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			Disquieting Rumors From the Interior
			Disquieting Rumors From the Interior.—Reconnoitring 
			Party— Preparations for a Trading Post.—An Unexpected Arrival—A Spy 
			in the Camp.—Expedition Into the Interior—Shores of the 
			Columbia—Mount Coffin.—Indian Sepulchre.—The Land of 
			Spirits—Columbian Valley—Vancouver's Point.-Falls and Rapids.—A 
			Great Fishing Mart.—The Village of Wishram.— Difference Between 
			Fishing Indians and Hunting Indians— Effects of Habits of Trade on 
			the Indian Character.—Post Established at the Oakinagan. 
			 
			WHILE the Astorians were busily occupied in 
			completing their factory and fort, a report was brought to them by 
			an Indian from the upper part of the river, that a party of thirty 
			white men had appeared on the banks of the Columbia, and were 
			actually building houses at the second rapids. This information 
			caused much disquiet. We have already mentioned that the Northwest 
			Company had established posts to the west of the Rocky Mountains, in 
			a district called by them New Caledonia, which extended from lat. 52 
			to 55 deg north, being within the British territories. It was now 
			apprehended that they were advancing within the American limits, and 
			were endeavoring to seize upon the upper part of the river and 
			forestall the American Fur Company in the surrounding trade; in 
			which case bloody feuds might be anticipated, such as had prevailed 
			between the rival fur companies in former days.  
			 
			A reconnoitring party was sent up the river to ascertain the truth 
			of the report. They ascended to the foot of the first rapid, about 
			two hundred miles, but could hear nothing of any white men being in 
			the neighborhood.  
			 
			Not long after their return, however, further accounts were 
			received, by two wandering Indians, which established the fact that 
			the Northwest Company had actually erected a trading house on the 
			Spokane River, which falls into the north branch of the Columbia.
			 
			 
			What rendered this intelligence the more disquieting was the 
			inability of the Astorians, in their present reduced state as to 
			numbers, and the exigencies of their new establishment, to furnish 
			detachments to penetrate the country in different directions, and 
			fix the posts necessary to secure the interior trade.  
			 
			It was resolved, however, at any rate, to advance a countercheck to 
			this post on the Spokan, and one of the partners, Mr. David Stuart, 
			prepared to set out for the purpose with eight men and a small 
			assortment of goods. He was to be guided by the two Indians, who 
			knew the country and promised to take him to a place not far from 
			the Spokan River, and in a neighborhood abounding with beaver. Here 
			he was to establish himself and to remain for a time, provided he 
			found the situation advantageous and the natives friendly.  
			 
			On the 15th of July, when Mr. Stuart was nearly ready to embark, a 
			canoe made its appearance, standing for the harbor, and manned by 
			nine white men. Much speculation took place who these strangers 
			could be, for it was too soon to expect their own people, under Mr. 
			Hunt, who were to cross the continent. As the canoe drew near, the 
			British standard was distinguished: on coming to land, one of the 
			crew stepped on shore, and announced himself as Mr. David Thompson, 
			astronomer, and partner of the Northwest Company. According to his 
			account, he had set out in the preceding year with a tolerably 
			strong party, and a supply of Indian goods, to cross the Rocky 
			Mountains. A part of his people, however, had deserted him on the 
			eastern side, and returned with the goods to the nearest Northwest 
			post. He had persisted in crossing the mountains with eight men, who 
			remained true to him. They had traversed the higher regions, and 
			ventured near the source of the Columbia, where, in the spring, they 
			had constructed a cedar canoe, the same in which they had reached 
			Astoria.  
			 
			This, in fact, was the party despatched by the Northwest Company to 
			anticipate Mr. Astor in his intention of effecting a settlement at 
			the mouth of the Columbia River. It appears, from information 
			subsequently derived from other sources, that Mr. Thompson had 
			pushed on his course with great haste, calling at all the Indian 
			villages in his march, presenting them with British flags, and even 
			planting them at the forks of the rivers, proclaiming formally that 
			he took possession of the country in the name of the king of Great 
			Britain for the Northwest Company. As his original plan was defeated 
			by the desertion of his people, it is probable that he descended the 
			river simply to reconnoitre, and ascertain whether an American 
			settlement had been commenced.  
			 
			Mr. Thompson was, no doubt, the first white man who descended the 
			northern branch of the Columbia from so near its source. Lewis and 
			Clarke struck the main body of the river at the forks, about four 
			hundred miles from its mouth. They entered it from Lewis River, its 
			southern branch, and thence descended.  
			 
			Though Mr. Thompson could be considered as little better than a spy 
			in the camp, he was received with great cordiality by Mr. M'Dougal, 
			who had a lurking feeling of companionship and good-will for all of 
			the Northwest Company. He invited him to head-quarters, where he and 
			his people were hospitably entertained. Nay, further, being somewhat 
			in extremity, he was furnished by Mr. M'Dougal with goods and 
			provisions for his journey back across the mountains, much against 
			the wishes Of Mr. David Stuart, who did not think the object of his 
			visit entitled him to any favor.  
			 
			On the 23rd of July, Mr. Stuart set out upon his expedition to the 
			interior. His party consisted of four of the clerks, Messrs. Pillet, 
			Ross, M'Lennon, and Montigny, two Canadian voyageurs, and two 
			natives of the Sandwich Islands. They had three canoes well laden 
			with provisions, and with goods and necessities for a trading 
			establishment.  
			 
			Mr. Thompson and his party set out in company with them, it being 
			his intention to proceed direct to Montreal. The partners at Astoria 
			forwarded by him a short letter to Mr. Astor, informing him of their 
			safe arrival at the mouth of the Columbia, and that they had not yet 
			heard of Mr. Hunt. The little squadron of canoes set sail with a 
			favorable breeze, and soon passed Tongue Point, a long, high, and 
			rocky promontory, covered with trees, and stretching far into the 
			river. Opposite to this, on the northern shore, is a deep bay, where 
			the Columbia anchored at the time of the discovery, and which is 
			still called Gray's Bay, from the name of her commander.  
			 
			From hence, the general course of the river for about seventy miles 
			was nearly southeast; varying in breadth according to its bays and 
			indentations, and navigable for vessels of three hundred tons. The 
			shores were in some places high and rocky, with low marshy islands 
			at their feet, subject to inundation, and covered with willows, 
			poplars, and other trees that love an alluvial soil. Sometimes the 
			mountains receded, and gave place to beautiful plains and noble 
			forests. While the river margin was richly fringed with trees of 
			deciduous foliage, the rough uplands were crowned by majestic pines, 
			and firs of gigantic size, some towering to the height of between 
			two and three hundred feet, with proportionate circumference. Out of 
			these the Indians wrought their great canoes and pirogues.  
			 
			At one part of the river, they passed, on the northern side, an 
			isolated rock, about one hundred and fifty feet high, rising from a 
			low marshy soil, and totally disconnected with the adjacent 
			mountains. This was held in great reverence by the neighboring 
			Indians, being one of their principal places of sepulture. The same 
			provident care for the deceased that prevails among the hunting 
			tribes of the prairies is observable among the piscatory tribes of 
			the rivers and sea-coast. Among the former, the favorite horse of 
			the hunter is buried with him in the same funereal mound, and his 
			bow and arrows are laid by his side, that he may be perfectly 
			equipped for the "happy hunting grounds" of the land of spirits. 
			Among the latter, the Indian is wrapped in his mantle of skins, laid 
			in his canoe, with his paddle, his fishing spear, and other 
			implements beside him, and placed aloft on some rock or other 
			eminence overlooking the river, or bay, or lake, that he has 
			frequented. He is thus fitted out to launch away upon those placid 
			streams and sunny lakes stocked with all kinds of fish and 
			waterfowl, which are prepared in the next world for those who have 
			acquitted themselves as good sons, good fathers, good husbands, and, 
			above all, good fishermen, during their mortal sojourn.  
			 
			The isolated rock in question presented a spectacle of the kind, 
			numerous dead bodies being deposited in canoes on its summit; while 
			on poles around were trophies, or, rather, funeral offerings of 
			trinkets, garments, baskets of roots, and other articles for the use 
			of the deceased. A reverential feeling protects these sacred spots 
			from robbery or insult. The friends of the deceased, especially the 
			women, repair here at sunrise and sunset for some time after his 
			death, singing his funeral dirge, and uttering loud wailings and 
			lamentations.  
			 
			From the number of dead bodies in canoes observed upon this rock by 
			the first explorers of the river, it received the name of Mount 
			Coffin, which it continues to bear.  
			 
			Beyond this rock they passed the mouth of a river on the right bank 
			of the Columbia, which appeared to take its rise in a distant 
			mountain covered with snow. The Indian name of this river was the 
			Cowleskee. Some miles further on they came to the great Columbian 
			Valley, so called by Lewis and Clarke. It is sixty miles in width, 
			and extends far to the southeast between parallel ridges of 
			mountains, which bound it on the east and west. Through the centre 
			of this valley flowed a large and beautiful stream, called the 
			Wallamot, which came wandering for several miles, through a yet 
			unexplored wilderness. The sheltered situation of this immense 
			valley had an obvious effect upon the climate. It was a region of 
			great beauty and luxuriance, with lakes and pools, and green meadows 
			shaded by noble groves. Various tribes were said to reside in this 
			valley, and along the banks of the Wallamot.  
			 
			About eight miles above the mouth of the Wallamot the little 
			squadron arrived at Vancouver's Point, so called in honor of that 
			celebrated voyager by his lieutenant (Broughton) when he explored 
			the river. This point is said to present one of the most beautiful 
			scenes on the Columbia; a lovely meadow, with a silver sheet of 
			limpid water in the center, enlivened by wild-fowl, a range of hills 
			crowned by forests, while the prospect is closed by Mount Hood, a 
			magnificent mountain rising into a lofty peak, and covered with 
			snow; the ultimate landmark of the first explorers of the river.  
			 
			Point Vancouver is about one hundred miles from Astoria. Here the 
			reflux of the tide ceases to be perceptible. To this place vessels 
			of two and three hundred tons burden may ascend. The party under the 
			command of Mr. Stuart had been three or four days in reaching it, 
			though we have forborne to notice their daily progress and nightly 
			encampments.  
			 
			From Point Vancouver the river turned towards the northeast, and 
			became more contracted and rapid, with occasional islands and 
			frequent sand-banks. These islands are furnished with a number of 
			ponds, and at certain seasons abound with swans, geese, brandts, 
			cranes, gulls, plover, and other wild-fowl. The shores, too, are low 
			and closely wooded, with such an undergrowth of vines and rushes as 
			to be almost impassable.  
			 
			About thirty miles above Point Vancouver the mountains again 
			approach on both sides of the river, which is bordered by stupendous 
			precipices, covered with the fir and the white cedar, and enlivened 
			occasionally by beautiful cascades leaping from a great height, and 
			sending up wreaths of vapor. One of these precipices, or cliffs, is 
			curiously worn by time and weather so as to have the appearance of a 
			ruined fortress, with towers and battlements, beetling high above 
			the river, while two small cascades, one hundred and fifty feet in 
			height, pitch down from the fissures of the rocks.  
			 
			The turbulence and rapidity of the current continually augmenting as 
			they advanced, gave the voyagers intimation that they were 
			approaching the great obstructions of the river, and at length they 
			arrived at Strawberry Island, so called by Lewis and Clarke, which 
			lies at the foot of the first rapid. As this part of the Columbia 
			will be repeatedly mentioned in the course of this work, being the 
			scene of some of its incidents, we shall give a general description 
			of it in this place.  
			 
			The falls or rapids of the Columbia are situated about one hundred 
			and eighty miles above the mouth of the river. The first is a 
			perpendicular cascade of twenty feet, after which there is a swift 
			descent for a mile, between islands of hard black rock, to another 
			pitch of eight feet divided by two rocks. About two and a half miles 
			below this the river expands into a wide basin, seemingly dammed up 
			by a perpendicular ridge of black rock. A current, however, sets 
			diagonally to the left of this rocky barrier, where there is a chasm 
			forty-five yards in width. Through this the whole body of the river 
			roars along, swelling and whirling and boiling for some distance in 
			the wildest confusion. Through this tremendous channel the intrepid 
			explorers of the river, Lewis and Clarke, passed in their boats; the 
			danger being, not from the rocks, but from the great surges and 
			whirlpools.  
			 
			At the distance of a mile and a half from the foot of this narrow 
			channel is a rapid, formed by two rocky islands; and two miles 
			beyond is a second great fall, over a ledge of rocks twenty feet 
			high, extending nearly from shore to shore. The river is again 
			compressed into a channel from fifty to a hundred feet wide, worn 
			through a rough bed of hard black rock, along which it boils and 
			roars with great fury for the distance of three miles. This is 
			called "The Long Narrows."  
			 
			Here is the great fishing place of the Columbia. In the spring of 
			the year, when the water is high, the salmon ascend the river in 
			incredible numbers. As they pass through this narrow strait, the 
			Indians, standing on the rocks, or on the end of wooden stages 
			projecting from the banks, scoop them up with small nets distended 
			on hoops and attached to long handles, and cast them on the shore.
			 
			 
			They are then cured and packed in a peculiar manner. After having 
			been opened and disemboweled, they are exposed to the sun on 
			scaffolds erected on the river banks. When sufficiently dry, they 
			are pounded fine between two stones, pressed into the smallest 
			compass, and packed in baskets or bales of grass matting, about two 
			feet long and one in diameter, lined with the cured skin of a 
			salmon. The top is likewise covered with fish skins, secured by 
			cords passing through holes in the edge of the basket. Packages are 
			then made, each containing twelve of these bales, seven at bottom, 
			five at top, pressed close to each other, with the corded side 
			upward, wrapped in mats and corded. These are placed in dry 
			situations, and again covered with matting. Each of these packages 
			contains from ninety to a hundred pounds of dried fish, which in 
			this state will keep sound for several years1.
			 
			 
			We have given this process at some length, as furnished by the first 
			explorers, because it marks a practiced ingenuity in preparing 
			articles of traffic for a market, seldom seen among our aboriginals. 
			For like reason we would make especial mention of the village of 
			Wishram, at the head of the Long Narrows, as being a solitary 
			instance of an aboriginal trading mart, or emporium. Here the salmon 
			caught in the neighboring rapids were "warehoused," to await 
			customers. Hither the tribes from the mouth of the Columbia repaired 
			with the fish of the sea-coast, the roots, berries, and especially 
			the wappatoo, gathered in the lower parts of the river, together 
			with goods and trinkets obtained from the ships which casually visit 
			the coast. Hither also the tribes from the Rocky Mountains brought 
			down horses, bear-grass, quamash, and other commodities of the 
			interior. The merchant fishermen at the falls acted as middlemen or 
			factors, and passed the objects of traffic, as it were, 
			cross-handed; trading away part of the wares received from the 
			mountain tribes to those of the rivers and plains, and vice versa: 
			their packages of pounded salmon entered largely into the system of 
			barter, and being carried off in opposite directions, found their 
			way to the savage hunting camps far in the interior, and to the 
			casual white traders who touched upon the coast.  
			 
			We have already noticed certain contrarieties of character between 
			the Indian tribes, produced by their diet and mode of life; and 
			nowhere are they more apparent than about the falls of the Columbia. 
			The Indians of this great fishing mart are represented by the 
			earliest explorers as sleeker and fatter, but less hardy and active, 
			than the tribes of the mountains and prairies, who live by hunting, 
			or of the upper parts of the river, where fish is scanty, and the 
			inhabitants must eke out their subsistence by digging roots or 
			chasing the deer. Indeed, whenever an Indian of the upper country is 
			too lazy to hunt, yet is fond of good living, he repairs to the 
			falls, to live in abundance without labor.  
			 
			"By such worthless dogs as these," says an honest trader in his 
			journal, which now lies before us, "by such worthless dogs as these 
			are these noted fishing-places peopled, which, like our great 
			cities, may with propriety be called the headquarters of vitiated 
			principles."  
			 
			The habits of trade and the avidity of gain have their corrupting 
			effects even in the wilderness, as may be instanced in the members 
			of this aboriginal emporium; for the same journalist denounces them 
			as "saucy, impudent rascals, who will steal when they can, and 
			pillage whenever a weak party falls in their power."  
			 
			That he does not belie them will be evidenced hereafter, when we 
			have occasion again to touch at Wishram and navigate the rapids. In 
			the present instance the travellers effected the laborious ascent of 
			this part of the river, with all its various portages, without 
			molestation, and once more launched away in smooth water above the 
			high falls.  
			 
			The two parties continued together, without material impediment, for 
			three or four hundred miles further up the Columbia; Mr. Thompson 
			appearing to take great interest in the success of Mr. Stuart, and 
			pointing out places favorable, as he said, to the establishment of 
			his contemplated trading post.  
			 
			Mr. Stuart, who distrusted his sincerity, at length pretended to 
			adopt his advice, and, taking leave of him, remained as if to 
			establish himself, while the other proceeded on his course towards 
			the mountains. No sooner, however, had he fairly departed than Mr. 
			Stuart again pushed forward, under guidance of the two Indians, nor 
			did he stop until he had arrived within about one hundred and forty 
			miles of the Spokan River, which he considered near enough to keep 
			the rival establishment in check. The place which he pitched upon 
			for his trading post was a point of land about three miles in length 
			and two in breadth, formed by the junction of the Oakinagan with the 
			Columbia. The former is a river which has its source in a 
			considerable lake about one hundred and fifty miles west of the 
			point of junction. The two rivers, about the place of their 
			confluence, are bordered by immense prairies covered with herbage, 
			but destitute of trees. The point itself was ornamented with wild 
			flowers of every hue, in which innumerable humming-birds were 
			"banqueting nearly the livelong day."  
			 
			The situation of this point appeared to be well adapted for a 
			trading post. The climate was salubrious, the soil fertile, the 
			rivers well stocked with fish, the natives peaceable and friendly. 
			There were easy communications with the interior by the upper waters 
			of the Columbia and the lateral stream of the Oakinagan, while the 
			downward current of the Columbia furnished a highway to Astoria.  
			 
			Availing himself, therefore, of the driftwood which had collected in 
			quantities in the neighboring bends of the river, Mr. Stuart and his 
			men set to work to erect a house, which in a little while was 
			sufficiently completed for their residence; and thus was established 
			the first interior post of the company. We will now return to notice 
			the progress of affairs at the mouth of the Columbia.  
			 
			1 Lewis and Clarke, vol. ii. p. 32.  
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			Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The 
			Rocky Mountains  
			
			
  
			
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