HAVING in the preceding chapters given a detailed
account of our first expedition into the interior, we propose in the
present briefly to notice the state of things at Astoria after our
departure, and the fate of the Tonquin.
No sooner had we left the establishment in July
last, than the natives became more and more hostile and annoying to the
whites at Astoria, so that under the impression of danger, all other
labour being suspended, the hands and minds of all were employed both day
and night in the construction and pallisading of a stronghold for
self-defence; but after various alarms the savage horde, without making
any hostile demonstration more than usual, took their departure
from the place, leaving the whites once more in the enjoyment of peace and
tranquillity.
In the fall of the year, a
schooner, of twenty-five tons, to be named the Dolly, the frame of which
had come out in the Tonquin, was built at Astoria. This vessel was
intended only for the coast trade; but in the present instance was placed
as a guard-ship in front of the infant establishment. She was found,
however, to be too small for the coast trade, and even unfit for tripping
up and down the river; and from her unwieldiness, not so safe as either
open boats or canoes. The people were also awkward and Unskilful, as might
be expected, having never been accustomed to such duties. In the very
first trip up the river, she had well nigh fallen into the hands of the
Indians: getting becalmed one day a little above the mouth of the
Wallamitte, with only fur men on board, curiosity drew a crowd of Indians
about her, and once on board it was no easy matter to get them off again.
Curiosity led to theft: every one began to help himself, and to take
whatever he could lay his hands upon. The pillage was begun, when the
interpreter boldly and opportunely called out that he was going instantly
to set fire to a keg of powder, and would blow all up into the air, unless
they left the ship that moment: the Indians got frightened; those who had
canoes jumped into them, made for shore with the hurry of despair; others
jumped overboard, and in an instant the vessel was cleared of her
troublesome visitors, and let go before the current. It will be
recollected that Mr. Aikins, the officer who had come out to take command
of the Dolly, was, with several others, unfortunately drowned on the bar.
Having made two or three trips up the river, she was condemned, and laid
aside altogether as useless.
It is a true saying, that the
wisest of us is not always wise. In appointing so small a vessel as the
Dolly to a station so dangerous, was manifested a total ignorance of the
character of the natives on the coast. Mr. Astor ought to have known that
even well appointed large and armed ships often ran great hazards there,
some of that class having been taken and pillaged by the hostile savages
of that quarter.
The American traders, with their
usual spirit of enterprize, had long carried on a lucrative business on
the north-west coast; they knew well, and none knew better than Astor
himself, what was necessary and suitable for that market; but we had got
nothing of this kind. Instead of guns, we got old metal pots and
gridirons; instead of beads and trinkets, we got white cotton; and instead
of blankets, molasses. In short, all the useless trash and unsaleable
trumpery which had been accumulating in his shops and stores for half a
century past, were swept together to fill his Columbia ships. That these
cargoes were insured need not be told; sink or swim, his profits were
sure.
But these we might have
overlooked, had we not felt aggrieved in other matters closely connected
with the general interest. The articles of agreement entered into, and the
promises of promotion held out, when the company was formed, were
violated, and that without a blush, by the very man at the head of the
concern,—that man who held its destinies in his hand. This perhaps may be
rendered a little more intelligible, by stating, that according to the
articles of co-partnership made at New York, two of the clerks were to be
promoted to an interest in the concern, or, in other words, to become
partners, after two years' service, and on that express condition they
joined the enterprize; but what will the reader say, or the world think,
when it is told that a young man who had never seen the country was, by a
dash of the pen, put over their heads, and this young man was no other
than Mr. Astor's nephew. Although a little out of place, we shall just
mention another circumstance which may shew how deeply and how sincerely
Mr. Astor was interested in the success and prosperity of his Columbia
colony. When the war' broke out between Great Britain and the United
States, the Boston merchants sent out, at a great expense, intelligence of
the event to their shipping on the north-west coast, and applied to Astor
for his quota of that expense, as he too had people and property there at
stake. What was his reply? "Let the United States' flag protect them."
Need it then be told that we were left to shift for ourselves. So much did
Mr. Astor care about our safety.
But from this disagreeable subject we turn to
another still more so, and that is the fate of the unfortunate Tonquin,
which ship, it will be remembered, left Astoria in June last.
On the 5th of August, Calpo, a friendly Chinook
Indian, informed M'Dougall that it was current
among the Indians that the Toiquin had been
destroyed by the natives along the coast, and this was the first tidings
the Astorians had of her fate: the report had spread quickly and widely,
although we remained ignorant of the fact; for not many days after we had
arrived at Oakinaeken, a party of Indians reached that place, on their
return from the Great Salt Lake, as they called it, and gave us to
understand by signs and gestures that a large ship, with white people in
it, had been blown up on the water; and, in order the better to make us
comprehend the subject, they threw up their arms in the air, blew with the
mouth, and made the wild grimace of despair, to signify the explosion. On
our part all was conjecture and suspense, unwilling as we were to believe
what we did not wish to be true; but the more we reflected, the more we
were disposed to believe the report, from the well-known fact that Mr.
Astor's choice of a captain was most unfortunate: in this instance, he
seemed to have wanted his usual sagacity; and this was the first rock on
which his grand enterprize had split A man who could deliberately leave,
as we have already seen, nine of his fellow-creatures to perish on the
Falkland Islands; who could throw one of his sailors
overboard, at the Island of Woahoo; who could offer the Indians at Owbyhee
a reward for the head of one of his own officers; who could force from his
ship four of his men in a storm, to perish at the mouth of the Columbia;
who could witness unmoved, from his own deck, three of his men, left to
perish on Columbia bar; and, to cap the climax of cruelty, we might,
however disagreeable, mention another circumstance. On the 11th of
February 1811, while sailing on the high seas, a man named Joe Lapierre
fell from the minn5t-head overboard, the ship at the time going eight
knots—a boat was instantly lowered: in the mean time a hen-coop, binnacle,
and some boards were thrown into the water, but he failed to get hold of
anything, and soon fell a good mile or more astern. When picked up he was
in a state of insensibility, and the crew made all possible haste to reach
the ship; but, as they were approaching, the captain, in a peremptory
tone, ordered them back to pick up the hen-coop, binnacle, and boards,
before they came alongside, or put the man on board. The boat obeyed
orders, went back again, picked up all, and returned to the ship at the
end of fifty-two minutes— yet life was not quite extinct, for, after
applying the usual remedies of salt, warm blankets, and friction, Lapierre
revived.
But to return to -the subject of
Calpo's report— the conduct of Captain Thom throughout, coupled with the
fact of his having left Astoria without a single officer on board his
ship, led strongly to the conclusion that all was not right, and that the
reports in circulation might ultimately prove true. The facts above stated
I myself witnessed—fifty others witnessed them also: they cannot be denied
nor gainsaid—yet such was the man who enjoyed Mr. Astor's unbounded
confidence.
Various and conflicting were the
reports that had from thne to time reached Astoria respecting the fate of
the Tonqzun; yet all agreed in the main point—that is, in her destruction.
She had also. passed, by some months, the time of her expected return, so
that there remained but little doubt of her fate; yet, subsequently to
Calpo's statement, nothing.. transpired to add to our fears for a month or
two, although during that time various individuals and parties had been
employed to trace out the true story of her fate.
On the 12th of October, however,
three Chinooks were fitted out, and set off with' the determination not to
return until they should reach the place where. it was reported she had
been cut off, or obtain certain accounts respecting her. These men had
not, however, proceeded far, before they were met by a. strange Indian, on
his way to Astoria with the unwelcome news of the Tonquin's tragical end:
so. the Chinooks turned about, and accompanied the stranger back to
Astoria, where they arrived on the eighth day; and here the strange Indian
made his report, which we shall give in his own words:-
"My name
is Kasiascall, but the Chinooks and. other Indians hereabout call me
Lamazu. I belong to the Wick-a-nook tribe of Indians near Nootka Sound. I
have often been on board ships. The whites call me Jack. I understand most
of the languages that are spoken along the coast. I can speak some
Chinook, too. I have been twice at this place before; once by land and
once by sea. I saw the ship Tonquin; Captain Thorn was her commander.. I
went on board of her at Woody Point harbour in June lost. We remained
there for two days. We then sailed for Vancouver's Island; and just as we
had got to it, a gale of wind drove us to sea, and it was three days
before we got back again. The fourth morning we cast anchor in Eyuck
Whoola, Newcetu Bay. There we remained for some days; Indians going and
coming, but not much trade. One day the Indians came on board in great
numbers, but did not trade much, although they had plenty of skins.. The
prices offered did not please the Indians; so they carried back their furs
again. The day following the chiefs came on board, and as usual asked the
captain to show them such and such things, and state the lowest price,
which he accordingly did. They did not, however, trade, but pressed the
captain for presents, which he refused. The chiefs left the ship
displeased at what they called stingy conduct in the captain, as they were
accustomed to receive trifling presents from the traders on the coast.
"In the evening of the
same day, Mr. M'Kay and myself went on shore, and were
well received by the chiefs, and saw a great many sea-otter skins with the
Indians. We both returned to the ship the same evening. Next day the
Indians came off to trade in great numbers. On their coming alongside, the
captain ordered the boarding-netting to be put up round the ship, and
would not allow more than ten on board at a time; but just as the trade
had commenced, an Indian was detected cutting the boarding-netting with a
knife in order to get on board. On being detected, he instantly jumped
into one of the canoes which were alongside, and made his escape. The
captain then, turning round, bade the chiefs to call him back. The chiefs
smiled and said nothing, which irritated the captain, and he immediately
laid hold of two of the chiefs, and threatened to hang them up unless they
caused the delinquent to be brought back to be punished. The moment the
chiefs were seized, all the Indians fled from the ship in consternation.
The chiefs were kept on board all night with a guard over them. Food was
offered them, but they would neither eat nor drink. Next day, however, the
offender was brought to the ship and delivered up, when the captain
ordered him to be stripped and tied up, but did not flog him. He was then
dismissed. The chiefs were also liberated, and left the ship, refusing
with disdain a present that was offered them, and vowing vengeance on the
whites for the insult received.
"Next day not an Indian came to
the ship; but in the afternoon an old chief sent for Mr. M'Kay and myself
to go to his lodge. We did so, and were very kindly treated. Mr. M'Kay was
a great favourite among the Indians; and I have no doubt that the plot for
destroying the ship was at this time fully arranged, and that it was
intended, if possible, to save M'Kay's life in the general massacre. But
not finding this practicable without the risk of discovery, he, as we
shall soon learn, fell with the rest. When we were on shore we saw the
chiefs, and they seemed all in good humour, and asked me if the captain
was still angry; and on being assured that they would be well treated and
kindly received by him if they went on board, they appeared highly
pleased, and promised to go and trade the following day. Mr. M'Kay
returned to the ship that evening, but I remained on shore till the next
morning. When I got on board, Mr. M'Kay was walking backwards and forwards
on deck in rather a gloomy mood, and considerably excited; himself and the
captain having, as he told me, had some angry words between them
respecting the two chiefs who had been kept prisoners on board, which was
sorely against M'Kay's will.
"As soon as I got on deck, he
called me to him. 'Well,' said he, 'are the Indians coming to trade
today?' I said, 'They are.' 'I wish they would not come,' said he again;
adding, 'I am afraid there is an under-current at work. After the
captain's late conduct to the chiefs, I do not like so sudden, so
flattering a change. There is treachery in the case, or they differ from
all other Indians I ever knew. I have told the captain so-1 have also
suggested that all lands should be on the alert when the Indians are here;
but he ridicules the suggestion as groundless. So let him have his own
way.' M'Kay then asked me my opinion. I told him it would be well to have
the netting up. He then bid me go to the captain, and I went; but before I
could speak to him, he called out, 'Well, Kas, are the Indians coming
today?' I said I thought so. He then asked—' Are the chiefs in good humour
yet?' I said I never saw them in better humour. 'I humbled the fellows a
little; they'll not be so saucy now; and we will get on much better,' said
the captain. At this moment M'Kay joined us, and repeated to the captain
what he had just stated to me. The captain laughed; observing to M'Kay,
'You pretend to know a great deal about the Indian character: you know
nothing at alL' And so the conversation dropt.
"Mr. M'Kay's anxiety and
perturbation of mind was increased by the manner in which the captain
treated his advice; and having, to all appearance, a presentiment of what
was brooding among the Indians, he refused going to breakfast that
morning, put two pair of pistols in his pockets, and sat down on the
larboard side of the quarter-deck in a pensive mood. In a short time
afterwards, the Indians began to flock about the ship, both men and women,
in great crowds, with their furs; and certainly I myself thought that
there was not the least danger, particularly as the women accompanied the
men to trade; but I was surprised that the captain did not put the netting
up. It was the first time I ever saw a ship trade there without adopting
that precaution. As soon as the Indians arrived, the captain, relying no
doubt on the apparent reconciliation which had taken place between M'Kay
and the chiefs on shore, and wishing perhaps to atone for the insult he
had offered the latter, flew from one extreme to the other, receiving them
with open arms, and admitting them on board without reserve, and without
the usual precautions. The trade went on briskly, and at the captain's own
prices. The Indians throwing the goods received into the canoes, which
were alongside, with the women in them; but in doing so, they managed to
conceal their knives about their persons, which circumstance was noticed
by one of the men aloft, then by myself, and we warned the captain of it;
but he treated the suggestions, as usual, with a smile of contempt, and no
more was said about it; but in a moment or two afterwards, the captain
began to suspect something himself, and was in the act of calling Mr.
M'Kay to him, when the Indians in an instant raised the hideous yell of
death, which echoed from stem to stern of the devoted ship, the women in
the canoes immediately pushed off, and the massacre began. The .00nfiiet
was bloody but short. The savages, with their naked knives and horrid
yells, rushed on the unsuspecting and defencelees whites, who were
dispersed all over the ship, and in five minutes' time the vessel was
their own. M'Kay, was the first man who fell, he shot one Indian, but was
instantly, killed and thrown overboard, and so sudden was the surprise
that the captain had scarcely time to draw from his pocket a clasp-knife,
with which he defended himself desperately, killed two, and wounded
several more, till at last he fell dead in the crowd. The last man I saw
alive was Stephen Weeks, the armourer. In the midst of the carnage, I
leapt overboard, as did several other Indians, and we were taken up by the
women in the canoes, who were yelling, whooping, and crying like so many
fiends about the ship; but before I had got two gun-shots from the ship,
and not ten minutes after I had left her, she blew up in the air with a
fearful explosion, filling the whole place with broken fragments and
mutilated bodies. The sight was terrific and overwhelming. Weeks must have
been the man who blew up the ship, and by that awful act of revenge, one
hundred and seventy-five Indians perished, and some of the canoes,
although at a great distance off, had a narrow escape. The melancholy and
fatal catastrophe spread desolation, lamentation, and terror throughout
the whole tribe.
"Scarcely anything belonging to
the ship was saved by the Indians, and so terrifying was the effect, so
awful the scene, when two other ships passed there soon afterwards, not an
Indian would venture to go near them. I knew that the Tonquin belonged to
the whites at Columbia, I was eighteen days on board of her, and had
started long ago with the tidings of her tragical end; but falling sick, I
was prevented from coming sooner. There might have been twenty-four days
between the time the Tonquin left the Columbia and her destruction by the
Indians."
Thus ended the sad story of
Kasiaseall, a story which we at the time believed to be perfectly true;
but not many days after, some Indians belonging to the same quarter
reached Astoria also, and gave a somewhat different version of the affair,
particularly as regarded Kasiascall himself, and what convinced us that he
had acted a treacherous part, was the fact, that on hearing that the other
Indians were coming, he immediately absconded, and we saw him no more.
These Indians confirmed Kasiascall's story in every respect as regarded
the destruction of the ill-fated Tonquin; but persisted in assuring us
that he was not on board at the time, and that he was privy to the whole
plot. They said, that before that affair he had caused the death of four
white men, and that, early in the morning of the Tonquin's fatal day, he
had induced the captain, through some plausible artifice, to send a boat
with six men to shore, and that neither he nor the six men were on board
at the time of her destruction. That in the evening of the same day,
Kasiascall himself headed the party who went, and brought the six
unfortunate men, after the ship was blown up, to the Indian camp, where
they were first tortured with savage cruelty, and then all massacred in
the most inhuman manner.
We have now brought the tragical story of the fated
Tonquin nearly to a dose. Wise men profit by experience, listen to
counsel, and yield to circumstances. Captain Thorn, on the contrary,
looked upon every suggestion as an attempt to dictate to him, despised
counsel, and treated advice with contempt Had he profited either by the
errors or misfortunes of others, or had he listened to the dictates of
common prudence, and used the means he had at command, the savages along
the coast, numerous and hostile as they are, would never have obtained the
mastery, nor taken the Ton gum. We lament the fate of her unfortunate crew
and commander. Captain Thorn had many good qualities— was brave, had the
manners of a gentleman, and was an able and experienced seaman; but his
temper was cruel and overbearing,—and his fate verifies the sacred decree,
that "he shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy."
The destruction of the Ton gum left Astoria
defenceless and almost hopeless, and might have proved fatal to the
enterprise; but, whilst these scenes were yet fresh in the minds of the
Astorians, and augmented the gloom occasioned by their harassing and
perilous situation, the timely arrival of M'Kenzie, with the first
division of Mr. Hunt's party, overland, made them for a moment forget that
their friends of the Tonquin were no more. This seasonable addition to
their numbers, with the daily expectation of others—for the main party had
not yet arrived - hushed, for a time, the threatening
tone of the Indians, and relieved the whites from that incessant watching
which prudence at1 a regard to safety obliged them to adopt, ever since
the first rumour of the Tonqztin's fate had reached their ears. The
subject of the land expedition we shall reserve for the next chapter,
concluding the present with a few cursory observations on the conduct of
that perfidious wretch, Kasiascall.
After absconding from Astoria, as
already stated, he lurked for some time among the neighbouring tribes,
trying to stir them up to betray the whites, and take Astoria. He had laid
several plans for the purpose; and, being desperate and daring himself, he
had, on the 5th of December, with twenty or thirty others of like
character, approached the establishment on the south side, through the
woods, till within sight of the back gate, with the intention of examining
the place, in order to make the attack sure the following morning; but,
providentially, his treason was baulked by one of those fortunate
incidents which sometimes intervene to save the innocent; for, that very
evening, the Astorians, as good luck would have it, had collected some
Indians, who, with the whites, made a display at the back gate, with the
intention of proceeding next morning to the chase, to hunt up some wild
hogs which were roaming at large in the woods; and were, as we were well
informed afterwards, seen by Kasiascall and his party as they were making
their approaches to the fort. They, supposing from the armed array that
their own atrocious designs had been discovered, immediately took to
flight, leaving, in the hurry, a gun, a quiver full of arrows, and some
other things behind; so that, in all probability, to this circumstance
alone the place owed its preservation, and the whites their lives. How
precarious is the life of an Indian trader, if we take into consideration
the habits of the country and the spirit of the people he has to live
among—a people who feel no remorse in using the instruments of death—a
people who delight in perfidy! Perfidy is the system of savages, treachery
and cunning the instruments of their power, and cruelty and bloodshed the
policy of their country.
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