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MILLIONS OF BUFFALOES.
Recollectiong of the Time When Buffaloes Darkened the Western Plains.
A Herd of the Animals That Covered One Hundred Miles of Prairie.
Bones of Over Six Millions of Buffaloes Gathered by One Railroad.
GREAT BEND. Kan. July 2. Special Correspondence. -During Kendall's Santa Fe expedition in 1841 the party one evening while in camp on the bankd of the Arkansas, about three miles for the city in which this letter is written, were visited by an old trapper, and a discussion arose in rotation to the immense number of buffaloes that at that moment were in sight and grazing in the "bottom" of the "Big Bend" the river makes at this point, Kendall asked his guest:
"How many buffaloes did you ever see at one time?"
"Can't say, exactly; probably between two and three million," replied the old trapper with a cool, matter-of-fact indifference, as much as to say that we was keeping as near the truth as possible.
The writer has passed the last thirty years of his life west of Missouri, and does not declare that he has seen two or three millions of buffaloes at one time, but he has stood upon a high rill of the prairie frequently, where there was neither tree nor bush to obstruct the vision in any direction, and has seen these animals darkening the plains at every hand. And once, in the winter of 1867, I rode with a party of friends for four days through one continuos herd. It is a simple calculation - our journey averaging thirty miles per day, with a perspective whose radius was constantly a length of ten miles - and with only six animals to the square acre, and their number was even greater - that the hed contained over a million buffaloes.
At that time, as every old plainsman knows, there were more and larger herd in "Nothern Texas" than anywhere else on the Western prairies, becuase their then most poewrful enemies, the Indians, did not range so low down on account of the whites.
In the winter campaign against the Cheyennes, Klowas, and Arrapahoec, in 1868. I have frequently dismounted my cavalry to fire at the leaders of immense herds, numbering tens of thousands, to prevent them from
RUNNING OVER THE SUPPLY TRAIN
as they madly rushed by, making the very earth tremble.
General A. T. Smith has often told me that when he was a young officer crossing the plains - years before my time - the buffalo were so numerous they were compelled to use their howitzers at times to turn them from the trail.
It seems impossible, espeically to any one who, only twenty-fiver years ago, saw them on their natural pastures, apparently as numberless as the sands on the sea shore, that they could ever be destroyed, but when I look back only a lottle more than a decade and remember that right here, where I pen this letter, how they roamed in such numbers, and now how far away are the few hundred which remain, I am compelled to accept the sad fiat that in a very short period they will take their place with the dodo and freat auk, stuffed, and in a glass case in the halls of our museums, munuments of an extinct genus, annihilated by the wantonness of man.
Twelve or fifteen years since Congress made an attempt to preseve the buffalo, but it proved abortive because the law was not specific enough, and was a "dead letter" by its own insufficiency. If the railroads and express companies had been forbidden, under severe penalties, to transport hids, the wholesale slaughter that was inaugurated with the advent of the locomotive on the palins might have been prevented; but thousands entered the field then as butchers for the sake of the robes which the age demanded.
The Hon. William F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill"), who is not hobnobbing with roualty on the other side of the water, gained his world knwn sobriquet for his carnage among these monarch of the prairies in 1869.
Charlie Rath, one of our best citizens, prince of good fellows, and alarge band account to his credits today, can number the hids he has procured by the hundred thousand, for several years successively.
I have purchased many fine silk-ribe, smoke-tanned and beaded from the Indians in early days for half a loaf of bread or a pound of sugar; now $50 in cash would not procure me such a magnificent article - for it does not exist.
Last Nobermber an old plainsmand - a rare specimen of the genus home now - an expert hunger, and a friend of a quarter of a centry, started from the town of Omarron, on the Arkansas, on a buffalo hunt. I happened to be there, and offered him $20 to bring me
TWO GREEN HIDES OF ANY KIND.
I met him on his return six weeks afterward. he had been far south to the once famous haunt of the animals, but killed none - or, as he expressed it : "I never saw hide or hair of one."
To give an idea of the unpardonalbe slaughter of the buffalo from 1872 to the end of the succeding nine years, at which time they disappeaed from the Kansas plains, the following facts may be considered sufficiently explicit:
Mr. Woodruff, agent for an Eastern sugar refingery, paid out during the years above specificed to the early homesteaders of the "Upper Arkansas Valley" $2,500,000 for bones gathered on the prairie withing a distance of as much as fifty miles from the railroad.
When it is considered that it required twenty bleached carcasses to make a ton - the average price of which was $8 - an estimate can easily be made of the number of animals the large sum first quoted represent in round numbers 6,250,000, and this only on one line of railroad.
I have seen the rack of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe piled up on both sides with buffal bones for a distance of fifteen miles at a stretch.
These "bald blear" skeletons of the desert were the salvation of the primitive occupants of the rich and properous counties of the Kansas today. Then the whole region ws the "theater of the tornado and the race-course of the winds;" the locusts' habitas and the debatable ground of the continent. But for that demand of chemistry for animal charcoal in the purification of the product of the case our pioneers would have been driven away by the very sterility of their surroundings.
With the extinction of the desiccated remains of these once famous sovereigns of the plains, the phenomenal mutations of climate began, and the wilderness was redeemed - man subordinated pasture to his demands- and the "desert blossomed as the rose."
The first authentic record we have of the American buffalo-or, properly, bison - is found in the itinerary of the famous Spaniard Coronado of his
MARCH ACROSS THE PLAINS
of Colorado and Kansas, only forty-eight years after the discovery of America, by his historian Castenaco.
He says: "As Cicuyo, one of the indians told them of cows, and showed the picture of one painted on his body."
(They, the Spaniards, always wrote of the buffal as vacas (cows).]
Castenado says, in referring to this painted picture of the cow:
"We would never have guess it from seeing the skings of these animals, for they are covered with a frizzled hair which resembles wool."
The following quaint descriotion is given by Castenado of the Great Plains, over which the exhausted Spaniards wandered after the treachery of their guide, El Turco:
"All that way of plains are as full of crooked-back oxen as the mountain serrens in Spain is of sheep, but there is no such people as keep those cattle.
"The men clothe themselves with leather, and the women, which are esteemed for their long locks, cover their heads with the same.
"They have no bread of any kind of grain, as they say, which I accounted a very great matter.
"Their chief food is flesh and that often times they eat raw, either of custom or for lack of wood. They east the fat as they take it out of the ox, and drink the blood hot, and do not die withat, as Empecdocies and others affirmed."
The writer of this has seen the Cheyennes eat tje jpt amd quivering liver and fat torn from a freshly killed antelope when out hunting with them.
Castenado continues: "These oxen are of the bigness and color of our bulls, but their bones are not so great. They have a great bunch upon their fore shoulder, and more hair on the fore part than on the hinder part, and its like wool. They have, as it were, an horse mane upon the backbone, and much hair and very long from their knees downward.
"They have great tufts of hair handing down their foreheads, and it seemeth they have beards because of the great store of hair hanging down at their chins and throats.
"The males have very long tails, and a great knob or flock at the end, so that in some respects they resemble the lion, and in some other the camel.
"They push with their horns, they run, they overtake and kill an horse when they are in their rage and ager.
"Finally, it is a foul fierce beaste of countenance and form of body.
"The horses fled from them, either becuase of their deformed shape, or else becuase they have never seen them.
"Their masters have no other riches nor substance: of them they eat, they drink, they apparel, they shoe themselves and of their hides they make many things, as houses, shoes, apparl, and ropes; of their bones, they make bodkins; of their sinews and hair, thread; of their horns, mawes, and bladders vessels; of their dung, fire, and of their calves skins budgets wherein they draw and keep water. To be short, they make as many things of them as they have need of, or as many as suffice them in the use of this life."
Thus Castenado tells us, as quaintly translated in the Enlgish of the period (Hakiuyus's Voyages, vol. iii. London, 1600). how:
Came the restless Coronado
To the open Kansas Plain:"
and the Spaniard's impressions of the buffalo, whose utilitarian character contuned with the animal until his extinction in the nineteenth century.
From other authentic records it appears that the habitat of the buffalo at the date of the invasion of the "new world" by Europeans, extended from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the isthmus to Hudson's Bay.
What a sad retrospect. In a little less than four hundred years man has accomplished what would have required, without his effort, and acon of geological change.
TA-TO-KA.
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