Read Amazing Tales for Making Men Out of Boys Online
Authors: Neil Oliver
In the end, matters were taken out of Joseph’s hands—not by the white man but by the actions of a handful of his own warriors. Unlike their chief, the prophet Toohoolhoolzote was no longer counseling peace. On the contrary, he wanted a fight to avenge himself for the indignity of his imprisonment at Lapwai. And he was able to argue quite persuasively that obeying the white man’s orders would give them no guarantee of safety. After all, though they had only covered a few miles, they had already been harried by whites who had stolen some of their livestock while they struggled across the swollen Snake River. After months and years of simmering acrimony, insults and slights felt on both sides, it was one wrong too many. Whipped up into a killing mood by Toohoolhoolzote’s words, a few Nez Perces braves slipped away from the rest of the tribe and spilt the blood of the first whites they could find.
When Chief Joseph learned what they had done, he knew peaceful relocation was no longer possible. He also knew his Nez Perces were not the only members of the tribe to have refused to sign the treaties of 1855 and 1863. More so-called “non-treaty” Nez Perces were encamped in nearby White Bird Canyon, and now, with blood on his warriors’ hands, Chief Joseph decided to join up with the rest of the fugitives.
The people who gathered together that spring and early summer by the waters of White Bird Creek were hardly a war band. It is hard to be precise about numbers, but there were no more than 700 individuals. Of these, perhaps 250 were fighting men, the rest
being the elderly, the women and the children. Also there with them was what remained of their material wealth—around 2,000 head of horses. Threatened and outnumbered though they were, there was no panic. Instead there was dignity and resolve—an understanding that the actions taken now must be for the good of the group.
It was there in White Bird Canyon, on June 17, 1877, that the Nez Perces began the fight to preserve some remnants of their way of life. Looking Glass had been chosen as war chief and, with a superior understanding of the terrain, he deployed his slim forces. Using skirmishers to draw forward the horsemen of Howard’s 1st US Cavalry, the Nez Perces warriors were able to isolate and expose their attackers’ flank. Around a third of the cavalrymen, lured into this vulnerable position, were killed within minutes. The rest were forced to flee for their lives. Looking Glass had demonstrated an understanding of guerrilla tactics that would serve them well.
The war had begun, and as the gunsmoke of that first battle drifted high into the sky, Chief Joseph understood what they must do. Gathering his fellow chiefs around him, he told them what they already knew in their hearts: that the Wallowa Valley could never again be home to the Nez Perces. He said, too, that none among them wanted to see their people herded like cattle into the Lapwai. There was only one option available to them—to follow the lead of Sitting Bull, victor of the Little Bighorn. Sitting Bull and his Sioux people had travelled north, all the way across the border into Canada. Chief Joseph said that since that land was governed not by the US, but by Great Britain, they could not be followed there by the cavalrymen who had fought with them just now. In Canada, the land of Queen Victoria—whom they knew as the Grandmother—they could live their old lives once more, free from persecution.
The other chiefs agreed—or could suggest no better option—and so began the flight of the Nez Perces. From the very beginning it was an unequal contest—and one that captured the imagination of
those who heard of its unfolding by means of telegraph communications that crackled across the country. This was not an army on the move but a people, the vestiges of a civilization made alien in its own homeland.
Howard’s men had had their noses bloodied, but were far from beaten. As Chief Joseph led his people toward the Lolo pass through the Bitterroots—a trail they knew well, since it led to their buffalo hunting grounds in Montana—the cavalrymen gave chase. Even slowed down by their elders, their women and children and the horse herd, the Indians were far quicker over the broken, rugged ground than their pursuers. Five weeks later, however, they encountered a fortified defensive position slung across the Lolo trail by soldiers commanded by a Captain Charles Rawn.
After some inconclusive skirmishing over several days, the warriors managed to slip past the enemy and continue on their route north—but they could not know that a third force had been dispatched against them and was closing in fast. Colonel John Gibbon, with 15 officers, 146 troopers, and 34 volunteers, was moving into position to strike. This then had been Rawn’s real objective all along—to stall the fugitives and give time for the larger trap to be sprung. By the second week in, August Gibbon’s men were in place and on the 9th they launched a night-time attack on the encampment.
It was a scrappy offensive, carried out by men who had prepared for the job by drinking whisky. Drunken and badly executed though the assault had been, for some little while it looked as if the element of surprise might carry the night. Instead, a Nez Perces chief named White Bird rallied his braves. The rearguard action he choreographed punished the soldiers severely—and gave time for Chief Joseph to bring order out of the chaos and get the remains of the camp up and moving through the cries of the dying. With the false warmth of liquor and adrenaline now draining fast from their veins, the soldiers lost the taste for the fight. Driven back in disorder, many
of their number stumbling blindly into a river, they saw sense and turned tail, back into the darkness. It had been a cruel night for the Nez Perces nonetheless, with many women and children lying dead and mutilated across the broken ground.
Just days later the fleeing group was attacked once more. This time it was by Howard’s cavalry, still infuriated by their drubbing two months before in White Bird Canyon. They were to be humiliated again—this time losing their baggage train and many of their horses as Chief Joseph and his warriors brushed past them in the manner befitting the ghosts they were.
By now their flight had brought them to the territory of the Yellowstone—land designated as North America’s first national park in 1872. There waiting for them was General William Tecumseh Sherman, hero of the Civil War and commander of the US Army. How, Sherman wanted to know, was a ragtag band of fugitives leading his professional soldiers such a merry dance? They were taking their women and children along for the ride, for God’s sake, and still they were outwitting and outfighting his men at every turn.
Risen like a phoenix after their destruction at the Little Bighorn, the 7th Cavalry was desperate for the chance to show its mettle and to prove to the General that they would not be found wanting a second time. But although they threw themselves after the fleeing Nez Perces, they failed to pin down the main body. Outriding forces of skirmishers from both sides played cat and mouse with one another, but the fugitives remained elusive to the last. Fighting rearguard actions to cover the flight of the old, the women and the young, they drew red blood from the blue coats time and again as August gave way to September.
By the end of that month Chief Joseph and his people had been on the run for over sixteen weeks. They had traveled more than 1,500 miles from their homes in the Valley of the Winding Waters
and evaded the best efforts of 2,000 of the best trained and best armed soldiers the US Army could send against them. They had bested or equaled their enemy at three major encounters and countless other running engagements—and they had done all this while moving and protecting their women and children and everything of value they possessed.
General Sherman would later report:
The Indians throughout displayed a courage and skill that elicited universal praise; they abstained from scalping; let captive women go free; did not commit indiscriminate murder of peaceful families, which is usual; and fought with almost scientific skill, using advance and rear guards, skirmish lines, and field fortifications.
It was the least he could have said.
By the end of September Chief Joseph had brought his people to within one long day’s march—perhaps 40 miles—of the Canadian border. His people were hungry, and once they had made it across the Missouri River he allowed them to make camp in the Bear Paw Mountains in northcentral Montana. They had seen no soldiers for several days and for the first time in a long while they were allowing the fires of hope to be rekindled. Soon perhaps they would be with Sitting Bull and his Sioux in the land of the Grandmother.
After a night spent feasting on freshly killed buffalo, the quiet of the morning was torn apart by the thunder of approaching horsemen. It was a cavalry force commanded by Colonel Nelson Miles and they had managed to place themselves between the Indians and their promised land of Canada. Disciplined to the end, those of the Nez Perces who were still able to fight took up positions and calmly unleashed a volley of rifle fire into the approaching horsemen. The fighting that followed was intense and brief. The
Indians successfully drove off the attackers but with heavy losses on their own side. Among the dead were the prophet Toohoolhoolzote and Chief Joseph’s brother, Ollocot.
While Joseph and his surviving war chiefs held their final councils, around campfires stacked high against the aching chill of falling snow and freezing wind, General Howard and his men arrived to surround the Indian position.
In one final skirmish, Looking Glass was killed by a single bullet to the head, and Chief Joseph’s heart was broken. Some of the survivors, Chief White Bird among them, begged Joseph to fight on. They had come so far, they said. Even if they should die now, it was better than surrender. Chief Joseph did not agree and his mind was made up.
The American journalist Charles Sutherland witnessed what happened on October 5, 1877. He said the chief appeared on the prairie just as the sun was setting. He was on horseback, his chin lowered to his chest. He was accompanied by just five of his comrades. As he came close he suddenly raised his head, the better to look into the eyes of his tormentors. He held his rifle in one hand and now he straightened his arm out toward Howard, signifying the end of his resistance and of the flight of the Nez Perces.
The speech he made to his captors then has become one of the best known of all statements made by Native Americans of the period. The poignancy and the poetry of it is clear to all—but whether that is down to Chief Joseph or to the soldier who recorded and translated it, will never now be known:
Tell General Howard I know his heart. What he told me before I have in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed. Looking Glass is dead. Toohoolhoolzote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led all the young men is dead. It is cold and we have no blankets.
The little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever.
Later that night, White Bird and a handful of the still rebellious braves crept stealthily through the encircling cordon. A few days later they made it to the camp of Sitting Bull.
For the rest, their surrender led only to greater heartbreak. Instead of being sent to the reservation set aside for them at Lapwai, the 87 men, 184 women and 147 children who surrendered that day were transported to imprisonment on land beside Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas. It was yet another betrayal. Chief Joseph would say later that if he had known Howard would break his word in that way, he would never have surrendered. Many of them died there, perhaps as many as 100 or more, before the remainder were moved to a barren patch of sand and scrub in northeastern Oklahoma, deep in the set-aside land known as the Indian Territory. The Nez Perces who lived and died there called it “the hot place.”
When in 1928 Chief Joseph’s descendants decided to exhume the old man’s body, for reburial on a patch of land back in the Valley of the Winding Waters, they found that his skull was missing. This came as no real surprise, since for years it had been rumored that someone had taken it for a souvenir.
Did Scott know about the fate that had befallen the Indians of North America—some of it taking place during the years of his own childhood and early adulthood? Had any of
their
bravery in the face of impossible odds inspired his own?
In 1887, when Scott was 19, Buffalo Bill Cody brought his “Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World Show” to Britain. While those refugees from a lost civilization became a spectacle on one side of the Atlantic, Sitting Bull, last great chief of the Sioux, was still at large in the US. Before his death in 1890, during a bungled attempt to arrest him, would come the rise of the Ghost Dance. While learning the steps, taught to them by a prophet, the surviving Indians would hear that a Christian messiah was soon to walk among them, restoring their lands to them and bringing their loved ones back from the dead.
Also in 1890 would come the final atrocity at Wounded Knee, when more than 250 captive Sioux—warriors, squaws, children, old men and women—would be cut down by the 7th Cavalry and left to die in the snow, four days after Christmas. No messiah for them; no more dancing.
Among the 200-strong company that Buffalo Bill brought to Britain were nearly 100 Indians—many of them warriors and chiefs
still wanted in the United States for their part in battles like Little Bighorn. The Wild West, and the way it had been won, was far from unknown in Victorian and Edwardian Britain.
If Scott had taken the time to study anything of the story of the conquest of North America by the white man, he would have learned that sometimes it is futile to surrender. Chief Joseph of the Nez Perces surrendered himself and his people to the US Government—and though it preserved their lives for a while, it hardly brought them any happiness, or even dignity. He acted out of the best of motives—the hope that he might have the chance to find his lost children—but it brought only misery for himself and his people. Part of the lesson of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perces is that sometimes, giving in is not an option.
Scott’s two-volume
Voyage of the Discovery
was published in the November of 1905 and received universally good reviews. By now he was a friend of the likes of J. M. Barrie, who had brought his play
Peter Pan
to the London stage for the first time just the year before. All about the “lost boys”—boys who choose never to grow up—and the quest for adventure in a place called “Neverland,”
Peter Pan
may well have struck a chord with adventurous manly men the world over.
Barrie introduced Scott to the actress Pauline Chase, then starring as Peter Pan, and the two were often seen dining together after the show. There were other women friends as well for this newly famous sailor: there was Mabel Beardsley, for one—another young actress and a friend of his sister Ettie, who was also earning her living on the stage by this time.
Mabel was very interested in Scott for a while—and apparently so possessive of him that they became quite the talking point among their mutual friends. It was Mabel who lived at 32 Westminster Palace Gardens and who, on that fateful day in 1907, invited Scott to a luncheon party along with her sculptor friend Kathleen Bruce.
Before the fame and the financial benefits of his explorations, women had been an undiscovered country for Scott. He had a loving mother and three loving sisters and doted on them all, but there had never been any women
friends
, no romance. There was his natural shyness for one thing—and from a practical point of view his relative poverty had always left him too poor for entertaining the ladies.
From now on, he was plotting a course toward the possibility of a wife and a family of his own—unfamiliar territory and fraught with dangers. What was required of the roles of husband and father? What does a manly man do when it comes to looking after the women and children?