Jedediah Smith (Wikipedia) |
Jedediah's party spent the winter of 1823-24 with the Absarokas (Crow) near the Wind River Range of the Rocky Mountains. In February, they left the winter encampment to resume their search for new trapping grounds and to find the rivers the Absarokas told them about during the winter. But first they had to find a way to cross the mountains. With forty peaks over 13,000 feet high, numerous glaciers, and over two thousand alpine lakes, the Wind River Range was a formidable barrier.
At first, the party attempted to cross the mountains through the Valley of the Green River at the north end of the range, but the snow was too deep and they had to turn around (see maps below). After making their way back to the Absarokas, they were told of an easier route at the south end of the mountains. Jedediah and his men made their way across the southern part of the Popo Agie River to the Sweetwater River in blizzard conditions.
(Wikimedia Commons) |
On July 12, 1846, Edwin Bryant, an emigrant, wrote that he traveled
"up a very gentle ascent to the south pass of the Rocky Mountains, or the dividing ridge separating the waters of the Atlantic and the Pacific. The ascent to the Pass is so gradual, that but for our geographical knowledge . . . we should not have been conscious that we had ascended to, and were standing upon the summit of the Rocky Mountains - the backbone . . . of the North American Continent." (National Park Service)
Historic marker near Lander, Wyoming (by Barry Swackhamer 18 Sep 2020, courtesy HMdb.org) |
The South Pass, in which you are now located, is perhaps the most significant transportation gateway through the Rocky Mountains. Indians, mountain men, Oregon Trail emigrants, Pony Express riders, and miners all recognized the value of the passageway straddling the Continental Divide. Bounded by the Wind River Range on the north and the Antelope Hills on the south, the pass offered overland travelers a broad relatively level corridor between the Atlantic and Pacific watersheds.
[Although Jedediah and party "discovered" the South Pass in 1824, they were not the first to do so. In 1812, Robert Stuart of the Pacific Fur Company, owned by John Jacob Astor, was directed to the pass by his party's Shoshone guide. But the "Astorians" were traveling from west to east, searching for an overland route to use instead of transporting their furs via ship along the California coast. News of their discovery was overshadowed by the War of 1812, and knowledge of the pass was lost until the Smith party found it twelve years later. Jedediah and his men were the first Euro-Americans to cross the pass from east to west.]
Thomas Fitzpatrick (1788-1837) |
In September, Jedediah and his small brigade happened upon a party of Iroquois freemen (independent) trappers near present-day Blackfoot, Idaho. The group had broken off from the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) Snake Country brigade led by Alexander Ross. The men were now ill-equipped to make the 400-mile return trip to their home base, Flathead Post, near present-day Thompson Falls, Montana.
[HBC was a British fur trading company that dominated the Pacific Northwest fur market in the 1820s. Even though both the U.S. and British Empire laid claim to the Oregon Country, which would later become the states of Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and parts of Montana and Wyoming, HBC made a point of discouraging American trappers in the region.]
The Bitterroot Mountains in Idaho and Montana looking north from El Capitan Peak (elevation 9,983 ft) in Montana. (Wikimedia Commons) |
L: Snake River Watershed (Wikimedia-User Shannon1 by GNU) & R: Bear River Watershed (Wikimedia-User Kmusser by CC 2.5 Generic) For orientation purposes, the modern city of Pocatello is marked by a red dot and highlighted in yellow on each map. |
Google Map (with additional locations and labeling) |
Catching Up by Alfred Jacob Miller, 1858-1860. Watercolor on paper. (The Walters Art Museum) |
Historical marker 1825 Rocky Mountain Rendezvous near McKinnon, WY. (by Barry Swackhamer, 10 Sep 2015, courtesy HMdb.org) |
The marker reads, in part:
James Beckwourth (1798-1866) |
Google Map (with added locations and labeling) |
Cavalcade by Alfred Jacob Miller, between 1858 and 1860. Watercolor on paper. (Walters Art Museum) |
The three partners split up the duties of the company – Jedediah would explore and trap to the south, while David Jackson and William Sublette would handle field operations and trap north along the Snake and Missouri Rivers. The partners and their respective brigades departed Bear River around mid-August.
From The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland:
In July 1858, a wealthy Baltimore businessman and art collector named William T. Walters commissioned 200 watercolors at twelve dollars apiece from Baltimore-born artist Alfred Jacob Miller. These paintings were each accompanied by a descriptive text, and were delivered in installments over the next twenty-one months and ultimately were bound in three albums. Transcriptions of field-sketches drawn during the 1837 expedition that Miller had undertaken to the annual fur-trader's rendezvous in the Green River Valley (in what is now western Wyoming), these watercolors are a unique record of the closing years of the western fur trade.
– FURTHER READING –
- The Ashley-Smith Explorations and the Discovery of a Central Route to the Pacific, 1822-1829, With the Original Journals by William Henry Ashley, Jedediah Strong Smith, and Harrison G. Rogers, published in 1918, is a free ebook available on Google Books. It includes a detailed, documented account of events leading up to and including Jedediah Smith's death, where many other sources speculate.
- James Clyman, American Frontiersman, 1792-1881. The adventures of a trapper and covered wagon emigrant as told in his own reminiscences and diaries. This is the former colonel's first-hand account of his experiences with the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He's the man who stitched up Jedediah's head.
- Jedediah Smith's Travels Pictures Maps
by Dr. O. Ned Eddins is an interesting, well-researched account of
Jedediah's travels. It includes photos, maps, and excerpts from
Jedediah's journals. Eddins' website, The Fur Trade Role in Western Expansion, is extensive, addressing a wide variety of topics related to the American West.
- The Jedediah Smith Society and An Unforgettable Man: Hugh Glass
websites have a wealth of information about life and times of these
men, particularly on the Hugh Glass site. The Smith site has original
letters written by Jedediah and his brothers (click on the "YouTube
Videos & Links to Other Sites" tab), as well as maps of his travels.
The Hugh Glass site is more extensive with a much wider range of
information and many references to Jedediah. Both sites are
well-researched and documented.
- The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, Mountaineer, Scout, and Pioneer, and Chief of the Crow Nation of Indians, written from Beckwourth's own dictation by Thomas D. Bonner in1856, provides another viewpoint. This is possibly an embellished version of events since Beckwourth was known for exaggeration.
- PJ Delhomme, author of The Ten Toughest Mountain Men and Women published in "Outdoor Life" in 2016, lists Jedediah Smith alongside Hugh Glass and eight others. Delhomme is a bit on the cheeky side but, as he says, if even half the stories about these men and women are true, they were tougher than tough.
Bradish-Scott Family History - Feb/Mar 2023
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