January 29, 2006

Nevada's Online State News Journal

 

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Nevada History:

 

HISTORY

 

OF THE

 

DONNER PARTY,

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A TRAGEDY OF THE SIERRA

 

_____

 

BY C. F. McGLASHAN,

PUBLISHER "PRESS," SANTA BARBARA, CAL.

 

_____

 

FOURTH EDITION -- ILLUSTRATED

 

 

SAN FRANCISCO:

A.L. BANCROFT & COMPANY, PRINTERS.

1881.

 

 

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Copyrighted 1879 and 1880, by C.F. McGlashan.

________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

TO

 

MRS. ELIZABETH A. KEISER,

 

ONE OF THE

PIONEER MOTHERS OF CALIFORNIA,

 

THIS BOOK

 

IS

 

RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR.

 

 

PREFACE.

____

 

            The delirium preceding death by starvation, is full of strange phantasies. Visions of plenty, of comfort, of elegance, flit ever before the fast-dimming eyes. The final twilight of death is a brief semi-consciousness in which the dying one frequently repeats his weird dreams. Half rising from his snowy couch, pointing upward, one of the death-stricken at Donner Lake may have said, with tremulous voice: "Look! there, just above us, is a beautiful house. It is of costliest walnut, inlaid with laurel and ebony, and is resplendent with burnished silver. Magnificent in all its apartments, it is furnished like a palace. It is rich with costly cushions, elegant tapestries, dazzling mirrors; its floor is covered with Oriental carpets, its ceiling with artistic frescoings; downy cushions invite the weary to repose. It is filled with people who are chatting, laughing, and singing, joyous and care-free. There is an abundance of warmth, and rare viands, and sparkling wines. Suspended among the storm-clouds, it is flying along the face of the precipice at a marvelous speed. Flying? no! it has wheels and is gliding along on a smooth, steel pathway. It is sheltered from the wind and snow by large beams and huge posts, which are bolted to the cliffs with heavy, iron rods. The avalanches, with their burden of earth and rocks and crushed pines, sweep harmlessly above this beautiful house and its happy inmates. It is drawn by neither oxen nor horses, but by a fiery, hot-breathed monster, with iron limbs and thews of, steel. The mountain trembles beneath his tread, and the rocks for miles re-echo his roar."

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6          PREFACE.

            If such a vision was related, it but indicates, prophetically, the progress of a few years. California's history is replete with tragic, startling events. These events are the landmarks by which its advancement is traced. One of the most mournful of these is recorded in this work - a work intended as a contribution, not to the literature, but to the history of the State. More thrilling than romance, more terrible than fiction, the sufferings of the Donner Party form a bold contrast to the joys of pleasure-seekers who to-day look down upon the lake from the windows of silver palace cars.

            The scenes of horror and despair which transpired in the snowy Sierra in the winter of 1846-7, need no exaggeration, no embellishment. From all the works heretofore published, from over one thousand letters received from the survivors, from ample manuscript, and from personal interviews with the most important actors in the tragedy, the facts have been carefully compiled. Neither time, pains, nor expense have been spared in ferreting out the truth. New and fragmentary versions of the sad story have appeared almost every year since the unfortunate occurrence. To forever supplant these distorted and fabulous reports - which have usually been sensational new articles - the survivors have deemed it wise to contribute the truth. The truth is sufficiently terrible.

            Where conflicting accounts of particular scenes or occurrences have been contributed, every effort has been made to render them harmonious and reconcilable. With justice, with impartiality, and with strict adherence to what appeared truthful and reliable, the book has been written. It is an honest effort toward the truth, and as such is given to the world.

C. F. McGLASHAN.

TRUCKEE, CAL., June 30, 1879.

 

 

CONTENTS.

 

 

CHAPTER I.

Donner Lake -- A Famous Tourist Resort -- Building the Central Pacific -- California's Skating Park -- The Pioneers -- The Organization of the Donner Party -- Ho! for California! -- A Mammoth Train -- The Dangers by the Way -- False Accounts of the Sufferings Endured -- Complete Roll of the Company -- Impostors Claiming to Belong to the Party -- Killed by the Pawnees -- An Alarmed Camp -- Resin Indians -- A Mother's Death

 

CHAPTER II.

Mrs. Donner's Letters -- Life on the Plains -- An Interesting Sketch -- The Outfit Required -- The Platte River -- Botanizing -- Five Hundred and Eighteen Wagons for California -- Burning "Buffalo Chips" -- The Fourth of July at Fort Laramie -- Indian Discipline -- Sioux Attempt to Purchase Mary Graves -George Donner Elected Captain -- Letter of Stanton -- Dissension -- One Company Split up into Five -- The Fatal Hastings Cut-off -- Lowering Wagons over a Precipice -- The First View of Great Salt Lake

 

CHAPTER III.

A Grave of Salt -- Members of the Mystic Tie -- Twenty Wells -- A Desolate Alkaline Waste -- Abandoned on the Desert -- A Night of Horror -- A Steer Maddened by Thirst -- The Mirage -- Yoking an Ox and a Cow -- "Cacheing" Goods -- The Emigrants' Silent Logic -- A Cry for Relief -- Two Heroic Volunteers -- A Perilous journey -- Letters to Captain Sutter

8          CONTENTS.

CHAPTER IV.

Gravelly Ford -- The Character of James F. Reed -- Causes which Led to the Reed-Snyder Tragedy -- John Snyder's Popularity -- The Fatal Altercation -- Conflicting Statements of Survivors -- Snyder's Death -- A Brave Girl -- A Primitive Trial -- A Court of Final Resort -- Verdict of Banishment -- A Sad Separation -- George and Jacob Donner Ahead at the Time -- Finding Letters in Split Sticks -- Danger of Starvation

 

CHAPTER V.

Great Hardships -- The Sink of the Humboldt -- Indians Stealing Cattle -- An Entire Company Compelled to Walk -- Abandoned to Die -- Wolfinger Murdered -- Rhinehart's Confession -- Arrival of C. T. Stanton -- A Temporary Relief -- A Fatal Accident -- The Sierra Nevada Mountains -- Imprisoned in Snow -- Struggles for Freedom -- A Hopeless Situation -- Digging for Cattle in Snow -- How the Breen Cabin Happened to be Built -- A Thrilling Sketch of a Solitary Winter -- Putting up Shelters -- The Donners Have Nothing but Tents -- Fishing for Trout.

 

CHAPTER VI.

Endeavors to Cross the Mountains -- Discouraging Failures -- Eddy Kills a Bear -- Making Snow-Shoes -- Who composed the "Forlorn Hope" -- Mary A. Graves -- An Irishman -- A Generous Act -- Six Days' Rations -- Mary Graves' Account -- Snow-Blind -- C. T. Stanton's Death -- "I Am Coming Soon" -- Sketch of Stanton's Early Life -- His Charity and Self-sacrifice -- The Diamond Breastpin -- Stanton's Last Poem

 

CHAPTER VII.

A Wife's Devotion -- The Smoky Gorge -- Caught in a Storm -- Casting Lots to See Who Should Die -- A Hidden River -- The Delirium of Starvation -- Franklin Ward Graves -- His Dying Advice -- A Frontiersman's Plan -- The Camp of Death -- A Dread Resort -- A Sister's Agony -- The Indians Refuse to Eat -- Lewis and Salvador Flee for Their Lives -- Killing a Deer -- Tracks Marked by Blood -- Nine Days without Food

CONTENTS.  9

CHAPTER VIII.

Starvation at Donner Lake -- Preparing Rawhide for Food -- Eating the Firerug -- Shoveling Snow off the Beds -- Playing they were Tea-cups of Custard -- A Starving Baby -- Pleading with Silent Eloquence -- Patrick Breen's Diary -- Jacob Donner's Death -- A Child's Vow -- A Christmas Dinner -- Lost on the Summits -- A Stump Twenty-two Feet High -- Seven Nursing Babes at Donner Lake -- A Devout Father -- A Dying Boy -- Sorrow and Suffering at the Cabins

 

CHAPTER IX.

The Last Resort -- Two Reports of a Gun -- Only Temporary Relief -- Weary Traveling -- The Snow Bridges -- Human Tracks! -- An Indian Rancherie -- Acorn Bread -- Starving Five Times! -- Carried Six Miles -- Bravery of John Rhodes -- A Thirty-two Days' Journey -- Organizing the First Relief Party -- Alcalde Sinclair's Address -- Capt. R. P. Tucker's Companions.

 

CHAPTER X.

A Lost Age in California History --The Change Wrought by the Discovery of Gold--The Start from Johnson's Ranch -- A Bucking Horse -- A Night Ride -- Lost in the Mountains -- A Terrible Night -- A Flooded Camp -- Crossing a Mountain Torrent -- Mule Springs -- A Crazy Companion -- Howlings of Gray Wolves -- A Deer Rendezvous -- A Midnight Thief -- Frightening Indians -- The Diary of the First Relief Party

 

CHAPTER XI.

Hardships of Reed and Herron -- Generosity of Captain Sutter -- Attempts to Cross the Mountains with Provisions -- Curtis' Dog -- Compelled to Turn Back -- Hostilities with Mexico -- Memorial to Gov. Stockton -- Yerba Buena's Generosity -- Johnson's Liberality -- Pitiful Scenes at Donner Lake -- Noble Mothers -- Dying rather than Eat Human Flesh -- A Mother's Prayer -- Tears of Joy -- Eating the Shoestrings

 

CHAPTER XII.

A Wife's Devotion -- Tamsen Donner's Early Life -- The Early Settlers of Sangamon County -- An Incident in School -- Teaching and Knitting

10        CONTENTS.

-- School Discipline -- Capt. George Donner's Appearance -- Parting Scenes at Alder Creek -- Starting over the Mountains -- A Baby's Death -- A Mason's Vow -- Crossing the Snow Barrier -- More Precious than Gold or Diamonds -- Elitha Donner's Kindness

 

CHAPTER XIII.

Death of Ada Keseberg -- Denton Discovering Gold -- A Poem Composed while Dying -- The Caches of Provisions Robbed by Fishers -- The Sequel to the Reed-Snyder Tragedy -- Death from Overeating -- The Agony of Frozen Feet -- An Interrupted Prayer -- Stanton, after Death, Guides the Relief Party! -- The Second Relief Party Arrives -- A Solitary Indian -- Patty Reed and Her Father -- Starving Children -- Lying in Bed -- Mrs. Graves' Money still Buried at Donner Lake

 

Chapter XIV.

Leaving Three Men in the Mountains -- The Emigrants Quite Helpless -- Bear Tracks in the Snow -- The Clumps of Tamarack -- Wounding a Bear -- Blood Stains upon the Snow -- A Weary Chase -- A Momentous Day -- Stone and Cady Leave the Sufferers -- A Mother Offering Five Hundred Dollars -- Mrs. Donner Parting from her Children -- "God will Take Care of You" -- Buried in Snow without Food or Fire -- Pines Uprooted by the Storm -- A Grave Cut in the Snow -- The Cub's Cave -- Firing at Random -- A Desperate Undertaking -- Preparing for a Hand-to-hand Battle -- Precipitated into the Cave -- Seizing the Bear -- Mrs. Elizabeth Donner's Death -- Clarke and Baptiste Attempt to Escape -- A Death more Cruel than Starvation

 

CHAPTER XV.

A Mountain Storm -- Provisions Exhausted -- Battling the Storm Fiends -- Black Despair -- Icy Coldness -- A Picture of Desolation -- The Sleep of Death -- A Piteous Farewell -- Falling into the Fire-well -- Isaac Donner's Death -- Living upon Snow Water -- Excruciating Pain -- A Vision of Angels -- "Patty is Dying!" -- The Thumb of a Mitten -- A Child's Treasures -- The "Dolly" of the Donner Party

CONTENTS.              11

CHAPTER XVI.

A Mother at Starved Camp -- Repeating the Litany -- Hoping in Despair -- Wasting Away -- The Precious Lump of Sugar -- "James is Dying" -- Restoring a Life -- Relentless Hunger -- The Silent Night Vigils -- The Sight of Earth -- Descending the Snow Pit -- The Flesh of the Dead -- Refusing to Eat -- The Morning Star -- The Mercy of God -- The Mutilated Forms -- The Dizziness of Delirium -- Faith Rewarded -- "There is Mrs. Breen."

 

CHAPTER XVII.

The Rescue -- California Aroused -- A Yerba Buena Newspaper -- Tidings of Woe -- A Cry of Distress -- Noble Generosity -- Subscriptions for the Donner Party -- The First and Second Reliefs -- Organization of the Third -- The Dilemma -- Voting to Abandon a Family -- The Fatal Ayes -- John Stark's Bravery -- Carrying the Starved Children -- A Plea for the Relief Party

 

CHAPTER XVIII.

Arrival of the Third Relief -- The Living and the Dead -- Captain George Donner Dying -- Mrs. Murphy's Words -- Foster and Eddy at the Lake -- Tamsen Donner and Her Children -- A Fearful Struggle -- The Husband's Wishes -- Walking Fourteen Miles -- Wifely Devotion -- Choosing Death -- The Night Journey -- An Unparalleled Ordeal -- An Honored Name -- Three Little Waifs -- "And Our Parents are Dead."

 

CHAPTER XIX.

False Ideas about the Donner Party -- Accused of Six Murders -- Interviews with Lewis Keseberg -- His Statement -- An Educated German -- A Predestined Fate -- Keseberg's Lameness -- Slanderous Reports -- Covered with Snow -- "Loathsome, Insipid, and Disgusting" -- Longings toward Suicide -- Tamsen Donner's Death -- Going to Get the Treasure -- Suspended over a Hidden Stream -- "Where is Donner's Money?" -- Extorting a Confession

12        CONTENTS.

CHAPTER XX.

Dates of the Rescues -- Arrival of the Fourth Relief -- A Scene Beggaring Description -- The Wealth of the Donners -- An Appeal to the Highest Court -- A Dreadful Shock -- Saved from a Grizzly Bear -- A Trial for Slander -- Keseberg Vindicated -- Two Kettles of Human Blood -- The Enmity of the Relief Party -- "Born under an Evil Star" -- "Stone Him! Stone Him!" -- Fire and Flood -- Keseberg's -- Reputation for Honesty -- A Prisoner in His Own House -- The Most Miserable of Men

 

CHAPTER XXI.

Sketch of Gen. John A. Sutter -- The Donner Party's Benefactor -- The Least and Most that Earth Can Bestow -- The Survivors' Request -- His Birth and Parentage -- Efforts to Reach California -- New Helvetia -- A Puny Army -- Uninviting Isolation -- Ross and Bodega -- Unbounded Generosity -- Sutter's Wealth -- Effect of the Gold Fever -- Wholesale Robbery -- The Sobrante Decision -- A "Genuine and Meritorious" Grant -- Utter Ruin -- Hock Farm -- Gen. Sutter's Death -- Mrs. E. P. Houghton's Tribute

 

CHAPTER XXII.

The Death List -- The Forty-two Who Perished -- Names of Those Saved -- Forty-eight Survivors -- Traversing Snow-belt Five Times -- Burying the Dead -- An Appalling Spectacle -- Tamsen Donner's Last Act of Devotion -- A Remarkable Proposal -- Twenty-six Present Survivors -- McCutchen -- Keseberg -- The Graves Family -- The Murphys -- Naming Marysville -- The Reeds -- The Breens

 

CHAPTER XXIII.

The Orphan Children of George and Tamsen Donner -- Sutter, the Philanthropist -- "If Mother Would Only Come" -- Christian and Mary Brunner -- An Enchanting Home -- "Can't You Keep Both of Us?" -- Eliza Donner Crossing the Torrent -- Earning a Silver Dollar -- The Gold Excitement -- Getting an Education -- Elitha C. Donner -- Leanna C. Donner -- Frances E. Donner -- Georgia A. Donner -- Eliza P Donner

CONTENTS.              13

CHAPTER XXIV.

Yerba Buena's Gift to George and Mary Donner -- An Alcalde's Negligence -- Mary Donner's Land Regranted -- Squatters Jump George Donner's Land -- A Characteristic Land Law-suit -- Vexatious Litigation -- Twice Appealed to Supreme Court, and once to United States Supreme Court -- A Well-taken Law Point -- Mutilating Records -- A Palpable Erasure -- Relics of the Donner Party -- Five Hundred Articles Buried Thirty-two Years -- Knives, Forks, Spoons -- Pretty Porcelain -- Identifying Chinaware -- Beads and Arrow-heads -- A Quaint Bridle-bit -- Remarkable Action of Rust -- A Flint-Lock Pistol -- A Baby's Shoe -- The Resting Place of the Dead -- Vanishing Land-marks

 

 

CHAPTER I.

 

Donner Lake -- A Famous Tourist Resort -- Building the Central Pacific -- California's Skating Park -- The Pioneers -- The Organization of the Donner Party -- Ho! for California! -- A Mammoth Train -- The Dangers by the Way -- False Accounts of the Sufferings Endured -- Complete Roll of the Company -- Impostors Claiming to Belong to the Party -- Killed by the Pawnees -- An Alarmed Camp -- Resin Indians -- A Mother's Death

            Three miles from Truckee, Nevada County, California, lies one of the fairest and most picturesque lakes in all the Sierra. Above, and on either side, are lofty mountains, with castellated granite crests, while below, at the mouth of the lake, a grassy, meadowy valley widens out and extends almost to Truckee. The body of water is three miles long, one and a half miles wide, and four hundred and eighty-three feet in depth.

            Tourists and picnic parties annually flock to its shores, and Bierstadt has made it the subject of one of his finest, grandest paintings. In summer, its willowy thickets, its groves of tamarack and forests of pine, are the favorite haunts and nesting places of the quail and grouse. Beautiful, speckled mountain trout plentifully abound in its crystalline waters. A rippling breeze usually wimples and dimples its laughing surface, but in calmer moods it reflects, as in a polished mirror, the lofty,

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16        HISTORY OF THE DONNER PARTY.

overhanging mountains, with every stately pine, bounding rivulet; blossoming shrub, waving fern, and - high above all, on the right - the clinging, thread-like line of the snow-sheds of the Central Pacific. When the railroad was being constructed, three thousand people dwelt on its shores; the surrounding forests resounded with the music of axes and saws, and the terrific blasts exploded in the lofty, o'ershadowing cliffs, filled the canyons with reverberating thunders, and hurled huge bowlders high in the air over the lake's quivering bosom.

            In winter it is almost as popular a pleasure resort as during the summer. The jingling of sleighbells, and the shouts and laughter of skating parties, can be heard almost constantly. The lake forms the grandest skating park on the Pacific Coast.

            Yet this same Donner Lake was the scene of one of the most thrilling, heart-rending tragedies ever recorded in California history. Interwoven with the very name of the lake are memories of a tale of destitution, loneliness, and despair, which borders on the incredible. It is a tale that has been repeated in many a miner's cabin, by many a hunter's campfire, and in many a frontiersman's home, and everywhere it has been listened to with bated breath.

            The pioneers of a new country are deserving of a niche in the country's history. The pioneers who became martyrs to the cause of the development of an almost unknown land, deserve to have a place in the hearts of its inhabitants. The far-famed Donner Party were, in a peculiar sense, pioneer martyrs of California. Before the discovery of gold, before the highway across the continent was fairly marked out, while untold dangers lurked by the wayside, and unnumbered foes awaited the emigrants, the Donner Party started for California. None but the brave and venturesome, none but the

ELIZA P. DONNER.

ORGANIZATION OF THE PARTY.                        17

energetic and courageous, could undertake such a journey.  In 1846, comparatively few had dared attempt to cross the almost unexplored plains which lay between the Mississippi and the fair young land called California. Hence it is that a certain grandeur, a certain heroism seems to cling about the men and women composing this party, even from the day they began their perilous journey across the plains.  California, with her golden harvests, her beautiful homes, her dazzling wealth, and her marvelous commercial facilities, may well enshrine the memory of these noble-hearted pioneers, pathfinders, martyrs.

            The States along the Mississippi were but sparsely settled in 1846, yet the fame of the fruitfulness, the healthfulness, and the almost tropical beauty of the land bordering the Pacific, tempted the members of the Donner Party to leave their homes. These homes were situated in Illinois, Iowa, Tennessee, Missouri, and Ohio. Families from each of these States joined the train and participated in its terrible fate; yet the party proper was organized in Sangamon County, Illinois, by George and Jacob Donner and James F. Reed. Early in April, 1846, the party set out from Springfield, Illinois, and by the first week in May reached Independence, Missouri. Here the party was increased by additional members, and the train comprised about one hundred persons.

            Independence was on the frontier in those days, and every care was taken to have ample provisions laid in and all necessary preparations made for the long journey. Ay, it was a long journey for many in the party! Great as was the enthusiasm and eagerness with which these noble-hearted pioneers caught up the cry of the times, "Ho! for California!" it is doubtful if presentiments of the fate to be encountered were not occasionally entertained. The road was difficult, and in places almost unbroken; warlike Indians

18        HISTORY OF THE DONNER PARTY.

guarded the way, and death, in a thousand forms, hovered about their march through the great wilderness.

            In the party were aged fathers with their trusting families about them, mothers whose very lives were wrapped up in their children, men in the prime and vigor of manhood, maidens in all the sweetness and freshness of budding womanhood, children full of glee and mirthfulness, and babes nestling on maternal breasts. Lovers there were, to whom the journey was tinged with rainbow hues of joy and happiness, and strong, manly hearts whose constant support and encouragement was the memory of dear ones left behind in home-land. The cloud of gloom which finally settled down in a death-pall over their heads was not yet perceptible, though, as we shall soon see, its mists began to collect almost at the outset, in the delays which marked the journey.

            The wonderment which all experience in viewing the scenery along the line of the old emigrant road was peculiarly vivid to these people. Few descriptions had been given of the route, and all was novel and unexpected. In later years the road was broadly and deeply marked, and good camping grounds were distinctly indicated. The bleaching bones of cattle that had perished, or the broken fragments of wagons or cast-away articles, were thickly strewn on either side of the highway. But in 1846 the way was through almost trackless valleys waving with grass, along rivers where few paths were visible, save those made by the feet of buffaloes and antelope, and over mountains and plains where little more than the westward course of the sun guided the travelers. Trading-posts were stationed at only a few widely distant points, and rarely did the party meet with any human beings, save wandering bands of Indians. Yet these first days are spoken of by all of the survivors as being crowned with peaceful enjoyment and pleasant anticipations. There were

A MAMMOTH TRAIN.        19

beautiful flowers by the roadside, an abundance of game in the meadows and mountains, and at night there were singing, dancing, and innocent plays.  Several musical instruments, and many excellent voices, were in the party, and the kindliest feeling and good-fellowship prevailed among the members.

            The formation of the company known as the Donner Party was purely accidental. The union of so many emigrants into one train was not occasioned by any preconcerted arrangement. Many composing the Donner Party were not aware, at the outset, that such a tide of emigration was sweeping to California. In many instances small parties would hear of the mammoth train just ahead of them or just behind them, and by hastening their pace, or halting for a few days, joined themselves to the party. Many were with the train during a portion of the journey, but from some cause or other became parted from the Donner company before reaching Donner Lake. Soon after the train left Independence it contained between two and three hundred wagons, and when in motion was two miles in length.

            With much bitterness and severity it is alleged by some of the survivors of the dreadful tragedy that certain impostors and falsifiers claim to have been members of the Donner Party, and as such have written untruthful and exaggerated accounts of the sufferings of the party.  While this is unquestionably true, it is barely possible that some who assert membership found their claim upon the fact that during a portion of the journey they were really in the Donner Party. Bearing this in mind, there is less difficulty in reconciling the conflicting statements of different narrators.

            The members of the party proper numbered ninety, and were as follows: George Donner, Tamsen Donner (his wife), Elitha C. Don-

20        HISTORY OF THE DONNER PARTY.

ner, Leanna C.  Donner, Frances E. Donner, Georgia A. Donner and Eliza P. Donner. The last three were children of George and Tamsen Donner; Elitha and Leanna were children of George Donner by a former wife.

            Jacob Donner, Elizabeth Donner (his wife), Solomon Hook, William Hook, George Donner, Jr., Mary M. Donner, Isaac Donner, Lewis Donner and Samuel Donner. Jacob Donner was a brother of George; Solomon and William Hook were sons of Elizabeth Donner by a former husband.

James Frazier Reed, Margaret W. Reed (his wife), Virginia E. Reed, Martha F. (Patty) Reed, James F. Reed, Jr., Thomas K. Reed, and Mrs.  Sarah Keyes, the mother of Mrs. Reed.

            The two Donner families and the Reeds were from Springfield, Illinois.  From the same place were Baylis Williams and his half-sister Eliza Williams, John Denton, Milton Elliott, James Smith, Walter Herron and Noah James.

            From Marshall County, Illinois, came Franklin Ward Graves, Elizabeth Graves (his wife), Mary A. Graves, William C. Graves, Eleanor Graves, Lovina Graves, Nancy Graves, Jonathan B. Graves, F. W. Graves, Jr., Elizabeth Graves, Jr., Jay Fosdick and Mrs. Sarah Fosdick (née Graves).  With this family came John Snyder.

            From Keokuk, Lee County, Iowa, came Patrick Breen, Mrs. Margaret Breen, John Breen, Edward J. Breen, Patrick Breen, Jr., Simon P. Breen, James F. Breen, Peter Breen, and Isabella M. Breen. Patrick Dolan also came from Keokuk.

            William H. Eddy, Mrs. Eleanor Eddy, James P. Eddy, and Margaret Eddy came from Belleville, Illinois.

            From Tennessee came Mrs. Lavina Murphy, a widow, and her family, John Landrum Murphy, Mary M. Murphy, Lemuel B. Murphy, William G. Murphy, Simon P. Murphy, William M. Pike, Mrs. Harriet F. Pike (née Murphy), Naomi

GEORGIA A. DONNER

[Mrs. W.A. Babcock]

1879.

KILLED BY THE PAWNEES.            21

L. Pike, and Catherine Pike. Another son-in-law of Mrs. Murphy, William M. Foster, with his wife, Mrs. Sarah A. C. Foster, and infant boy George Foster, came from St. Louis, Missouri.

            William McCutchen, Mrs. W. McCutchen, and Harriet McCutchen were from Jackson County, Missouri.

            Lewis Keseberg, Mrs. Phillipine Keseberg, Ada Keseberg, and L. Keseberg, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Wolfinger, Joseph Rhinehart, Augustus Spitzer, and Charles Burger, came from Germany.

            Samuel Shoemaker came from Springfield, Ohio, Charles T. Stanton from Chicago, Illinois, Luke Halloran from St. Joseph, Missouri, Mr. Hardcoop from Antwerp, in Belgium, Antoine from New Mexico. John Baptiste was a Spaniard, who joined the train near the Santa Fé trail, and Lewis and Salvador were two Indians, who were sent out from California by Captain Sutter.

            The Breens joined the company at Independence, Missouri, and the Graves family overtook the train one hundred miles west of Fort Bridger. Each family, prior to its consolidation with the train, had its individual incidents. William Trimble, who was traveling with the Graves family, was slain by the Pawnee Indians about fifty miles east of Scott's Bluff.  Trimble left a wife and two or three children. The wife and some of her relatives were so disheartened by this sad bereavement, and by the fact that many of their cattle were stolen by the Indians, that they gave up the journey to California, and turned back to the homes whence they had started.

            An amusing incident is related in the Healdsburg (Cal.) Flag, by Mr. W. C. Graves, of Calistoga, which occurred soon after his party left St.  Joseph, Missouri. It was on the fourth night out, and Mr. Graves and four or five others were detailed to stand guard. The constant terror of the emi-

22        HISTORY OF THE DONNER PARTY.

grants in those days was Indians. Both the Pawnees, the Sioux, and the Snakes were warlike and powerful, and were jealous, revengeful, and merciless toward the whites. That night a fire somehow started in the prairie grass about half a mile from camp. The west wind, blowing fierce and strong, carried the flames in great surging gusts through the tall prairie grass. A resin weed grows in bunches in this part of the country, generally attaining the height of four or five feet. The night being very dark, these weeds could be seen standing between the fire and the guards. As the flames swayed past the weeds, the impression was very naturally produced upon the mind of a timid beholder that the weeds were moving in the opposite direction. This optical illusion caused some of the guards to believe that the Indians had set fire to the grass, and were moving in immense numbers between them and the fire with intent to surround them, stampede the cattle, and massacre the entire party. The watcher next to Mr. Graves discovered the enemy, and rushed breathlessly to his comrade to impart the intelligence. Scarcely had Mr. Graves quieted him before it was evident that a general alarm had been spread in the camp. Two other guards had seen the Indians, and the aroused camp, armed to the teeth, marched out to give battle to the imaginary foe. It was a rich joke, and it was some time before those who were scared heard the last of the resin Indians.

            Only once, before reaching Salt Lake, did death invade the joyous Donner company. It was near the present site of Manhattan, Kansas, and Mrs.  Sarah Keyes was the victim. This estimable lady was the mother of Mrs.  J. F. Reed, and had reached her four score and ten years. Her aged frame and feeble health were not equal to the fatigues and exposure of the trip, and on the thirtieth of May they laid her tenderly to rest. She was buried in a coffin carefully fashioned from  

A MOTHER'S DEATH.         23

the trunk of a cottonwood tree, and on the brow of a beautiful knoll overlooking the valley. A grand old oak, still standing, guards the lonely grave of the dear old mother who was spared the sight of the misery in store for her loved ones. Could those who performed the last sad rites have caught a vision of the horrors awaiting the party, they would have known how good was the God who in mercy took her to Himself.

Chapter I; Chapter II;  Chapter III;  Chapter IV;  Chapter V;  Chapter VI;  Chapter VII;  Chapter VIII;  Chapter IX;  Chapter X;  Chapter XI;  Chapter XII;  Chapter XIII;  Chapter XIV;  Chapter XV;  Chapter XVI;  Chapter XVII;  Chapter XVIII;  Chapter XIX;  Chapter XX;  Chapter XXI;  Chapter XXII;  Chapter XXIII;  Chapter XXIV