A FATAL TRIP
Before leaving Fort Sumner an agreement
had been entered into between my employers and the
contractors for a third herd. The delivery was
set for the first week in September, and twenty-five
hundred beeves were agreed upon, with a liberal leeway
above and below that number in case of accident en
route. Accordingly, on our return to Loving’s
ranch active preparations were begun for the next drive.
Extra horses were purchased, several new guns of the
most modern make were secured, and the gathering of
cattle in Loving’s brand began at once, continuing
for six weeks. We combed the hills and valleys
along the main Brazos, and then started west up the
Clear Fork, carrying the beeves with us while gathering.
The range was in prime condition, the cattle were
fat and indolent, and with the exception of Indian
rumors there was not a cloud in the sky.
Our last camp was made a few miles
above Fort Griffin. Military protection was not
expected, yet our proximity to that post was considered
a security from Indian interference, as at times not
over half the outfit were with the herd. We had
nearly completed our numbers when, one morning early
in July, the redskins struck our camp with the violence
of a cyclone. The attack occurred, as usual, about
half an hour before dawn, and, to add to the difficulty
of the situation, the cattle stampeded with the first
shot fired. I was on last guard at the time,
and conscious that it was an Indian attack I unslung
a new Sharp’s rifle and tore away in the lead
of the herd. With the rumbling of over two thousand
running cattle in my ears, hearing was out of the
question, while my sense of sight was rendered useless
by the darkness of the morning hour. Yet I had
some very distinct visions; not from the herd of frenzied
beeves, thundering at my heels, but every shade and
shadow in the darkness looked like a pursuing Comanche.
Once I leveled my rifle at a shadow, but hesitated,
when a flash from a six-shooter revealed the object
to be one of our own men. I knew there were four
of us with the herd when it stampeded, but if the
rest were as badly bewildered as I was, it was dangerous
even to approach them. But I had a king’s
horse under me and trusted my life to him, and he
led the run until breaking dawn revealed our identity
to each other.
The presence of two other men with
the running herd was then discovered. We were
fully five miles from camp, and giving our attention
to the running cattle we soon turned the lead.
The main body of the herd was strung back for a mile,
but we fell on the leaders right and left, and soon
had them headed back for camp. In the mean time,
and with the breaking of day, our trail had been taken
up by both drovers and half a dozen men, who overtook
us shortly after sun-up. A count was made and
we had every hoof. A determined fight had occurred
over the remuda and commissary, and three of the Indians’
ponies had been killed, while some thirty arrows had
found lodgment in our wagon. There were no casualties
in the cow outfit, and if any occurred among the redskins,
the wounded or killed were carried away by their comrades
before daybreak. All agreed that there were fully
one hundred warriors in the attacking party, and as
we slowly drifted the cattle back to camp doubt was
expressed by the drovers whether it was advisable
to drive the herd to its destination in midsummer with
the Comanches out on their old hunting grounds.
A report of the attack was sent into
Griffin that morning, and a company of cavalry took
up the Indian trail, followed it until evening, and
returned to the post during the night. Approaching
a government station was generally looked upon as
an audacious act of the redskins, but the contempt
of the Comanche and his ally for citizen and soldier
alike was well known on the Texas frontier and excited
little comment. Several years later, in broad
daylight, they raided the town of Weatherford, untied
every horse from the hitching racks, and defiantly
rode away with their spoil. But the prevailing
spirits in our camp were not the kind to yield to an
inferior race, and, true to their obligation to the
contractors, they pushed forward preparations to start
the herd. Within a week our numbers were completed,
two extra men were secured, and on the morning of July
14, 1867, we trailed out up the Clear Fork with a
few over twenty-six hundred big beeves. It was
the same old route to the southwest, there was a decided
lack of enthusiasm over the start, yet never a word
of discouragement escaped the lips of men or employers.
I have never been a superstitious man, have never
had a premonition of impending danger, always rather
felt an enthusiasm in my undertakings, yet that morning
when the flag over Fort Griffin faded from our view,
I believe there was not a man in the outfit but realized
that our journey would be disputed by Indians.
Nor had we long to wait. Near
the juncture of Elm Creek with the main Clear Fork
we were again attacked at the usual hour in the morning.
The camp was the best available, and yet not a good
one for defense, as the ground was broken by shallow
draws and dry washes. There were about one hundred
yards of clear space on three sides of the camp, while
on the exposed side, and thirty yards distant, was
a slight depression of several feet. Fortunately
we had a moment’s warning, by several horses
snorting and pawing the ground, which caused Goodnight
to quietly awake the men sleeping near him, who in
turn were arousing the others, when a flight of arrows
buried themselves in the ground around us and the
war-whoop of the Comanche sounded. Ever cautious,
we had studied the situation on encamping, and had
tied our horses, cavalry fashion, to a heavy rope
stretched from the protected side of the wagon to
a high stake driven for the purpose. With the
attack the majority of the men flung themselves into
their saddles and started to the rescue of the remuda,
while three others and myself, detailed in anticipation,
ran for the ravine and dropped into it about forty
yards above the wagon. We could easily hear the
exultations of the redskins just below us in the shallow
gorge, and an enfilade fire was poured into them at
short range. Two guns were cutting the grass from
underneath the wagon, and, knowing the Indians had
crept up the depression on foot, we began a rapid
fire from our carbines and six-shooters, which created
the impression of a dozen rifles on their flank, and
they took to their heels in a headlong rout.
Once the firing ceased, we hailed
our men under the wagon and returned to it. Three
men were with the commissary, one of whom was a mere
boy, who was wounded in the head from an arrow during
the first moment of the attack, and was then raving
piteously from his sufferings. The darky cook,
who was one of the defenders of the wagon, was consoling
the boy, so with a parting word of encouragement we
swung into our saddles and rode in the direction of
dim firing up the creek. The cattle were out
of hearing, but the random shooting directed our course,
and halting several times, we were finally piloted
to the scene of activity. Our hail was met by
a shout of welcome, and the next moment we dashed
in among our own and reported the repulse of the Indians
from the wagon. The remuda was dashing about,
hither and yon, a mob of howling savages were circling
about, barely within gunshot, while our men rode cautiously,
checking and turning the frenzied saddle horses, and
never missing a chance of judiciously throwing a little
lead. There was no sign of daybreak, and, fearful
for the safety of our commissary, we threw a cordon
around the remuda and started for camp. Although
there must have been over one hundred Indians in the
general attack, we were still masters of the situation,
though they followed us until the wagon was reached
and the horses secured in a rope corral. A number
of us again sought the protection of the ravine, and
scattering above and below, we got in some telling
shots at short range, when the redskins gave up the
struggle and decamped. As they bore off westward
on the main Clear Fork their hilarious shoutings could
be distinctly heard for miles on the stillness of
the morning air.
An inventory of the camp was taken
at dawn. The wounded lad received the first attention.
The arrowhead had buried itself below and behind the
ear, but nippers were applied and the steel point was
extracted. The cook washed the wound thoroughly
and applied a poultice of meal, which afforded almost
instant relief. While horses were being saddled
to follow the cattle, I cast my eye over the camp and
counted over two hundred arrows within a radius of
fifty yards. Two had found lodgment in the bear-skin
on which I slept. Dozens were imbedded in the
running-gear and box of the wagon, while the stationary
flashes from the muzzle of the cook’s Creedmoor
had concentrated an unusual number of arrows in and
around his citadel. The darky had exercised caution
and corded the six ox-yokes against the front wheel
of the wagon in such a manner as to form a barrier,
using the spaces between the spokes as port-holes.
As he never varied his position under the wagon, the
Indians had aimed at his flash, and during the rather
brief fight twenty arrows had buried themselves in
that barricade of ox-yokes.
The trail of the beeves was taken
at dawn. This made the fifth stampede of the
herd since we started, a very unfortunate thing, for
stampeding easily becomes a mania with range cattle.
The steers had left the bed-ground in an easterly
direction, but finding that they were not pursued,
the men had gradually turned them to the right, and
at daybreak the herd was near Elm Creek, where it was
checked. We rode the circle in a free gallop,
the prairie being cut into dust and the trail as easy
to follow as a highway. As the herd happened to
land on our course, after the usual count the commissary
was sent for, and it and the remuda were brought up.
With the exception of wearing hobbles, the oxen were
always given their freedom at night. This morning
one of them was found in a dying condition from an
arrow in his stomach. A humane shot had relieved
the poor beast, and his mate trailed up to the herd,
tied behind the wagon with a rope. There were
several odd oxen among the cattle and the vacancy
was easily filled. If I am lacking in compassion
for my red brother, the lack has been heightened by
his fiendish atrocities to dumb animals. I have
been witness to the ruin of several wagon trains captured
by Indians, have seen their ashes and irons, and even
charred human remains, and was scarce moved to pity
because of the completeness of the hellish work.
Death is merciful and humane when compared to the
hamstringing of oxen, gouging out their eyes, severing
their ears, cutting deep slashes from shoulder to
hip, and leaving the innocent victim to a lingering
death. And when dumb animals are thus mutilated
in every conceivable form of torment, as if for the
amusement of the imps of the evil one, my compassion
for poor Lo ceases.
It was impossible to send the wounded
boy back to the settlements, so a comfortable bunk
was made for him in the wagon. Late in the evening
we resumed our journey, expecting to drive all night,
as it was good starlight. Fair progress was made,
but towards morning a rainstorm struck us, and the
cattle again stampeded. In all my outdoor experience
I never saw such pitchy darkness as accompanied that
storm; although galloping across a prairie in a blustering
rainfall, it required no strain of the imagination
to see hills and mountains and forests on every hand.
Fourteen men were with the herd, yet it was impossible
to work in unison, and when day broke we had less than
half the cattle. The lead had been maintained,
but in drifting at random with the storm several contingents
of beeves had cut off from the main body, supposedly
from the rear. When the sun rose, men were dispatched
in pairs and trios, the trail of the missing steers
was picked up, and by ten o’clock every hoof
was in hand or accounted for. I came in with
the last contingent and found the camp in an uproar
over the supposed desertion of one of the hands.
Yankee Bill, a sixteen-year-old boy, and another man
were left in charge of the herd when the rest of us
struck out to hunt the missing cattle. An hour
after sunrise the boy was seen to ride deliberately
away from his charge, without cause or excuse, and
had not returned. Desertion was the general supposition.
Had he not been mounted on one of the firm’s
horses the offense might have been overlooked.
But the delivery of the herd depended on the saddle
stock, and two men were sent on his trail. The
rain had freshened the ground, and after trailing
the horse for fifteen miles the boy was overtaken
while following cattle tracks towards the herd.
He had simply fallen asleep in the saddle, and the
horse had wandered away. Yankee Bill had made
the trip to Sumner with us the fall before, and stood
well with his employers, so the incident was forgiven
and forgotten.
From Elm Creek to the beginning of
the dry drive was one continual struggle with stampeding
cattle or warding off Indians. In spite of careful
handling, the herd became spoiled, and would run from
the howl of a wolf or the snort of a horse. The
dark hour before dawn was usually the crucial period,
and until the arid belt was reached all hands were
aroused at two o’clock in the morning. The
start was timed so as to reach the dry drive during
the full of the moon, and although it was a test of
endurance for man and beast, there was relief in the
desert waste—from the lurking savage—which
recompensed for its severity. Three sleepless
nights were borne without a murmur, and on our reaching
Horsehead Crossing and watering the cattle they were
turned back on the mesa and freed for the time being.
The presence of Indian sign around the ford was the
reason for turning loose, but at the round-up the
next morning the experiment proved a costly one, as
three hundred and sixty-three beeves were missing.
The cattle were nervous and feverish through suffering
from thirst, and had they been bedded closely, stampeding
would have resulted, the foreman choosing the least
of two alternatives in scattering the herd. That
night we slept the sleep of exhausted men, and the
next morning even awaited the sun on the cattle before
throwing them together, giving the Indian thieves
full ten hours the start. The stealing of cattle
by the Comanches was something unusual, and there
was just reason for believing that the present theft
was instigated by renegade Mexicans, allies in the
war of ’36. Three distinct trails left the
range around the Crossing, all heading south, each
accompanied by fully fifty horsemen. One contingent
crossed the Pecos at an Indian trail about twenty-five
miles below Horsehead, another still below, while the
third continued on down the left bank of the river.
Yankee Bill and “Mocho” Wilson, a one-armed
man, followed the latter trail, sighting them late
in the evening, but keeping well in the open.
When the Comanches had satisfied themselves that but
two men were following them, small bands of warriors
dropped out under cover of the broken country and
attempted to gain the rear of our men. Wilson
was an old plainsman, and once he saw the hopelessness
of recovering the cattle, he and Yankee Bill began
a cautious retreat. During the night and when
opposite the ford where the first contingent of beeves
crossed, they were waylaid, while returning, by the
wily redskins. The nickering of a pony warned
them of the presence of the enemy, and circling wide,
they avoided an ambush, though pursued by the stealthy
Comanches. Wilson was mounted on a good horse,
while Yankee Bill rode a mule, and so closely were
they pursued, that on reaching the first broken ground
Bill turned into a coulee, while Mocho bore off on
an angle, firing his six-shooter to attract the enemy
after him. Yankee Bill told us afterward how
he held the muzzle of his mule for an hour on dismounting,
to keep the rascal from bawling after the departing
horse. Wilson reached camp after midnight and
reported the hopelessness of the situation; but morning
came, and with it no Yankee Bill in camp. Half
a dozen of us started in search of him, under the
leadership of the one-armed plainsman, and an hour
afterward Bill was met riding leisurely up the river.
When rebuked by his comrade for not coming in under
cover of darkness, he retorted, “Hell, man, I
wasn’t going to run my mule to death just because
there were a few Comanches in the country!”
In trailing the missing cattle the
day previous, I had accompanied Mr. Loving to the
second Indian crossing. The country opposite the
ford was broken and brushy, the trail was five or
six hours old, and, fearing an ambush, the drover
refused to follow them farther. With the return
of Yankee Bill safe and sound to camp, all hope of
recovering the beeves was abandoned, and we crossed
the Pecos and turned up that river. An effort
was now made to quiet the herd and bring it back to
a normal condition, in order to fit it for delivery.
With Indian raids, frenzy in stampeding, and an unavoidable
dry drive, the cattle had gaunted like rails.
But with an abundance of water and by merely grazing
the remainder of the distance, it was believed that
the beeves would recover their old form and be ready
for inspection at the end of the month of August.
Indian sign was still plentiful, but in smaller bands,
and with an unceasing vigilance we wormed our way up
the Pecos valley.
When within a day’s ride of
the post, Mr. Loving took Wilson with him and started
in to Fort Sumner. The heat of August on the herd
had made recovery slow, but if a two weeks’
postponement could be agreed on, it was believed the
beeves would qualify. The circumstances were
unavoidable; the government had been lenient before;
so, hopeful of accomplishing his mission, the senior
member of the firm set out on his way. The two
men left camp at daybreak, cautioned by Goodnight
to cross the river by a well-known trail, keeping in
the open, even though it was farther, as a matter
of safety. They were well mounted for the trip,
and no further concern was given to their welfare until
the second morning, when Loving’s horse came
into camp, whinnying for his mates. There were
blood-stains on the saddle, and the story of a man
who was cautious for others and careless of himself
was easily understood. Conjecture was rife.
The presence of the horse admitted of several interpretations.
An Indian ambush was the most probable, and a number
of men were detailed to ferret out the mystery.
We were then seventy miles below Sumner, and with
orders to return to the herd at night six of us immediately
started. The searching party was divided into
squads, one on either side of the Pecos River, but
no results were obtained from the first day’s
hunt. The herd had moved up fifteen miles during
the day, and the next morning the search was resumed,
the work beginning where it had ceased the evening
before. Late that afternoon and from the east
bank, as Goodnight and I were scanning the opposite
side of the river, a lone man, almost naked, emerged
from a cave across the channel and above us.
Had it not been for his missing arm it is doubtful
if we should have recognized him, for he seemed demented.
We rode opposite and hailed, when he skulked back into
his refuge; but we were satisfied that it was Wilson.
The other searchers were signaled to, and finding
an entrance into the river, we swam it and rode up
to the cave. A shout of welcome greeted us, and
the next instant Wilson staggered out of the cavern,
his eyes filled with tears.
He was in a horrible physical condition,
and bewildered. We were an hour getting his story.
They had been ambushed by Indians and ran for the
brakes of the river, but were compelled to abandon
their horses, one of which was captured, the other
escaping. Loving was wounded twice, in the wrist
and the side, but from the cover gained they had stood
off the savages until darkness fell. During the
night Loving, unable to walk, believed that he was
going to die, and begged Wilson to make his escape,
and if possible return to the herd. After making
his employer as comfortable as possible, Wilson buried
his own rifle, pistols, and knife, and started on
his return to the herd. Being one-armed, he had
discarded his boots and nearly all his clothing to
assist him in swimming the river, which he had done
any number of times, traveling by night and hiding
during the day. When found in the cave, his feet
were badly swollen, compelling him to travel in the
river-bed to protect them from sandburs and thorns.
He was taken up behind one of the boys on a horse,
and we returned to camp.
Wilson firmly believed that Loving
was dead, and described the scene of the fight so
clearly that any one familiar with the river would
have no difficulty in locating the exact spot.
But the next morning as we were nearing the place
we met an ambulance in the road, the driver of which
reported that Loving had been brought into Sumner by
a freight outfit. On receipt of this information
Goodnight hurried on to the post, while the rest of
us looked over the scene, recovered the buried guns
of Wilson, and returned to the herd. Subsequently
we learned that the next morning after Wilson left
Loving had crawled to the river for a drink, and,
looking upstream, saw some one a mile or more distant
watering a team. By firing his pistol he attracted
attention to himself and so was rescued, the Indians
having decamped during the night. To his partner,
Mr. Loving corroborated Wilson’s story, and
rejoiced to know that his comrade had also escaped.
Everything that medical science could do was done by
the post surgeons for the veteran cowman, but after
lingering twenty-one days he died. Wilson and
the wounded boy both recovered, the cattle were delivered
in two installments, and early in October we started
homeward, carrying the embalmed remains of the pioneer
drover in a light conveyance. The trip was uneventful,
the traveling was done principally by night, and on
the arrival at Loving’s frontier home, six hundred
miles from Fort Sumner, his remains were laid at rest
with Masonic honors.
Over thirty years afterward a claim
was made against the government for the cattle lost
at Horsehead Crossing. Wilson and I were witnesses
before the commissioner sent to take evidence in the
case. The hearing was held at a federal court,
and after it was over, Wilson, while drinking, accused
me of suspecting him of deserting his employer,—a
suspicion I had, in fact, entertained at the time we
discovered him at the cave. I had never breathed
it to a living man, yet it was the truth, slumbering
for a generation before finding expression.