F 880 „ _^_,^^^,^,,^^^ .W5914 Copy 2 .UTHENTIC ACCOUNT > OF THE MURDER OF DR. WHITMAN AND OTHER MISSIONARIES, By the Cayuse Indians of Oregon, in 1847, AND THE CAUSES WHICH LED TO THAT HORRIBLE CATASTROPHE. BY THE VERY REV. J. B. A. 6R0UILLET. Magna est Veritas, et prcevalebit.'' Second Kdition. PORTLAND, OREGON: S. J. IVIcCORlVXICK, PXJBLISHER. 1869. AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OP THE MUEDEE OF M. WHITMAN AND OTHER MISSIONARIES, By the Cayuse Indians of Oregon, in 1847, AND THE CAUSES WHICH LED TO THAT HORRIBLE CATASTROPHE. BY THE VERY REV. /b. A.^ROUILLET, II ^^ Magna est Veritas^ et prcevalebiC Second Kditioii, PORTLAND, OREGON: S. J. IMcCORMIICK, FXJBLISKER. 1869. ^. 4 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. issued in 1853, has become exhausted; some of the priu- cipal witnesses of the Indian massacre at Dr. Whitman's station have left the country ; many of them are dead — a new community has sprung up in the land. Still there are found those amongst us whoso prejudices, even at tjiis remote day, are so strong as not to yield be- fore the penetrating rays of truth ; whose minds will not be satisfied with the unchangeable and irrefutable evidence of disinterested witnesses, and whose spleen against the Catholic church, and all that pertains to her creed, her pastors and her people, findsvcnt in the shape of ^' resolutions" without reason,'^ paragraphs without point, and anonymous newspaper articles without re- sponsibility. It being not only impracticable, but distasteful, to the author to undertake the task of replying to the open or covert attacks thus made upon questions of veracity long since settled, ho has included in the present work all the evidence relative to the massacre of Dr. Whitman and others, by the Cayuse Indians, published in his former pamphlet, together with an appendix, wherein will be found additional irrefutable evidence which has since emanated from sources beyond the suspicion of partial- ity, some of which we deem worthy of special reference. The Eev. Gustavus Hines, I). D., (extracts from whose History of Oregon are given in. the appendix) is an in- fluential minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, ,and his evidence alone, aside from the testimony adduced from numerous other equally reliable sources, should bring conviction to the minds of all impartial men, who desire to learn the truth of history. Dr. Hines' w.ork was first issued in 1850, three years after the lamenta- •i-See resolutions adopted by Congregational Assotjiation of Oregon, July, 1869. THE WHITxMxVN MASSACRE. 5 blo tragedy at i)r. Whitman's mission ; the vvork has passed through several editions, finding its way into ev- ery State in the Union, and the author, encouraged by the success ^Yhich was justly accorded his first effort, has issued a recent work upon the Institutions of Ore- gon, yet the truths he published in 1850 have stood un- challenged for nearly tv/enty years, showing the remote causes which led to the massacre of so many innocent people, and clcarl}^ exonerating, the Catholic missiona- ries from the foul charge sought to be fastened on them. The letter of Sir James Douglas, Chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay Co., (who was residing at Yancouver at the time of the massacre at Dr. Whitman's station, and who upon learning the sad newsiramediatelj^ dispatched a large force of their emploj-es, under charge of Peter Skeen Ogde-n, to the scene,. for the purpose of prevent- ing further atrocities) will also be found in the appendix. The opinions so strongly expressed in this letter were based upon information received from Mr. Ogden, Mr. McBean, clerk at Fort Walla W^alla, (the nearest post to the &ceue of the murder) and other reliable gentlemen attached to the Hudson's Bay Company. It is thei'efore strictly impartial, detailing the circumstances which led to the sad catastrophe in plain, Unvarnished language, and expressing the united opinions of men well qualified by education and years of experience, to judge the Indi- an character. The evidence adduced by these and other disinterested witnesses, together with the facts reite\-ated from the former publication, cannot fail of bringing conviction to every candid mind, that the murder of Dr. Whitman and his associates was premeditated, matured and deter- mined upon by the evil-disposed Indians among the Cay- usc nation, long before the arrival of the Bishop of 6 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE WalLa Walla and his mission^aries. In proof of this as- sertion, we need only recur to the files of the "Oregon, American "and Evangelical Unionist," a periodical issued during 1848, at Tualatin Plains, in Washington county, and edited by Rev. J. S. GrifTm. In the fourth number of this periodical we find over the signature of Rev H. H. vSpalding an article from which we learn the fact that a Kez Perces Indian inquired of him prior to the massacre if Dr. Whitman was not killed ; but little attention was paid to the question ; Mr. Spalding, however, mentioned the matter to Dr. Whitman, Mr. Kimble, and others at the station. "TTe considered it a reiteration of what had been said for a long time — a ball can j^enetrate your body. * ;!c * * rpj^^ Doctor in one of his visits had discovered Tamahas (called the murderer from having killed several Indians) who had just before lost his wife, and who was the person that afterwards, with two blows upon the head laid our lamented brother bleeding senseless, but not lifeless, upon the floor) in rather a suspicious attitude. From that time the Doctor had been cautious. But there were no inflammatory meetings among the chiefs, as there had often been. For instance, when they returned from California, two years ago, after the death of the Walla Walla Chief, several meetings were held to consider whether Dr. Whitman, myself or some other American teacher should be killed as a set off for Elijah." It must also bo borne in mind that on several occa- sions previous to the massacre, the Cayuse Indians had made assaults upon and threats against the missionary station at Wailatpu, and the ferocity of the character of the Ca3^use8 is clearly established by Sir James Doug- las, who knew them well, and who declares them to be "the most treacherous and intractible of all the Indian THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 7 tribes in this country, and who had on many former oc- casions alarmed the inmates of the mission by their tu- multuous proceedings and ferocious threats." In order to show more fully the precarious position occupied by the white settlers ia Oregon, previous to the year of the Whitman massacre, we insert an extract from the message of Governor George Abernethy to the Legislative Assembly of Oregon Territory, convened at Oregon City, December, 1847 : '' Our relations with the Indians becomes every year more embarrassing. They see the white man occupying their land, rapidly filling up the country, and they put in a claim for pay. They have been told that a chief would come out from the United States, and treat with them for their lands ; they have been told this so often that they begin to doubt the truth of it ; at all events, they say, ' he will not come until we are all dead, and then what good will blankets do us? We want some-. thii:|g now.' This leads to trouble between the settler and the Indians about him. Some plan should be de- vised by which a fund can be raised, and presents made to the Indians of sufficient value to keep, them quiet un- til an agent arrives from the United States." -^ven as early as 1835, some of the missionaries settled in Oregon and engaged in civilizing the Indians, were in danger of being murdered in consequence of the death of one of the Indian children attending school. The circumstances were as follows: "A boy whose name was Ken-o-teesh. belonging to the Si-le-Iah tribe, was re- 'ceived into the mission in April, and died on the 19th of the following August. A few days after, his brother de- termined to seek revenge for the death of Ken-o-teesh, by taking the life of Daniel Lee and Cyrus Shepard."* •*lliaes' History of Oregon, p. 14. 8 THE WIIITMxlN MASSACRE. This fact illustrates the If.clian creed of '' life for life, °^ and proves that it required no " priestlj^" influences to urge them on. to murder, inasmuch as no Catholic mis- sionaries had then arrived in the Willamette valley. Again, in 1836, "We-lap-tu-lekt, an Indian of the Cay- use tribe-j" went to the Willamette mission, "where he placed his two sons, desiring to have them educated. He had traveled with the missionaries, and desired them to settle in his country, but they^uot acceding to his re- quest, he determined upon bringing his family from east of the Cascades to the Willamette mission. This he ac- complished early in September, 1836. • Some of his chil- dren attended school, and appeared to be making rapid progress; but in February, 1837, his family began to suffer with disease. Two of his children died in quick succession, and a third was fast sinking with a burning fever. We-lap-tu-lekt was frightened, and supposed that all his children would die, if he did not leave the place. He accordingly fled in a canoe, but just as he lauded at ' Fort Vancouver, on his way to his mountain home, an- other of his children died. "These repeated deaths in one family,'' remarks Hev. Mr. Hines, from whose histo- ry of Oregon we glean these facts, " and the fact that most of the mission children were sick, and some had died but -recently, began to create a prejudice in the minds of the Indians against having their children re- main with the mission, and after this it was not so easy to procure and retain them." So that as early as 1836, eleven 3'ears before the mas- sacre, « pr^jVZfce was created in the minds of the Indi- ans against the American' missonaries, and that, too, among the very tribe that afterwards conlmittcd the brutal murders. Of course, the fact of children dying fThe same tribe that murdered Dr.^ Whitman. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. natural deaths could have no weight in forming opinions in the minds of intelligent, civilized men, but, with poor untutored savages, who could see no tangible cause for such unprecedented mortality, among their children, particularly when placed under the care of white men, the case was entirely altered, and in the terrible rcven^% which they afterwards per^^etrated upon the Whitman station, they doubtless sought to avenge the deaths of all their kindred and children who had perished, as they imagined, through the instrumentality of the whites,dur- ing long years of association. Again, in 1838, wo are told by the Eev. Dr. Hines that '• a fearful mortality " raged among the children that at- tended the Methodist mission school. About one-tfdrd of all the children that had been received had died — a ratio of mortality that was almost nnprecedented in the annals of any country undergoing the change from bar- barism to civilization. Still again in 1842, a fatal disease carried away many of the children, others ran awaj^, and- some v/ere stolen by their parents, until but few were left, and these with- erino; under the influence ot the fatal scrofula. Finally, we find that in 18-13, the Indians, not only of the Willamette valley, but those of Eastern Oregon, were seriously disaffected towards the whites. Mr. Hines, treating on this subject, says; '' About this time the Indians became quite trouble- some in various parts of the country. At Wailatpu, on the Walla Walla river, where a missionary station had been established by Dr. Marcus Whitman, they took ad- vantage of the Doctor's absence and broke into the house in the dead of night, and even into the bed-chamber of Mrs. Whitman, who, with much difficulty, escaped from their hands." 10 THE WIIITMx^N MASSACRE. The reader vtiII bear in mind that this outrage upon Mrs. Whitman was perpetrated by the Cayuse Indians, nearly four years previous to the arrival of Bishop Blan- chet, the author, and the other Catholic missionaries at Fort Walla Walla. Such experience as illustrated in the foregoing ca- lamities was not 53alculated to awaken a very warm love for Amei'ican missionaries in the breasts of savages who came for the first time in contact with white men, and found in such union almost certain death to their children. True, all the Indian children who died through the "fearful mortality '^ which raged in the Willamette mis- sion school were not of the Oayusc nation ; but these deaths, taken in connection with the " fearful mortality " which subsequently carried off whole tribes of Indians east of the Cascade mountains, had doubtless created prejudices in the minds of the Cayuse and other Indian tribes which were immeasurably unfavorable to the American missionaries. It will be borne in mind that the Cayuses, allied with other tribes, threatened the de- struction of the whites prior to 1842. Again in that year they threatened to massacre the whites settled in Oregon in consequence of suspicions which were im- planted in the minds of the Indians that the whites de- signed '• to destroy them and take possession of their country.^' The arrival of a large party of emigrants about this time, and the sudden departure of Dr. Whit- man for the United States, with the avowed intention of bringing back with him as many as he could enlist for Oregon, served to hasten them to the above conclusion. Thus the Indians saw 'in Dr. Whitman the chief cause of bringing so many whites into their country, for the pur- pose, as they imagined, of destroying their liberties and THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 11 their lives, and of occupying their lands, and this con- viction in their minds, " strong as holy writ," led them, in conjunction with other causes, real and imaginary, to perpetrate a foul murder, that fell with double force upon the hearts of the Catholic missionaries, from the fact not only of the horror it created in their minds, the loss of their property, which the Indians burned when they abandoned their mission, but it also endangered their own lives, and was the cause for many years of preventing the Catholic missionaries from planting the standard of the cross among other Indians adjacent to the Cayuse nation, who passed away in the same pagan- ism in which they lived, in consequence of no Catholic missionaries being amongst them. A charge has also been brought against the Catholic missionaries that they carried arms and amunition to hostile Indian bands. This is not only untrue, but the charge is prompted through the basest feelings of malice, and made with the hope of prejudicing the Cath- olic cause. The facts in the case are simply these : The Catholic missionaries who had established themselves among the Flat-heads, Cour-de-alenes and other Indiana of the mountains, were annually in the habit of visiting the settlements for the purpose of laying in their sup- plies for the ensuing year. Among the more necessary articles indispensible to those who live in the region of the Eocky Mountains, is powder and shot, to be used in procuring game during the long and dreary winter re- gions where they have to live sometimes six months in succession upon venison or other game. The Indians have, since 1840, been well supplied with arms; but their supplies of amunition would become exhausted, and it became a question of life and death — not only to the missionary himself, but also to those with whom he 12 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. resided, and all the Indians in his vicinity — whether he returned from his annual trip with or without amu- nition. So great was the necessity for amunition among the Indians, and so well were their necessities in this re- spect understood by the early settlers in Oregon, that Governor Abernethy — in his message to the Legislative Assembly which convened early in 1849 — asked the Legislature to repeal an act which had been passed at a previous session, forbiding persons selling or con- veying arms and amunition to Indians, and gave as his motive for this request the following cogent reasons : " As many of the Indians live by hunting, and a small quantity of powder aud Jead is actually necessary to provide for their wants, I think the law should be mod- ified so as to permit the sale of powder and lead to friendly Indians." It was for this purpose — and this alone — that the Catholic missionaries included powder and lead in their annual supplies — but these supplies were intended for their own peaceable Indians — as no Catholic missionary — under any circumstance ever con- veyed munitions of war to hostile bands of Indians at war with American settlers upon American soil. This, I hope, finally disposes of this slander which the enemies of Catholicity have for years rolled under their tongues as a " sweet morsel." Finally, this unfortunate massacre stands- in the rec- ords of history as another evidence of the unstability of the Indian charactei;', especially when operated upon by superstitious fears arising from the conviction among the Indians that their country, their property, and their very existence even, was endangered by the influx of Americans. It is characteristic of Indian justice to con- sider as forfeited the life of the Doctor or " Medicine Man" who fails to eifect a cure, or whose patient dies THE WHITMAN MASSACRE, 13 whilst under his treatment. In this connection it will be borne in mind that the wife' of Tamahas (the mur^ derer) who killed Dr. Whitman, died whilst under the Doctor's treatment a short time previous to the massaqre, and farther, it i^ an established fact that Dr. Wliitman had discovered Tamahas in a suspicious attitu(Je, a few weeks anterior to his death. These facts establish a predetermination ou the part of Tamahas and his accom-. plices in his murderous work, and were doubtless among the principal causes which led to the horrible butchery which followed. The candid reader will also bear in mind that of all the Indians who imbrued their hands in the irnnocent blood of the Presbj^terian missionaries, not one among them prof essed the Catholic faith, and in order to exhibit the character of the Cayuse Indians, we need only refer to the opinion expressed by a correspondent of the Oregon American, who says : " The Cayuses had become a praying people. In almost every lodge the family altar was erected.- No doubt on the morning of the bloody 29th the murderers were scrupulous to observe their morning devotions — • again at evening, while the dead bodies of the slain lay unburied, the food of the fowls of heaven and the beasts of the earth. One of the actors of this horrible scene was a member of our church, and while he held one of the captives as his wife, the sport of his brutal passions, he was careful to have morning and evening prayer, and to read a portion of the scripture from his book which we printed while he was iu our school at Clear water."* Taking these facts, in connection with other equally *A missionary station among the Nez Perces near the present site of Fort Lapwai, Idaho, and under charge of Mr. Spalding. 2 14 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. important and convincing evidence, no impartial mind can be warped into the conclusion that the Catholic mis- sionaries were in the remotest degree, responsible for the atrocities at Dr. Whitman's mission. Aside from the horror which pervades the mind of every christian when contemplating the horrible sacrifice of human life, the natural current of events even, preclude the possi- bility of any collusion between missionaries of one faith, and Indians of another. The Catholic missionaries had never interfered with the Cayuse Indians under charge of Dr. Whitman and his associates. They could have no possible influence over them, either through spiritual advice or temporal friendship. Bishop Blanchet and the other Catholic missionaries arrived at Fort Walla Walla, in September, 1847, where they remained until the 28th of November, at which time they opened their first mis- sion among the Umatilla Indians (not one of whom was concerned in the murder) at a distance of twenty-five miles from Dr. Whitman's station. At a council of the Chiefs of Indian tribes located along the banks of the Columbia between the Dalles and Walla Walla, called for the purpose of ascertaining the wishes of the several chiefs relative to having Catholic missionaries among them. Bishop Blanchet had peremptorily refused the oifer of some of the Cayuse Chiefs to dispossess Dr, Whitman. At a subsequent period, the writer reiterated to Tilokaikt (one of the chiefs of the Cayuse nation, who had tendered the mission lands) the refusal of the Bishop, ^and again rejected the offer. In order to set this matter visibly at rest, the writer proceeded at once to the camp of the young Chief (a Cayuse In- dian who had been converted and who for several years had been expecting Catholic missionaries) and there entered upon his missionary labors, occupying a THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. i^ house that had been erected for the Youno- Chiof u gave the missionaries the use of it. Thu "t wiU I; ° ce.ved that the Catholic mission was locate ^L^X from Dr. Whitman's mission-among Indians som^ of whom were already CathoKes, but not one ofTvLnf was concerned in the massaerp Ti,„ , Whitman „r„u,- ""''"'^ssacie. 1 ho murder of Dr Whitman and his associates occured on the 29th of No vember, one day after the Catholic mission was com' menced. It may here be reasonably asked whL . .' influence could the Catholic mission:?es-e:n fso whom tl^ " '"""'!' "''"■ " *"'^« «f Indians among whonx they never resided, and whose lodges were twen ty-five miles distant, to induce them to perpetrate the fou murder of thirteen innocent people ?' The fnswer IS plam-neither time nor circumsLies could poX wrth the Indians who committed the massacre To hmk otherwise is not only repugnant to ever.f Ii„ Jof christian charity, but of common sense ° With these remarks the author presents the present volume to the reading public, believing that the perusa of Its pages will not only prove interesting to the Z eralread<.._contaii:ingas they do a trajc chap eft the early history of this coast, and embracing in^Ments of frontier ife sufficient to interest the studfnt of h" ory-but this little work may also prove its u til I by dispelling the atmosphere of prejudice into which Tome mmds may have unthinkingly wandered, and briL" home to their better nature the pure lighi of hietori^ J. B. A. BEOUILLET, V. G. Walla Walla, August, 1869. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. A deplorable event signalised the autumn of the year 1847 in Oregon, and brought consternation to all hearts. The 29th of November, Dr. Marcus Whitman, Presby- terian missionary among the Cayuses, his wife and eight other Americans, fell victims to the barbarity of the Indians, and three others shared the same fate a few days afterwards. For a time all the people apprehended that the fury of the savages would not stop there, but, that after having made new victims of the women and children who remained alive at the station, passing from tribe to tribe, it would excite suddenly all the neighbor- ing Indians and bring them at once upon the Willamette settlements. The Catholic Bishop of Walla Walla and his clergy, stationed in the neighborhood of the place of the disas- ter, togethpr with the clerk in charge of Fort Walla Walla and some other persons, were however so fortun- ate as to quiet by degrees, through their influence, their advice and their repeated solicitations, the fury of the Indians, and save the lives of the widows and orj^hans, until Mr. P. S. Ogden, one of the chief Factors of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Vancouver, came up to Fort Walla Walla, and having bought them from the hands of the Indians, had the consolation and glory of bringing them down in safety to the Willamette. The efforts both of the gentlemen of the Hudson's Bay Com- pany and of the clergy, had also the good effect of pre- venting for a time the Indians from carrying their hos- tilities any farther. 18 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. The causes, both remote and immediate, of the dis- aster, were clear, and left no doubts in the minds of un- prejudiced persons, who knew the history of these coun- tries, and the dispositions, prejudices, and superstitions of the Indians. It Avas evident that the ravages caused amongst them by the measles and dysentery, together with false reports and advices of a vagabond who was in the employ of Br. Whitman, were the only motives that urged the Indians to that act of atrocity, inclined as they were to believe these reports from the suspicions and dissatisfaction that they had been for a long time entertaining against Dr. "Whitman in particular and the Americans in general. But a certain gentleman, moved on by religious fanat- icism, and ashamed of owing his own life and that of his family and friends to some priests, began to insinuate false suspicions about the true causes of the disaster — proceeded by degrees to make more open accusations, and finally declared publicly that the Bishop of Walla Walla and his clergy were the first cause and great movers of all the evil. The gentleman is the Eev. H. H. Spalding, whose life had been saved from the Indians by a priest at the. peril of his own. His first insinuations were so malicious and their meaning so well understood, that Colonel Gilliam and his troops, about starting for the purpose of chastising the murderers at Wailatpu, said publicly that the priests, missionaries of the Cayuses, w^ere deserving death, and that they would shoot or hang the first one of them they should meet. A letter, however, written to Colonel Gil- liam by the Bishop of Walla Walla, and some explana- tions given by a priest to him and to the Commissary, General J. Palmer, before they started for the upper country, satisfied them, and the Colonel declared then that "Mr. Spalding could not have spoken so without being crazy," and Gen. Palmer said that " he ought not to be allowed any more to go among the Indians." A relation of the principal circumstances of the awful deed, which Colonel Gilliam himself had asked of one of the missionaries of the Cayuses, dissipated completely his prejudices against the priests, and from that moment to his death he did not cease to be one of their best and most sincere friends. il THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 19 Hon. P. H. Burnett being aware of the different accu- sations made by Mr. Spalding, in his conversation and preaching, and of the unfavorable impressions that they were producing upon persons ignorant and already pre- judiced, asked him in 1848, to give him in writing the charges he had made and the testimony which supported them, in order that he might see ^vhat means of defence the accused could employ. That demand was followed sometime afterwards by the publication of a letter from Mr. Spalding and of his '•' History of the Massacre at Wailatjou" in the Oregon American. These writings, intermixed with editorial notes in the same sense, contain many grievious accusa- tions against the clergy and the Catholics in general. Mr. Burnett then began in the Oregon American an answer that he intended to pursue, w^hen the cessation of the journal obliged him to suspend it. Judging then that it w^ould be to the interest of relig- ion that the public should be informed of the truth in that matter, in order to destroy the bad impressions which such atrocious accusations might have made on the minds of some persons, I have considered it my duty, as a priest, to resume the task of Mr. Burnett and to re- store the facts which have been misconstrued by Mr. Spalding and others. Such is the origin and the design o± this writing. It was prepared in the fall of 1848, but circumstances did not allow me to have it published for the first time until the year 1853. I show first the causes of the massacre of Wailatpu. I give next a min,ute journal of the principal events that occurred in the Walla Walla country from the arri- val of the Bishop and his clergy there until the moment they left that country for the Willamette settlements, and I conclude by a summary of all the principal charges made against the Catholic clergy by Mr. Spalding, the Oregon American, and others, up to the month of October, 1848, with an answer to each of them. An appendix has also been added wherein will be found many documents confirmatory of the evidence in- serted in the body of the work. 20 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. CHAPTER I. The remote and immediate causes which led to the IVJiif- man 7nassacre That events had occurred prior to the arrival of Bishop Blanchet and the other Catholic missionaries at "Walla Walla in 1848, which ultimately led to the unfor- tunate tragedy at Dr. Whitman's station will appear evident to every unprejudiced reader who calmly con- siders the following facts : — I. Mr. McKinlay, the intimate friend of Dr. Whit- man, had been for four or five years in charge of Fort Walla Walla. During his stay there, being aware of the evil dispositions of the Indians towards the Doctor, he warned him very often that he was in danger, that the Indians hated him, and that he had better go away, because he was afraid they would kill him. After he left the Fort he did not cease to advise him every year to leave Wailatpu, telling him that if he persisted in remaining there, the Indians would certainly kill him sooner or later. II. Some years ago, prior to 1848, Dr. McLaughlin, then Governor of Fort Yancouver and of all the estab- lishments of the Hudson's Bay Company west of the Rocky Mountains, judging by some difficulties which Dr. Whitman had with the Indians, that it was dangerous for him to stay any longer among them, wrote to him to urge him to leave his mission, at least for some time, and to come down to the Willamette, telling him that he feared the Indians would kill him if he should persist in remaining among them under such circumstances. A copy of that letter was inserted in the journal of Fort Vancouver. III. Mr. R. Newell — agent among the Nez Perces Indians — who lived many years with the Nez Perces, and who had an opportunity of knowing the Cayuses well, often said to Dr. Whitman that he ought to leave Wailatpu, because the Indians hated him and would kill him. He told me iiimself, speaking of Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding, that he was astonished they had stood so long. " Mr. Spalding would have been killed long THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 21 ago, said he, if it had not been for his wife, who was very much Kked by the Indians." IV. Dr. Bayley, a member of the Legislature of the Territory, warned in like manner Dr. Whitman, as a friend, to clear away from the Cayuses, because if he did not they would kill him. V. Messrs. J. Douglas and P. S. Ogden, both chief Factors of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Van- couver, together with the most part of -Dr. Whitman's friends, had been for a long time trying every year to induce him to come down to the Willamette for his safety. VI. lu the spring of 1848, Gen. Joel Palmer, the In- dian Agent and Commissary G-eneral for the troops, and one of three Commissioners appointed to treat for peace with the Indians, said in my presence at Fort Walla Walla, that he and the other Commissioners had found about the Doctor's house many letters which proved that even in 1845 he was considered as being in danger. VII. Ill treatment had been received at different times previously by Dr. Whitman, Mr. Spalding, Mr. Gray and Mr. Smith, as is evident from the statements of Messrs. Toupin, Gervais and McKay, that are found in the following pages. VIII. Mr. Spalding says in his writings : " The months of deep solicitude we had, occasioned by the in- creasing menacing demands of the Indians for pay for their water, their wood, their air, their lands W-e have held ourselves ready to leave the country whenever the Indians as a body wished it Dr. Whitman twice during the last year called the Cayuses together, and told them if a majority wished he would leave the coun- try at once Dr. Whitman held himself ready to sell the Wailatpu Station to the Catholic mission, whenever a majority of the Cayuses might wish it When they (the Indians) returned from California two years ago, after the death of the son of the Walla Walla chief, several meetings were held to consider whether Dr. Whit- man, myself, or some other American teacher should be killed as a set-off for Elijah." IX. The same Mr. Spalding said on the 31st of Au- gust, 1846, to Dr. Poujade, (see his statement) : " The 22 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. Indians are getting worse every day for two or three years back 3 they are threatening to turn ns out of these missions. A few days ago they tore down my fences ; and I do not know what the Missionary Board of New York means to do. It is a fact we are doing no good ; when the emigration passes, the Indians all run oif to trade, and return worse than when we came amongst them.'' X. Dr. Whitman had declared many times during the last two years of his life that he wished to leave ; that he knew the Indians were ill disposed towards him and that it was dangerous for him to remain among themj that for a couple of years he had done nothing for the teaching of the Indians, because they would not listen to him. He said in the fall of 1847 that he would leave certainly in the spring for the Dalles, where he had al- ready bought the Methodist mission He went so far then as to ask Mr. McKay to pass the winter with him, for fear of the Indians, and seemed disposed to exchange his place at Wailatpu for another one in the Willamette. (See Mr. McKay's statement). Mr. Spalding declared also, in the winter of 1847, that for three or four ^^ears he had ceased to teach the Indians, as they refused to hear him (See Gervais' statement). XI. From a letter of Dr. White Indian Agent, writ- ten in 1845 to the Indian Department at Washington, it is evident that at that time the whole colony was in a ter- rible fright, expecting that ^11 the Indinn tribes of the Walla Walla country would massacre the Americans who were upon their lands, and next would come down upon the Willamette settlement and destroy the whole colony. XII. In spite of the enthusiasm that had signalized the first year of the establishment of his mission, Mr. Spalding was complaining even as early as 1840, that he had very little hope in the dispositions of the Nez Per- ces. (See Mr. Spalding's Letters, printed in the Ameri- can Board of Missionaries for Foreign Missions, publish- ed in 1842.) XIII. A missionary of the Spokans, writing to Dr. Whitman as early as 1839, said : " The failure of this mission (the Spokan) is so strongly impressed upon my THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. ' 23 mind that I feel it necessary to have cane in hand and as much as one shoe on, ready for a move. I see noth- ing but the power of. God that can save us." These facts and statements prove clearly that there existed among the Indians, long before the arrival of the bishop of Walla Walla and his clergy, strong causes of dissatisfaction against the Protestant missionaries and the Americans in general, and that they formed a leaven that had been fermenting for several vears. CHAPTEE II. Boeumentary Evidence Proving the foregoing assertions MR. JOHN TOUPIN's STATEMENT, IN 1848. '• I have been seventeen years employed as interpreter at Fort "Walla Walla, and I left that Fort about seven years ago. I was there when Mr. Parker, in 1835, came to select places for Presbyterian missions among the Cayuses and the Ncz Perces, and to ask lands for these missions. He employed me as interpreter in his nego- tiations with the Indians on that occasion. Mr. Pom- brun, the gentleman then in charge of the Fort, accom- panied him to the Cayuses and the Nez Perces. " Mr. Parker, in company with Mr. Pombrun, an American and myself, went first to the Cayuses upon the lands called Wailatpu, that belonged to the three chiefs — Splitted Lip, or Yomtipi, Eed Cloak, or Wapfcachtakamal, and Tilaukaikt. Having met tiiem at that place he told them that he was coming to select a place to build a preaching house to teach them how to live, and to teach school to their children ; that he would not come himself to establish the mission, but a Doctor or a medicine man would come in his place; that the Doctor would be the chief of the mission, and would come in the following spring. ' I come to select a place for a mission,' said he, ' but I do not intend to take your lands for nothing. After the Doctor is come, there will come every year a big ship, loaded with goods :24 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. to be divided among the Indians. Those goods will not be sold, but given to you. The missionaries will bring you plows and hoes, to teach you how to cultivate the land, and they will not sell, but give them to you/ "From the Cayuses Mr. Parker went to the Nez Per- ces, about 125 miles distant, on the lands of the Old But- ton, on a small creek which empties into the Clearwater seven or eight miles from the actual mission. And there he made the same promises to the Indians as at Wailat- pu. ' Next spring there will come a missionary to estab- lish himself here and take a piece of land; but he will not take it for nothing; you shall be paid every year; this is the American fashion.' "In the following year, 1836, Dr. Whitman arrived among the Cayuses, and began to build. The Indians did not stop him, as they expected to be paid, as they said. In the summer of the next year, 1837, Splitted Lip asked him where the goods which he had promised him were ; whether he would pay him or whether he wanted to steal his lands. He told him if he did not want to pay him, he had better go off immediatel}^, because he did not want to give his lands for nothing. This has been told me very often by the Indians at that time. "In the winter of the ensuing year, 1838, as Splitted Lip's wife was sick, he went to the Doctor one evening and told him : ' Doctor, jou. have come here to give us bad medicines ; you come to kill us, and you steal our lands. You had promised to -psiy me every year, and you have been here already two years and have as yet given me nothing. You had better go away; if my wife dies; you shall die also.' I happened to be present in the house when he spoke so, and I heard him. " I very often heard the Indians speaking of new dif- ficulties relative to the payment for their lands, arising from year to year. They constantly told the Doctor to pay them or else go away ; and the Doctor always per- sisted in remaining there without paying them, saying that the Indians were talking lightly, and that the}^ would do him no harm. He let them have ploughs, but those only who had good horses to give him, as they said. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 25 '' The Indians often complained that the Doctor and his wife were very severe and hard to them, and often ill-treated them, which occasioned frequent quarrels be- tween them and the Doctor. " One day the Doctor had a great quarrel with the Indians, on account of some of their horses that had damaged his grain, and was very ill treated by them. Tliey insulted him, covered him with mud, plucked out his beard, pulled his ears, tried to throw his house do^vn, snapped a gun at him twice, and attempted to strike him with an axe, which he avoided by turning his head aside. "A short time afterwards he started for the United States, telling the Indians that he was going to see the great chief of the Americans, and that when he would return, he would bring with himself many people to chastise them; and the Indians had been looking to his return with great anxiety and fear. "Mr. Spalding established his mission among the N'ez Perces in the same year (1836) as Dr. Whitman did among the Cayuses. " The following j^ear, 1837, lie decided to send Mr. Gray to the United States with a band of horses to ex- change them for cattle. Three Indian chiefs started with Mr. Gray, viz -.Ellis, the Blue Cloak and the Hat. When at the rendezvous their horses feet began to fail, Ellis then observed to his companions that the}' could not continue their journey, their horses being unable to stand the trip, and that they would die on the road. Then ho and the Blue Cloak returned back, while the Hat went on with Mr. Gray. Ellis and Blue Cloak ar- rived in the fall at the mission ' of Mr. Spalding, who got very angry when he saw them back, and said that they deserted severe puuishment. He could not take Ellis, who had too strong a part}^ ; but the Blue Cloak, having come one evening with the others to prayer, Mr. Spalding saw him, and commanded the In- dians to take him ; and as no one would move, the young chief ^ez Perce, or Tonwitakis, arose with anger, took hold of the' Indian and tied him up, and then said to Mr. Spalding : 'Now" whip him.' Mr. Spalding answered him ; ' No, I do not whip ; I stand in the place of God, I com- mand ; God does not whip, he command^.' ' You are a 3 26 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. liar/ said the Indian chief, ' look at your image, (point- ing to an image hanging on the wall, which Mr, Spalding had made for the instruction of the Indians) you. have painted two men in it and Q-od behind them with a bun- dle of rods to whip them. Whip him, or if not we will put you in his place and whip you.' Mr. Spalding obey- ed, whipped the Indian, and received from him the horse that he had exacted. * The third chief, who had followed Mr. Gray on his journey.to the States, was killed on the way by the Sioux or Pawnees. When Mr. Gray returned, in the ensuing year, 1838, Ellis, seeing that he was alone, and learning that his companion had been killed, went to Mr, Spald- ing, and said to him: ^ Ilear me j the Hat, who accom- panied Mr. Gray, has been killed; if we had gone with bim we should have been killed too; and because we returned back, refusing to follow hjm, you wished us to be flogged ; you then intended that wq should be killed, also.' The Indians then met together and kept all the whites who lived at the station, blockaded in their house for more than a month. I was then sent three times by Mr. Pombrun to the Nez Perces, to induce them to set the missionaries and their people at liberty, observing to them that it was not the fault of Mr. Gray if the Indian chief had been killed ; and it was at my thjrd trip only that I could induce them to accept tobacco in sign of peace, and to retire, " About the year 1839, in the fall, Mr. Smith, belong- ing to the same society as Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spal- ding, asked Ellis permission to build upon his lands for the purpose of teaching the Indians as the other mis- sionaries were doing, and of keeping a school. Ellis allowed him to build, but forbade him to cultivate the land, and warned him that if he did th'e piece of ground which he would till should serve to bury him in. In the following spring, however, Mr. Smith prepared his plow to till the ground y and Ellis, seing him read}^ to begin, went to him and said to him: < Do you not recollect what I told you? I do not wish you to cultivate the land.' Mr. Smith, however, persisted in his dotermina^ tion ; but as he was beginning to plow, the Indians took bold of him and said to him ; ' Do you not know what THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 27 Las been told you, that you would be digging a hole in which j-ou should be buried ?' Mr. Smith then did not persist anj' longer, but said to them : ' Let me go, I will leave the place;' and he started off immediately. That circumstance has been related to me by the Indians, and soon after I saw Mr. Smith myself, at Fort Walla Walla; he was on his wa}" down to Fort Vancouverj where he embarked for the Sandwich Islands, from whence he did not come back any more. " I have witnessed repeated efforts on the part of Mr. Pombrun to help Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding, He often told me that the Doctor treated him very friendly, but that it was but reasonable on his part, as without him those missionaries could not stand, and would have been killed long since. " Two Catholic missionaries passed by Walla Walla in 1838, on their i^ay from Canada to Fort Vancouver. In the j^ears 1839 and 1840, one of them. Father Demers, came to Walla Walla for a short time each year, and gave instructions to the Indians, which a great part of the Cayuses came to hear. Some time after, Dr. Whit- man^and Mr. Spalding, being alarmed at seeing so many Indians abandonijig them to go and hear the priest, came to Fort Walla Walla, and reproved Mr. Pombrun for having allowed the priest to teach the ludians in his Fort. I was near the gate of the Fort, when the Doctor had hardly dismounted from his horse before he said, a little excited, to Mr. Pombrun:^'! thought, sir, that 3'ou had promised me that you would not allow that priest the liberty of speaking to the Indians in j^our Fort. If that man has the liberty of coming among the Indians, we shall have to abandon ihem ; we shall be" un- able to do anything more among them.' " Two years ago, 1846, a Cayuse came to my house, in the Willamette settlement, and stopped jvith me over two weeks. During that time he often spoke of Dr. Whitman, complaining that he possessed the lands of the Indians, on which he was raising a great deal of wheat, which he was selling to the Americans v/ithout giving them anything; that he had a mill u])on their lands and they had to pay him for grinding their wheat — a big horse, for twenty sacks. He said they told him to leave, 28 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. but he would not listen to them; that they had been much enlightened by the Americans; before they bad no wit, but the Americans had giveu them some; thej^ had told them that the American missionaries were stealing their lands; that the}^ were receiving great benefit from them, and that they were living among them for the purpose of enriching themselves/' (Signed) JOHN TOUPHST. St. Louis of Willamette, Sept. 24, 1848. MR. THOMAS M'kAY's STATEMENT IN 1848. '^ I was at] Fort Walla Walla last fall, when the Cayuse chiefs, at the request of the Bishop of Walla Waila, met there to decide whether they would give him a piece of land for a mission. During the meeting, Tumsakay said that Dr. Whitman was a bad man ; that he robbed and poisoned them. The Bishop replied to him that ' his thoughts were bad, the Doctor did not poison them, nor rob them ; he had to banish those thoughts from his mind. You do not know the Doctor,' he added, ' he is not a bad man.' " One of the chiefs told the Bishop that they would send the doctor off very soon ; they would give him his house if he wished. The Bishop answered .that he did not 'Wish them to send the Doctor away, and that there was room enougk for two missions. " The Doctor often told me that for a couple of years he had ceased to teach the Indians because they would not listen to him. He told me repeatedly, during the tAVO last years especially, that he wished to leave ; that he knew the Indians were ill-disposed towards him, and it was dangerous for him to stay there; but that he wished all the'chiefs to tell him to go away, in order to excuse himself to the Board of Foreign Missions. Last fall, during my stay at Fort Walla Walla, long before the meeting of the chiefs, called by the Bishop, the Doctor asked me to go and pass the winter with him, saying that he was afraid of the Indians. I told him I could not, on account of my business, which called me home; THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 29 but tliat I would exchange my place for his if he wished. Then he replied he would see my place. He told me also several times last fall that he would leave certainly in the spring for the Dalles. I am aware, moreover, that the Cayuses have a great many times ill-treated Dr. Whitman." (Signed,) Thomas McKay. St. Louis of Willamette, Sept. 11, 1848. Mr. John Baptist Gervais' Statei^ent in 1848. " I spent last fall and last winter among the Nez Per- ces. I arrived there at the beginning of October. But I have known the Nez Perces for over twenty years, having been in the habit of trading and traveling with them almost every year; and it was at their request that I had gone to settle in their country. For many years I had heard the Nez Perces very often speaking badly of Mr. Spalding. It appeared to me that the greatest part of those Indians disliked and hated him. According to their reports, they were very often quarrel- ing with him; they complained that Mr. Spalding was too quick tempered. He fought with them twice, and tried to fire at them once. The Indians ill-treated and insulted him in a great many waj^s. They threw down his mill, pretending it was theirs. " Mr. Spalding told me himself last fall that for three or four years back he had ceased entirely to teach the Indians, because they refused to hear him." (Signed,) John Baptist Gervais. St. Paul of Willamette, Oct. 15, 1848. Messrs. John Young's and Augustin Eaymond's Statement in 1848. "I spent the winter of ^846 in Dr. Whitman's em- ployment. I generally worked at the saw-mill. During the time I was there, I observed that Dr. Whitman was in the habit of poisoning the wolves. I did not see him put the poison in the baits for the wolves; but two 30 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. youn^ men of the house, bj" bis order, were poisoning pieces of meat, and distributing them in the places where ' the wolves were in the habit of coming, at a short distance around the establishment of the Doctor. " The Doctor gave mo once some arsenic to poisofi the wolves that were around the saw-mill. By his order I poisoned some pieces of meat which I fixed at the end of short sticks at about a quarter of a mile from the saw- mill. Some Indians who happened to pass there, took the meat and eat it -, three of them were very sick and were near dying. After they got better, the old chief, Tilaukaikt, with a certain number of others, came to me at the saw-mill, and told nie, (pointing to those who had eatcQ the poisoned meat,) that they had been very sick ; that if they had died, their hearts would have been very bad, and they w^ould have killed me ; but as they did not die, their hearts were consoled, and they would not hurt me. Some days afterwards, the Doctor told me, laugh- ing, that they would have certainly died, if they had not drunk a great quantity of warm water, to excite vom- iting. ' I had told them very often,' said he, ' not to eat of that meat which we distributed for the wolves, that it would kill them : they will take care now, I suppose.' ' " An American, who was also in the service of Dr. Whitman, worked with me at the saw-mill. He got from me a part of the poison which the Doctor had given me, and with it poisoned some other meat for the purpose of killing tigers, as he said. • " About eight years ago, the first year I came into the country, I stopped for about ten days with Mr. A. Eay- mond, the companion of ni}^ journey, at Dr. Whitman's, who happened to have then a quanity of melons in his garden. Mr. Gray, who was then living with the Doctor, offered us as many melons to eat as we liked ; but he warned us at the same time not to eat them indis- criminately, as some of them were poisoned. ' The In- dians,' said he, ' are continually stealing our melons ; to stop them, we have. put a little poison on'the bigger ones, in order that the Indians who will eat them might be a little sick : we did not put on enough of it to kill them, but only enough to make them a little sick.' And he THE WIlITxMAN MASSACRE. ^ 31 went and selected himself some melons for ns to eat/' (Signed,) John Young. St. Paul of Willamette, September 12, 1848. This is to certify that the part of the above statement of Mr. John Yonng relative to the putting of poison on some melons at Dr. Whitman's establishment is correct. I was with Mr. Young at that time; I heard what Mr. Gray told him : his words were directed to both of us, and I have eaten of the melons which Mr. Gray gave us at that time. (Signed) Augustine Eaymond. 'St. Paul of Willamette, Sept. 12, 1848. Extracts from a Letter written on the 4:th of April, 1845, by Dr. Elijah White, Suh-lndian Agent, ivest of the Rocky Mountains, to the Indian Department at Washington. After- speaking of some difficulties that occurred m California between the Cayuses and the Walla Wallas on one part, and the Spaniards and Americans on the other, on account of some stolen horses that the Cayuses and Walla Wallas had taken from hostile Indians by fighting them, Mr. White passes on to relate a murder there committed coollj' by an American the fall previous, upon the person of Elijah, the son of the Yellow Serpent, the chief of the Walla Wallas, in the following way : " The Indians had gone to the fort of Captain Sutter to church, and after service, Elijah was invited into an- other apartment,' taking with him his uncle, (Young Chief, or Tawatowe, of the Umatilla river,) a brave and sensible chief, of the age of five and forty; while there, in an unarmed and defenceless condition, they com- menced menajicing him for things alleged against the river Indians of this upper country, in which none of thenV had any participation, called them indiscriminately dogs, thieves, (tc. This American then observed, 'yes- terday you were going to kill me, now you must die,' and drawing a pistols-Elijah, who had been five or six 32 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. years at the Methodist mission, and had learned to read, write, and speak English respectably, said, deliberately, 'let me pray a little first,' and kneeling down, at once commenced, and, when invoking the divine mercy, was shot through the hea.it or vitals, dead upon the spot. " Taking for truth an Indian report, this horrible af- fair creates considerable excitement, and there is some danger of its disturbing the friendly relation that hith- erto existed between us here and all those formidable tribes in the region of .Walla Walla and Snake river. " Learing from Dr. Whitman, who resides in their midst, how much they were all excited by reason of the treacherous and violent death of this educated and ac- complished young chief, and, perhaps, more especially by the loss they had sustained, and then, after suffering so many hardships and encountering so many dangers, losing the whole, I apprehended there might be much difficulty in adjusting it, particularly as they lay much stress upon the restless, disaffected scamps, late from Willamette to California, loading them with the vile epithets of dogs, thieves, &c., from which they believed or affected to believe, that the slanderous reports of our citizens caused all their loss and disasters, and therefore held us responsible. He, Ellis, the Nez Perce chief, as- sured me that the Cayuses, Walla Wallas, Nez Perces, Spokans, Pondereys, and Snakes were all on terms of amity, and that a portion of the aggrieved party were for raising a party of about two thousand warriors of those formidable tribes, and march to California at once, and nobly revenge themselves on the inhabitants by capture and plunder, enrich themselves upon the spoils ; whilst others not indisposed to the enterprise, wished first to learn how it would be regarded here, and wheth- er we would remain neutral in the affair. A third party were for holding us responsible, as Elijah was killed by an American, and the Americans incensed the Spaniards. " Sir, how this affair will end is difficult to conjecture ; the general impression is that it will lead to the most disastrous consequences to the Californians themselves, or to the colony of the Willamette valley. My principal fear is that it results in so much jealousy, prejudice and disaffection, as to divert their minds from the pursuit of knowledge, agriculture, and the means of civilization, THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 33 which thoy have been for such a length of time so laud- ably engaged in obtaining. " Should this be the case with these numerous, brave, and formidable tribes, the result to them and to us would be, indeed, most calamitous. To prevent such a result I wrote, through Ellis, a long, cordial, and rather sym- pathizing letter to the chiefs of these tribes, assuring them that I should at once write to the Governor of Cal- ifornia, to Captain Sutter, and to our great chief, respect- ing this matter. With a view, to divert attention and promote good feeling, I invited all the chiefs to come down in the fall, before the arrival of the emigrants, in company with Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding, and con- fer with me upon this subject." (Signed,) Elijah White. Mr. William Craig's Statement in 1848. Question by Hon. P. H. Burnett — State whether you were acquainted with Tom Hill, a Delaware Indian, and when and where, and what statements he made to the ISQz Perces, and whether the Cayuses were informed of his statements^ and what impression he made on the In- dians ? Auswei'^ — The first acquaintance was in the Rocky Mountains in the year 1837, and then in 1845, when he came to the Nez Perces country. I frequently heard that he had been telling unfavorable tales of the Ameri- cans ; how they had treated the Indians in his country. He said the first were missionaries that came to him, and then others came in and settled, and then com- menced taking our lands, and finally drove us off; and they will do the same to you. This I had heard of Tom Hill. On seeing him, I asked him what he had told the Indians ; if he had told them so and so, as I had heard. He said he had told them how the Americans had treat- ed them in his place, and they had better not keep Spalding there, or it would l)ethe same thing with them; I am acquainted with missionaries; it is only a way of making property; there is nothing in religion, only to make money ; you can see that ; look how they are sell- 34 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. ing everything they raise in your own lands ; you cannot get anything from them without paying for it, not so much as a piece of meat when you are hungrj^. After my interview with Hill, he came once in company with some Nez Perces to Dr. Whitman's; after remaining there some twelve or fifteen days, he returned ; I asked him how he and the Doctor got along- he told me very well ; that he was a heap better man than Spalding • he had asked him into his house sometimes. After that the Doctor told me Tom had done some mischief with the Indians in that place. Question — Will you state what is the custom among the Cayuses when a medicine man fails to cure a patient and the patient dies ? Answer — Since I have been acquainted with them, it has always been their custom in such cases to kill the medicine man or woman; and every year since I have known them, I have heard of them killing such persons. Question — How long have you been acquainted with the Cayuses? Answer — Since the year 1840. Question — State whether you ever heard any of the ■Cayuses say anything about the Catholics establishing missions among them, and whether they disliked that they should? j Ansvv^er. — I heard an Indian, who was left in charge of the Young Chief's business, while the chief was out after buffalo, and which was sometime during the sum- mer of 1847, say that the Young Chief told him that if they, the Catholic missionaries, should come there before he got back, to tell them to remain, but not to commence building until his return, and he would show them where to build. It was, however,, a common report among the ISTez Perces that the Cayuses had asked the Catholics to come among them and to establish missions. Question. — Did you hear Dr. Whitman say anything relative to the Catholics establishing missions among the Indians ; if so, state what? Answer. — Dr. Whitman told me that he heard a talk of the Catholics estabhshing a mission on the Tucannon, about sixty miles off, and said he would "rather they would be nearer at hand. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 35 Question,— State where you were at the time the mas- sacre took place, and what do you know about a messen- ger from the murderers to the Nez Perces Indians, and what the messenger said in reference to the cause of the Ca^'uses killing Dr. Whitman. Answer.— I was living about ten miles from Mr. Spald- ing's mission. Mr. Camfield first brought the news of the massacre. On the 8th, after the massacre, being Monday, a great many Indians met at Mr. Spalding's before Mr. S. had returned; a messenger came there from the Cay uses, and the Indians, when assembled, re- quired him to state all he knew about the matter, and to state the truth ; 1 was present; and he said, in substance, that all the chiefs were concerned, except Young Chief and Five Crows, who knew nothing of it; that the cause of the murder was that Dr. Whitman and Spalding were poisoning the Indians. They asked him, are you sure that they were poisoning the Indians ? He said yes. How do you know it? Jos, Lewis said so. What did he say ? Jos, Lewis said that Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding had been writing for two years to their friends in the East, where Jos, Lewis lived, to send them poison to kill off the Ca^'Uses and the Nez Perces; and they had sent them some that was not good, and they wrote for more that would kill them off quick, and that the medicine had come this summer. Jos. Lewis said he was lying on the settee in Dr. Whitman's room, and he heard a conversation between Dr. Whitman, Mrs. Whitman, and Mr. Spalding, in which Mr. Spalding asked the Doc- tor why he did not kill the Indians off faster? "Oh,'' said the Doctor, "they are dying fast enough ; the young ones will die off this winter, and the old ones next spring." Mr^, Whitman said that our friends will be on, and want to settle in this country. A talk then took place betv/een Dr, Whitman and Mr. Spalding, in which thej^said, how easy we will live when the Indians are all killed off; such an Indian has so many horses, and such an Indian so many spotted horses, and our boys will drive them up, and we will give them to our friends. One of them said that man will hear us, alluding to Jos. Lewis. Oh, no, said another, he cannot hear, he is sleep- ing sound, They talked rather low, but Jos. Lewis said 36 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. he could hear all that passed. This Indian messenger sta- ted that Jos. Lewis had made this statement in a council of the Cayuses on the Saturday night previous to the mur- der, and that Jos. Lewis said he had heard this conver- sation between Dr. Whitman and the others on the Wednesday before the murder. Jos. Lewis, the messen- ger said, told the Cayuses in the council that unless they (the Indians) killed Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding quick, they would all die. The -messenger went on to say himself, that one hundred and ninety-seven Indians had died since the immigration commenced passing that summer. He said that there were six buried on Monday morning, and among the rest his own wife; he said he .knew they were poisoned. Question. — Are you acquainted with the fact that the small-pox was spread among the Blackfeet Indians east of the Eocky Mountains ? If so, state in what year, and how far it spread, and whether a knowledge of this fact is not familiar with the Cayuses and Nez Perces. Answer. — In the year 1837, the small-pox was spread among the Blackfeet Indians by one Beck with, wh6 brought the matter for that purpose. Beckwith took it himself, and a clerk at one of the trading posts, J^ort Muriah, on one branch o! the Missouri river, helped to spread it among the Blackfeet Indians for the purpose of killing them off. A knowledge of this fact is common among the Nez Perces, and, I think, among the Cayuses. (Signed,) William Craig. July 11, 1848. CHAPTEE III. REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE ADDUCED IN THE FOREGOING CHAPTER. Every impartial and unprejudiced person, after read- ing attentively the foregoing documents, will come to the conclusion that the causes, both remote and imme- diate of the whole evil, must have been the following :— I. The promise made by Mr. Parker to the Cayuses THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 87 and tho Xez Ppreos of pa3'ing for their lands oveiy year, and tlie want of fulfillment of tiiat promise. Thence came '-the months of deep solicitude, occa- sioncd by the increasing and menacing' demands of tho Indians for paj* for their water, their wood, their air, their lands,'' of which Mr. Spalding complains in his '•History of the Massacre." It was not unnatural that the Indians seeing they were refused the price fixed for their lands, should repeat their demands, and finally come to the threatcnings. White people would no"t have done much less. II. The death of tKo Nez Perces' chief, killed on his way to the United States, when ho Avas in company with 3Ir. Gray, and in his service. The conclusion is evident from the circumstances which preceded that death, and from tho proceedings of ihe Nez Perces against Mr. Spalding, and all the people of his establishment on account of it, and likewise from the general habit of the Indians in such cases. Besides, in the council that the Cayuses held sometime after the massacre, to offer to tho government their proposals of peace, Tilaukaikt was mentioning that death as one of their grounds of complaint against the Americans. III. The murder committed by an American in Cali- fornia, on the person of Elijah, "^the son of tho Walla Walla chief, in 1844. Dr. White's letter sa.ys in relation to that murder : • Tho general impression is that it will lead to tlie most disastrous consequences to tho Californians thQmselves, or to the colony of tho Willamette valley." Mr. Spald- ing says in his "History of the Massacre:" -'When they, the Indians, returned back from California, two years ago, after the death of the son of the Walla Walla chief, several meetings were held to consider whether Dr. Whitman, myself, or some other American teacher, should be killed as a set-off for Elijah." And Mr. Mc- Kinlay assures mo that in the fall of 1844, tho Indians, a short time after their return from California, met one da}^ at Fort VV^alla AYalla, seven hundred in number, all armed, and decided to walk down immediately upon tho colony of the Willamette, and that they could be stopped only by the Young Chief, who, by his influence and en- 4 38 THE WHITMAN MASSACEE, treaties, decided then> to abandon theii* uDdortakiDg and to go home. And in the spring of 11^47, the Walla Walla chief himselfj yelio^y Serpent, started with a party of Walla Wallas and Cayuses for the purpose of attacking the Americans in California, whom they thought unsus- picious, but having found them on their ,«:uard, and too strong to be attacked witliout dq^nger, he took their part against the Spaniards, offered his services to them, and fought in their ranks. On his w^y, coming back, he lost many of his people from sickness, so that he and his young man, when arrived at home in the fall, felt worse disposed than ever towards the Americans. And, Tilau- kaikt mentioned that murder also among the grievances that they had against the Americans. lY, The tales of Tom Hill in accordance with what was going on among the Indians. That Indian had told the Nez Percos and Cayuses that •' the first were missionaries," who came to them " only to make property, that there was nothing in religion." Now, when the Protestant missionaries arrived among those tribes of Indians, they assured them that they came only to teach them and to help them to live hotter, and promised them a great price for their lands. But soon after they got their lands they worked for them- selves and neglected the Indians, and even for three or four years the}^ had ceased entirely to teach them, as Mr. bpalding said. They got bands of horses, sheep and cattle ; made large farms, traded with the emigrants their horses, cattle and grain, and were getting rich without dividing with the Indians. They refused obsti- pately, from year to year, to pay the price they had promised for their lancfs, and persisted in keeping them; and they made nothing jfor the Indians unless they were paid for it. Tom Hill had also said, that after the missionaries, ^'others come, settle, begin to take their lands, and finally send them off." Now — ^the year after the arrival of those missionaries— Mr. Spalding thought lit to send Mr. Gray to the States for the purpose of bringing from thence fifty new faniiUes of missionaines, and had it made known to the Indians. In 1839 Mr. Smith wished to cultivate the ]m^ m spit^^ of the Indians, nnd becausa / TUE WHITMAN MASSACRE. , 39 they stopped jiim he went off. In 1842 Dr. Whitman started for the States, telling the Indians that he would bring back with him many people to chastise them for ill-treating him. The Indians had been waiting for his return with anxiety, fearing the execution of his threat. He came back, however, with a few people only; but in the following year more came ; and next year yet more, and more and more for every following year; so that the Indians could possibly suppose that the Doctor would execute his threats and take revenge on them as soon as he thought himself strong enough. Besides, they knew the Willamette valley well, and seeing so many Americans passing through their coun- try every year to go thither, it was not unnatural they should put this question to themselves: If they con- tinue for many years more to come in so great a num- ber, where will they settle? There is not room enough in the Willamette for so many people. And the answer then w^as natural : — They will come here and will take our lands, as Tom Hill says they have done in the States, and as they are doing in the Willamette, and will drive us out of the country. And then that conclusion suggested to them by Tom Hill found naturally its place : that the missionaries were among them only to prepare the way for other Americans, and that they had better not keep Mr. Spalding nor any other American missionary among themselves. Y. The spreading of small pox by Americans among the Blackfcet Indians, in connection with the measles among the Cayuses, and the imprudent use of poison at Dr. Whitman's establishment, and his profession as a physician. The Cayuses and the ^N'ez Perces, as stated by Mr. Craig, knew that the small-pox had been brought and spread among the Blackfcet Indians by Americans, and seeing a great similarity between the effects of the measles among themselves and of the small-pox among the Blackfcet, they could be induced very easily to believe that the Americans had brought them the same sickness' with the intention of killing them as they had done with the Blackfcet. Moreover Doctor Whitman w^as in the habit of using poison to kill wolves. The In- 40 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. dians knew it ; and three of them had bpen very near losing their lives by eating of the meat that he had poisoned. The Indians knew then that he had the power of poisoning them whenever he wished ; and, with Indians, from the power to the act, there is but very little distance. It is certain also that the Doctor, or those about him, had poisoned melons for the purpose of making the In- dians sick. The Indians knew it, and had been long com- plaining of it. Going farther ttiey took occasion from that circumstance for accusing the Doctor of having poisoned other food that he gave them to eat ; and it was a general report among them that very often they experienced vomitings and colics after eting the Doc- tor's aliments, and they went so far as to designate a good many among themselves who have been taken sick in this manner. The Doctor was also in the habit of trusting poison to all persons in his service indis- criminately. Who then could say that he had not trusted poison to some person unworthy of his confi- dence, who, without his knowledge and against his will, might have used it against the Indians? And finally, Dr. Whitman was a physician, and every one knows the prejudice of the Indians against any kind of what they call " medicine men," to whom they impute the power of killing or healing as they choose, the per- sons they attend, ^nd whom they are in the habit of killing as murderers, when their patient dies. YI. Lack of sincerity and faithfulness to their word aftd promise, violence of character and imprudent ex- pressions, together with an excessive seeking for tem- poral welfare in some of the missionaries. . We have seen that they had promised to pay the In- dians for their lands and to give them a great many things which they never gave. Mr. Spalding, writing to the Bishop of Walla Walla some days after the massacre of AVailatpu, said : " My object in writing principally is to give information through you to the Cayuses that it is our wish to have peace, that we do not wdsh Americans to come from below to avenge the wrong ; we hope the Cayuses and Americans will be on friendly terms, that Americans will THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 41 no more come to this country, unless they wish it. As soon as these men return, I hope, if alive, to send them to the Governor, to prevent Americans comini^ up to molest the Cayuses for what is done .... The Nez Per- ces pledged to protect us from the Cayuses if we' would prevent the Americans from coming up to avenge the murders. This Ave have pledged to do, and for this we beg for the sake of our lives at this place and Mr. Walker's. By all means keep quiet, send no war re- ports, send nothing but proposals of peace. They sa}' they iuive buried the death of the Walla Walla chief's son killed in California. They wish us to bury this offence." And in the Oregon American he says : " The object of the letter was solely to gain time for the H. B. Company to reach Walla Walla and secure our de- liverance before the Indians should discover any move- ment on the part of the Americans." And, as if to prove it, he had hardly escaped from the hands of the Indians, when on his way going down to the Willamette, in company with the other captives after their deliv- erance, passing at the Dalles, he tried all he could to in- duce the troops that were stationed there to go up im- mediately to the Cayuses and kill them all with the ex- ception of only five or six whom he commended to their clemency, as the following letter partly proves : — « Oregon City, Aug. 18th, 1848. "Hon. P. II. Burnett: " Dear Sir, — In answer to your polite note I can only say that I did not charge my mind parLiculrtrly with Eev. Mr. Spalding's statements, consequently cannot give you his precise language. I recollect distinctly, however, that he was not in favor of killing all the Cay- uses; for he gave me names of some four or five that ho knew to be friendly, and another whom I marked as questionable ; the balance, if I am not very much mis- taken, he would have share one fate " I am, Sir, with respect, yours, (Signed) *' J. Magone." M r. Spalding intended then to deceive the Indians with the letter that he wrote to the Bishop, and had no in- 42 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. tenlion of keeping his promises to them. And the In- dians knew him so well in that respect that when they heard his letter read at the Catholic mission, they said without hesitation that Mr. Spalding was spealiing well because he was in a hole. Now, it is known by every one that nothing is so apt to destroy the confidence and excite the bad feelings of Indians towards any body as lack of sincerity and faithfulness. As to the violence of character and imprudent ex- pressions, I heard Dr. Whitman say at Fort Walla Walla, in the fall of 1847, that he had very much scolded the Indians of the Dalles, who had robbed the emi- grants, and that he had told them : " Since you are so wicked, such robbers, we shall call for troops to chastise you; and next fall we will see here five hundred dragoons who will take care of you." We have seen moreover in Mr. Toupin's statement the ignominius treatment to which the Doctor exposed himself by that hardness and violence of character, and Mr. Gervais told us Avhat the consequences were for Mr. Spalding through his quickness of temper. As for the excessive seeking for temporal welfare, Mr. Joel Palmer, then Indian Agent, said in my presence at Walla Walla, during the winter of 1848, that in his opin- ion the application of the missionaries to get excessive riches had been a great obstacle to the prosj)erity of the missions ; that it absorbed too much of their attention and excited against them the jealousy of the Indians -, that his opinion was that the government ought to pro- hibit them from getting more than a certain amount of revenue as considered necessary for their habitual sub- sistence. Such had been — upon the Indians — the unfavorable eflPect of the facts and circumstances which I have just given above as the remote causes of the massacre, that a great part of the volunteers of 1848, and also of the population of the WilUimette, came to the general con- clusion that the missions were prejudicial to the Indians, made them worse, and had better be abandoned. When they came to this conclusion, however, they could speak of the Protestant missions only, because they had then Jio opportunity of knowing what the Catholic missions THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 43 were, and what effects they produced among the Indians — the Flat Head missions being so far off that very few Protestants knew anything of their management. YII. The ultimate causes and the only immediate ones were the ravages of the measles and dysentery, together with the tales of Lewis. The causes that I have enumerated above, must be considered as so many remote and indirect ones, which had been preparing for a long time the way for the awful deed ; but as to immediate causes every sensible person will find it in the ravages of the measles and dys- entery, which had terrified the Indians, and in the tales that Jo. Lewis spread among them, and which agreed so perfectl}" with the long prejudices and suspicions of the Indians, and with the tales that had been spread before by Tom Hill. As an evident proof of that I refer to Mr. Craig's statement which w^e have seen above, and as a second and yet stronger proof I introduce the lan- guage of Mr. Spalding himself. " It was most distressing," says Mr. Spaulding in his ' History,' " to go into a lodge of some ten fires and count twenty or twenty-five, some in the midst of measles, others in the last stage of dysentery, in the midst of every kind of filth of itself sufficient to cause sickness, with no suitable means to alleviate their inconceivable sufferings, with perhaps one well person to look after the wants of two sick ones. They were dying every day, one, two, and sometimes five in a day, with the dysen- tery, which very generally followed the measles. Every- where the sick and dying were pointed to Jesus, and the well were urged to prepare for death. Indeed there was enough there to alarm Indians and to excite them to excesses, if anybody knew how to take advantage of those circumstances: and that man was found in Jo. Lewis. Appearing full of solicitude for the welfare of the Indians, he went to them and told them that he was himself an Indian the same as they were, belonging to the Chinook tribe ; " that formerly," as Mr. Spalding continues to relate in his ' History,' " the Amer- icans by ships brought poison to the low^er country with a view to destroy all the Indians. Yast multitudes were destroyed, as their old men very well recollect — 44 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. referring, doubtless, to small-pox and measles, which raged throughout the Territory some thirty-five or forty years ago.* He, being a small child, was reserved by the Americans, taken to the States, where he had grown up, ever mindful of his native country, and anxious to return to his own people. He told the Indians that he took particular notice of the letters of Dr. Whitman and myself from this country ; told them that some of these letters spoke of this vast country as every way desirable for settlement — its healthy climate, its rich soil, the bands of horses, &c. Some of these letters called for poisons by which we could sweep off the Indians and •make way for the Americans. In accordance with this request, he said, several bottles of poison had been brought over by the last emigration which had caused imany deaths among the immigrants, and was the cause of the sore sickness and frequent deaths among the In- dians, and would soon kill them all if the Docter and Mrs. Whitman and myself were not removed. This I received from Stikas in his lodge twenty-four hours after the butchery had taken place. It seems that immedi- ately on my arrival Lewis set himself to excite the In- dians to do the dreadful deed. He told them that he overheard Dr. Whitman and myself consulting at night as to the most effectual way to kill off the Indians." " Such statements," Mr. Spalding continues, " follow- ing like statements which have been sounding in the ears of the Indians for years, and made with so much apparent solicitude for them, and at the time of great excitement among the Indians on account of the measles, had doubtless much to do in bringing about the bloody tragedy." And for my part I do not hesitate to affirm that any sensible and unprejudiced person will conclude that there, and there only, lies the immediate cause of the murders, and that such were the true and only mo- tives that induced the Indians to perpetrate the horrible crime. All efforts to prove the contrary would prove nothing but the injustice and blind prejudice of their Authors. "*It was in the year 1830 that entire villages were swept away by sick- ness. THE WHITxMAN MASSACRE. 45 CHAPTEEiy. Journal of the Principal Events that occurred in the Walla Walla Country, from the arrival of the Bishop and his Clergy until the moment they left that Country for the Willamette Settlements. It was on the 5th of September, 1847, that the Eight Eev. Bishop A. M. A. Blanchet arrived at Fort Walla Walla, where he was cordially received by Mr. McBean, Clerk i\\ charge of the Fort. He was accompanied by the Superior. of the Oblats and two other clergymen. He had the intention of remaining but a few da^^s at the Fort, for he knew that Towatowe, (or Young Chief,) one of the Cayuse chiefs, had a house which he had destined for the use of the Catholic missionaries, and he-intended to go and occupy it without delay ; but the absence of the Young Chief, who was hunting buffalo, created a difficulty in regard to the occupation of the house, and in consequence he had to wait longer than he wished. On the 23d of September, Dr. Whitman, on his way from the Dalles, stopped at Fort Walla Walla. His countenance bore sufficient testimony of the agitation of his heart. He soon showed by his words that he was deeply wounded by the arrival of the Bishop. " I know very well," said he, " fo]' what purpose you have come." ^' All is known," replied the Bishop, " I come to labor for the conversion of the Indians, and even of Americans, if they are willing to listen to me." The Doctor then continued in the same tone to speak of many things. He attributed the coming of the Bishop to the Young Chief's influence- — made a furious charge against the Catholics, accusing them of having persecuted Protest- ants and of even having shed their blood wherever they had prevailed. He said he did not like Catholics that he should oppose the missionaries to the extent of his power. ... He spoke against the Catholic Ladder * and said that he would cover it with blood, to show the persecution of Protestants by Catholics. He refused to *A picture explaining the principal points of Catholic faith. 46 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. sell provisions to the Bishop, and protested that he wouH not assist the missionaries unless he saw them in starva- tion. After such a manifestation of sentiment towards Cathohcs in general and priests in particular, the Bishop was not astonished at hearing some hours after that Dr. Whitman on leaving the Fort went to the lodge of Pio- piomoxmox (or Yellow Serpent); that he had spoken a great deal against the Priests ; that he had wished to prevail upon this chief to co-operate with him, in order that by the aid of his influence with the Cayuses, De Shutes aud Dalles Indians, he might be enabled to ex- cite these nations against them, etc. The clergymen who had remained behind with the wagons and effects of the mission, arrived at Fort VYalla Walla on the 4th of October. During the months of October and November the Dr. came to the Fort several times to render his professional services to Mrs. Maxwell and Mr. Thos. McKay; he was a little more reserved than at the first interview, but it was always visible enough that the sight of the clergy was far from being agreeable to him. On the 26th of October Young Chief came to the Fort, and the Bishop asked him if he was disposed to re- ceive a priest for him and his young men ; telling him that he could only give one for the whole nation, and if the Cayuses wished to avail themselves of his ser- vices, they would do well to come to an understanding together concerning the location of the mission. The Young Chief replied that he would receive a priest with pleasure ; that he had long desired one, and that he could take his house and as much land as he wanted ; but as a means of re-uniting the Cayuses, who had been hereto- fore divided, and in order to facilitate their religious in- struction, he suggested the idea of establishing the mis- sion near Dr. Whitman's, at the Camp of Tilokaikt, say- ing that there was more land there than near his house, and that it was more central; that, by his wife, he had a right to the land of Tilokaikt, and that he was dis- wniins t> ; posed to give it to the mission, if Tilokaikt was that he would go and live there himself with his young men, if the mission could be established there; but that THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 47 hi ease this could not be done, his house was at the ser- vice of the priest at any time he pleased. On the 29th of October the Bishop, agreeably to the ivords of the Youug Chief, informed Tilokaikt that he wished to see him ; and, on the 4th of November, Tilo- kaikt, Camaspelo, and Tomsaka}^ with many other In- dians, Avere at the Fort. The meeting took place after supper ; it was done publicly and in the presence of Mr. Thomas McKay and all the persons at the Fort who chose to witness it. Tomsakay spoke first, Camaspelo next, and then Tilo- kaikt taking the floor, put man}^ questions to the Bishop; asking him "whether it was the Pope who had sent him to ask for land for tlie mission — how the priests lived in -the country— who maintained them — -whether the priests Avould make presents to the Indians — w^hether they would cause their land to be ploughed — whether they would aid them in building houses— whether they would feed and clothe their children, &c. &c. The Bishop re- plied that it was the Pope who had sent him; that he had not sent him to take their land, but only for the purpose of saving their souls; that however, Laving to live, and posscssino- no wealth, he had asked of them a piece of land that he could cultivate for his support; that in his country it was the Faithful who maintained tlie priests, but that here he did not ask so much, but only a piece of land, and that the priests themselves would do the rest. He told them that he would not make pressents to Indians, that he would give them noth- ing for the land he asked; that in case they worked for Slim, he would. pay them for their work and no more; that he would assist them neither in ploughing their lands nor in building houses, nor would he feed or clothe their children, &c. The Bishop then closed, the young men retired, and Tilokaikt concluded the meeting by saying that he would not go against the words of the Young Chief, and requested the Bishop to send immediately Bome person to visit his land and select a place for a mission.* On the 8th of IS'ovcmber I went by order of the Bishop For further pajticulsrs of the qjeeting, see Mr. Thomas McKay's stat©^ 48 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. to Wailatpu to look at the land which Tilokaikt had of- fered ; but he had changed his mind and refused to show it to me, saying that it was toofemall He told me that he had no other place to give me but that of Dr. Whit- man, whom he intended to send away. I declared to him a second time, the same as the Bishop had done at the meeting, that I would not have the place of Dr. Whitman. I then went immediately to the camp of Young Chief, to notify him that I would take his house, since I was unable to procure a place from Tilokaikt. I returned to the Fort on the 10th, and on tlie 11th Eev. Mr. Eousseau left with his men to repair the house, and having come back on the 26th, announcing that the house was in a condition to be occupied, it was imme- diately decided that we should go and lake our lodging in it the next day. The same day we received, at the Fort, a visit from Mr. Spalding, the Presbyterian mission- ary of the Nez Perces, whom we acquainted, during the conversation, with our intention of leaving the next day for our mission on the Umatilla river. The next day, I^ovember 27th, we took our leave of Mr. McBean and his family to go to the Umatilla, where we (the Bishop, his Secretary and mj'self) arrived towards evening. Eev. Mr. Eousseau remained behind with the wagons and bagixage, and did not arrive until some days after. The following is the substance of a letter which I ad- dressed to Col. Gilliam, containing a relation of the events which immediately followed our arrival : — Fort Walla Walla, March 2, 1848. CoL. Gilliam : — Dear Sir : — I have the honor to reply to the request which you have been pleased to make me lately. It af- fords me great satisfaction to be able to oblige you by giving you a detailed account of the facts relative to the terrible event of the 29th November, 1847, which hap- pened within my knowledge. You know, sir, that eight Catholic missionaries, at the THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 49 bead of whom was the Bishop, A. M. A. Blanchet, ar- rived at Fort Walla Walla at the beginning of last autumn, with the intention of devoting themselves to the instruction of the various tribes of Indians in this part of Oregon. Some were located north of the Colum- bia, and it was decided that the others should pass the winter with the Cayuses at the camp of Young Chief, because this chief had uot ceased for sevej-al years to ask for priests, and had offered his house for their accommo- dation. But, when we arrived at the Fort, he was away on a hunting expedition, from which he did not return till late in the fall, and for that reason the commence- ment of our mission was retarded until the 27th .of No- vember. During our stay at the Fort wo saw Dr. Whitman sev-. eral iimos, and though at first he seemed violently opposed to us, telling the Bishop frankly that he would do all he could agtiiiist him, yet upon further acquaint tance he seemed to regard us with a more favorable eye, and when the care of the Ca.yuse mission was given to me b}^ the Bishop, I indulged the hope of being able to live upon good terms with the Doctor. Tbe day before our departure from the Fort for the Umatilla, we dined w^ith Mr. Spalding and Mr. Eodgers, and I assure you that it was a satisfaction to me to make the acquaintance of those gentlemen. I then indulged the hope more strongly than ever of living in peace with them all, which was in perfect accordance with my natu- ral feelings; for those who are acquainted with me knov\' that i have nothing more at heart than to live in }')eace with all men, and that, exempt from prejudices, I am disposed to look with an equal eye upon the members of all religious denominations, to do all I can for the good of all without regard to the name by which they may be called. On Saturday, November 27th, I left the Fort in com. pany with the Bishop and his Secretary for our mission on the Umatilla, twenty-five miles from Dr. Whitman's. We had scarcely arrived in the evening, when, on going to see a sick person, I learned that Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding were en route for my mission, Dr. Whitman navino; been called to attend to the sick 50 thp: whitman massacre, The next day, being Sunday, we were visited by Dr, Whitman, who remained but a few minutes at the house, and appeared to be much a,2jitated. Being invited to dine, he refuged, saying that he feared it would be too late, as he had twenty-five mile.s to go, and wished to reach home before night. On parting he entreated me not to fail to visit him when I would pa&s by his mis- sion, which I very cordially promised to do. On Monday, 29th, Mr. Spalding took supper with us, {ind appeared quite gay, During the conversation he happened to say that tlie Doctor vvas unquiet, that the Indians were displeased with him on account of the sick- ness, and that even he had been informed that the mur-. /^erer (an Indian) intended to kill liim; but he seemed not to believe this, and suspected as little as we did what was taking place at the mission of the Doctor. Before leaving Fort Walla Walla it had been decided that after visiting the sick people of my mission on the Umatilla, I should go and visit those of Tilokaikt's camp for the purpose of baptising the infants and such dying adults as might desire this iavor; and the Doctor and Mr. Spalding having informed me that there were still many sick persons at their missions, I was confirmed in this resolution, and made preparations to go as soon as possible. After having finished baptising the infants and dying adults of my mission, I left on Tuesday, the oOth of ISTo- vembcr, late in the afternoon, for Tilokaikt's camp, where 1 arrived between seven and eight o'clock in the evening. It is impossible to conceive my surprise and consternation when, upon my arrival, I learned that the Indians the day before had massacred the Doctor and his wife, with the greater part of the Americans at the missipn. I passed the night \vithout scarcel}^ closing my eyes. Early the next morning I baptised three sick children, two of whom died soon after, and then hasten- ed to the scene of death to oifer to the widows and orphans all the assistauec in my power. I found five or six women and over thirty children in a condition de^ plorable beyond description. Some had just lost their husbands, and the others their fathers, whom they had iieen massacred before their eyes, aaid were expecting THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 51 every moment to share the same fate. The sight of those persons caused me to shed tears, why3h, however, I was obliged to conceal, for I was the greater part of the day in the presence of the murderers, and closelj^ watched b}^ them, and if I had shown too marked an interest in behalf of the sufferers, it would only have en- dangered their lives and mine; these therefore entreat- ed me to be upon my guard. After the first few words that could be exchanged under such circumstances, I in- quired after the victims, and was told that they were yet un buried. Joseph Stanfield, a Frenchman, who was in the service of Dr. Whitman, and had been spared by the Indians, was en^^aged in washing the corpses, but being alone he was unable to bury ^them. 1 resolved to go and assist him, so as to render to those unfortunate vic- tims the last service in my power to offer them. What a sight did I then behold ! Ten dead bodies lying here and there, covered with blood and bearing the marks of the most atrocious cruelty, — some pierced with balls, others more or less gashed by the hatchet. Dr. Whit- man had received three gashes on the face. Three o'thers had their skulls crushed so that their brains were oozing out. It was on the 29th of November, between two and three o'clock in the afteraoon, while all the people at the Doctor's house were busy, that the Indians with their arms concealed beneath their blankets, introduced tliejn- selves successively into the yard, and in an instant exe- cuted their horrible butchery. Three or four men (Amer- icans) only were able to escape. The ravages which sickness had made in their midst, together with the conviction which a half-breed, named Jo. Lewis, had succeeded in fixing upon their minds that Dr. Whitman had poisoned them, were the only motives I could discover which could have prompted them to this act of murder. This half breed had imagined a con- vei'sation between Dr Whitman, his wife, and Mr. Spalding in which he made them saj' that it was neces- sary to hasten the death of the Indians in order to get possession of their horses and lands. ' If you do not kill the Doctor,' said he, ' you will all be dead in the spring/ 62 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. I assure you, Sir, that during the time I was occupied in burying the victims of this disaster, 1 was far from feeling safe, being obliged to go here and there gatho-ing up the dead bodies, in the midst of assassins, whose hands were still stained with blood, and who by their manners, their countenances, and the arms w^hich they still car- ried, sufficiently announced that their thirst for blood wes yet unsatiated. Assuming as composed a manner as possible, I cast more than one glance behind at the knives, pistols, and guns, in order to assure myself whether there were not some of them directed towards me. The bodies were all deposited in a common grave, wlii:di had been dug the day previous by Joseph Stan- field; and before leaving I saw that they were covered with earth. But I have since learned that the grave not having been soon enough enclosed, had been mo- lested by the wolves, and that some of the corpses had been devoured by them. " Having buried the dead, I hastened to prepare for my return to my mission, in order to acquaint Mr. Si)alding with the danger which threatened him; because on Monday evening, when he supped with us, he had said that it was his intention to return to Dr. Whitman's on the following Wednesday or Thursday ; and I wished to meet him in time to give him a chance to escape. This I repeated several times to the unfortunate widows of the slain, and expressed to them my desire of being able to save Mr. Sj)ahling. Before leaving the women and children I spoke to the son of Tilokaikt, who seemed to be acting in the place of his father, asking him to promise me that they should not be molested, and that he would take care of them. 'Say to them,' said he, ' that they need fear nothing, they shall be taken care of, and well treated. I then left them, after saying what I could to encourage them, although I was not mj^self entirely exempt from fear upon their account. " On leaving the Doctor's house, I perceived that the son of Tilokaikt followed me in company with my inter- preter, who himself was an Indian, his friend and his relative by his wife. I did not think that he had the In- tention of coming far with us ; I believed that he was THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 53 merely coming to the river to point out some new place for crossing, and that he would afterwards return. But when, after having crossed the river, he still continued going on with us, I began strongly to fear for Mr, Spalding. I knew that the Indians were angry with all Americans, and more enraged against Mr. Spalding than any other. But what could I do in such a circumstance? I saw no remedy; I could not tell the Indian to go back, because he would have suspected something, and it would have been worse ; I could not start ahead of him, be- cause he had a much better horse than mine : I resolved then to leave all in the hands of Providence. Fortu- nately, a few minutes after crossing the river the inter- preter asked Tilokaikt's son for a smoke. They pre- pared the calumet, but when the moment came for light- ing it, there was nothing to make fire. ' You have a pistol,' said the interpreter, ' fire it and we will light.' Accordingly, without stopping, he fired his pistol, re- loaded it and fired it again. He then commenced smok- ing with the interpreter without thinking of reloading his pistol. A few minutes after, while they were thus engaged, in smoking, I saw Mr. Spalding come galloping towards me. In a moment he was at my side, taking me by the hand, and asking for news. ' Have you been to the Doctor's?' he inquired. ' Yes,' I replied. ' What news,' ' Sad news?'* ' Is any person dead?' ' Yes, Sir.' ' Who is dead, is it one of the Doctor's children?' (He had left two of them very sick.) ' No,' I replied. ' Who then is dead?' I hesitated to tell him. ' Wait a mo- ment,' said I, ' I cannot tell you now.' While Mr. Spald- ing was asking me those difi'erent questions, I had spoken to my interpreter, telling him to entreat the In- dian in my name, not to kill Mr. Spalding, which I begged of him as a special favor, and hoped that he would not refuse it to me. I was wating for his answer, and did not wish to relate the disaster to Mr. Spalding before getting it, for fear that he might by his manner discover to the Indian what I had told him; for the least motion like flight would have cost him his life and probably exposed mine also. The son of Tilokaikt, after hesitating some moments, replied that he could not take it upon himself to save Mr. Spalding, but that he 54 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. would go back and consult the other Indians y and so he started back immediately to his camp. I then availed myself of his absence to satisfy the anxiety of Mr. Spald- ing. I related to him what had passed. ' The Doctor is dead,' said I, ' the Indians have killed him, together M'ith his wife and eight other Americans, on Monday last, the 29th, and I have buried them before leaving to-day.' ' The Indians have killed the Doctor!' cried Mr. Spald- ing; .... they will kill me also, if I go lo the camp! ' I fear it very much,' said I. ' What then shall I do?' ' I know not ; I have told you what has happened, decide now for yourself what you had best do ; 1 have no ad- vice to give you in regard to that.' ' Wh}^ has that In- dian started back?' he inquired. ' I begged him to spare your life,' said I, ' and he answered me that he could not take it upon himself to do so, but that he would go and take the advice of the other Indians about it ; that is the reason why he started back. Mr. Spalding seemed frightened and discouraged. ' Is it possible ! Is it pos- sible !' he repeated several times ; ' they will certainly kill me; and he was unable to come to any decision. But what could have prompted the Indians to this ?' he inquired. ' I know not,' said I, ' but be quick to take a decision, you have no time to lose. If the Indians should resolve not to spare your life, they will be here very soon, as we are only about three miles from their camp.' ' But where shall I go ?" ' I know not, you know the country better than I; all that I know is that the Indians say the order to kill Americans has been sent in all directions. Mr. Spalding then resolved to fly. He asked me if I was willing to take charge of some loose horses that he was driving before him. I told him that I could not for fear of becoming suspicious to the Indians. I told him, however, that if the interpreter was willing to take them under his charge at his own risk, he was perfectly at liberty to do so. To this the interpreter agreed. I gave Mr. Spalding what provisions I had left, and hastened to take leave- of him, w^ishing him with all my heart a happj^ escape, and promising to pray for him. In quitting him L was so much terrified at the thought of the danger with which he was threat- ened, that I trembled in every limb, and could scarcely THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 55 hold myself upon my horse. I left him with my inter- preter, to whom he ai>;ain put many questions, and w^ho pointed out to him a by-road which he would be able to follow with most safety-. I thought he advised him to go to the Dalles, but I am not certain. Mr. Spalding still continuing to ask new questions, and hesitating to leave, the interpreter advised him to hasten his flight, and he had left him a moment before he had decided to quit the road. The interpreter had not left Mr. Spald- ing more than twenty minutes when he saw three armed Cayuscs riding hastily tov\'ards him, who were in pursuit of Mr. Spalding. Upon coming up to the interpreter they seemed much displeased that I had warned Mr. Spalding of their intentions, and thereby furnished him with an opportunity to escape. ' The priest ought to have attended to his own business and not to have inter- fered with ours,' they said in an angry tone, and started immediately in pursuit of him. And they must have in- evitably overtaken him had not the approaching dark- ness of the night and a heavy fog that happened to fall down prevented them from discovering his trail, and forced them to return. I had continued mj^ route quite slowly, so that it was dark when I reached th-e Spring on Marron's Fork I dismounted for a moment to drink, and on mounting my horse was somewhat alarmed fo hear a horseman coming at full sj^eed in our rear. I called to the interpreter and told him to speak and inform him who we were. The Indian recognised the name of the interpreter, and ap- proached him and spoke amicably to him, and fired off his pistol. It was the son of Tilokaikt, the same w^ho had returned to camp to consult the Indians about the fate of Mr. Spalding. He continued to accompany us until we reached the camp of Camaspelo, on the TJma- tilla river, and there I learned from the interpreter that he had come to inform Camaspelo of the horrible event. After six da^'S of danger, privations and fatigue, Mr. Spalding was enabled to reach his family at his mission amongst the Nez Perces, as you have seen from his letter to the Bishop of Walla Walla, since published in the Oregon Spectator. I was truly happy to learu that Mr. Spalding was out of danger, and I thanked God sincerely 56 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. for having made me instrumental in saving the life of a fellow-creature at the peril of my own. Some days after an express reached us from the Fort, informing us that our lives were in danger from a por- tion of the Indians who could not pardon me for having deprived them of their victim; and this was the only reason which prevented me from fulfilling [the promise which I had made to the widows and orphans of return- ing to see them, and obliged me to be contented with sending my interpreter. You are acquainted, Sir, with the events which fol- lowed, — the murder of two sick men, who were brutally torn from their beds and their throats cut ; the murder of the young American when returning from the mill; the good fortune of the other Americans at the mill, who owed their escape to a single Indian, (Tintinmitsi,) while the others wished to kill them; the violation of three young girls; the letter of Mr. Spalding, which oc- casioned the assembling of the chiefs at the Catholic mission, and their asking for peace ; the| arrival of Mr. Ogden and the deliveay of the captives. Such are, Sir, the facts and circumstances relative to this deplorable event, the relation of which I thought would be of a nature to interest you. I am pleased with the confidence you have shown me by asking this relation at my hands, and thank you sincerely for the same. I thank you more especially for the opportunity you have given me of presenting to you a full and candid ex- position of my conduct and intentions in thecircnm- stances so dangerous and so delicate in which I acci- dentally found myself involved. With sentiments of the highest consideration and re- spect, I have the honor to be, Sir, Your most ob't humble ser't, J. B. A. Brouillet, Priest, Yicar-General of Walla Walla. I arrived at the mission on Thursday moi-ning, 2d of THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 57 December, and announced to the inmates the frightful tidini^s which were yet unknown to them. On the 3d the Bishop called for the Young Chief and bis brother, Five Crows, in order to express to them bow deeply he had been pained by the news of the hor- rible affair at Wailatpu, and to recommend to their care the widows and orphans, as well, as the men, who had survived the massacre. They protested they gave no consent to what had happened at Wailatpu, and prom- ised to do all in their power for the survivors. ^ Some days after we learned that a young man, who had been engaged working at a saw-mill some twenty miles from the establishment of the Doctor, with some other Americans, had been killed on his return from the mill to the Doctor's, and that the Indians intended to kill the others. On the 10th we received the painful intelligence that two other young men, who, being sick, had been spared by 'the Indians at the time of the first massacre, had since been torn from their bed and cruelly butchered. We learned at the same time that the other men be- lono-ing to the mill had been spared and brought to the Doctor's for the purpose of taking care of the women and children. , , , ^- ^• On the 11th of December we had the affliction to hear that one of the captives had been carried off from the Doctor's house by the order of Five Crows, and brought to him; and we learned, that two otheis had been violated at the Doctor's house. On the 16th two Nez Perce chiefs (Inimilpip and iip- ialana'hkeikt) brought us the following letter* from Mr. Spalding: — Clear Water, Dec. 10th, 1847. To the Bishop of Walla Walla or either of the Catholic priests : Eeverend and dear friend,— i This hasty note may inform you that I am yet alive through the astonishing mercy of God. The hand of «-We had reason to be astonished at that confidence of those Indians, as we had bad as yet no opportunity of seeing any one of the Nez Perces since our arrival in the country. 58 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. the merciful God brought me to my family after six daj^s and nights from the time my dear friendf fur- nished me with provisions, and I escaped from the In- dians. Mv daughter is 3^et a captive, I fear, but in the hands of our merciful heavenly father. Two Indians have gone for her. My object in writing is principally to give info^'mation through you to the Cayuses that it is our wish to have peace ; that we do not wish the Amer- icans to come from below to avenge the wrong; we hope the Caynses and the Americans will be on friendly terms; that Americans will no more come in their country unless they wish it. As soon as these men re- turn, I hiTipe, if alive, to send them to the Governor to prevent Americans from coming up to molest the Cay- uses for what is done, I know that you will do all in your power for the relief of the captives, women and children, at Wailatpu ; you will spare no pains to ap- pease and quiet the Indians. There are five Americans here, my wife and three children, one 3'oung woman, and two Frenchmen. We cannot leave the country without help. Our help under God is in your hands and in the hands of the Hudson's Bay Company. Can help come from that source? Ask their advice and let me know. I am certain that if the Americans should attempt to come it would be likely to prove the ruin of us all in this upper country, and would involve the country in war: God grant that thc'y may not attempt it. At this moment I have obtained permission of the Indians to write more, but I have but a moment. Please send this or co)iy to Governor Abernethy. The Nez Perces held a meeting yesterday; they pledged themselves to protect us from the Cajnises if they would prevent the Americans from com'ng up to avenge the murders. This we have pledged to do, and for this we beg for the sake of our lives at this place and at Mr. Walker's. By all means keep quiet and send no war reports, send nothing but proposals for peace. They say they have buried the death of the Walla Walla chief's son, killed in California. They wish us to bury this offence. I hope to write soon to Gov. Abernethy, but as yet the Indians are not willing, but are willing that I fMy dear friend, because he was yet in the hole, as the Indians said. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 59 .should send thonQ hints tbroiigh you. 1 hope you will send by all meaus and with all speed, to keep quiet in the Willamette. Could Mr. Grant come this way, it would be a great fovor to us and do good to the Indians. 1 just leai'u that these Indians wish us to remain in the country as hostages of peace. They wish the com- munication for Americans to be kept open. We are willing to remain so if peace can be secured. It does not seem safe for us to attempt to leave the country in any way at present. May the God of heaven protect u8 and finally bring peace. These two men go to make peace, and when they return, if successful with the Cayuses, they will go. to the Willamette. We have learned that one man escaped to' Walla AYalla, crossed over the river, and went below. He would naturally suppose that all were killed. Besides myself, another white man escaped wounded and reached m}^ place three days before I did. Late Indian reports say that no women except Mrs. Whitman, or children, were killed, but all are in cap- tivity. Those people, if the Cayuses consent, will bring them all to this place. I traveled only nights and hid myself days, most of the waj- on foot, as m}^ horse escaped from me ; suffered some days from hunger and cold and sore feet; had no shoes, as I threw ray boots away, not being able to wear them. and. also left blankets. God in mercy brought me here. From the white man v/ho escaped, and from the Indians, we learn that an Indian from the States, who was in the employ of Dr, Whitman, was at the head of the bloodj^ affair, and helped demolish the windows and take the property. We think the Cayuses have been urged into the dreadful deed. God in his mercy forgive them,. for the}' know not what they do. Perhaps these men can bring my horses and things. Please give all particulars you. have been able to learn, and what news has gone below. How do the women and children fare ? How extensive is the war ? In giving this information and sending this letter below to Governor Abernethy, you will oblige your afflicted friend. I would write di- 60 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE, rectly to the Governor, but the Indians wish me to rest till they return. Yours in affection and with best wishes, (Signed) H. H. Spalding. The two Nez Perce chiefs advised the Cayuses to take measures for avoiding a war with the Americans. They requested the Bishiop to write to Gov. Abernothy, beg- ging him not to send up ao army, but rather to come himself in the spring and make a treaty of peace with the Cayuses, who promised that they wonld tlien release the captives of Wailatpu, — promising besides to offer no injury to Americans until they heard the news from the Willamette. The Bishop told them he was glad of their -proceeding, and was disposed to assist them to the ex- tent of his power, but that he could not write without knowing the opinion of the Caj'uses, and that as poor as he could learn this he would send an express below. He then encouraged them to see all the chiefs about it. On tlie 18th of December Camasj^elo came to sec the Bishop, and told him that be had disapproved of all that had happened at Wailatpu,*— that the 3'oung men had stolen his word. He seemed discouraged, and spoke of killing all the horses and of leaving the country, as all the Indians expected to die. The Bishop succeeded in raising his spirits a liLilc by representing to him the possibility of yet obtaining peace, arul told him that the chiefs ought to meet as soon as possible, in order to come to an understanding among themselves aS to what was best to do in this matter; that the more they de- laved, the more difficult the arranj^ement of affairs w^ould become. The 20th being fixed upon as the day of the meeting, Camaspelo retired with apparently increased courage, promising to notify the other chiefs and secure their at- tendance. Accordingly on Monday, 20th December, at the Catholic mission, the Ca^nises assembled in Grand Council, held by Tawatoe, (or Young Chief,) Tilokaikt, Achekaia, (or Five Crows,) and Camaspelo, all the great chiefs of the Cayuses, in presence of many other great men (second chiefs) of the nation. About 10 o'clock in the morning they all entered the mission house. Tho THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 61. Bishop was present, together with Messrs. Eousseau, Led aire and myself. After a deep silence of some minutes the Bishop ex- plained to them the object of the meeting. Ho began by expressing to them the pleasure he felt in seeing them thus assembled for the purpose of deliberating on a most important subject — that of avoiding war, which is al- ways a gi-eat evil. He told them that in matters of im- portance they should always hold a council and consult those who might be best able to give them good advice; that in giving their advice separately, they were liable to be misunderstood, and thereby expose themselves and their people to great misfortunes; and he was persuaded that if the chiefs had deliberated together they would not now have to deplore the horrible massacre of Wai- latpu, nor to fear its probable consequences. He told them that two Kez Perce chiefs had asked him to write to the Great Chief of the Willamette to obtain peace, but that he could not do so without the consent of the Cayuses ; that the propositions which those chiefs wished to send were these : — -Ist. That Americans should not come to make war; 2d. That they should send up two or three great men to make a treaty of peace; 3d. That when these great men should arrive all the captives should be released ; 4th. That they would offer no of^ fence to Americans before knowing the news from below. The Bishop then desired them to speak and to say what they thought of these propositions. Camaspelo spoke first. He was blind and ignorant, and had despaired of the life and salvation of his nation, but the words of the Bishop had opened his eyes, con- soled and encouraged him ; that he had confidence and that he approved the propositions. Tilokaikt then rose to say that he was not a great speaker, and that his talk would not be long. He then reviewed the history of the nation since the arrival of the whites* in the country down to the present time. He said that before they had been visited b}^ white men the Indians were always at war ; that at the place where Fort Walla Walla now stood nothing but blood was con- * French, or Ilndsou's Bay Company people, 6 62 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. tinually seen ; that they had been taught by the whites there was a God who forbid men to kill each other ; that since this time they had always lived in peace and en- deavored to persuade others to do the same. He eulo- gised Mr. Pombrun, spoke of a Nez Perce chief who had been killed on his way to the States, afterwards of the son of Yellow Serpent, who had been killed b}^ Amer- icans in California; said that they had forgotten all this. He spoke also of Dr. Whitman and Mr. Spalding, and finished by saying that since they had forgotten all, ho hoped the Americans would also forget what had been recently done, that now they were even. He spoke nearly two hours. Achckaia (or Five Crows) arose only to suggest some other propositions vvhich' he wished added to those- al- ready announced. The Young Chief said but little. He said he vras weak and did not feel able to talk long. Ho was in favor of the propositions as well as those who had spoken before him. Edward, the son of Tilokaikt, then came forward, bearing in his hand the Catholic I/adder stained with blood: he repeated the words which Dr. Whitman had used when he showed it to them, one or two weeks be- fore he died : " You see this blood! it is to show you that now, because you have the priests among you, the comitry is going to be covered with blood ! ! You will have nothing now but blood r' He then related what had passed, gave a touching picture of the afflicted fixmilies in seeing borne to the grave a father, a mother, a brother, or a sister; spoke of a single member of a family who had been left to weep alone over all the rest who had disappeared. He stated how and for what the murder had been com- mitted, entered in the most minute details, avoiding, how- ever, to give any knowledge of the guilty ; repeated the words which Jo Lewis said had passed between Dr. Whitman, his wnfe, and Mr. Spalding, and finally spoke of the pretended declaration of Mr. Kogers at the mo- ment of his death : " that Dr. Whitman had been poison- ing the Indians." After having deliberated together the chiefs concluded by adding something to the propositions of the JSTez Per- ces, insisting principally upon the reasons which they THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 63 pretended ought to excuse their action, and requested the Bishop to send to the Governor in their name the foUowing manifesto : — " The principal chiefs of the Cayuses in council assem- bled state : That a young Indian who understands En- glish, and who. slept in Dr. AVhitman's room, heard the Doctor, his wife, and Mr. Spalding, express their desire of possessing the lands and animals of the Indians ; that he stated also that Mr. S])alding said to the Doctor: ' huny giving medicines to the Indians that they may soon die;' that the same Indian told the Cayuses: 'if you do not kill the Doctor soon, 3-ou will all be dead before spring;' that they buried six Cayuses on Sunday, November :^8th, and three the next day ; that the scho(»l- master, Mr. Eodgers, stated to them before be died, that the Doctor, his wife, and Mr. Spalding poisoned the In- dians; that for several 3'eais past the}^ had to deplore the death of their chiklren, and that according to these reports they were led to believe that the whites had un- dertaken to kill them all; and that these were the motives which led them to kill the Americans. The same chiefs ask at present — 1st. That the Americans may not go to war with the Cayuses. 2d. That they may forget the latelj- committed mur- ders, as the Cayuses will foi-get the murder of the son of the great chief of Walla Walla, committed in California. 3d. That two or three great n en may come up to con- clude peace. 4tli. That as soon as these great men have arrived and concluded peace, they may take with them all the women and children. 5th. They give assurance ihat they will not harm the Americans before the arrival of these two or three great men. 6th. They ask that Americans may not travel any more through their country, as their young men might do them harm. Place of Tawatowe, Youmatilla, 2Uth December, ls47, f Tilokatkt, (Signed) ^ Camaspklo, ^ ^ ^ I Tawatowe, i^ ACHEKAIA. 64 THE WHITMAN xMASSACRE. The Bishop accompanied this manifesto with a letter addressed to the Governor, which concluded in these terms: "It is sufficient to state that all these speeches went to show, that since they had been instructed by the whites they abhorred war, and that the tra^-edy of the 29th had occurred from an anxious desire of self-preser- vation, and that it was the reports made against the Doctor and others which led them to commit this act. They dtvsire to have the past forgotten and to live in peace as before. Your Excellency has to judge of the value of the documents which I have been requested to forward to you. Nevertheless, without having the least intention to influence one way or the other, I feel myself obliged to tell you, that by going to war with the Cay- uses, you will likely have all the Indians of this country against you. Would it be for the interest of a young colony to expose herself? That, you will have to decide with your Council. Before taking leave of the Chiefs, the Bishop said to them all publicly, as he had also done several times pri^ vately, that those who had taken American girls should give them up immediately. And then all entreated Five Crows to give up the one whom lie had taken, but to no purpose. Mr Ogden had arrived at Fort Walla Walla on the lijih of December, in the evening, witii the intention of obtaining from the Cayuses the release of all the Amer- ican prisoners He had sent immediately an exjiress to the Cayuses, notifying the chiefs to assemble without de- lay at Walla Walla The same express had brought a letter to the Bishoj) requesting him to attend theassfm- b!y of the chiefs. The Bishop being unable to attend then, I went !0 Fort Walla Walla on the 21st, in com- ])any with an Indian chief, to meet Mr. Ogden, atid to inform him of what liad passed in the Cx)uncil held the day before at the mission. It was the first time that any one of us had dared to leave the Young Chiefs camp since the burial of the murdered, and Mr. Spald- ing's escape, for fear of the Indians of Tilokaikt's camp. At the renewed request of Mr. Ogden, the Bishop came to the Fort next day, and on the 28d the assembly THE AVHITMAN MASSACRE. 65 convoked by Mr. 0<^'den took place. The Young Chief and Tilokaikt, with a dozen young men, were in the room, and at half past nine, A. M., Mr. Ogden opened the meeting. He spoke forcibly against the massacre, threw the whole blame upon the chiefs, who, he said knew not how to restrain their young men. He told them it was useless to have chiefs if they arc not listened to. He made them understand that he did not come on the part of the Americans ; that he had loft Vancouver before they knew wdiat had passed at Wail- atpu ; that he knew the Cayuses, and had been known by them a long time; that the Fi-ench people (Hudson's Bay Company) had never deceived them ; that he hoped they would listen to his w^ords;.that the Company did not meddle with the affairs of the Americans; that there were three parties, the Americans on one side, the Cay- uses on the other, and the French people and the priests in the middle; that the Company was there to trade and the priests to teach them their duties; listen to the priests, said he several times, listen to the priests, they will teach you how to lead a good life; the priests do not come to make war, they carry no arms, tliey carry but their crucifixes,* and with them they cannot kill. He insisted particularly, and at several times, upon the distinction necessary to be made betw^een the affairs of the Company and those of the Americans. He said to all the Cayuses that they had Chiefs to whom they ought to listen ; that the young men w^ere blind, and their chiefs should not allow them to do as they pleased. He told them that he had come with a charitable design ; that he demanded of the chiefs that they should give up to him all the Americans who were now captives; but that they should understand well that he did not promise them that the iVmerieans would not come to make war; he promised them only that he would speak in their favor. H' they would release the captives he would give them fifty blankets, fifty shirts, ten guns, ten fathoms of tobacco, ten handkerchiefs and one hundred balls and powder. The Young Chief thanked Mr. Ogden for the good advice he had given them and approved of what he had The Oblats, who constantly carry a crucifix on their breast, were present. QQ THE WHITMAiN MASSACRE. said, but in regard to the captives he said that it belonged to Tiiokaikt to speak as they were on his lands. Tih)lvaikt then spoke of the harmony that had always existed between them and the French people; that the French had espoused their daughters, and that they had been buried in the same burial ground, etc. He conclu- ded by saying that he would release the captives to Mr. Ogden, because he was old, and his hair was white, and that he had known him a long time, but that one younger than Mr. Ogden could not have had them. The'Nez Perces (or Sahaptin) came after the Cayuses and promised to release Mr. Spalding and all other American captives who were with them. Mr. Ogden promised them twelve blankets, twelve shirts, two guns, twelve handkerchiefs, five fathoms of tobacco, two hundred balls and powder, and some knives. The Bishop expressed to the Cayuses and Nez Perces the pleasure he felt in seeing them willing to release the captives. They agreed upon the time when the captives shduld be at the Port, and the quantit}^ of provisions necessary. The Catholic Ladder^ which Dr. Whitnnm had stained with blood, was given to Mr. Ogden by an Indian who had it In his possession. Mr. Ogden received also at his request from another one the ridiculous ladder^ which Mr. Spalding had been carrying amongst the Indians in opposition to the priests. On the 29th the captives of Wailatpu arrrived at the Fort to the number of forty-six, who together with five already at the Fort made fifty-one. The Bishop determined to avail himself of the offers of Mr. Ogden, and to descend in the boats that were to convey the captives. January 1st, 1848, Mr. Spalding arrived at the Fort ■••A picture representinf!^ two mads towards heaven — a wide one, where the Pope is selling indulgences and forgiveness of sins, and the Catholica were seen going, and at the upper end of which they were all falling head- foremost into hell, and a narrow one where the Protestants were supposed to go, but apparently so difhcult to ascend that none were seen ascending it. Mr. Spalding had been carrying it among the Indians, and explaining it to them for soifle time. THE WHITiMAN MASSACRE. 67 with his family and the other captives, accompanied by fifty Nez Perces. During the time which had passed from the assembling of the chiefs to the arrival of the captives at the Fort, Mr. Ogden had not been without inquietude. Divers rumors were in circulation among the Indians. It was said that an army had ari-ived at the Dalles, and they had come to avenge the murders. It was feared that these rumors might change the minds of the Indians, and cause them to retain the captives. The Indians came from time to time to ask if it was true that the Americans were at the Dalles. Mr. Ogden t6ld them that he knew nothing about it, but that he did not believe it. Indeed, it was difficult to believe the Americans would decide to come up so soon, knowing that Mr. Og- den was in the midst of the Indians, occupied in treating for the deliverance of the captives, for it Avas easy to suppose that the first news of such a step would' break off all negotiations and probably become the signal for the general massacre of all tliose unfortunate beings. It was certainly the conviction of Mr. Spalding, as ex- pressed in his letter to the Bishop, as well as that of all the whites at Walla Walhx. As soon as Mr. Spalding had arrived, Mr. Ogden de- cided that the departure should take place on the follow- ing day. The morning of the 2nd the Bishop conferred the order of priesthood upon two clergymen of the congregation of the Oblates, both destined for the Yakima Indians on the north side of the Columbia, where they had a mis- sion already commenced, and not for the mission of th© Nez Perces, as Mr. Spalding has said. At seven o'clock the ceremon}^ was over, but in spite of all the diligence and activity of Mr. Ogden, they were unable to start before halfpast twelve. The boats had only left the Fort a few hours with all the captives, when fifty armed Cayuse warriors arrived^- for the purpose, as they said, of taking and killing Mr. Spalding, as they had ascertained that American soldiers had arrived at the Dalles on their journey up. -i On arriving at the Dalles, Mr. Spalding proved tliat the Indians had judged him prettj" correctly, — when; 68 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. upon hearing his letter read, they said : " He speaks well, but it is because he is in a hole!" — for scarcel}^ had he put his feet on shore when he said to Major Lee: *" Hasten up with your companj^ in order to siir})rise the Indians and save the animals of the mission." These words were immediately reported to the Bishop by Mr. Ogden, who heard them himself He said still more to Major Magone; for he designated all the Caynses as worthy of death, with the fegble exception of five or six, whose names he gave. At noon on the 8th the boats arrived at Fort Yan- couver. On the 10th Mr. Ogden was again en route to conduct the captives to Oregon City, where he delivered them into the hands of Gov. Abernethy ; to whom he deliv- ered also a written account of what he had done for the deliverance of the captives, together with Mr. S])alding's letter to the Bishop, the manifesto of the Cayiise chiefs, and the Bishop's letter to the Governor that accompa- nied said manifesto. And as the editors of the Oregon Spectator wished to publish bitt a part of Mr. Spalding's letter, Mr. Ogden told them that they should print the whole of the letter or no part of what he had given them for that purpose; they consented reluctantly to publish the whole. On the 15th the Bishop, was at St. Paul's Mission, Willamette. After the departure of the Bishop I had remained alone with Mr. Leclaire at the mission on the Umatilla, where we continued to reside until the 20th of Febru- ary, in continual anxiety, between the fear of war and the hope of peace. Indian reports of all kinds were in circulation every day, saying tiiat there were troops already at the I)alles, that they had fought with the In- dians of that country, and that they had destroyed en- tire villages. On the other hand, prudence and the in- terest of the colony seemed to us to demand that the Governor should not disregard the propositions of the Indians, but that he should enter into negotiations of peace with them. A letter from Mr. Ogden would have removed our uncertainty; for, on the delivery of the captives, he promised the Indians that he would exert THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 69 liiniself in their behalf to secure peace with the Ameri- can!^, and that as soon as the Government had decided, whether for peace or for war, he would send them an express to Fort Walla Walla to apprise ihem of the re- sult. But this express came not. The Indians beij;an to suspect that Mr. Ogden had betrayed them. His letter, by accident, did not arrive until after the first engage- ment between the troops and the Cayuses Had it arrived in time, it would probably have prevented the engagement and induced the Ca^'uses to accept peace upon the terms offered by the Government. In the midst of so much uncertainty we desired to witiidraw from among the Cayuses, but to do this a good reason was necessary that could satisfy the Indians, and this reason w^e had not. I had promised to remain with them as long as they were at peace, but had told them that I should retire as soon as war should be declared. I was obliged to keep my word with them. However, on the 19th of February, the Cayuses hav- ing gone to meet the American troops, we had a right to consider war as inevitable, if not already declared ; and from this moment my word was disengaged. We there- fore made choice of the first opportunity that presented itself for retiring, and on the next day w^e departed for Foi't Walla Walla, whei-e we remained until the 18th of March. A few da^^s after our de}>arture the Cayuses burned our house and destroyed tlie i)roperty ^ve had left among them. On the loth of March, the Commissioners aj»pointed to treat foi- peace witli the Indians, being about to de- scend to Willamette, we availed ourselves of the oppor- tunity, and descended w^ith them, accompanied by the missionary Oblates of Yakima river. The Superintendent of Indian Affairs having issued, on the 15th of June, an order to stop all tl e nnssionary labors among the Indians, w^e made no effort to rees- tablish our mission among the Cayuses, but deferred it until more favorable circumstances. 70 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. CHAPTER V. Snmmary of the principal accusations made against the Catholic Clergy of Walla Walla, by Mr. Spalding and others, roith an ansiver to each of them. Mr* SjKilding stated in the Oregon American and else- where : 1st. That the massacre of Wailatpu had been com- mitted by the Indians in hatred of the heretics, as Pj-o- testants only, and no Catholics, were killed, and insinua- ted that it had been committed at the instigation of the priests. 2nd. That the priests baptised the children and fam- ilies of the murderers, and the murderers themselves im- mediately after the massacre, as they had their hands «till dripping with the warm blood of the murdered, and so a])proved the massacre. 3rd. That the Bishop and the priests were going and xjomingthrougli the country, and resided among the mur- derers unmolested and appearing to feel in safety, and gave it as a new proof that they had had a hand in the massacre. 4th. That soon after the massacre the priests were making preparations to begin new stations, and to pursue with renewed etforts those already begun; and that they had settled at Wailatpu immediately after the departure of the captives. 5th. That neither the Bishop nor any of his priests went near the captives of Wailat])u after the baptism of the murderers, and they concluded they had no comj^as- fiion nor charity for them. 6th. That the Eoman Catholic priests had offered a great price to Dr. Whitman for his station, but he re- fused to sell it: they had told him again to fix his price and they would pay it, but he had i-efused obstinately to sell ; and they concluded the priests were determined to have it by any means. — (Mr. John Kinzay, in the Oregon American.) 71 h. That some of the priests, who were at Walla Walla, did not offer their beds to Mr. Osborne's wife, THE WHITMAN MASSACRE, 71 while she Avas sick ; that they gave neither blankets nor food to Mr. Osborne when he started for the purpose of looking up his family, and that they did not prevent him from starting with his family for the river (Umatilla).-— (Mr. Osborne, in the Oregon American.) 8th. That the Bishop of Walla Walla had come with his priests into a country where there was no church or Catholic station, and no stationary priest, but that was entirely occupied by Protestant missionaries, the most of whom had worked there peaceably for eleven years. — (Mr. Spalding) 9th. That Jo. Lewis, Joseph Stantield, and Nicholas Finlay, who had been seen plundering, were Catholics, and from that concluded against Catholics in general. — (Mr. Spalding.) 10th. That the priests neglected to have the bodies of the victims of the massacre buried, when they had the facilities of doing so. — (Verbal reports, attributed to Mr. Spalding.) 11th. That the Bishop neglected to give to Mr. Spald- ing some info^-mation which he asked in regard to his daughter and the other captives. — (Mr Spalding.) 12th. That a young American was kjUed at Wailatpu at 2 o'clock p. M., on Tuesday, just about the time the priest arrived, and insinuated that the priest caused him to be killed. — fMr. Spalding.) 13th. That the priests concerted at Wailatpu with Mr. M'Bcan's messengers the letter which he (Mr. M'Bean) sent to Fort Vancouver in or'der to deceive the public about the true causes of the murder. — (Editor of the Oregon Araerican. 14th. That the Catholic missionaries despised the au- thority of the Governor and of the Indian Agent, who had commanded them to leave the Indian country. — (Editor of the Oregon American.) 15th. That one of the priests had been met by Mr. Spalding in companj^ with an Indian who had the avow- ed intention to kill him, and that the Indian, whose pis- tol was unloaded, retired to an unobserved place to reload it; and insinuated that the intention of that priest was to have had him killed b}^ that Indian. — (Mr. Spalding.) 16th, And, iOnally, that the priests hud told the Indians 72 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. everywhere that the Protestant missionaries were cans- rng them to die, and the Walla WaUa chief in particu- lar ; that they were poisoning them; that it was the Americans who had brought the measles among them, and that God had sent that sickness among them to show His hatred against the heretics; and they pointed to that as the source from which originated the indirect causes of the massacre. — (Mr. Spalding.) I will now proceed to rectify those statements and give a short answer to each of them : Ist. The massacre of Wailatpu has not been commit- ted by the Indians in hatred of the heritics. If Ameri- cans only have been killed, it is because the war had been declared by the Indians against the Americans only, and not against foreigners, it was therefore in their qualit}^ of American citizens and not as Protestants that the Indians killed them : as a proof of this I state the fact that two sons of Mr. Manson, a Protestant gentleman of the Hudson's Bay Company, who, being Protestants as well as their father, were selected by the Indians from the American children and sent to Port Walla Walla — and as a second proof I will observe that the Indians who perpetrated the massacre were all Protest- ants, and after the massacre remained Protestants as before, and continued to pray after the method that their Protestant missionaries had taught them, as Mr. Spalding himself affirms.* 2nd. We never baptised any of the murderers nor their families ; such an assertion has been a shameful slander brought upon U3 like many others. The only thing done in the matter of baptism connected with that circumstance is what follows : — As stated in my re- lation of the affair to Col, Gilliam, I had gone to Tilo- kaikt's camp, without being aware of what had passed in its vicinity, for the purpose of baptising the sick chil- dren and the dying adults whom I could dispose for baptism. On the morning I was there, w^hen about starting to pay a visit to the widows and orphans of the mission, and to bury the corpses, I inquired after the "^Five of those who were hung at Oregon City on the 3d of June, ISoO, embraced then the Catholic faith and were baptised by the Archbishop, F. N. Blanchet, a few hours before their execation. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. Indians who were dangerously sick and expected to die. None wore found in the camp but three young children, whom I baptised, and two of them died soon after; two of the three were slaves, and I did not learn to whom the other child belonged. Nothing more was done. Now, no sensible person could suspect that I intended to approve of the murderous deed by baptising those children, if they only knew what the principles and practice of the Catholic Church are in regard to baptism of infants. The Churcli teaches that baptism is of abso. lute necessity to the salvation of infants as well as of adults, and not holding children responsible for the faults of their parents or others, she commands her niinisters always to baptise them, whatever may be the circumstances, in any case of necessity or danger of death. Besides, those children were not offered to me for baptism by their fathers with their hands dripping with blood, and asking for an approval of their deed, as has been said ; but it was upon my own request, and repeatedly made, that their owners (two of them were slaves from other tribes) reluctantly consented to allow them to be baptised. 3d. The goings and comings of the clergy through the country- never existed but in the warm imagination of Mr. Spalding; and instead of that security which he supposed wo felt, some of us trembled from fear very frequently. It was three weeks after the massacre that, on the urgent request of Mr. Ogden, one of us dared for the first time, since the burial of the murdered victims, to leave the camp of the Young Chief and go to Walla Walla; and then, being the day that followed the coun- cil of the Cay uses at the Catholic mission, the Indians appeared more quieted than before by the hope of peace, which the letter of Mr. Spalding and the words of the Bishop had produced in their minds ; and moreover they had promised to stop any further hostilities until the intentions of the Governrnent were known; and besides, that Priest was accompanied by one of the chiefs, w^ho could have protected him against any of the young men who had bad intentions. Before that time we liad con-* sidered it unsafe for us to go at any distance from the Young Chiefs camp, on account of the evil dispositions 74 THS WHITMAN MASSACRE. of a portion of the murderers, towards us since Mr, Spalding's escape, as some of them could not forgive us for having taken their intended victim from their hands, and as a letter from Walla Walla bad warned us to be on our guard on that account. It is an error to say that the priests remained among the murderers. This tbcy never did. The Cayuse na- tion was divided into three oamps entirely distinct from each other, each camp having its own chief, who gov- erned his young men as he pleased; each of the chiefs were independent of the others, and those three camps formed, as it were, three independent states of a small federal republic, each of them administering their own private affairs as they pleased, without interlerence from the others. They were the camps of Tilokaikt, Camas- •pelo, and Young Chief and Five Crows together. But it was in Tilokaikt's camp, and by his Indians only, that Doctor Whitman had been killed : then the Indians of that camp only could be called murderers, and even but a small portion of them, since twelve or thirteen only have been designated as guilt}^ by the army itself, when on the spot. Again, we never remained in Tilokaikt's camp, but at a distance of twenty-live miles from it, in Young Chiefs camp, where some of the people -were Catholics, and where nobod}^ had taken part in the mur- der. Then it is evidently incorrect to say that we have remained among the murderers. It is also incorrect to say that we have been" unmolested by the Indians, since they burned our house and effects a few days after we had started from, among them, and about the time the troops were coming up to their country. 4th. It is* asserted that soon after, the massacre the priests were making preparations to begin new stations and to pursue with renewed efforts those already begun. The proof of which undoubtedly is that the Bishop started down to the Willamette at the same time as Mr. Spalding, taking with him the Superior of the Oblate Fathers and another clergyman, and leaving me alone at the Umatilla mission with a young clergymaii who was jiot a priest yet; and that shortly after, at the lirst op- portunity they could get, the remainder of his clergy wero following his example- THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. ; that he robbed and pois- oned them." The Bishop replied to him ''that his thoughts were bad ; tho Doctor did not poivson them nor rob them ; he had better banish those thoughts from his mind. You do not know the Doctor, he is not a bad man." '• One of the chiefs told the Bishop they would send the Doctor away very soon, and they would give him his house it he wished. The Bishop answered that he would not take the Doctor's house; that he did not wish them to send the Doctor away, and that there was room enough for two missions." Now, if the Bishop had formally contradicted the Indians in that circumstance, how could it be supposed that he should have spoken differently on other occa- sions ? He knew how important it was to weigh well his answers and words with the Indians, and carefully to avoid anytliing that would appear like hesitation or contradiction. Besides, he never spoke to the Indians but through an interpreter, and generally the i>iter- preter of the Fort, ami always in the ]}ublic room, and in presence of all the people that wished to hear him. The importance of keeping his influence even with tlie whites would have then prevented him from saying anything against Dr. Whitman and othei's in contradic- tion to what he had said on that occasion. And I affirm that lie never did ; for a proof of which I refer to the people who lived or were at Walla Walla during our stay there. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 89 But there is anotbei- circumstance that, in my opinion, can throw i^^reater light on the rratter than anj^hing else. It is a conversation that took place between Mr. Spalding and Dr. Ponjade, in the Caj^use country, about five or six miles at farthest from the place where the Catholic mission was afterwards established. It was three months before the establishment of that mission, and five days before the Bishop (who was'far ahead of his priests) passed for the first time on the Cayuse lands, on his way to Fort Walla Walla. The reader will judge from that conversation what reliance 'can be placed on Mr. Spalding's assertions in general, but especially on those that engage our attention at present. Let it be remembered in perusing the conversation, that there were no clergymen yet arrived among the Cayuses, the nearest were at least one hundred miles, and the others about three hundred miles distant. The conversation took place on the 31st of August, and the mission of the Cayuses did not begin until the latter part of November. Here follows the conversation as related by Dr. Pou- jade: This is to certify that on the 31st day of August, 1847, while on the road to Oregon, I met Eev. H. H. Spald- ing at the Willow Spring, at the foot of the Blue Moun- tains, and that the following conversation took place between him and me at that place : He asked me how many wagons were in. our company. I answered him, seven. H. H. Spalding— Well, you had better wait for a larger company. J. P. Poujade— Why so ? H. H. Spalding — Because the Indians are getting very bad. J. P. Poujade — Have they done anybody any harm ? H. H. Spalding — Yes, they have killed two white men at the Dalles. • J. P. Poujade — The Americans may be in fault. H. H. Spalding — No, it is the Catholic priests, icho have established a mission among the Cayuses; and they have put the Indians \?p to kill all the American Pro- testants on the road to Oregon. J. P. Poujade — Impossible ; that is not Christianity, it 90 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. must be a mistake, because we must love our nei<^bbors as ourselves. I have lived thirty years among the Catholics in the United States, and I always understood the Catholic Church to teach her children to do good for evil, and to be cha^-itable by giving good moral ex- ample, and I think well oi' the Catholic clergy. And to tell you the truth, I am a Catholic; but here is a Pro- testant gentleman, Mr. Larkins, who has lived neighbor to me twenty years, ask him if ever he knew Catholics to kill Protestants. Mr. Larkins answered, No. H. H. Spalding' — It is true, I have received fresh news, and I understand the Indians had stolen from the whites. One Indian was killed by the whites, and the Indians killed one white man. Do you know if the dragoons are coming or not ? ' J. P Poujade— The bill did not pass. H. H. Spalding — I am sorry; the Indians are getting worse every day for two or three years back. They are threatening to turn us out of the mission. A few days ago they tore down my fences. And I do not know what the Missionary Board of New York means to do. It is a fact, we are doing no good. When the emigration passes, the Indians all run off to trade, and return worse than when we came amongst them. And so I left him with his blanket spread, full of one thing and another, and he had also many head of horses, for the purpose of trading with the emigrants. Around us were scattered in the prairies several bands of horses, that the Indians pointed out to us as belonging to Dr. Whitman. (Signed,) John P. Pot/jade. I certify to the above conversation, being present at the time. (Signed,) Anne Poujade. "Saint Louis Willamet, Sept. 12, 1848. I leave all comments on that conversation to the pub- lic. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 91 Now, 1 have exposed frankly and candidly what I consider to have been the true causes of the massacre of Wailatpu, wnth the grounds and proofs that support my opinion, together with the conduct of the Catholic clergy in regard to that whole affair, on one part, and the ma- licious and grievous accusations made by Mr. Spalding and others against that same Catholic clergy with re- gard to that same affair, together with what I consider as a plain and full refutation of them, on the other part. I leave now the matter before the public, to which it belongs attentively to examine and weigh the testimony on both sides, and then impartially to decide and pro- nounce whether the Catholic clergy are guilty of tho atrocious charges brought against them, or whether Mr. Spalding and others could have spoken so against the Catholic clergy " without being crazy," as Col. Gilliam and many others have, already pronounced. They could not, without being moved by blind, unjust, and too violent religious prejudices. APPENDIX. Extracts from Hiaes' History of OrogOB. The following extracts from Kev. Gustavus Hineg' History of Oregon^ will no doubt prove interesting to every reader who desires to learn the truth of history, forming as they do, a chain of evidence which shows conclusively the remote causes which led to the mas- sacre at Wailatpu. It will be borne in mind that the events detailed in the following extracts, occurred from 1842 to 184G-7, and among Indians with whom Catholic missionaries had never resided. The Catholic missions among the Indians west of the Eocky Mountains, were first established in 1840, by Father Peter de Smet, S. J., among the Flathead and Pen de Orielles tribes, who had sent deputations to the missionary establishment, at St. Louis, Missouri, years before, soliciting the presence of the "black gowns" amongst them. The camps of these Indians were located many hundred miles from the Cay- use and other tribes of malcontents mentioned hereafter, and with whom the Pen de Orielles and Flatheads had no communication whatever. It has been generally remarked by Indian agents and other Federal officials, that the Indians among whom the Catholic missionaries were located, have invariably proved more moral, more susceptible of civilization, and more friendly towards the whites than those Indians whose spiritual welfare was under the control of non< 96 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. Catholic teachers. This is an established fact, verified by the national records, and is easily explained, inas- much as the missionaries of the Catholic Church devote themselves solely to the great work of their spiritual calling, whilst it not unfreqaently happens that the mis- sionaries of many other denomination^ make their re- ligious profession secondtiry to their own affluence and aggr a n d i z e m e n t. With these remarks VvC append the extracts above al- luded to, asking for them a careful perusal and candid consideration : EXTR A.CTS. April 14 This settlement has been thrown into a panic by intelligence which has just been received from the upper country, concerning the hostile intentions of the Cayuse, Nez Perce, and Walla Walla Indians. It appears that they have again threatened the destruction, of the whites. Some time in October last,* Indian re- port said that these tribes were coming down to kill off the Boston people, meaning those from the United States. This intelligence produced considerable excitement at the time, and induced the sub-agent of Indian Affairs to go directl}^ to the upper country and ascertain the truth of the report, and if possible settle all matters of diffi- culty. On arriving among the Indians, he ascertained that the report was not without foundation; but entered into such arrangements with them as appeared to give satisfaction. Thomas McKay contributed much to allay the excitement among them, and in connexion with the sub-agent, induced the ISTez Perces to adopt a code of laws, and appoint a head chief and inferior chiefs, sufficient to carry the laws into execution. It had been the policy of the Hudson's Bay Company to destroy the chieftainship, cut the different tribes into smaller clans, *1842 — Five years before the massacre at Wailatpu. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 97 and divide their interests as far as possible so as ta weaken them, and render them incapable of injuring the whites, by preventing them from acting in concert. But the sub-agent adopted a diiferent policy. The individ- ual appointed to a high chieftainship over the Nez Per- cefe, Avas one ElUs, as he was called by the English, who^ having spent several years in the settlement an the Red river, east of the mountains, had, with a smattering of the English language, acquired a high sense of his own importance ; and consequently, after he was appointed chief, pursued a very haughty and overbearing course. The fulfillment of the laws which the agent recommend- ed for their adoption, was required by Ellis with the utmost rigor. Individuals were severely punished for crimes, which, from time immemorial, had been com- mitted by the people with impunity. This occasioned suspicions in the minds of the Indians generally, that the whites designed the ultimate subjugation of their tribes. They saw in the laws they had adopted, a deep- laid scheme of the whites to destroy them, and take possession of their country. The arrival of a large party of emigrants about this time, and the sudden de-. parture of Dr. Whitman to the United States, with the avowed intention of bringing back with him as many as he could enlist for Oregon, served to hasten them to the above conclusion. That a great excitement existed among the Indians in the interior, and that they designed to make war upon the settlement, was only known to the whites through the medium of vague report, until a letter was received from H. K. W. Perkins, at the Dalles, in which he informed us that the Wascopam and Walla Walla Indians, had communicated to him in sub- stance the following information : that the Indians are very much exasperated against the whites in consequence of so many of the latter coming into the country, to de- stroy their game, and take away their lands; that the Nez Perces dispatched one of their chiefs last winter on snow shoes, to visit the Indians in the buffalo country east of Fort Hall, for the purpose of exciting them to cut off the party that it is expected Dr. Whitman will bring back with him to settle the Nez Perce country; that the Indians are endeavoring to form a general coali- 9 « 98 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE, tioii for the purpose of destroying all the Boston people ; that it is not good to kill a part of them and leave the rest, hut that every one of them must he destroyed. This information produced a great excitement throughout the community, and almost every man had a plan of his own by which to avert the impending storm. In the estima- tion of some the Indians were to be upon us immediately, and it was unsafe to retire at night for fear the settle* ment v/ould be attacked before morning. The plan of the agent wias to induce men to pledge themselves, under the forfeiture of one hundred dollars in case of delin- quency, to keep constantl}^ on hand, and ready for use, either a good musket or a rifle, and one hundred charges of ammunition, and to hold themselves in readiness to go at the call of the agent to any part of the country, not to exceed two days travel, for the purpose of defend-^ ing the settlement, and repelling any savage invaders. This plan pleased some of the people, and they put down their names -, but many were much dissatisfied with it, and as we had no authority, no law, no order, for the time being, in the country, it was impossible, to tell what would be the result, if the Indians should at- tempt to carry their threats into execution. * =f^ * * Eeport says, furthermore, that the Klikitat Indians are collecting together back of the TuaUty plains, but for what purpose is not known. The people on the plains, consisting of about thirty families, are quite alarmed. There is also a move among the Calapooahs, Shoefon, one of the principal men of the tribe, left this place a few days ago, and crossed the Willamette river declaring that he would never return until he came with a band of men to drive off the Boston people. He was - very much offended because some of his people were seized and flogged, through the influence of Dr. White, for having stolen horses from some of the missionaries, and flour from the mission mill. His influence is not very extensive among the Indians, or we miglit have much to fear. The colony is indeed in a most defence- less condition ; two hundred Indians, divided into four bands, might destroy the settlement in one night. * * * On the 20th of April, 1843, a letter was received in the settlement, written by IJ, B. Brewer, at the Dalles, which THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 99 brings the latest intelligence from the infected region. This letter states that the Indians in the interior talk much of war, and Mr. Brewer urges Dr. White to come up ^yithout delay, and endeavor to allay the exciternent. He does not inform us that the Indians design any evil to^vard the wdiites, but says that the war ,is to be betw^een themselves, but that the Boston people have much to tear. As the Doctor, in his visit to the interior last October, left an appointment to meet the Walla Walla Indians and the Cayuses, in their own country, on the 10th of May, and believing that a great share of the excitement originated in a misunderstanding of the Indians, he came to the conclusion at all hazards to go amorfg them. At the solicitation of the agent, I deter- mined to accompany him on the expedition. The great complaint of the Indians w^as that the Bos- ton peoj)le designed to take away their lands, ana reduce them to 8laver3^ This they had inferred from what Dr. White had told them in his previous visit; and this misunderstanding of tlie Indians had not only pro- duced a great excitement among them, but had occa- sioned considerable trouble betwixt them and the mis- sionaries and other wdiites in the upper country, as well as influencing them to threaten the destruction of all the American people. Iridividuals had come down from Fort Walla Walla to Vancouver, bringing information of the excited stale of things among the Indians, and giv- ing out that' it would be extremely dangerous for Dr. White to go up to meet his engagements, ^k * * * Next morning, at the rising of the sun, we left oiir attendants with tlie pack animals, and proceeded on ahead, determined, if possible, to reach the mission sta- tion at Waialatpu, on the Walla Walla river, the same day. Passed Ft)rt Walla Walla at twelve, and arrived at Dr. Whitman's at five, having traveled fittv miles since we mounted in the morning. We were received with great cordiality by Mrs. Whitman and Mr. Giger, Dr. Whitman being absent on a tour to the United States. They had heard we w^ere coming, and were looking for us with great anxiety. We soon learned that the reports in the lower country about war, that bad produced such an excitement, were not without 100 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. foundation : the Cayuse Indians, among wliom this mission is established, had freely communicated to Mi'. Giger, whom they esteemed as their friend, all they knew concerning it. When the Indians were first told that the Americans were designing to subjugate them, and take away their lands, the young chiefs of the Cayuse tribe were in favor of proceeding immediatcl}^ to hostilities. They were for raising a large war party, and, rushing directly down to the Willamette settlement, cut off the inhabit- ants at a blow. The old chiefs were of a different opinion; they suggested more cautious measures. Tak- ing into consideration the difficult}", at that season of the year, of marching a large party the distance of three or four hundred miles through a wide range of moun- tains, covered with snow, they advised all the Indians to wait until they should obtain more information con- cerning ihe designs of the Americans. They also thought that it would not be wisdom in them, in any case, to commence an offensive war, but to prepare themselves for a vigorous defence against any attack. TheyJrequently remarked to Mr. Giger, that the}' did not wish to go to war, but if the Americans came to take away their lands, and bring them into a state of vassalage, they would fight so long as they had a di'op of blood to shed. They said they had received their iufoi'mation concerning the designs of the Americans from Baptiste Dorio. This individual, wlfo is a half- breed, son of Madame Dorio, the heroine of Washington Lving's Astoria, understands the Nez Perce languaj^e well, and had given the Cay uses the information that had alarmed ,them. Mr. Giger endeavored to induce them to prepare, early in the spring, to cultivate the ground as they did the year before, but they refused to do anything, saying that Baptiste Dorio had told them that it would be of no consequence; that the whites would come in the summer, and kill them all off, and destroy their plantations. After Dorio had told them this story, they sent a Walla Walla chief, called Yellow Serpent, to Vancouver, to learn from Doctor McLaughlin the facts in the case. Yellow Serpent returned and told the Cayuses that Dr. THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 101 McLaughlin said he had nothing to do in a war with the Indians; that he did not believe the Americans desigried to attack them, and'that, if the Americans did go to war with the Indians, the Hudson's Bay Company would not assist them. After they got this information from the Mas ( great) Doctor, the Indians became more calm; many of them went to cultivating the ground as for- merly, and a large number of little patches had been planted and sown, before we arrived at the station. The Cay uses were principally encamped along the base of the Blue Mountains, a few miles east of Dr. Whitman's house; and after we had obtained all the information we could from Mrs. Whitman and Mr. Gi- ger, concerning the state of things among them, we sent them word that we had come, and desired to see them. We also sent the chiefs word that we desired them to make arrangements to have all their people meet us at the mission on the following Friday, to have a talk. The chiefs came to see us at Dr. Whitman's, and told the stor}^ of their grievances, and said that the}^ desired to have the difficulty settled. They said it would not be convenient for the people to come, together so soon as we desired, as man}- of them were off among the moun- tains, hunting elk. As they must be informed of the meeting, it would be several days before the, people could get together. * * * * Tuesday, 23d. The chiefs and principal men of both tribes came together at Dr. Whitman's to hear what we had to say. They were called to order by Tauitau, who by this time had got over his excitement, and then was placed before them the object of our visit. Among other things they were told that much had been said about war, and we bad come to assure them that they had nothing to fear from that quarter; that the Presi- dent of the United .States had not sent the Doctor to their country, to make war upon them, but to enter into arrangements with them to regulate t.heir intercourse with the white people. We were not there to catch them in a trap as a man would catch a beaver, but to do them good; and if they would lay aside their former practices and prejudices, stop their quarrels, cultivate their lands, and receive good laws, they might become a 102 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. great and a happy people; that in order to do this, they muHt be united, for they w©re but few in comparison to the whites; and if they were not all of one heart, they would be able to accomplish nothing; that the chiefs should set the example and love each otlier, and not get proud and haughty-, but consider the people as their brothers and their children, and labor to do them good; that the people should be obedient, and in their morning and evening pra3'ers they should remember their chiefs. Liberty was then given for the chiefs to speak, and Ellis remarked that it would not be proper for the Nez Perce chiefs to speak until the Cayuse people should receive the laws. The Cayuse chiefs replied, " If 3'ou want us to receive the laws, bring them forward and let us see them, as we cannot take them unless we know what they are." A speech was then delivered to the young men to im- press them favorably with regard to the laws. They were told that they would soon take the places of the old men, and thej^ should be willing to act for the good of the people ; that they should not go here and there and spread false reports about war; and that this had been the cause of all the difficulty and excitement which had prevailed among them during the past winter. The laws were then read, first in English, and then in the Nez Perce. Yellow Serpent then rose and said : " 1 have a mes- sage to you. Where are these laws from ? Are they from God or from the earth ? I would that you* might say, they were from God. But I think they are from the earth, because, from what I know of white men, they do not honor these laws. In answer to this, the people were informed that the laws were recognized by God, and imposed on men in all civilized countries. Yellow Serpent was pleased with the explanation, and said that it was according to the instructions he had received from others, and he w^as very glad to learn that it was so, because many of his people had been angry with him when he had whipped them for crime, and had told him that God would send him to hell for it, and he was glad to know that it was pleasing to God." THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 103 felaukaikt, a Cayiise chief, rose and said : " What do ou read the laws for before we take them ? Wo do not take the laws because Tauitau saj^s so. He is a Catholic, and as a people we do not follow his worship." Dr. White replied that this did not make any difference about law ; that the people in the States had different modes of worship, yet all had one law. Then a chief, called the Prince, arose and said : " I understand you gave us liberty to examine every law — all the words and lines — and as questions are asked about jt, we should get a better understanding of it. The people of this country have but one mind about it. I have something to say, but perhaps the people will dispute me. As a body, we have not had an opportunity to consult, therefore you come to us as in a wind, and speak to us as to the air, as we have no point, and we' cannot speak because we have no point before us. The business before us is whole, like a bod}^ we, have not dissected it. And perhaps you will say that it is out of place for me to speak, because I am not a great chief. Once I had influence, but now I have but little." He was about to sit down, but was told to go on. He then said — " When the whites first came among us, we had no cattle, they have given us none; what we have now got we have obtained by an exchange of property. A long time ago Lewis and Clark came to this country, and I want to know what they said about us. Did they say that they found friends or enemies here ?" Being told that they spoke well of the Indians, the Prince said, " that is a reason why the whites should unite with us, and all become one people. Those who have been here before 5^ou, have left us no memorial of their kindness, by giving us presents. We speak by way of favor. If you have any benefit to bestow, we will then speak more freely. One thing that we can speak about is cattle, and the reason why we cannot speak out now is because we have not the thing before us. My people are poor and blind, and we must have something tangible. Other chiefs have bewildered ino since they came; yet I am from an honorable stock. Promises which have been made to me and m}' fathers, have not been fulfilled, and I am made miserable; but il^ 104 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. ' \ will not answer for me to speak out, for my people do not consider me as their chief One thini^ more; 3^ou have reminded me of what was promised me sometimt^ ago, and I am inclined to follow on and see; though 1 have been giving my beaver to the whites, and have received many promises, and have always been disap- pointed. I want to know what you are going to do." Illutin, or Big Belly, then arose and said, that the old men were wearied with the wickedness of the young men. That if he was alone, he could say yes at once to the laws, and that the reason why the young men did not feel as he felt was because thej^- had stolen property in their hands, and the laws condemned stealing. But he assured them that the laws were calculated to do them good, and not evil. But this did not satisfy the Prince. He desired that the good which it was proposed to do them by adopting the laws, might be put io a tangible form before them. He said that it had been a long lime since the countr}'' had been discovered by whites, and that ever since that time, people had been coming along, and promising to do them good ; but they had all passed by and left no blessing behind them. That the Hudson's Bay Company bad persuaded them to continue with them, and not go atter the Americans; that if the Americans designed to do them good why did they not bring goods with them to leave with the Indians ? that they were fools to listen to what the Yankees had to say; that they would only talk, but the company would both talk and give them presents. ?(=*** About this time (1843) the Indians became quite trouble- some, in various parts of the country. AtWailatpu, on the Walla Walla river, where a mission station had be.m established by Dr. Marcus Whitman, they took advan- tage of the Doctor's absence and broke into the house, in the dead of the night, and even in the bed-chamber of Mrs. Whitman, who, with much difficulty, escaped out of their hands. At Lapwai, on Clear Water river, where the Eev. Mr. Spalding was conducting a mission atation, they committed some outrages; also, at the Falls of the Willamette river. A number of individuals of Dr. White's party, who had separated themselves THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 105 from the main company, were robbed of their effecta wliile passini^ down the Columbia river. The Nez Perces and Cayuses, two of the most power- ful tribes in the country, had talked much of making w^ar upon the American settlement on the Willamette river. These things, with many others of more or les» importance, produced a high degree of excitement, and served to arouse the people again to the subject of en- tering into some measures by which their mutual pro- tection micjbt be secured. * :?: * h< Letter of Sir James Douglas. The follovving letter from Sir James Douglas, chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay Company, to S. N. Castle, Esq., was first published in the Friend, at Honlulu,S. I., where the gentlman resided to whom it was addressed. It relates the massacre of Dr. Whitman and other mis- sionaries in a truthful manner, and gives, as one of the causes for their murder, the fact alread}" ])atent to the reader who has perused the foregoing pages, viz : The prejudices existing in the minds of the Cayuse Indians against Doctor Whitman, "tor not exerting his supposed supernatural powers in saving their lives." No man then residing on this coast had better opportunities for judging the character of the Cayuse Indians, than Mr. Douglas, and no man possessed greater facilities for pro- curing correct information relative to the causes — both remote and immediate — which led to the massacre at Wailatpu. Hence the letter of Mr. Douglas is entitled to more than ordinary ^consideration, and his conclusions will be found to coincide exactlj' with those of other dis- interested witnesses, clearly exonerating the Catholic missionaries from any shadow of culpability and placing the responsibility of the calamity where it properly be- longs : 106 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. Fort Yancouver, 9tb Dec, 1847. S. W. Castle, Esq. — Sir : It is with feelings indescrib- ably painful, that I hasten to communicate to you, for the information of the Board of Missions, intelligence of a disastrous event which lately occurred at the mission- ary stations of Wailatpu. Our estimable friend. Dr. Whitman, his amiable and accomplished lady, and nine other men and j^ouths in the mission employ, were mur- dered on the 29th ult., by the Cay use Indians, with cir- oumstancL^s of the most revolting cruelty. The lives of the wonicu and children with the exception of the la- mented lady already named, were spared. The mis- sion being situated in the Cayuse country, they had a peculiar interest in prorecting it from harm, in gratitude for past favors and for the blessings of religious instruc- tions so assiduously dispensed to them and to their fam- ilies, yet those very people the objects of so much solici- tude, were alone concerned in effecting the destruction of an establishment founded solely for their benefit. The Cayuse are the most treacherous and intractable of all the Indian tribes in this country, and had on many for- mer occasions alarmed the inmates of the missiort by their tumultuous proceedings and ferocious threats; but unfortunately^ these evidences of a brutal disposition were disregarded by their admirable pastor, and served onlj^ to arm him with a firmer resolution to do them good. He hoped that time and instruction would pro- duce a change of mind — a better state of feeling towards the mission; and he might have lived to see his hopes re- iilized had not the measles and dysentery, following in the train of immigrants from the United States, made frightful ravages this year in the upper country, many Indians have been cai-ried off through the violence of the disease and others through their own inprudence. The Cayuse Indians of AYailatpu being sufferers in this gen- eral calamity, were incensed against Dr. Whitman for not exerting his supposed supernatural powers in saving their lives. The}' carried this absurdity beyond that point of folly. Their superstitous minds became pos- sessed with the horrible suspicion that he was giving poison to the sick instead of wholesome medicines with the view of working the destruction of the tribe, their THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. 107 former cruelty probably adding strength to this suspic- ion. Still some of the more reflecting had confidence in Dr. Whitman's integrity, and it was agreed to test the effects of the medicine he had furnished on three of their people, one of whom was said to be in perfect health. They unfortunately died, and from that moment it was resolved to destroy the Mission. It was immediately af- ter burying the remains of these three persons that they repaired to the mission and murdered every man found there. This happened about 2 o'clock in the afternoon ; the Indians arrived at the mission one after another with their arms hid under their blankets. The doctor was at school with the children, the others were cutting up an ox they had just killed. When the Indians saw they were numerous enough to effect their object, they fell u^^on the poor victims, some with guns and others with hatchets, and their blood was soon streaming on all sides. Some of the Indians turned their attention towards the doctor ; he received a pistoi shot in the breast from one, and a blow on the head with a hatchet from another. He had still strength enough remaining to reach a sofa, where he threv/ himself down and expired. Mrs. Whitman was dragged from the gar- ret, and mercilesslj^ butchered at the door. Mr. Eogere was shot after his life had been granted to him; the wo- men and children were also goiag to be murdered, when a voice was raised to ask for mercy in favor of those whom they thought innocent, and their lives were spared. It is reported that a kind of deposition made by a Mr, Bogers increased the fury of this savage mob, Mr. Eogers was seized, was made to sit down, and then told that his life would be spared if he made a'fiill dis- covery of Dr. Whitman's supposed treachery. That person then told the Indians that the Doctor intended to poison them, that one night, when Mr. Spalding was at Waiiatpu, he heard them say that the Indians ought to be poisoned, in order that the Americans might take pos- session of their lands — that the Doctor wished to poison them all at once, but that Mr. Spalding advised him to do it gradually. Mr. Eogers, after this deposition, was spared, but an Indian^ who was not present, having seen 108 THE WHITMAN MASSACRE. him, fired at and killed bim. An American made a simi- lar deposition, adding that Mrs. W. was an accomplice, and she deserved death as well as her husband. It ap- pears that he concluded by saying that he would take the side of the Indians, and that he detested the Ameri- cans. An Indian then put a pistol into his hand, and said to him, if you tell the truth, you must prove it by shoot- ing that young American ; and this wretched apostate from his country fired upon the young man shown to him, and laid him dead at his feet. It was upon the evi- dence of that American that Mrs. Whitman was murder- ed, or she might have shared in the mercy extended to the other females and children. Such are the details as far as known of that disastrous •event and the causes which led to it. Mr. Eoger's re- ported deposition, if correct is unworthy of belief, hav- ing been drawn from him by the fear of instant death. The other American who shed the blood of his friend, must be a villain of the darkest dye, and ought to suffer for his aggravated crime. On the 7th inst., Mr. Ogdcn proceeded towards Walla Walla with a strong party of the Hudson's Bay Com- panj-'s servants to endeavor to prevent further evil. Accompanying you will rei^eive a copy of a letter which I addressed to Governor Abernethy immediately after the arrival of the melancholy intelligence, at this place. All that can be collected will be considered im- portant by the friends of Doctor and Mrs. Whitman in the United States, who will be anxious to learn every particular concerning their tragic fate. It will be a satisfaction for them to know that these •eminent servants of God were faithful in their lives, though we have to deplore the melancholy circumstances which .accompanied their departure from this world of trial, I remain, sir, Your very ob't. servant, James Douglas, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 017 186 979 1