880 U59 opy 1 ClassXOl^ Book ly^'ff 01-'i^Ialdingand his heroic companion are laboring faithfully both for the spiritual and temporal good of this people (Nez Perces ), and in no part of the world have I seen more visible fruits of labor thus bestowed. Far away from all civilized society, and depending for their safety from the fury of excited savages alone in the protection of Heaven, they are entitled to the sympathy and prayers of the whole Christian church. — Uincs's History Around the World, page 172. Through the self-abnegating labors of this good old man (Spalding) these abo- riginees, we feel safe in saying, have been benefited more than by all the thousands of outlay by the Government. Their savage natures are changed in his presence, and from the chiefs to the humblest they obey and reverence him as do dutiful children a parent. — Golden Age, Lewiston, Idaho Territory, Novemher, 16, 1864. We concur in the above. JOEL PALMER. GEO. ABERNATHY. * [Extracts from Commodore AVilkos.] Vol. IV, page 460: "He (Spalding) baa not neglected to attend to the proper sphere of his duties, for his labors in this respect will compare with those of his brethren. * * His eftorts in agriculture are not less exemjilary. * * The In- dians, have a strong desire for cattle. A party was persuaded to accompany a mission- 6 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. ary over the Rocky Mountains, and take horses to the States to exchange for cattle, but they were destroyed by the Sioux. " * Among the other duties of Mr. Spalding, he has taught them the art of cultivation, and many of them have plantations ; these are kept in good order. * ■ Mr. Spalding kindly loans them his plows and other im- plements, aiid on a difficulty arising among them he has only to threaten them with the loss of the plow to bring the refractory jiersons to reason. * * The women are represented as coming miles to learn to knit, spin, and weave, and to assist Mrs. Spald- ing in her large school and domestic avocations. ' * The great endeavor of Mr. Spalding is to induce the Indians to give up their roving mode of life, and to settle down, and cultivate the soil, and in this he is succeeding admirably. He shows admira- ble tact and skill, together with untiring industry and perseverance, in the prosecu- tion of his labors as a missionary; and he appears to be determined to leave nothing undone that one person alone can perform. " " In the winter the time of himself and that of his wife is devoted to teaching, at which season their school is much en- larged. " * Our gentlemen heard the ])upils read. In the winter the school at the station numbers about live hundred scholars, but in the summer not one-tenth of that number attend." — IVilkes's Exploring/ Expedition around fhe World duriny the years 1840, '41, '42, '43. Vol. 4, pages 460-465. I concur in the above statements. GEO. ABERNATHY. I heartily concur in the above. JOEL PALMER. We concur in the above. J. S. GRIFFIN. WM. GEIGER. Center viLLE, Oregon, Decemher, 14, 1868. Dear Sir: I have seen and read with pleasure a memorial signed by Edward R. Geary and others, a committee appointed by the Oregon Presbytery of the Old School, and the United Presbyterian Churches, to devise measures for the renewal of the work of Christian missions among the nation of the Nez Perees Indians, and to reinstate the Rev. H. H. Spalding. * " I most heartily concur in the state- ments therein contained, and earnestly recommend that your excellency appoint Rev. H. H. Spalding superintendent of instruction. * - i have been acquainted with Mr. Spalding ever since 1845, and am personally knowing to most of the facts set forth in the memorial. I was in that country during the Cay use war in 1848. And then, again, in 1>;55 and 1856, I commanded the Oregon volunteers, when there was a con- cert of action among all the Indian tribes on our northwest coast, except the Nez Per ces alone, who, as a tribe, have always been friendly to the Americans. In the spring of 1856 they furnished horses to remount a portion of the volunteers under my com- mand, then in the valley of Walla-AYalla, for the purpose of waging war against the other tribes, all of whom were hostile to the Americans south and west of the Spokans, except the Nez Perees. In conclusion, permit me to say that I have no hesitancy in believing that the in- terests of the (Jovernment and that of the tribe would be better subserved by the appointment of Mr. Spalding than by any other man. I have the honor to be, sir, very respectfully, vour obedient servant, T. R. CORN ATI US, Former Fresident of the Oregon Senate. To His Excellency Governor Ballard, Of the Territory of Idaho, ejc,-offieio Superintendent of Indian Affairs. We concur in the stmtiments above expressed. GEORGE ABERNATHY. JOEL PALMER. A. HINMAN. Brownsville, Xovembcr 4, 1868. Sir: The undersigned ministers and members of the Willamette Presbytery of the Cumberland Presbyterian Churcli desire to represent that they have this day read a memorial addressed to your excellency, in behalf of the Rev. H. H. Spalding, indorsed by the Oregon Presbytery of the Old School Church, also by the Oregon Presbyteries of the United Presbyterian Church, and by the Pleasant Bute Baptist Church, and by many citizens of Linn County and vicinity, where said Spalding has been longest and best known. It affords us pleasure to express our hearty concurrence in the sentiments contained in said memorial, and further to assure you that it will be a source of dee]i gratifica- tion to the membership and ministers of the denomination which we represent to have the object named in the memorial effected as soon as practicable ; believing that in so EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 7 doing only a moiety of justice would be done to a worthy and good man, and to one who has labored and suitered more for this Pacific coast than auy other living man. Very respectfully, your obedient servants, W. R. BISHOP, LUTHER WHITE, Committee of Presbytery. D. W. Ballard, Governor and ex-officio Superintendent of Indian J ff airs for Idaho Territory. Lewiston, February 22, 1865. Sir: I was United States Indian agent in charge of the Nez Perces Nation, Idaho Territory, when the Rev. H. H. Spalding, who had been appointed superintendent of instruction for Nez Perces Indians by Superintendent Hale, arrived at the Lapwai agency in the fall of 1862. At the time of his arrival a. great part of the tribe was collected at tlie agency, and I must say they seemed highly delighted at seeing Mr. Spalding again. They seemed much pleased at the idea of having a school started among them, and of having a minister who could preach to them in their own language. Every Sabliath the Indians in great numbers attended Mr. Spalding's preaching, and I was greatly astonished at the orderly and dignified deportment of the congregation. Although Mr. Spalding had l)een absent from the tribe many years, yet they retained all the forms of worship that he had taught them. Many of them have prayers night and morning in their lodges. The Nez Perces have always maintained friendly rela- tions with the Americans. This is, no doubt, in a great measure to be attributed to the influence and teachings of Mr. Spalding. In my opinion, Mr. Spalding, by his own personal labors, has accomplished more good in thistribethan all the money expended by Government has been able to effect. Not having any suitable school-house, I permitted Mr. Spalding to open his school in my office shortly after his arrival, and from that time till he was compelled to discontinue the school from severe sickness, the office was crowded not only with children, but with old men and women, some com- pelled to use glasses to assist their sight. Some of the old men would remain till bed- time engaged in transcribing into their language portions of Scripture translated by Mr. Spalding. The desire I have to correct any false impression that may have gone abroad with regard to the reception of Mr. Spalding by the tribe on his return to the Lapwai in the fall of 1862, is the only apology I will ofier for troubling you with this communication. I remain, very respectfully, your obedient servant. I concur. 1 concur. S. H. Atkins, D. D. [From the Pacific, .Sau Francisco, California, Februfiry 6, 1864.] J. W. ANDERSON. G. ABERNATHY. JOEL PALMER. On Sunday last I had the pleasure of attending church at this place. The services were conducted in the Nez Perces language by the Rev. H. H. Spalding, who came to this people with his heroic wife in 1836. The governor of the Territory was present, and all the Federal officers and nearly all the county officers, with most of the citizens of Lewiston. The large court-room was crowded to its utmost capacity. The scene was deeply solemn and interesting; the breathless silence, the earnest, devout attention of that great Indian congregation (even the small child) to the words of their much-loved pastor; the spirit, the sweet melody of their singing, the readiness with which they turned to hymns and chapters, and read with Mr. Spalding the Sabbath lessons from their Testaments, which Mr. Spaldinghadtranslated and printed twenty years before; the earnest, pathetic voice of the native Christians whom Mr. Spalding called upon to pray — all, all, deeply and sol- emnly impressed that large congregation of white spectators even to tears. It wonld be better to-day, a thousand times over, if Government would do away with its policy that is so inefficiently carried out, and only lend its aid to a few such men as Mr. Spald- ing, whose whole heart is in the business, who has but one desire, and that to civilize and christianize these Indians. To-day shows what can be done when the heart is right. ALEX. SMITH, Judge First Judicial District, Territory of Idaho. I concur. GEORGE ABERNATHY. I heartily concur. .lOEL PALMER. I heartily concur. A. HINMAN. 8 EARLY LA130KS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. From Hon. I). S. Thoinpsoii, 0/ Oregon Sviiaie. Washington, D. C, January 20, 1871. Dear Sir: I wa.s employed duriii;>- the past summer in surveying into twenty-acre lots apart of the Xez Perces reservation, Idaho Territory. I have lieen in the western portion of the United States, among the Indians, the greatest portion of my life, and I Ixdievf the Nez Perces Indians are by far the most intelligent and susceptible of civil- ization of any Indians of which lam acquainted. The worlv done l>y yourself for these Indians, years ago, you must feel yourself well paid for when you see what they now are, and what they were when you lirst went among them. Last year they raised not less than 50,000 bushels of wheat, 10,000 bushels of corn, 10,000 T)usliels of oats, besides large quantities of potatoes and other vegetables. I am rejoiced to hear that you are going back to tliat people ; you are better acquainted with them than any other man, and 1 know they regard you their best friend. Yours, &c., D. S. THOMPSON. Rev. H. H. Spaldixg. [From tlie Chicago Advance, Decemljer 1, 1870.] AN EVENING WITH AN OLD MISSIONARY. One day last week a man of humble appearance, about seventy years of age, called at our office, and was introduced by a stronger as the Rev. H. H. Spalding, of Oregon. We had heard something of his labors as a missionary among the Indians in that region, and were glad to take the veteran by the hand. He was on the way to his old home at the East, after an absence of thii-ty-four years, and intended to stay over but a single train in Chicago. The few words we could then have together led us to press him to share our hospitalities for the night, which he accejited. ^ "Dr. Wliitinau's wife and mine," said the missionary, as we drew up our chairs about the study table and opened our "Colton" tt) the riglit maj), "were the tirst white women that ever c.-rossed the Rocky Mountains. That saved Oregon to the L'nion. It was God's plan to give the wealth of the Pacific slope to the United States through the agency of missionaries." We asked for an explanation. " The Northwestern terri- tory was then occujtied by the Hudson's Bay Company. Who should linally i)os8ess it — England or the United States — depended upon who could first settle it with an immi- gration. The Hudson's liay Company desired to secure it for their half-breeds and the Jesuits. They were slowly creeping down from Selkiriv settlement, here on the north," pointing it out on the map, "and silently taking possession, with forts and trading posts. Neither wagons nor women, they industiiously said, can ever pass the terrible rock-barriers that wall out Oregon from the United States. Trap]>ers, traders, travel- ers, everybody' echoed tbe words: 'No white woman can cross the mountains and live.' Seven different com[tanies of male emigrants from the East had l)cen shrewdly harried out of the country by their machinations. Hut they couldn't do it with us," said he, rising excitedly. " When the missionaries, with tlieir wives and a wagon, ap- peared on the 'divide,' one of them said : ' Here is somebody that you can't get rid of 80 easy. These folks have come to stay.'"' " But how came you to go ? " we asked. And then for four hours of the rarest interest we listened to the wond(?rful story. It would take a volume to unfold it. We must press it into the briefest possil)le space. The Maccdi>niaii Xe: Peres. — About their counci] fire, in solemn conclave —it was in the year 1832 — the Flatbeads and Nez Perces had determined to send four of their uumlier to " the Rising Sun " for "that Book frimi Heaven." They had got word of the Bible and a Saviour in some way from the Iroquois. These four dusky wise men, one of them a chid', who had thus dimly "seen His star in the east,'" made their way to St. Louis. And it is significant of the perils of this thousand miles' journey that only one of them survived to return. They fell into the hands of General Clark, who, with Lewis, had traveled extensively iu the regions of the Columbia River. He was a Romanist, and took them to his church, and, to entertain them, to the theater. How utterly he failed to meet their w;ints is revealed in tlie sad words with which they departed: "I cauie to you " — and the survivor repeated the words years afterward to Mr. Spalding — "with one eye partly oiiened; I go back with both eyes closed and both arms broken. My prople sent me to obtain that Book from Heaven. You took me where your women dance as we do not allow ours to dance; and the Book was not there. You took me where I sawmen worship God with candles; and the Book wasnot there. I am not to return without it, aiKl my people will die in darkness.'' And so they took their leave. But this sad lament was overheard. A young man wrote it to his friends in Pittsburg. Tliey showed the account to Catlin, of Indian portrait fame, whohadjustcome from the Ivocky Mountains. Kesaid: "Itcannot be: those Indians were in our company, and I heard nothing of this. Wait till I write to Clark before EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. \) you publish it." He wrote. The response was : " It is true. That was the sole object of their visit- to get the Bible." Then Catliu said, "Give itto the world " The ^Meth- odists at once commissioned Rev. Mr. Lee to go and tind this tribe, who had so strangely broken out of their darkness toward the light. Dr. Marcus Whitman, of the American Board, who was too late for the overland caravan for that summer, followed the next year. Lee found the Nez Perces ; but so fearful were the ridges and the ravines of the path to them, and so wild the country where ihey roamed, that the gift of ten horses, with which they pleaded their cause, could not keep him. He pushed on to the tribes living near the coast, and sent for his wife and associates by the way of Cape Horn. Woma-'s hcruism.—lt was with great joj- theNez Perces welcomed Whitman thenext year. Having explore(l<(ii on shore. — An incident, bv the way, should be noted here. The party took boat at I'ittsburg. Saturday night found them between Cairo and St. Louis. Mrs. Spalding, who seems to have had a good share both of courage and the conscience of the com2)any, insisted tliat they should be put on shore to spend Sunday. The captain and the passengers lauglied at lier scruples. But 8he said, •' Out on the plains we shall he at the mercy of the I'ur Company, and must go on; here we can stop." "But no boat will e^'er call at such an ont-of-the-way place as this to take you off." ''We'll take the chances of that. Put us on shore." The New England Iiome missionary marked that day in white which brouglit such a rare accession to liis little meeting in the schoolhouse. He said it was like an angePs visit. Early ]\[ouday morning a great putting was lieard below, and a grand ste;imer, better than the one they had left, rounded to at their signal and took them on l)oard. Sixty miles abo\e they overtook the other )>(>at hojtelessly stranded on a sand-bar. At St. Louis the missionaries found tlio American Fur Company titting out their an- nual expedition i'or the mountains. But as the two wives were along, they could not have secured a ]ilace in the caravan had not Whitman been in special favor by his serv- ices rendered the year before. It seems that, on his previous trip, a few days out from Council Bluffs, the cholera had broken out, and the demoralized men, dropping their packs, began to flee in a perfect rout. But Dr. Whitman, who, added to his great streugtli, had skill and tact, was equal to the emergency. Throwing off bis coat, he sweated the patients over the boiling camp kettles, administered ]>owerful i-emedies, and so stayed the pestilence and restoreil order. The men were now as grateful as thej'^ had been betbre cool and contemptuous ; and when an arrow's head had been ex- tracted from behind the festering spine of a comrade, and his life saved, their adnura- tion knew no bounds. Flaving secured the compnny's pledge, they pressed on by boat to Liberty Landing, Here Spalding purchased mules, (wild he found them, ) hiteen or twenty horses, as many cows, and two wagons, not forgetting a quart of seed wheat. With this retinue he started for Council Bluffs, while Whitujan waited, with the women and the goods, for the company's boat. After some days that boat passed, purposely leaving them behind. Through this bad faith, he was obliged to send forward to Spalding for horses, and to overtalve him as he could by land. I'his part of the trip was peculiarly trying. Spalding especially, who, for his wife's sake, was not yet altogether happy in going, seemed to be the sport of a very ill fortune. But in the review even he could see a comic side to his mishaps. A mule kiclced him. He was terribly shaken l)y the ague. In crossing a ferry an unruly cow, whi<'h he had laid hold of, Jumped overl)oard, taking hira along for ballast. A tornado scattered his cattle, swept away his tent, tore his blankets Irom him while the ague turn was on, and left liim to be drenched by the rain, with the usual consequences to one who takes calomel for his medicine. It did not help the case any to learn, when they were within twenty-tive miles of Council Bluffs, that the Fur Company's convoy had starteoc. No. 38, o.5th Congress, 1st session." It claims to be — it ifi astatement full of perjuries and perversions — "A History of Prot- estantism in Oregon, by the Rev. J. B. A. Brouillet, vicar-general of Walla Walla." Further on it calls itself an "Account of the murder of Dr. Whiluiau, and the ungrate- ful calumnies of H. H. Spalding, Protestant nussionary." The Nez Pcrces mission- grounds, abandoned (so say the ofS( ials) by the American board, are in litigation to- day for recovery, and the .lesuits are thrusting themselves upon that very tribe re- deemed from heathenism through the labors of this same Protestant missionary. Who shall now say we have a State without a church:' O, ye priests and politicians, for this wrong unj)aralleled, you shall yet stand condemned at the bar of an outraged pub- lic sentiment; and, after that, at the bar of God! "How long, Lord, how long!" From Elijah White, Esq., United States Indian agent, 1843. April 1, 1843. * * * Left the following day for the station of Mr. Spalding, among the Nez Perces, 120 miles over a most verdant and delightful gi-azing district, well watered but badly timl)ered. * # :* r^^^ chiefs met us with civility, gravity, and dignilied reserve, but the missionaries with joyful countenances and glad hearts' * " * Spent a season in the school, hearing them read, sing, and spell; at the same time examined their printing (with the pen) and writing, and can hardly avoid here saying I was happily surprised and greatly interested at seeing such num- bers so far advanced and so eagerly pursuing after knowledge. The next day (Decem- ber 4, 1842) I visited their plantations, rude, to lie sure, but successfully carried on, so far asraising the necessaries of life were concerned; and it was most gratifying to wit- ness their fondness andcare for their little herds, pigs, poultry, Arc. * * # I was ushered into the presence of the assembled chiefs to the number of t\yenty-two, andalarge number of the common people. * * "" The gravity, fixed atten- tion, and decorum of these sons of the forest was calculated to make for them a most favorable impression. * " I gave them to understand how highly Mr. and Mrs. Spalding were prized by the numerous whites, and with what pleasure the gi'eat chief had given them a paper to encourage them to come here to teach them what they were now so diligently employed in obtaining, in order that they and their children might become good, wise, and happy. * # * Mr. McKinley, of Fort Walla Walla, spoke concisely of his long residence among them as their trader, and forcibly of their (to him) unexpected advancement in the arts and sciences. Next arose Mr. McKay : " I appear as one from the long sleep of death. You know of the death of my father on board the ship Tonguin ; I was but a youth. I have mingled with you in bloody wars and profound peace ; I have stood in your midst surrounded with plenty, audsutfored with you in seasons of scarcity. We have had our days of wild sport and nights of watching, till 1 vanished from among men. left the Hudson's Bay Company, and retired to my plantation ; was silent as one dead ; the voice of my brother aroused me ; I mounted horse ; am here ; I am glad it is so. I came at the call of the great chief, whose children are more numerous than the stars in the heavens or the leaves in the forest. Will you hear and be advised? You will. Your wonderful im- provements in the arts and sciences prove you are no fools; surely you will hear." Chiefs speak; Five Crows, (Pahet-ko-ko,) about 4o, neatly attired in English cos- tume, wealthy, and owns some 2,000 horses, stepped gravely but modestly to the table: " I am but a youth, but my feelings urge me to speak. I have listened to what has been said. I have great hopes that brighter days are before us; have been groping for something, hardly knew what, as in darkness; here it is." EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 13 The bloody chief (Noo-son-ki-oon,) not less than 90 years : " I speak to-day ; to-mor- row pei-haps I die. I am the oldest chief of the tribe ; was the great chief wheu your brothers Lewis and Clark visited this country ; they honored me with their friendship and counsel. I showed them my numerous wounds received in bloody battle with the Snakes ; they told me it was not good ; it was better to be at peace ; gave me a Hag of peace; I held it up high; we met, we talked, but never fought again. Clark pointed to this day ; we have long waited ; sent three of our sons to the rising sun to obtain the Book from Heaven ; two of them sleep with their fathers. I am glad to live to see this day; shall soon be still and quiet in death." Other chiefs spoke. . Ellis was appointed high chief: a sensible man of 32, reading, speaking, and writing the English language tolerably well ; has a tine small plantation, few sheep, some neat cattle, and no less than 1,100 head of horses. Then came the feast; our ox was fat, and cooked and served up in a manner remiudiug me of the days of yore. We ate beef, corn, and peas to our till, and in good cheer took the pipe; when Rev. Mr. Spalding, Messrs. McKinley, Rogers, and McKay wished fiom our boatmen a song; it was no sooner given than returned by the Indians, and repeated again and again in high cheer. I thought it a good time, and requested all having any claim or grievance against Mr. Spalding to meet me and the high chief at evening in the council room, and requested Mr. Spalding to do the same. We met at six and ended at eleven, having accom- plisLied much business in the happiest manner. The next day we had our last meeting. I made them, in the name of our great chief, a present of 50 hoes, ( heavy, ) to be distributed by Mr. Spalding among their industrious pool'. I then turned, and, with good effect, desired all the chiefs to look upon the con- gregation as their own children, and then pointed to Mr. Spalding and lady, and told the chiefs and all present to look upon them as their father and mother, and to treat them in all respects as snch. Thus closed this mutually hapi^y and interesting meeting, and mounting our horses for home, Mr. and ^Nlrs. Spalding'and the chiefs accompanied ns four or tive miles, when we took leave of them in the pleasantest manner, not a single circumstance having occurred to mar our peace, or shake each other's conridence. After a severe journey of four days, reached Waiilatpu, Dr. Whitman's station, where we had many most unpleasant matters to settle. Feather Cap commenced weeping. Tauwat-wai said the whites were mnch more to blame than the Indians; that three-fourths of them, though they taught the purest doctrines, practiced the greatest abominations, referring to the base conduct of many in the Rocky Mountains ; acknowledged it as his opinion that the mill was burnt purposely by some disafiected persons toward Dr. Whitman. The mill, lumber, and great quantity of grain was burnt by Catholic Indians, instigated by Romanists, to breakup the Protestant mis- sion, and prevent supplies to the on-coming emigration by Dr. Whitman. " ' And here allow me to say, except at Wascopum, the missionaries of the upper country are too few in number, * * and in too defenseless state for their own safety. * * Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Spalding, whose zeal and untiring indu.stry for the benetit of the people of their charge entitles them to our best consideration, have a school of some two hundred and twenty-four, in constant attendance, most successfully carried forward, which promises to be of great usefulness to both sexes and all ages. ELIJAH WHITE, Sub-Agent of Indian Affairs West of the Rocky Mountains^ T. Hartley Crawford, Esq., Commissioner Indian Affairs, Washinf/ton, I). C. Department of War, Office of Indian Affairs, November 25, 1844. Communications have been received from Dr. Elijah White, sub-Indian agent for the Indians in Oregon Territory. * * They contain much of interest in considerable detail. The establishment of white settlements from the United States in that remote region seems to be attended with the circumstances that have always arisen out of the conversion of an American wilderness into a cultivated and improved region, modified by the great advance of the present time in morals, and benevolent and religious institutions. It is very remarkable that there should be so soon several well-supported, well-attended, and well-conducted schools in Oregon. The Nez Perces tribe of Indians have adopted a few simple and plain laws as their code, which will teach them self-restraint, and is the beginning of government on their part. Respectfully submitted. T. HARTLEY CRAWFORD. Hon. William Wilkins, Secretary of War. From Elwood Evans. Again, the Hudson's Bay Company professed neutrality. See Governor Ogden's speech to the Indians when he went to redeem the captives. See, too, what he says 14 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. ■when be tells the ludiaiis that they thought such acts would ])iove acceptable to the compauy. The logic of the lattei- proves the outbreak to have been liable to follow the too-literal appreciation of the education of the Indian mind as to their hatred of the Jlostou ; and neutrality in such a case is but sympathy with the wrong-doer. And history, therefore, niusl accept the inexorable logic that though Dr. Whitman had committed no such acts as seemed in the eyes of the company to justify such retalia- tion, yet some events it was a character of service which might have been expected from their alliance with the compjiuy. Again, the company's servants could travel in the hostile country in perfect safety. Any Catholic coukl. enjoy similar immunity — a j'vlori the Indians Avere hostile, not to whites, but to American Protestants. Again, there is no doubt but that either the Hudson's Bay Company or the Catholic missionaries could have prevented any outbreak of hostility on the part of Indians. They failed to exercise such iuHuence. They omitted to do a Christian, humane duty. Such an omission is as criminal, niorally, as direct commission of acts inciting to hostility. History, therefore, to do justice, will condemn the criminal teaching of a creature, hardly accouutable, to hate a class. It will palliate the Indian who could not discrimi- nate between " no intercourse" and open hostility. It will blaine those who, provoking a storm, were not gifted with the power to control the elements, even had they the desire to do so. Nor will it excuse them because by a proffer of sympathy to stay the sacrifice of life they endeavored to relieve the captives. That Governor Ogden could relieve those captives, that the Roman clergy could stay in the midst of the hostile Indians, proves too much. The same inlluence, had it been jjroperly exerted, would have avoided the massacre. But we must go deeper for the cause of the massacre. Thehistory of the agency of Protestant missions in encouraging American settlement; the advent of settlers; the uniform first visit to the Whitman station; the treaty of 1846, which decided that the days of the occupancy by the company of the Territory were numbered, and that they had been baftied in getting Columbia River for the line, explain the causes of chagrin of the company. The policy of the company, pursued everywhere, of making the Indian subservient in time of peace, auxiliary in event of war, finishes the matter. There is no necessity to charge that the Indians who killed the inmates of Waiilatpu, on the specified occasion, were directly incited to that act. There was no time, from 1836 down to November, 1847, when such advice was neces- sary. — Elwood Evans's Histoin/, chaj). 19. How naturally the query arises, "Why is the Catholic exempt from danger; why can the Hudson's l^ay Company employe remain amid these scenes of blood and Indian vengeance against the white race, cat peace, undisturbed, and what is more loathsome, neutral in such a conflict; why can the priest adminster the rites of his church to those Indians who are making war against Christians — even flocking to him — when you and other missionaries are fleeing for your lives because you are a missionary and an American f" Think you the conviction will not follow that the uncivilized Indian was, at best, supposing that these bloody deeds w^ere acceptable service to those whom he continued to regard as patrons and friends^ Let your narrative really illustrate that "inasmuch as they did these things unto me" because I was an American and a Protestant, that any and all Americans at that time WQuld have suffered like conse- quences, then will flow the corollary — distilled truth, the logic of history — Catholics and Britons Avere exempt. The American missionaries were the apostles ]>aving the way for American occupancy — the avant couriers of Oregon-Americanization. The Hudson's Bay Company — wi th its auxiliaries, the Catholic missionaries — were making their last grand struggle for the sole and unlimited control of the Indian mind. They expected they were carrying out the wishes of their teachers. See Ogden's speech to the Indians, where he boldly and o])enly owns that " the Indians believed they would receive the approbation of the company." — Honorable Elwood Ecans's Letter toliev. H. H. Spanldinij, OU/mpin, June 30, 1868. That record (history) is the best monument to the faithful who died at their posts — words of tribute or panegyric from any pen sink into insignificance when compared to American blood crying aloud from unmade graces at Waiilatpu. " Remember this, we suffered because we were Americans !" That mound called Whitman's grave, speaks louder "the deep damnation of his taking off " than could most elociuent txibnte inscribed upon the granite shaft, lifting its towering head to heaven itself; for it calls to mind that none were spared of American blood to do the last sad rites to these martyrs. Nor need you fear that the missionary heroines, who proved that Avoman could go to Oregon, and live and die there, Avill ever be forgotten. When this generation shall have passed away, Avhen envious neighbors, A'ieing Avith each other Avho did most to bring American institutions to the shores of the Pacific, shall lie motionless in death, and thousands now unborn shall travel by rail OA^er that then untraveled route, that little missionary caraA'an will come back to memory, to last as long as the eternal mountains. That transit, now stripped of all terrors, difficulty and danger will be re- EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 15 cognized as the direct consequence of that Leroic journey, showing what woman could do. Nor will it be forgotten that Oregon was then deemed worthless because of its remoteness and supposed inaccessibility. Those women dispelled both these false theories ; demonstrated that Oregon could be peopled from the United States ; showed its continuity to the Pacific shore, joint occupancy or non-occupancy, call it what you please, was superseded by American xnle occupancy. ( )regon was saved by reason of those women, engaged in a soul-saving mission, west of the Rocky Mountains. — Hon. Elwood Eraihs'n Letter to I>ev. H. H. Spaldiuti, Olynipiu, W. T., June 30, 1868. Report of the United States Indian Agent for 1843. AViLLAMETTE Valley, OREGON, November 15, 1843. Honored Sir: Since my arrival I have had the honor of addressing you some three or four communications, the last conveyed by the Hudson's Hay Company's express over the Rocky Mountains ^■ia Canada. The day following we left those Walla-Wallas and Cayuses, to pay a visit to the Nez Perces. In two days we were at Mr. Spalding's station. The Nez Perces came together in greater numbers than on any former occasion for years, and all the circumstances combining to favor it, received us most cordially. Their improvemet during the winter, in reading, singing, writ- ing, weaving, &c., was considerable, and the enlargement of their plantations, with the increased variety and quantities of the various kinds of grains and products, now vigorously shooting forth, connected with the better state of cultivation, and their universally good fences, were certainly most encouraging. Spending three days with this interesting tribe and their missionaries in thepleas- antest manner, they accepted mj' invitation to visit with me the Cayuses and VValla- "VVallas, and assist, by their influence, to bring them into the same regulations. Mr. Spalding and Ellis, the high chief, and every other chief and brave of impor- tance, and some five hundred of the men and women accompanied us to Waiilatpu, a distance of one hundred and thirty miles, where we met the Cayuses and Walla-Wallas in a mass, and spent some six days in adjusting principles, so as to receive the Cayuses into civil compact, which done, and a chief elected, much to the satisfaction of both whites and Indians, I ordered two fat oxen killed, and wheat, salt, &c., to be dis- tributed. The last year's report, in which was incorporated Mr. Lewis's Oregon speech and Captain Spalding's statements of hundreds of unoffending Indians being shot down annually by men under his (Dr. McLaughlin's) control, alHicts the gentlemen of the Hudson's Bay Company, and is utterly without foundation. Respectfullv, yours, ELI.TAH WHITE, Sub-agent of Indian Jffahs West of tlie Hocky Mounta ns. Hon. J. M. Porter, Secretary of War, Washington, D. C. Depart.ment of War, Office of Indian Affairs, Wasliington, D. C, November 24, 184.5. Two interesting and very instructive reports have been received from the sub-agent west of the Rocky Mountains. They present that country in a new and important light to the consideration of the public. The advancement in civilization by the numerous tribes in that remote and hitherto neglected portion of our territory, with so few advantages, is a matter of suri)rise. Indeed, the red men of that region would almost seem to be of a different order from those with whom we have been in more familiar intercourse. A few years since the face of a white man was almost unknown to them. Now, through the benevolent policy of the various Christian churches and the indefatigable exertions of the missionaries in their employ, they have ])rescribed and well adapted rules for their government, which are observed and respected to a degree worthy the most intelligent whites. Numerous schools have grown up in their midst, at which their children are acquir- ing the most important and useful information. They have already advanced (esjje- cially the Nez Perces Nation) to a degree of civilization that prcmiises the most bene- ficial results to them and their brethren on this side of the mountains, with whom they may, and no doubt will, at no distant day be brought into intercourse. They are turning their attention to agricultural pursuits, and, with but few of the neces- sary utensils in their possession, already produce sufiScient, in some instances, to meet their every want. Among some of the tribes hunting has been almost entirely abandoned, many indi- viduals looking wholly to the soil for support. The lauds are represented as extremely fertile and the climate healthy, agreeable, and uniform. Under these circumstances, so promising in their consequences and so grateful to the feelings of the philanthropist, it would seem to be the duty of the Government of S. Ex. Doc. 37 2 16 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. the United States to encourage their advancement and still further aid their progress in the path of civilization. Respectfully submitted, W, MEDILL. Hon. Wm. L. Makcy, Secretary of War. Testimony of General Alcord, of the United States Army. He (Colonel Steptoe) often descanted on the manly traits and Christian persever- ance and fortitude of Timothy, (a Nez Perces chief,) and many of the Nez Perces. Accounts concur as to the remarkable preservation by the Nez Perces of the habits derived from the missionaries a dozen years ago. Such docility deserves encourage- ment. Their devotion to our people, our arms, and our Government, has also endeared them to all who have been watching the histoi'y of their position. — General Alvord's letter to G. U. Atkinson, D. D., of Portland, dated Fort Fancuurer, December 2S, 1858. I concur cordially in the above. GEO. ABERNATHY. I concur in the sentiments of General Alvord. JOEL PALMER. Question. Can you concur in the sentiments contained in the printed memorial herewith sent? Please sign and return. I heartily concur. GEO. ABERNATHY. I concur with all my heart. J. S. GRIFFIN. WM. GEIGER. A. HINMAN. J. N. GILBERT. AVe cheerfully concur. GUSTAVUS HINES. W. C. HATCH. O. DICKINSON. A. Z. WALLAR. JOEL PALMER. Albany, Oregon, October 22, 1868. To his excellency Governor Ballard, of the Territory of Idaho, cx-officio superintendent of Indian Affairs: The undersigned, a committee appointed by the presbytery of (Oregon, (Old School,) to devise measures for tlie renewal of the work of Christian missions among thenation of the Nez Peices Indians, and to promote the reinstatement of our respected minis- terial brother, the Rev. H. H. Spalding, in that tield of his early and successful labors, would respectfully and earnestly request your excellency to ap])oint Mr. Spalding superintendent of instruction, under the treaty of 1856, aud would respect- fully submit the following considerations therefor: 1st. Our long personal ac([uaintance with Mr. Spalding aud knowledge of his early successful labors in that tield impel us to regard him as eminently qualified for the position. 2d. His familiar ac(|naintance with the native language, reduced by him to a writ- ten state, several scliool books being prepared and portions of Scripture translated by liim, and printed on the first press on this coast, the only instance of the Icind, it is belived, among the Indian tribes on these Pacihc shores. These books are held at this time above all price by the Nez Perces. 3d. His great, perhaps unparalleled success as a missionary in Christianizing and introducing the usages of civilization among that people during the eleven years spent among them, and until driven away in the year 18 17, as attested by the superior intel- ligence, enterprise, and good order still characterizing and distinguisliing them from the surrounding tribes. To this httndreds of our citizens, civil and military officers, miners, travelers, and oth(;rs of most reliable character, bear a uniform testimony. Among these we would name Commodore Wilkes, an eye-witness in 1841, Rev. Gus- tavns Hines, in 1843, General Joel Palmer, in 1846, Colonel Steptoe, Agent Ander- son, and Governor Daniels. The country, on the arrival of Mr. Spalding, in 1836, was emphatically a wilderness; uncultivated; not a hoe, plow, or hoof of cattle; the sav- ages starving on their meagre supply of roots and tishes ; ignorant of letters, of agriculture, of the Sabbath, and of human salvation. 4th. That this scene should so soon be changed, the "desert to bud and blossom," the fields to wave with grain, 15,000 to 20,000 bushels of grain harvested yearly by the Indians, orchards and gardens planted, cattle roving in bands, schools established, in EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 17 wliich from 100 to 500 souls were in daily attendance, women spinning, over 100 profes- sors adorning the Christian faith, a church organized and family altars erected, speak volumes for the fidelity and efficiency of Mr. Spalding and his estimable wife. 5th. The strong alliance and unwavering friendship of the Nez Pcrces to the Ameri- cans, while all the surrounding tribes have been at times hostile and repeatedly in arms against the United States, their friendship being fairly and clearly attributable to the instruction and inlluence of Mr. Spalding, render him worthy of the most favorable consideration of the Government. 6th. The personal hazards, sacriiices, and perils of Mr. Spalding and wife, and Dr. Whitman and wife (the first white women to hazard the Kocky Mountains and the route across the continent), in opening the great emigrant route in 1836, thus securing the settling of this coast by Americans, their constant aid and friendship to the wayworn emigrant, their watchful and untiring labors in defeating the intrigues of English diplomacy, and securing this vast Pa(-ific West to our country, should secure to them a gratitude and esteem not to be forgotten. 7th. The oft-expressed and strong desire of the Xez Perces for Mr. Spalding's return, and his constant and full reciprocation of that desire to live among them and devote his life to their spiritual good and social elevation, is all a consideration not to be lightly regarded. 8th. No other man lives capable of translating the Scriptures into their language, and of preaching to them the Gospel so intelligently as Mr. Spalding. 9th. The honor of the United States is involved in the faithful execution of the treaty of 1856 for the ))urcha8e of that country, which could not have been suiccssfully negotiated without the liberal provisions for schools and teachers which it contains; the disregard of wliich hitherto subjects our Government to the charge of bad faith and a failure to appreciate the fidelity of a people whose integrity and frienciship have often saved our frontiers from the blood and desolation of 8av;ige war, and the National Treasury the expense of millions of dollars in njilitary expenditures. Agent Anderson, for several years in charge of the Nez Perces, does not, in our judg- ment, exaggenite in saying that the "friendly relations always maintained by the Nez Perces with the Americaus is in a great measure to be attributed to the influence and teachings of Mr. Spalding," and that, in his "opinion, Mr. S., by his own personal labors, has accomplished more good to this tribe than all the money expended Ijy the Government has been able to effect." All of which is respectfully submitteele(iate to Congress. A. G. COOK, Attorney at law. T. W. REED, Former Speaker of Legislative Assembly, II . T. and I. T. C. C. HEWET, Chief Justice Washinqton Territory. B. T. YANTIS. T. F. Mcelroy. H. K. HINES, Presiding Elder Methodist Episcopal Chnrch. ELWOOD EVANS, Late Secretary TV. T., including Xez Perces Xation. E. S. SMITH, Secretary Washington Territory. The Methodist Episcop.-il Church, the liaptist, the Christian, the Congregational, the Presbyterian Church, the United Presbyterian Church, and reunited churches, in their ecclesiastical bodies, have concurred in said memorial. What two missionary women have done for the country — Hon. Elwood Evans— Success of missions the wealth of the nation. Alter the discovery of America by Columbus, it was not long before the Atlantic Ocean had ceased to be regarded as a great barrier to an advent to the Atlantic shores of the American continent. Indeed, long before the first settlement of New England the continent itself was the obstacle to westward progress, then already the path to EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 19 empire. To cross this immensity of land, or to avoid it being crossed, really had be- come the problem before the pilgrim fathers thought of settlement in America,. The latter theory ^yas regarded the one which needed solntion. None were bold enough to attempt crossing the continent itself, yet this was the task the ( tregon emigrant had to accomplish or to make the voyage around Cape Horn. The history of the Oregon con- troversy develops the fjict that it long continued to be doubted whether it were possi- ble to people Oregon overland from the United States, or whetlier that Territtiry must receive its populaticm by sea, via Cape Horn. If the former failed, then Great i->ritaiu, with her over-glutted centers of population, could use Oregon as an escape-valve, and all the probabilities seemed to indicate that British colonization would ultimately settle the Oregon controversy by maturing occupancy and possession. But a third of a century ago two heroic, self-sacriticing Ameiican women found the solution of this problem of doubt and uncertainty. Actuated by as holy an impulse as inspired the Puritan fathers to spread the blessings of the Christian religion in new lands, they undertook the pilgrimage to Oregon to convt*i"t the Indians. What ser- mon could be more eloquent than that silent readiness to undertake such a journey? No heroism more sulilime than their willingness to go. How sanctitied has been that ])reaching! How shortly after the fruit ai3peared, in opening to Amerieauization the vast region west of the Rocky Mountains preparing it for the homes of men, women, and children. If women could reach Oregon overland the settlement of territorial claim was attained. That interesting incident of the past was the sure harbinger of what we are now about realizing. The great engineering and ntilitarian idea of the 19tli century is about to be consummated. The continent is crossed by a railroad. After American women had traversed the broad plains and crossed the great mountain chains of the American continent, it was needless further to search for a ''Strait of Anian.'" That Journey, accomplished safely, preceded the emigrant wagon road. As a natural conseijuence the railway has been substituted, the commerce of the Pacitic and the eastern .seas is concentrated in American cities on the Pacific shores, and the United States of America is the leading power of the world. The example of the sainted heroines — one of whom (Mi's. Dr. Marcus Whitman) was slain at her post of duty by the perfidious savage for whose benefit she had gone into exile from home, kindred, and all its endearments, and the other (Mrs. Rev. H. H. Spalding) lies under the clod in an Oregon valley — was soon followed by a hardy band of men, women, and children. In each of these was a living argument of the integrity of claim of their nation to this territory. They were alike devoted to the glorious task of dedicating the wilderness to become a home for God's creatures, and reclaim- ing for their conntry a vast expanse of valuable territory, well-nigh lost by the "masterly inactivity" and apathy of the Government. — Hon. Elwood Erans's (late secretary Washington Territor;/) address at Port Townsend, JV. T., -.'annary, 1869. THE MARTYR WHITMAN'S SERVICES TO THE EMIGRANT ROUTE. HIS TERRIFIC WIXTEK .JOUKNEV THROUGH THE ROCKY :\IOUNTAIXS — HIS SUCCESSFUL MISSION AT WASHINGTON. However the political question between England and the United States as to the ownership of Oregon may be decided, Oregon. will never be cohmized overland from the United States. The world must assume a new face before the American wagons will make plain the road to the Columbia as they have to the Ohio. — Edinburgh I!e- vietv, 1843. SENATOR LANE OF OREGON ON THE MISSIONARY WHITMAN. Among those who thus labored faithfully and unremittingly !ind with a singleness of purpose and self-sacrificing zeal which commanded the admiration and respect of all who observed his elevated and untiring labors, was the Rev. Marcus Whitman. Never, in my opinion, did missionary go forth to the. field of his labors animated by a nobler purpose, or devote himself to his task with more earnestness and sincerity than this meek and Christian man. He arrived in 183ti, and established his mission in the Waiilatpu country, east of the Cascade Mountains, and devoted his entire time to the education and improvement of the Indians, teaching them the arts of civilization, the mode of cultivating the soil, to plant, to sow, to reap, to do all the duties that pertain to civilized man. He erected mills, plowed their ground, sowed their crops, and assisted in gathering in their harvest. About the time he had sueceeded in teaching them some of these arts and the means of using some of these advantages, they rose against him without cause and without notice, and massacred him and his wife and many others who were at the mission at the time. — General I.ane in the House of Representatires, April, 1856. 20 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. THE MAltTYU WHITMAN'S WINTER JOUKNEY TO WASHINGTON — LIVES ON UNCOOKKD FROZEN MULE MEAT — HIS SERVICES TO THE EMIGRANT ROUTE. This vastly important emijiraut route, thus established by tlic persoual sacrifices and hazards. of those two devoted missionaries, was saved to our country, as it was about to l>e extiuguislied by tlie false representations and wiles of the Hudson's Bay Comijany, l)y the personal hazards and hardships of that devoted missionary, Ur. Whitman, in the California mountains, in the winter of ISl'J and 1843. Those two missionary heroines, with Dr. Whitman, Dr. (iray, and myself, crossed the mountains in 1886, bringing the lirst cattle and wagons. In 1838 four lady mis- sionaries — Mrs. Smith, Eells, and Walker, from New England, and Mrs. Gray, from New York — and their husbands, and Mr. Rogers, from Cincinnati, crossed, bringing cattle, ))ut no wagons. Two lady missionaries crossed in 1839 — Mrs. Grifiin and Mrs. Miuger, from New York, and their husbands. In 18-10 three missionary ladies from New York, Mrs. Smith, Cl*rk, and Littlejohn, and their husbands, and the first emi- grant lady, Mrs. Walker, and her husband, crossed the mountains and brought their wagons; but on reaching Fort Hall they were compelled to abandon their wagons by the representations of the Hudson's Bay Company, who declared that wagons never bad passed and could not pass through the Snake country and the Blue Mountains to the Columbia. This Airs. Walker and her husband went from Oregon to California in 1841 — the first American lady in California. In 1841 no missionaries crossed, but several emigrant families, bringing wagons, which, on reaching Fort Hall, suffered the same fate with those of 1840. In 1842 con- siderable emigration moved forward with ox teams and wagons, but on reaching Fort Hall the same story was told them and the teams were sacrificed, and the emigrant families reached Dr. Whitman's station late in the fall, in very destitute circum- stances. About this time, as events proved, that shrewd English diplomatist. Gov- ernor Simpson, long a. resident on the Nortiiwest coast, reached \Vashiugton, after having arranged that an English colony of some 150 souls should leave the Selkirk Settlement on the Red River of the lakes in the spring of 1842, and cross the Rocky Mountains by the Saskatchawan Pass. DR. WIHTAIAN'S WINTER .TOURNEY, 1843. The peculiar event that aroused Dr. Wliitmau and sent him through the mountains of New Mexico, during that terrible winter of 1843, to ^Vashington, just in time to save this now so valuable country from being traded oft' by Webster to the shrewd Englishman for a "cod fishery'' down east, was as follows: In October of 1842 our mission was called together, on business, a.t Waiilat])u — Dr. Whitman's station — and while in session. Dr. W. was called to Fort Walla-Walla to visit a sick man. While there the "brigade'' for New Caledonia, fifteen bateaux, arrived at that point on ' their way n]» the Columbia, with Indian goods for the New Caledonia or Frazer River : country. Thej' were accompanied by some twenty chief factors, traders, and clerks I of the Hudson's Bay Com]>any, and Bishop Demois, who had crossed the mountains > from Canada, in 1839 — the first Catholic priest on this coast; Bishop Blanchett came ,-^ at the same time. While this great company were at dinner, an express arrived from Fort Colville, announcing the (to them) glad news that the colony from Red River had passed the Rocky Mountains and were near Colville. An exclamation of joy burst from the whole table, at first unaccountable to Doctor Whitman, till a young priest, perhaps not so discreet as the older, and not thinking that there was an American at the table, sprang to his feet, and swinging his hand, exclaimed: "Hurrah for ('olumbial (Oregon.) America is too late; we have got the country." In an instant, as by instinct. Dr. Wliitman saw through the whole plan, clear to Washington, Fort Hall, and all. He immediately arose from the taltle and asked to be excused, sprang upon his horse, and in a very short time stood with his noble " Cayuse," white with foam, before his door; and without stopping to dismount, he replied to our anxious inipiiries with great decision and earnestness : " I am going to cross the Rocky Mountains and reach Wash- ington this winter, God carrying me through, and bring out an emigration over the mountains next season, or this country is lost." The events soon developed that if that whole-souled American missionary was not the "son of a prophet,'' he guessed right when he said a " deep-hiid scheme was about culminating which would deprive the United States of this Oregon, and it must Ite broken at once, orthe country islost." We united our remonstrances with those of sister Whitman, who was in deep agony at the idea of lier husband perishing in the snows of the Rocky Mountains. We told him it would be a miracle if he escaped death either from starving, or freezing, or the savages, or the perishing of his horses, during the five months that would be recjuired to make the only possible circuitous route, via Fort Hall, Toas, Santa Fe, and Bent Fort. His reply was tbat of my angel wife six years before: "I am ready not to be bound only, but to die at Jerusalem or in the snows of the Rocky Mountains for the EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 21 uanie of the Lord Jesus or my country. I am a missionary, it is true, but my country needs me now." And taking leave of his missionary associates, his comfortable home, and his weeping companion, with but little hope of seeing them again in this world, he entered upon his fearful journey the 2d of October, 1842, and reached the city of Washington the 2d of March, 1843, with his face, nose, ears, hanrls, feet, and legs badly frozen. It is well that the good man did not live to see himself and his faith- ful associates robbed and their character slandered by that very Government he was ready to lay down his life for. It would have been to him, as it is to me, the most mournful event of my life. Nothing but the continued outstretched hand of God, and his clothing of butfalo hides, with the fur inside, and his unyielding spirit, saved him from perishing from the intense cold. On that terrible 13th of January, 1843, when so many in all parts of our country froze to death, the doctor, against the advice of his Mexican guide, left his camp in a deep gorge of the mountains of Now Mexico, in the morning, to pursue his journey. But on reaching the divide, the cold became so intense, and the animals actually becoming maddened by the driving snows, the doctor saw his peril, and attempted to retrace his steps, and, if possible, to tind his camp, as the only hope of saving their lives. But the drifting snow had totally obliterated every trace, and tiie air becom- ing almost as dark as night bj the maddening storm, the doctor saw that it would be impossible for any human being to find camp, and commending himself and distant wife to his covenant-keeping God, he gave himself, his faithful guide, and animals up to their snowy grave, which was fast closing about them, when the guide, observing the ears of one of the mules intently bent forward, sprang upon him, giving him the reins, exclaiming: ''This mule will find the camp if he can live to reach it." The doctor mounted another and followed. The faithful animal kept down the divide a short distance, and then turned square down the steep mountain. Through deep snow-drifts, over frightful ]>recipice8, down, down, he pushed, unguided and unurged, as if he knew the lives of the two men and the fate of the great expedition depended upon his endurance and his faithfulness, and into the thick timber, and stopped sud- denly over a bai"e spot, and as the doctor dismounted — the ^lexican was too far gone — behold t)ie very fire-place of their morning camp ! Two brands of fire were yet alive and smoking ; plenty of timber in reach. The butfalo hides had done much to protect the doctor, and providentially he could move about and collect dry limbs, and soon had a rousing fire. The guide revived, but both were badly frozen. They remained in this secluded hole in the mountains several days, till the cold and the storm abated. At another time, with another guide, on ihe head- waters of the Arkansas, after traveling all day in a terrible storm, they reached a small river for camp, but with- out a stick of wood anywhere to be had except on the other side of the stream, which was covered with ice. but too thin to support a man erect. The storm cleared away, and the night bid fair to be intensely cold; besides, they must have tire to prepare bread and food. The doctor took his ax in one hand and a willow stick in the other, laid himself upon the thin ice, and spreading his arms and legs, he worked himself over on his breast, cut his wood and slid it over, and returned in the same way. That was the last time the doctor enjoyed the luxury of his ax — so indispensable at that season of the year, in such a country. That night a wolf poked his nose under the foot of the bed where the ax had been placed for safe-keeping, and took it oif for a leather string that had been wrapped around the split helve. DR. whitman's SUCCKSSFUL MISSION AT WASHINGTON. On reaching the settlements, Dr. Whitman found that many of the now old Ore- gonians — Waldo, Applegate, Hamtree, Xeyser and others— who had once made calcu- lations to come to Oregon, had abandoned the idea because of the representations from Washington that every attempt to take wagons and ox teams through the Rocky and Blue Mountains to the Columbia had failed. Dr. Whitman saw at once what the stop- ping of wagons at Fort Mall every year meant. The representations i)nrported to come from Secretary Wel>ster, but really from Governor Simpson, who, magnifying the statements of his chief trader. Grant, at Fort Hall, declared the Americans must be going mad, from their repeated fruitless attempts to take wagons and teams through the impassable regions of the Columbia, and that the women and children of those wild fanatics hail been saved from a terrible death only by the repeated and philan- thropic labors of Mr, (4rant, at Fort Hall, in furnishing them with horses. The doctor told these men as he met them tliat his only object in crossing the mountains in the dead of winter, at the risk of his life, and through untold sufferings, was to take back an American emigration that summer through the mountains to the Columbia with their wagons and their teams. The route was practicable. We had taken our cattle and our families through seven years before. They had nothing to fear ; but to be ready on his return. The stopping of wagons at Fort Hall was a Hudson Bay Company scheme to prevent the settling of the country by Americans, till they could settle it 22 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. with their own stihjeets from the Selkirk settlemeut. This news spiead like fire throngh ^Nlissonri, as will be seen Irom Zacrey's statement. The doctor pushed on to Washington and immediately sought an interview with Secretary Webster — both being from the same State— and stated to him the ol»jectof his crossingthe nioiuitaius, and laid before him the great imj)ortance of < iregou to the United States. Hut Mi'. Webster lay too near Cape Cod to see tilings in the same light with his lellow-statesmau who had transferred his worldly interests to the Pacitic cojist He awarded sincerity to the missionary, but could not admit for a moment that the short residence of six years could give the doctt)r the knowledge of the country possessed by Governor Simp- son, who had almost grown up in the country, and had traveled every part of it, and rep- resents it as one unbroken wasteof sand deserts and impassable mountains, tit only for the beaver, the gray bear, and the savage. Besides, he had about traded it off with Governor Simpson, to go into the Ashburton treaty, for a cod-hshery on Newfoundland. The doctor next sought, through Seuutor Linn, an interview Avith President Tyler, who at once appreciated his solicitude and his timely representations of Oregon, and especially his disinterested though hazardous undertaking to cross the Ro(dvy Moun- tains in the winter to take back a caravan of wagons, fie said that, although the doctor's representations of the character of the country, and the possibility of reach- ing it by wagon route, were in direct contradiction to those of Governor Simpson, his frozen limbs were sufficient proof of his sincerity, and his missionary character was sufficient guarantee for his lionesty, and lit; woulil, therefore, as President, rest upon these and act accordingly; would detail Fremont with a military force to escort the doctor's caravan through the mountains; and no more action should be had toward trading off Oregon till he couhl henr the result of the ex])editi<)n. If the doctor could establish a wagon route through the mountains to the Columbia River, pronounced inipossible by Governor Simpson and Ashburton, he would use his intluence to hold on to Oregon. The great desire of the doctor's American soul. Christian withal, that is, the jiledge of the President that the swapping of Oregon with England for a cod- lishery should stop for the ]>resent, was attained, although at the risk of life, and through great sufferings, and uns(»licited, and without the promise or expectation of a dollar's reward from any source. And now, (iod giving him life and strength, he would do the rest, that is, connect the Missouri and Columbia rivers with a "agon track so dee]) and plain that neither national envy nor sectional fanaticism would ever blot it out. And when the 4th of September, 184o, saw the rearof the doctor's caravan of nearly two hundred wagons with which he started from Missouri last of April, emerge irom the western shades of the Blue ;\lountainsupon the plains of the Columbia, the greatest work was tinished ever accomplished by one man ibr Oregon on this coast. And through that great emigration, during that whole summer, the doctor was their everywhere-i)resent angel of mercy, ministering to the sick, helping the weary, encouraging the wavering, cheering the mothers, mending wagons, setting broken bones, hunting stray oxen ; climbing precipices, now in the rear, now in the center, now at the front; in the rivers looking out fords through the(iuicks;inds, in the deserts looking out water; in the dark mountains lo(d Blanchett and Vicar-General Brouilette, a part via Caj>e Horn and part by the overland rouie. It is reported that the children of Mr. Hall, after their arrival at the fort, Siiw the pants, caj), and sash of their father. As the roar and yells commenced, Mr. Saunders, the teacher, naturally opened the school-room door, when three Indians came up the steps and seized him. His daughter Helen and my daughter Eliza ran to the window. Helen screamed, " 'J'hey are killing my father.'' Eliza gazed a few minutes on the terriVde scene. She saw Mr. Saunders fall and rise several times among the tomahawks and knives, trying to reach his house, till two Indians came up on horses, and with long-liandled tomahawks hewed him down. Next day in going among the dead she found his head split open, a part lying at a distance ; and with her tender hands the dear child put it in its place, and assisted in sewing sheets around his and the other bodies. She found Hotfnian split open in the back, and his heart and lungs taken out; she replaced them, and sewed a sheet around him. His aftlicted sister, in Elmira, New York, writes me, '• I desire above all things to clasp that dear cliild to my bosom before I die, for her kindness to my fallen brother, whom I am to see no more.' Eliza saw multitudes of Indian women and children dancing, and naked men swinging their hatchets dripping with blood. In the sitting-room there were now four persons bleeding. Dr. and Mrs. Whitman, Kimball, and Rogers; Sager was in the kitchen. Alter the women came in, they fas- tened the doors and took the sick children and Mrs. W. up stairs. At the commence- ment the ciiildren of the school hid themselves in the loft over the school-room. To- wardnight Fiiidley, Joe Lewis, and several Iinlians came in, and called to the children to come down. Findley selected the two Manson (Hudson Bay) boys and the doctor's Spanish boy, to take to Walla-Walla, to save their lives, and said the others were to be killed by the Indian women. MyEliza caught Findley by the clothes: "Oh, Nicholas, save me, do ! " He pushed her away, and Lewis and the Indians huddled them down into the kitchen. As they were driven into the kitchen to be shot, tiiey pa.ssed over the bod J' of John. His brother Francis, fifteen yearsold, stooped down, took the woolen scarf from the gory thoat of his dying brother, and sjioke to him. .lohn gasped, and immediately expired. Francis said to his sister Matilda, "I shall go next," and was never heard to speak again. The children were huddled in a corner, where a scene that beggars description commenced. The large room filled up with Indian women and naked, painted men, yelling, dancing, scraping up the blood that was deep upon the floor, and flirting it, painting their guns, and brandishing their bloody tomahawks over the heads of these helpless little lambs, screaming, -'Shall we shootf Shall we shoot?" Eliza, who could understand the language, says, ''I covered my eyes with my apron, that I might not see the bloody tomahawk strike that was just over my head." Telankaikt, the heale8S children were compelled to witness it. The Indian women and children were particularly acti\e— yelling, dancing, and singing the scalp-dance, ilrs. Whit- man was thrown violently from the settee into the mud. They tried to ride their horses over the bodies, but the horses refused. They slashed the faces of their dying victims with their \\hips, and as they would writhe and groan, it only increased the glee of the Indian women and children. They leaped and screamed for Joy, throwing handsfnl of blood around, and drinking down the osed to the cold and the smell ol' blood while sewing sheets around the offensive dead bodies, constant calls from the terrified white women and the Intiians, to interpret for them, Eliza sunk down in a few days, and was laid almost helpless in the same room with Sails and Bewley. On the eighth day after the first butchery, three Indians came into the room and said that the great white chief at Umatilla had said that tliey must kill the two sick men to stoj) the dying of ' their people. (Hinman and NVliitman testify the great chief was Bishop Blanchette. ) They tore off the table-legs and commenced lieating Sails and Bewley, and Avere full lialf an hour in killing them — their victims struggling over the floor and around the room, the blood and brains flying over my child, who was compelled to hear the blows and groans and witness the terrible scene. Miss Bewley attempted to rush iu from another room, w4ion she heard the agonies of her dying brother, but the women held her back. The bodies were thrown out at the door, and w ere not allowed to be buried for three days. THE TRAGIC FATE OF THK AMIABLK MISS BEWLEY, FORCED BY THE JESUITS INTO THE HANDS OF THE SAVAGES — HER ALMOST MIRACULOUS DELIVERANCE— THE SAVAGE MORE A HUMAN llEING THAN THE JESUIT — ROMANISM IN OREGON — MISS BEVVLEY'S DEPOSITION. The next day, while the bi'other of Miss Bewley lay yet unburied at the door, my child Eliza, looking out of the door as she lay sick, and seeing an Indian ride up lead- a horse, cried out, ''Oh there is Tashe — iny horse; now I know the Indians have killey the names of .lames and Red Wolf, came after Mr. Spald- ing's horses, which he had left with IJronilette, and brought us the news that Mr. Spald- ing had escaped and reached his family alive in the Xez Perce country, and that Mr. Caniield had also escaped and readied the same place. And what was to me most joyful news, they said efforts were being made to deliver all the captives. Although I could see no hope, the bare mention was a great comtbrt to my terrible situation. "The next day, while the NezPerces were yet there, word came that Mr. Ogden had arrived at Walla- Walla from Vancouver, with men, boats, and goods, to deliver the captives from the Indians, and that he had sent for the Cayuses and \\'alla-Wallas to come into council. Only those who have been in like fearful circumstances can have any idea of my frantic joy. I could not eat or sleep, or sit still, although the chills and the fever continued severe. 1 watched every motion of the trees, the birds, and the Indians, and every hour seemed a weelc. Three days after the tirst news of Mr. Ogden, Mr. Brouilettc called to me in the morning to come out to him. He was on his horse to go to Walla-Walla. My heart leaped tor joy with the ho})e that I was to be taken with him, Init as I came up his look, as he iiointed his thiger, chilled my blood, and he said : 'Look here, if you go to that Indi.in's lodge to-night, stay there; don't come to my house again. Stay at one place or the other.' "My blood curdled. In an instant I saw my fate was lixed, and not by the Indians; my breath almost stopped, and I only replied: ' Bntwhatcan I do? The Indians will drag me away.' He replied: ' Remember what I tell you," and putspurs to hismnle, and was soon out of sight. I sank upon the ground almost senseless, and lay some time, but recovering a little, I begged (iod in mercy to take away my life. The chills returned as I lay u[)ou the frozen ground, and it seemed as if thetlesh would shake off my bones. The Indian would tind me where I was, and I dreaded the house, but had to return to the bishop's room. " Tln^ fever and the pains that followed were terrific, and yet the fearful forebodings for the future would make me forget these for a moment. I told one of the young jjriests what Brouilette had ordered, and begged him to protect me. He said the bishfip did not like to ha^ e women al)out his lioust;, but if the Indian came for me I wouhl have to go. I asked if they would let nie come back in the morning. He told nie to come. When the Indian came in the evening, I tried to kee]) out of his way by going from one room to aiu)ther, into the bishop's loom, tlien into the kitchen among the men; he followed me, and tried to crowd me out of the door. He put my bonnet and shawl on. When his head was turned, I threw these under the bed and he did not tind them, but he finally dragged me away without them. "But thaidvs, everlasting thanks be toOod. my deliverance came nmst unexpectedly. On the 28th of December, in the morning, while I w^as yet at the Five Crows' lodge, an Indian rode up leading a horse and handed me a note from Mr. ( )gden, stating the joy- ful news that he had finally succeeded in redeeming all the unfortunate captives; that he had redeemed me. 1 had nothing to fear and nothing to do but to accompany the Indian as fast as I could, comfortably, to Walla-Walla. I could hardly believe my eyes. I bowed upon my knees with a grateful heart, and thanked u)y Saviour for his great mercy to me. Tlie Five Crows pi'cpared tea and a good breakfast for me, and jiut a new blanket and buffalo robe upon the saddle to make it comfortable for me to ride and for sleeping at night, and a thick shawl around me, and assisted me on my EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 37 horse, and bade me goodbye kindly and with much feeling, and gave me food for the journey. Again I was riding with a lone Indian over the prairies, but with very dif- ferent feelings from those of three weeks before. Indeed, I cannot describe my feel- ings. My joy was unspeakable, and yet I might be seized by the hands that had de- ■ceived me in the hour of greatest jieril. Although I was more fit for the sick-bed than a journey on horseback of 55 miles in the winter, yet I found myself urging the horse sometimes upon the lope. It was a gentle and easy-going horse. The night was cold, with a thick fog. The Indian found a good camping place on the Walla-Walla, and soon had a good fire, and replenished it several times through the night, seemingly for my benefit. Although I had bedding enough, and the good fire to keep me com- fortable, my joy kept me from sleep. At dawn the Indian was up, built a rousing fire, and brought in the horses which he had hobbled out, and took great pains to prepare my breakfast, with tea in a cup he had with him, and then after he wor- shipped, in which I joined most heartily, although I understood but a few of his words, he saddled my horse and arranged my robe and blanket and helped me on, and we rode oft'; and when we came in sight of the fort, the Indian pointed it out to me, and said, ' House,' ' suyapuaiat' — American woman. I thought my heart would jump out of my bosom. "As we rode up. Governor Ogden and Mr. McBean, with several Catholic priests and half-breed women, came out. Mr. Ogden took me gently from the horse, as a father, and said, 'Thank God, I have got you safe at last. I had to pay the Indians more for you than for all the other captives, and I feared they would never give you up.' Mr. McBean provided a good bed for me, and treated me very kindly. They took me into Mr. Osborne's room, wbere I found Mrs. Osborne very sick, and her hip bones cut through the skin on the tloor. All the captives from Walleiptu were brought in that night. Two days alter, Mr. Spalding and family, and Mr. Craig and Canfield, were brought in Ijy the Nez I'erces. "LORINDA BEWLEY. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 12th day of December, 1848, at Oregon Citv, Oregon Territory. G. WALLING, Justice of the Peace, Deposition of John KirAzey. On my way to this country, with my family, last fall, I called at Fort ^Valla-Walla to exchange my teams and wagon for horses. There were at the Ibrt two Roman Catholic priests. During my stay of about two days, Mr. McBean, in the presence of my wife, said the fathers had ofiered to purchase Dr. Whitman's station, but Dr. Whitman had refused to sell. He said they had requested the doctor to fix his own price, ane the sport of their atrocities, and furnishing the savages war material to destroy the American set- tlements on the Pacific shores, our American missionary, Dr. Parker, was furnishing protection and safety under the American fiag, at bis own house in China, to Catholic priests, to save them from death at the hands of the exasperated Chinese, and with his 38 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. own Protestant hands smoothed the dying pillow of one of them who expired soon after he got him to his house. (See Dr. Parker's report as United States minister to China in the documents at Washington.) Testimony of Miss Bewletj. Questions to Miss Bewley: When did thepriest arrive?— Answer. Wednesday, while the bodies were being prepared for the grave. The bodies were collected into the boxes on Tuesday evening. Q. Did the Indians bury a vial or bottle of the doctor's medicine f — A. They said they did. Jo. Stautield madetheboxto bury it in, and the Indians said they buried it. Q. Why did they bury \tt — A. They said the priests said it was poison. Stautield and Nichols were their interpreters to us. Q. How did they obtain this vialf — A. The Indians said the priest found it among the doctor's medicine, and showed it to thein, and told them if it broke it would poison the whole nation. Q. Was there much stir among the Indians about this vialf — A. Yes, a great deal. Q. Why did the Indians kill your brother? — A. Edward Telankaikt (chief's son) returned from the Umatilla, and told us (after they had killed him) the great chief had told them their disease would spread. (It will be seen by Iliuman's deposition, an and lay down; but I noticed the Frenchman was much agitated; he would ■walk up and dowu tlie river, and come and look earnestly at me, and go away, and come back again. Finally he came nj), and fixing his eyes ui)on me exclaimed, ' Very bad man, me, Mr. Hiumaii. Big lie I tell you^no uian dead at Walla-Walla; but Dr. Whituuin bedeail; all the Americans at Doctor's dead; Indians have killed them; I see them with my eyes, the day before I start; I see Mrs. Whitman dead; Indians got all woineu and children prisoners. I take letter to A'ancouver forthe company to eouie quick and get all American women and children before Indian he kill tlieui.' Mr. Hiuman said,' Why did you not tell me at home ? Now the Indians have prol)ably come dowu and killed my family.' 'Very bad man, Mr. Hiuman; but the priests tell me not to tell you and Americans at Dalles. If I tell you they no pardon my sins ; but I have to tell you ; too much terror here' — putting his hand to his breast. Mr. Hiuman knew not whether to turnback to save his family, or to push ahead to give the company the news and the opportunity to send up the sooner ; but he pushed on, reached Vaucouver, ■went into Mr. Ogden's office, and delivered the letters and reported the awful news. 'Just what I expected,' said Mr. Ogden, ' when those eight priests went up a few weeks ago.' The letters being directed to Mr. Douglass, they all walked into his office, and, throwing down the letters, Mr. Ogden said, ' There,seewhat a war in religion has done. The good doctor is dead. I knew there would be trouble when tiiose priests went up.' 'Tut, tut, Mr. Ogden, don't be too hasty,' said Mr. Douglass, and opened the letters and read: 'Dr. Whitman is killed; Mrs. Whitman is killed; Indians are after Spalding, &c., &c., and moreover parties are fitting out; one to go to the mill, one to go to the Spokane mission to kill all at those stations; and to go to Clear Water; and one to g — my God, Hiuman, why are you here ? — to the Dalles.' " " Sure enough," said Mr. Hinman. " Why was that Frenchman forbid to tell me; and I only heard of it just up here at Cape Horn.'" The tables were now turned upon Mj-. Douglass, who replied: "You must remember that man was in trying circumstances." Mr. Douglass tran- scribed that letter to Governor Abernathy for the "Oregon Spectator,"' but that sen- tence was leftout, and but for Mr. Hinman's providential presence the world would not have known that the man who was bearing a letter l)y the Dalles, containing a declara- tion that a party ofsavage murderers was to start to kill the families at that place, was forbidden to warn them of their danger on pain of not ha\ ing his sins pardoned; and when asked by Mr. Hiuman about tlae doctor, said he did not believe he was dead, but he was the man sent out to look for horses, attracted by a crowd about the doctor"s, who rode there on Tuesday and saw the dead bodies lying about; saw the doctor's body and Mrs. Whituian's and returned to Walla-Walla that evening and started the next morning for ^ ancouver with the letters. I*. B. Whitman says, in his depositiim before Esquire Purdy, of Salem: "Abouttwenty minutes after Mr. Hinman and the Frenchman had left for Vancouver, a crowd of Indians came into the room and sat down silently for some time, and then exclaimed, "Why are you not crying?" "Why?"' "Because your father and mother are dead ; all the Americans are dead ; the Caynse have killed them.'" "How do you know ?" "The Frenchmen told us that he saw them lying dead about the doctor's house just before he started; and he has gone to Husushnihai ( Whitehead's Vancouver) for them to send up men and goods to purchase the many cap- tive women and children." "That can not be," I replied; "the Frenchman told us that he had not seen the doctor, my uncle, for two weeks, and did not believe he was dead; but that all the meu atthe fort except himselfand Mr. McBean weredead ; that he'was going to Vancouver for more n:en to man the post. Besides, we have received no let- ters from Walla-Walla ; Imt if my uncle and the Americans at his place had been killed, we surely would have received letters from Mr. McBean or the priests." There were six Americans at the Dalles, viz: Mr. and Mrs. Hinman (missionaries), Mr. and EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 41 Mrs. McKinuey, (emigrants,) P. B. Whitman, and Doctor Saifrdns. As they bad re- ceived no intimation from tbe Freuchniau, wlio was direct from Walla- Walla, and had received no letters from that ])ost, vrhich they certainly would, had the doctor and the emigrants been killed, as represented by the Indians, they could not believe for a mo- ment the report of the Indians. But still the Indians about the station became more and more excited from day to day, and hnally took their women and eftects to the mountains; and the day before ilr. Hinman's return, several painted, naked Cayuse showed themselves in the vicinity of the station. It is a question of vital importance to American Protestants, not of that day only, but of the present day, why that Frenchman was ordered not to let Americans at the Dalles know their danger; why he was threatened with that most fearful of all pun- ishments, more than lines or imprisonment, to deter him from telling them. Why did not Mr. McBean or the priests write by that messenger to the Dalles, when they knew a party of the murderers was soon to start to kill them ? Why was the French- man told to obtain Mr. Hinman to go on with him, if possible, thus leaving his family more exposed / Questions to Mr. Hinman: Did you ever hear Dr. Whitman express fears concern- ing influence which Catholics were exerting among the Indians? Hinman's answer : I have heard him say several times that he had no fears but that the mission would prosper only from the Catholic influence. Q. Do you know anything of the Catholic Jauder'/ — A. I saw one in the hands of the Indians at the Dalles, and heard them speak of others. The object of this paint- ing was to represent Protestants leading Indians to hell, and Catholics leading In- dians to heaven. Q. Did you ever hear the Indians say they had been told by Catholics and French- men that American missionaries were causing them to die? — A. Yes, very often. Q. Who would you understand by the term "great chief," as used by the Indians ? — A. The principal white nian among them. Q. Who was the principal white man at Umatilla at the time of Whitman's ma;s- sacre? — A. Bishop Blanchette. Q. How did Dr, Whitman regard the Cayuse as to their readiness to receiv'e instruc- tions? — A. The last time I saw him, which was a few weeks before the butchery, he was greatly encouraged. Q. Did the Krenchman tell you that he saw the dead bodies of Dr. and Mrs. Whit- man? — A. He said he was out on Tuesday looking after the horses of the j^ost; saw a great multitude of tbe Indians about the doctor's house ; rode there ; saw the bodies of Dr. and 31rs. Whitman and others lying about. The Indians told him to alight and not be afraid. He saw the doctor and John lying in the house; ]\irs. Whitman, Mr. Rodgers and Francis lying in the mud near the kitchen door; others at a little dis- tance. Crows were upon them ; they were badly cut to nieces. ALANSON HINMAN. Subscribed and swurn to before me this 9th day of April, 1849. JOST .1. HEMBREE, Justice of the Peace in and for the county of Yamhill, 0. T. AMERICAN CONGRESS vs. PROTESTANTISM IN OREGON. WITNESS FOR THE DEFENSE, NO. 2 — ^VHAT THE PEOPLE OF OREGON AND WASHINGTON THINK OF EXECUTIVE DOCUMENT NO. 38. To the hoiiorahJc the Senate and Houseof Representatives of the Congress of the United States: The memorial of the undersigned, Henry H. Spalding, of the State of Oregon, late missionary of the American Boardof Commissioners of I'V) reign Missions to the Indians, in the former Territory of Oregon, respectfully I'epresents : That Marcus Whitman, M. 1)., a citizen of the United States, and a native of the State of New York, did, in 1836, by ofiticial permit from the War Department of the United States, proceed to the Paciflc shores, then almost wholly unknown to our jieo- ple and totally unappreciated, and ostensibly in the joint occupancy of the United States and Great Britain, but really under the exclusive control of the Hudson's Bay Company, a British monopoly, goveined by a board of directors in London, with 55 sworn officers in the Territory, and 515 articled men, and over 800 half-breeds and all the Indian tribes under their control, with a line of well-established and strongly fortified posts extending from the Paciflc to the Atlantic shores, and having com- plete control of the Paciflc coast for over 2,000 miles, deriving a yearly revenue of over $40,000, and who had succeeded by their power and the aid of the savages in forcing the last American trader from the country. And that said Dr. Whitman, by order of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, established an American mission in the valley of the Walla-Walla, in said Territory of Oregon, and by his travels as missionary made himself acquainted 42 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. with the valiie of the country, both for settlement and for its mineral wealth; and haA'ing' demonstrated tlie problem that wagons and iamilies conld cross the monntaius and the continent by l)ringing his wagons through in 183(3. And that said Whitman, by his sleepless vigilance, became convinced that a deeji- laid plan was about culminating to secure this rich country of Oregon Territory to Great Britain from misrepresentations on the part of Great Britain and for want of information as to tlie cliaracter and value of the country on the part of the Govern- ment of the United States. And that to prevent the sale and transfer of said Territory, and the conse(£uent loss to the United States of this great Northwest and its valuable seaboard, and the great commercial considerations therewith, said Whit\n;in did, in the dead of winter, at his own expense, and without asking or expecting a dollar from any source, cross the con- tinent, amid the snows of the Rocky Mountains and the bleakness of the intervening plains, inhabited by hostile savages, suttering severe hardships and perils from being compelled to swim broad, ra])id, and ice-lloating rivers, and to wander lost in the ter- rific snow-storms, subsisting on mule and dug meat, and reached the city of Washing- ton not an hour too soon, confronting the Hritisli agents Ashlnirton, Fox, and Simp- son, who, there is evidence to show, in a short time would have consununated their plans, and secured a part, if not all, of our territory west of the mountains to Great Britain, and by his own personal knowledge disproving their allegations, anil by com- municating to President Tyler important information concerning the country, and the fact that he had taken his wagons and mission families through years liefore, and that he )iroposed taking back a wagon-train of emigrants that season, did thereby prevent the sale and loss of this our rich Pacific domain to the people of the United States. And that said Whitman did then return to Oregon Territory and conduct the first wagon-train of 1,000 souls to the Columbia River, thereby greatly increasing Ameri- can inrtuence, and completely breaking the infiuence of the British monopoly and adding immensely to the courage and wealth of the little American settlement, and continued, at his mission station in the Walla-Walla Valley, to furnish needed sup- plies to the yearly emigrants, and a resort for them to rest antrrecruit, until he and his heroic wife and her equally heroic associate, Mrs. Spalding, together with seven- teen other emigrants who had stopped to winter, were brutally destroyed in 1847 by the Indians, and the American settlements in Middle Oregon broken up, and a bloody war to exterminate the Americans on the Pacific coast coumienced. And that there is abundant proof to show that the said Whitman massacre, and the long and expensive wars that followed, were commenced by the above-said British monopoly for the purpose of breaking up the American settlements and of regaining the territory, and that the.v were especially chagrined against the said Whitman as being the ])rincipal agent in disappointing their schemes. And said proof consists in— 1. Apamj)hlet ])ublished by an agent from Enrope, connected with the Hudson's Bay Company, who was on the ground during the bloody tragedy, and walked unharmed amid the slaughter, which lasted eight days, encouraging the savages, in which he says, "The massacre of Waiilatpu has not been committed by the Indians in hatred of the heretics. If Americ^ans only have been killed, it is because the war has been declared by the Indians against the Americans only, and not against foreigners; and it was in their quality as American citizens and not as Protestants that the Indians killed them." 2. The said agent, with his associates and officers of the Hudson's Bay Company, turned out the escaped Americans from their posts, one of wliom was murdered by the Indians, and they also refused admittance to mothers and their infants during the slaughter, and with their own hands, lor fifteen nights, handed one of our Amer- ican girls to the savages, to be the sport of their atrocities. .3. One of the overland companions of this agent, from Canada, gave the signal for the tomahawk to commence, aiul shot Mrs. Wliitman with his own hand. 4. Defying the infant provisional government, and remaining in the hostile coun- try furnishing onr enemies with, war material after that country was closed against all whites. 5. Attempting to furnish the combined hostiles from the English post, at Fort Van- couver, in the Hudson's Bay Com))any's boats, with Hudson's Bay men in charge of one of their agents, with over four thousand pounds of powder and ball, and three cases of guns, which were t.iken from them at Fort Wascopum by Lieutenant Rogers, only fifteen miles sliort of the hostile camp, waiting at the river Hes Chutes, who boasted three days before that such ammunition was coming up by such agents to them, ;iud that when they obtained it thej- would fall upon the American settlements and destroy them, and take their women and cattle and herds. 6. The sudden building of fortifications at Fort Vancouver. 7. The significant boast of Sir George Sim])son, only n few months before this bloody work commenced, i)ublished in his Voyage Around the World, viz: "I defy the American Congress to establish their Atlantic tariff in the Pacific ports.'' It is not, therefore, too much to say that Dr. Marcus Whitman and those heroic EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 43 women lost their lives iu consequence of their services aforesaid, which they so heroic- ally and lavishly gave to their country and a pure Christianity. And that a document has been published by order of Congress, entitled Executive Document No. 38, of the TJjirty-fifth Congress, (doubtless through one of those inad- vertencies which sometimes occur in the proceedings of deliberative bodies,) which document casts severe retiections upon the memory of said Dr. Whitman and his com- patriots, as also upon the early Protestant missions in Oregon, attempting to show that they rendered no benefit to the country, but "set a Itad example to the races among whom they chose to dwell," and were the real causes of the massacre and of the war. In connection with this memorial, the undersigned respectfully invites attention to the following documents bearing on the case, viz: Document A. Memorial to Governor Ballard, signed by E. R. Geary, and some 700 citizens of Oregon, and Elwood Evans and others, of Washington Territory. Document B. Resolutions of the Presbyterian Church, (Old School,) signed by A. L. Lindsley, moderator, and E. E. Geary, stated clerk. Document C. Resolut'ons of the Oregon Presbytery of the Cumberland Presby- terian Church, W. R. Bishop, moderator; C. Wooley, stated clerk. Document D. Resolutions of Oregon United Presbyterian Church, Jeremiah Dick, moderator; T. S. Kenilal, stated clerk. Document E. Resolutions of the Oregon Association of the Congregational Church, G. II. Atkinson, moderator; C. N. Terry, clerk. Document F. Resolutions of the Oregon Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, Bishop Kingsley, moderator; C. C. Strattou, clerk. Document G. Resolutions of the Pleasant Bute Baptist Church, State of Oregon, J. W. Warmouth, moderator; H. J. C. Averill, clerk. Document H. Resolutions of the Oregon lirotherhood of the Christian Church, J. M. Harris, moderator; W. H. Rowland, clerk. Document 1. Resolutions of the Steuben Presbytery, Presbyterian Church, New York, D. Henry Palmer, J. H. Hotehkiss, O. F. Marshall, committee. Document J. Memorial of the citizens of Steuben County, Alleghany County, and Chemung County, New York. Signed by O. F. Marshall, George Edwards, J. W, Hoffman, and others. Document K. Memorial of the citizens of Oberlin, Ohio, signed by President Fair- child, and others. Now, therefore, in view of the great wrong and injustice done; to the cause of Prot- estant missitms, on the ground, to the memory of martyrs whose services there were of so signal advantage to the country as such, as well as to the cause of religion, and the undersigned personally, the present Congress is respectfully and earnestly peti- tioned so far to review the action of the Twenty-lifth Congress, as to issue, in docu- mentary form, a suitable vindication of the parties mentioned. Your honorable body is respectfully but earnestly requested to publish, in a like Congressional document, the reply or manifesto herewith transmitted. And your memorialist feels the utmost assurance that the sacred regard for the truth of history ever entertained, and the high value ever placed upon unselfish patriotism by your honorable body, will lead you at once to see both the justice and the patriot- ism of his humble praver. HENRY PI. SPALDING, Of Over/ on. We hope Congress will appoint a comiuittee of investigation, and if faithful and patriotic men and women have been publicly wronged, let them be righted as pub- licly before the nation. — Neto York Observer, October, 1867. Official slander of martyred missionaries attempted. — Dayton (Ohio) Telescope, Jan- uary, 1870. PiiELPS, Dodge & Co., (Cliff street, between .John and Fulton,) New York, December 29, 1870. My Dear Sir: This will introduce the Rev. H. H. Spalding, long a missionary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Oregon, who visits Washington by the advice of many friends to see if the great wrong done to the mem- ory of his companion in the mission, Rev. Dr. Whitman, cannot be rectified by Congress. I have known of the facts for many years, and the inclosed, if you can take time to look them over, will deejjly interest you, and show you how our Government has, no doubt iguorautly, done great injustice to one who deserved the highest com- mendation for what he had done for the nation. I beg you to fake a little time in looking into this matter, and consulting with other friends of Protestant religion, to see if we cannot wipe out this stain. Very respectfully, yours, W. E. DODGE. Hon. James G. Blaine, Speaker United States House of Eepresentatives, IVashington, D. C, 44 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. PiiiLADELrniA, Januarij 5, 1871. I fullv concur in the sentiments and wishes of Hon. W. E. Dodge. JAY COOKE. A like circular was addressed by the eminent patriots to Senators Colfax, Patterson, Pomeroy, Buckingham, and Wilson ; to Cattell, Armstrong, and Maynard, of the House of Representatives. Office of the Oregon Central Railroad Company, Salem, Xovemher 8, 1869. Dear Sir: Your favor of 29th ultimo came duly to hand per last mail; contents noted. I assure you I will gladly do what I can to aid in rendering justice to those noble-minded men and women, (martyrs to truth and a pure Christianity,) which our too lenient, and in this instance criminally careless. Government permitted itself to abuse in such unscrupulous manner as was done by the publication, authoritatively, of Ex. Doc. ;}8, referred to in yours. Very truly, yours, .J. R. MOORES. James Blakely, Es<]., Chairman of Committee. Document K. Whereas tlie United States Congress published in Executive Document No. 38, 1859, an ex parte statement of what is known as the Whitman massacre, and of the causes that led to it, which reflects severely upon the devoted missionaries of the American Board then laboring on the Pacific shores, and does great injustice to those faithful martyrs to a pure Christianity : Therefore resolved, That we, citizens of Oberliu, unite with the thousands of patri- otic brethren on the Pacitic slopes in respectfully aud earnestly petitioning Congress to take the steps requisite to correct the wrong ito the memory of the patriotic dead, aud extend justice to the living. JAS. H. FAIRCHILD, President. JOHN M. ELLIS, Professor of InieUectual Philosophy. JUDSON SMITH, Professor of Ecclesiastical History. C. H. CHURCHILL, Professor «/ Mathematics^ G. W. STEELE, Professor of Music. S. F. PORTER, Conqrcrjdiional Minister. R. THEO. CROSS, Principal of Preparatory Department. G. W. SHURTLEFF, Profe>lishment. If a settler located anywhere against the company's will he had to pay the forfeit. (Hearing of these jirojected plans in the United States, these Jesuitical rascals took the earliest nnans possible to head off' the enter])rises and to wrest the whole country from us and out Government.) Dr. McLaughlin received orders, as the governor of this western liranch of this company, to dispatch agents to Fort Hall and order them to stop the American emigration, and, if possible, to prevent them from crossing the Blue Mountains. And if that lamented man, Dr. Marcus Whit- S. Ex. Doc. 37 4 48 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. man, bad not l)een murdered, as well as papers burned, we sbould bave bad tbe evidence wbicb this ((inipany feared. Mr. Speaker, tbere is a tale about tbe murder of tbis Dr. Wbitman ol' no little inter- est to tbis Hudson's Bay Company. Wbeu Wbitman, wbo piloted tbe emigration of 1843, arrived at Fort Hall, wben tbey found tbese men would not be deterred l(y any otber means, they threatened to bar tbem by tbe Hudson's Bay Company, wbo bad possession of tbe country and wbo would not allow tbem to settle. Of tbe unirder of Dr. Wbitman and tbat great number of American emigrants, wbicb murder I bave no more doubt was iustigaled by tbe Hudson's Bay Comx)any tban I doubt my exist- ence. — Hon. S. 11. TItKrston's speech in the House of lieprescntutives, December '26, 18."30. We entertain a very bigb respect for tbe Rev. H. H. Spalding. He left bome and friends and comfort, and passed, witb tbe wife of bis cboice, into a distant wilder- ness, to rear a family and wear out bis own life and tbat oi' his estimable wife in teach- ing tbe arts of civilization and tbe glad tidings of salvation to tbe benighted savages. Mr. Spalding and bis associates own no property in Oregon. What they bave grown and reared bas been so much saved to and lor tbe society whose stewards they are. We bave seen a disposition to undervalue tbe objects and efforts oi' mission- aries. This is wrong, and a moment's reflection will satisfy all of tbe injustice of imputing selfisb motives to tbe missionaries. Tbe importance of tbe country, as described by tbem, lirougbt the citizens of Oregon here. We can readily see what brougbt the Hudson's Bay Company here; but what broiujht the miss onai-ies, who, with their lives in their bands, led the way witb their wives into this country, wben it was almost unknown and entirely unappreciated^ It would appear that there is but one answer; it was tlie high and boly estimation wbicb tbey placed upon the importance of souls and tbe command of their Great Master in Heaven. — Judge Wait, editor of the Oregon Spectator. Jnly 18, 181N. 2. On pages 18 and 27, tbat tbe missionaries promised tbe Cayuse and Nez Perces "to pay them every year for their lands;'" also, "to come every year a big ship loaded witb goods to lie divided among tbe ludians; not to be sold, but to be given to them; " also, " jilows and hoes, not to sold but given to you." Answer. I believe tbis to be false. GEO. ABERNATHY. Their instructions from the board were directly tbe opposite. J. S. GRIFFIN. (See letter of Presbyterian Committee to Blakely.) 3. On page 27, " that tbe want of fulttllment ol' tbese promises was one of tbe true causes remote and immediate of the whole evil." Answers. I believe tbis false. GEO. ABERNATHY. Slanders of tbe worst description. J. S. GRIFFIN. 4. On pages 19 and 26, tbat "Dr. and Mrs. Whitman were severe and bard to tbem, (Indians,) and ill-treated tbem;'" tbat Spalding and wile were so " bad" tbe "Nez Perces blockaded the missionaries" in the house "for mox'e tban a month;" that the Catholics were " sent three times to induce tbe Indians to set tbe missionaries at liberty." Answers. I believe tbis all false. GEO. ABERNATHY. All tbe above charges against Dr. Whitman are untrue, I am certain. Dr. and Mrs. Whitman were good people, and lost their lives laboring for those who murdered tbem; and tbat tlie name of Mrs. Spalding will be cherished while a single Nez Perces remains. R. NEWELL. 5. On page 28, that "missionaries worked only for themselves;" "refused obsti- nately from year to year to pay the price tbey had promised for their lands," and "persisted to keep them;" " neglected tbe Indians:'' did, taught, helped, nor made "nothing for them unless tbey sbould be paid a great price." Answers. Also false. G. A. A Jesuit slander, repeated by Congress, to their shame and tbe shame of all Americans. J. S. GRIFFIN. Totally untrue. R. NEWELL. 6. On pages 3. 21, 22, 25, 28, and 31, tbat tbe Protestant missionaries i^roduced " evil effects upon tbe Indians;'' "instead of Christianizing the Indians, showed a very bad EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 49 example to the races;" "did not benefit the Indians;" "made them worse;" "neither taught,uor helped, nor furnished them with anything ;neither written norprintedbooks; neither schools nor board, nor clothing for boarding children ; no room or care for the sick; no medicine for the nation, and provided no saw or flour mill for the benefit of the nation; no shops, no church, no spinning and weaving room; helped them to nothing, neither seeds, plows, hoes, nor cattle; neither sheep, orchards, ditches, nor farms; never visited the sick, nor gave an Indian a piece of meat when hungry; neither translated nor printed for them any part of the Bible." Answer. I believe all false. How any set of men could make such assertions I cannot understand, as thev are directly opposed to the facts in the case. GEO. ABERNATHY. All slanders of the worst description; and it was only as the .Jesuits were running Congress that that body ever published such scandal. J. S. GRIFFIN. Totally untrue. WM. GEIGER, Jr. 7. On page 28, that "the missionaries (Whitman and Spalding) took their (Indians') horses, cattle, and grain," and "traded them to the emigrants," "without dividing with the Indians, and were getting rich." Answer. Do not believe a word of it. G. A. A Jesuit slander, repeated by Congress. J. S. GRIFFIN. 8. On pages 30 and 31, that "the applications of the missionaries to get excessive riches," " with excessive seeking for temporal welfare." Answer. I believe the efibrts of the missionaries were to elevate and benefit the Indians, not to obtain riches. GEO. ABERNATHY. Spalding and Whitman had not a dollar salary, and were allowed by the board to draw but JfoOO a year for each family, with which to do everything in that " great and terrible wilderness," destitute of everything, 200 miles from nearest mill, and 400 from shop or store, and with that to feed, clothe, house themselves, to do all mis- sionary work, to put up shops, mills, churches, school-houses, and printing office, open farms, and keep all going. J. S. GRIFFIN. I think the missionaries were not allowed any salary, and were required to prac- tice the most strict economy, in order to support their large families. Dr. Whitman had eleven children, (white.) Mr. Spalding had some twenty boarding children^ (Indian,) beside the large Indian school. A. HINMAN. / The missionaries (Spalding and Whitman) owned no property. — Oregon Spectator of July, 1848. All these results were accomplished at an expense to the American Board of Missions of $500 per annum for each mission family ; the enterprise and indefatigable industry of the missionaries did the rest with native help. — Sacramento I'nion, July 10, 1869. In this lonely situation they (Spalding and wife) have spent the best j)art of their days for no other compensation than a scanty subsistence. .JOEL PALMER. 9. On pages 26, 22, and 23, that Dr. and Mrs. Whitman and Spalding "sent to the States for poison to kill the Cayuse and Nez Perces ;" received poison by the emigrants that year; distributed it to kill tigers,as he (Whitman) "said,laughing," that Whitman and wife and Spalding w^ere overheard to say " Such an Indian has so many horses, and such an Indian has so many spotted horses; when the Indians are all dead, our boys will drive them up, and we will give them to our friends, who will be on from the States and want to settle on these good lands, and we will live easy." Answer. Any one that knew Dr. Whitman would at once say this is all untrue. It is probably made to turn attention from the true cause of the massacre. GEORGE ABERNATHY. The entire statements are as false as hell itself. So far as my means of informa- tion have enabled me to judge, there never has been one single incident from which any one of thtrabove nine statements could have originated other than from a depraved heart, and wirh an intent to falsify. JOEL PALMER. 5U EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IX OREGON. j\Iy reply to the ealunmies nuiler the above nine statenieuts is, to my persoual kiiowleclge it was entirely the reverse. L N. GILBERT. The entire uiue statements are perfectly false as can l)e. P. H. HATCH. Ihese statements under these nine heads are maliciously false, to my personal knowledge, and n)ade, as I believe, for no other purjiose than to shift the responsi- bility of the Whitman massacre from those guilty Catholics to those who were as innocent as the President of the I'uited States. A. HINMAN. Nothing further from the truth than the entire nine statements, and so proved at the time, and Congress was wofnllv ignorant that they did not know it. J. S. GRIFFIN. Now, therefore, it is resolved by this presbytery, that in the opinion of this presby- tery, from a vast array of most reliable testimony now before us on the subject, the unfavorable statements made in this congressional document concerning the Protes- tent missii'uaries in Oregon are in the highest degree false and slanderous. — Willa- mette I're-sbi/tern of the Cumherland Freshiiteriaii Cliiirch, May, 18(59. Your committee find, from overwhelming evidence from the testiujony of different United States officers, civil and military, and from other citizens of most reliable credibility, that this congressional document has involved in it so many prominent and al)solute falsehoods as to cast most fallacious and infamous reriectio s u^ion the characters of the elevated and faithful missionaries of the American iioard there laboring at that time, — Extract from resolutions adopted bij the Congregational Associa- tion of Oregon, June, 1869. The notoriety which these atrocities speedily obtained naturally aroused the insti- gators to attempt at concealment, where secrecy could avail and at self-defense where the facts cnuld be neither suppressed nor distorted. They have songht to exculpate themselves by various expedients, and especially in the publication above referred to, in which the character of Dr. Whitman anil his associates is traduced, their motives assailed, their actions misrepresented, and thus a deliberate attempt is made to stigmatize the fame of men and women which is far above reproach, and whose services as patriots and ])hilanthropists entitle them to the lasting gratitude of the nation. — Extract from resolutions adopted hj/ tlie Oregon Presbyterij of the Old School Fresbi/terian Cluirch, Jniie, 1.(00 volumes and burn them. You owe it to yourselves; yon owe it to the age; you owe it to Oregon. The most significant and ominous feature of this whole affair is, not that the Indians could be induced to butcher their teachers; not that the .Jesuit priests could pay down the savages on the s]»ot for butchering the heretics, by baptizing their blood-stained children while the murders were going on, and by handing out. with their own hands, our helpless cai)tive young women and infants to be the sport of the tomahawk and brutalities worse than death ; not that they could meditate the destruc- tion, by the tomahawk, of the entire infant settlements, to gloat their hellish hate of Protestantism and Americans, and actually did ship up the Columbia River a great quantityof ammunition for the combined savagehosts waiting at theDes Chutes for it, as tiiey themselves announced three days before it arrived at the Dalles, where it was intercepted at the last critical moment. This is all in keeping with Romanism; but EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 51 that Cougress should offer this iiifamous docuuieut to the world as ^' an inieresting and authentic diapler in tlie liistoru of Prolesianl missions.'' This actiou of the Exectiveaud of Congress speaks a lauguagc louder than words can litter. It is a direct insult to the Protestant Church. — From the Report adopted bij the Christian Churclt. in Linn Count 11, Oref/on, October, 1869. Also, by the annual meeting of said body, for Oregon, in Polk County, in 1870. These proofs, in the Oregon publications of the day, drew out a lengthy publication in the Freemen's Journal, New York, 1848. headed " Protestnnisni in Oregon," given with all the sophistry of the Jesuit mind, and which directly attempted to show that the missionaries were horse thieves and poisoners, laboring only to make money out of the Indians, giving them no instruction, and continually breaking i)lighted faith with them. That they brought destruction upon themselves, and were entirelj' unworthy of confidence. The publication of it deserves little notice, only as it was embodied word for word in the report of J. Ross Browne, and publislied as an executive docu- ment by order of the House of Rejiresentatives. Tbirty-tifth Congress, and went forth to the word a gross slander on American missionaries, who lost their lives in the cause they had espoused, and Avhose memories should be honored so long as the story of the early settlement of Oregon is told. There is no possible excuse for Mr. Browne. He either maliciously took this course to slander the memory of martyred dead, or he was too heedless of great principles and of the mission intrusted to him to give it con- scientious performance. — Sacramento U)iion, Jnly, 1869. And this false narrative was, by Congress, published to the world, with no reply to its enormous statements. It is one of the strongest, shrewdest lueasnres of the Jesuits of which we have read in American history, to get Congress to publish this narra- tive of over fifty pages, filled with most erroneous charges against the Protestant missionaries, trying to throw off from themselves the well-founded iiublic belief that they were the real causes of this horrible massacre, and place the blame npon Amer- icans. Also, that Browne should, from choice or otherwise, become a tool of these Jesuits to get Congress to publish the false accoaut, virtually sanctioning it as true, and placing it alone among its permanent documents for future reference, is a fact that calls for unmeasured condemnation. — I'he Pacific, of San Fran ci>ico,. Jul y 22, 1869. But to call attention to a great wrong that has been done the memory of these early Christian pioneers by the Congress of the United States. This insidious libel upon those devoted Christian martyrs was ingeniously iialmed upon the Department of the Treasury by J. Ross Browne. The priest, Brouilette, wrote in the most malicious spirit, such as is expected of Rome. As for J. Ross Browne, he richly deserves to be held up to the scorn and contempt of every honest man for sufl'ering himself to be made the mouth-2)ioce for trumpeting forth a gross and malicious calumny against the most self-sacrificing band of Christian pioneers that ever braved the dangers of a pagan wilderness. — American Unionist, Salem, Oregon, ./»«e 26, 1869. It is affirmed in this congression.al document, that " these pages will form an inter- esting and authentic chapter in the history of Protestant missions." And in this 'chapter," the Hon. J. Ross Browne took advantageof his position as an officer of the Government to advance the interest of the Catholic Church, by covering with obloquy the memory of those who sacrificed their lives for the promotion of republican lilierty and Christian civilization, and of utterly destroying the character of the only survivor of that heroic baud, the first to cross the Rocky Mountains and the continent ■with their wives, and the first to plant the seeds of pure Christianity in Eastern Oregon. We refer to the Rev. II. H. Spalding. — From the manifesto adopted by the Oregon Conference of the Alethodist Episcopal Church, 1869. Oregon owes too much to Protestant missions to allow such monstrous falsehoods to go without remonstrance. It is not generosity, nor eulogy of the memories of those who may truly be called the founders of the State, which is desired; it is simple justice. Let honor be given to whom honor is due. — Pacific Chrixtian Advocate. From Rev. Gustavus Hines, missionary and presiding elder, Alethodist Fypiscopal Church. Salem, Okegon, March 22, 1869. This is to certify that I arrived in Oregon in the .spring of 1840; that I have been identified with the country most of the time since that period ; that I have been cog- nizant of, and conversant with, all the early missionary establishments, both under the direction of Spalding and Whitman, in the interior, and of the Lees, in the valley of the Willamette, and that, according to the best of my knowledge, the extracts from congressional documents, as taken by the Rev. R. H. Spalding, involving the character of Dr. Marcus Whitman and wife, Mr. Spalding and wife, as well as others, are wholly and totally false. And I furthermore state that the missionaries referred to, instead of deserving the foul censures of the great American Congress, have been the greatest benefactors of the nation upon the Pacific coast. GUSTAVUS HINES. 52 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. Qnestion. On the other hand, did not the Catholic priests and the Hudson's Bay men oppose the settling of the country by Anierican settlements from the beginning, and the formation of the provisional government? Answer. Thisis mybelief ; thevopposedtheformatiouof theprovisional government. GEO. ABERNATHY. That is my opinion. P. H. HATCH. In every move to promote the settlement and internal improvement of Oregon, Dr. McLaughlin and the Hudson's Bay Company to a man have been opposed, until they were absolutely compelled by force of circumstances to yield. The history of that company in Oregon is no less oppressive and unjust, as regards Ameiican citizens, than was that of their ancestors in 1776. — ITon. .S. li. Thurstou, in ( ongress, heceniber, 1850, from n petition to Congress by -'S early Oregonians — G. Nines, Shorfess, Bears, and others. From Dr. Treat, Secretary of American Board of ( Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1S70. MASSACRE OF DK. WHITMAN — A CHAPTER IN AMERICAN HISTORY — HOW OREGON WAS SAVED TO THE UNITED STATES — WHO EXCITED THE INDIANS TO MURDER THE MISSIONARIES ? Nearly ten years ago a document was published at Washington which seems to have attracted very little notice at first — it may have done its appointed work, neverthe- less — but which has caused within the last few months no small stir beyond the Rocky Mountains. It is known as Executive Document Xo. 38, House of Representatives, Thirty-fifth Congress, first session, and was printed by order of the House of Repre- sentatives. This document contains a "letter of J. Ross Browne, special agent of the Treasury Department, to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, reviewing the origin of the Indian war of 1855-'56 in the Territories of Oregon and ^Vashington.'' This " letter" apparently, and nothing else, was called for by the House of Repre- sentatives ; bnt we find, to our utter astonishment, after perusingits less than twelve pages, with grave questionings here and there, that we have come to an essay of more than fifty pages on "Protestantism in Oregon." We find, too, that this essay was written and published in the New York Freeman's.Jourual. by Rev. J. B. A. Brouilette, vicar general of Walla- Walla, some ten years Ijet'ore the date of Browne's letter. An "American may be pardoned for asking, just here, why an ex-p.arte scatement of such suspicious length, already before the world, should be a})pendedtoa "lettei," addressed by a special agent of the Treasury Department to the Commissioner of Indian Aftairs, and why esjiecially it was called for and printed by the House of Representatives? It is easy enough to understand the motives of Father Brouilette in writing this monograph, but it is not so easy to understand why it shoubl have received such distinguished honor from Hon, .J. Ross Browne and the House of Representatives. It was quite natural that Father Brouilette should wish to free himself and associates from blame; liut why should the House of Representatives, so many years after, call for and give currency to his defense at public charges under the name of " Protestant- ism in Oregon ? '' The Congregational Association of Oregon adopted a report in .lune last which condemns the " prominent and absolute falsehood" of this document, and expresses the belief, "from evidence clear and sufficient to them," that the Roman Catholic priests did themselves instigate violence to the missions, resulting in the massacre. Similar action was taken by the Old School, the Cumberland, and United Presbyterian Presbyteries, The Methodist Conference, composed of more than seventy preachers, under the presidency of Bishop Kingsley, adopted a comprehensive and able report, in which the massacre at Waiilatpu is declared to have been " wholly unpro- voked by Dr. Whitman or any member of the mission," and to have arisen from the policy of the Hudson's Bay Company " to exclude American settlers,'" and " the efforts of Roman priests directed against the establishment of Protestantism in the country." Other religious bodies have acted, it is believed, and valuable testimony is borne to the character of the missionaries. While the motives of Hon, .J. Ross Browne in ajipending Father Brouilette's pamphlet to his "letter," and the reasons of the House of Representativ<'s for publishing the same, are open to grave suspicions, facts have been elicited which throw light on the bearings and uses of the missionary enterprise. — New York Evangelist, January oint a counsel, which is always done in every court of the civilized world, even for the vilest of criminals. i. There was no jury. Thus in several particulars the fiindameutal principles of the sacred Constitution of the United States are violated in this royal farce. 5. The character of the testimony which the court I'elt themselves authorized to accept in this trial of " Protestantism in Oregon," and the manner of collecting it caps the climax. Nothing like it in the history of any court of the civilized world, and tit rather for the dark ages of the Spanish inquisition, when black suspicion and hellish hate took the place of calm reason and truth. Fifteen of the so-called witnesses were known to have been concerned in the horrible butchery, and must have been so known to the court, and which would have thrown their testimony out of any other court in the civilized world. Five of them had been tried and executed for the murder of Dr. Whitman. Nine statements put down in the testimony as the statements of General Joel Palmer and the Hon. Robert Newell, are proved by the testimony of these gentlemen, given to our conunittee, to have been forged against them. They never made such statements. And the whole of the so-called testimony is but Indian rumors passing through many hands. We reject this so-called "chapter on Protestant missions," prepared at so great expense and sent forth to the world on the wheels of the Post Office Department as " an authentic chapter on Protestant missions, "(doubtless through some kind of smug- gling.) to sadden the hearts of the children of the faithful dead and the friends of mis- sions, because that from iiersonal knowledge, some of us being in the country at the time, and from a vast array of testimony of the most unimpeachable character now before us, from old Oregoniaus, from eye-witnesses, from the captives, from military and civil officers, we are convinced that it was the Romish clergy and British agents working together to set on the Indians to destroy the American settlement and hand the country back to England, which instigated the massacie in wliicli Dr. Whitman, his amiable wife, Mrs. Spalding, and seventeen others, nn)stly American emigrants stopping to winter and recruit, lost their lives, and tbeuu)st brutal atrocities practiced upon female captives, reserved for a fate worse than death; the Protestant missions broken up, the last American forced to leave Midtlle Oregon, and the country involved in the long and most disastrous Indian Avars. 6. Because this exective document, or so-called chapter on "Protestantism in Ore- gon," was written bv one of the i>riucipal instigators of that most horrible butchery— a Jesuit by the nanieof I. B. A. Brouilette, the vicar-geneial of the pa]):il hosts on this coast— anil published in the Freeman's Journal, New York, a i)aper that has always proclaimed its ha tred of Protestantism and our free schools and free press. This vicar- general Avas on the ground at Waiilatpu during the horrible butchery, which lasted eight days, with his bishop and thirteen priests, direct from Euroiie, camped at helping distance around, and with one of his overland ])arty— an educated half-breed from Canada, by the name of Jo LeAvis— at the window outside, by Dr. Whitman's head, to give the signal for the tomahawks to commence, Avho shot Mrs. Whitmau through the breast, and with his oavu hands butchered Hotiman and two other Americans; who told the Caynse and Oregon Indians he had seen, before he left the States, the letters of Spalding and Mrs. Whitman calling Ibi' poison to come by the emigrants to kill the Cayuse and Nez Perces. It was a question of life or death Avith them ; they must destroy the Americans while few, or be destroyed. He would help them. The vicar-general and bishop, just over from the great father, the Pope, would furnish plenty of ammnnition Irom the English posts." This Brouilette, to remove all doubt from the minds of the Oregon Indians as to his abhorrence of Americans, and as pay down to the savages for butchering the heretics, actually proceeded to baptize the blood-stained children of the murdering savages while the butchery was going on and the unburied dead and gasping bodies lay about hisfeet; hogs and dogs running about with parts in their mouths; the screams of our ever to be pitied young women, Avrith- ing in the hands of unrestrained brutality, his church music ; and who, with his bishop and associates, handed over with their own hands our young helpless girls to be bru- talized before their eyes, and turned our escaped fathers and inlauts and mothers out of their doors to be scalped by the savages, (see the testimony of Mr. Osborn, Miss Bewly, of George Abernathy, General Palmer, &c. ;) and who, when our dear, helpless children and mothers Avere huddled in a corner, with blood-streaming tomahawks EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 55 brandished over their heads by the Indian Tvomeu, crying to the chief, " Shall we strike ? '' rushed in among them, took a phial from the doctor's shelf, and holding it up to the excited Indians cried ouit through his Canadian helper, " Here is the identical j)oison; see what your Protestant Whitman and Spalding were doing; bury this or you are all dead." And our captives saw the bos filled with earth, the phial put in as this priest directed, and taken oft' to be buried. (See testimony of C. Segor and Eliza Spalding, captives.) And all this to excite the savages to chop our helpless children and mothers to pieces ou the spot. Hut the chief refused. And who, after all this ; after the last Protestantmissionary and American in Eastern Oregon hadbeenkilled or forced from the country, but his hate of Protestanism ane missionaries and teachers to reside in the Indian country among the Flathead aud Nez Perces Indians. Approving the designs of said board, these gentlemen are permitted to reside in the country indicated, and I recommend them to the officers of the Army of the United States, to the Indian agents, and to the citizens generally, and request for them such attentions and aid as will facilitate the accomi)lishmeut of their object and protection, should circumstances require it. Given under my hand and thesealofthe War Department this 1st dayof March, 1836. LEWIS CASS. 58 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. Act of Conf/ress confirming fhc hind to the hoard, approved August 14, 1848. "That tbe title to tbelmul, uot ex teed ing 640 acres, now occupied as mission stations among the Indian tribes in said Territory, together with the improvements thereon, be courtrmed and estal)lishe(i in tbe several religious societies to which said missionary stations respectively belong." (See Oregon Stats., 185.5, page 3t).) Repeated bv (Jovernment, determined to do justice to the mission boards, March 2, 1853. " That the title to the land, not exceeding 640 acres now occupied as mission stations aniongthe Indian tribes in said Territory, or that may have been so occupied as mis- sionary stations prior to the passage of the act establishing the territorial government of Oregon, together with the improvements thereon, be and is hereby cimtirmed in the several religious societies to which said mission stations respectively belong."' (Ap- proved March 2, 18.53.) The act speaks for itself. "Permit me to remark that a grant of luiblic land by statute is the highest and. strongest form of title known to our land. It is stronger than a patent." — Opinion of Attorneii deneral Hates, ATaij 29, 1864. But neither statutory grants, oidniou of Attorney General, nor possession of thirty years, nor blood of martyred patriots, are regarded now. H. H. SPALDING. THIRTY-SEVENTH, THIRTY-NINTH, AND FORTY-FIRST CONGRESSES vs. PROTESTANTISM IN OREGON. WITNESSES FOR THE DEFEXSK. His excellency George Abernathy, governor of Oregon Territory at that date; Hon. Joel Palmer, commissioner general and superintendent Indian atfairs at that date, and late United States superintendent of Indian affairs for Nez Perces Nation, and member of Oregon senate; Hon. R. Newell, Hon. A. Hinman; Messrs. J. N.Gilbert, P. H. Hatch; Revs. ,1. S. Griftin, H. H. Spalding, Horace Heart; Mrs. Mary Clymer ; William Geiger; the Oregon conference of the Methodist Episcojjal Church, 1869; the Oregon presbytery of the Old School Presbyterian Church, 1869; the Oregon presbytery of the United Presbyterian Church, 1868; Oi'egon .\ssociation of the Congregational Church. 1869; the Oregon Association of the Christian Church, 1869. Wliereas the House of Representatives, 3d session of the Thirty-seventh Congress, in executive document No. 1, vol. II, page 570, publishes as follows: "As it is currently understood, by those in the countrj' at the time, that the mission- aries [Mrs. II. H. Spalding] voluntiirily abandoned the cLiim [Lapway mission] on the 4th of December, 1847, and went into other business;" And whereas the Government upon the above allegation proceeded to violate a sol- emn contract of a former administration for the use of said mission for twenty years as an agency, and proceeded to junij) said mission claim aad to drive the said American board off in the jierson of their attorney, Rev. C. A. Eells, in 1862, and to force the old missionarj' in 1S65 from his old home, mills, orchards, from the beloved people and large schools, and from his native church of thirty years' pastorate and tore down his house ; and whereas the Government has continued to keep forcible jtossession of said mission and property Irom that date to this, thus iuflictingdamage upon said American board which cannot be estimated, and upon that Nez Perces church and people who have rendered such invaluable service to the American people and American Govern- ment — a wrong which can never be redressed — by de])riving them thus, year after year, of the Sabbath services and luiuistrations of their old pastor. And upon that pastor and most faithful missionary— the oldest clergyman upon the Pacific coast — a malicious outrage, a living death, an injustice that can never be amended, by driving him thus from his home; a home secured to him by three solemn acts of that Government; a home sacred to him by the oft di8]>lays of God's converting grace, and where himself and sainted wife gave the best of their life services to create in the breasts of the Nez Perces nation steadfast loyalty to the American people and Government; a home where were born all his children, and by driving him from his beloved church of thirty years" ])astorate — gathered into the folil of Christ in that lone land long years ago — and by thus placing the brand of infamy upon his Christian character; and especially thus inflicting in this specified date a most sacrilegious, baseless, vandalic libel upon the memory of one who on the page of Oregon's history stands among tlie very few of the most eminently successful and devoted of modern missionaries, and whose heroic transit, in company with her equ.ally heroic companion, Mrs. Marcus Whitman, of the North American continent, in 1836, over the Rocky Mountains, through the burning sand deserts, expecting to be two years, and to winter in the eternal snows and deep EARLY LABOKS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 59 defiles of the mouutains ; to ilo without bread ; to ask their daily food of God aud re- ceive it atthehands of the huntsman from the bands of the wild buffalo ; the endurance of the horse to hold out the whole journey, aud escape foes and starvation, their de- pendence — liable every moment to be pounced upon by the sleepless savage, scalped, taken prisoner, or put on foot to starve ; sick or well, compelled to Travel on witliout house or shelter, new dangers aud toils multiplying upon every step, where so many strong men had perished, and where foot of white women had never trod — an under- taking pronounced impossible by mountain men aud travelers for a white Avomau — will be by the impartial historian counted anumg if not the principal step thatsecnred this great Pacific coast to the American people, as it demonstrated the all-important ciues- tion that families and wagons couhl cross; thus by their personal hazards and foot- steps they established the overland emigrant route, and thus settled the Pacific slope with American settlements; this led to the development, and by American hands, of the endless gold helds so long hid from the eye of mortals, aud to the great transcon- tinental railroad, aud v, hose memory will be cherished both by the red and the white man while a single one remains alive of the Nez Perces race, or the story of the settle- ment of Oregon is told : Resolved, llicrefore. That the trutli of history, as also the immediate interest of the Protestant Church on these shores, aud the honor of men and women whose characters are above reproach, demands a vindication at the hands of those who are familar with full facts; tothisend, tlierefore, we, thecounnitteeappointedtoexamiuetheexecutive documents above referred to, would beg leave to propound to your excellency the following questions: Question. The Governmeut has published iji the congressional documents and spread wide through the laud to the damage of the defendant that it was currently under- stood by those in the country at the time that the said defendant voluntarily aban- doned the said Lapway mission on the 4th of December, 1847. Was it so understood in this country at that time or at any time? Answers. — The missionaries were ordered to leave the country and forbidden to return to their missions. GEO. ABERNATHY. It was not so nuderstood ; it was deemed improper for Mr. Spalding and family to remain in that country until quiet was restored. It was not a voluntary abandon- ment of the station. We sent troops to escort Eclls aud Walker out of the country. JOEL PALMER. The best information that wo have had bv those present says it is false. WM. GEIGER. I was with the escort, and Mr. Palmer's statement is true. J.M.GILBERT. Au escort was sent to bring those missionaries out of the Indian country. P. H. HATCH.. I made no such representations. R. NEWELL. In no sense true. J. S. GRIFFIN. The above delaratiou in the above-said congressional docment is not true in any sense. The mission claim was not so abandoned on said 4tli of December, 1847, or at any time, and it was not so. understood bv those in the county at the time. H.H.SPALDING. Deposition before the court of the third judicial district of Oregon, July 5, 1868, as called for by the court of the tirst judicial district, Idaho Territory, to give testi- mony in the case wherein the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions is plaintiff, and the United States Government defendant. Horace Heaut, of the county of Walla- Walla, Washington Territpry, first being duly sworn, says: I was stopping with my brother-in-law. Rev. H. H. Spalding, iu the fall of 1847. Mr. and Mrs. Spalding were missionaries of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and had been residing at Lapway, among the Nez Perces, since 1836, the year they crossed the mouutains. Sometime in November Mr. Spalding and daughter, ten years of age, left home for Dr. Whitman's mission. On the 2d of December Mr. Canfield arrived at Lapway woundeil iu the side, aud reported the sad news that Dr. and Mrs. Whitman, aud all the American emigrants at Waiilatpu (Whitman's station,) were killed by the Indians; that Mr. Spalding was probably among the slain. That the women and children, his own wife and children, aud Mr. 60 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. Spalding's daughter were made prisoners and reserved for a fate worse than death. That the the savages in council had determined to exterminate all Americans on the Pacitic coast. That a large party of fortj^ of the murderers were holding a scalp-dance only twelve miles distant, and wouhl immediately be upon the station to commit a second slaughter. My sister threw herself at oucc upon her people, (the Nez Perces,) who immediately collected their forces to protect their much-beloved teacher, but decided they could not do it so well at the old station, where wood and grass were gone, as at a point of tiraljer ten miles distant, where were both and timber to fort. This was late Saturday nii;ht. Mrs. S. refused to move on the Sabbath. This, though regarded by the four white uien too superstitious, seemeress under- standing on the subject, the missionaries themselves came to be the best agents of the Government in promoting the population of the country. We find that the latter company of missionaries established themselves among the savages at difierent points in the interior. Dr. Marcus Whitman on the Walla-Walla at Waiilatpu, Rev. H. H. Spalding at Lapwai on the Clear Water, and the remainder at points in the valley of the great Columbia, where their labors were most needed. Applying themselves with great diligence and constancy to their work, it was soon apparentthat their laborious, trying, and self-denying exertions in behalf of the red man were not in vain. A knowledge of agriculture and the mechanic arts had been acquired by many of them, and by the untiring assiduity of Mr. and Mrs. Spalding the Indian language had been reduced to a system, and books to some extent had been put into their hands, and education and religion were exerting their benign influ- ence, softening the savage disposition, and moulding and elevating their character. Thus these indefatigable missionaries labored on for eleven long years, witnessing the ripening fruits already resulting from their efi^orts, in the rapid progress which the objects of their love and solicitude were making in almost everything pertaining to modern civilization ; and all this, notwithstanding the subtle and unrelenting hostility which they had to encounter from the enemies of American interests in the country, but especially from the Jesuit emissaries of Rome. This opposition l)ecame more and more apparent as the evidences of the success of the missionaries became more and more manifest and satisfactory, till at length, in the fall of 1847, it culminated in one of the most fearful and horrid tragedies that the human mind can possibly imagine. Dr. Whitman, whose every energy had been consecrated to the elevation and well- being of the Indian race, his accomplished wife, who hesitated not to exchange the luxuries of wealth and refinement for exposure and toil and suffering in a heathen 66 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. land, and eigbteeu other persons, while in the midst of fancied seenrity, were butch- ered in cold blood. Women whose husbands lay welterinj; in <;ore, and young hi dies whose brothers had fallen victims to savage barbarity, wore dragged away from the bleeding and lifeless forms of their friends and subjected to a fate even worse than death itself; and many children were taken into captivity, where they remained until they were relieved by ransom. This terrible tragedy occurred at Waiilatpu, on the Walla-Walla River, and the facts pertaining to it, which are fully attested by an array of evidence sufbcieut to place them beyond the possibility of a doubt, all go to ])rove the following points: I. That the massacre was wholly unprovoked by Dr. Whitman, or any other mem- ber or members of the mission ; while, on the other hand, the victims themselves were employed at the very time they were attacked in relieving the sufferings of the Indians arising from the prevalence of an epidemical disorder of unusual fatality. II. That the true causes of the massacre may be found in the policy and course pursued by the Hudson's Bay Company, which was an embodiment of the British government at that time in the country, to exclude American settlers from the land, and the efforts of Roman priests directed against the establishment of Protestantism in the country, which they hoped to accomplish by preventing its settlement by American citizens. These two things, a knowledge of which was possessed by the savages, operated u])on their dark, suspicious minds, and excited them, doubtlessly, to perpetrate the horrid butchery, and to intlict ujjon the survivors the most inde- scribable brutalities. III. That the objects sought by these atrocities were as above stated appears very clear, from the fact that immigrants on their way to the lower country, then resting a season at the premises, shared the same fate tliat fell upon the missionaries. Fur- thermore, the massacre was entirely confined to American Protestants; the Catholics on and about the premises walked unhurt amidst the slaughter, and Brouilette him- self came to the spot before the ground had drank tlie blood of the victims, and while yet the mangled bodies remained uuburied, baptized the Indians amidst the general desolation which his own machinations had contributed to effect. IV. It also a])pears very clear by the accumulated testimony in the case, that not only was the mission at Waiilatpu broken up and destroyed by the massacre, but all the Protestant missionaries among the Nez Perces and other tribes of the interior were compelled, from the same cause, to abandon their different fields, wliile the mission- aries of the Roman Church remained in perfect security among the tribes, and in the immetliate vicinity of the scenes of blood and carnage already described. These as- tounding atrocities being made puldic, and the evidence of tlieir true origin becom- ing more and more apparent, it was natural for the instigators of the horrid crime to endeavor to exculpate themselves; and, in order to do this, they must fasten it upon some other persons, and hence the publication of the pamphlet alluded to, in which the author in every possible way attem])ts to stigmatize and traduce the character of Whit- man and Spalding, and their heroic, devoted and estimable wives, whose noble deeds of Christian patriotism entitle them to the lasting gratitude of the entire country. It now ai)pears quite certain, by the testimony which has come to hand, that Browne himself, as well as Brouilette, wrote in the interests of the Roman Church, for on this ground only can it api)ear at all reasonable that he would have incorporated into his report so false a i>voduction as that of which it is affirmed in the Congres- sional document under consideration, that " it will form an interesting and authen- tic chapter in the history of the Protestant missions." In this character, Browne, acting on the princix)le that lies at the basis of all .lesuitical ethics, that "the end justifies the means,'' took ad\antage of his position as an officer of the (iovernmeut to advance the interests of Romanism by covering with oblo(|uy the memory of those who sacrificed their lives for the })romotion of republican liberty and Christian civ- ilization; and of utterly destroying the character of the only survivor of the heroic band who constituted the second section of the vanguard of civilization, and who were the first to plant the seeds of puie Christianity in eastern Oregon. We here refer to Rev. H. H. Spalding, whose arduous and long-continued labors, with those of his devoted wife, resulted in securing the fidelity of the Nez Perces, the most pow- erful tribe of Indians on the western slope, to American interests, so that in all the Indian wars which have followed the \\ hitman massacre, thf^y have, with few excep- tions, always remained true, and by their influence and ))Ower have often prevented the desolations of savage warfare from sweeping over the white; settlements of the country. Under the teachings of these devoted servants of the red race, the Nez Perces were so bound to American interests and to Protestant Christianity that no hostile tribes nor Roman emissaries have ever been able to draw them away from their friendship and allegiance; and though, by the unwise jiolicy of (Government officials, they have been deprived of the presence and council of their beloved mis- sionary for many long years, yet most of them still stand firm in their religion, and remain the most uncompromising friends of the American people. With these facts before us, wewould unite with all lovers of truth and justice in EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 67 earnestly petitioning the Congress of the United States, as far as possible, to rectify the evils which have resulted from the publication as a congressional document of the slanders of J. Ross Browne; and thus lift the cloud of darkness that hangs over the memory of the righteous dead, and extend equal justice to those who survive. C. KINGSLEY, 3Ioderaio7'. GUSTAVUS HINES, I. D. DRIVER, A. F. WALLER, JOHN SPENCER, H. K. HIXES, J. H. WILBUR, Members of the Committee. Resolutions of the Oregon preshytery of the Cumierland Preshyterian Church. 1. Whereas a pamphlet has recently appeared in our midst entitled "Protestantism in Oregon,'' published by one J. B. A. Brouilette, a priest of the sect of Rome, dated at New York, 1853, and purporting to contain a detailed account of the Whitman massacre and its causes. 2. And whereas the said pamphlet contains many statements reflecting great dis- credit upon the early Protestant missionaries in Oregon, and particularly upon the lamented Dr. Whitman, Rev. H. H. Spalding, and their sainted wives. 3. And whereas it is attempted to be shown, in said pamphlet, that the massacre of the Whitman family and others was the result of the improper bearing of Dr. Whit- man and Rev. H. H. Spalding among the Indians. 4. And whereas, to our astonishment, we find said pamphlet published in Ex. Doc. No. 38, Thirty-fifth Congress, 1st session. House of Representatives, accompanying a letter from J . Ross Browne, special agent of Treasury Department, to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, dated at San Francisco, December 4, 1857. Now, therefore, it is resolved by this presbytery: 1st. That it is the oiiinion of this presbytery, from a multitude of most reliable tes- timony now before us on the subject, that the unfavorable statements, made in the pam- phlet referred to in the preceding preamble, concerning the early Protestant mission- aries in Oregon, are in the highest- degree false and slanderous. 2d. That this presbytery regards it not only as a duty, but as an esteemed privilege, to express her confidence in the character of the late Dr. Marcus Whitman, possessing, in a large degree, the elements of a true Christian character, and native goodness of heart, and purity of life. And that to his labors, more than toanyotheroneman, weare indebted for preventing what is now the State of Oregon and Territory of Washington from falling into the hands of the British Government To render which service to our Government and the cause of Protestantism Dr. Whitman performed a journey across the continent in midwinter. 3d. That what has been said of the merits of Dr. Whitman, as a man and a Christian of high moral worth, is affirmed; also, and with equal pleasure, of Rev. H. H. Spald- ing, who, in the order of a kind Providence, is now spending the evening of his life in our midst, happily surrounded by his children and his children's children. And further, it affords us great pleasure to indorse what has been often aflirmed by others, that Rev. H. H. Spalding and his amiable and accomplished wife, now in heaven, have done more through their labors, as missionaries, to civilize and Christian- ize the Nez Perces tribe of Indians than the Government has ever been able to accom- plish by an outlay of vast sums of money. And further, that to their influence is mainly attributed the steadfast friendship of the Nez Perces, under all circumstances, to the white population, even when all the surrounding tribes — under Roman influ- ence — were at war with the American people. 4th. That, from what is regarded as evidence of the most reliable character, this presbytery is fully convinced that the Roman clergy, then occupying the country, were the principal instigators of the Whitman tragedj'. W. R. BISHOP, Moderator. C. A. WooLEY, Clerk. Doc. C. — Ilesolntions adopted by the Conrjrefjational Association of Oregon at themeeting in Salem, June, 1869. Your committee, to whom was referred Executive Document No. 38, of the Thirty- fifth Congress, first session. House of Representatives, respectfully report: That they have carefully exanuned snid document, and to their surprise find that (while published under the authority of the Congress of the United States, as though a report of J. Ross Browne) it contains only twelve pages of matter prepared by said Browne, and fifty-three other pages, consisting of matter first published in a Roman 68 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. Catholic newspaper in New York city, and afterward issued as a pamphlet prepared by a Jesuit priest by the uame of Hrouilette. This pamphlet purports to give a true account of the Protestant missions involved in the Indian massacre of 1847, in which Dr. Whitman and nineteen others lost their lives, and the missions were broken up. Your committee hnd from overwhelming evidence, from the testimony of different United States ofiticers, civil and military, and from other citizens of most reliable credibility, that this portion of said congressional document involved in it so many prominent and absolute falsehoods as to give a most erroneous impression to the whole, and to cast most fallacious and infamous reflections upon the characters of the devoted and faithful missionaries of the American Board there laboring at that time. It jiositively appears that this Jesuit priest (Brouilette) was, as he himself admits, present auiong the Indians at the time of the massacre, and at the very place, and was actually baptizing tlie children of the murdering Indians while the outrage was going on, and in the presence of unburied bodies of the victims, and in hearing of the screams of the suffering prisoners. That Roman Catholic priests did carry arms and ammunition to the hostile Indians, and that when Captain Rogers intercepted this ammunition at the Dalles the priests did vigorouslj- threaten that all the Catholic Indian ti'ibes, French and Hudson's Bay men would attack the little garrison and settle- ments if he dared to take the arms and ammunition. Your committee believe, from evidence clear and sufflcient to them, that the Roman Catholic priests did themselves instigate violence to the missions resulting in the massacre ; and that this pamphlet, so most strangely published by Congress, with no rebutting statements accompanying it, was prepared by them to throw the blame of the massacre upon the American missionaries. Your committee conclude by presenting for your adoption the following resolutions : Resolved, That as members of the Congregational Association of Oregon, and long acquainted with the surviving members of the Oregon Mission of the American Board, we believe them to have been, and to be, persons of verarity and of sincere Christian devotion and of unquestionable benev^olence in their labors to civilize and Christianize the Indian tribes. liesolvi'd, That their labors I'edounded immensely to the promotion of all American interests on this coast, if not indeed to the preservation of the country to the Ameri- can Union. Resolved, That we learn with great satisfaction that the Rev. H. H. Spalding has collected authentic documents for a truthful history of the whole matter, conclusively refuting the foul statements of the Jesuits. Resolved, That we respectfully ask of Congress that, as this erroneous pam])hlet of a foreign emissary of the Pope of Rome has, under their sanction, been given to the world, so a candid and truthful account of the matter thus treated of, wliich is now being prepared by an able committee of reliable American citizens, may also be pub- lished under their sanction in a lil^e congressional document. Resolved, That from acquaintance with facts for the last twenty years, and other clear evidence, we believe that the missionaries, contrary to the statements made by Congress, did not abandon the mission at Lapwai, but were first forced away by the war, and that those who have since been anxious to return have been steadily ex- cluded by Government ofticials. even to having their houses pulled down, and the agents of the board threatened with violence if they persisted. 0. DICKENSON, 1. V. BLAKESLEE, ELKANAH WALKER, Committee. G. H. ATKINSON, Moderator of ()ve()OH AssocUiiio)!. Attest: Chester N. Tei^ky, Clerk of Congregational Association of Oregon. Doc. D. — Resolutions adopted hy the Oregon Presbytery of the United Preshyterian Church at their meeting in Linn County, in 1868 and 1869. We, the ministers and ruling elders of the Oregon Presbytery of the United Presby- terian Church, some of us being residents of Oregon at the tinu' of the Whitman mas- sacre, agree upon the following expressions of opinion, to wit: 1st. Dr. Marcus Whitman and wife, and Rev. II. H. Spalding and wife, for their Christian zeal, devotedness, and unyielding perseverance through fearful hazards and long-continued hardships for mouths during their journey over the Rocky Mountains, across the continent, on horseback and without bread, where the foot of white woman had never trod, to establish the kingdom of truth, and plant the tree of civiliza- tion on these then dark shores of jiaganism, amid privations of self denial most fear- ful; 1^,000 miles from home and friends, and where no succor could reach them, other than that invoked from the God they worshijied, are entitled to the respect, esteem, love and sympathy, both in regard to those yet livir.g and the memory of the dead, of EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 69 the eutire Christian church, in all its various denominations, not only in Oregon, but throughout the whole world. 2d. The tribes among whom they located in 1836 were in a state of entire wildness and savageism, starving on a meager supply of roots, tish and game ; not a foot of land in cultivation ; not a hoe, plow or cow ; without a knowledge of hitters, of the Sabbath, or human salvation. 3d. That this wild wilderness should so soon be changed, "the desert to bud and blos- som," the fields to wave with grain — from 15,000 to 2 t,000 bushels of grain harvested yearly by the Nez Perces tribe, among whom Mr. Spalding and his amiable wife loca- ted; orchards and gardens planted, cattle roaming in bands, schools established, in which from 100 to 500 souls were in daily attendance, women spinning and weaving, over 100 adoring the Christian faith, churches organized, family altars erected, the language reduced to a written state, portions of God's word translated and printed — the only instance on the Pacific coast — speak volumes for the fidelity and efbcieucy of those faithful servants of Jesus Christ, and evince the presence of God's Spirit among them, while it places them, in the minds of every candid thinker, above the imputa- tion of being influenced by low, selfish, and worldly motives. 4th. As proof of the above we might refer to the present superior intelligence, enter- prise, and good order which distinguished the Nez Perces tribe from the surrounding tribes ; as also to a great amount of testimony now before us from George Aberuathy, es(|., then governor of the Territory of Oregon ; from Commodore Wilks, an eye-wit- ness in 1841; from Rev. G. Hines, in 1843; from GeneralJoel Palmer, in 1846, 1847, and 1848; from Colonels Steptoe, Alvord, Cornelius, Agent Anderson, Governor Daniels, and scores of our citizens, civil and military officers, miners and travelers of most reliable character, all bear unilbrm testimony to the above declarations. 5th. The strong alliance and unwavering friendship of the Nez Perces to the Ameri- cans, while all the surrounding tribes have been at times hostile and repeatedly in arms against the United States; and when, in 1848, had they joined the combined tribes under the Roman priests, the last American family on this coast would have been cut off", as testifies Governor Aberuathy before the committee. And when again, in 18.56, all the tribes on this Northwest coast were combined against the Americans, except the Nez Perces, as testifies Colonel Cornelius to the same committee, under the priests, had the Nez Perces joined them, if the American settlements had not been annihilated they would have been involved in a most disastrous and expensive war — their constant friendship being fairly, by abundant testimony before us, attributal)le to the instructions and influence of Mr. Spalding and his sainted wife, now in heaven — render them worthy the most favorable considerations of the American Gov- ernment, rather than the foul and libelous slanders which they are sending forth to the world in their executive documents. 6th. In demonstrating the practicability of an overland route connecting the eastern and western slopes of the North American continent for families, herds, and wagons, Mrs. Spalding and Mrs. Whitman being the first white women who, in obedience to their Lord, had the Christian courage to turn their backs upon weeping parents and the civilized world, and face the hazards and unknown dangers of this then great and terrible wilderne.s8, where so many stout men had perished, and pronounced impossible for a white woman. In the encouragement and aid given by them to the weary, way- worn emigrants to this western wilderness, in the influence they exerted in sustaining the just claimsof our Government to the vast field embraced in thedispute, and thereby thwarting the schemes of intriguing European diph)matists, these pioneer mission- aries, both overland and by sea, are entitled to gratitude from every American citizen. 7th. It is our delibei-ate conviction that the Lapwai mission belongs to the Amer- ican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, as the mission home of our Brother Spalding. 1st. By the lawful permit of the American Government now before us, dated War Department, Marcli, 1836, for the said board, in the person of Rev. H. H. Spalding and family, to enter and settle in said Nez Perces country as a teacher and missionary. 2d. By contract of said tribe in council, November, 1836. 3d. By eleven years' residence, and until forced away. 4th. By the acts of Congress in 1848, and in 18.52, both of which confirm the title of the land to the American Board. And Ave heartily concur in the opinions set forth by his excellency Governor Abernathy, by General Palmer, by Colonel Cornelius, and by some 600 of the best citizens of our State, in a memorial to our government praying that they may be allowed to renew the work of Protestant missions at the old Lapwai station, which prayer, though renewed for three years, has been steadily refused. That the interests of the Gov- ernment and of the tribe would be better subserved bj^ the appointment of Mr, Spalding there than by any other man. 8th. We heartily concur in the aT)Ove named memorial, in which every religious body in the State has concurred so far as there has been opportunity, as also the citizens of Oregon and Washington, numbering 600 or more, irrespective of party or religious sects, including the very best citizens and most of the officers, civil and military, both of the present date and of former years, to wit : Mr. Anderson, for several years agent 70 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. of the Nez Perces, does not, ii) our opinion, exaggerate in saying that the friendly relations always maintained by the Nez Perces with the Americans is in a great measure to be attributed to the teachings of Mr. Spalding, and that in his ojiinion Mr. Spalding, by his own personal labors, has accomplished more good to this tribe than all the money expended by Government has been able to effect. Uth. The plea of voluntary abandonment of the Lapwai mission December, 1847, by the missionaries, as put forth by the Thirty-seventh Congress, is simply absurd. Ore- gon history of that date, and the testimony of the governor, the officers of the Army, and most of the citizens, show conclusively that Mrs. Spalding, the only missionary at Lapwai at that date, being one of eight days of the bloody carnage, her husband and daughter sup]iosed to be among the slain, and her three infant children were barely delivered from the tomahawk of the savage Indians, by her faithful Nez Perces, and taken that 4th of December, 1847, to a point of salety in the timber. This is called by a Christian Congress '-voluntary abandonment;'" and that after Mr. Spalding was brought in, more dead than alive, from lacerated bare feet on ice, and prickly pear, cut rocks, freezing, want of sleep, and starving six days and nights, himself and fam- ily ; the other fifty-two women and children prisoners, including the last American in the country, were redeemed by P. S. Ogdeu, of the Hudson's Bay Company, by pay- ing the Indians $1,000 ; were taken out of the country, tlie long wars commenced, and the country was closed by Government against all viissioiiaries, and remained closed till 1858. And it i^ well known and proved that so soon as it was thought safe Brother Spalding attempted to return, but was forbidden, and that when he did and opened his schools among his old people, who were rejoiced to see him, and at once tilled up church and school-room, as testified by Agent Anderson, these were broken up and himself forced from his old home, his orchards, buildings, his people and his native church, of nearly thirty years' pastorate, by Government officials. 10th. We are decided, in our coinictions that the Nez Perces are the people among whom Mr. Spalding, as missionary and minister, should be allowed to labor. His lolig residence, his perfect knowledge of their language — no other person can preach it — the mutual attachment existing between himself and them ; their strong and oft- repeated desire for his return ; his unquenchable ardor to labor and die among them ; his former great, perhaps unparalleled success, together with other kindred cfualitica- tions, eminently tit him for missionary service among that people. The heroic cour- age of himself and wife displayed through that long, most hazardous and tedious journey to reach their field o.f labor; their great service to their country; the sacred associations of the place, being the birth-place of all his children, and where he and his companion spent the best part of their lives, and where they often witnessed the display of God's converting grace, consecrating that land to Christ and to liberty with their prayers, their sweat, and tlieir blood, all present Brother Spalding's claim to the Lapwai mission as morally just and beyond dispute. nth. We believe it was through the efforts of the early missionaries to this coun- try that it was thrown open to and settled by the citizens of the United States, and that in a, special degree are we indebted to the late martyred Whitman, whose pres- ence in Washington City in March, 1843, through severe winter suffei'ings, very opportunely prevented the consummation of a transfer of Oregon to England. 12th. From personal knowledge and overwhelming testimony, we are convinced that Romanism and British inliuence were the main causes of the Whitman massacre, the wars that followed, the prosecuting and banishing from tlie country the Protes- tant missionaries, destroying their property and imperiling their health and lives. Romanism has, we are ))er8naded, with a bitterness unparalleled except in the ])a8t history of its own bloody acts, attempted, in every way possible to them, the utter subversion of Protestantism in Oregon. 13th. From our knowledge of Ex-Governor Abernathy, General Palmer, and Hon. A. Hinman, we say without hesitation that we believe them to be men of integrity and veracity, above suspicion, and that consequently the testimony collected from them by Rev. H. II. S])alding may be implicitly relied upon. While Romanism in its senility is showing signs of its speedy dissolution, we unite in sympathy with Brother Spalding and all other Piotestants throughout the laud who are now or who have been suffering under their unhallowed inliuence. We heartily unite with them before God's bar in prayer, that the days of the man of sin may soon be numbered. JAMES DICK, Moderator of Preshiitery. T. S. Kendall, Cleric of I'reshyfcni, T. S. KENDALL, J. McCOY, Committee. [Resolutions similar to the above were passed by the Cumberland Presbytery and by the Congregational Association of Oregon.] EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARrES IN OREGON. 71 Doc. G. — Resolutions adopted by the Pleasant Butte Baptist Clmreli of Linn County, Oregon, October 22, 1869. Whereas our Aniericau Congress have, with apparent good intentions and with all earnestness, felt themselves called upon to undertake the censorship of the Protestant Church; and whereas they have published by their vote and sanction a pamphlet entitled "Executive Document No. 38, House of Representatives, Thirty-lifth Con- gress, first session," thus giving to it the authority and sanction both of the House of Representatives and the Executive. This executive documeut contains a report of the Hon. J. Ross Browne, special agent of the Government to the Pacific coast, and founded, as Browne says, only "on reliable historical data." But this so-called report of the agent, of 66 pages, with the exception of a short preface of 12 pages by the agent, was written years before by a .Jesuit from the Pacific coast, and published in a Romish newpaper in New York, and appears now in this "executive document," word for word, constituting the report of Browne and receiving the sanction of Congress. This document, under the remarkable heading " Protestantism in Oregon," con- tains this significant language : "These pages will form an interesting and authentic chapter in tlie history of Protestant missions." This congressional "chapter" on " Protestant missions" purports to give a record of the testimony and the trial of "Protestantism in Oregon," in the persons of four of r)regon's early pioneers and missionaries, for very high crimes and misdemeanors, and among them the highest crimes known to mortals, that of high treason against the Captain of human salvation, by assuming the character of Christian teachers before the Christian Church, obtaining their funds, making great pledges to the natives of yearly ships loaded with goods to be given, not sold, to the Indians, of great sums for their lands, but steadily breaking all these pledges, refusing to give or pay the price fixed, or to teach or to aid the Indians to anything "unless paid a high price," but " per- sisted to stay" and proceeded to rob the natives of "their horses, cattle, and grain;" "imported ])oi8on from the States" to "poison the Indians" to "obtain their spotted horses and lands;" incited massacres and wars with a view "to exterminate the set- tlements;" and alongside of these crimes is given in this executive document a cata- logue of the virtues and glowing deeds of Romanism in Oregon among the natives, and in their multiplied labors to aid the early American settlements, and especially their timely and self-sacrificing efforts, even " at the risk of their lives," to stay the bloody massacre invoked at Waiilat|)u by the Protestant missionaries, and to deliver the missionaries and to "redeem the captive American women and children." And thus, in ofl'ering this executive document as a chapter on Protestant missions, Congress has felt constrained to throw down the gauntlet and have fairly forced upon us, Protestants of Oregon, the challenge to compare the record of "Protestantism in Oregon" with the record of "Romanism in Oregon:" Therefore, Resolved, As Oregonians aud as Protestants, we accept the challenge, with all defer- ence to our Executive and the House of Representatives, and proceed at once to the comparison by reviewing the records of l)oth Protestantism and of Romanism in Ore- gon ; and in doing so we shall also rely " only upon reliable historic data," a history known and read of all men, and written upon the ground, and not in the dark cells of New York, 3,000 miles away, and with hands at the moment dripping with the blood of Protestants and of American mothers and infants, butchered by their instigation. 2. Resolved, That we reject, with unutterable mortification as Americans, and deep detestation as Protestants, this chapter on Protestant missions, which our American Congress has prepared at such great labor, and sent forth at public expense, on the wheels of the Post Office Department, and for the following reason^, to wit : I. Because it breathes the most malignant bitterness against the Protestant Church, and was manifestly pul)lished for the benefit of the Romish hierarchy, and to exculpate a band of the most atrocious butcherers of American fathers, mothers, and infants, and designed, whether by Congress or not, certainly by Rome, as a club in the hands of Congress against Protestantism. II. Because it is a libel on Oregon'shistory and a gross and most malicious calumny against the most self-sacrificing band of patriots and Christian pioneers that ever braved the dangers of a pagan wilderness. III. Because that, from personal knowledge, some of us being in the country at the time, and from a vast array of testimony now before us, from old Oregonians, from eye- witnesses, from the captives, from military and civil officers, we are convinced that it was the Romish clergy and British agents who instigated the Whitman massacre, in which Dr. Whitman, his amiable wife, Mrs. Spalding, and seventeen othei's. mostly American emigrants stopping to winter and recruit, lost their lives, and the most brutal atrocities practiced iipon female captives reserved for a fate worse than death, the Protestant missions broken up, the last American forced to leave Middle Oregon, and the country involved in the long and most disastrous Indian wars. 72 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. IV. Because the " executive docimient," or so-called chapter on Protestant mission, was written by one of the principal instigators of that most horrible bntchery, a Jesuit by the name of J. H. A. Broiiilette, the vicar-general of the I'acitic coast, andpnblished in the Freeman's Jonrnal, New York, a paper that has always proclained its hatred of Protestantism and our free schools and free press. From abundant testimony he, this vicar-general, was on the ground at Waiilat])n during the horrible bntchery, which lasted eight days, with his bishop and thirteen ])riest8, direct from Europe, cam]»edat helping clistance around, and with one of his overland party, an educated Indian fiom Canada, standing at the window by the doctor's head, to iiive the signal for the toma- hawking to commence; who shot Mrs. Whitman through the breast, and with his own hands butchered Hoffmaii and two other Americans, and who told the Caynses and Oregon Indians that he had seen, before he left the States, the letters of Mrs. Whit- man and Mr. Si)alding, calling for poison, to come by the emigrants, to kill the Cayuses and Nez Perces; that it was a (luestion of life or death with them — they must destroy the Americans while few or be destroyed ; he would help them, and the bishop and the vicar- general, who had just come o\('r Irom the Pope, their great father, would furnish plenty of ammunition from the English post. This Brouiletle, to remove all doubt from the uiinds of the < Megan Indians as to his abhorrence of Americans, and as paij doirn for butcheriug the heretics, actually jiro- ceeded to baptize the blood-stained children of the butchering savages, while the bntchery was going on and the unbnried dead and gaspiug bodies lay about his i'eet, hogs and dogs rnnniug aboi^t \\ ith parts in their months, the screams of our ever-to-be- pitied young women, writhing in the hands of unrestrained brutality, his church- music; and who, with his bishop and associates, handed over with their own hands our young, liclpless girls to be brutalized before their eyes, and turned our escaped fathers and infants and mothers out of doors, to be scal])ed by the savages; and who, when our dear, helpless children and mothers were huddled in a corner, with blood- streaming ttonahawks brandished over their heads by the Indian women, crying to the chiefs, " Shall we strike?" rushed in among them and took a phial from the doc- tor's shelf, holding it up to the excited Indians, cried out through his Canadian helper, "Here is the identical poison ; see what your Protestants Whitman and Spald- ing were doing; bury this or you are all dead ;" and all this to excite the savages to chop our helpless children and mothers to pieces on the spot. And who after all this — the last Protestant missionary and Auierican killed or forced out of Eastern Oregon, but his hellish hate of Protestantism and Americans not yet suf- ficiently gloated — could meditate the horrible butchery and the attendant atrocities of the entire American settlements, and for that purpose shipped up the river from the English jiost at ^'anconver over four thonsand pounds of powder and balls, and boxes of guns for the combined savages, and which were taken from them l)y Lieu- tenant Rogers and his little band of faithful Protestants only fifteen miles short of the cam]) at Des Chutes, who had boasted only three days before that plenty of ammunition was coming Jip by the priests, and then they "would come down and scalp Americans and take their women and cattle." And these are the Jesuit monsters whose record in Oregon is thus written with Protestant blood and the blood of American fathers, and infants, and mothers, who receive by vote of the American Congress the copyright to prepare testimony against and chapters on Protestant missions, and our House of Representatives are compelled to resolve themselves into a publishing-hf)use to publisli the same, an^l the Army oiScers into a, corps of colporteurs to circulate them. The Brouilette, who could thus help on this horrid butchery of Protestants and Americans, could thus revel in female anguish aiid the screauis of scalped ini'ants, could thus refuse hel]i to agonized mothers, and could, in cool blood, meditate the butchery of the last American family on this coast, not able to meet the overwhelming testimony against him, published at the time on the spot, and fearing the just indig- nation of the Americans, fied three thousand miles to New York, and, safe in the cells of New York inquisition, prepared this paper, composed of forgeries agjxinst the best citizens of Oregon, and the most revolting falsehoods against the memory of the unfortunate victims he had caused to be butchered, and all to exculpate their guilty heads. And while it remained a Romish production by such monsters, no one took any notice of it, but, to our utter astonishment, it now appears, word for word, in this executive document, and is oflt'ered to us by the American Congress, with an audacity that has no parallel in modern history, as "an interesting and authentic chapter in the history of Protestant missions;'' but we reject it with becoming Ameri- can disdain, and as Protestants of this Pacific West we respectfully advise Congress to burn it, to call in every document without delay and burn them. You owe it to yourselves, to your country, and to the age. And, V. We reject this chapter or record of the court — if trial it is to be regarded, and such it will be by a majority of readers — because of the irregular and extraordinary mode of getting it up; and — 1. The so-called court had no iurisdiction in the case. The American Congress is not EARLY LABORS OF MLSSIONARIES IN OREGON. 73 an ecclesiastical body, not even a judicial; but the case is purely religious, beiug Protestantism in Oregon. 2. It had no jurisdiction as to territory. The fourscore and ten crimes as found iu the bill of indictment, made out in the walls of the New York inquisition, are set forth as committed iu Oregon Territory, but the court sits in the city of Waahiugtou, three thousand miles away, thus repeating in this republican commonwealth the fearful crimes loudest complained of by the fathers of 1776. 3. Three of the four individuals brought before the court for trial were dead, and had been for years ; fell martyrs to that very Government which is thus tearing open their graves secretly iu Oregon and taking their characters off three thousand miles to Wash- ington to blacken them iu their pui)lic documents; and the only survivor not notified of said intended trial (another breach of the Constitution) consequently had no oppor- tunity to confront testimony or to offer testimony, when more than property or lite was at stake, (another breach of the Constitution) and the court, even the Congress of the United States, refuses to appoint a counsel, which is done in every court of the civil- ized world, even for the vilest of criminals, showing the deadly prejudice and bitter- ness of the court against the criminal, Protestantism. 4. There was no jury. Thus, in seven particulars, the fundamental principles of the sacred Constitution of the United States are grossly violated in this royal farce. 5. The character of the testimony which Congress thought all-sufidcieut in this trial of " Protestantism in Oregon," and the manner of collecting it, caps the climax. Nothing like it iu the history of any court in the civilized world, and fit rather for the dark ages of the Spanish inciuisition. Much is forgery outright ; for instance, that of General Joel Palmer and honorable Robert Newell is proved to be such by the testi- mony of those gentlemen before our committee. By the testimony of these gentle- men nine forgeries are detected (perhaps there are ninety nine) in this royal chapter, declared under the official and sacred oath of this dignified body to be "founded only on reliable historical data."' But the manner of collecting the testimony. Not a witness is sworn or even called before the court, either in Washington or this country, and not required to state what they knew, but simply what they had heard second, fourth, and in some instances, eight-handed. It seems that this Browne was dignified by the title of special agent of the Treasury Department, as a blind, whereas his real business appears to have been to collect absurdities and the grossest falsehoods against Protestantism, who straightway passed secretly through Oregon without giving the least idea that he was collecting testimony with which to enable Congress to try those Protestant women, Mrs. Spald- ing and Mrs. Whitman, for the crime of crossing the Rocky Mountains and the conti- nent three thousand miles, and of robbing four large tribes of Indians of their horses, their cattle, and grain, and lands, and then ])oisouing them all, with the help only of their husbands, and passed on to the walls of the New York inquisition and found his brother Jesuit Browne, who employed him at once, entered upon the office of sub- contractor to collect testimony, and brought out his paper to be received and declared by Congress to be "reliable historical data," with the understanding that no oath should be required, as almost every word was either forgerj^ upon oldOregonians, or the falsehoods and reported sayings of the savages who had been executed, why they undertook to exterminate the Americans. Fifteen of the so-called witnesses in this strange document are known to have been concerned in that l^loody tragedy. Tills whdlethingisa disgrace to Congress, to the Executive, to the American people, and the highest possible insult to the Protestent church of the United States. Indeed, the most significant and most fearful feature of the whole affair is, not that the super- stitious Indians could be made to kill their benefactors ; not that .Tesuite could excite savages to butcher the hated heretics, scalp American mothers and infants, and hand over with their own hands our young women to be brutalized betbre their eyes; not that the Roman priests could undertake to aid the savages by furnishing ammunition to burn the infant settlements, butcher its inhabitants, and subject the captive infants and mothers to -a fate worse than death; but that this paiper should be off'erd by the American Congress, with its solemn sanction, and the seal of the Executive, to the Protestant church of these United States as "an interesting and authentic chapter in the history of Protestant mission.'" (See page 13.) This action of Congress utters a language louder and plainer than words can speak, and the more especially since the Thirty-ninth Congress and its Executive have pro- claimed in their document one of these faithful missionaries an apostate; that she abandoned her field voluntarily ; that the American Board of Missions is no better than a band of thieves, and proceeded to sieze their mission lands in Idaho, and to drive the board, iu the person of its attorney, oft', by threatening, the title of which had been confirmed to that board by three acts of Government, the first bearing date March, 1836; and since the Thirty-ninth Congress and its Executive have proceeded to force the only survivor of these condemned missionaries, in his old age, the first resident clergyman on the Pacific coast, from his old home, secured to him by the above-named 74 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. three acts of Oovernnu'nt, made sacred 1>y the oft displays of God's couverting grace, and because the birthplace of all his children and the scene of the best part of his life and that of his companion, now in heaven, from his orchard, mills, and farm, from his btdoved people, lor whom he and his angel wife left the civilized world long years before the Government made footprints on this coast, and from his native church of nearly thirty-two years pastorate, and t(ne down his house and threw it into the river ; and since the present Congress and Executive continue to keep forcible possession and to keei> by force this old Protestant missionary from his work and his people, who ha\e oft begged the President to allow their old pastor to leturn, and not to force Catholics upon them, and he as strongly desires to return and labor and die with them. With the Rev. Mr. Spalding we are intimately acquainted. Here he has been longest and best known. He is our neighbor and brother, beloved in the church of Christ; and whereof we speak we know. Protesiantism in Oregon. From the pages of Oregon's history, from the personal knowledge of some of us, having been residents of this Pacitic coast for years, and from abundance of the most reliable testimony, we, the members of Pleasant Butte Baptist Church, agree upon the following expression of opinion : It was, under God, Protestantism in Oregon which, after many strong efforts by Government, by .Tohn Jacob Astor, and by others, to establish American settlements on these Pacitic shores, counted by .Jeti'erson of the greatest national importance, had totally failed, did succeed, in the teeth of th? most unrelenting and bloody opposi- tion of Romanism and British influence, to establish the first successful and perma- nent American settlement on these vast shores, now so important a portion of our commonwealth. 1. By the crossing of the Eocky Mountains in 1834, (four years before any Romish priest set foot in Oregon, ) by the Protestant Lee, the pioneer missionary, and his little band, to become permanent missionaries and settlers on this coast. And the un- daunted patriotism exhibited by this Christian hero in his first interview with the governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, then a corrupt British monopoly on this coast. The governor said to Mr. Lee : "All needed supplies and facility in our powershall be afforded to your mission while you confine yourselves to yourwork as teachers, butthe day you lay hands on beaver all supplies will be stopped, and you will be left destitute. The trade in furs and the commerce of these seas belong to us." The reply of the mis- sionary, American withal, was prompt and characteristic : '' Governor, it is true 1 was born a British subject ; but I am now an American citizen, and as such I have and shall claim the same right on these shores as the most favored British subject, and that too by treaty. I shall therefore trade beaver where and when I please." The same reply, almost word for word, was made two yeiirs later to the same English officer, by that faithful Christian but stern patriot, Marcus ^^ hitman. That determined the fate of both of these valuable men ; they fell martyrs to this their country. The destruction of the one was brought about through apostate Americans and disaffected friends employed to misrepresent; that of the other by imported Romish agents and Hudson's Bay interpreters working upon the savages; Imt not till this great Pacific West was securely made a part of our national domain, and their enlightened, stern, American, unselfish patriotism claims for their memory the lasting gratitude of the nation rather than the malicious calumnies now being heaped upon them through Congress, evi- dently for the benefit of Romanism. 2. By the successful crossing of the continent in 1836, of those two Protestant women, Mrs. Spalding and Mrs. Whitman, emphatically the American heroines of the nine- teenth century, the first women who, in obedience to the command of their Lord, had the Christian courage to turn their backs forever upon weeping friends and the civ- ilized world, and to face the hazards of the Rocky Mountains and the vast unknown beyond, to be perhaps two years ; to winter in the everlasting snows and dark defiles of the mountains; to do without bread, to ask their daily food of God, and receive it at the hands of hunters and from buffalo bauds; liable every minute to be pounced upon by prowling bands, the party butchered or put afoot to starve ; sick or well, com- pelled to travel on, where foot of woman never trod ; the endurance of the horse to hold out the two years, and escape foes and starv.ition — their only hope where so many strong men had perished — new dangers and accumulating labors multiplying every hour upon their fainting bodies. An undertaking prououuccfl impossible for woman by every mountain-man, by Geoi-ge Catlin, and the missionary Lee. Mrs. Spalding, more dead than alive from starvation and the attendant horril)le sufferings, the green buffalo causing fearful diarrhu-a, when the Nez Perces, who had sent to the "rising sun " for the Book of God, met them, and gave her dried roots which served as bread. Thus did these two Protestant heroines, not for honor or for gold, but to seek God's benighted ones, over 3,000 miles from home, and where no succor could reach but that invoked from the God they trusted, by their own footsteps and personal hazards EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 75 settle the great national question that families, and herds, and wagons could scale the mountains and the sand deseits, anil thus fairly establish the great emigrant route connecting the eastern and western slopes of the North American Continent, so soon replaced by the longest railroad and the greatest human work of the age. This emi- grant route led to the settling of this great Pacific West by American settlements, and these again to the develoi)ment of those vast gold fields so long hid from the eye of mortals, and the magic growth of this new half of our commonwealth. This end- less amount of gold was mani lestly decreed by the Almighty to be in time for our national debt iind in part to speed the gospel wheels of salvation. 3. By the arrival inthevalleyof the Willamette, iul837, by ajourney of 22,000mile9 around Cape Horn, of seven Protestant women, to be permanent residents with their husbands, and associates of the pioneer Lee, and who laid the foundation of civilized and Christian society in Western Oregon, and brought into existence, in 1841, the pro- visional government. 4. By the arrival in the years 1838, 1839, and 1840of nine Protestant missionary ladies overland, and of 15 by sea, in all, on the 4th of July, 1841, 33 Protestant wives and mothers, with their husbands, six unmarried men and 29 children, 100 in all, (5 had died, ) not as yet an emigrant mother in the country, (one had passed through to Califor- nia, ) to l)ecome permanent settlers, and to make these distant shores their future home for themselves and children, to roll back the thick darkness of unknown ages, to erect the standard of the cross, and plant asecond North American Republic on tliese Pacitic shores. Precisely the number of that noble band of pilgrims who landed on Plymouth rock, 22d of December, 1620. just 220 years before, whose record as the defenders of the true faith and the true fathers of this great American Republic is world-wide known and justly appreciated. And it is evident from our country's already Pacific posses- sions, that the record of the Atlantic mother will not suffer in the comparison with the Pacific daughter. Already the Protestant colony of lUO souls has become a half empire as in a day. At twelve o'clock, on the 4th of July last, thirtj'-three years ago, two Protestant heroines, Mrs. Spalding and Mrs Whitman, alighted from their weary horses, them- selves in great weakness, atthe dividing point on the Rocky Mountains, in the famous South Pass, and after returning profound thanks to Almighty' God for his heavenly care of them thus far, and dedicating themselves anew to his holy cause, with the banner of the cross in one hand and the stars and stripes in the other, they stepjied down, the first American women, intotheTerritory of Oregon, and took formal possession in the . name of their Saviour and their country, in the name of American mothers and of the American church ; and beingimmediately confronted by the British lion, they instantly bearded the royal beast in his lair. Memorable day! It sealed the fate of Great Britain on these shores. Then, from the Spanish South to the Frozen North, with the exception of a few British trapi)ers and traders, with Indian wives, it was ah unbroken wilderness, brooded over by the darkness of ages unknown, without tow nor settlement, without school-house or church-yoing bell, except the new-begun mission on the Willa- mette of tile pioneer Lee, and his three heroic brothers, ^^ ithout their w ives. Every where this vast region was the undisputed home of the wild man and the \\ ild beast, regarded even l)y our Government, on account of its rugged and wild nature, fit only for the savage, the beaver, and the gi"ay bear. But what, in so short a time, has ap- peared ? A half empire-born as in a day ! Three great States, and their Senators in Congress. The whole vast region, from the Pacitie waves to the mountain summit, mapped into teri'itories, with their governments, and throughout the whole, springing into existence as by magic, are crowded cities and lively settlements, interlocked by the telegraph, the railroad and steamer, the daily stage and mail. In the thousand valleys and every mountain top of this great Pacific slope, the darkness and solitude of ages are displaced by the merry school, the hum of business, the temi^le, and the morning praises to the living God. Our numerous rivers and our vast Pacific shores, so lately the playground only of the sea otter, are white with a fioating commerce, and from its numerous harbors vessels and steamers are daily leaving for the markets of New York and Liverpool, for China and Japan, laden with the abnudant products of our rich valleys and vast prairies, the $60,000,000 of gold and silver a month from our snow-capped mountains. And 5th. By securing from California in 1837, 600 head of cattle, in spite of the powerful opposition of the Hudson's Bay Company, through tbe efforts of the far-seeing Protestant, Lee. 'i'hese cattle were divided among the mission, a lew mountain men with Indian wives, according to funds invested, and became the foundation of tlie comfort and speedy wealth of the country, and effectually delivered the American settlement from the Hudson's Bay monopolj'. And 6th. By the arrival of the Protestant Whitman at the city of Washington, in March, 1843, through untold winter sufi'erings in the mountains of Utah and New Mexico, not an hour too soon to prevent the transfer of all Oregon to Great Britain to go into the Ashburton and Webster treaty for a codfishery on Newfoundland; by his personal representations to President Tyler of this country, of its vast importance, 76 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. aud his assurance of a wagou route, as be assured him we had taken cattle, a wagon, and his niissionai'y families through six years l)efore, and that he thus ventured his life through that wintry journey for the sole object of taking back a caravan of wagons through to the Columbia, and thus to settle the question forever that families and wagons could cross; this effectually committed the President and stopped the negotiations. L5y his bringing successfully through to the Columbia, in spite of the combined aud powerful indueuce of the Hudson's Bay Company, and Romanism, both at Washiugton and at Fort Hall, of that great emigration of 1813, with their two hundred wagons and herds, under the momentous conviction that, if he failed, Oregon w^as lost, as the Hudson's Bay Company had succeeded only the year before in suddenly planting a colony of 140 souls on the I'acitic shores, from thi^ Red River settlements by the Sas- katchawan Pass. The ue\\s of their having passed the mountains caused a. young priest, not thiulviug that an American was at the large table, to rise, and waving his hand, "Hurrah for Columbia! America is too late; w^e have got the country now." This astonishing but significant l)oast, coupled with the stopping of wagons at Fort Hall every year, aroused the patriot Whitman, who saw at a glance that not an hour could be lost, and, unsolicited and unrewarded, and even opposed by the tears of his wife and the entreaties of his associates, because of the almost certain death, leaving his home on the Walla-Walla in Octolter, 1842, he undertook the herculean lalior of reach- ing Washington through the terrific mountain snows of Utah and New Mexico that winter, to l)ring through a caravan of wagons. Aud again, on reaching Fort Hall that fall, coming up from important medical services in the rear of the long caravan, the good doctor found the head companies in great consternation and distress from the representations of the Hudson's Bay Company, that no wagons ever had nor ever could pass through the terrific Snake deserts and reach the Columbia, aud confronting the British lion, as oft he had done, he stepped forward and said, " Mj countrymen, you have trusted me thus far ; from this jjoint I know the country ; we took our families, cattle, aud wagon through seven years ago, and these men know it. By tbe help of that kind Providence who has brought us thus far, we will reach the banks of the Columbia before the -!()th of September." And the consequence was, that that large emigration passed successfully the Snake country and the Blue Mountains, under the guidance of the Protestant missionary and his Prot<'stant Indians, who had come a journey of mouths to meet and assist their beloved teacher, and reached the Dalles of the Columbia, aud the great enugrant route connecting the Atlantic and Pacihc shores was established a sure tl)ing, and becaine at once of the greatest national importance. And 8th. By affording at the Protestant stations the yearly way-worn emigrants needed sujiplies of provisions in their long aud often disastrous journey to reach this \\estern wilderness, and at Dr. Whitman's an asylum for orphans who had lost l>arents and all on the route. Eleven adopted orphans were thus upon the hands of this philanthropist and his angel wife when they fell, and five of them mingled their blood with that of their adopted mother, who with her last breath was heard to pray — her lieart's l)lood fast flowing out — '• Oh ! my dear Saviour, take care of my dear chil- dren, now to l)e left a second time orphans;" and in a whisper, "tell my mother for me that I fell at my post." And also stopping-places for many every year who were compelled to stop over winter on account of sickness, given-out teams, or the lateness of the season. Some fifty were thus wintering w itli the doctor when the massacre took place, and most of the men were butchered with the doctor. Again : in the Willamette Valley the Protestant stations were everywhere ready to greet their weary, broken- hearted, journey-8trii)ped countrymen with needed supplies, shelter from Oregon storms, opportunity to labor, and with schools aud with Christian society. And 9. By furnishing the American people and the American Governnientthe ear- liest aud constant history of the extent aud charactei' of this great country in their numerous yearlj' journals aiul letters, which were published in the ofMcial journals of the respective mission boards, aud in the newspapers of the day, aud spread wide overt lie laud. And 10. By the steadfast devotion of the Protestant Nez Perces, the most ])owerful tribe west of the mountains, totheAmericansandthe American Government. Through that long and severe struggle to prevent or destroy the Americjin settlements and annihilate Protestantism in Oregon ; during the Wbitnian massacre, and the long wars that followed, till 1H'>7, the Nez Perces — true to the teachings of their Protestant mis- sionaries — remained constantly the firm allies and friends of the Americans, and oppos- ing Indian sagacity to Indian sagacity, they were always the best allies of the Amer- icans; the quickest to discover the designs of the enemy, and ready to strike at the critical moment. When the .Jesuits and p]nglish bad, liy means of Indian ruuners, excited the surrounding tribes to butcher the Protestant missionaries aud American emigrants at Waiilatpu and to exterminate the American settlements on the Pacific, the Nez Perces refused to join them, and first rushed at once to the defense of their beloved teacher, Mrs. Sjialding, and rescued her and lier infants from a band of forty of the murderers; then, second, fled to the scene of the eight days' carnage, aud by EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 77 their intlueuee stopped tbe bloody work of the Jesuita; induced the Cayuses to give up the fifty Protestant woiueu aud children to Mr. Ogilen; and themselves, third, brouglit Mr. .Spalding and family safe through hostile tribes one hundred aud fifty miles to \\'ana- Walla, and delivered them to Mr. Ogdeu, and when the Cayuse, urged ou by the Jesuit Lewis, after they had obtained the ransom money, made the attempt to retake Mr. Spalding aud the Americans, they threw themselves between them aud beat them back till Mr. Ogden, by strong current and a most favorable wiud, aud the utmost nerve of every oarsman, was out of reach down the Columbia with his three boat-loads of humau beings, mostly women aud children, whom this true l'rf)testaut, through a kind Providence, had, almost as by miracle— no other nu^u living could have saved them — rescued from the bloody tomahawk, or a fate worse than death ; some of them iu a dying state —all in a wretched condition ; their husbands aud fathers aud brothers horribly butchered before their eyes; their flesh given to the beasts of the field; themsel\ es subjected to horrors too shocking for the pen, and robbed of every- thing, and left destitute in a land of strangers. But this is Romanism iu Oregon : wid- ows left with large families of young children, Dr. and Mrs. Whitman's large family of adopted orphans — left doubly orphans — without jiareuts or relatives iu the country. Some helpless children aud tbeir dying mothers were actually turned out by these Jesuits of one of the very establisliments which the American Captain Mullau demon- inates ''the St. Bernards of the West, where the weary traveler is always taken in and refreshed by the holy fathers,'' although he must have known its Ijloody record. 4. Andagain, in 1848, when all the tribes of the Northwest, under Jesuits.had assem- bled at iJes Chutes, waiting for ammunition to be brought to them from the English post by the priests, with which to cut ort the Willamette settlements and take their women audherds, hadtheNez Percesjoined them, as strongly urged, the last Americau family would have been butchered, as testifies Governor Abernathy, who ought to know; but they refused, and, on the other hand, seut word to the combined camji if they attempted to fall upon the Americau settlements they would fall upon their rear, sweep their country of their lierds of horses, aud retire east of tbe mountains. This unexpected intelligence coming at the moment of the unexpected seizure, by Lieuten- ant Rogers, of the anmiunition from the priests, completely checked the savages, and saved the settlements, which, at the time, was peculiarly exposed, most of the men having rushed to the gol . mines of California, and Rou)anism was again disappointed. 5. Aud again, iu 1850, after the volnnteers failed to apprehend the guilty Cayuse, the Nez Perces, at the request of the Government, rushed through the winter snows, overtook the savages on Upper John Day River, overcame the Cayuse iu a Ions' fight, killed some, and took five of their principal leaders and delivered them to the Govern- ment, and they were tried and executed at Oregon City. 6. Again, in 18.")5, wheu all the tribes of the >s'orthwest were combined against the Americans, except the Nez Perces, as testifies Colonel Cornelius, had they joined the combination, (as they were sore pressed to do, thirty-seven oxen being killed at one feast to induce them to break their alliance with the Americans and join the combined hosts under the priests,) if the American settlements ou this coast had not been bro- ken up. they would have been involved iu a most disastrous and expensive war. But they steadily maintained their friendship to the Americans, as taught them by their missionaries; furnished provisions and cattle to our Army, express, to go where no white man could live; remounted our Army atone time with four hundred horses; at three different times furnished a battalion of warriors to aid our people when sore pressed by the combined hosts, who were coustantly supplied with ammunition. 7. They flew to the rescue of Governor Stevens and party wheu their retreat was cut oft', and when Colouel Steptoe was defeated in a two days' fight, one-fourth of his cpm- mand killed or wounded, his retreat and water cutoff and ammunition goue. which dis- aster was brought about by a treacherous Jesuit priest, acting the friend iu the American camp, but really a spy for the savages, learning the colonel's small amount of ammu- nition, seut the savages word, and joined them as soon as thefight commenced with his packs of so-called groceries and nails, but really balls aud powder. Then it was Tim- othy, the Protestaut, Nez Perces, preacher, and his two brothers, fighting with the Americans, discovering an tinguarded opening iu the rocks, taking advantage of the darkness and the uproar of the surrounding savages at their dance fires awaiting the dawn to scalp the last American, led out the colonel aud his remnant, and, with the stillness of death, on through the night, to his country thus saved them and furnished them food. Aud during all these years " we had to fight all the tribes which have been under Catholic priests," as reports Superintendent Xesiuith, the Nez Perces, so thoroughly imbued with the principles of Protestantism and of the Americau Govern- ment that uo hostile trilies nor Romish emissaries have been able to draw them from their allegiance, have remained a bulwark upon our frontiers, often preveuting our settlements from being drenched in the blood of its citizens : and although,by the unwise policy of our Government, they have been deprived of the counsels and teachings of their old beloved mission for many long years, still they stand firm in their religion, and remain the most uncompromising friends of the American people, their constant 78 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. lidelity aud friendship to the Americans l)eing unanimonsly attributed by Superin- tendent Hale and Agents Anderson and Howe, long in charge of tLie tribe, by Gov- ernor Abernathy, General Palmer, and scores of miners and ti-avelers, citizens and offic«n's, botli civi) aud military, and by about every religious lady in the State, to the long-coutinued and most successful laboi's and intlueuce of the Rev. H. H. Spalding and his most amiable wife, now in Heaven. Done bv order of the Pleasant Bute Baptist Church, Brownsville, Linn County, Oregon, October L'2, 1869. H. I. C. AVERILL, L. C. RICE, H. R. POWELL, Committee on liesolutionn. J. WARMOUTH, Moderator. J. A. C. AVERILL, Clerk. Done by order of the Christian Church at Brownsville, Oregon, this October 29, 1869. JOHN M. HARRIS, Moderator. Attest : W. H. ROWLAND, Clerk. OBADIAH TUARP, D. W. PUTMAN, JOSEPH HUNTSAKER, W. H. ROWLAND, Co7ninittee. Adopted unanimously at the annual meeting in Polk County, Oregon, Tuesday after third Sabbath in June, 1870, by the committee of the Brotherhood of the Christian Church iu Oregon, and voted to be published in the Review at Cincinnati, and to be used by our beloved brother Spalding as he may deem proper, with as many of our names a^ mav be necessary. J. M. HARRIS, Moderator. W. H. ROWLAND. Clerk. Wil. RUBLE and others, Committee. THE OREGON MISSION AND THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. The undersigned committee, appointed by the Presbytery of Steuben to prepare and publish a report on what is known in history as the Oregon mission of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, would earnestly call the attention of all concerned to the following facts and considerations: 1. Marcus Whitman, M. D., and Rev. H. H. Spalding, and their wives, missionaries of the A. B. C. F. M., were tlie lirst to pi'ove that families could cross the American continent, by safely accomplishing that journey in 1836. 2. A successful mission was established by these pioneers among the Cayuse and Nez Perces Indians, in what was then known as the Oregon Territory. This was done byspecial permit of the United States Government. Themission was maintained eleven years, to the great beuelit, as can be abundantly shown, of the Indians, espe- cially of the large and powerful tribe of Nez Perces. 3. It is well known that then the whole of that northwest territory, though osten- sibly in the joint occupancy of the United States and Great Britain, was really under the control of the Hudson's Bay Company. The agents of that British monopoly had driven away the last American trader from those shores, and were doing all in their power to exclude American settlers. Their efforts were so far successful, that, in the autumn of 184'2, a treaty was about to be closed between tiie United States and Great Britain, transferring to the latter that whole territory. 4. It was at this important juncture that Dr. Whitman determined, notwithstand- ing tlie approach of winter, to cross the continent, and, if possible, save thiit country to the United States. A more hazardous undertaking, more heroically accomplished, the annals of adventure nowhere describe. That terrible winter journey, and its con- sequences, constitute a notable and thrilling chapter of our national history. Dr. Whitman reached Washington in the spring of 1843, barely in time to secuie, by his representations of the country and the overland route, a postponement of the disas- trous treaty until he should conduct an emigrant train to the Columbia River. This task he accomplished during the following summer, bringing ;< trainof one thou- sand souls safely through, thus completely demonstrating the ieasibility of the overland route, and effectually securing that vast and valuable territory to the United States. EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 79 And from that time tLe luissiou station of Dr. Whitman at Waiilatpu was a well-known haven of rest and supplies to the emigrants passing tliroiigh yearly to the Pacific coast. 5. It is, therefore, not surprising that the Britisli officials in that region were greatly incensed against Dr. Whitman and his associates. It is now a matter of authentic history that extreme measures were soon resorted to by the agents of the Hudson's Ba^ Company to check the growth of American influence. Special agents from Europe appeared on the ground, antl, by the aid of certain Roman Catholic ])rie8ts, the Indians themselves were incited to violence by false reports concerning the missionaries, as, e. (?., that they had come to poison the Indians and possess their lands. The result of such intrigues was what might be expected. On the 29th of November, 1847, began the horrid Whitman massacre, in which Dr. W^hitman and nineteen others were slain. Throughout those eight days of slaughter, Americans o)ili/ were the victims. The priests and others who were there in the interests of the Hudson's liay Company were unharmed, and there is every reason to believe that they only encouraged and assisted the savages in their bloody work. It was a white man that gave the signal ibr the slaughter to commence, and with his own hands he shot Mrs. Whitman. And the few who escaped were refused admittance at the forts of the comjjany. 6. It is well known that the Whitman uiassacre was the beginning of an attempt to break up all American settlements in the Territory, and that the missionaries at th^ Lapwai station only escaped butchery through the friendly protection of the Nez Perces. There is also abundance of the best possible testimony from such men as Com- modore Wilkes, United States Navy ; Governor Abernathy, and General Joel Palmer; from many prominent United States officers, from missionaries, travelers, and citizens of the Territory, proving the fidelity to that mission of Mr. and Mrs. Spalding, and the great value to the United States Government of their labors among the Nez Perces. During the long and expensive war following the massacre, this tribe alone, among the Indians, was friendly to the Americans. And there is no doubt, as many have testified, that this was owing in a great measure to the teachings of Mr. Spalding; and, accord- ing to Mr. Anderson, several years agent of the Nez Perces, "Mr. Spalding by his own per.sonal labors has accomplished more good to this tribe than all the money expended by the Government has been able to effect." Having thus briefly alluded to the vast services rendered, and the almost unparal- leled sufferings endured by the founders of the Oregon mission for their country, we pause to ask what has their country done for them. What has the General Govern- ment done in recognition of these services? How has the nation exjiressed its grati- tude to the memory of those patriots, to whom we owe, under God, a large portion, if not all our possessions on the Pacific coast f In thefirstplace, a document bearing on this subject has been published by Congress, entitled " Executive Document No. 38, Thirty-fifth Congress, First Session," and con- taining ostensibly the report of .J. Ross Browne as special agent of the Government to inquire into the causes of the Indian war in Oregon. But, on examination, we find this report, containing only twelve pages written by said Browne, and fifty-three other pages, made up ot a pamphlet first published years before in New York City, by a Jesuit priest, Brouilette. But this pamphlet, it is plain, was prepared soon after the Whit- man massacre, and is an attempt to screen the author and others from the charges brought against them of complicity in that tragedy. And there is overwhelming evi- dence of the best possible kind, that this portion of said con-^ressional document con- tains many absolute falsehoods, and casts most infamous reflections upon Dr. Whitman and his associates. This Brouilette, it is proved, in part by his own testimony, was present at the massacre, doing nothing to save the victims, but baptizing the children of the murdering Indians, and otherwise stimulating them in their work of death. That such a man should have written such a pamphlet is not surprising. But why, we ask in the name of humanity and justice, why must Congress give currency to such slanders against the very men who achieved and suffered so much for their country? Why must the General Government give to so infamous and malignant an attack all the dignity and authority of an official document, and that, too, without publishing a scrap of the abundant rebutting testimony. . But this is not all. In another official document we find the Thirty-seventh Congress declaring that the Lapwai mission was "voluntarily abandoned " "by the missionaries in December, 1847, which, as the world knows, is false and absurd. First driven away by the murdering savages of the Whitman massacre, the missionaries were afterward taken out of the country, and the country was closed against all missionaries by the Government until 1858. And finally : "It is well known and proved that so soon as it was thought safe Mr. Spalding attempted to return, but was forbidden ; and when he did and opened his schools among his old people, who were rejoiced to see him, and at once filled up church and school-room— as testified by Agent Anderson, these schools were broken up and himself forced from his old home, his orchards and buildings, his people and native (Indian) church,"' by the United States Government; nor has he since been permitted to return. S. Ex. Doc. 37 6 80 EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. Sncli, iu its main features, lias been and still is the attitude of the fieneral Govern- uii'ut toward the sui'vivors of the Oi'egon mission! Such is almost the only recogni- tion yet made by this nation of the invaluable services rendered by those martyred l^atriots and their associates! We, therefore, in behalf of the Presbytery of Steuben, from whose bounds Dr. Mar- cus Whitman and Kev. H. H. Spalding went forth upon their mission in 1836; ahd firmly l)elieving that the above statements are true, having ourselves examined much of the testimony referred to, do most earnestly unite with our fellow-eitizens of the Pacific coast and the various I'rotestant churches there, in respectfully entreating Congress, as far as possible, to rectify the wrong done to the memory of the dead and the reputation of the living in the publication of the aforesaid Executive Document No. 38, Thirty-fifth Congress. To this end, wo pray that a candid and well-attested account of the whole matter, about to be presented to Congress, may be published in a like official document. We also, as a presbytery, would express our entire confidence in the high Christian character of these missionaries, who were well known to some of us personally. We especiallv hereby tender our warmest sympathies to our afflicted and faithful brother, Rev. H. H. Spalding. We earnestly entreat of the Government at Washington that he may be restored to his beloved missionary work, and to the native church and schools which he was so successful in establishing. And now, since the last Protestant missionary to the Indians beyond the Rocky Mountains has recently been driven from his field by the General Government, as is well known, and that, too, at the very time when the Government claims to be intro- ducing a more humane and righteous Indian policy than has heretofore prevailed, we feel that, in common with all American Christians and all friends of humanity, "we have the right to earnestly ask of our Government that this long series of griev- ous wrongs may cease, and these evils, so far as possible, be rectified. P>y order of the Presbytery of Steuben : D. HENRY PALMER, JAMES H. HOTCHKIS, O. F. MARSHALL, Committee. " Let not the country cast dishonor on unselfish patriotism. '' Let not the brand of infamy remain on the memory of the just. "The publication of the allegations above mentioned by authority of Congress, doubtless through one of those inadvertencies which creep into the proceedings of deliberative bodies, calls for ample redress. "We therefore unite with all patriotic and fair-dealing men in the earnest petition that the Congress of the United States should do justice to the memory of the dead and protect the rights of the living." Adopted bv the Oregon Presbytery, Old School Presbyterian Church. A. L. LINDSLEY, D. D., Moderator. Adopted also by the Oregon Presbytery, Cumberland Presbvterian Church. W. R. BISHOP, Moderator. Adoi)ted also bv the Oregon Presbytery, United Presbyterian Church. ■ I. DICK, Moderator. Adopted also by the Oregon Conference Methodist Episcopal Church. BISHOP KINGSLEY, Moderator. Adopted also by the Oregon Congregational Association. G. H. ATKINSON, D. D., Moderator. Adopted also by the Pleasant Bute Baptist Chnrch. .1. WARMOUTH, Moderator. Adopted also at the annual meeting of the Oregon Christian Church. JOHN HARRIS, Moderator. And these !)odies probably represent full 30,000 of the best inhabitants of the State. These sentiments are also concurred in by all the leading journals on this side of the mountains. We have thus allowed the leading citizens of the State of Oregon and the Territory of W' ashington, and nearly all the Federal officers of the country, to speak for them- selves on this all-important subject which the Congress of the United States, by their own vote, and in their own official documents, have placed iu the hands of the ]>eople. EARLY LABORS OF MISSIONARIES IN OREGON. 81 And now, with the utmost confidence, we commend these witnesses to that ever- watchful care over the truth of history, and to that sacred regard for unselfish patriot- ism which animates the bosom of every American Assisted by- ' «• «• SPALDING. Rev. W. H. ROWLAND. Hon. R. H. CRAWFORD. Hon. R. B. COCHRAN. Hon. T. R. CORNELIUS. Rev. J. S. GRIFFIN. DUDLEY ALLEN, M. D. JAMES H. HOTCHKIN, Esq. E. R. GEARY, D. D. Hon. I. R. MOORES. Rev. J. M. HARRIS. Rev. G. S. KENDALL. J. C. H. AVERILL. GUSTAVUS HINES, D. D. JAMES BLACKESLY. Rev. W. R. BISHOP. G. H. ATKINSON, D. D. Rev. LUTHER WHITE. JOHN WILSON. o LB Mr '05 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS lilhlHi I 017 1873861 ^