CHAPTER XXIII.
    ATTACK OF A WAR PARTY OF DAKOTAS ON A FRENCH TRADING HOUSE, ON THE UPPER 
    MISSISSIPPI, IN THE YEAR 1783.
      
     
    A French trader whom the Ojibways name "the Blacksmith" builds a cabin, and 
    winters at the mouth of Pena River, which empties into the Crow Wing--He is 
    attacked by two hundred Dakotas--The Dakotas, being armed mostly with bows 
    and arrows, are finally repulsed with loss--Two Frenchmen are wounded.
    Esh-ke-bug-e-coshe, the old chieftain of the Pillagers, who 
    is now1 beyond his seventieth year, relates that when he was a small boy, 
    not yet able to handle a gun, he was present at a trading house located at 
    the confluence of Patridge, or Pe-na River, with the Crow Wing, when it was 
    attacked by a large war party of Dakotas. The different circumstances of 
    this transaction appear still fresh and clear in the old man's memory, and 
    as he is one of the few Indian story tellers who is not accustomed to 
    exaggerate, and in whose accounts perfect reliance can be placed, I have 
    thought the tale worthy of insertion here, from notes carefully taken at the 
    time I first heard the old chief relate it, as an important incident in the 
    course of his adventurous and checkered life.A.D. 1852. 
    The trading house had been built late in the fall by a 
    French trader whom the Indians designated with the name of Ah-wish-to-yah, 
    meaning, a Blacksmith. He had venturously pitched his winter's quarters in 
    the heart of the best hunting grounds on lands at that time still claimed by 
    the Dakotas, but on which the Pillagers were now accustomed to make their 
    fall and winter hunts, undeterred by the fear of their enemies, with whom 
    they continually came in deadly contact, while engaged in the pursuit of the 
    game whose fur procured them the merchandise of the whites.
    Being located in a dangerous neighborhood, the trader had 
    erected a rude fence, or barrier of logs, around his dwelling, and the 
    cluster of Indian wigwams containing the women and children of his hunters, 
    which stood a few rods from his door, were also surrounded with felled trees 
    and brush, as a defense against the sudden midnight attack which at any 
    moment they might expect from the Dakotas. Ten hunters had left their 
    families at the camp some days previous, to go and trap beaver which 
    abounded in the vicinity. One night, long before they were expected back, 
    they startled the inmates of the wigwams and trading house from their quiet 
    slumbers, by their sudden arrival. They reported the approach of two hundred 
    Dakotas, who would doubtless attack the party, as they had ever proved 
    enemies to the whites who traded with the Ojibways, and supplied them with 
    the guns and ammunition which made them such able opponents, and who thus 
    gave them the means and power of possessing their best hunting grounds.
    The ten hunters had, the day previous to their sudden 
    arrival at the camp, discovered the trail of the enemy, over which the 
    peculiar odor of their tobacco smoke still lingered, discernible to the keen 
    sense of the hunter's nostrils, denoting that the party had but just passed 
    on the trail. The course of the Dakotas led directly towards a small hunting 
    camp which was perfectly defenseless, and which contained the relatives of 
    the ten hunters, who determined, if possible, to save them from certain 
    destruction. In order to effect their purpose, they concluded to turn the 
    course of the war party towards the trading house, where from behind the 
    defenses, they hoped to beat them off, while at the same time the report of 
    their guns would warn the scattered hunters in the vicinity, of danger, and 
    collect them to their succor. In order to effect this plan, the ten hunters 
    made a circuit and heading the Dakotas during the night, while encamped, 
    they crossed their course at right angles, and proceeded straight towards 
    the trading house, judging that in the morning, when the war party fell 
    across their tracks (as they would certainly do), they would eagerly follow 
    them up. The hunters had marched all night, and were consequently several 
    hours in advance of the enemy. These hours were employed by the trader and 
    his people in strengthening the barriers around the house. The trees and 
    logs were hauled by main force from around the wigwams, and piled on the 
    defenses, and the women, with the children (among whom was the narrator), 
    were invited to take shelter within the house.
    The Indian hunters, together with the trader and several "Coureurs 
    dew bois," numbered nearly twenty men, capable of bearing arms in defense of 
    the post, against a party judged, by the depth and size of their trail, to 
    number two hundred warriors.
    The preparations of the Ojibways and their white allies 
    had hardly been completed, when the enemy made their appearance, on the 
    opposite banks of the river. They leisurely made their usual preparations 
    for battle by adoring their persons with paints, feathers, and ornaments; 
    and relying on their numbers, they bravely crossed the stream on the ice, 
    and commenced the attack on the trading house by discharging clouds of 
    barbed arrows, accompanied with a terrific yelling of the war-whoop. Their 
    comparatively harmless missiles were promptly answered with death-winged 
    bullets, by the trader and his hunters, and such of the Dakotas as 
    approached too near the wooden wall, suffered for their temerity.
    The western, or prairie, Dakotas had not as yet generally 
    become possessed of the fatal fire-arm, and on this occasion, in the whole 
    party of two hundred warriors, they hardly numbered half a dozen guns. They 
    fought with the bow and arrow, and in this consisted the safety and 
    salvation of the twenty Ojibway hunters and Frenchmen who fought against 
    such immense odds, and who, being all supplied with fire-arms, easily kept 
    off their numerous assailants.
    The only manner in which they were annoyed was by the 
    enemy's shooting their arrows into the air in such a manner as to fall 
    directly into the enclosure, on the heads of its defenders. The more timid 
    were thus forced to retreat into the house for shelter, as for many minutes, 
    the barbed arrows fell as thick as snowflakes, and two of the hunters being 
    severely wounded, were disabled from further fighting.
    Having exhausted their arrows without materially lessening 
    the destructive fire of the Ojibways and Frenchmen, the Dakotas having lost 
    a number of their men, finally retreated, first dragging away their dead, 
    whom they threw into holes made in the ice, to prevent their being scalped.
    Shortly after their departure, the hunters in the vicinity 
    of the trading house, who had heard the firing attendant on the late fight, 
    arrived one after another to the scene of action, till, at sunset, forty men 
    had collected, all eager for pursuing the retreating enemy. The trader, 
    however, humanely dissuaded them from the enterprise, and as they had lost 
    no lives in the late attack, they were the more easily persuaded to forego 
    their intent.
    
    
    go to chapter 24
          
    
    
    
    
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