q a < o > THE GRAND CANYON 8i capacities are too limited to fully grasp and appreciate what is here unveiled. The man of letters is appalled as he gazes down into its depths. The artist relapses into despair as he views the numberless cliffs, pinnacles, spires, domes, obelisks, pagodas, and measureless amphitheatres, with all their wealth of coloring, the secret of whose blcnd- DuTTON Point and Masonic Temple from the Grand Scenic Divide. ing is known only to the Creator. The geologist is amazed and delighted as he contemplates his surroundings, and he sees how the Stone Book of Nature has been opened for his delectation. " Never before has he been permitted to gaze on so much of the physical geology of the earth at one glance. Nowhere else can he find such an elaborate and exhaust- ive treatise on dynamics as in the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. More than six thousand feet of sedimentary 6 82 IN AND AROUND formations are plainly visible at a single glance, represent- ing periods of geological time that utterly defy mathemat- ical calculation or human conception." — J. C. Martin. "An inferno, swathed in soft celestial fires; a whole chaotic under-world, just emptied of primeval floods and waiting for a new creative word; a boding, terrible thing, unflinchingly real, yet spectral as a dream, eluding all sense of perspective or dimension, outstretching the faculty of measurement, overlapping the confines of definite ap- prehension. The beholder is at first unimpressed by any detail ; he is overwhelmed by the ensemble of a stupendous panorama, a thousand square miles in extent, that lies wholly beneath the eye, as if he stood upon a mountain peak instead of the level brink of a fearful chasm in the plateau whose opposite shore is thirteen miles away. A labyrinth of huge architectural forms, endlessly varied in design, fretted with ornamental devices, festooned with lace-like webs formed of talus from the upper cliffs, and painted with every color known to the palette in pure transparent tones of marvellous delicacy. Never was a picture more harmonious, never flower more exquisitely beautiful. It flashes instant communication of all that architecture, and painting, and music for a thousand years have gropingly striven to express. It is the soul of Michael Angelo and of Beethoven. " That river channel, the profoundest depth, and actually more than six thousand feet below the point of view, is in seeming a rather insignificant trench, attracting the eye more by reason of its sombre tone and mysterious sugges- tion than by any appreciable characteristic of a chasm. It is nearly five miles distant in a straight line, and its upper- most rims are three thousand feet beneath the observer, whose measuring capacity is entirclx' inadequate to the demand made by such magnitudes. (3ne cannot believe the distance to be more than a mile as the crow flies, before descending the wall or attempting some other form THE GRAND CANYON 8 of actual measurement. Mere brain knowledge counts for little against the illusion under which the organ of vision is here doomed to labor. That red cliff upon your right, darkening from white to gray, yellow and brown as your glance descends, is taller than the Washington Monument. The Auditorium in Chicasfo would not cover one-half its Copyright, I KoHONiNO Forest and Point from near Comanche Point. perpendicular span. Yet it does not greatly impress you. You idly toss a pebble toward it, and are surprised to note how far the missile falls short. Subsequently you learn that the cliff is a good half-mile distant. If you care for an abiding sense of its true proportions, go over to the trail that begins beside its summit, and clamber down to its base and back. You will return some hours later, and with a decided respect for a small Grand Canyon cliff Relatively it is insignificant ; in that sense your first esti- mate was correct. Were Vulcan to cast it bodily into the chasm directly beneath your feet, it would pass for a 84 IN AND AROUND boulder, if indeed it were discoverable to the unaided eye. Vet the immediate chasm itself is only the first step of a long terrace that leads down to the innermost gorge and the river. Roll a heavy stone to the rim and let it go. It falls sheer the height of a church or an Eiffel Tower, ac- cording to your position, and explodes like a bomb on a projecting ledge. If, haply, any considerable fragments remain, they bound onward like elastic balls, leaping in wild parabola from point to point, snapping trees like straws, bursting, crashing, thundering down until they make a last plunge over the brink of a void, and then there comes languidly up the cliff sides a faint, distant roar, and your boulder that had withstood the buffets of centuries, lies scattered as wide as Wycliffe's ashes, although the final fragment has lodged only a little way, so to speak, below the rim." — C. A. HiGGixS. " Here are great mansions, built high and secure upon rock-walled spaces ; more temples of the Greek, the Roman, the Egyptian; more modern churches; more villages; more turret-crowned castles ; gigantic esplanades upon which might be manceuvred the armies of the world's most powerful nations; beetling cliffs that tower up to the blue horizon and bathe their feet in the murky river; great dumps of disintegrated rock like waste from mammoth mines ; piles of material stacked up ready to build a hun- dred Londons ; great palisades that in comparison make the palisades of the Hudson as but a baby's finger mark on the wall. All these one sees and notes as the shadows lengthen from the mountain which sits enwalled in the canyon below him." — UNKNOWN. "The Grand Canyon of the Colorado is a great innova- tion in modern ideas of scenery, and in our conceptions of the grandeur, beauty, and power of nature. As with all great innovations, it is not to be comprehended in a day or a week, nor even in a month. It must be dwelt upon and studied, and the stud}' must comprise the slow acquisition THE GRAND CANYON 85 of the meaning and spirit of that marvellous scenery which characterizes the Plateau country, and of which the great chasm is the superlative manifestation. The study and slow mastery of the influences of that class of scenery and its full appreciation is a special culture, requiring time, patience, and long familiarity for its consummation. The lover of nature, whose perceptions have been trained in the Alps, in Ital\', Germany, or New England, in the Appalachians or Cordilleras, in Scotland or Colorado, would enter this strange region with a shock, and dwell there for a time with a sense of oppression, and perhaps with horror. Whatsoever things he had learned to regard as beautiful and noble he would seldom or never see, and whatsoever he might see would appear to him as any- thing but beautiful and noble. Whatsoever might be bold and striking would at first seem only grotesque. The colors would be the very ones he had learned to shun as tawdry and bizarre. The tones and shades, modest and tender, subdued yet rich, in which his fancy had always taken special delight, would be the ones which are con- spicuously absent. But time would bring a gradual change. Some day he would suddenly become conscious that out- lines which at first seemed harsh and trivial have grace and meaning ; that forms which seemed grotesque are full of dignity ; that magnitudes which had added enormity to coarseness have become replete with strength and even majesty; that colors which had been esteemed unrefined, immodest, and glaring, are as expressive, tender, changeful, and capacious of effects as any others. Great innovations, whether in art or literature, in science or in nature, seldom take the world by storm. They must be understood before they can be estimated, and must be cultivated before they can be understood. " It is so with the Grand Canyon. The observer who visits its commanding points with the expectation of ex- periencing forthwith a rapturous exaltation, an ecstasy arising from the realization of a degree of grandeur and 86 IN AND AROUND sublimity never felt before, is doomed to disappointment. Supposing him to be but little familiar with plateau scenery, he will be simply bewildered. Must he therefore pronounce it a failure, an overpraised thing? Must he entertain a just resentment towards those who may have raised his expectations too high? The answer is, that sub- jects which disclose their full power, meaning, and beauty as soon as they are presented to the mind have very little of those qualities to disclose. Moreover a visitor to the chasm or to any other famous scene must necessarily come there (for so is the human mind constituted) with a picture of it created by his own imagination. He reaches the spot, the conjured picture vanishes in an instant, and the place of it must be filled anew. Surely no imagination can con- struct out of its own material any picture having the remotest resemblance to the Grand Canyon. In truth, the first step in attempting a description is to beg the reader to dismiss from his mind, so far as practicable, any precon- ceived notion of it." — C. A. DUTTON. Q < K u , < ^^ Oh uj P-. ci < < a" u til = W 1-1 s > . O Id c-1 S X P C/2 S o O Dh CSS fe O X H <; tjn > < (d) Hopi Point The chief points of observation on the rim near the Bright Angel Hotel are, to the east, O'Neill and Cremation Points, and to the west, Maricopa, Hopi, and Cyclorama Points. All these are well worth a visit. The eastern views are practically the same as those already described, but the general outlook from Hopi Point requires more detailed description. Standing on Hopi Point, one naturally looks first of all for the river. It is clearly discernible in five places. Looking eastward, short stretches both east and west of Pluto Pyramid are exposed. To the west of Mahomet Temple is a small peep- 90 IN AND AROUND ing eye of river, which seems as if it could be covered with one's handkerchief. This is " the Eye of the Colorado." Another small stretch is seen at the end of Cyclorama Point, and then, beyond the end of Cope Plateau a view is obtained of at least three miles of the muddy, turbulent waters of this maddest of all mad rivers. Now pick out all the buttes and temples de- scribed in the chapter on the Bright Angel Trail, and the points east and west that force themselves upon the attention. Eastward are Pima, O'Neill, Yaki, Comanche, and far away Navaho. Across the river are Vishnu Temple and Newberry Ter- race. Standing between these great structures and ourselves are the buttes that make up the interest- ing Angel Gate, which I so named on account of the following legend. In an earlier chapter reference has been made to the mythology of one of the Paiuti tribes, which accounts for the creation of the great gorge. Some day the gods — Those Above — will return to the earth, and " Angel Gate " is to be their place of descent from the " shadow world above " to the "world of the here" below. This "gate" may be seen from several of the trails and outlook points on the rim, and the following is the story the Indians tell about it. While their ancestors settled in these regions under the direct guidance of " Those Above," they ever believed and taught their descendants that some day, some time, the gods would return to the earth and lead them into a far more beautiful, fertile, and better watered land, where seeds, fruits, flowers, vegetables, roots, THE GRAND CANYON 91 trees, and game of every kind would abound, and where the Indians would find an earthly home, a fit foretaste of their spirit home. But the gods told no one exactly when this visit to the earth was to be made, so it has been the duty of cer- tain Shamans, or medicine men, on given days of the year to watch for their coming. And it is through this gateway they will come. So the Indians call it " The Entrance or Gateway of the People of the Shadows," and the priests sit where they can watch " Angel Gate " from the rising to the setting of the sun, that they may be ready to warn their people when Those Above come to lead them from their present homes of poverty, toil, and ceaseless struggle to their new and blessed homes of plenty, comfort, and rest. Just beyond Yaki Point, where the Battleship Oregon stands, carved in imperishable stone, in the heart of the Canyon, is a long terrace of the red sandstone with a sharp, detached butte at the north end. This is Gilbert Terrace, so named after the accomplished geologist who, when with the Wheeler Survey, made the ascent of the Colorado in its very jaws up as far as Diamond Creek. The record of this trip is practically unknown, but it is as fascinat- ing a chapter as any in American exploring annals. The Battleship Iowa is also clearly seen from here, and, below it is a small red sandstone plateau named Marsh Plateau, in honor of the great paleon- tologist ; and as a similar plateau is found at the extremity of Cyclorama Point, it has been nanied Cope Plateau, after his great rival in the paleonto- logical field. 92 IN AND AROUND If the atmosphere is in a suitable condition, Manu Temple is clearly defined against the wall of the Kaibab Plateau, here known as the Haunted Mesa, where Phantom Creek has its rise. To the north and west of Shiva Temple is a massive square rock-pile which I have named Holmes Tower, after that most genial and accom- plished scientist in so many branches, Mr. W. H. Holmes. Geology not only owes him much for his charming drawings, which embellish Captain Button's canyon report, but archaeology and eth- nology are his great debtors, as a cursory survey of the reports of the Bureau of Ethnology will reveal. And it seemed most appropriate that one of the great canyon monuments, which stood almost under his eyes as he sat on Point Sublime making his inimitable drawings, should receive his name. West of Confucius Temple is another great butte wdiich is named Becker Butte, and between this and Holmes Tower, at the western extension of Shiva Temple, is Russell Butte, so named after the geologist who traced the beaches of the pre- historic Lake Lahontan. Beyond Russell Butte, and almost due west of Becker, is a square red tower which is named Gannett Tower, after the man whose topographical work has made world- famed the maps of the United States Geological Survey. Away off in the direction of Havasupai Point (which seems to reach almost across the river to Dutton Point), in the heart of the Canyon, north of Geikie Monument, is a small square structure in the lower part of the red wall limestone, which is THE GRAND CANYON 93 so like the pictures shown of the prehistoric tern pies of Yucatan that it is named Yucatan Temple. {c) Surprise Outlook — Bass Camp At Bass Camp there are three especial views afforded, which give the intelligent visitor a clearer comprehension of the Canyon in all its aspects than can be obtained, according to my judgment, in any other way. These three are the "Surprise Out- look," the " Eastern View " of the Canyon from Havasupai Point, and the " Western View " from Wallapai Point. The first view encountered by the visitor to Bass Camp is that which is presented as the stage, with- out warning, halts immediately on the edge of the Canyon, close to the head of Mystic Spring Trail, — hence its name, " Surprise Outlook." Here, after the first impression — which is always of the Can- yon's vastness — has somewhat subsided, the eye instinctively seeks the important point on the op- posite side, which has already been referred to as Dutton Point. This is the " Point Sublime " of our stage ride ; the great promontory that rises over half a thousand feet above every other canyon point within our ken, as, forty miles away, we ap- proach the great gorge. It is the extreme eastern end of Powell Plateau. Almost immediately opposite Bass Camp, slightly to the left, and directly in the heart of the Canyon, is Mount Observation, a solitary, lone, rocky giant of cross-bedded sandstone, topped with a small resi- due of cherty limestone. From where we stand at 94 IN AND AROUND night we can look out and see the moon shed its silver brilliancy over the massive white walls, which gained the mountain its name from the Indians, — Hue-tha-wa-li, — White Mountain. It is one of the most impressive specimens of the result of the Eastern End of Mount (Juskkx aiio.n. erosive and disintegrating processes of nature to be seen in this region. Its talus has more slope than the generality of the cliffs, and this makes the approach to it fairly easy. It seems as if you might throw a stone to it from where we stand on the rim of the Canyon, and it is one of the first lessons in distance that many a tourist will eventually take, to find out how far away it really is. The next features that attract our attention are THE GRAND CANYON 95 the three central, interior plateaux, which, two thousand feet below the rim, thrust their noses far out from the south wall until they seem to be im- mediately over the Inner Gorge, where the Colorado River flows in sullen majesty through the granite. The plateau which connects the south wall with these interior plateaux is named Le Conte Plateau. These are all in the red sandstone. The upper stratum — the deep chocolate — has entirely disap- peared except at each end of Hue-tha-wa-li. The plateau to the west, which is partially hidden by Hue-tha-wa-li, is the Mystic Spring Plateau, so named from a small medicinal spring long known to the Havasupai Indians and used by them. It oozes apparently through the red sandstone into a rocky basin on the edge of the western precipice. The central plateau, and, from where we stand, the most striking one, is named after Hue-tha-wa-li (Mount Observation), Hue-tha-wa-li or Observation Plateau, as this mountain stands close upon its point of junction with Le Conte Plateau. At its end is an eroded mass of red sandstone, clearly defined and distinct, to which the name has been Sfiven of Murchison Butte. Still nearer the end, and belonging to the red limestone or marble wall, is a pagoda, modest in size and appearance, from here, but which would make miniature the largest creations of the architects of Hindoostan. It is called The Temple of Om. The easternmost of the three plateaux has been most appropriately named by Mr. Bass the Grand Scenic Divide, for here, geologically as well as scenically, the character of the Canyon undergoes 96 IN AND AROUND material change. At its end is a small eroded needle of red sandstone, which, however, to those who have climbed to its base, is an imposing obelisk, larger and more massive than the Washing- ton Monument. This is Dick Pillar, so named in honor of the in- defatigable Rob- ert Dick of Thurso, Scotland, whose labors in the old red sand- stone added so much to the oeo- logical knowledge of his and our times. These plateaux vary in width from aquarter of a mile to over a mile wide ; they are dotted with what seem, from here, to be patches of grass, but which are juniper and pinion trees from ten to forty feet in height. Each plateau broadens out towards its base by a series of steps, clearly marking the strati- fication of the red sandstone down to the so-called red wall limestone, which is a sheer wall from seven hundred to one thousand feet hieh. To form a good idea of the arrangement of these radiating plateaux, imagine Le Conte Plateau to be ^^. Dick Pillar at the End of Grand Scenic Divide. THE GRAND CANYON 97 the wrist of a giant hand with but three fingers. The Grand Scenic Divide is the easternmost finger, Trail Canyon (down which the Mystic Spring Trail continues to the river) is the space between the first and middle fi nosers, Hue-tha-wa-li or Observation Plateau the middle finger, and Mystic Spring Plateau the finger to the west, while Copper Canyon divides these two westernmost fingers. On the edge of Le Conte Plateau, like a great wart between the knuckles of these fingers, is Mount Observa- tion, Hue-tha-wa-li. Hue-tha-wa-li is a mountain between five thou- sand and six thousand feet high, — almost as high as Mount Lowe, above Pasadena, California, or Mount Washington in New England, — having its base washed by the Colorado River, and yet it is merely a feature in the vast scene between the rocky banks of that river. It is oval in shape, and when first seen by dim moonlight gives color to the imagination, which sees in it a wrecked vessel, dis- masted and storm-beaten, cast high upon these in- hospitable rocks, and there petrified and doomed to remain forever. By this time the great mural face stretching west- ward from Dutton Point has successfully enchained the attention. Its dominant color is red, though it is crowned with the deep green of tall pines, many of which have dropped over the edge and planted themselves in the talus of the upper gray limestones and sandstones, especially towards the point. As we are in the curve of a receding amphi- theatre, the wall across is fully ten or twelve miles away, while farther walls to the right are fifteen to 7 98 IN AND AROUND seventeen miles. Try to realize a wall nearly a mile high and twelve miles distant, angled and recessed, the line of its summit almost even on the horizon, though curving towards us to the left, but whose mural front zigzags and curves, protrudes and retreats, until it is obscured by the irregularities of an obtrusive point belonging to this side of the Canyon. To the left of Dutton Point a "hump" in the surface of the wall is seen, and this we call Powell Arch. Immediately below Dutton Point, to the left, is a great square recess, formed by the red marble wall which faces us, an angular extension of the lower wall of the point, and an eastern wall, which shoots out at right angles, completing a striking square temple, closed on three sides and opened towards the southwest. Its being " on the square " suggested the name " the Masonic Temple." Another larger but somewhat similar three-sided temple, in the red marble, and at the same elevation, at the eastern extremity of Dutton Point, with elaborate extended side walls, was called the " Temple of the Rising Sun," for it receives the first rays of the August sun as they dart over the eastern walls of the Canyon. It is easy for the imagination to picture the souls of devout Parsees standing here, as at Bombay and elsewhere, greeting the rising of the morning luminary with all the adoration worthy so powerful and benignant a deity. Following the wall of Powell Plateau westward, it terminates, or seems to do so, in two points, — a sharp one to the extreme west, and a more blunt one nearer this way. The sharp point is called Ives Point, and the eastern one Beale Point. THE GRAND CANYON 99 A little to the west of Masonic Temple, also, will be observed a somewhat straggling offshoot from the upper red wall terminating in a butte. This is Clarence Wall and King Butte, so named to con- nect them with the name and labors of Clarence Kin or. The farther walls to the right of Dutton Point, and which extend as far as we can see to the east- ward, are not so striking in the facial characteristics of the upper thousand feet as they are lower down. There has been a more decided invasion here of verdure from the densely clothed Kaibab Plateau on the north, and the trees have robbed the walls of that purely rocky character which elsewhere they possess almost exclusively. The change is a delight- ful one, for the most avaricious rock-lover cannot complain of any lack of his chosen material. This part of the wall is less regular than the wall of Powell Plateau. It is deeply recessed by alcoves and amphitheatres, in the front of which are detached masses or buttes, square towers, and meandering walls that give additional character, dignity, and impressiveness to the scene. The most imposing of these detached towers is a square ponderous mass, rising from the greenish gray terraces of the sand- stone, first, in a leap upwards of nearly one thousand feet of red wall limestone or marble, then in a series of red sandstone terraces, and finally, in an even though steep slope of deepest crimson, fringed with green, to the summit, upon which is placed what seems to be a short but perfectly circular memorial shaft. Its upper portion is made of the gray and the lower of the rich crimson sandstone. Many lOO IN AND AROUND years ago tlie first white lady to descend the Canyon at this point named this " Bass Tomb," and 1 see no reason to reject the name, for in sight of it Mr, Bass's most arduous labors have been spent, and here it is appropriate he should have his immortal memorial. There is a private chapel attached to In Trail Canyon, looking across to Bass Tomb and Dox Castle. the marble base of the tomb, caused by walls of marble partially enclosing it. The open space faces us. This is " Memorial Chapel." Immediately to the right of the right wall of Memorial Chapel, and about midway between Bass Tomb and the end of Grand Scenic Divide, is a massive structure of rich dark red and brownish rock, dwarfed materially by Bass Tomb, which bears the name Dox Castle, in honor of Miss Viro;inia THE GRAND CANYON loi Dox, the pioneer lady visitor to the interior of the Canyon at this point. Slightly to the rear and right of Bass Tomb is another pyramidal structure, less in size, and with- out the crowning column of that majestic pile. At times it is impossible to distinguish it as a structure distinct and separate from the main wall, but, dur- ing a fog, or when the clouds act as reflectors of the sunshine behind it, and yet clothe it in shade, its personality and individuality are clearly discernible. I have named it Shaler Pyramid. Its summit is oval. Immediately between us and Bass Tomb are the Tilts, the upthrust of the archaean rocks having tilted the strata backwards towards the north wall. They are of a dark iron gray shade, varying towards reddish black, and add a more gloomy aspect to the lowest deeps. To the left and slightly above the Tilts are the Crimson Ridges and the Gray Ridges, both, as their respective names imply, being ridges of color showing out clearly and distinctly above the archaean rocks. At the foot of these ridges a line like a small black gash may be seen. This is the Canyon of the Shinumo, down which flows a goodly stream of water, and which is deemed worthy a later chapter in this volume. One other striking feature presents itself on the opposite wall, and that is a winding, twisting canyon, its outer walls set in the air, its inner walls enclosing — what, I know not. But so tortuous a canyon immediately recalls the Constellation of Draco, the Dragon, so we name it the Canyon of the I02 IN AND AROUND Dragon. On tlie nearer of the two walls of this canyon, at the far-away eastern end, is a butte, which we name Dragon Castle. Immediately to our right and east of the Grand Scenic Divide is Fossil Mountain, a great peak of the cherty limestone, belonorinij to the south wall, in which large numbers of fossils have been found. This is glo- riously covered with f a i r - s i z e d bushy junipers and pinions, and the deep green of the trees and the gray of the stone add additional charm to the striking reds lower down. The curious visitor, who hovers long, will see many other fea- tures than those here described. There has been no attempt at elaborateness or completeness of detail. Merely enough is presented to enable the visitor to recognize the salient objects. No careful observer, however, can fail to notice that here nature has not followed her usual curving lines of beauty. The striking features of this view are not curves and circles, but squares and angles. The Masonic Temple, Memorial Temple, Temple of the Rising Sun, Bass Tomb, Shaler Pyramid, are all more or less angular Copyright, IS'J'J, by F. H. Maude. Fossil Mouxtaix. THE GRAND CANYON 103 This portion of the Canyon being almost due east and west, presents also shifting lights and shades, peculiar search-light effects, morning and evening, and glories of coloring that are not everywhere observable. {d) Eastern Outlook from Havasupai Point This, to my mind, of all the Canyon views from the south rim, is the most comprehensive and sublime. After carefully going over the rim again from Mystic Spring Trail to Hance Camp, I am con- vinced that Havasupai Point is the Sentinel Point referred to in " Harper's Magazine " as follows: — " It is not easy, where every outlook is sublime, to select a single point upon the canyon's brink of which you can say, this is, after all, the best. Altogether, it has seemed to me that of all the places which I have visited on either side of the river the one which is most impressive is a long high spur, forest-clad at the base and bare at the end, on the south side, about forty miles below Hance Camp. This looms far out over the deeps between two mighty gulfs, and commands a stretch of many miles of the broad- est and profoundest sections of the Grand Canyon." — T. Mitchell Prudden. Recent correspondence with Dr. Prudden con- firms this location as Havasupai Point. It is the point long ago chosen by Mr. Bass, and that, for years, I have advocated as the one affording the grandest of all canyon outlooks, and it is gratifying to have so observant and educated a western traveller as Dr. Prudden independently confirm the results of our observations. I04 IN AND AROUND It is the only point on the south wall of the Canyon from Navaho Point on the east, to the Great Bend beyond Cardenas Aisle, sixty-five miles west, that protrudes far enough into the heart of the Canyon to afford practically a perfect and complete C'^ °f *- a storm some years aoohelcebT ""*'' °"' ''" y 1^0, neiice became practically 126 IN AND AROUND inaccessible. Then, after disappointing the more intellisfent and educated of the tourists for some years by taking them down a trail which did not reach the archasan rocks, and whicli, like the Old Trail, was "boxed in" almost the entire distance from the rim to the river, the Red Canyon Trail was abandoned by the railway officials and their tourists taken to the Grand View Trail. A later chapter is devoted to these two trails. Viewed from every possible standpoint, this change was advantageous to the student, the geolo- gist, and the sight-seer. Tlie " rim " views ?re equally good, if not superior, to those at the head of the Old and Red Canyon Trails, and a short day's ride will include them if it is so desired. The Grand View Trail is better engineered and constructed, and one may ride from rim to river nearly all the way, with the additional and really important advantage that the sight-seer descends to a large plateau, when about two thousand feet below the rim, and to still another, one thousand feet lower, from both of which plateaux extended and comprehensive views can be obtained in every direction from the interior of the Canyon, a desideratum rendered impossible by the "closed in" character of the Canyon at the two aforementioned trails. Again, the Grand View Trail reaches the river where it has cut through the granite to a great depth, thus giving a complete opportunity to know the character of "the Inner Gorge," — the name given by the geologists to the inner granite canyon through which the river runs, and ivhich is the chief disti7iguishing feature o{ the Grand Canyon. It is > THE GRAND CANYON 127 the presence of the granite that mainly differentiates Marble, or Glen, or Desolation, or any of the upper canyons, from that supreme division of the way of the Colorado River known as the Grand Canyon. One other marked feature of the Grand View Trail is the recent discovery of an interesting series of caves, which I had the pleasure of exploring in company with Mr. P. D. Berry, one of the owners of the trail. They were discovered in 1S97, by Joseph Gildner, a cook employed in the mining camp of Messrs. Cameron and Berry. It was late one afternoon when we entered the mouth of the first cave. Well within the entrance is a peculiar stalagmite of dendritic appearance which I desired to photograph. Having no flash powder, I cut up all the candles that could be spared into pieces long enough to burn for an hour or more, and in the light of twenty-seven of these burning candles left the sensitive plate exposed, while Mr. Berry guided me into farther recesses. This first cave is some three hundred feet long, and varying in height from ten to eighty or ninety feet. The second cave is of about the same length, but much higher, and the stalactites larger and more diver- sified in shape. A peculiar feature of these caves that has much puzzled the local minds is that, while most of the formations are white, the cave itself is in the red limestone or marble. This is merely another dem- onstration that the red marble wall of the Canyon is not of this color naturally, but is dyed red by the infiltration or flowing over of storm and rain water, saturated with the powerful oxydization from the 28 [N AND AROUND red sandstone above. All careful observers must have noted that wlierever the outer dyed wall has been eroded, the color of the so-called red limestone is brown, or gray, or white, as the case may be, but nevej" red. I conclude, then, that the original rock Copyright by George ]\'k,u-foii Jamei- Dendritic Formation in Caves — Grand \'ie\v Trail. of which the formations of the cave were made was white, and their preservation in this virgin state is owing to the sealing up of any water channels from the red strata above. Returning now to the entrance after some hours of absence, I placed the slide in my camera, and am pleased herewith to present my readers with the first and only photograph I have ever seen made by candle-light alone. As we stepped outside the entrance the darkness of Pluto greeted us. While we had been engaged THE GRAND CANYON 129 within, clay had changed into night. There was no trail constructed at that early date in the dis- covery of the cave, and the knowledge of the diffi- culties of the upward climb we had made, in the full light of day, did not steady our nerves for the descent. But Mr. Berry is a man of expedients. In a few moments he had fired a withered cactus, and with the liorht of this torch we clambered on hands and knees, slipped or slid, stumbled or fell, down to the bed of Clear Creek Canyon, a thousand feet below, from which we soon reached camp. A well-built trail, however, now leads to the mouth of the caves, and he is wise who, desirous of seeing the peculiar processes of nature's internal workings, spends the short time necessary to go as far into these caves as his guide will conduct him. I JO IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XII THE BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL THIS is the trail that enters the Canyon a short distance from El Tovai'-. While on the Government maps it is called the Cameron Trail, it will doubtless continue to be called by its original name, received from the beautiful and pellucid Bright Ano-el Creek which flows down the rus^aed Canyon, which is the distinctive feature of the Grand Canyon on the north side of the river, a little to the right of El Tovar. This — as were all the trails from the Little Colo- rado River to Havasu (Cataract) Canyon — was used first long ages ago by the Havasupai Indians, and, in the heart of the side canyon down which the trail goes, are still to be seen the rude irrigating canals which conveyed the large volume of water that flows from a near-by spring to the so-called Indian Garden, the richness of whose verdure is one of the great attractions to the tourist who gazes down from the rim. Recently a new upper section of trail, well engi- neered and of easy grade, was constructed from the Brio^ht Ano^el Hotel for over a mile. Leaving the hotel, the trail drops westward for three-quarters of a mile, zigzagging back and forth until the top of the cross-bedded sandstone is THE GRAND CANYON 131 reached. Here, even the non-geological observer can see the faulting of the rocks, which has so broken and shattered the strata as to make a trail possible down these precipitous walls. The sign- board calls attention to the " drop " or " rise " of the C op} > /., // y //I Battleship Iowa on Bright Angel Trail. sandstone, for, opposite us, the cap of this stratum is one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet higher than the same cap upon which we now stand. Mr. P. C. Bicknell, the geological expert of the Anita mines, states that all the copper mines of the region are found on a line almost due south from this fault, and his theory is that the copper was ejected during the time of the faulting. Down about a mile the line of separation between the cross-bedded sandstone and upper red sandstone is very clearly shown to the left of the trail. 132 IN AND AROUND Immediately before us to the left is a majestic pile of the red sandstone, capping the red wall limestone. This is so much like a battleship that it has been called the Battleship Iowa. A few feet farther and the cross-bedded sandstone may be seen far below^ to the right, showing per- fectly the fault before referred to. Here, too, it is well to stand and observe that the fault extends away down the side gorges across the river and to the summit of the Kaibab Plateau, making the canyon of the Bright Angel Creek ; hence it has been called the Bright Angel Fault. A fine and comprehensive view also is had of the marble wall and the Indian Garden, and, far below, at the end of Pluto's Workshop, is to be seen a peculiar folding of the Algonkian strata, and, on the other side of the river the tilt of the same rocks. It is a singular fact that no pines are found on or near the trail, while they abound on the rim, and that the Douglas spruce of the trail cannot be found on the rim. As soon as the "blue lime" — as the stratum that crowms the " red wall limestone " is locally termed — is reached, there is an awkward piece of trail. Steps have been cut, logs placed upon them, and loose material thrown over all to make the descent easier; but it is still a place for the rider to dismount and go ahead, leading his horse. Imagine what the descent of this great gorge would have been had not tiic processes of tiature kindly broken up these precipitous walls into sloping taluses upon which the trails of pygniy man could be cut. Copyright lUUa, by F. H. Ma-. Q o 1^ u a < 6 u X THE GRAND CANYON 151 The Q-Qcls themselves have hewn out this mountain as a magnificent pedestal, upon which reverent wor- shippers might place their temple and altars there- upon to offer constant worship and sacrifice. It covers the interior canyon prospect in every direction. As a place of defensive retreat it would be absolutely impregnable. Only on the narrow- est and most precarious of paths could the summit be attained, and the will of a score of brave and determined men could have kept the whole armies of the world in check, had such a conflict occurred before firearms were discovered. Yonder, across the river, the keen eyes of our guide discern a mountain sheep, and we level our field-glasses upon him. It is a great sight, to witness the flight of a band of " Big Horns," or mountain sheep, on the steep slopes of the Grand Canyon. You would think not even mountain sheep could keep their foothold, much less run at full speed on this sloping talus, so plentifully bestrewn with boulders ; but they do it with perfect ease, and apparently with no con- sciousness of fear. They are wonderfully crafty, and it is hard to get near enough to shoot them, or with several companions surround, so as to en- trap them. When they are driven to frenzy by apparent hopelessness of escape, they will dash to the edge of great precipices, and without hesitation jump down, often landing on their skulls, rather than their feet. A roll or two, and they are up and off, and in your astonishment at tliis negro-like acrobatic feat you lose all chance of shooting them. It is on Le Conte Plateau, in the region of Hue- 152 IN AND AROUND tha-wa-li, that many and various evidences of the use of this plateau as the home of the Indians are to be found. There are mescal pits, so long for- saken that they are buried under the talus of rock which has fallen ; others, in the centre and on the sides of which huge trees have grown. There are storage houses in the cliffs where corn and other foods were placed, and houses occupied by the Indians themselves. Indeed, there are a few of these houses where the Havasupais yet come and live while they are making mescal, or gathering it to take away. Even on the igneous rocks down in the very in- most recesses of the Canyon, similar evidences of human occupancy exist, and the Havasupais speak of them all as the residences of their forefathers. Descending INIount Observation, we stand in in- terested amazement before " Balanced Rock," a huge mass of stone weighing many tons, the base of which has so disintegrated as to leave the upper and more solid portion resting upon the slightest possible foundation. While it does not "swing," as do the balanced rocks of Cornwall, it appears so much like them as to justify the name. Now we may ride out to the point of Mount Ob- servation (Hue-tha-wa-li) Plateau, where the view is similar to the one enjoyed from the Grand Scenic Divide, or shall have shortly from the Mystic Spring Plateau, the westernmost offshoot from Le Conte Plateau. We look down the vast recesses of Cop- per Canyon and see a score of "El Capitans " in the red marble walls on either side. Then we ride out towards Mystic Spring, passing on the THE GRAND CANYON 153 way a curious freak of erosion known as Seal Head Rock. It was Cciptain Burro who led Mr. Bass to Mystic Spring,, whose existence he had long known, but which all his most careful searchings could never find. They had become great friends, and Burro ,-y^:^ ,m:.\l iiEAD Rock, near Mystic Spring. had learned that this wliite man had, so far, been true to all his promises. So, one day, after Mr. Bass had returned from another wearisome, dis- heartening, and futile search. Burro said, " Billy, you give me a sack of flour and half a beef, and I show you my spring, and you can always use it for your- self and your horses." The transfer of the prop- erty was made, and Mr. Bass was taken to the spring, which, to his great amazement, was so near 154 IN AND AROUND to where he had searched in vain for it, that he could have thrown a pebble into it. Hence, the name he had already given to it — long before he saw it — the Mystic Spring. And it is mystic in more ways than one. Its curative properties in cases of dyspepsia, as well as the sino[ular manner in which it seems to ooze out of the solid rock, make the name most appropriate. Now and again it disappears entirely. Standing at the spring in front of us is a yawn- ing abyss whose bottom is floored with the rocks of ages, and whose sides are perpendicular walls of rock. To our right is a deeper abyss of the same style of architecture. To our left, a still deeper one, the deepest one so far seen, and through which we obtain another view of the river. This is Mystic Amphitheatre. At the extreme north end of Mystic Spring Plateau, we look into the amphitheatre named the " Ruins of Paradise," on account of its towers and turrets and the transcendent coloring of its lofty vertical walls, which recalled Milton's description of the walls of heaven and the great dilTficulty the arch fiend found in scaling them. Here, in the Ruins of Paradise, is the region of chromes and Naples yellows, the blues, and the delicate shades of browns and grays. It is when you are among the shales and slates, and where the serpentine marble lies, that these exquisite colors reveal themselves in all their glory. These do not appear everywhere. They are not dominant, insistent, like the reds. It is only when you seek them out, in such secluded nooks as this. THE GRAND CANYON ^55 that you can enjoy to the full their unique revelry of coloring. Then, too, the luminous haze, which generally may be observed everywhere in the Canyon in the early morning or late afternoon hours, is nowhere so luminous and radiantly beautiful as down here. It seems to take upon itself from these rich and g 1 o vv i n o" colors Burros drinking at Mystic Spring. some of their glory, so that the two effects com- bine to make an unequalled scene of transcendent Now, riding around from Mystic Spring to the head of Trail Canyon, we are ready for the river. How the trail winds around and takes advantage of every opportunity to descend. We are under the western wall of Hue-tha-wa-li Plateau, soon to 156 IN AND AROUND be CLirvincf down under Le Conte Plateau. As we enter the marble the walls grow narrower and nar- rower, until, for a short distance, we are within a mere gorge, but the stupendous height of the walls almost frightens us as we look up and see them conjoined to the sky. On the wall to the left is a great Gothic archway, that seems like an entrance to a vast and inaccessible cave. The contour of the entrance changes as we approach nearer to it, and we see that it is merely a break in the marble, where either the crushing of an uplift has mashed the rock and made it easily disintegrated, or it is the remains of one of the many vast caves — eaten out by acid-charged waters — found in this forma- tion throughout the entire canyon system. Down we go, farther and farther. The narrow canyon opens out, and we breathe more freely. The trail is excellent, and we ride in comfort. Now we come to a great monoclinal fold of the lower strata, cut throuHi bv the storm waters, which again and again, doubtless, during the centuries, have dashed down Trail Canyon, The fold stands almost directly parallel to the course of the canyon, for a short distance, so that as the processes of erosion have been performed the tilted strata first appeared by being denuded of covering strata above and on each side of their upturned edges. Then, as erosion cut deeper, the wall composed of the folded strata formed an obstacle to the passage of the storm waters on its eastern side, as, at its lower exposed end the canyon makes a slight curve, and the fold is left undisturbed and uncovered as a por- tion of the ris^ht canvon wall. So, during some THE GRAND CANYON ^57 violent storm, or, perhaps, by the slower processes of weathering, the perpendicular wall was cut through, and we now ride through a cut in the great uncovered tilt, where the curve stands upon our right, and the remains of the upturned wall. Wheeler Fold in Trail Canyon. its upper edges jagged and rough, is upon our left. This fold 1 have named the Wheeler Fold, and its corresponding wall to the left, the Gilbert Wall. A little farther on, and the trail, which has left the bed of the stream, turns into it, doubles on itself, and returns into a shut-in o-oro^e. At its extremity we find ourselves in a camp more per- fect and complete than the one at Mystic Spring ; for the bed of the canyon here has so eroded as 158 IN AND AROUND to make a precipice of fifteen or twenty feet, and the overhanging rock makes of the precipice such a place as the Cliff-dwellers built their fortress homes in centuries ago. Here Mr. Bass has stores of food, a portable forge, anvil, and other aids to his trail building and mining operations. Above the camp, and reached by a rough ladder built of mesquite, is a tiny spring of pure, sweet water, nestling in a basin of solid rock. From this camp the trail leads us over still another mile and a half, windino- its sinuous and tortuous way over the steep and a d a m a n t i n e granite. There to the right is the place where w^e stood and looked at and longed to reach the river as recounted in the next chap- ter. But now the trail leads us to the muddy waters, and after watering the horses and tying them up, watching the fierce rapids which are somewhat similar to those described elsewhere, looking up and around at the buttes, temples, spires, and walls whicli surround us, we doff our clothing, and, in a safe harbor, plunge into the -tw^y:* 1 »' -=**^ Hj BM^a^i^^-' ' '^''' ^gM ^H H|^^»^J IHHj SHI ffP' f"** , " ., .^^p -♦•- The Ladder to the Sprinc; at Bed Rock Camp. THE GRAND CANYON 159 " raging Colorado " and enjoy the luxury of a swim. More of a bath, it is, than a swim, but it is delight- ful to feel one's self in deep water, even though it be the sand-, silt-, and color-laden water of the Colorado. i6o IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XV THREE DAYS OF EXPLORING IN TRAIL CANYON WITH THE WRONG COMPANION TRAIL Canyon is that inner side gorge clown which the Mystic Spring Trail leaves Le Conte Plateau on its way to the river. On one of my visits some years ago, before this portion of the trail was constructed, 1 determined, if possible, to reach the Colorado down this canyon. Mr. Bass had been down several times, and, although he warned me that it would be rather a hard trip, he felt sure I could make it. I had with me at this time two companions, one a doctor, and the other " was not." No sooner did they learn of the in- tended outing than they also desired to go. Mr. " Was-not " was not very strong, physically, and Mr. Bass urged him not to go, but not content with this advice he came and solicited my counsel. I felt somewhat dififidcnt about advising him, for, unhappily, I had learned that should I bid him remain, he would forever after regret and complain that I had had some ulterior object in not allowing him to go, and if, on the other hand, I said "Go," and the trip were to prove, as I felt assured it would, very arduous, he would not be the man to face difficulties with equanimity, and would condemn me for having permitted him to go. Still, as he wanted to go, and as, I must confess, I did not an- THE GRAND CANYON i6i ticipate anything like the hardships we afterwards encountered, I said that if he much desired it, he would better go, and I would do all I could to help him. I was soon sorry I gave him this advice, for, five minutes after we started, he began to complain, Looking down Trail Canyon. and, with but few — very few — interruptions, kept it up until we returned, three days later. In leaving the upper section of the Mystic Spring Trail, we had to descend, for perhaps two thousand feet, an almost precipitous talus, with no suggestion of a trail. Now we were dropping down eight and ten feet ledges, then climoing over loose boulders, only to alight on a mass of sliding debris which carried us along perilously near a precipice five hundred feet high, over which we could hear the fore-portion 1 62 IN AND AROUND of our rocky stream fall upon the marble beneath. Several times we found ourselves on ledges which ended nowhere, and our steps had to be retraced. The only provisions we had loaded ourselves with were a couple of cans of fruit, one can of salmon, a few dried biscuits, some sugar, and a small canteen of water. We thought we should surely reach the river tliat night, and there we could refill the canteen and return to Mystic Spring Camp the next day, where there was an abundance of both provision and water. But, as we slowly climbed and slid downwards, and saw the sun hastening to his western domain, the long black shadows thrown in the canyon cast equally black shadows upon the hope that we should see the river that night. Indeed it was already starlight when I called a halt. I ' found a small sandy spot, where I thought we three could sleep. As the wind blew down the canyon at night I placed Was-not, our complaining friend, on the lee of a huge rock which effectively shielded him. The doctor took a position by the side of another rock on the lower side, and I lay in the open, al- most at right angles with Was-not. I had chosen these positions purely for the benefit of my friends, but the kicker " kicked " at his position, and I had to reason with him and show him "why" I had tlnis placed him. Then he began to whine. " How was he to sleep in such a place.? He had no blankets and no tent, and he had never slept out of bed or out of doors in his life. And what if rattlesnakes came to us in tlie night .? or centipedes.? or what would become of us if those oioantic rocks THE GRAND CANYON 163 should fall on us ? " (they did look fearfully threaten- ing in the semi-darkness) and what this, and what the other, until I fairly exploded with a somew^hat petulant sermon on his lack of faith in the Almighty. I contended that, as he had used the best judgment he possessed in making this trip, he had as much right, after committing his way unto the Lord, to expect His protecting care as if he were asleep in his own bed. I then turned over, and had just gone to sleep when another whine began, and the doc- tor afterwards told me that poor Was-not was so nervous he had to sidle up to him, hold his hand, and soothe him as if he had been a child, before he could get him to sleep. Early in the morning, after a frugal meal, we started on again. I could enjoy writing a long chapter on the wonders of the trip to our then less- accustomed eyes, but we were in a hurry to see the river. The sun came up, and it became hotter and hotter. Soon the canteen was empty, and the springs or water-pockets we had expected to find on the way down were not there. As we neared the river, travelling became harder and harder, and the heat grew so intense that where we had to pull ourselves over boulders, the rocks blistered our ungloved hands. About noon we did find a water- pocket, half full of a stagnant liquid in which toads, tadpoles, and mosquitoes, etc., held high carnival. Although we were already terribly thirsty, none of us could drink this horrible stuff, so we hurried on in order to get water at the river. Coleridge's words truthfully pictured our fearful state as, — " All in a hot and copper sky The bloody sun at noon " i64 IN AND AROUND shone down upon us with pitiless fury, and increased our already dreadful thirst. Imagine our horror, and the terror of our situation, when at last we came to a cliff of granite, to the summit of which we managed to creep, and crawl, and climb, and saw, three hundred feet below, the river dashing madly along, but could discover no possible way by which it could be reached. It was as absolutely inaccessible to us as if it were in the moon. Mr. Bass had explained to the doctor how we could get down to the river, by retracing our steps some distance and climbing over the cliffs to the left, but Was- not could not be persuaded to go, and he was horrified at the idea of our oroino: and leaving him alone. We were indeed in a terrible quandary. No water, very little provision, a day and a half, at least, from Mystic Spring Camp, and a man on our hands who was worse than all the other calamities of the trip combined. " With throats unslacked, with black Hps baked, We could not laugh nor wail." It was too hot to think of attempting to return, and yet it was like being in a furnace, remaining where we were. Our empty canteen actually seemed to take on a fiendish face, and laughed at us every time we looked at it ; the rocks seemed to grow hotter, and our throats, lips, and tongues more parched. So, making a virtue of oiu" necessity, we returned to tlie water-pocket I had discovered on the down trip, and turning my felt hat inside out, scooped into it, water, tadpoles, dead and live mos- quitoes, mud, slime, and the rest, and then sat on THE GRAND CANYON 165 the scorchiiio' hot rocks, the doctor holdinor the canteen and I the hat, waiting for the water to filter through. It took us a full hour to exhaust the pocket and obtain three-quarters of a canteen full of this "tadpole soup." Then we returned to where there was a little shade to be had, and spent the day until about five o'clock, dodging the sun. The moment the fierce Monarch of Day, who seemed determined to scorch our brains out, and then bake us alive, dodged over the western rim of our box- canyon, we started for the place where we had stayed the night before. Every few steps we had to stop and rest, and far oftener than I liked one or the other of us would want water. I carried the canteen, as I dared not trust the precious — though filthy and odorous — fluid in any one else's hands. When we reached our sandy bed, poor Was-not was so nervous that he could not sleep. He was far worse than on the previous night, and, after several futile attempts to get him to sleep, as a last resort I had to rub him down and massacre him with a little of the valuable fluid from the canteen. In the morning, while the stars were smiling on us, we started for the summit. The " water " had nauseated the doctor, and we had nothino- to eat, but pluckily he trudged along. How I dreaded to see the first gleam of sunlight ! I had often watched with intense delight the sparkling diamond the sun makes on a canyon wall, as in the Yosemite, and had even studied to find a low place in the rim where I could enjoy that indescribably beautiful effect, and then, running to obtain a different angle, i66 IN AND AROUND see it again and again, several times; — Init now! how I longed for the power of Joshua, that success- fully I might have bidden the sun stand still ! But I had no such power, and ruthlessly, remorse- lessly, indeed, rather gleefully, it seemed to all of us, he finally shot over the walls with an unseemly and indecorous haste, and made our upward climb more arduous than before. We were all nearly at the last gasp, but Was-not felt that his oppor- tunities would be lost if he did not expend his strength and nervous energies in complaining : " What a fool he was to have come on such a trip ! Would the Lord ever forgive him for venturing on such a foolhardy errand? If He would, and W'Ould allow him to o^et out, a hundred million dol- lars should never tempt him to make it again," and so on, ad libituiii, ad nmiscarii, until, disgusted and annoyed beyond control, the doctor called me on one side and said: "This trip and that man's whin- ing are driving me crazy. Stop his howling or I shall become insane and kill him." I felt exactly in the same condition the doctor so graphically and tersely described, so, turning to Was-not, I burst forth : " You came down here of your own will, knowing as much of the difficulties as we did. W'e have helped and cared for you all we could, and now, 1, for one, propose that you shall stop your howling and kicking. Can't you see that every breath you waste in this foolish complaining is exhausting your nerve energies, and the effect of it upon us is as bad as upon yourself.-^ We're in a tiglit place, and it will be hard work for us to get out. Now you either quit, or, the next growl you THE GRAND CANYON 167 Qiake we '11 leave you, and you can get out or not, as you like." This emphatic and seemingly brutal remonstrance had the desired effect, for, of course, we could never have left the poor fellow down there, no matter what he had said or done, but it was a comfort to " hear him still " for a while. During this "interlude" the doctor built a signal fire, in the hope that the smoke would be seen by Mr. Bass, and he would come or send some one to our rescue. But, unfortunately, the breeze sent the smoke down the canyon instead of allowing it to ascend, so tliat the effort was in vain. Again we started, and slowly labored on, and just as the last sip was taken from our canteen, we came to the final climb, helped each other up to the Mystic Spring Trail, and then — lay there. But "lying there " would never do. We were all faint from loss of food and water. We held a consultation. One of us had to go to Mystic Spring — three miles away — for help. Of course Was-not could not go, — it was between the doctor and myself which should brave the heat of the afternoon sun. I offered for the service, but confessed my doubt as to my ability to stand the heat. If I had had shade I tliink I should have gone without a question, but — The upshot was, the doctor bravely went, and Was-not and I lay in the shade of the rocks as best we could. I think that he lay offering thanks, — I offered mine, with a sincere heart, — and then to divert my mind from the pangs of hunger and thirst, buried myself in a few pages of r68 IN AND AROUND one of Wilkie Collins's novels which I had slipped into one of my pockets. In about an hour and a half — it seemed an age — Mr. Bass's partner hal- looed as he crossed the Winchell Ridge, and soon after, with two extra horses, and two generous can- teens filled with the refreshing water of Mystic Spring, rode up, and we were saved. How delicious that water was ! and how I longed for the neck of a giraffe to feel the exquisite sensa- tion prolonged as it bubbled into my mouth and down my throat! I wanted two yards of throat in- stead of the little I had. After this it was an easy ride, and a delightful arrival at Mystic Spring, where we found the noble doctor already recup- erated and almost ready for another trip. The next day we were all right, and it would have required only a powerful enough object, and two more canteens of water, to have sent us off on a similar expedition. Was-not has since expressed himself as to the " folly " of our adventure. Why go down into that canyon ? Where could any benefit be derived by ourselves or others .?* Why cannot men be content to stay in places of safety and comfort, and not jeopardize life by trying to know more than easily comes to them ? And I cannot help the reflection : how true to life — or many people's conception of life — this kind of complaining is. Was-not is right, after all, from the worldly-wise standpoint. It is an un- wise and dangerous thing to explore that wondrous canyon-mystery we call " life." Happy is that man who is content to remain on the dead level, and who neither seeks to penetrate the depths or the heights THE GRAND CANYON 169 he sees around him. True; they are there, — he recognizes their existence, but cares not to know, dares not to risk finding, the mysteries which may be hidden therein. Why dare.'' Why risk? Has he not bread and butter as it is ? Down there may he not lose it } Better let well alone, and let the canyons deeps be explored and the mountain's heights and fastnesses scaled by the " fools " who will dare and venture, because they are not content where they are. But, thank God ! for adventurous souls who wi/l dare, who wi// venture, who wi// explore, even at risk of life and all that ordinary souls hold dear. The world would soon die of stagnation and dead- rot were it not for the Leif Ericsons, the Colum- buses, the Drakes, the Cabrillos, the Wattses, the Stephensons, the Edisons, the Morses, the Frank- lins, w^ho in all the walks of life 7W// leave the ruts and seek to find out the hidden mysteries of Nature and Life. And as in the physical so in the mental world. We need the darino; souls who will face the work-a- day common world with new and startling thoughts, who will soar into the heavens and through the canyon depths on the wings of imagination and bring us back the flowers and food found in their fiight. Yes, we are o-lad and thankful that the darino- ploughman is to be found who ruthlessly and cruelly, it seems to us, drives his ploughshare ^v M^ the field whose harvest we are now reaping. And he makes it barren and bare! But the new seed is sown by the Almighty Father of us all, and 170 IN AND AROUND s oon a new, a richer, and a fuller harvest comes to us, and we discover, — nearly always too late, though, — when the ploughman has gone to his eternal rest, — that he was our biavest and our best friend. THE GRAND CANYON 171 CHAPTER XVI MR. W. W. BASS AND HIS CANYON EXPERIENCES EVERYTHING depends upon the " angle of vision " in which you stand as related to any given subject. To the neat, finical, faddy people, who use sapolio on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and all the other secular days, in order that they may rest on Sunday, and whose linen must be "just so," and the cooking even more so, and everything in life done on the perfect plan, the semi-Indian life of the pioneer and explorer in wild Arizona would be a torture and a misery. What a life to lead ! Never, or seldom, sleeping in a house, but out of doors, on Mother Earth's sturdy bosom; dusty, dirty, rocky, muddy, often wet and always hard ; bugs, flies, fleas, mosquitoes, centipedes, earwigs, rattlesnakes, and scorpions as occasional companions ; in the neighborhood of rats, bats, wolves, foxes, coyotes, and skunks, and, now and then, bears and mountain lions ; cookingr over a camp fire where everything gets smoked, black, and dirty beyond remedy, and where handles get red-hot and cut into one's flesh, and where smoke gives flavor to everything, — and this in the best of weather. But in " other " weathers ! Think of cooking in a sand-storm, with fine sand penetrating everything ; in a rain-storm, when wood 172 IN AND AROUND is wet, fire won't burn, and everybody is ill-tempered, and hungry ; in a wind-storni, when the smoke whirls and swirls in every direction, and one's eyes are blinded, and the fire burns now to the east, then to the west, veers to the north, then to the south, and finally to all points of the compass and up and down at the same time! And eating and sleeping and riding and driving and working have all to be done under similar adverse conditions. Away from civilization and humankind, seldom meeting men, much less women, and many of those that are met " rough and ready," good-hearted, good-natured, but profane, unrefined, vulgar, and uncouth, " on the draw," equally ready for a game at cards, a " booze," a row, or a fight ; with such associates as these one would think life would be a failure, and that all man's highest aspirations and destinies would be overlooked and forgotten. Yet it need not be so ! The pioneer may be, and often is, rough and uncouth, but it is not uncommon to find him regarding all the things mentioned as the merest incidents. Life itself is in breathing the pure, unsmoked, unsmelling, un-bacteria-laden air fresh from God's desert, forest, mountain, and canyon laboratories; in seeing and feeling himself under the clearest sky of God's creation ; in walking in His temples of stately aisled trees, sweet-smell- ing, health-giving, and soul-uplifting; in going with deep reverence into His sculptured and cloistered cathedrals of deep canyons, mysterious and glorious, marvellous and sublime; in hearing His voice in the joyful songs of birds, the whisper- ing of leaves, the roaring of rivers, the babbling of THE GRAND CANYON 173 brooks, the crashing of tlninder, and the thousand and one sounds that animate Nature o-ives vent to in accordance with the Creator's will. In the buoyant sense of freedom and contact with God Himself that are two of the rewards of his solitude ; in the grand development of individuality, selfhood, calm confidence, and self-reliance that necessarily come to him if he continues in such life, — these are what make up his pleasures, his compensations. He may be grizzled and unshaven ; his clothes soiled and worn; his linen torn or uncared for; his food coarse and rudely prepared ; his sleeping accommodations gypsy-like and unprepossessing, his speech unlearned and unrefined; yet if the men who live in cities and who are the reverse of him in these things were to come in contact with him more, the world would progress with a speed hitherto unknown, the doctor's work would largely disappear, the doors of the insane asylum would be closed, the law'yer would be much less called upon, and the numbers of the priest ridden and driven much reduced. Such a train of thought is naturally inspired each time I look upon the sturdy personality of my friend, William Wallace Bass, the onlv real o-uide into the Grand Canyon of Arizona. He was born in Shelbyville, Indiana, October 2, 1849. In 1850, his father, attracted by the gold excitement, came to California, died in 185 1, and was buried in Sacramento. The year-old boy had no memory of his father, but, as he grew older, the story of that sad and untimely death out in the West was always a peculiar source of attraction, and ac- 174 IN AND AROUND counts for the readiness with which he hurried west- ward when the opportunity arose. As he grew to manhood he entered railway life. Shortly before coming to Arizona he was train despatcher on the Elevated Railway of New York, when his health broke down, and General Winslow, Joe, the Burro; Shep, the Dog; W. W. Bass, the Canyon Guide. then Vice-President of the Atlantic & Pacific Rail- way and President of the St. Louis & San Fran- cisco Railway, urged him to visit Arizona and see if the climate there would not restore him to health. For eight years he had been a conductor on the Erie Railway, under the })residency of "Jim " Fisk, hence it was natural that when he first arrived in Arizona he should endeavor to resume work at the THE GRAND CANYON 175 occupation with which he was familiar. But dis- satisfied with railway work, in 1883 he took up a ranch eight miles from Williams, and there lived in a cave formed by the waters of the Havasu (Cata- ract) Creek he has since so thoroughly studied. Soon after his settlement in VV^illiams he read in some Arizona paper one of those strangely roman- tic accounts of the Havasupai Indians elsewhere referred to, and this gave him an intense desire to see so peculiar and wonderful a people, who were said to combine within themselves so many character- istics of the Indians of centuries aorone. He had also heard of the prospecting trip on which Mooney was killed, and had accidentally met one of the men who was with Mooney at the time. This man had informed him that there was an old Indian trail which crossed Havasu Canyon at a point where it was "boxed in," which would lead him directly to the Havasupai village. The general supposition at that time was that the Havasu Creek "boxed " soon after leaving Williams, and was impassable and " un- crossable " after it was thus closed in. Experiencing difficulty in inducing any one to take so risky and arduous a trip merely for the pleasure of seeing a few Indians and their home, he concluded to go alone, and, accordingly, made his preparations. Eating in a restaurant the day before the start was to be made, a man came and acciden- tally took the seat by his side. By and by the two entered into conversation, and it turned out that the stranger was an Easterner with whose friends Mr. Bass was somewhat familiar. He was wearino- an elegant gold watch on which was inscribed " Pre- 1/6 IN AND AROUND seated to J. W. McKinney by Charles McFadden as a token of efficient service rendered in the con- struction of the West End Tunnel of the Lehigh Valley Railroad." And now I will tell the story of their trip in Mr. Bass's own words as far as possible. " I soon found he knew all my friends, and was a railroad man. So was I. So, when he asked if he might accompany me on my trip I was glad to have him do so. I had secured the latest government map of the region, and, with plenty of provisions, bedding, two guns, our revolvers, and ammunition, we started. Each of us had a mare with a young colt, and we had a white shepherd dog, and a pack burro, which also had a colt. It was the 8th day of September, 1884, when we started. For two days we met with little or no water. The supply in our small canteens gave out, and we were in a bad fix. The third day out we found a little more water, and entered a region where we passed alternately through canyon walls and fertile valleys. On the 12th we came to a place in the bed of Havasu Creek where a large volume of water was held, doubtless from some cloud-burst, and our horses were so famished for water that they rushed into it and would not be restrained, so that they nearly drowned. I su2:2:ested we remain here for a few days, but McKinney was in a hurry to go on, so about four o'clock in the afternoon, filling our can- teens and letting the horses drink all they would, we started again. That night we made a dry camp, and by daylight next morning were once more on the move. About ten o'clock we came to where THE GRAND CANYON 177 there were several deep gorges and pretty rough travelling, so, leaving the liorses and burros in Mc- Kinney's care, I went in search of water. I soon came across an Indian trail, which led down the main gorge, and, following it a little way, came to a place in the rocks where there were several small water-pockets partially filled with the precious fluid. " I returned for McKinney. Wlien he saw the spot, he concluded we were not far from the Hava- supai village, for from the stories that had been told us in Williams when it was known we were about to start, we expected to come to the waterfalls first, on the crest of which we could stand and look down the three hundred feet upon the Indians at work in their fields below. The water, we were told, came right out from the rocks and dashed over the falls. "As McKinney was older than I and had had some experience, I yielded to him when he expressed the determination to go on alone to the village. Accordingly he took the rifle and field-glasses, with tlie remark that ' It could n't be far, and he 'd go and see if he could find the falls.' AlthouQ-h it was now well along towards noon, we had had no break- fast, as we had waited for water, so I ao-reed to o-q back and cook breakfast, and wait his return. I did so ; ate my own breakfast, and waited uneasily for three hours. Then I had my dinner, and, as he still did not come, I began to pack water to the animals. " McKinney was thinly clad, as it was warm weather, and he had on neither coat nor vest. He took no blankets, food, nor water with him. . 12 178 IN AND AROUND " At this point the bed of Havasu Creek begins its descent into the crust of the earth, and is soon a canyon about twenty-five feet wide and very deep. For two or three miles it grows deeper and deeper, and, in places, the walls are so narrow that they almost overhang and shut out any but the smallest glimpse of the sky overhead. It is a literal canyon. In some places great rocks — boulders — have rolled in so as to make travelling pretty severe work. "That night, as McKinneydid not return, I went and stayed with the animals, carrying them water in the morning in our camp-kettle, dutch-oven, and canteens. After I had watered them I found a way to bring the horses and our supplies down to the water-pockets. Then, after baking bread, I went on a hunt for some of the game whose tracks I had seen in profusion. There were antelope, deer, quail, and rabbits in abundance, and soon I had killed all we could eat. " By this time I had decided that some accident had occurred to McKinney, — he had either been bitten by a rattlesnake or had tumbled over some bluff or other, and I had better go and hunt for him. So I prepared a rope and some bandages, filled the canteen, got my gun, prepared provisions, and with the revolver in my hands started. I had not Qfone more than a mile or a mile and a half when I came to a nest of rattlesnakes, and some of these I killed with the gun, thinking the sound of the report might warn McKinney that I was coming. Soon afterwards I came to a perpendicular jump of forty or fifty feet, below which I could see a change in the formation from the hard limestone to a white THE GRAND CANYON 179 sandstone. I got down by climbing around, and on the sand I saw his tracks. Here, in the bed of the canyon, were some wahiiit and alder trees, and some pinions. I walked on to the next bend in the canyon, and there saw pony and moccasin tracks, which completely obliterated Mc Kinney's. This put me into a state of considerable trepidation, for common report around Williams said that if a man was found anywhere near the Havasupais with revolver and cartridges, they would kill him. I con- fess I felt afraid both for McKinney and myself, and began to think I had seen the last of him. Here the canyon took a due west turn. Hitherto it had been oroinor north, and now it widened out and became deeper. As I could now see a long way ahead, I determined to go on anyhow, and did so, until I heard the noise of fallino^ stones. Looking up, I saw an Indian pony on the slopes grazing. The tracks in the bed of the canyon were quite fresh, and I did n't know but I might run into a band of hostile Indians, and, as I was very much afraid of rattlesnakes, especially when night came, I decided that, as it was growing dusk, I would try to climb up the south wall out of the canyon and return to camp that way. I had quite a load, — a three-bar- relled Baker gun, a six-shooter, medicines, canteen, provisions for three or four days, and a long coil of rope, — and found it quite a task climbing, but suc- ceeded in reaching within about five hundred feet of the top, when I came to a perpendicular wall with a narrow shelf running along its base. I fol- lowed the shelf, until it reached an amphitheatre and there broke off abruptly. Directly over my i8o IN AND AROUND head, but fully twenty-five feet above me, was an overhanging angle of rock. This was my only hope. I must either get over that, or go back. So, with a desperate throw I managed to get the rope across the projecting angle so that I could hold on to both ends. Fastening all my supplies together and tying them on the end of one of the ropes, I began the ascent, placing my back against the wall and pulling myself up hand over hand. On reach- ing a shelf above, I rolled over upon it exhausted and nearly insensible, but had presence of mind enough to secure myself with the rope. When I came to, I found one more effort would release me, and, gathering all my remaining strength, made it, and reached the top just as the sun was going down. After a little rest I revived, and fortunately found a trail oroino- east. I followed it for a short distance, but it was soon quite dark, and, when I entered the thick timber I was unable to see it, and before long felt myself hopelessly lost for that night, at least. As I stood, wondering what to do, something white came rushing towards me, and in a moment jumped upon me with every demonstration of pleasure. It was my dog, which I had left at the camp. From the time it took us to go — I estimated afterwards — we were fully seven miles from camp, yet the faithful animal went ahead on the trail, and he, being white, I was able to see him, and he took me safely back, where I camped in security and com- fort. " Next morning (Sunday) I found the water pretty nearly all gone, so baking up a good supply of bread and meat, enough to take and enough to THE GRAND CANYON i«i leave, I sought a smooth place on the limestone, where I wrote a bold notice for Mc Kinney, should he return, that I had gone to Williams for assist- ance and he was to wait here until my return. Then, as I noticed that the coyotes were in the habit of using this water hole, I hung the food up, out of their reach, directing him where to find it, and then sorrowfully started back for Williams. " That night I travelled until four o'clock in the morning, when the burro and one of the colts posi- tively refused to go farther, so, stretching out in the bed of Havasu Creek, I rested, resuming my journey as early as possible before sunrise. At noon I came to water, and there camped and rested a while, then, taking WilHams Mountain as my guide, started off again. In two days I reached my ranch and cave, watered the stock, and continued on to Williams, arriving there about ten o'clock at night. I went directly to the restaurant where I had met Mc Kinney, and found the proprietor about to retire. I was wild and rough in appearance, mentally worried almost to deatli with the distress and harassment of the past few days, and worn out with the hardships I had endured. My lips were swollen and cracked, and my tongue so black and thick I could scarcely have spoken had I had the strength. Unable to eat, I managed to make known my want for a bottle of beer or some other gentle stimulant. " The proprietor and one or two guests took me, at first, for a crazy man, but as soon as the former recognized me, he cried out: 'What! You back already ? WHiere 's Mc Kinney ? ' i82 IN AND AROUND " ' He 's lost,' 1 whispered thickly. "'Lost! How's that?' " As fast as I gained strength I explained, and said I wanted to go right back next day with a party to find him. Then, caring for the animals and walk- ing over to my own house, I was soon asleep in bed. The next morning it was about nine o'clock before I got out, and went immediately to find some one to go with me to find McKinney. No one seemed anxious to go, and I soon noticed groups of men looking suspiciously towards me, talking earnestly as I came up, but remaining ominously still when I approached. " After I had talked pretty roughly to some of them about their cowardice in leaving a man to perish without any attempt to find or rescue him from hostile Indians (had he fallen into their hands), a number of them agreed to be ready to start with me at four o'clock that afternoon. When the time came, however, there were but four who were ready to go. These were the Justice of the Peace and ex-officio Coroner, Scott, a carpenter named Hurd, who claimed to be an expert trailer, a doctor named Mason, and an Irishman named Baggott. That night we went to my cave and stayed there, and next day travelled as fast as we could, reaching the water in Havasu Creek where I had previously camped. Then, the following day, about two o'clock, we reached our camp. As we had brought plenty of water with us, we prepared a meal, and as soon as it was eaten Scott desired me to take himself and Hurd to the spot where I had lost McKinney. I took them to the place, and when THE GRAND CANYON 183 we arrived thev were determined to 2fo on into the canyon that night. I explained the difficulties of the descent and urged the propriety of their going around by the trail and down that way. Hurd was emphatic in insisting that they go straight down. They could climb out anywhere, the ignorant fool claimed, and, more preposterous still, he said Baggott and I could follow them along the rim of the canyon and throw blankets and food down to them if it was found impossible to reach the village that night. They went on, and I returned up the trail with Dr. Mason to the camp. When we got about half-way up, the doctor, who was troubled with heart disease, was taken sick. I cared for him as well as I could, and as he began to recover he turned to me and said, ' Bass, I feel sorry for you. I 'm going to tell you something, but I don't want you to give me away.' Then, as I gazed at him in amazement, he continued : ' The people in Wil- liams think you killed Mc Kinney, and they have sent me to perform an autopsy on his body, Scott, the Justice and Coroner, to hold an inquest, and Hurd as an expert trailer to find the body if you 've tried to dispose of it. Our orders are to bring you back to Williams anyhow. They were talking pretty earnestly about hanging you before we left, and you had a narrower escape than you imagine. But Scott persuaded them to wait until we 'd been out to see the body. That 's why those fellows are so determined to go into the canyon to-night. They expect to find McKinney's body somewhere down there.' " You can imagine the anger, amazement, and 1 84 IN AND AROUND liorror with which I heard these words. It was the first intimation I had received of anything of the kind. I had noticed the ugly looks of the men in Williams, but it never occurred to me that the dastardly wretches imagined I had killed McKinney. " But the doctor continued, ' Report has it that McKinney had a very valuable watch and four hun- dred dollars.' " The contemptible suggestion implied in these words so infuriated me that 1 started back after Scott and Hurd with the exclamation, ' I '11 go with them,' but the doctor was so sick and nervous that, yielding to his earnest solicitations, I returned with him to camp. " By this time I began to feel somewhat distressed about Scott and Hurd; I knew they had little or no food or water, and that they were in far greater danger than they imagined. So, though Dr. Mason and Baggott hated to move, and I knew it was not the best thino- to do, I decided to follow alono^ the rim of the canyon as Scott and Hurd had asked us to do, ready to help them should any emergency arise. I did not want it to be said afterwards that I would leave those fellows in danger, even though they were hunting evidence to hang me. So we started along by the rim, ready to ' throw down provisions and blankets' as Hurd, — poor simple- ton ! — had suQ^fjested. As it became dark we came to a side canyon which, though so narrow that we could throw a stone across it, took us so long to ride around that by the time we reached the other side it was dark. Baggott and I now went to the edge of the main canyon and fired, waiting for THE GRAND CANYON 185 a return signal, as agreed upon, from Scott and Hurd below. But we saw and heard nothing, so returned to Dr. Mason and camped. The doctor was dreadfully afraid of hostile Indians, and Baggott was worse, appealing every moment in most piteous tones to the ' Blessed Virgin and all the howly saints to protect him.' He went out and staked the horses, but somehow staked them so that the ropes crossed. We had not been long in our blankets before some mountain sheep came and stampeded the horses. We discovered next morning what animals they were from their tracks. Poor Bag- got was too terrified to yell. He sat up on his blankets and fervently prayed to the ' Howly Saint Peter and the Blessed Howly Mother ' to save him from being scalped alive. When I got out to the horses I found them pretty badly mixed up, and had to cut the ropes ere they could be straightened out. Then Dr. Mason wished me to come and sleep by him with the gun in my hand. " Next morning we decided to go back to the water in Havasu Creek and stay until Scott and Hurd came back. We left bedding, provisions, and water at the camp, and a note saying where we had gone, and then started on the twenty-five miles return. It was night-time when we reached the place, but just light enough to see that the water was covered with ducks, some of which we killed. The following morning I made a pot-pie while Mason and Baggott slept, and then, when they arose, we three sat around it and were enjoying the delicacy when we heard a horse coming. Look- ing up, there stood an Indian before us and an- i86 IN AND AROUND other one following. I grabbed my gun and the doctor his, while Baggott ' hollered' and then fainted. I held my gun as if to fire, when the Indian stopped me by raising his hands and showing me that he had no gun. Then I lowered mine and went up Near where McKinney was found by the Havasupais. to him. He gave me his hand, and when we had shaken hands I motioned him from his horse, and invited him to eat. " The other Indian was his son, a lad of some twelve or fourteen years. After he had had a liearty repast he began to talk, — which of course we did not understand, — and to make marks in the sand, which latter, combined with his gestures, soon informed us that the Havasupais had found Scott THE GRAND CANYON 187 and Hurd, nearly dead, and, at tlieir request had guided them back to the camp, where they earnestly requested us to return and fetch them. As well as I was able I asked about McKinney, — a third man who was lost some time previous. To my joy, the Indian explained that he also was found, and, thrust- ing his tongue out of his mouth and rolling his eyes, he indicated the fearful condition of distress in which the poor fellow was discovered. After he had rested with the Indians for three days, and had been most hospitably entertained, feasting on their peaches, which were ripe at the time, the Havasupais had sent him back by way of the Black Tank Trail to Williams in the company of two prospectors who had been in their canyon. This Indian had helped care for him, and had not only loaned him a horse, but had given him a blanket and provisions, for which McKinney had promised him a good army overcoat, which he was now on his way to Williams for. The doctor's horse beino- lame and he too sick to q-o back to the canyon, and his fear of the Indian considerably reduced after hearing of the treatment of McKin- ney and the others, he decided to go on with him to Williams, while Baggott and I started back. On the return trip Baggott lost two blankets — one of Scott's and one of Hurd's — through his careless failure to properly cinch his horse's saddle. He went back to find them, but failed to do so. In his distress at what he expected of the anger of Scott and Hurd, he said, 'Shure, and what '11 I do .f^ ' With a laugh of sarcasm I suggested, ' Tell them you threw them down into the canyon wrapped 1 88 IN AND AROUND around some provisions.' The suggestion de- lighted Baggott. ' Begorra, tliat 's fvvhat I'll do.' " Here let me anticipate my story a little just to say that this was exactly the yarn Baggott told when the two men discovered the absence of their blan- kets. 'Fwhat!' exclaimed he, 'didn't ye tell Bass and me to throw you some provisions wrapped up in a blanket? And did n't I wrap up a jack rabbit in the one, and a loaf of bread in the other, and throw them down the canyon to you?' And to this day, as far as I know, the Justice and his com- panion know nothing to the contrary. " Now to resume the thread of the narrative. When Baggott and I reached the camp neither Scott nor Hurd were in sight. Going down to the water hole to find them, I met Scott coming alone. '' ' You 're a nice man, you are, sent out to trail me to death and never to say a word to me about it,' was the salutation I met him with. He turned paler than his privations had made him as he re- plied : ' I had to promise those fellows in Williams that I would be responsible for your return or they would never have let you leave town. They would have hung you there and then ! ' " Believing that perhaps he spoke the truth I left him, and went on to meet Hurd. As he approached I levelled my revolver on him and said : ' Before you come another step farther up this trail I 'm going to find out who sent you on this trip and what they sent you for! ' He began to stammer out some lie or other, but I stopped him. 'It's no use your lying. You came here to trail me to my death. I 've got the drop on you. Now tell me all about THE GRAND CANYON 189 it, and tell me quick.' Without further hesitation he named over the men who had sent him. They said I had undoubtedly murdered Mc Kinney, and he was to come and find the body and help bring me back to Williams to suffer for the crime. " ' What did you find out ? ' I asked. '"That all you said was true, and if it hadn't been for the Injuns we 'd have lost our lives, — Scott and me. We found a squaw gathering prickly pears ; we were without food and water. I could n't follow no trail down there, and I wanted to go back long before, only Scott would n't let me. Just be- fore I seed the squaw, I thought I was dying, and I beQ:Q;ed her to o'et me some " awa," but she no sabbied. I took hold of her olla, but there was no water in it, but when she seed I wanted water she fetched us some from a spring. Then she took us to where there was some ponies, and we catched them, and she showed us the way to the village, and the next day the Injuns brought us up here.' " That was the man's story. " Well, the upshot of the whole thing was, we returned to Williams, and when I went into the saloon, there stood McKinney behind the bar. He asked me to drink with him, but I refused. ' I don't have to drink with a man like you. You went off and left me, and never even thought it w^orth while to send an Indian after me. I might have starved, or been killed, or worried to death for fear of what had become of you, for aught you would have cared.' " ' Well,' said McKinney, ' I did n't think ! ' I90 IN AND AROUND " ' No ! ' I replied, ' You did n't, and your not thinking nearly got me hung. I 've lost my time and my grub, and did n't get to see the Havasupais after all. I want nothing more to do with a man like you.' "That night McKinney took the train and left, and has never been seen here since. The boys went in and joked him so, as soon as they knew the facts, that he thought he had better clear out. That, sir, was my first attempt to reach the Hava- supai village. " My next attempt was more successful. I went the following March with a man named Miller, and it was on that trip that I met Tom, the second chief of the tribe. Tom took me to his ' ha-wa,' and to a mine that I asked him to show me. He was taken sick while I was there, and I gave him some medicine that helped him. He said, ' White man's medicine heap good. Havasupai medicine no good.' He took a liking to me, and said he'd come and see me the next time he came to Williams. He did so, and I returned to the canyon with him, and many times after that we went in or out to- gether. He made the other Indians friendly to me, as you know they are. On one of my earliest trips he took me to the Grand Canyon, and from that moment my interest in it at that spot has grown, for I immediately saw the great scenic advantages this portion possessed over every other that I had seen. " My first trip to the Grand Canyon was in the fall of 1883. I was following some wild cattle in the neighborhood of Rain Tanks, and, riding after THE GRAND CANYON 191 them at full speed, came out of the timber all of a sudden upon the very brink of the Canyon. It nearly scared me to death. " Then, later on that same year, as I was going from Flagstaff to the Moenkopie Wash, to trade with the Moki Indians, I fell in with Major Miner and his party for a few hours, as they were blazing the trail to the Canyon, which was since largely followed in the construction of the Flag- staff stage road." A visit was made to the Canyon then and later, down the Tanner-French trail, as related in the chapter devoted to that trail. Mr. Bass's interest in the Havasupai Indians once aroused, it was ever after exercised — as it still is — on their behalf. He began to work with his accus- tomed energy and directness to interest the Indian department to establish a school and send a teacher and farmer to Havasu Canyon to teach the Hava- supais good citizenship and good farming. I was present when, ten years ago. Agent McCowan was sent out as a Special Commissioner by the depart- ment, not to establish a school in their own canyon, as the Indians desired and Mr. Bass had suggested, but to induce the Havasupai chiefs and heads of families to send their children to the Indian School at Fort Mohave. Elsewhere I have described the way this offer was received and refused. But though the Havasupais rejected this offer, it was Mr. Bass's kind efforts in their behalf that had secured it to them, and he it was who patiently and persistently worked for what was ultimately attained, — a teacher, a schoolhouse, and a farmer of their own. 192 IN AND AROUND When he first visited them their universal cus- tom was to burn their dead, destroying at the same time some of the most valuable property and pos- sessions of the deceased. It was Mr. Bass's in- fluence upon Tom and the other Indian leaders that led to their change of this custom. I have been present several times when Tom has lectured or harangued his fellows on the extravagant and useless waste of their cremation customs and urged them to follow the advice of their white friend, Bass, and bury their dead. When the Havasupais agreed to follow the white man's custom, the news was carried to the relative Wallapais by the medicine men, who w^ere opposed to the innovation. They thought it meant a subversion of their power, and a bringing of their dynasty to a speedy end, so they stirred up the chiefs and medicine men of the Wallapais, who paid a visit to their cousins of Havasu to confer with them and endeavor to lead them back to the time-honored customs of their ancestors. Dances and pow-wows were held, and such excite- ment reigned that even the white men of the mining region near and in Kingman heard of it, and, dread- ing lest some attack upon the whites was being planned, they sent peace messengers to find out what was the matter. These were returned with the message to the w4iite men to mind their own business. They were considering how to dispose of their dead, and that was an affair that concerned themselves alone. In spite of dances and argu- ments the progressive party, led by Tom, largely prevailed, and cremation received its first great blow among the Havasupais. Mr. R. C. Bauer, of the THE GRAND CANYON 193 Indian Service, continued the good work thus begun, until now interment is the rule and cremation the exception. As a token of the great esteem in which he held his white brother, Chief Tom presented Mr. Bass with the finest Indian pony in the possession of the W. W. Bass and his Indian Pony, Silver. tribe. Silver, though growing old, is still an hon- ored member of Mr. Bass's equine family, and he may consider himself specially favored who is per- mitted at any time to ride Tom's gift. That Mr. Bass has not outworn his Indian friend- ship, is evidenced from the facts I have observed again and again when he visits Havasupai Can3^on. The Indians will come to meet him, and, on his 13 194 IN AND AROUND arrival, a perfect crowd of men, women, and children come around to give him a word of welcome, and hear his welcome to them. His horses are taken to the best pastures, and the fruit picked from the best peach trees, and the finest corn gathered for the occasion. Indians of any tribe are not in the habit of treating other than those they know to be their friends in this demonstrative manner. His endeavors to make the Canyon accessible at the points his judgment deemed most attractive have cost him many thousands of dollars, years of herculean labors, harassing worries, and dreadful privations, that would have daunted and disheart- ened almost any other man. He had a wagon road surveyed and built from Williams, and, when he found an easier orrade and better conditions from Ashfork, he made thirty-five miles of new road to connect with his Williams road midway to the Can- yon, starting from the new point, Ashfork. The Williams road, and the regular stage which he ran over it, were the first set in operation to accommo- date tourists. To provide against the dry season of Arizona, when water for stock and personal use is of the highest importance, he has constructed dams in Havasu Creek, blasted out a number of cisterns in the solid surface rock, and has now stored in his reservoirs or cisterns hundreds of thousands of barrels of water. There is no enterprise of its kind in this semi-barren country so well provided witli water as are the stage stations, hotel camps, and trails in the Canyon controlled by Mr. Bass. % The Mystic Spring Trail, though reaching into TPIE GRAND CANYON 195 the Canyon, where the Havasupais for centuries have been constant visitors, is, practically, of Mr. Bass's engineering and construction. From the lower plateau to the river, he both engineered and constructed it at great expense and labor. The trail as a whole, as elsewhere described, I regard as the finest in the Canyon, and one down which man, woman, or child may ride almost every foot of the way with perfect safety. One would have thought these were abundant labors for any man who had " his own living to make," but Mr. Bass has been public spirited enough several times to set in motion national legislation for the benefit of the Grand Canyon or the people of Arizona. Noticing the serious injury to the water supply of the territory — limited at its best — caused by the unrestricted cutting of the timber, he personally circulated a petition (in which work I had the honor to be able somewhat to assist him) calling upon the Secretary of the Interior to declare certain named portions of the territory timber reserves. This effort was successful, and the San Francisco Forest Reserve was duly estab- lished. Then, when the miners of the territory complained that the Forest Reserve law precluded the possibility of their continuing their search for the precious minerals in the Grand Canyon, he suc- cessfully circulated another petition, which had its due effect in setting in motion the change in, or addition to, the law, which now permits all legitimate mining upon United States Government Forest Reserves. It should not be forgotten that to Mr. Bass is 196 IN AND AROUND owing the correction of an error that for years was perpetrated by the mendacity of the Flagstaff guides. That was that the Point Sublime of Cap- tain Dutton was seen from Navaho, Ute, Co- manche, and Paiuti Points, when, in reality, the point thus designated was Cape Final. Even such a careful writer as Charles Dudley Warner was led into the error of stating that " the point where we struck the Grand Canyon, approaching it from the south, is opposite the promontory in the Kaibab Plateau named Point Sublime by Major Powell, just north of the 36th parallel, and 112 degrees, 15 minutes west longitude." This passage contains two misstatements. Point Sublime is not in sight at any of the outlooks reached from Flagstaff, and it was given that name by Captain Dutton and not by Major Powell. Point Sublime is to be seen from Hopi Point, and is slightly to the right of Havasupai Point, across the river. THE GRAND CANYON 197 CHAPTER XVn THE SHINUMO AND ITS ANCIENT INHABITANTS LOOKING down from Bass Camp, across the river, slightly to the left of the Tilts, the interested observer will notice a small gash in the rocks, coming down from the Gray and Crim- son Ridges to the heart of the Inner Gorge. This gash is the lower portion of the gorge of the Shin- umo Creek, one of the most beautiful streams of water that flow into the Colorado River. Alto- gether unlike the streams that enter from the south side, — as the Little Colorado and the Havasu (Cataract) Creek, — the nordiern creeks that come from the high forest regions of the Kaibab Plateau, or from canyon springs that have their origin in the deep snows that fall on that elevated region in winter, are clear, pure, and beautiful from source to mouth, while those that flow from south to nortl are muddy and dirty. Necessarily, during storm weather, the north creeks, becoming charged with sand and dirt, and decomposing minerals and rocks, change their character, and for the time are almost as dirty as the Little Colorado, but a few hours after the storms have ceased they speedily return to their pristine freshness and beauty. For many years I have been hearing of the beauty of the Shinumo, the purity of its waters, the charm 198 IN AND AROUND of its willow-fringed creek, the interest of its cliff- dwellings and prehistoric irrigating ditches and gardens, and — fascinating but repulsive — the stories of human selfishness, murder, and cannibal- ism that have desecrated its beauties and native sanctity. Several years ago, an Indian brought out from one of the cliff-dwellings an exquisitely shaped large olla, fashioned exactly after one of the common oriental patterns. It was perfect in every way. Mr. Bass purchased it, and it now holds a promi- nent place in the ancient pottery department of Mrs. T. S. C. Lowe's museum, in Pasadena, Cali- fornia. These things necessarily sharpened my desires to fully explore this interesting Shinumo Canyon, and in August and September of 1899 I determined to give a few days to a preliminary survey. My time, unfortunately, was limited, so it is of but a small portion of the Shinumo I can write from personal knowledge. Leaving Bass Camp, the trail is taken to Bed Rock Camp, and from there a side trail leads to the river crossing. Here was a rude boat, roughly made of rougher lumber, and the seams everywhere open, in cracks one-eighth of an inch in thickness. The only calking materials we had were pieces of cotton clothes-line, and with these the rude punt was made a little less leaky. After a few hours' soaking Dad and I ventured. The roar of the near- by rapids below, and the swift flowing of the cur- rent, nerved mv arms to their best endeavor as I pulled steadily at the oars. We made the trip across with comparative ease. After unloading the THE GRAND CANYON 199 bedding, provisions, tools, camera, etc., we towed the boat up to a point considerably higher than the landing place on the south side, where our two com- panions awaited the return of the boat with interest, not unmixed with anxiety. But by this time the Crossing the Colorado River to the Shinumo. punt held over a foot of water, and this had to be baled out. At last we were ready. A squall was threatening, and the wind came in fitful gusts and flurries down the Canyon, and as we started, one of these flurries caught us in such a way that we shipped considerable water. Then, to add to the discomfort, — and possible danger, — just as I began to pull, one end of my seat slipped from its support, and sent me sliding sideways to the bottom of the boat. But there was neither time nor opportunity 200 IN AND AROUND for readjustment. The rapids were roaring, the river flowing, and we ghding down with a rapidity, at that moment, that seemed ahnost appalhng ; so, righting myself as well as I could, cramped up in the uncomfortable position that can better be imagined than described, I rowed, while Dad pad- dled, and, in a few minutes, once again we stepped ashore in safety. This time we did n't attempt to bale out the boat. The four of us ran it high and dry on the rocks, and, tipping it over, thus got rid of the surplus water. Again we took our seats: Dad, with paddle at bow, one man at the stern, and the other on a seat before me, his knees touching mine. Poor fellow, his face was pale and his lips quivered, and he held on like grim death, but, plucky and brave, never said a word or made a move to distress or hinder us. It was with a deep sigh of pleasure, however, that we reached the north shore in safety, and the perils of the roaring " Hackataia" were over. Two miles over a prehistoric trail, passing one or two ancient ruins, and, crossing over two long stretches of weather-worn boulders where the trail had been blazed, who knows how many centuries ago, by pounding rocks upon rocks, obtaining a glimpse of one of the worst rapids of the Colorado River, and finally dropping down over a bluff of shattered metamorphic rocks to the very brink of the Shinumo, we found the rude camp which was to be our headquarters for the few following days. And what a delicious night's rest I enjoyed ! Lulled by the steady murmur of the stream, — not a loud, sullen, angry roar, as of the Colorado, but a THE GRAND CANYON 20I gentle, soothing babble, — accompanied with enough stirring of the air to temper the heat gendered in the rocks by the ardent wooing of the sun during the day, I could not have failed to rest, although I had no other pillow than a judicious combination of camera-case, shoes, overalls, and focus- sing cloth, and one comforter and a blanket for a bed. I slept soundly and awoke refreshed, ready to begin a study of the Shinumo, which I hope I shall be able before long to continue. The Shinumo is from twelve to fifteen miles in length. It has two upper forks, one of which heads behind Bass Tomb, and the other to the northeast in a canyon of the Shinumo Amphitheatre, the rich green of which can be seen clearly from any of the points near Bass Camp on the south side. These two forks unite at the corner of Shaler Pyramid. The stream con- tinues south for a distance, curves to the west, and flows between Bass Tomb and Dox Castle, to be shortly joined by White Creek, a small stream that winds around in Muav Canyon from beyond Dutton Point to add its water to the Shinumo slightly to Copyright, 18D9, by F. H. Maude. Rocky Pillar at the Mouth OF THE Shinumo. 202 IN AND AROUND the northeast of the Gray and Crimson Ridges. It is about two miles from here to Bass's Shinumo Camp, and another mile to the junction with the Colorado River, where, unfortunately, its sweet, pure, clean water is immediately lost in the sandy, dirty Red. On the Shinumo. All alono^ its banks from river to hio^hest reaches are constant evidences of early human occupancy. A few yards above Shinumo Camp is a heap of ruins similar to those found throughout Arizona and New Mexico, showing clearly that they were once human residences. Near here the remains of an ancient irrigating ditch were found, which since have been utilized to convey water to a prehis- toric garden. In the rocks to the right of this THE GRAND CANYON 203 garden, which is about a quarter of a mile below the camp, are two interesting and curious little food caches. These are circular structures, built exactly after the general plan of cliff-dwellings, in suitable niches of the rocks, but of so tiny and diminutive a character as to have puzzled beyond any hope of explanation those earliest wanderers into such hidden regions, — the gold prospectors. All the way up the canyon similar food caches may be found, some of them in places that, to-day, are absolutely inaccessible, others where a little climb- ing can comfortably reach them. These are similar, in size, build, and general appearance, to those found in Havasu (Cataract) Canyon, and which the Hava- supais explain were used by their long-time-back ancestors as corn storehouses. Mescal pits are also found in large numbers, showing that the gathering of the mescal, macerating, and cooking it, were here carried on extensively. The Indians tell me that on the northeast fork are a large number of cliff-dwellings, also a few in the Canyon of the Bright Angel. The latter Major Powell discovered and briefly described. 204 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XVIII PEACH SPRINGS TRAIL THE nearest point on the Santa Fe main line from which the Grand Canyon may be reached is Peach Springs, an insignificant station eighty seven miles west of Williams, and four hundred and twenty-three east of Los Angeles. But the scenery is so in- ferior, compared with that of any of the points elsewhere de- scribed, that only when it is found im- possible to go to these points is a visitor jus- tified in seeing the Grand Canyon at a spot where its ma- Ax THE Mouth of Diamond Creek jestvand o'randeurare IN THE Grand Canyon. j c'^^ \z i_ i-i • so dwarfed. Vet this is an historic trail. The Peach Springs Canyon has been so worked upon that one can drive all the way to the mouth of Diamond Creek, which unites with Peach Springs THE GRAND CANYON 205 Canyon a very short distance from the river. Lieu- tenant Ives visited the Grand Canyon at this point in 1858, and the following is his description: — "This morning (April 3, 1858) we left the valley and followed the course of a creek down a ravine, in the bed of w^iich the water at intervals sank and rose for two or three miles, when it altogether disappeared. The ravine soon attained the proportions of a canyon. The bottom was rocky and irregular, and there were some jump-offs over which it was hard to make the pack animals pass. The vegetation began to disappear, leaving only a few stunted cedars projecting from the sides of the rugged bluffs. The place grew wilder and grander. The sides of the tortuous canyon became loftier, and before long we were hemmed in by walls two thousand feet high. The scenery much resembled that in the Black Canyon, excepting that the rapid descent, the increasing magnitude of the colossal piles that blocked the end of the vista, and the correspond- ing depth and gloom of the gaping chasms into which we were plunging, imparted an unearthly character to a way that might have resembled the portals of the infernal regions. Harsh screams issuing from aerial recesses in the canyon sides, and apparitions of goblin-like figures perched in the rifts and hollows of the impending cliffs, gave an odd reality to this impression. At short distances other avenues of equally magnificent proportions came in from one side or the other; and no trail being left on the rocky pathway, the idea suggested itself that were the guides to desert us our experience might further resemble that of the dwellers in the unblest abodes, — in the difficulty of getting out. " Huts of the rudest construction, visible here and there in some sheltered niche or beneath a projecting rock, and the sight of a hideous old squaw staggering under a bundle of fuel, showed that we had penetrated into the domestic retreats of the Wallapais nation. Our party 2o6 IN AND AROUND being, in all probability, the first company of whites that had ever been seen by them, we had anticipated producing a great effect, and were a little chagrined when the old woman, and two or three others of both sexes that were met, went by without taking the slightest notice of us. If pack-trains had been in the habit of passing twenty times ^M Powell Pykamiu at the Foot of Peach Springs Trail. a day they could not have manifested a more complete indifference. "Seventeen miles of this strange travel had now been ac- complished. The road was becoming more difficult, and we looked ahead distrustfully into the dark and apparently interminable windings, and wondered where we were to find a camping place. At last we struck a wide branch canyon coming in from the south, and saw with joyful surprise a beautiful and brilliantly clear stream of water gushing over a pebbly bed in the centre, and shooting from between the rocks in sparkling jets and miniature cascades. On THE GRAND CANYON 207 either side was an oasis of verdure, — young willows and a thick patch of grass. Camp was speedily formed, and men and mules have had a welcome rest after their fatiguing journey. " A hundred yards below the camp the canyon takes a turn; but as it was becoming very dark, all further ex- aminations were postponed till to-morrow. In the course of the evening Ireteba came into my tent, and I asked him how far we had still to travel before reaching the great river. To my surprise he informed me that the mouth of the creek is only a few yards below the turn, and that we are now camped just on the verge of the Big Canyon of the Colorado. " A short walk down the bed of Diamond Creek, on the morning after we had reached it, verified the statement of Ireteba, and disclosed the famous Colorado canyon. The view from the ridge, beyond the creek to which the Wallapais had first conducted us, had shown that the plateaux farther north and east were several thousand feet higher than that through which the Colorado cuts at this point, and the canyons proportionally deeper ; but the scene was sufficiently grand to well repay for the labor of the descent. The Canyon was similar in character to others that have been mentioned, but on a larger scale, and thus far unrivalled in grandeur. The course of the river could be traced for only a few hundred yards, above or below, but what had been seen from the tableland showed that we were at the apex of a great southern bend. The walls, on either side, rose directly out of the water. The river was about fifty yards wide. The channel was studded with rocks, and the torrent rushed through like a mill-race." For some years an irregular stage was run from Peach Springs, and a rude lumber hotel was erected at the mouth of Diamond Creek for the accommo- dation of visitors to the Canyon. The distance is twenty-four and a half miles. 2o8 IN AND AROUND What mifjht have been a most tras^ic incident oc- ciirred from this trail. In October, 1894, Charles L. Potter, First Lieutenant of Engineers, United States Army, wrote in the hotel register as follows : — " Being ordered to make an examination of the Colo- rado River from the mouth of the Virgen Riv^er to Yuma, I had to choose between two ways to get to the mouth of the Virgen. To pull up from the Needles, which would take ten days, or ship my boat via Peach Springs to this place and go down. I have chosen the latter as cheaper and quicker, and I hope it may prove so. The members of my party are M. F. Davis, Lieutenant Fourth Cavalry (out for fun), B, S. Weaver, Needles, and John Golden, Needles." Later H. S. K. writes, referring to Lieutenant Potter's " cheaper and quicker " : — " It proved to be both. Party was shipwrecked seven- teen miles below mouth of Diamond Creek and had to walk sixty-five miles to Hackberry. They are satisfied to do their boating on some other river now." Lieutenant Davis afterwards described some of the adventures the party experienced. They had difficulty in letting" the boat down over the first rapids, and then, in accordance with what some one had told them, who knew less of the river than they did, they settled down to enjoy seventy-five miles of smooth water. When nio^htfall came thev had had several narrow escapes and had shot fifteen rapids. The second day was nearly as bad, but the third day proved their Bull Run. They came to a rapid where, for a mile, the river changed to a mass of angry, roaring, hissing foam. Emptying the boat. THE GRAND CANYON 209 Lieutenant Potter and his two men earned every- thino- over a perilous trail to a point below the rapids. This took nearly all day. Then Lieu- tenant Davis, in accordance with the prearranged plan, turned the boat loose and let it shoot the rapid empty and unguided. Ten minutes after he released it, it shot by Lieutenant Potter like a race- horse. There was no alternative now but to swim or climb out, so, with provisions, a blanket each and fire-arms, they started, following the trail of a " big horn." He says: — " Sometimes our path was one hundred feet wide, some- times for one hundred feet we had scarcely six inches to cHng to. In the latter situation our sensations were hor- rible. Over one thousand feet below us yawned the black chasm ; beneath us the rock was treacherous and slippery. It was always level, always the same dizzy height from the white, brawling stream below. " For twenty-two miles we followed this dangerous trail. Then with feelings of joy we emerged upon the Wallapai Desert. We were three days in crossing this. We had plenty of water and provisions, but the men's shoes had given out and they suffered greatly from the hot sand and the cacti. On the third day we reached the railroad and were taken up." It was at this point that Robert Brewster Stanton remained ten days, recuperating and getting sup- plies from the railroad ere proceeding on his peril- ous but successful trip. He says that Diamond Creek is fifty-three miles from the mouth of the Grand Canyon. 2IO IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XIX LEE'S FERRY AND THE JOURNEY THITHER THE ride from Winslow to Lee's Ferry and the adventures and experiences connected there- with form one of the great memories of my life. iTHTianiiiiniiiin'" rri C , / 1 right by George U harton James. Oi\ THE Way to Lee's Ferry. I shall not attempt to give them in detail. A few will give a true picture of an historic section near the Grand Canyon and the Little Colorado River of which few people have any conception. My driver to this memorable spot was Franklin French, an old pioneer, born in Boston, Massachu- THE GRAND CANYON 211 setts, whose life had been spent in the West, and who would have been a character for Dickens or Bret Harte. He was good company, especially over the desert country we had to drive. The first por- tion of the journey I went ahead in another wagon. Crossing Red Lake, dry at this season of the year, we came to a slough, which ordinarily is dry, but now was filled up with the fine dust blown in by the never-quiet wind of this region, all moistened into a soft and yielding mud by a small stream that made a channel for itself as it sluggishly flowed. John, the driver of the first wagon, on the front seat of w^hich I sat wdth him, was busy at the moment we reached this treacherous slough, expounding some mining problems to me, and, expecting the moist-looking red mud was the coarse sand gen- erally found, and which easily bears up a heavily loaded wagon, he recklessly drove on. In a moment leaders and wheelers were floundering deep in the quagmire ; horses wildly leaping and striving to extricate themselves, the mules wisely resting as they fell, waiting until the slush around them settled somewhat. In the mean time John and myself slipped off all our nether garments and jumped into the yielding mud to release the animals from the harness. As soon as they were free, it was not many moments before they stood on the opposite side of the slough. A chain and double-trees were now brought from the rearw^agon, fastened to the end of our submerged wagon-pole, the four animals harnessed, and John took the lines! ! ! ! ! ! Reader, do you know what those six exclamation 212 IN AND AROUND points mean ? Did you ever hear an Arizona pioneer drive mules? — especially when he was mad ? More especially when his wagon was stuck in such a horrible mess as we had fallen into ? Most especially when for his nether garments was sub- stituted a coating of red mud an inch thick ? In my varied experiences I have heard skilled artists in profanity, but compared with this man they were but in the kindergarten, and he a classi- cal scholar, familiar with the profanity of the ages in all tongues. And how those mules did pull ! With that sul- phurous stream of expletives striking them with full force, accompanied by vigorous thwacks of a wire-loaded black-snake, it was not long before the wagon and its precious freight were safe on the other side. In apologizing for his vigorous profanity, John explained that nothing but swearing would make mules pull when in such a place, and, said he, " While I was ashamed to use such lan- guage in your presence, nothing but the Simon- pure article does with these yere chaps." Beine safe and secure, I felt constrained to ex- cuse him, and serene, though muddy, our caravan proceeded, the other wagon making a short detour around the head of the slough, and thus avoiding all trouble. In a few more miles we reached the banks of the Rio Colorado Chiquito. The only road was one made by the cowboys, and of all the Chinese puzzles of a road it would outwit the celestial inventor of the most bewildering razzle-dazzle to construct another equal to this. We moved in THE GRAND CANYON 213 every direction, made acute angles, oblique angles, and described curves of every order, several times retracing our steps for long distances towards Winslow. In despair I was about to give up the hope of ever reaching the crossing, when John nerved me to a few more moments' waiting, with the assurance that we were " nearly there." We reached and crossed the dirty red stream at last, and there made our first noon camp. In order to test the muddy qualities of the stream, and also to enjoy a swim, if one were possible, one of the gentlemen and myself deter- mined to undress and enter the river. One plunge convinced us of the vast amount of matter it held in solution, and the swift current decided for us the question of swimming. We were compelled to strike out, and make for the other bank, walk back on a mud flat, and then recross to where our clothes were. As we emerged we found ourselves fairly coated with a fine red paint, which nothing but plenty of clean water would remove. This we did not have, so scraping with sticks the fine mud off as well as we were able, we dressed, and rejoined the party, who were now about ready to proceed. For a long way our route lay alongside the Little Colorado River. We passed on the west side of Volz's Crossing — where once I had a party de- layed for nearly two days, owing to a ten-feet rise in the river during the night — on to Wolf's Crossing and Trading Post, and in turn passed Black and Grand Falls. Black Falls, in reality, is but a long stretch of slight cascades, the river-bed formed of and filled with . rough boulders of lava 2T4 IN AND AROUND and basic rock, so that the muddy red waters are churned into creamy foam for the distance of nearly half a mile, and thus set off in contrast the black of the rocks. The scene is not unlike that of the upper cataracts of the Nile, but on a reduced scale. Grand Falls is more of a genuine waterfall, but unless it is in flood time, there is not enough water to cover the width of the crest of the precipice over which it dashes, and thus make an effective scene. In flood time, however, it is a miniature Niagara. All along the banks of this stream, variously known as the Flax River, the Salt River (the Havasupais still speak of it as the Salt River, because here their Hopi friends used to obtain salt), the Colorado Chiquito, and its English equiva- lent, the Little Colorado, are the ruins of a large number of homes of people who, long ages ago, here found shelter from worse enemies than the barren- ness of a desert, — enemies whose fierce hostility led them to seek protection in caves and cliffs and desert places of this character. What a piteous life it must have been! Nothing grand, picturesque, or beautiful to soothe the horror and awfulness of it ; fearful of the attacks of blood-thirsty and persist- ent foes, both by day and by night ; in a region where nothing could grow ; the dumping ground of volcanoes, and fired and scorched by pitiless lava flows, — I never picture the life of those wretched, hunted people of the past but a sob of pity rises within me, and tears well up in my eyes. And to give vividness to the horror, every time I have crossed this desert I have been caught in a dreadful storm. On this occasion it was such a THE GRAND CANYON 215 one as I had never seen before, and I hope I may never see again. From pure cobalt or rich tur- quoise blue the sky gradually changed to ashen gray, then lowering black, and then fiery red. Clouds were drifting in from the north. When the In the "Boxing" of the Little Colorado. liehtninor besfan it was on three sides, and all at once a wild, fierce glare everywhere. Occasionally these sheets of lightning were followed by vindictive zigzag flashes, which in the north struck from zenith to nadir. By this time the wind was blowing a perfect hurricane, and the thunder rolled fiercely in accompaniment to the wild raging of the wind. But these were only premonitions ! For an hour or more they continued, the Storm King lashing himself into greater and greater fury, until, all at 2i6 IN AND AROUND once, his fierce anger become uncontrollable, and the crisis came. The heavens split wide afar, the flood-gates were opened, and down came many waters. Not in drops did the rain descend, nor torrents even, but in rivers, in Niagaras ! The hills were water-washed everywhere, and deep canyons were cut even into solid rock. With such a tempest twice a year even, gathering rills into streams, streams into rivers, rolling with fierce rapidity over the rocky slopes, the water charged with sand, pos- sibly stones, and, as the velocity increases, large fragments of rock, there is no wonder that this whole country is barren and cut, sawed, seamed, and scarred, and made as rugged in face and feature as the hero of a hundred desperate hand to hand battles. It seems as if the evil powers of nature concentrated all their fury, deadly hatred, and most awful vindictiveness in this corner, — an area of perhaps one hundred miles in circumference, — for in summer it is blazing with tropic heat, in the fall deluQ^ed with friq-htful floods, in winter cursed with cutting snow blizzards, and in spring the scene of dire battles fought with fierce winds laden with blinding sand. Hence, at all times it is desolate and accursed. And he is wise — unless he be a true explorer and investigator, willing to endure all hardships in his chosen work — who shuns closer acquaintance with its awful desolation, wind- swept wastes, and water-cut surface. This barren desolation continues as far as Wil- low Spring, a Navaho Indian trading store. Near- by a number of " hogans " may be seen, where the women are hard at work at their looms, weaving THE GRAND CANYON 217 blankets. Two or three of these weavers have considerable skill and ability, and some of the fin- est blankets of the tribe are made here. This is the nearest settlement of any kind to the junction of the Little Colorado River with the Grand Canyon. It was undoubtedly by Willow Copyright, y v ^, 'i^oige Whatton James. Interior of Navaho Hogan. Spring that Cardenas with his handful of soldiers was led by the crafty Hopis, who did not wish the Spaniards to obtain too favorable an impression of the Colorado River region, or gain access to their beds of salt near the junction of the lesser and greater rivers. No other presumption can account for their not being guided by the Hopis down the old Salt Trail — to which reference will be made in a later chapter — to the very edge of the water. Poor Cardenas ! thou and thy thirsty soldiers are not the only ones who have been misguided by 21 8 IN AND AROUND wily and suspicious Indians, or deceived by their constant protestations of good faith. This corner of country near the mouth of the Little Colorado River is seamed with canyons, ravines, and gulches. It is a genuine " Beled-el- ateuch " — land of thirst — and may well be desig- nated an " interminable country of desolation." There is no water for miles, and except immedi- ately after a rain-storm, when water is caught in a few natural rock pockets, or during the storms of winter, when patches of snow may be found, it is impossible to get even an Indian, used to the sandy deserts in Arizona, to ride across it, much less undertake to guide a stranger over its waterless and pathless miles. In looking over the country from Echo Reef, one sees a thousand hills of all sizes and materials, — sandstone, sandy clay, blue marl, — and the rock, cut, washed, scarred, and carved by all the uninter- rupted forces of nature, that in such places as these seem to enjoy their work of creating desolation. If one follows the windings of the Litde Colo- rado River, about sixty miles of w^alled-in, boxed-up canyon are presented, every mile of it grand, stupendous, overpowering. During the dry season, the upper portion of this canyon is almost dry, often entirely so, the light f^ows of water from the sources in the Arizona White Mountains dis- appearing in the sand and gravel soon after their appearance. But about twenty niiles from the junction of the Little Colorado River with the main Colorado River, nearly parallel with Kohonino Point, there flows out a large body of water at the THE GRAND CANYON 219 base of the canyon wall that makes a stream of considerable size. This water is strongly impreg- nated with mineral, and is blue in appearance, and when free from the mud and filth of the upper Mineral Spring in the Canyon of the Little Colorado. waters of the Little Colorado, offers an unspeak- ably beautiful spectacle as it flows on to join the waters of the great river below. There has been much conjecture as to the source of this large stream. I am satisfied, from extended observation on the Kohonino Plateau, between the Little Colo- rado Canyon and the San Francisco Mountains, that it has its rise in the water-soaked slopes of the latter. Indeed, in several places I have found holes in the rock on this plateau, into which the 220 IN AND AROUND wind was sucked with great velocity, so much so that on tearing up slips of paper and placing them within reach of this in-sucking current, they im- mediately disappeared. I can only account for this suction by the flowing of a strong current of water underneath. It was a weary drive from Willow Spring to Lee's Ferry. One night the horses got away and started back for water. Poor French had to follow them sixteen miles before he caught them, and the day was nearly gone when at last we made a start, to travel but five miles ere we camped again. In approaching Lee's Ferry from the south side, there is little or no premonition of the great break in the canyon walls which makes the ferry possible. Ever since we left Willow Spring, we were really in a portion of the great canyon, for Echo Reef, on our right, had gradually been rising higher and higher, while, far away, on what we knew, although we could not see, was the opposite side of the river, was the stratum with its face of precip- itous bluffs corresponding with Echo Reef, actually making a vast upper canyon many miles wide. But as we drove along, even when we were nearing the ferry, not a sign could be found in the plateau to denote the presence of Marble Canyon. The first fifteen or twenty miles from W^illow Spring is a gentle rise, after which a short ridge is crossed, dotted with struggling pines and junipers, and then begins a gradual descent, which lasts until the ferry itself is reached. The farther we go the more rough and rocky the road becomes. The homestead, established by John D. Lee, now THE GRAND CANYON 221 belongs to the Mormon Church, and is leased to an elder of tlie faith named James S. Emet. It is located about a mile and a half from the ferry on the north side of the river. We had to wait a long time on the south side, owing to our inability to Looking across the Colorado River between the Upper AND Lower Lee's Ferry to the Entrance of Paria Creek — Lee's Ferry Ranch House and Ranch also SEEN. make the ferryman hear; for, not only was there the distance to overcome, but the roar of the rapids above and below the ferry was enough to drown the noise of anything except artillery, unless the wind was in the riq;ht direction. When at last we did cross, the actual presence of the rapids to our right and left, their fierce, angry, deafening chorus, together with the narrow and precipitous walls of 222 IN AND AROUND the mouth of Marble Canyon close by, made us feel the necessity of having ferrymen with sturdy arms, vio-orous lungs, and a thorough knowledge of their business. Arrived on the other side, it was but the work of a few minutes for our horses to pull the wao-on through the soft sand, to what seemed to our desert-stricken eyes a perfect paradise. There, surrounded by towering walls, glaring back in bril- liant reds, crimsons, vermilions, greens, oranges, and yellows, was the scene of the arduous labors of the notorious Lee. Large alfalfa fields, almost equally large vineyards and orchards of apples, pears, peaches, plums, cherries, etc., and a vegetable garden stocked with thriving potatoes, squash, beans, toma- toes, melons, and everything that one could desire, the whole irrigated with water diverted from the Paria Creek, had taken the place of the sandy vv^aste that Lee originally found. THE GRAND CANYON 223 CHAPTER XX JOHN D. LEE AND THE MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE THE detailed story of Lee's connection with the Mountain Meadows Massacre is much too long for these pages, but its outline will show that his name is associated with the Colorado canyons at several points. Who is there that has not been thrilled with the horror of the story of the Mountain Meadows Massacre? And what person, who is old enough, does not recall the sense of relief that was felt throuQ-hout the civilized world when the authentic news was circulated that John D. Lee was shot? There was a space of nearly twenty years (Sep- tember, 1857, to March 23, 1877) between the perpetration of the awful and hideous crime and its avenging. Why ? Various answers have been given, but all are more or less conjecture. In 1857, a hundred and twenty men, women, and children passed through Salt Lake City on their way from Arkansas to California. They met with various difificulties from Mormons and Indians, and, on reaching southern Utah, were directed to camp at a place known as Mountain Meadows. Here they were beset by Indians, and Mormons disguised as such, and for days kept in a state of close siege, 224 IN AND AROUND until water gave out and horrible death seemed imminent. Then Lee and other Mormons waited upon them, and offered to lead them away from danger, provided they would undertake to return and give up their anus to please the Indians. In- credible though it seems, the despondent men, anx- ious for the lives and honor of their loved ones, yielded to this preposterous demand, and, under a flag of truce, began to march — as they thought — to a place of safety. Their line was no sooner stretched out so as to prevent mutual help, when they were set upon by the fiends who had pledged themselves to protect them, and every man and woman, and most of the children, were ruthlessly butchered in cold blood. When the news of this unparalleled atrocity reached the ears of the outside world it was stricken with horror, followed with a fierce rage which called for inunediate vengeance. The hierarch of the Mormon Church was openly accused of being the instigatc)r of the crime. He denied either knowl- edge of or participation in it, except that a report had been made to him by Lee as Indian agent that it was the work of Indians whose fierce attacks he and other members of the church had sought to restrain. Little by little the truth began to leak out that, authorized or unauthorized by the head of thei. church. Mormons were certainly participants in the crime. Lee was charged with being one of the leaders, and an effort was made to apprehend him. He escaped, and was gone for three years, none knowing his whereabouts. Then he returned, and established the ferry that bears his name. Here J. THE GRAND CANYON 225 Hanson Beadle, a noted newspaper correspondent, found him. Soon the knowledge of his return renewed the fierce demand for his punishment. Again an effort was made to arrest him, and again he escaped. After a short lapse of time he returned to one of his many homes, — he had eighteen wives and a correspondingly large number of homes, — was captured, had two trials, was sentenced to death, taken out to the scene of the massacre, and there shot. The attitude of the church is that Lee, for pur- poses of personal plunder, committed the crime, and that he and his associates alone are responsible. Lee claims that he acted under orders, and that when he escaped, both the first and second times, it was because of advices that had reached him secretly from Brigham Young. On the occasion of his first escape, he, with three companions who were like- wise accused, fled to a region below Kanab, into one of the many side gorges of the Grand Canyon. A Paiuti boy accompanied them. According to the story Lee afterwards told to one of the chiefs of the Havasupai Indians, they were so driven for food that, one after another, the boy and two of the men were slain and eaten. On the Shinumo the bones of an Indian boy have been found, hacked with a knife, as if for the purpose of removing the flesh. After great struggles and perilous escapes, the two remaininof \vretches crossed the Colorado River, a little west of the Mystic Spring Trail. One fled to the Wallapai country, and the other, Lee, while subsisting upon seeds and desert plants, was found by the Havasupais, and by them secretly taken IS 226 IN AND AROUND into the depths of their canyon home. Here for nearly three years he remained, teaching them improved meth- ods of irrigation, fruit culture, vegetable rais- ing, etc. Then he decided to return and face his accusers, — so he de- clares, — but, when beset with danger, he again fled, only to be captured at last, igno- miniously secreted in a chicken-house. His claim of be- trayal at his trial is best told in his own words in this literal copy of the letter written by him at the time to Emma, his last wife, from whom I obtained it. John D. Lee and his two Favorite Wives. [From a porlrait in the possession of his son at Tuba City.] UNITED STATES MARSHAL'S OFFICE Wm. Nelson, U. S. Marshal. District of Utah. Beaver City, Utah, Sept. 21st, 1876. Mrs. Emma B. Lee. Lonely Dell, Lees Ferry, A. T. Much beloved Companion, — Knowing the suspense you are in to hear from me and learn of my present situ- ation, and prospects in future, I hasten to write, as I cannot communicate to you in person. I reached here on the 4th instant, but was not wanted till the iith, at which time m,y THE GRAND CANYON 227 bondsmen appeared and surrendered mc to the court, which placed me in an awkward situation. I was left in charge of the officers of the court, and sent to prison, there to await the summons of the court from time to time. This strange and mysterious move warned me that there was treachery and conspiracy on foot. General Wells, or the " one-eyed pirate," as the Tribune calls him, was in Beaver, to advise and council and direct the Brethren how to swear, and those that composed the jury to be a unit in rendering a verdict of murder in the first degree. My worthy friend and able attorney, W. VV. Bishop, felt that we were sold ; he and Judge Foster of Pioche, who assisted him, had the promise that all was right from the leading men of the church here in Beaver, and even went so far as to mark the names of each man to be retained on the jury, telling him that if he would make up his jury with the names marked that they would be sure to clear me. Though fearful, he trusted them, which resulted in the jury's finding a verdict against me of murder in the first degree. Six witnesses testified against me, four of whom purgered them- selves by swearing falsehoods of the blackest character. Old Jacob Hamblin, the fiend of Hell, testified under oath that I told him that two young women were found in a thicket, where they had secreted themselves, by an Indian chief, who brought the girls to me and wanted to know what was to be done with them. That I replied that they was to old to live and would give evidence and must be killed; the Indian said that they were too pretty to kill, that one of them fell on her knees and said. Spare my life and I will serve you all my days, that I then cut her throat, and the Indian killed the other. Such a thing I never heard of before, let alone committing the awful deed. The old hypocrite thought that now was his chance to reek his vengeance on me, by swearing away my life. Nephi John- son was the last man that I could have believed that would have sealed his damnation by bearing false testimony against me, his neighbor, to take away my life. The other 228 IN AND AROUND two witnesses, Knights and McMurdy, swore that I com- mitted the awful deeds, that they did with their own wicl Vn^^4 .,t :'pyright, 1899, by F. H. M ■ni AT THE HEAD OF TOPOCOBVA TRAIL INTO IIAVASU CANYON. THE GRAND CANYON 257 rowness, Havasu Canyon more nearly approximates to the popular idea of a canyon than the Grand Canyon itself. In this regard it is siniilar to, though surpassing, the canyon of the Little Colorado, and as the latter is practically inaccessible, and the former is so comparatively easy of access that I have taken my daughter into its inmost depths, I deem it appropriate that it should find a representative place in this book. It is a part, and a not insignificant part, of the Grand Canyon system. It is one of the most important of the southern tributaries of the Colorado River ; it is the home of a tribe of Indians whose history and every-day life is insep- arably connected with the Grand Canyon, — a people who rudely engineered the whole of the trails described in this book from the Tanner- French Trail, nearest to the Little Colorado, to the Mystic Spring Trail on the west, — the six most important trails of the Grand Canyon, — so that the only reason against its introduction is that it cannot be treated in these pages as fully and satis- factorily as its importance and interest warrant. Ten years ago, in company with Mr. Bass and a special agent sent out to make overtures to the Havasupais to send their children to Fort Mohave to school, I made my first trip down the Topocobya Trail to the Havasupai village and the superlatively enchanting waterfalls, which have given their name to the canyon. The Indians call it the Canyon of Hahavasu, — the blue water, — a most appropriate and truthful designation, for the water we find on our arrival at the villages is of a singularly blue color. The Iv 17 258 IN AND AROUND dians themselves are the Ha-ha-va-su-pai — the pal, people, of the va-su, blue, ha-ha, water. This is shortened into Havasupai, and by the miners and people of Arizona generally into "Siipai." Leaving Bass Camp, we drive over a fair wagon road that mainly follows the long used tlavasupai Trail from the village to Hue-tha-\va-li, which, as the reader will recall, is the Mount Observation of the Mystic Spring Trail. The whole wagon ride is through the pinion, cedar, and juniper forest that covers this portion of the southern edge of the Grand Canyon. There is nothing of peculiar inter- est in the ride, except that we pass one of the water- pockets of the Indians, — ^ valuable to them beyond silver or Qrold, — a natural water hole in the lime- stone where the rain-water collects in sui^cient quantities to last beyond the rainy season into hot and dry weather. It is about midway between the heads of Topocobya and the Mystic Spring Trails, and therefore most conveniently and appropriately located. It rejoices in the appellation of Ha-ha-ta- wal-ga. After about thirteen miles of this picturesque rolling forest and glade have been passed, the wagon is left, and provisions and bedding — if one is going for a prolonged stay — are placed on pack burros that have been driven on ahead, and we take the saddle on good horses or mules, sure of foot and steady of nerve, for we are going to descend a trail that tries the nerves of horses as well as men. Two miles of riding down the gentle slopes of a " draw," where the Topocobya Canyon has its head, leads us to the point where this ticklish part THE GRAND CANYON 259 of the trail begins. And it is well we were warned beforehand. We ride out upon a very small level space at the foot of the limestone walls that already begin to hem us in, and from there take a look at the "jump off" down which we are expected to believe human beings have constructed a trail safe for us to travel. It is too much for even our cre- dulity. Directly before us — we are on its very brink — -is a precipice of a thousand feet, that ap- pears to hollow in beneath us, so that we cannot see its base. There, far, far, but immediately be- low, is the dry bed of the stream, boulder strewn and rough, in which is our trail, and in that short lateral distance we must lower ourselves the thou- sand feet of this awful precipice. Ah ! what clever engineers these Indians of a past generation were ! To have seen the difficulties would have been enough to discourage ten genera- tions of school-trained engineers, but to the practical necessities of the Havasupai the natural obstacles of making this a place of ingress and egress were soon overcome. Follow with your eye Mr. Bass and the Indians who have come to meet us. To the right, on a narrow shelf, that seems a mere scratch on the face of this frightful cliff, they are riding or leading their horses. If they dare go, we dare also. So, following them, as they zigzag down the loose rocks and boulders that have fallen into this " Topocobya," sometimes going to the south, then to the north, with the advance members of the party now below us so that easily we could Jumj 26o IN AND AROUND upon their backs, — in places where to give an enemy a love-tap with a fifty pound rock would have been, in purely Indian days, the most simple matter imaginable, — then straightening along on a shelf under the overhanging cliff, and descending over another hair-raising precipice, three steps hewn out of the solid, slippery rock, only to return to more " zig and zag," and " zag and zig," — this is the occupation that arrests our attention for a full hour, the interest heightened by the constant solici- tation one feels as to whether the horse he is lead- ing will slip over him in the dangerous turns, or whether it will be possible to avoid scaring the horse on the shelf above that is advancing to the south as we studiously and carefully pick our steps to the north. If he falls he will surely bring down upon us a perfect avalanche of the rocks that line his perilous pathway. The Indians' name for this place is an appro- priate one. A "Topocobya" is any semi-circular declivity between two outstretched rocks, as at the fleshy curve between the finger and thumb. A short distance before reaching the dry bed of the stream the trail makes another detour to the left, landing us immediately at the base of the solid mass of limestone and sandstone, and there, indeed, are we surprised at finding ourselves suddenly within a secret recess of grandeur, fascination, and usefulness. Trickling down from the edges of the lowest layers of the rock is an almost imperceptible spring of water, but it is sufficient to comfortably fill three rocky basins, holding forty or fifty gallons. Rising up from these basins is the wall, — solid, mas- THE GRAND CANYON 261 sive, pitiless rock, — curving slightly outwards, so that, in its ascent, it soon completely overhangs and overshadows this cunningly hidden retreat. A chamber indeed for goddesses to bathe and sport in, unalarmed and fearless, for, provided the one Copyri,^ht, ISO'J, by F. H. Maude. At the Topocobya Spring. approach is protected, there is no spot around from which a peeping Tom may see what transpires. This trail and the spring are connected with the memory of the notorious John D. Lee, of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, for it was on the plateau above that he was discovered by the Hava- supais. Blindfolded, they led him down the canyon we are soon to traverse, to the hospitality of the vil- lage, where, for nearly three years he was generously entertained and cared for; as completely lost to the 262 IN AND AROUND outside world of wives, friends, church, and country, — all of whom were looking for him with varying degrees of eagerness — as though he had no exist- ence whatever. Packs adjusted, saddles put back from the necks of the horses, and cinches tightened, we resume our journey. For a while — a mile or so — our trail is on the loose pebbles of the dry stream. The rock}' walls of sandstone and limestone tower precipitously on each side of us. This is Topocobya Canyon, a side canyon to the main Havasu (Cataract) Canyon, to which this leads us, and its junction with which we reach when about half the distance between the spring and the village is accomplished. All along this portion of our way are immense masses of rude conglomerate, — pebbles, rocks, and boulders imbedded in a softer substance which has hardened around them like mortar, — occupying such positions as demonstrate them to have been formed by slow accumulation in the former bed of the stream. Oftentimes they were directly in the course of the creek, which has washed through them and formed walls on either side through which we pass, fifty, a hundred, and even more feet high, thus showing the power of the occasional torrents which disturb this now quiet and dry ravine. The ravine soon cuts into the red sandstone, and rapidly we "drop" into it, leaving the gray walls, to be immediately hemmed in by the red. What a chansfe of scenerv in a few m»inutes! These walls have marked stratification, and, as the erosion has cut down the rock, it has left terraces, revealing the lamination. These terraces are of varying sizes THE GRAND CANYON 263 and widths, and as we go lower and lower they are crowned with all the fantastic forms and fiQ:ures that one can conceive. This would have been a perfect treasure ground of suggestions for the medi- aeval sculptors who wanted hideous forms for gar- goyles for their churches and cathedrals. i ►-^'fra I trv'^'i \j '-^ %3f^ ^ PJfe^ ■yright, 1898, by George Wliarion James Man-a-ka-cha, present Kohot, ok Chief of Havasupais. THE GRAND CANYON 287 Many of the names given are proofs of the rude, lusty animality of the people, for they are untrans- latable to ears polite, though to the Havasupais they are every-day words and suggest no offence. A great source of amusement to the little chil- Co/'yright, 1S9S. by George Wharton Jaiifs Havasupai Girls playing Game of Hui-ta-oui'-chi-ka. dren — especially the girls — is tossing three or four hard small melons as the jugglers do, seeing how many they can keep in the air at one time. Often have I seen four, and sometimes five and six, kept up together. Their eyes and quick, active motions make this an interesting occupation to witness. Another game, called Hui-ta-qui'-chi-ka, is played as follows : — Squatted around a circle of small stones, the circle having an opening at a certain portion of 288 IN AND AROUND Its circumference, called the Yam-si-kyalb-yl-ha, and a large flat stone in the centre, called Tad-bi- c/ii, the Havasupai Indians play the game called H^ii-ta-qtn -chi-ka. Any number of players can engage in the game. These players are chosen into " sides." The first player begins the game by holding in his hand three pieces of short stick, white on one side and red on the other. These sticks are called Toh-be-ya, and take the place of our dice. Rapidly they are flung upon the centre stone, — Tad-bi-chi-ka, — and as they fall, counts are made as follows : — 3 whites up . lO 2 whites and i red up . 2 2 reds and i white up 3 3 reds up . 5 Tallies are kept by placing short sticks between the stones — "/////" — tliat compose the circle, one "side" counting in one direction from the opening Yam-si-kyalb-yi-ka , and the other " side " keeping tally in the opposite direction. Of late years this gamic has been one of the most popular forms of gambling with the Hava- supai, and even the girls now play it, gambling for safety-pins or other girls' treasures. But space forbids lengthened description of this interesting people. Elsewhere I must write more fully about them. THE GRAND CANYON 289 CHAPTER XXVIH HAVASU (CATARACT) CANYON AND ITS WATERFALLS AND LIMESTONE CAVES IT is at the foot of the cottonwood trees before mentioned that Havasu Creek bubbles up in a thousand springs to enjoy an open-air existence for Navaho Falls, Havasu Canyon. the remainder of its journey to the Colorado River. It is no figure of speech to say a " thousand springs," for the creek is alive with them all the way down, some small and others as large as a man's thigh. 19 290 IN AND AROUND At Navaho Falls, half a mile below the village, the stream is fully ten feet wide and about four feet deep, and flows rapidly. As the water emerges from the ground it is neither cold nor pure. It is slightly warm, and though clean to the eye, is heavily charged with lime and oxides. These sediments are answerable for the astonish- ing process which is constantly in operation imme- diately below the Havasupai village. They rapidly solidify, clinging to anything that affords sufficient resistance to overcome the force of the current. It seems that at some remote period the inner chasm below where the Indians now live became gorged and choked at different points by falling boulders, thus forming a base for the cataracts and waterfalls it now contains. The velocity of the current was checked, its carrying capacity reduced, and the work of building up commenced. Destruction at one point, reconstruction at another. Trees, vines, etc., took root in the alluvial deposits. Each suc- cession of vegetation became enwrapped in a solid casement of lime, while the sand and debris were held in check and firmly cemented together in a conglomerate mass. For ages the solidifying pro- cess has been going on, building outward and up- ward. Miles and miles of this conglomerate or native concrete may here be seen, as well as the processes of manufacture in active operation. There are tree trunks, doubtless encased when growing, and now exposed by later erosion of the surround- ing deposit. Scores of caves are found, full of red- dish, creamy accretions, some as delicate as the finest ferns, others that rival the cobwebs in their THE GRAND CANYON 291 frailty and surpass them in beauty. Above Navaho, Bridal Veil, and Mooney Falls one may spend hours ransacking these repositories of exquisite workman- ship " not made with hands," and by the sides of Bridal Veil and Mooney Falls, in places over which the lime-charged waters used to flow, especially beautiful specimens of these accretions are to be found. Just below Bridal Veil Falls is a great mass of this " concrete," reaching almost the entire width of the canyon. It is covered by a wild tangle of trees, shrubs, and undergrowth, yet careful study of its surface demonstrates that it was once the retard- ing pathway of the creek, which, at some impetu- ous period in its history, when made swollen and fierce by flood waters, rasped and cut a narrow way to the right, through which it still flows. For, allowing for the natural erosion, this wall — which is approximately from sixty to one hundred feet deep, an eighth of a mile wide, and a quarter of a mile long — presents the same appearance as the quarter or half mile in the narrow canyon above. Here the bed of the stream, which extends across the entire canyon, is covered in many places with a growth of Cottonwood trees. Wherever a root has been exposed the solidification of the carbonates has taken place, and, as one stumbles and jumps his way along, he crosses scores of small, large and larger basins, some of them ten, fifteen and more feet deep, and equally wide and long, all made by the upbuilding of these sediments clinging to roots, fibres, or arrested debris. Nothing can be more strange and picturesque than these basins. They remind one somewhat of the geyser basins in the 292 IN AND AROUND Yellowstone, but, being surrounded and overshad- owed by trees, and filled with clear running water, and extending for a long distance, they are far more attractive and romantic. In trying to reach Beaver Falls, which is several miles below Moonev Fall, I found hundreds of these basins. Indeed, the only way my companion and I could make progress was by swimming the pools, one after another, where the concrete edges were too weak or narrow to allow us to walk over them. This was exhausting and wearisome work, and, after three miles of it, we determined to go no farther, and with difficulty struggled, waded, and swam our way back. Never again since have I tried to reach Beaver Falls that way. There are five waterfalls in Havasu Canyon. The first is Havasupai Falls, a small but picturesque "splurge" of waters not far below the village. The next, a few hundred yards farther down, is Navaho Falls, more pretentious and strikingly beautiful ; but it is so inferior to the next falls, generally known as Bridal Veil Falls, that in these already too-expanded pages I must forego the pleasure of describing it. Bridal Veil Falls — Wa-ha-hath-peek-ha-ha — is, to my mind, the most exquisitely beautiful water- fall in the world. There is nothing in the Yosemite that, for rich delicacy of beauty and rare combina- tion of charms, can equal it. Sit down in the grass in the magnificent amphitheatre built by Nature immediately before it, and drink of its delicate beauty to the full. Nay! you cannot do that in one hour's view. You must study it ere you can know fill that makes it what it is, "a thing of beauty THE GRAND CANYON 293 and a joy forever." To the left and right are towering cHffs two thousand feet high, of red sand- stone. At your feet is rich green grass, and a deli- cate gauzy growth, as fine as asparagus grass which covers the ground with fairy-like lace and makes a carpet fit for a "Midsummer Night's Dream " dance. Above, just on the edge of the fall, are several trees, rich in their new dress of spring leaves, with the red moun- tains and azure sky, as richly blue as that of the Medi- terranean, form- ing a singularly picturesque back- ground for the incomparable fall underneath. The leafy branches overhang the falling water, and drop down so as to mingle their green with the blue and green of the water and the fluffy white spray of the fall, whilst ivy, peculiar vines, climbing clematis, maiden- hair and other ferns, columbines, and rich and rare mosses, in a perfect revelry of green shading, cover the rocky setting of the fall with a grace and elegance that would be at once the envy and the despair of any Bridal Veil Falls, Havasu Canyon. 294 IN AND AROUND landscape artist. But even this does not complete the description of the background of the fall. The sediment in the water, before spoken of, combined with the small shrubs, etc., which grow profusely, has made a number of caves — some large, others small, as if a number of umbrella trees, growing up- right on the face of the cliff, had been drenched with water, and then, whilst the water was still fall- ing, by some magic art, trees, leaves, branches, and water had all become red stone. Now, with such a background, enjoy the fall — Wa-hath-peek-ha-ha. It is not one sheet of water, as the Niagara or Vernal or Nevada or Yosemite, but there are at least five hundred different streams, one large, three or four lesser ones, and the remainder mere tiny baby falls, which, flowing over the varied red and green oehind, make up this fairy-like scene. Fairy-like ? Yes, indeed it is ! Shut out the world beyond from your thought, let your imagination have free play, and in five minutes Oberon and Titania, and all the hosts of Shakespeare's fairyland, are dancing on the grass, merrily tripping in and out of their own caves be- hind the falling water, laughing and playing with the dashing spray, while mermaids, tritons, and nereids splash and dash in the pools beneath as the water falls upon them. Pan is alive again ! His pipes are heard in the singing of melodious waters as they descend, and dash, and babble, and murmur and gurgle on their way to the far-off sea. In a booklet recently issued some one has had the effrontery to place the following as the title under an engraving of these falls : " The Hance Falls, Grand Canyon." Such a designation reflects TPIE GRAND CANYON 295 no honor upon the author of the book, as it is a false and misleading title. These falls are not in the Grand Canyon, and the association with them of the above name, which is synonymous with noth- ing that is " beautiful, true, honest, pure, lovely, and of good report," is a desecration and an imperti- nence that every true soul will resent. There are four modes of descent to Bridal Veil Falls, all of which I have followed, though the way generally taken is the path on the left-hand side of Havasupai Canyon and down by the Miner's Trail. One may clamber down the side of Navaho Falls, or go along the regular trail to the left until he comes to a break in the marble wall, which leads by a scary foothold here and there down to the open space a few hundred feet above the fall. Or, he may cross to the right-hand side of the canyon, either above or below Havasupai Falls, and then, tying his horse to an immense boulder on the plateau, scale the wall over and through the caves to the bed of the canyon which is seen to the left, when looking towards the falls from below. And what a descent that " climb " is ! First a few foot- holes cut into the rock, then through a manhole eight or ten feet deep into the heart of one of the great caves, before described, formed by the carbon- ate of lime in the waterfall of centuries ago when this was the place of its life, instead of fifty or one hundred feet away. Here another hole of fifteen or twenty feet is to be crawled through, and then more hand and foot holes, where one clings to the face of the wall as a cat climbs up a tree. It is ticklish work, and requires clear brain, 296 IN AND AROUND steady eye, and strong muscles to accomplish it in safety. The caves here are the most beautiful and per- fect I have ever found. They are such caves as our childish imagination used to people with mer- maids under the sea, only all the seaweeds, kelp, and salt water are gone, and the caves are high and dry in the heart of this canyon. There are lace-work in most delicate tints, masses and masses of coral, and festoons of stone sponges in all the caves, and there are small caves leading from large caves, and caves within caves, caves below caves., caves above caves, and labyrinth after labyrinth of caves, all full of these exquisite and delicate specimens of lime- stone accretions. It appears as if tree branches, the leafage of shrubs, ferns, trailing vines, creepers, etc., had all been caught by the overflowing water, and bowed down in umbrella form, and there, in that position, coated with the red limestone deposit before referred to. Imagine a score or a hundred of these stone masses, appearing one above another, and all across the face of the cliff over which Bridal Veil Falls leap, irregular in arrangement, diverse in form and size, and yet all having the umbrella shape, and you have a faint conception of these peculiar and in- teresting formations. Of course only half the umbrella is presented. It is as if a large number of different-sized stone umbrellas had been cut in half, and then cemented on the rock wall for the water to tumble over. Inside and underneath each formation are stalac- tites and stalagmites, crystals, lime-covered moss, THE GRAND CANYON 297 ferns, vines, shrubs, tree trunks, branches, bunches of leaves, masses of debris, but all made into fairy- like lace-work by the slow weaving of the stone- laden waters. I have several tree roots and branches covered from half an inch to an inch in thickness Havasu between Bridal Veil Falls and Mooney Fall. with the stem still green and living within. I have seen scores of tree trunks, in the older formation.s, completely surrounded, sometimes the tree rotten to punk, in other cases so firm that they could be pulled out, thus leaving the stone matrix empty. From Bridal Veil Falls to Mooney Fall is a most interesting walk. There is just enough of adventure in it to give spice and vim, even for ladies ; but of course they, as well as the sterner sex, must dress in such a manner as to enable them to face the roughness without fear. The distance 298 IN AND AROUND is a mile, and the first part of the trip is over the peculiar red limestone formation already described. There are acres and acres of it, piled up in some places two, three, or four hundred feet high. Tree trunks, branches, leaves, twigs, are still found em- bedded in the lithoid substance, and in the hidden recesses of the caves rare specimens may be found, as delicate in appearance as the finest Mexican filigree work, and yet ready to fall to pieces at the slightest touch. They are composed of the skeletons of leaves, plants, and flowers, covered with a very slight lime formation, as if the " troll " of the waterfall had but breathed on them as they decayed. Farther down, the surface of this formation has so disintegrated as to afford plentiful nourishment for plant and tree life, and there is an extensive area covered with a tangle of cottonwoods and underbrush. Climbing up the sides of the canyon, which become deeper as we go farther down, are vines, clematis, ivy, and other creeping shrubs, and on examining these I was astonished and delighted to find, in a score of places, the water trickling down, filtered of its reddening substance, and de- positing its lime in a million fantastic forms on rocks, tree, fein, moss, and iiower. Stalactites twenty feet long are found, hidden in tiny caves, — long narrow cracks, that just allow the pendent lime column to hang. By and by, if left undis- turbed, these columns will so expand as to fill up the crevices, and a limestone la3'er will be made, to be further solidified by time, and in after years to be exposed, perhaps, as an object lesson in geological infiltration. This is not mere theory, o H W o o < THE GRAND CANYON 299 for I have watched the processes on my different visits, and in many cases have found the growth of lithoid matter exactly as here described, both be- hind the falls and in the canyon wall crevices. Crossing the stream, in several places, on tree trunks, we come at last to a deserted mine. White men discovered a fairly rich silver mine, worked it for a time, built a trail at considerable expense out from the canyon to the plateau above, and then de- serted it. In rambling about the tunnels I found a couple of boxes and sacks, in which were sticks of dynamite, candles, etc., the latter gnawed by the rats. On the dump are still to be found good specimens of ore, bearing silver and gold in paying quantities. Just above Mooney Fall the creek flows directly under the right wall of the canyon. Its roar fills our ears as we walk with and wade in the stream, and at length we stand on the summit and look down through the spray and mist into the great basin below. We are able here to trace the path of this fall. The umbrella-shaped lithoid formation occurs here as at Navaho and Bridal Veil Falls, and, as the debris, washed down in the stream, has caught and solidified, the w^ater has been diverted, first to one side, then to the other, until it has filled up the entire canyon from wall to wall with these beautiful appearances. To the left of the fall we are able to climb down over a number of these "umbrellas" to a lower level, and there we can obtain not only a better view of the fall, but can explore a score of the caves under the umbrellas, where most delicate specimens are to be obtained. 300 IN AND AROUND This fall is named by the old Indians "Mother of the Waters," but by the whites, and now even by the younger Havasupais, Mooney Fall. This name was conferred upon it in memory of James Mooney, a mining prospector, who lost his life here in the year 1880. Mooney was a sailor, who, weary of his sea-faring life, settled at Prcscott, Arizona, and became a miner. Learning of the Grand Canyon and its tributaries from cowboys and others who had traversed the banks of the great gorge, and doubtless fired with stories that have never ceased to circulate in this region about valuable mines dis- covered and worked by the Spaniards and the Indians and then abandoned, he with four others started from Prescott on a prospecting trip. They came in safety to the Havasupai village, and were hospitably received. Near the foot of Bridal Veil Falls they prospected and made some locations, and then pushed on until they reached the summit of these falls. Mooney, being the most adventur- ous of the party, urged an immediate descent to the lower plateau. How were they to reach the foot of the fall? He would descend by means of the rope they had brought. One end was securely fastened above and the other thrown over the precipice. Without waiting to see whether the rope reached the bottom, Mooney grasped it in both hands, coiled it around his leg, and was soon slipping down to the depths beneath. His com- panions, unable to see him, waited long enough, as they thought, to enable him to reach the bottom, but no sign or signal did Mooney give. They tried, by peering over the precipice, to see where THE GRAND CANYON 301 he landed, but in vain. Then one of them, seizing the rope, pulled upon it, and as it immediately yielded, found there was no one upon it ; conse- quently Mooney must have reached the bottom. But still he gave no signal. They shouted and shouted, but no answer was returned. At last, thoroughly alarmed, and fearing that their comrade had met with an accident, they sought a place from which they could see where the rope hung. To their horror they found that it did not reach to the bottom of the precipice, and saw that Mooney, relying upon its reaching the bottom, had dropped unknowingly and unconsciously to his death. He must have been so surprised when he came to the end of rope as to be incapable of giving any alarm, or, if he did so, its sound was lost in the roar of the falling water. It is possible that he discovered that the rope was too short, but in throwing it over the precipice he had carelessly allowed it to enter a crevice, which would prevent his pulling himself up hand over hand. However it had happened, there was no doubt as to his fall, for there he lay. In vain his friends tried to descend the tragic depths, and at last, finding it impossible, sadly they gave up the trip and returned to Prescott. It was not until ten months later that a party of them re- turned, so equipped that they were enabled to build and put in place a ladder, — which, in an un- safe and dangerous condition, still remained when I made my 1898 trip, — by means of which they de- scended. There they found the remains of their friend. Reverently they dug a grave, and covered all that was left of him who had gone to his death 302 IN AND AROUND in so sudden a manner. When I first visited the fall, the grave of Mooney was still to be seen, although one end of it had been washed away during some unusual rise of the water in the can- yon. It has now completely disappeared. About six miles below Mooney Fall is a smaller cataract named Beaver Falls, from the large number of beaver constantly at work there. Five miles far- ther and the junction of Havasu Canyon with the Grand Canyon — Hack-a-tai-a — takes place. I have never seen this junction. Several times I have tried to reach it, but some unforeseen and un- provided for difficulty has always interposed. Some day perhaps I shall succeed. The Havasupais call the Grand Canyon Hack-a- tai-a Chic-a-mi-mi. The first word signifies any loud, roaring sound, whether caused by a fierce wind or the dashing of the waters ; the latter word means a large canyon. The Colorado River always gives this roaring noise, especially in the region of the rapids. So the name Hack-a-tai-a to them has come to mean the canyon as a whole. Hence, when a Havasupai would tell you he is going to the canyon, he says, " Ya-ma-gi Hack-a- tai-a," " I go to the place of the roaring sound." His own canyon is Havasu Chic-a-mi-ga — the small canyon of the Blue Water, Chic-a-mi-ga be- ing a small canyon. THE GRAND CANYON 303 CHAPTER XXIX AN ADVENTURE IN BEAVER CANYON I HAVE had many a perilous adventure in my ten years of exploring in the canyons of the Colorado River, but none so peculiar as one I passed through this year (1899). My note-book says : — " I sit here late in the afternoon of Saturday, Au- gust 3, 1899, alive, well, and happy. An hour ago my Indian guide and friend, — Wa-lu-tha-ma, — of the tribe of the Havasu, and myself were entrapped in a deep gorge, where the sun shines for but one or two hours in the day, between two precipices, the one descending over fifty feet and the other ascending about twenty-five feet. The space be- tween these two precipices is perhaps two hundred to two hundred and fifty feet long, and is occupied by a deep pool of water. An hour ago I almost despaired of leaving the place alive. Bruised, bleeding, exhausted with my futile endeavors to scale the smaller precipice down which we had come, I sank back into the deep water almost help- less, — the Indian had about given, up in despair, when I determined upon making another and a different effort. " For years, as related in the preceding chapter, I have endeavored to reach the junction of Havasu 304 IN AND AROUND (Cataract) Canyon with tlie main canyon of the Colorado River (Chic-a-mi-mi Hack-a-tai-a), but have not yet succeeded. Others starting from the Havasupai village claim that they have stood where the pure blue waters of Havasu Creek mingle with the dirty red of the Colorado, but my efforts have not been crowned with success. "On talking the matter over with Wa-lu-tha-ma, who with Yu-ta controls this portion of the canyon as a range for his stock, he suggested that, instead of descending to the foot of Mooney Fall, we ride along the plateau above, detour to the south to the head of a short but frightfully deep tributary can- yon known as Beaver Canyon, ascend to its head, and, starting down its bed, reach the junction that way. It is astonishing how easy such trips look when one is merely talking or writing about them, and how the difficulties magnify as the endeavor is being made. " I decided to attempt the descent the way \Va- lu-tha ma suggested, and on Saturday, August 3, 1899, the two of us set forth. We rode along on the edge of the canyon, on the plateau made by the long-ago denudation of the strata above, and at places came to where, without dismounting from my horse, I could look down into the frightful depths of the canyon to my right, to where the Cottonwood trees and flowing: water o^ave life and wondrous enchantment to what would otherwise have been an awful hell of barren rocks. For the walls here were not more than a cou})lc of stone throw\s apart, — two hundred or three hundred yards, — and yet they were a sheer two thousand feet or THE GRAND CANYON 305 more in actual, unbroken depth. No wonder that even the Indian kept as far away from the edge as he could. "All the morninfj we rode, turnino- at lenoth from the southwesterly direction of the course of the canyon of the Havasu to the south, where the tribu- tary — Beaver Canyon — entered. This canyon at its junction with the Havasu is as majestic, grand, and awe-inspiring as the main canyon, but it rapidly narrows, going towards its head, until there are places where the sun seldom, if ever, reaches the bottom, — a canyon of perpetual gloom. To the head of this we rode, some three or four miles from the point of its junction. After finding water for our horses and turninsf them loose to o-raze until our return, — which we calculated might be in two or three days, — we prepared for the descent. We had provisions enough for scant three days, but they were hearty and good. Wa-lu-tha-ma took them on his back, and also carried two long, stout ropes, which we anticipated the possibility of needing. After walking down perhaps a quarter of a mile, we lunched and then pushed forward. In less than an hour we came to the place of our fate, — the place where I now write, and where Wa- lu-tha-ma lies asleep, wearied, exhausted with his heroic and successful climb back to life. Poor fellow ! it is time we were returning, but I have n't the heart to awaken him. Let him sleep and gain the rest he has well deserved, for had it not been for him I should be down below on the nether edge of that pool, shivering myself to death, a shiver more of fear than of cold. 3o6 IN AND AROUND " We had passed one rather big downward jump caused by a blocking boulder when we came to this. Try to picture two marble walls, several hundred feet high and less than twenty feet wide. Immediately where we are two immense boulders of sandstone have fallen in, and, aided with lesser rocks, have completely blocked up the narrow space. To the right the tiny stream flows rapidly down the steep bed of the canyon. It dashes into a small pool under the larger of the two boulders and then down a marble slide or shute into the great pool beneath, which is fully twenty feet in depth at this end. When we reached this spot Wa-lu-tha-ma, after examining it, laughed and cried out, ' No in-yah-a' — no trail, no way, — and said we must go back. Seeing my intense disap- pointment, he looked again, and as I gazed into the dark pool of deep waters I asked whether he dare plunge into this deep reservoir, and swim to the farther end, and there look down to see what the prospects were for continuing our jour- ney. He said he would go if I would. We could tie the rope to a boulder above and then pull ourselves up after we had investigated the situation. " No sooner said than done. We undressed. I carelessly threw the rope over a boulder and asked him to fasten it before he ventured his weiirht O upon it. Laughing and thoughtless, Wa-lu-tha-ma seized the rope without inspecting it, lowered him- self, and plunged in. Calling out that the water was ' ha-ni-gi ! ' — good — I followed, and, to my horror, just as I put pressure upon the rope it THE GRAND CANYON 307 slipped from off the boulder and precipitated me into the pool. 1 sank, but my heart rose into my mouth, and I felt — what did I not feel? — as I came to the surface and looked up that horrible marble slide down which the water was flowing, — as it had been doing for centuries, making the rock as smooth as if polished by a lapidary, — and up the other side where the sandstone boulder stood at an angle so slightly tilted from the perpendicular as to seem absolutely precipitous. How should we get back ? The Indian laughed with thought- less glee. ' No yarm-i-gi,' he cried, — ' no way of getting back.' Hastily I swam to the lower end of the pool and found worse conditions there than at the upper end. It was another precipice deeper than the one over which we had come, and at the foot of it another pool equally as large as the one through which we had swum. And what beyond ? I did n't know, but Wa-lu-tha-ma did. There was no way out down there, he said, except to struggle on, naked as we were, to the junction of the Havasu, then up to Mooney Fall, and endeavor to climb out up the old and dangerous ladder. " This made even the Indian serious, and, swim- ing to the upper end, he tried and tried and tried again to scale the marble slide and the sandstone wall. But they were alike insensible to the danger of our state, and yielded not an iota of their impos- sible conditions. Then I tried, and the rough sandstone scraped away large pieces of my cuticle here and there, and the cruel marble bruised me almost everywhere as I slipped and slipped again in my desperate attempts to ascend. 3o8 IN AND AROUND " Then it was that I thought of trying to remove a smaller boulder that acted as a keystone by the side of the great boulder that dammed the lower end of the pool. I thought if this could be taken up, a large amount of the water of the upper pool would flow away and give us a better chance for our escape, than struggling up a steep-faced rock directly from deep water. But Wa-lu-tha-ma thought the water better than nothing to fall back in. ' Nothing,' meant being bruised on the rocks beneath, and perhaps dashed to death. Then why not try to carry some of the smaller rocks ; build up a standing place ; get it as high as possible ; then one of us stand on that to give the other a 'boost' up the rock to where, possibly, a hand- hold could be reached, and thus escape made possible. It was hard work to swim, sometimes on the surface, but oftener under the water, with heavy rocks in our hands, and it was frightfully slow work building up a pile high enough to be of any service. But we kept at it. Sometimes we got a rock half-way across the pool and were compelled to drop it. Then rising to the surface for air, we would float a moment or two, regain breath, strength, and courage, dive down, seize the rock, and with a desperate forward dive seek to put it in place. " At last I deemed the pile high enough. We sat down and rested, and studied out a plan of action. Wa-lu-tha-ma was to go first, get on the pile, and obtain as good a hand and foot hold as he could. I was to follow, and, planting myself firmly on the rock pile, help him up in any and every THE GRAND CANYON 309 way until he could stand on my body or shoulders or head, and thus get out. Fortunately we had a second rope above, so that it was not necessary for him to be weighted with the innocent cause of our misfortune as he made his endeavors. We did as we had planned. Twice he slipped back, and forced me to make a backward dive off the pile. But the third time he fairly seemed to hang on with his fingernails and eyebrows, while I braced myself to bear his strugglings as he stood on my body and shoulders reaching upwards. At last, with one shout and a grunt of content his weight left me, and he was safe on top. Joyfully I dived in, returned to the other end of the pool for the treacherously tied rope, swam back, and pulled myself out as Wa-lu-tha-ma held the other rope. " It is easy to laugh at it all, now that it is over, but as I stretch over Wa-lu-tha-ma's sleeping form ere I wake him, and look down into that deep shady pool, the 'shivers' go over me, and I ask myself tw^o questions: What would I have done without Wa-lu-tha-ma ? and. Is there a Providence that watches over such a careless explorer as I am?" We were tired out when we arrived late that afternoon at Wa-lu-tha-ma's ha-wa, which we had left in the morning. The Havasupais had openly prophesied that we could not make the descent, so I was not surprised, three minutes after our return, to see men, women, and children come around as if they had been on the lookout. As' soon as possible Wa-lu-tha-ma and I sat down to eat, surrounded by about thirty of the Indians. They 310 IN AND AROUND listened with great glee to the recital, by my com- panion, of our attempt and failure. I was made the butt of the major part of the fun, Wa-lu-tha-ma ate and ate and continued to eat, and the coffee-pot was twice replenished ere he had completed his Wa-lu-tha-ma telling the Story on our Return. story. Knowing the joking propensities of his people and their utter indifference to the feelings of any person out of whom they can extract a little fun, I was prepared for the rude jokes and vulgar witticisms expended upon me, and sat eating and drinking with the stolidity of a Hottentot — or a Havasupai. If they enjoyed making me the object of their fun I was quite willing, since I was safe out of the adventure. But I am going again some day. THE GRAND CANYON 311 CHAPTER XXX THE GEOLOGY OF THE GRAND CANYON TO discuss exhaustively, in a few pages, the geology of the Grand Canyon, when Major Powell and Captain Dutton required large vol- umes for the purpose, is an evident impossibility. All I can do is to give an outline of their theory. Simultaneous with the deposition of the sedimen- tary strata in the ocean beds which afterwards became the plateaux of the Grand Canyon region, the uplift and subsidence consequent upon the coolino; and contractinor of the earth's surface were Quoins: on. For it must be remembered that in those early days of the earth's history its crust was in a far more heated, and therefore plastic condition, than it is now. So that when vast sedimentary deposits were rapidly made in any given area, the yielding earth subsided, and thus afforded room for more and higher deposits. These processes of deposition and subsidence continued until, for some reason or other, a new era set in. The depositions ceased, the subsidence was reversed, and uplift began. And ere long (geologically speaking) the matter that had been deposited under water as sand, silt, and what not, now appeared above the face of the waters as solid rock ; that latest deposited appearing first. And, 3T2 IN AND AROUND if the uplift continues long enough, all the strata thus deposited are exposed, and perhaps also the archaean and plutonic rocks beneath. This is what we actually find to be the case in the Grand Canyon. At the mouth of the Little Colorado clear evi- dences of uplift and subsidence are seen in con- nection with the non-conformable strata of the pre-carboniferous era. Here, with a thickness of about five hundred feet, strata are found, in a tilted condition, upon which are horizontally deposited the several thousand feet of the carboniferous era. To the geologist the history of these strata is easily read. It tells of ten thousand feet of rock sub- stance deposited horizontally upon the plutonic formations aeons ago. In the uplift that followed their deposition they were tilted. While thus thrust out and tilted, denudation began. This undoubtedly was rapid and fierce, for ninety-five hundred feet were removed and washed down by the river. But the non-scientific reader asks : How do you know ninety-five hundred feet of strata were re- moved from this region.? W^ith only five hundred feet- left how can you assert that there were once ten thousand feet.? In other words. How do you measure strata that are no longer there .? The answer is simple. One could take books that are but a foot high and an inch thick, and, standing them in a tilted position, lay them together, as in Fig. A, side by side, for a mile. Yet they would be but a foot in height. But if these same books were placed one above another, as in Fig. B, THE GRAND CANYON 313 Fig. a. Fig. B. they would no longer be a foot, but a mile high. Now, instead of dealing with books, deal with immense layers of rock five hundred or more feet in thickness and covering vast areas, deposited originally one above another as the books are piled in Fi^. B to a thickness of ten thousand feet. Then slowly tilt this mass over until the rocks are sloping, as are the books in Fio^. A, but of course reachinsf far up into the air. Let the forces of erosion gnaw away at them for the centuries, and by the time they are submerged again into the ocean bed, they are mere fragments of their former selves. Yet if their measurement be taken lougihidinally, it is apparent that this must have been their height when originally deposited horizontally. Consequently, though now they are but five hundred feet horizon- tally, their longitudinal measurement being ten 314 IN AND AROUND thousand feet or thereabouts, we know that tliat was their oriijinal height. Standing on Ute, Comanche, or Navaho Points, or riding down the Red Canyon Trails, these non- conformable strata are beautifully apparent. On the Red Canyon Trail, showing Nonconformable Strata. Newberry Terrace and Vishnu Temple ACROSS the River. Above these non-conformable strata are to be found various layers of the carboniferous to a depth of some four thousand five hundred feet. These are as level and horizontal as when originally deposited. Here then is a demonstration that after the period of denudation, when the nine thousand five hundred feet of strata were washed away, the whole of this region subsided, and was again submerged. THE GRAND CANYON 315 During the period of submergence millions of tons of sand and other sediments were washed down from the rocky regions above, and in the course of the ages made the four thousand five hundred feet of depositions we now find in solid rock above the denuded fragm.ents of the earlier strata. To account for their regularity we must assume that the bed of the ocean upon which they were placed, subsided slowly and evenly to allow them to be deposited, and that then a new era of uplift began, and they were thrust out, with regularity and even- ness, to take their places as a part of the rocky crust of the exposed earth surface. But a study of the plateaux around and beyond the Grand Canyon demonstrate to the satisfaction of such an expert geologist as Captain C. E. Dutton that there used to be even ten or eleven thousand more feet of strata on this Grand Canyon Plateau region than now exist, so that, if all the strata that have been deposited here during the ages had re- mained, the sum would have been as follows: — Archaean Rocks depth unknown Algonkian (?) about 200 feet Remains of non-conformable pre-carbonifer- ous . . = 500 " Denudation of non-conformable pre-carboni- ferous 9,500 " Carboniferous (upper and lower) . . . 4,500 " Permian, Jura-Trias, and Cretaceous . . 10,000 " Lower Eocene (lacustrine) 1,200 " thus giving the enormous total of twenty-five thou- sand seven hundred feet of sedimentary deposits. Imagine the height of a region nearly twenty-six 3i6 IN AND AROUND thousand feet above the level of the sea. And these are the conservative estimates of the best informed experts who have spent many years in investigating the geological conditions of this interesting region. How came all these upper ten or eleven thou- sand feet of strata to disappear? Here is Captain Dutton's theory. Suppose the whole country were forced up from underneath in a dome-shaped mass, and that over the area of greatest elevation the rasping forces of nature began to gnaw away the rocks, which were ground into minute particles and carried away as sediment in a river that had a great descent, and therefore great transporting power ; it would not be long (speaking geologically) before that eleven thousand feet of strata would disappear. If this theory were a correct one, however, the remnants of the strata would be found in the form of terraces leading up from all directions towards this common centre, the summit of the original dome, and which is now the platform of the Grand Canyon. These terraces are found west, north, and east. They are met, as one journeys east and north, exactly as one would expect to find them, — first the Permian, then, further back, the Triassic, then the Jurassic, followed by the Cretaceous and Eocene. Button claims that this great denudation took place in Tertiary times. Here existed a great Eocene lake, which received the sediment-laden waters of the rivers above. Slowly the continent at this region began to be uplifted. The waters of the lake were poured out into a channel they rapidly carved for themselves. As the uplift continued, the THE GRAND CANYON 317 cutting clown accompanied it with equal speed. The river, laden with rock debris, was the saw, — to use Major F'oweH's apt illustration, — and the for- mation of the uprising earth's crust was the log, and as fast as the uplifting forces supplied the log the saw cut through it. And these processes continued, until not only the eleven thousand feet of Eocene and Mesozoic strata were washed through, but the saw rasped into the Carboniferous, made sharper and keener by the destruction and removal of the beds of Eocene and Mesozoic which had once cov- ered the Carboniferous. And had the uplift not ceased, the sawing pro- cesses would have continued until many thousand more feet, perhaps, of the Archaean and Plutonic rocks had been exposed, and some of earth's most esoteric transactions revealed. And this is the theory Newberry, Powell, and Dutton present to us as the only rational explana- tion of the existence of the various canyons of the Colorado River. It is accepted almost without question by all the great geologists of the world, and by them is believed to be the only theory that satisfactorily accounts for all the existing conditions. But during all these asons of uplift and subsi- dence, erosion and corrasion, were there no greater forces at work } Are there no evidences of earth- quakes, active volcanoes, and the like, to more satis- factorily account for this stupendous phenomenon } These are questions perpetually asked by those of less geological knowledge. Complex questions, indeed, yet the geologists are 31 8 IN AND AROUND almost a unit in answering them. Earthquakes, vol- canoes, faultings, flexurings ? Yes, in great quantity, but as subsidiary, ViOt primary, forces in the produc- tion of the Canyon. Across the Grand Canyon and Plateau regions over fifteen faults of stupendous magnitude are found to exist. Some of these are hundreds of miles in extent, and the displacements vary from a few hundreds to upwards of seven thousand feet. Imagine the process. A great country, of thou- sands of square miles of area, split in half, one portion remaining on the level, and the other slowly but surely rising seven thousand feet above its original level, or subsiding to that extent. It is the evidences of these great upheavals that puzzle the local and slightly informed geologists. They contend, and not without some show of rea- son, that these must have had some important influence in the creation and present appearance of the great Colorado waterway. Undoubtedly they have helped shape its ulterior form, but in a small and insignificant manner as compared with the great law of simultaneous uplift of the region and cutting down of the river's channel before outlined. And it should not be forgotten here, by way of an important parenthesis, that, comparatively speak- ing, during all these years of cutting and rasping the river retained about the same level. It neither raised nor lowered. It went on flowing, and cut down its channel as fast as the uplifting forces fed the rock to its saw-like waters. I have already described, in the chapter on the Mystic Spring Trail, the Wheeler Fold in Trail Can- THE GRAND CANYON 319 yon. This is one of the earth's flexurings while the processes of upHft and subsidence and crust crump- ling were going on. But I think it is evident that this took place in pre-carboniferous times, and therefore could not have had any influence in determining the course of a waterway that was made through strata deposited at a much later era, and which, as an impervious sheet, covered this and scores of similar folds and wrinkles throughout the region. The Uinkaret Mountains, which are clearly seen from the head of the Mystic Spring Trail, are purely volcanic, and their fiery floods of lava have poured in burning streams over the very edge of the Canyon's precipices, thus demonstrating an activity long after the Canyon was formed. It is not improbable that the San Francisco Mountains — which are all volcanic — were once an area of great depression in the plateau region whose denudation I have attempted to describe, and that, prior to that wholesale denudation, a chimney or rent in the earth's crust had afforded a vent for boiling lava from the molten mass beneath. This lava formed a crust over the area of depression, so that when, subsequently, the region round about was eroded, this lava crust acted as a protecting cap and saved the region from falling a prey to the other- wise irresistible forces. Thus, as the degradation continued, the erewhile depression became a prom- inence, and ultimately a mountain. There are many other evidences of faultings, flex- urings, and upheaval to be observed in the canyon region, and in the Bibliography published at the end of this volume the interested student will find a list of 320 IN AND AROUND those works that will aid him in his studies of these and all other geological phenomena connected with the Grand Canyon. That the Grand Canyon region presents to the geologist a fascinating and unequalled field there can be no question, and he who seeks to penetrate the mysteries of nature's primitive forces will be wise if, ere he travels farther, he solves the problems here offered for solution. THE GRAND CANYON 321 CHAPTER XXXI BOTANY OF THE GRAND CANYON I SHALL attempt no personal account of the botany of the Canyon, but merely introduce this heading to allow the insertion of two items from the Canyon Hotel Register at the Peach Springs Trail. Professor Asa Gray, of Harvard, Americas greatest botanist, and Mrs. Gray, visited the Canyon May 3, 1885, and thus wrote in the register: — " Some conspicuous Fonquiera splendens, Acacia Lemmoni, n. sp. AUionia incariiata L. Fallugia paradoxa. Cow^ania Mexicaua. Larrea Mexicana. Porophyllum. Eriogonum inflatum. Abronia turbinata. plants of the Canyon are : — " Occotillo." Cat's Claw. Flat on the ground, flowers all day and all the year. Shuts at night. Bush with white, rose-like flower on slender stalk. Bush like last, many greenish white blossoms, followed by beautiful feathery seed-carriers. The Creosote plant. So vile in odor that even mules will not eat it. With yellow flowers in balls, sweet scented, on slender twigs. Herb. Indian pipe-stem. Small flowers in cluster, white flowers in the sand on the river. 21 322 IN AND AROUND Alternanthera lanugi- Large flowers, separate. White nosa. flowers in the sand on the river. Erytheae Calycosa. Herb with red, star-shaped flowers. Professor and Mrs. J. G. Lemmon, of Oakland, California, on November 4 and 5, 1892, wrote as follows : — " First visited the Canyon April, 1884, discovering sev- eral new species of plants. Second visit, November 4 and 5, 1892. Following is a list of the principal plants of Peach Springs Wash and Diamond Creek to its confluence with the Colorado, be- ginning with the trees : — Populus Wislizeni. The large poplar near the spring. Nut Pine. The only pine of the region. Sp. Pinon. Rare on the plateau, surrounding and in the Canyon. Western juniper. Long-pod mesquite, with large leaves and spines. Screw-pod mesquite, with small leaves and spines. Acacia Lemmoni, Gray, n. sp. Cat's Claw. Dalea Parryi. Dr. Parry's dalea, shrubby bush. Grayia polygaloides. Grease wood. Commemorating Professor Asa Gray. "Neat but not gaudy," as he says. Green bush, quite large on the cliffs below the spring ; a mass of in- tricate branches and spines. Shrubby black oak, the only oaks of the region. True willows, several species along the damp can)'ons. Quite large one is Salix longifolia with white, long leaves. PinuB edulis. Juniperus Utahensis, Lemmon, n. sp. Juniperus Occidentalis. Prosopis juliflora. ProBopis pubescens. Canotia holacantha. Quercus turbinella, Greene Saliz. THE GRAND CANYON 323 Cheilopsis saligna. Atriplex. Ephedra trifurca. Penstemon Palmeri. P. spectabilis. P. Parryi. Salazaria Mexicana. Fallngia paradoxa. Co^vania Mexicana. Larrea Mexicana. Fonquiera splendens. Porophyllum macro- cephalum. CEnothera Ceespitosa. CEnothera albicaulis, AUionia incarnata. Desert willow. Resembles a willow, but bears large red bilabiate fls. Several species of pigweed — one is quite a large bush. Mexican Tea, a noted medicine for skin diseases. Dr. Palmer's beard tongue, — pur- ple, in the Canyon, large (3-5 feet high), very fragrant and beautiful. Ver)' beautiful. Near Peach Springs Station — purple. Dr. Parry's, smaller, — red. Fragrant shrub of the mint family. Commemorates the Mexican member of Boundary Survey, — Salazar. Shrub with solitary white flowers. Shrub with many yellowish flowers. The noted Creosote bush, very strong-scented, spreading bush, with bilobcd leaves and jointed stems. Even the traditional burro's appetite rejects this bush. " Candlewood," from its flame- like flowers, and also termed " Occotillo " from resemblance to a fish-pole. Very curious, and tenacious of life. Odor of marigold. Large rose red, flowers numerous, by the very side of the Colorado river, fragrant. White evening primrose. Prostrate, running plant, with red flowers. 324 IN AND AROUND Salvia Greggii. Abrouia turbinata. Menthaceous plant. Aster tortifolius. Aplopappus. Phacelia glechomae- folia. Phacelia Lemmoni, Gray, n. sp. Phacelia saxicola, Lemmon n. sp. Nicotiana trigonophylla. Argemone hispida. Eucnide urens, Parry, Hilaria rigida. Muhlenbergia Texana. Panicum Lemmoni, n. sp. Cheilanthes Parryi, Eaton. Cheilanthes tenera. Perhaps undcscribed, red. Dia- mond River. On sand-spit at confluence of Dia- mond River. Diamond River. With very large showy flowers. Several other species along the Wash from Peach Springs. Several species, one yellow-flow ered, shrubby, in Diamond Creek. New species, large-flowered, very pretty. W^ill be an acquisition for cultivation. On rocks, small flowers rare. On rocks near Peach Springs, the roots penetrate the cracks of the rocks and flake ofl" small convex scales, — hence the name. Indian tobacco. Rough Mexican poppy, flowers 4-6 inches across. Clefts of rock along Diamond Creek, clothed with stinging hairs. Galleta grass, coarse but very nu- tritious. Black Grama, fine-stemmed, very valuable, $60 per ton. Near Peach Springs Station, with several species. Parry's cotton fern, clefts of rocks. Clefts of rocks — high up on sides of Diamond Creek, very rare. THE GRAND CANYON 325 Cacti. Opuntia fulgens. Opuntia arborescens. Opuntia basilaris. Cereus Wislizeni. Cereus gigantea. Mammillaria phel- losperina. Mammillaria pectinata. Several species called " Cholla " (Chaw-ya) if formidable, or " Tu- iia" if bearing eatable fruit. White-spined and formidable, bushlike. Quite large and terrible bushes. Prickly pear, common, nearly spine- less. Barrel cactus, 2-3 feet high. Giant cactus, 40-60 feet high, " Su- giiar-o^' Sp. for Water Carrier, (pron. Swar'-o). Fish-hook cactus, small, 3-4 inches high, with hooked spines. Rainbow cactus, with bright-col- ored zones. On the Kohonino Plains bordering the Grand and Havasu Canyons is a thin forest of Pinus sco- puloriim, Lemmon (lately decided to be a distinct species). This is south of the Canyon, and leads by scattered trees back to the magnificent forest of the same species covering the great Colorado Plateau, some seventy by thirty miles in extent, and which is seen at its best from any high point near the Grand View Hotel. I am indebted to Professor J. G. Lemmon, of the Lemmon Herbarium, Oakland, California, for several valuable additions to this chapter. 326 IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XXXII RELIGIOUS AND OTHER IMPRESSIONS IN THE GRAND CANYON CAN any soul look upon a masterpiece of any kind, the masterfulness of which is in any degree apparent to him, and not feel the deepest emotions of his nature stirred ? Marion Crawford well illustrates this in " Marzio's Crucifix." The infidelistic chiseller of silver images for churches, who despised creeds, churches, and priests, w-as yet so moved before a crucifix of his own manufacture that, as he bowed before it to study its artistic ex- cellence the better, his daughter, accidentally seeing him through the half-open door, imagined him in the surprising attitude (for him) of reverent and adoring worship. And there was a worship — of its kind. So, with all souls capable of feeling, the Grand Canyon produces — calls forth — emotions, feelings that, for the time being, at least, dominate all other feelings. I once rode up the mountains in a fierce storn\ with Clarence Eddy, the great organist. We were^ almost blown from our horses. But the power of it, — the irresistible fury of the storm, the compelling impetuosity of the wind, the dominating roar of its angry voice in the trees, made such an impression THE GRAND CANYON 327 upon Mr. Eddy that he said : " This forms an epoch in my Hfe. I shall play better for this experience so long as I live." This is something of what I mean when I speak of the religious and other impressions evoked by the Grand Canyon. To the musician it will suggest new powers in his art; to the artist, new color emo- tions will be stirred ; to the sculptor, new forms will be suggested; to the architect, new majesties in structure will be set forth ; to the reverent believer in God, new conceptions of His power; to the ag- nostic or disbeliever, new and strange movings of the soul, which speak of higher forces than any yet conceived. One man, an avowed agnostic, as he stood and gazed upon the vast amphitheatre of sixty-five miles' sweep which is opened up to the gaze at Havasupai Point, turned to me and said: "What a place! Here is surely where the Almighty will hold the Judgment Day ! " What a long history this Canyon has had in the making of it! Look back a hundred years, when Washington and Jefferson and their compeers were fighting for American freedom, and this Canyon was hoary with antiquity. It seems a long time ago since Cromwell battled to overturn the doctrine of the divine right of kings, yet the Grand Canyon has scarcely added a day to its history since the unhappy Charles the First was beheaded. The dawn of American history begins with Columbus, yet from the time of Columbus until now, scarcely a change of any importance in this great waterway could be discerned by the most careful observer. 328 IN AND AROUND History has begun to grow dim wlien you look back to the time when William the Conqueror, with his warlike Normans, slew the Saxon Harold at Battle Abbey, yet this great and mighty river was then flowing as it is now. The twilight has become darkness when we gaze upon the Pyramids of Egypt, yet God had sculptured the many and wondrous architectural forms of this Grand Canyon centuries before Cheops was born, or the dynasty of the Shepherd Kings had gone. And as one listens to the teachings of the geolo- gists in regard to the formation of the Canyon, the millions of millions of years that undoubtedly have elapsed since its foundations were laid, the millions that have rolled away to allow ten thousand feet of non-conformable strata to be deposited, elevated, tilted, washed away; the depression of the Canyon surface again for the depositing of Devonian, Lower Carboniferous, Upper Carboniferous, Permian, Tri- assic, Jurassic, Cretaceous; the formation of the vast Eocene Lake and its total disappearance; the open- ino: of the earth's crust and the venting^ from its angry stomach the foul lavas that blacken portions of its area, — the mind reels and whirls and grows dizzy in a vain attempt to comprehend the magni- tude of such periods of time, and when reason can assert itself it is to feel the truth of the Hebrew Apostle's words : " One day is with the Lord as a thousand years, a thousand years as one day." The "American style of Architecture" is not yet born, yet, I am satisfied the time and the master architect will come. And when he does come, it is in this Grand Canyon that he will gain his inspira- THE GRAND CANYON 329 tion. From the varied, marvellous, and sublime of the thousands of miles of canyon, a system of architecture will be created quite as original and national as Persia and Egypt borrowed from their sandstone ledges, or the inhabitants of the north of Europe found in the primeval forests of the fir and pine. Then who can gaze upon this weird and won- drous beauty and not feel that God must love beauty for its own sake ? The idea that everything is formed solely as a background upon which to dis- play the development of man, takes powerful grasp upon us when we yield ourselves to the persuasive eloquence of Browning, but a voice louder and more forceful than the great English master's peals forth in one's own soul when he gazes upon God's great work here, and he feels instinctively that the Al- mighty God made this glorious grandeur centuries of centuries before man ever could see it in order that He, personally, might enjoy its beauty. Just as the garments of Aaron the priest were to be made "for glory and for beauty," so do I think this great Canyon was made as a revelation to man that God loves to make things solely for " Glory and Beauty." Then its solitude ! Ah, who but those who know and love the solitude that shuts out the fever of life; the fretful nervousness that contact with man produces ; the rush of busy streets ; the cold- heartedness, selfishness, indifference, and apathy to others' woes that one must see in great population centres, — who but he can tell the delight of this gracious, healing, restful solitude, where, however, 330 IN AND AROUND one is never alone ? For there is an abiding sense of the brooding presence of the Ahiiighty, all- powerful, all-loving, all-merciful, that soothes and hushes and quiets the distressed and wounded soul, so that a normal equilibrium is gained and strength restored to return to one's place, manfully to fight one's true battles with the world, the flesh, and the devil. To me this Canyon is the Holy of Holies, the Inner Temple, where each man may be his own High Priest, open the sacred veil, and stand face to face with the Divine. And he who can thus "talk with God" may not show it to his fellows, but he knows within himself the new power, calm- ness, and equanimity which he has gained, and he returns to life's struggles thankful for his glimpses of the Divine. And yet what words can tell how utterly insig- nificant man must feel himself to be when he finds himself in the depths of this Great Gorge, solitary and alone, and finds not this Divine presence ! He may be a king on his throne ; a despotic ruler in his office ; a monarch in his store; a tyrant in his workshop; but here he is so dwarfed, made so small, that, if he have any soul at all, he is humbled and made reverent at this marvellous manifestation of superior power, might, and greatness. But it is only to suggest a few of the impressions aroused by these scenes that this chapter is inserted as a fitting conclusion to my book. I never take a mental view of the great river flowing from the high snowy mountains of Utah, Wyoming, and Colorado to the great Pacific through the Gulf of California, that I do not feel THE GRAND CANYON 331 how like to man's life it is. Watch it from its source to its mouth. It has its rise in the pure white, un- sullied snow of the mountains; it flows on, gather- ing strength and power as it progresses ; it passes through Flaming Gorge, where everything is bright and brilliant; there is the excitement of the rapids, and the exhilarating feelings that come from dash- ing along at high speed and the dangers are mini- fied. Soon sweet and restful paths are entered, where gentle deer browse, and the " forest aisles are filled with the music of birds, and the parks are decked with flowers." Then comes the Canyon of Desolation, with everything dreary, desolate, and forsaken. But even here the " Lighthouse Rock " catches the rays of the sun and speaks of brightness beyond, which, indeed, is reached when farther progress is made, and Glen Canyon is entered. Marble Canyon, with its rapids and dangers, is passed, and then- the waters enter the Granite Gorge of the Grand Can- yon. Here jagged cruel rocks line the waterway, and there are places of deepest gloom where the sun never touches the water. Here are great waterfalls, and then deep cuts through black and forbidding lava. But on and on the water flows, enters Black Canyon, and finally emerges into the open, peaceful, gentle slopes of the desert, down and on, without effort, into the Gulf of California, soon to have all its individuality as a river lost in the vastness of the great Pacific Ocean. Is not this a perfect type of man's life.'* He begins in the high mountains of innocency and childhood. He progresses through places where 332 IN AND AROUND everything is bright and brilliant, and passes in safety and exhilaration places in life where others, perhaps, have been wrecked. Then he enters the soothing parks and quiet pathways, gaining strength and courage for the canyons where rapids must be run and disasters risked, and, happily, avoided. How joyously he welcomes open places and sun- shine that follow, and how disgusted with the re- straining influence of the "bends " of life, and then how sad and forsaken when he is forced into the Canyon of Desolation! Friends have forsaken him, loved ones gone, perhaps even God seems to have left him to himself, but as he looks up, even here he sees the sun of grace shining upon the Light- house Rocks that raise their heads above the Canyon walls, and new hope, new faith, new en- couras:ement are the result. And alas! he, too, may have to contend with " Dirty Devil " streams flowing into his life, which will becloud and befoul the hitherto pure waters. But, as in the Colorado River, by and by the Bright Angel Creek, with full, clear, pellucid, refresh- ing, and purifying power enters in. And so his life flows on, passing through canyons and rapids, dashing by the cruel, hungry granite and over dangerous waterfalls; but just as surely as the river flows on and enters the Great Pacific, so will man enter the unfathomable ocean of the heart of God. So, friend, reader, whomsoever you may be, and in whatever portion of your canyon journey, may I commend the end of life to you as your en- couragement. If you are in the refreshing parks THE GRAND CANYON 333 there may be Desolation Canyons ahead. Get all the strength and courage you can; you will need these and all the virtues ere the end of your journey is reached. Have you just entered the cruel water- way and been dashed over great precipices and find yourself crushed and bleeding where the sun never shines.? Flow on ! Ere long you will emerge into the sunshine, and in the bosom of God forever find rest. 3J4. IN AND AROUND CHAPTER XXXIII PHOTOGRAPHING THE GRAND CANYON UNTIL recently there were few subjects more disappointing to the photographer — pro- fessional as well as amateur — than the Grand Canyon. Its vastness, its great precipices and wide distances, all covered and filled with a peculiar purple or violet haze, rendered it singularly un- accommodating to the photographer's art. In the Yosemite and similar valleys the objects are so near, compared with those of the Grand Canyon, that photography was enabled to accomplish for the former what for years it could not achieve for the latter. But as in all difficulties capable of scientific so- lution, persistence, skill, and science at length have overcome the obstacles to excellent picture-making to a great extent, and now good photographs of the Grand Canyon may be obtained. And in the fore- front of those who have studiously worked for a solution of the many problems involved is Mr. Frederic Hamer Maude, of Los Angeles, who for several years has visited the Canyon, making hun- dreds of negatives, and learning from his failures the secrets of success. The result is an excellent selection of most artistic and desirable subjects. From the Red Canyon Trail to the Topocobya THE GRAND CANYON 335 Trail into Havasu Canyon he has seized upon almost every available point to secure grand and comprehensive views of the Eastern, Surprise, and Western Outlooks. From the interior plateaux he has made photographs of mural masses crowned with fleecy clouds that are triumphs. He has most successfully caught the varying moods of this most moody of American rivers, and its rapids, whirlpools, and smooth stretches have all pictured themselves upon his sensitive films. In his studies of the Havasupai Indians, the waterfalls, limestone caves, and general environments of their wondrous canyon home he has been no less successful, and this book owes many of its illustrations to his skilful en- deavors. Another photographer who has met with admi- rable success is Mr. A. F. Messinger, of Phoenix, Arizona. He has spent considerable time and energy at Bass Camp, Havasupai Point, and has a number of fine subjects from all the salient out- look points. With a persistent energy that would have daunted and discouraged most men, he labored day after day on the rim and on the plateaux below with his large twenty by twenty-four outfit, mak- ing gigantic panoramas twenty inches high and eight feet in length. Two or three exquisite pic- tures such as these, printed on bromide or platinum surfaces, giving the wide sweep of Canyon from rim to opposite rim, afford one a clearer comprehension of the architectural variety found within the Canyon walls than pages of verbal description. On one occasion, when taking his large camera down the steep trail to Le Conte Plateau, the pack mule, 33^ IN AND AROUND just at the most ticklish portion of the road, ob- jected to his weighty and top-heavy pack, and sought to rid himself of it. Kicking and plunging, he became oblivious to his danger. Lenses and knick-knacks scattering about his heels rendered him more reckless, and with a desperate plunge he landed head first on a slop- ing ledge, a foot be- tween himself and death. With reckless bravery Mr. Bass dashed upon the pros- trate animal and sat upon his head. Mr. M e s s i n g e r, d e t e r- mined to hang on to his precious camera outfit, clung to the mule's rope with des- perate earnestness, and between the two the a n i m a 1 was hoisted to a place of safety, his pack adjusted, and the trip completed without further contretemps. On another occasion, while on the very edge of the Grand Scenic Divide, a sudden storm arose, which nearly blew camera and operator into the deep gulf beneath. But, re- gardless of dangers and difficulties, Mr. Messinger persisted, and his excellent collection of superb photographs is his reward. LVELL MONLfiMENT IN THE COKNER OF Standing Rocks. THE GRAND CANYON 337 The engraving of Lyell Monument, from the " Corner of Standing Rocks " on Havasupai Point, is one of Mr. Messinger's choice pieces. Other photographic artists — as H. G. Peabody, of Boston, Massachusetts — have made fine pictures of the Canyon, and some of Mr. Peabody's artistic creations grace these pages by his favor. But without question the finest, the most elabo- rate and satisfactory work yet done photographi- cally in the Grand Canyon, has been accomplished by Mr. Oliver Lippincott of the Lippincott Art Photographic Company of Los Angeles, Cal. Mr. Lippincott has made a large number of photo- graphs, taking in all the principal trails from the Red Canyon to the Mystic Spring and Topocobya Trail into Havasu Canyon. He has been pre- eminently successful in his large panorama work, making panoramas six and seven feet long and one to three feet wide. Photographically they are per- fect ; the mechanical work is the best of its kind, and of the art shown in securing the subjects, in choosing locations, and in placing upon the sensi- tive paper those scenes that were especially im- pressive to the Canyon visitor, too many words of praise cannot be said. Until photography in colors becomes an accomplished reality it seems to me that nothing can surpass Mr. Lippincott's Canyon photography. Especially should attention be called to his panorama from Comanche Point, taking in the river, Vishnu Temple, Point Final, Newberry Terrace, and the massive North Wall of the Kai- bab Plateau. Another panorama is from Havasupai Point overlooking the region of the Mystic Spring 338 IN AND AROUND Trail, showing Point Sublime, Dutton Point, Bass Tomb, Dox Castle, and the Grand Scenic Divide. To own such pictures as these is to possess those things that are "a joy forever." On his trip to the Mystic Spring Trail Mr. Lip- pi ncott descended to the river, making pictures from the Grand Scenic Divide, and all the way down Trail Canyon. Then crossing the river, he made several fine pictures of Shinumo Creek and Camp. He is now contemplating a trip which will take him across to the summit of the Kaibab Plateau, where, from Point Sublime, he will photo- graph those scenes that hitherto we have had no pictorial record of except j.n the admirable outline sketches, before described, made by Professor Holmes, THE GRAND CANYON 339 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE GRAND CANYON REGION " Relacion de la Jornada de Cibola Conpucsta por Pedro de Casteiiada de Nagera." The original of this narrative is in the Lenox Library, New York. A fine translation, with critical notes, by GEORGE PARKER VVlN- SHIP, is in the Fourteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. " Report upon the Colorado River of the West," by Lieutenant Joseph C. Ives. Executive Document No. 90, published by order of the Secretary of War, 1861. " U. S. Geographical Surveys West of the looth Meri- dian," by Captain Geo. M. Wheeler. Vol. I., Geographi- cal Report, pp. 156 to 171, with many plates, devoted to the Exploration of Colorado River and the lower portion of the Grand Canyon. " Explorations of the Colorado River of the West, 1869-72," by Major J. W. Powell. U. S. Government Printing Office. "The Journeyings of F. Francisco Silvestre Velez Es- calante from Santa Fe to Utah Lake," etc. In Simpson's " Across the Great Basin in 1859." " On the Trail of a Spanish Pioneer." The Diary and Itinerary of Francisco Garces. Translated by Elliott COUES. 2 Vols. F. P. Harper, New York. " Explorations in Texas, New Mexico, California," etc., by J. R. Bartlett, U. S. Commissioner of the Mexican Boundary Commission, New York, 1856. " Military Reconnoissance from Ft. Leavenworth to San Diego, by Lieutenant-Colonel W. H. Emory. 340 IN AND AROUND " March from Santa Fe to San Diego, Cal.," by Colonel P. St. George Cooke. " Tertiary History of the Grand Canyon District," by Captain C. E. DuTTON. U. S. Geol. Survey Monographs, No. 2. With large atlas. " The Physical Geology of the Grand Canyon District," by C. E. DuTTON. Second Annual Report U. S. Geologi- cal Survey. " Report of the Exploring Expedition from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Junction of the Grand and Green Rivers of the Great Colorado of the West in 1859," by Captain J. N. Macomb, Engineer Department, U. S. Army, 1876. " Geology of the Uinta Mountains," by J. W. Powell, Department of the Interior, 1876. " Geology of the Henry Mountains," by G. K. GILBERT, Dept. of the Interior, 1880. " Geology of the High Plateaus of Utah," by C. E. DUTTON, Dept. of the Interior, 1880. "The Upper Colorado," Nature, p. 337, Feb. 15, 1877. "The Canyons of the Colorado," by Major J. \V. Powell, Scribner's Mag. Vol. IX. Three articles, pp. 293. 394. 523- " Physical P""eatures of the Colorado Valley," by Major J. W. Powell, Popular Science Monthly, Vol. VII. Three articles, pp. 385-531-670. "The Great Canyon," by Major J. \V. PowELL. Sub- scription Book, published by the Chautauquan Co. " An Overland Trip to the Grand Canyon," by J. W. Powell, Scribner's Mag., Vol. X, p. 659. " The Geological History of the Colorado River and Plateaus," by C. E. DUTTOX, Nature, Jan. 16, 1879, p. 247, Jan. 23, 1879, p. 272. In Nature, Feb. 15, 1883, p. 357, ARCHIBALD Geikie reviews Captain Dutton's " Tertiar}' History of the Grand Canyon District." " The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft," 39 Vols., San Francisco, Cal. THE GRAND CANYON 341 " Through the Grand Canyon of the Colorado," by Robert Brewster Stanton, p. 591, Scribncr's Mag., 1890, Vol. VIII. " Availability of the Canyons of the Colorado River of the West for Railway Purposes." Transactions of Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers, No. 523, April, 1892. In the American Naturalist, May, 1890, p. 463, notes are given of " R. B, Stanton's Recent Descent of the Colorado River." " Through Mysterious Canyons of the Colorado," by F. A. NiMS, Overland Monthly, Vol. XIX, p. 253. " In the Whirlpools of the Grand Canyon of the Colo- rado," by Ethan Allen Reynolds, Cosmopolitan, No- vember, 1889. " Grand Canyon of the Colorado," by J. G. Lemmon, Overland Monthly, Vol. XII, p. 244. Sept., 1888. (A fine article.) " The Grand Canyon of Arizona," by C. A. HiGGiNS, Passenger Department of the Santa Fe Route. Charles Dudley Warner's " Our Italy " contains two good chapters on the Grand Canyon. " Hand-Book to Arizona," by R. J. HiNTON. " The Grand Canyon of the Colorado," by Henry Haynie, Boston, Mass., Sunday Herald, July 26, 1896. " The Grand Canyon," by John L. Stoddard, in Stod- dard's Lectures, Boston, Mass., Vol. X. " The Nation of the Willows," by F. H. CUSHING, At- lantic Monthly, September and October, 1882. "Our Undeveloped West," by J. Hanson Beadle, National Pub. Co., Philadelphia, Pa. " On the Border with Crook," by John G. Bourke. Scribner's, 1896. " Under the Spell of the Grand Canyon," by T. Mitchell Prudden. " Harper's Magazine, August, 1898. " Photographs of the Grand Canyon," by H. G. Peabody, Fred Harvey, Kansas City, 1900. APPENDIX Plateaus of the Grand Canyon and Their Elevations COCONINO PLATEAU Feet above sea level . 6866 . 6681 6462 6417 6837 At El Tovar At Rowe's Well .... At Road to Boucher Trail At Bass Station .... At Road to Grand View . At Entrance to Long Jim Canyon 681 1 At Bench Mark in Long Jim Canyon .... 7195 On Bass Road near Heather Wash 6372 On Bass Road Overlooking Turquoise Canyon . . 6519 Feet above sea level 6652 At Bass Camp .... At Junction of Ashfork Road and Topocobya Spring 6302 Opposite Topocobya Trail 6129 At Grand View .... 7490 At Hance Ranch . . . 7185 At Trail near Maricopa Pt. 6817 At Cedar Mountain . . yo^y At Head of Straight Canyon 6452 Kaibab Plateau has a general elevation, opposite El Tovar, of 8300 feet. In some places it attains to 8500 feet. Powell Plateau, opposite Bass Camp, has a general elevation of 7650 feet. On the southern and western sides it decreases to 7250, and 6750 near Ive's and Beale Points. Walhalla Plateau, opposite Grand View Point, has a general elevation of 8250 feet. (3n its northern border it attains to 8500. The Painted Desert, both north and south of tlie Little Colorado River, has a fairly uniform elevation of 6000 feet, rising to 7057 feet on Cedar Mountain. Elevations of Towers, Buttes, Etc., Between THE Canyon Walls SEEN FROM OR South of the river The Battleship .... 5867 Dana Butte 5025 Cope Butte 4540 near el tovar Marsh Butte 4730 O'Neill Butte .... 5700 Newton Butte .... 5900 Lyell Butte 5300 344 APPENDIX JVes^ of Bright Angel Canyon Zoroaster Temple . Brahma Temple , . . . Deva Temple . . . . North of the river Cheops Pyramid Buddha Temple . Manu Temple Oza Butte Upperwall Colonnade . 7136 7554 7344 5350 7218 7192 8066 7250 North of the ri Isis Temple . Tower of Set . Horus Temple Osiris Temple Tower of Ra . Sheba Temple Mencius Temple Confucius Temple Dragon Head er {continued) 7028 5997 6150 6637 6079 7650 7000 7128 7728 SEEN FROM OR NEAR GRAND VIEW POINT South of the river Horseslioe Mesa . . . Three Castles .... Coronado Butte (Ayer Peak) Tonto Trail (about) . Escalente Butte .... Cardenas Butte .... North of the river Newberry Butte . Angel's Gate . Thor Temple . . Wotan's Throne Freya Castle Vishnu Temple . Krishna Shrine . N'orth of the river {continued) 4900 Rama Shrine . 641 1 7344 Sheba Temple . Solomon Temple 4993 5103 7120 Tabernacle 4829 4000 Apollo Temple . . 6261 6532 V'enus Temple . 6286 6264 Jupiter Temple . Juno Temple . Siegfried Pyre . 7089 6750 7926 5085 Gunther Castle . 7199 6756 Lava Butte . 4131 6752 Carbon Butte 5305 7700 Chuar Butte . . . 6528 7296 Awatabi Crest • 5398 7537 Qwagunt Butte . 6390 6131 Malgosa Crest • 5585 SEEN FROM BASS CAMP South of the river Bass Camp 6652 Mt. Huethawali . . . 6280 Grand Scenic Divide . 5650 Huxley Terrace . 5500 Spencer Terrace 5450 Le Conte Plateau . 3500 Drummond Plateau 5500 Shaler Plateau . 4650 Fisk Butte .... 3750 Wallace Butte . . . 4750 Tyndall Dome . . . 4250 Bedrock Tank . . . 2840 Fossil Mt • 6730 South of the river {cofttinueii) Signal Hill ..... 6780 NortJi of the river Do's Castle (approximate) 5000 Masonic Temple . . . 6200 King Crest 6250 Holy Grail Temple (Bass Tomb) 6710 Elaine Castle 7425 King Arthur Castle . . 7315 Guinevere Castle . . . 7255 Ex-Calibur Castle . . . 7055 APPENDIX 345 Points and Their Elevations on the South Rim Beginning on the West the points on the South Rim, with their elevations, are as follows Apache Point 6360 Mohave Point 6500 Point Quetzal 6350 Hopi Point . . 7050 Point CenteotI . 6250 Maricopa Point . 7050 Point Huitzil 6100 El Tovar . . . 6866 Montezuma Point 6500 Yavapai Point 7000 Toltec Point . . 6470 Yaki Point . . 7100 Chemehuevi Point 6626 Shoshone Point . 7050 Bass Camp . . 6652 Grand View Point 7406 Havasupai Point 6750 Grand View Hotel 7496 Signal Hill . . 6780 Hance Ranch 7185 Wallapai Point . 6050 Head of Red Canyon T rai 6982 Piute Point . . 6632 Moran Point . 7157 Jicarilla Point 6250 Zuni Point 7284 Mescalero Point . 6635 Papago Point 7370 Mimbrano Point. 6635 PinalPoint . . 7250 Cocopa Point 6250 Lipan Point . 7000 Yuma Point . 6500 Navaho Point 7250 Pima Point . . 6350 Comanche Point 7079 Rowe's Well . . 6681 Cape Solitude 6157 Bass Station . . 6417 Points and Their Elevations on the North Rim Beginning on the W^est the points on the North Rim, with their elevations, are as follows : Newberry Point Thompson Point Beale Point . Ives's Point Wheeler Point Dutton Point . Rose Point Emerald Point Violet Point . Lancelot Point Galahad Point Bedivere Point Point Sublime 7000 Grama Point 7450 6750 Tiyo Point 7765 6695 Bright Angel Point . . . 8153 6600 Natchi Point 8000 6750 Greenland Spring . . . 8000 7555 Ariel Point . . . . . 8000 7500 Honan Point 7050 7500 Cape Royal 7876 7530 Cape Final 7919 7750 Komo Point 8000 7750 Obi Point 8050 7750 Naji Point 8200 7464 Atoko Point 8328 Various Elevations Tonto Sandstones of Bright Angel Plateau, overlooking the river, 370S feet. Distance across Canyon from El Tovar to Kaibab Plateau, 13 miles in an air line. 346 APPENDIX Length of Grand Canyon from the Little Colorado River to Grand Wash, 217 miles. Difference of elevation between El Tovar and the river, 4430 feet. Difference between El Tovar and the Indian Gardens, 4205 feet. Difference between top of Vishnu Temple and the river, 5000 feet. Difference between Grand View and the Colorado River, 3500 feet. Difference between Bass Camp and the Colorado River, 43S0 feet. Difference between Grand View Hotel and the Colorado River at the foot of the Berry Trail, 4896 feet. Colorado River at Bass Cable Crossing .... 2272 Colorado River at foot of Bright Angel Trail . . 2436 Colorado River at foot of Red Canyon Trail . . 26(4 Colorado River at junction with Little Colorado . 2750 Descent of river from mouth of Little Colorado to foot of liass Trail (Bass Cable Crossing) 478 feet. Distance (approximately) about 60 miles. PRACTICAL HINTS TO TOURISTS The Best Time to Visit the Canyon. Visitors should bear in mind that the Grand Canyon is an all-the-year-round resort. Unlike the Yellowstone and many other far west scenic playgrounds, one may visit it with comfort any time of tlie year. While certain periods are more favorable than others for outdoor life, each season iias its distinctive joys. As a rule, this part of Arizona is a true land of sunshine. Sunny days are largely in evidence. As a rule, the air is dry. Even the rains don't soak it through. As a rule, except on the edge of tlie rim, the wind velocity is under the average. As a rule, one may ride, walk, or loaf outdoors, without fear of over- exertion. The air is like wine ; it builds one anew. Yet the weather is not perfect. You may strike a small sandstorm in midsummer, you may hit a blizzard in midwinter, a torrential shower may drencli you in July or August, a fervent sun may unduly tan you, but tliese deviations from Paradise come only occasionally; they are the bitter that makes the sweet more sweet. 1 can safely promise vou, nine times out of ten, pleasanter weather than vou would find if at home. And tliat is the best test. The Best Months. In my varied experience at tlie Canyon, I have found the months of September, October, and November most agree- able in spite of an occasional liot day in September. January and March are often perfect months, and while there may be a little (or much) snow on the rim, I regard the winter as the most delightful time for trips into the Canyon. Tiie snow may make the trail slippery and disagreeable for the first mile or so, then one reaches tlie dry and snowless region where, practically, snow never falls, yet where the heat from radiating rock-walls is tempered and subdued by the coolness from the snow above. May, also, is a good month for visitors, with more possibilities of agreeable days than February or April, though APPENDIX 347 tlie warm clays begin to come on apace soon after the middle of tlie month. Winter Months. From late in November to the end of April, snow may be expected at any time on the rim, though many of the most delightful days of the year occur in these months. Snow usually does not fall until after Christmas. Some years the winter is almost snowless ; other years there is enough snow to make fine sleighing. June and July are the warm summer months, with August hot; but the heat is likely to be tempered by the rain. From tlie middle of July to aliout the end of October, rains tnay be looked for at any time, and the days after the rains are generally cool, delicious, and altogether desirable. Now and again, before and after a rain, the air will become moist and sultry, somewhat as it is in the East, but this condition is so rare as to cause surprise. Generally the air is dry, and the sun shines warmly, so that "catching cold" is infrequent. What to Bring. If much tramping is to be done, stout, thick shoes should be provided. Ladies will find that short walking skirts are a convenience ; divided skirts are preferable, but not essential, for the horseback journey down the zigzag trail. In winter, travelling caps and warm gloves are useful toilet adjuncts. Otherwise, ordinary clothing will suffice. A strong field-glass materially assists in getting a satisfactory view of the farthest cliffs. A camera of ordinary size should be brought along, although it can only record little details of the Canyon — one should not expect satisfactorily to photograph the entire panorama. Those who are doing any climbing will do well to provide themselves with a few Bent's crackers, the hard, solid ones that take up but little room and need a good deal of masticating. Even more useful is a small flask of Horlick's Malted Milk Tablets. These tablets are a wonderful help sometimes. One can be placed in the mouth and allowed slowly to dissolve, and it will relieve both thirst and hunger. They are far better than alcoholic stimulants, and tide one over " Iiard places" without any subsequent evil results. From personal experi- ence I can recommend them highly. A little vaseline or cold cream and other emollients are good for sunburn and chafing: after riding. HOW TO SPEND YOUR TIME AT THE CANYON I cannot too strongly deprecate the idea that some travellers hold, namely, that they can see all they wish to see of the Grand Canyon in two or three days. Never was there a greater mistake. A week is the very shortest time that one should allow himself, and a month is far better. If, however, circumstances should render it imperative that the visitor can spend but one day, there are three trips for his choice, any one of which should occupy one day. First Trip — Down Bright Angel Trail. As a rule those who take this ride down the trail, after arriving on the morning train, do not go as far down as the river. They visit the Indian Garden, and are'then taken out to a prominent point of Angel Plateau, and there obtain a fine view of the river. From the scenic standpoint, this is much to be 348 APPENDIX preferred to going down to the river itself, especially when time is limited. The trail to the river is down a side gorge, where one's view is materially obstructed, and while there is great satisfaction in stand- ing immediately before the river itself, and seeing it roll along between the gloomy walls of the Inner Gorge, one does not see as much of it, or in so striking a setting, as from the plateau, one thousand three hundred and twenty feet above. If one is determined to go to the river, however, it will be necessary for him to arrange for a special guide, and push along down the trail witii vigor, for the regular trail party leaves for tlie river at 8.30 A. M., while the train does not arrive at El T^T'^r until about nine o'clock, and one may wish to take breakfast before starting. Hence, tlie start is seldom accomplished until after ten o'clock, two liours beyond the allotted time. Second Trip — To Hopi and Yavapai Points. To the less strenuous visitor who wishes to see all he can in one day, without the f.itigue of the trail trip, two courses are open. One is to take the two short drives (i) out to Yavapai Point, which gives the panorama views to the east, and (2) to Hopi Point, which gives a corresponding view to the west, or take the drive to Grand View Point. Though Yavapai Point is but three miles away, the drive and the time for sightseeing occupy about two hours. The outlook of the Canyon from Yavapai Point is comprehensive and wonderful, and when com- bined with the view from El Tovar Point and Hopi Point gives the one-day visitor a pleasing variety which he can never forget. El Tov-ar Point is a quarter of a mile west from Yavapai Point, and is so named because it is the end of the right arm of the amphitheatre in which El Tovar is located, and also because it affords a fine view of the hotel itself. It used to be called Grandeur Point. Its elevation is seven thousand feet. Hopi Point is in the opposite direction from Yavapai Point, so the visitor can arrange to return to the hotel for lunch, and then drive to Hopi Point afterwards The round trip is about six miles, also taking in Maricopa Point, and occupies from an hour and a half to two hours. Those who go in private conveyances generally stay longer, and make a three-hour trip of it. Leaving El Tovar, the road turns southwest for a short distance, aud tlien enters the forest to the north. It is a restful drive over a well-made road. While the distance that separates Hopi Point and Yavapai Point seems to be very small, the difference in the scenery of the Canyon is something remarkable, and no visitor should leave without getting these two diverse views. Third Trip — To Grand View. This is a round trip of twenty- eight miles over a fairly good road, and with a good team, allowing for plenty of sightseeing at Grand View, one may so arrange that he can spend a short time "at Yavapai Point on the way out, and by a little planning, arrange to see the sunset at Hopi Point on his return, before leaving on the evening train. The outlook from Grand View is fully described on pages 87 et seq. One thing should be noted about these rim or trail trips. They are all planned so as to afford ample time for meals before and after APPENDIX 349 making them, and also to insure the catching of trains. The Fred Harvey system runs in harmony with the Santa Fe Railway system, so that no matter how nervous the visitor, he may rest perfectly con- tented that when he goes off on any of these trips he will always be back "on time," both for me;ds and trains. Suggestions for Two Days. Suppose the visitor to the Canyon arrives ni tiie niorniii<;on an early train and must leave the next night; how can he best fill in iiis time? He should take either the trip to Grand View, or tiie two siiort drives, viz., to Hopi and Yavapai Points. Either the Grand View trip or tliese two trips will comfortably fill up tlie first day. The second day he should descend the Bright Angel Trail. 1 do not deem it wise for a visitor to spend his first day (which, after all, is only part of a day) on the trail trip, but, if he intends to descend, he should give the whole of his second day to it. If the 8.30 start is made, he can go to the river and back in time for dinner, and have ample time before the departure of the evening train. If, however, he should not care to make the trail trip, then one day can be spent in going to Grand View, and the other to tlie two points, Hopi and Yavapai. Suggestions for Three Days. If the visitor has three days at his disposal, let him spend the first day in going out to Hopi and Yavapai Points. This gives iiim a general outlook over the Canyon from these near-by salient points on tlie rim. The second day, with tiiese rim views in mind, he descends the trail to the river, and thus adds knowl- edge of the interior scenic effects to those already received on the rim. The third day he can drive out to (irand View, enjoy the eastern end of the Canyon, and return to El Toiiar ready to leave after dinner on the evening train, and able to assert with truthfulness that he has gained a reasonably comprehensive view of the Grand Canyon. Suggestions for Four or Five Days. If the visitor can spend fonr or five days, he should take the trips already described, and then plan in addition to go down the Boucher Trail. This is a new trail built since the body of this book was written. It is reached by a ten minutes' drive from El Tovar by way of Rowe's Well, over a some- what rough road through the Coconino Forest. At the head of the trail the harness is removed from the horses, saddles substituted, and the descent of the trail begun. In a little over a mile Dripping Spring is reached, a most picturesque feature of this trail. Picture a great overhanging wall at the very bottom of the cross-bedded sandstone, from twelve to fifty and more feet high, the recess being perhaps thirty or forty feet back. From the rocks above, with a drop of about fifteen feet, seeping through a green cluster of maidenhair ferns, the pure water of the spring drips into a stone trough placed to receive it. Day and night, winter and summer, fair weather or foul, it seldom varies its quick, tinkling, merry drip, drip into the receptacle below. Below the trough a natural cavity in the rocks receives the overflow, and here, within the pool, and on its edges, aquatic and otlier plants grow in profusion, while some recendy acquired goldfisii swim to and fro among beds of moss and floating lilies. The continuation of the trail is through Hermit Basin and under Columbus Point to the lower trail which zigzags to and fro under Yuma Point and finally reaches Boucher Creek and the river. This 350 APPENDIX trail reveals many points of difference from Bright Angel Trail, and well repays the ride. Camping Trips. By far the best way, however, to enjoy the Canyon region is to arrange with tlie management of EL Tovar for one or more camping trips. One can cross the Coconino Plateau eastward to the Little Colorado and thence over the Painted Desert to the Mavaho reservation and Hopi Indian villages. If this trip is arranged at the proper time, one may see that thrilling and fascinating ceremonial of the Hopis known as the "Snake Dance ";i and a visit to the unique towns of the Hopis, perched high upon their rugged mesas, several hundred feet al)ove the Painted Desert, is an experience as foreign to the conception of the ordin.ary Eastern mind as is a trip up the Nile or into the heart of "Darkest Africa." Another trip is to cross the Grand Canyon by wav of Bass Trail and Cable Crossing over Kaibab Plateau to Point Sublime. Still another excellent camping trip will take one to the homes, canyon, and waterfalls of the Havasupai Indians, as described in Chapters XXVI, XXVIII XXVIII, and XXIX. Still another camping trip which an increasing number of people are taking is to go down tJrand View Trail, crossing the old Hance Trail, to the foot of Red Canyon Trail, re-ascending to the rim by way of this interesting trail, studying the non-conformable rocks of the rarely seen Algonkian strata, and then to El Tovar by trail along the rim. Still another trip which is full of a strange, wild fascination is to cross the Canyon to the North Rim by way of Bass Trail, and then visit the Mormon towns of Soutiiern Utah, taking in the extinct volcanoes of the Uinkaret Range. Or one can visit the Mormon settlements and there obtain a guide wlio will take him to the seldom- visited Canyon of the Rio Virgen, whose temples, towers, and walls are a close rival to those of the Grand Canyon. These are merely suggestions, and they are capable of much expan- sion, so that one can visit the Canyon agahi and again, year after year, and stay a month or more each time, and yet indulge himself in a new trip on every visit. THE HOPI HOUSE To give to the visitors at the Grand Canyon an intelligent conception of the manv features of the life of the primitive inhabitants of this fascinating region, Fred Harvey has built within a stone's throw of El Tovar, an exact reproduction of a Hopi House. The original is in the village of Oraibi. It is three stories high and contains many rooms, ft is built of the chips of sandstone and other rock, in accord- ance with Hopi custom, rudely and irregulariy laid in mortar. It is of the terraced style of architecture, each story receding from tlie one below it, so tiiat'the "second-story front "finds a ready courtyard on the roof of the "first-story front," and the "third-story front" on tliat of the " second-story front." Houses of this type were originally built by the Pueblo Indians, to act as fortresses, consequently there was neither door nor window in the first story. The only means of ingress > See " The Indians of the Painted Desert Region," by George Wharton James. APPENDIX 351 was up a ladder and through a hatchway ia the roof. All Pueblo houses are built by the women, who control everything brought into them except the hunting and dance paraphernalia of the men. The Hopi House at the Grand Canyon contains a wonderful collec- tion of the works of Indian industry and artistic skill. Here are to be found baskets made by every Indian tribe of North America, Katchina dolls or masks, Indian pottery, Mexican antiques, Navaho and Mexican blankets in great variety, etc. Navaho and Pueblo weavers and silversmiths are also to be seen daily at their interesting avocations, and several women may be found making their famous pottery ware. Each night representatives of the different local tribes give, for the instruction and enjoyment of the guests at El Tovar^ some of their unique and interesting songs and dances. THE FRED HARVEY SYSTEM OF HOTELS In order to provide for their exacting class of patrons who are desirous of studying the unique scenic, geological, commercial, and social features of the great American South-West, the Santa Fe Railway Company, in connection with Fred Harvey, have established a system of hotels whicli, in their architecture and general appoint- ment, as well as in their management, have given added luster to the already world-famous name of Fred Harvey. Most of these hotels are built after the Mission Style of architecture, made famous by the old Franciscan Missions of California, though they by no means slavishly adhere to this distinctively Western type. The most striking of these hotels are : The El To7>ar, of Grand Canyon ; the Harvey Hotel, of Newton; the new Bisonte, of Hutchinson. Kan.; the new El Ortez, of Lamy, N. M.; the Alvarado, of Albuquerque; the new Fray Marcos, of Williams; the Escalante, of Ashfork, and the El Garces, of Needles. Each of these hotels has its distinctive features, but all being under the same management there is no difference in the quality of service that the visitor obtains. After an experience with one no traveller ever hesitates to arrange, without a word of question, for a week, a month, or longer, at any one of the others. FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE CANYON In addition to this book on the Grand Canyon, I published in 1910 an entirely new work entitled " The Grand Canyon of Arizona." While it is complete in itself, it is almost entirely supplementary to this volume, and forms a fitting complement to it. It comprises 32 chapters, 259 pages, with 87 illustrations and 5 geological diagrams. It is a compact book, light in weight, and handier in form than this volume, so that it can be slipped into the pocket or handbag. Its price in cloth is $1.50 iief, postage 15 cents. Should any further information be required or particulars desired of railway rates to the Canyon from any part of tlie country, those interested are requested to write to any of the following: Geo. T. Nicholson, Passenger Trafific Manager, The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway System, Chicago ; John J. Byrne, General Passenger 352 APPENDIX Agent, Southern California Railway, Santa Fe Pacific Railway, and San Francisco and San Joaquin \'alley Railway, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia; W. J. Black, General Passenger Agent, The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, Topeka, Kansas ; W. S. Keenan, General Passenger Agent, Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railway, Galveston, Texas. It will afford me pleasure to answer queries for the readers of my book if they will enclose a stamped and directed envelope for reply. My permanent address is Pasadena, California. FH -^^/^f /=";'"'■*"/., P L A T E A U I*— I ^es cabin DETAIL MAP OF GRANITE GORGE SECTION GRAND CANYON OF ARIZONA One copy del. to Cat. Div.