Edwin Tucker's Diary
Edwin Tucker with his father, David, and
his uncle, Elijah (6'7" and deaf) came
to Kansas from Beloit, Wisconsin, in a
covered wagon with oxen, cattle, etc
and, with others, founding Eureka,
Kansas.
Edwin was born in Newbury, Vermont Dec.
23, 1835. He later served in the Kansas
House of Representatives and Senate, and
was an early Regent of Washburn College.
This diary was donated to the Heritage
Server for publication on the Internet
by Walter Cole, great-great grandson of
the author. The original copy of the
diary is in the collection of the ---
Historical Society.
Thurs April 16, 1857
We bid good bye to friends this morning
and started for Kansas; our enthusiasm
for Kansas, could not quite drown our
feelings of sadness at parting from
relatives, friends, home and nearly all,
which is dear on earth. We hardly know
what it is to leave home until we learn
by experience. Neighbors gathered and
helped us start. Nothing of interest
occurred in the forenoon at noon we took
our first lunch emigrant style; in the
afternoon passed through Roscoe. Oxen
concluded they had got near enough Kans
turned around and broke the wagon tongue
mended it and went on. Troubled to get a
stopping plane for the night stopped in
a Christian family it certainly is
pleasant to find people who fear God and
acknowledge Christ as their Savior. We
were all invited to eat breakfast with
the family and accepted.
Friday, April 17, 1857
Started early morning pleasant the
country passed through a fine rolling
prairie quite thickly settled we crossed
a small stream during the forenoon
beautifully lined with trees saw some
maples which had been tapped. In the
afternoon went through Rockford stopped
at night at a farm house
Saturday, April 18th l857
Found about five inches of snow this
morning when we arose crossed the
Rishwaukie in the forenoon which is
quite a stream where we crossed near its
mouth there is a beautiful view of the
bottom land on the North side of the
river from the bluff on the south side
we saw the cellar to the mansion that
Brooke built several years ago the
remains not of an air castle but of an
air city. Stopped at night at a Mr.
Bly's.
Sunday Apr. 19
Found a family who were professors of
religion joined with them in prayers in
the morning missed church privileges of
Beloit. Enjoyed a season of prayer find
myself taken up altogether with the
business of the world I trust that by
God's grace I may be enabled to live a
holier life.
Monday, Apr. 20
Found the roads very muddy the prairie
more rolling than Illinois prairie
generally broke our wagon tongue again
in crossing a small stream passed
through Watertown a place of about 14
inhabitants from thence to Daysville
containing about 36 inhabitants.
Tuesday Apr. 21
Morning commenced with snow started down
Rook River which is lined with high
bluffs these bluffs rise precipitately
on both sides of the river. I was
informed by a gentleman that one of
Black Hawk's warriors is buried in one
of the higher of these bluffs a stone
structure marks the place where his
bones will rest forever. As we passed
down the river we found the bottom on
the East heavily timbered with oak.
Stopped at night at a farm house people
kind.
Wednesday April 22d -57
Reached Dixon after about an hour and a
half' s drive Dixon is place containing
about 4500 inhabitants the village is
scattered over considerable area there
are about a dozen large blocks in the
town passed from thence to Sterling
which occupies a beautiful site for a
city on the west bank of Rook River
stopped at a tavern for the night
Thursday April 23d 1857
Passed down the river to Como a small
village from thence to Lyndon another
small village about the same size of
Como about two miles from Lyndon crossed
the river on e ferry boat from there to
Prophetstown a village con- taining
about fifty houses three or four stores
one tavern and a Post Office.
Friday April 24th -57
Passed from Prophetstown to Portland
over a level road Portland is a village
of about the same size of Lyndon Como
Prophetstown etc, the road from Portland
toward Genesceo was quite sandy for
about nine miles from Portland the soil
must be too sandy I think for profitable
culture a fault not common however to
Illinois prairies the country passed
over so far especially that between
Rockford and Prophetstown is rather flat
too much so I should think for health
towards night we passed some swamp land
hundreds of acres perfectly level with
here and there a small sheet of water
scattered over it stopped at night with
genuine Illinoisan very kind willing to
accommodate furnished with straw and a
little hay only charged $.30
Saturday April 25
Reached Geneseo about noon it is quite a
thriving village cars run through it
from Geneseo we passed south over a
prairie which seemed almost boundless as
far as the eye could scan from east to
west not a tree could be seen this is
more rolling there and consequently
dryer and more healthy than any other
prairie we have crossed stopped over the
Sabbath at a farmer's near the center of
the plain - people quite accommodating
but regard not the claims God has upon
them it is sad sight to see people other
wise sane rush on madly to destruction
without one care one thought for the
future Alas! none of us live as we
should if God were to disregard us and
our wants as we should be willing &
count it a privilege to give to God our
all for my part I am resolved with God's
help to live more for Christ and less to
myself.
Monday April 27, 57
Passed through Cambridge in the morning
another small Illinois town. A little
incident occurred illustrating the fact
that many men are very apt to attach
blame or mere suspicion where none is
due but to the scene we were overtaken
soon after we left town by a man in a
great hurry asking what we picked up in
the road just in the edge of town told
him nothing he said the one driving the
ox team found a letter in the road
opened it furthermore said letter had
money in it told him he must be mistaken
seemed to doubt our word told him he
might search for his letter and dollar
which it con- tained wasn't quite
prepared for that he finally concluded
to go back after having relieved himself
by saying he thought some one of us had
it little else of interest occurred
during the forenoon crossed a wide
bottom the bottom however we found a
little too near the center of gravity of
the earth for our convience in crossing.
In the afternoon passed over a prairie
almost as boundless as the desert and
trackless as the ocean but to come to
facts we could see no timber east west
nor south a little at our backs the
prairie I should think altogether too
flat for anything but corn and hogs
stopped at night for the first time
since we started out on the prairie with
no nearer approach to civilization than
a fence which served the purpose a
stable. The same God watched over and
protected there who had sustained us.
Tuesday April 28th, 1857
Nothing of interest occurred during the
day in the latter part of the forenoon
we passed through some beautiful timber
much maple as we passed along the road
across small streams winding their
peaceful course through the most
beautiful groves of young timber and
whose banks were lined with new born
grass spring's virgin fruit I could but
think of the brooks and woods of my
native Vermont that good old state such
scenes carry me back to the time how
short when I was an innocent child
roaming through the woods in search of
gum from the spruce or sap from the
maple accompanied by others as artless
as myself. At noon we stopped at a place
summum bonum of all that is good in
Illinois in the first place the people
were hospitable they "reckoned" we could
have whatever we wanted but the
situation was perfectly charming the
house on a gentle rise is half on the
prairie and half in the timber we might
say a small prairie lies to the east and
south while on the west and north there
is as beautiful a grove of maple as I
ever saw. The matron was away from home
a girl of about 14 officiated she was
very anxious we should go in the house
and eat our dinner to which we did not
object no- thing out of the usual order
during the remainder of the day stopped
one mile north of Galesburg.
Wednesday April 29th
Passed through Galesburg in the morning
Galesburg is a thriving place pleasantly
situated on the prairie where we find
nearly all Illinois towns the Northern
Cross Rail Road passes through the
place. Churches and schools are well
situated there I should think from the
appearance of buildings con- structed
for these purposes altogether it is
quite a neat place from Galesburg our
road passed in a southeast direction
through a continuous mudhole I have
frequently read in the geography of the
great depth of the soil in Illinois but
never expected to practically test its
depth with wagon wheels which we
certainly did do today. We encamped for
by the side of the creek by a gentle
grassy slope a beautiful grove lined the
north and west sides the green grass was
just starting from the ground just long
enough to give the ground a bright green
appearance the little camping ground was
certainly a delightful spot
Thursday, April 30
Passed through Abingdon early in the
morning a place which I put down as
ditto, Our course from Ab. was south
west through heavy timber the follows
the Hall Road very nearly in the
afternoon we came to one of the most
difficult crossings I ever saw the
stream was about a rod wide where it was
all in one channel; where we crossed the
stream divided forming an island there
was no difficulty in crossing the first
branch and the entrance into the second
was good but of all the chance for
getting out of a stream here was the
slimest the bank was nearly
perpendicular with mud at the bottom and
just at the top of the bank there just
about room enough for one yoke of oxen
to stand between the creek on one side
and a deep ditch on the other cut in
building the Rail Road which was about
twenty feet from the stream. 0ur only
way to get out was to make a short turn
almost at a right angle between two
trees one of which was just near enough
so that the wagon tongue would
conviently hit it and from the other
tree projected roots as though they grew
there on purpose for the wheels to run
over. How we got through would seem a
mystery (to) any one who ever saw the
place. In the afternoon passed through
Avon another ditto place stopped at
night in the rain which had been
threatening all day at a farmer's.
Friday May 1st 1857
Passed through Prairie City an infant
town about a year & half old if it
receives sufficient nutriment to mature
it will eventually attain to con-
siderable dimension it certainly is a
prairie city there's not a tree within
its limits but what has been planted
since it was built it presents a very
fine appearance to one a little distance
from it the houses are new and neat it
owes its existence to the Northern Cross
Rail Road which touches at this point.
From Prai. C. we passed over a beautiful
rolling prairie but little cultivated to
Bushnell a second Prairie City and on
the same R.R. from Bushnell we passed
over prairie for about four miles then
through a belt of timber about three
miles in width upon the farther side of
which we stopped for the night. This
timber is quite heavy a mixture of oak
and hickory
Saturday May 2d 1857
We must be in the land of corn cakes
where wheat breed is as much of a rarity
as maple sugar is in southern Wisconsin
we paid .50 for a loaf this morning
which is about .12 or .15 per pound I
should judge. Reached Macomb in the
afternoon which is quite a business
place some three thousand in- habitants
I should think three churches one of
them we noticed was fenced in by a neat
board fence which I think is a decided
improvement on the common plan which is
to leave them half in the street as
though they were no more sacred than the
town hall or the public store. Saw a man
engaged in forming a company to go to
Kansas to settle next Fall. From Macomb
we took a south west course traveled
about 3 miles and stopped just before we
stopped we bought come corn of an old
maid a pitiable object indeed she is
nearly 50 years of age I should think
quite near sighted hands and face be
somewhat smutty from work in the garden.
Her house is rather an odd looking
structure a double log house chimney at
each end room enough between the two
parts for a wood shed a place to keep
tools etc. Her house was built in her
younger days thought perhaps she had it
built in that form so that she might
live in one end and her husband in the
other if she over got married and they
had any difficulty it certainly looks
queer to see an old maid living in a
double log house. Stopped at night at a
Mr. Blecher's had a corn cake baked for
supper which was certainly a luxury the
first we have had since we started.
Sunday May 3
A beautiful warm day weather appeared
more like spring than any we have had
before. Sunday seems hardly like the
Sabbath when we have no church to attend
and so much to see to, that we have but
little time for meditation and prayer.
In the afternoon went to a Sunday school
held in a school house near by the
school was started by the gentleman with
whom we stopped as this was the first
Sunday they had met they did little but
read a few verses and sing the first
singing we had heard since we left home
and although it was not artistically
good it touched my heart it came from
simple hearted unsophisticated country
people they sung several pieces one of
which was "Alas and did my Savior bleed"
etc although it probably would not have
affected me in the same manner to have
heard it at home it drew tears from my
eyes.
Monday May 4th 1857
Started early in the morning passed
through timber land covered mostly with
second growth halted early bought some
oats in the bundle of a large generous
Kentuckian he owned a very large tract
of land had 7 or 8 ploughs running all
fine and pleasant without but the family
alas there was the least chance for
domestic enjoyment that ever I saw in
any family the wife a wild maniac the
only daughter deranged and no one to
take care of them and do the work about
the house but an ignorant colored women
alas poor man although he is wealthy
little does he know of the joy of a
happy home. We certainly do not know how
to ap- preciate the many blessings we
enjoy from the hand of our bountiful
Benefactor. The negro woman too was a
pitiable object a slave from her youth
until she was brought to Illinois and
now worse than a common slave she
certainly has had a "hard row to hoe" as
she termed it it seems to me that a
woman who believes on Christ and who has
suffered as much as she has in this
world of oppression will not be kept
from heaven on account of the color of
her skin and if she is worthy of
Christ's love and home with him above
she must have a right to her own body
here on earth. encamped at night on a
beautiful bottom near a flouring mill.
Tuesday May 5th, 1857
Passed through a small village called
Plymouth nothing of interest during the
day stopped at night within about 6
miles of Chili People very kind man had
an impediment in his speech. He was one
of those who drove the Mormons from
Nauvoo
Wednesday May 6,1857
Passed through Chili in the forenoon saw
a new way of planting corn by means of
flat stones, a furrow was first made
with a plow then a man walked in the
furrow leading a horse with a flat stone
attached to the horse. In the afternoon
passed through Woodville a man there
told that there had 188 teams passed
through the place for Kansas this
spring. Camped at night on a beautiful
creek in a heavy grove of timber. There
was a level plat of ground just large
enough for an ample camping ground now
green with grass. Most beautiful night
the moon and stars shining brightly. The
Heavens magnificent, the earth
beautiful.
Thursday May 7th 1857
Started early had alternate timber and
prairie timber handsome prairie fine saw
some Osage Orange fence very good
indeed. In the afternoon crossed a belt
of very heavy timber handsomest we had
seen Country very rolling. Got within
six miles of Quincy.
Friday, May 8, 1857
Road to Quincy hilly some beautiful
farms and fine orchards we have seen
many fine orchards in coming through
Illinois. Quincy is a handsome city
viewed from the bluff on the east or
from the river on the went it has a dry
healthy location on a bluff. The houses
are neat and there is considerable
business transacting there from the
river and country. In the afternoon
crossed the Mississippi on a steam
ferryboat, saw several steamboats
running up and down the river. The
Mississippi is truly a dignified river
its majestic waters sweep down in on
harmonious current. I had so much to see
to that I had little time for sublime
thoughts. The timber on the west side is
very heavy truly a mighty forest some
parts of the bottom are beautiful beyond
description the most splendid of timber
bordering on prairie bottom as level and
handsome as eye ever beheld.
Saturday May 9, 1857
Traveled about two hours on the Miss.
bottom some fine farming land rich as
need be on this bottom saw for the first
time some slaves at a casual ob-
servation we observe nothing striking in
their appearance but upon watching them
more closely we observe a subdued,
saddened, deadened spirit. The houses,
outbuildings, fences etc belonging to
the farm exhibit none of that thrift and
improvement which characterize western
farms generally. Stopped to spend the
remainder of the day and the coming
Sabbath near a farm house. people very
kind.
Sunday, May 10, 1857
Weather very cold. Sabbath almost a
blank no church and not spent as pro-
fitably as it might have been. Saw a
great deal of riding about and visiting,
It is really a pitiable sight in this
Christian land to see a whole community
absorbed in selfsatisfaction and
worldliness disregarding their own best
in- terest and their makers claims upon
them.
Monday May 11,1857
Traveled through a timber country quite
broken reached Palmyra a little before
noon. At noon met two wagons that had
been to Kansas City but no further on
account of the high price of provisions
there stopped at night near where a
steam saw mill was building. Oxen
started to go back to the Miss. bottom
where the grass is better.
Tuesday May 12 1857
Started early passed through a beautiful
prairie tract of land very level, ? at
noon in a brush ravine afternoon more
timber and hills Stopped at night near a
creek. Five men from Ill. camped nearby
going to S.W., Mo. or Kan.
Wednesday May 13
Passed through alternate timber and
prairie. Stopped at night by a
Kentuckians house turned our cattle into
his pasture, A very light shower near
night.
Thursday, May 14
Reached Paris at about 9 o'clock. Paris
is the county seat, quite a pretty place
stopped at noon where we went off the
road to buy corn. Stopped at night near
a very intelligent kind man, Mr. Wade.
Friday, May 15
Morning cold and cloudy at noon went
about half mile from the road to : buy
some corn bought from a man who had been
in the country about thirty years, never
knew so backward a spring before. In the
afternoon passed through a beautiful but
small prairie seven miles east of
Huntsville. A little before night we
bought a half bushel of apples of a
negro woman who appeared quite
intelligent and decidedly more womanlike
than hundreds of white women For supper
cooked a hasty pudding quite a luxury
with milk.
Saturday May 16
Nothing of special interest. camped at
night near a large bottom fine chance
for the stock.
Sunday, May 17
Morning cloudy, very cold Sabbath very
unprofitably spent. There seems to be a
disposition in myself at least to eat an
unnecessary amount of food when all
outside influences are withdrawn. The
mind is thrown back upon it- self
nothing to do, too cold to read. no
companion to talk with idleness is the
parent of bad thoughts, bad words and
bad actions. There is no better antidote
for heartwanderings as far as free moral
agency is concerned than the habit of
being constantly employed in something
useful. If our hearts were right toward
God I suppose we should ever be able
under all circumstances to refrain from
the commission of gross sins
Third week of April
I reached the Mo.R. at Brunswick. It is
far inferior to the Miss in every
particular it does not impress me with
that sense of majesty, power and stern
purity which shoots out from every swell
of the Father of Waters. The Mo. is a
murky rapid stream reminding one of a
group of dirty children running in to
dinner in too much of a hurry to wash.
It is nevertheless a very useful stream
bearing on its neverfaiIing muddy
current the busy throng of migrants and
the useful products of many a State We
feel while looking the mighty mass of
running water a sullen ( ) awe crossed
Grand river near its mouth a little
above B. Grand in name but in nothing
else - Country fine, quite rolling.
Crab- apple trees & grape vines fill the
woods. The Redbud, a small tree is very
abundant and exceedingly beautiful with
its profusion of small flowers. The
week's journey closed with a circuitous
wind among trees, between and around
stumps over logs and fallen trees down
steep and crooked hills up steeper and
more crooked ones all to get to a
crossing on a small stream which the
chivalrous slaveholders had not
enterprise enough to bridge.
Sunday May 24.
I stopped with a man from Ohio came
there the Spring before on his way to
Kan. went no farther on account of the
state of affairs there. Man very
accomodating, family quite interesting.
The country around dressed in the most
beauteous verdure. Spring, natures chief
artist is now finishing her picture, she
has reserved the richness of Paradise
beauty for the last stroke, and as she
leaves on airy wings to await her
returning season, she gives a triumphant
parting gaze and leaves the impulse of
her blooming beauty. now should we feel
toward Him from whom these beauties
flow: What were the earth without this
heavenly magnificence? What must heaven
itself be and the beauty of the abode of
those pure and holy beings for whom God
causes to bloom the flowers and leave
the trees of Paradise.
Passed through Richfield mon. morn. a
small town situated rather picturesquely
a part of it upon the high bluff which
is near the river. houses scattered
along down the bluff, the business part
of town on a narrow bottom between the
hill and R, many fine springs run from
the crevices in the rocks along the W
Bank of the Mo. The road from Richfield
to Kan C. is along the R. bottom heavily
timbered most of the way. Crossed the Mo
to Kan. C. Tuesday. Kan.C. is scattered
over wide area Wyandot C. three miles
above at the mouth of the Kan.R.
presents the appearance of quite a
pretty little place. Camped at night
near the line between Mo. and Kan. Wed.
morning drove a few miles and came out
onto a high open prairie. As we took in
the prospect our eyes looking to the S.
over the broad, magnificent rolling
prairies, luxuriously green in the garb
of nature we thought these are the
plains of K. for the possession of these
the two great parties of the American
Union have contended martyrs in the
cause of human liberty, noble men &
women have bled and died for their
rights and for the protection of their
homes. Well might free men strive to
wrest from cruel slavery these broad
noble prairies and consecrate them to
freedom. Well we are in Kan. at last but
people cannot live even in Kan. on
heroic determinations to resist the
slave power; we felt as though we wanted
a home; enquired of everyone we met
about claims some re- presented that
there were plenty about where they lived
almost every man anxious to get
everybody to settle in his vicinity,
men, many of them, are so selfish or
enthusiastic or both that they will make
all sorts of statements whenever it is
for their interest. After spending about
three days in noting places, route etc.
and inquiring of everybody we saw and
discussing the relative merits of
different localities we came to the sage
conclusion that everybody's home
wouldn't do for us and the only safe way
was to believe nobody only as far as we
chose. On Friday we heard of some land
belonging to the Ottawa Indians which we
could have to plant corn on. concluded
to stop, wait, deliberate, get cool and
then choose accordingly on Sat. we
pitched our camp in an Indian
settlement, the Ottawa Preserve. The
country traveled on Sat afternoon ex-
ceedingly beautiful. a large level plain
stretched out to the E., from 0ttawa
Creek and presents an exceedingly
delightful appearance from the more
elevated tableland N of it. The eye
wanders on a wide, smooth, living,
growing ocean with here and there a
small leafy island refining (?) the
memory of the scene
Sunday May 31.
Our first Sabbath in Kan! camped by a
man from S.W. Wis. very kind and
obliging, too much inclined to talk
about claims, making money etc on the
Lord's Day, a sin quite common with many
professing Christians in the W. where
the temptations to worldliness are so
numerous & strong. Alas that we who
profess to be followers of the glorious
Redeemer & trust that we have felt the
pardoning love and tasted the sweetness
of a holy communion with Him who died
that we might live, should grow so cold,
so worldly as to choose rather to think
of the enjoyments of earth and talk of
business than seek and pray for the more
enduring portion and that glorious hope
beyond these passing vanities. Mon.
started off in search of the Squire as
he is called, who had the corn ground to
let. After various windings and crossing
the creek twice, we reached the sought
for place, made a bargain with the
Squire, who was a large, fat,
good-humored being in his legging pants
and calico shirt or hunting gown, a
garment somewhat resembling a
Professor's study gown but more
elaborately made busy this week putting
in corn - our Indian neighbors curious
in regard to our mode of living etc.
They seem very willing to have white
people among them. Nothing of interest
occurred during the week, We got
permission to move into their old mill
for awhile felt quite grateful for so
much of house as this after being out
with nothing but our wagon to shelter us
for about six weeks. Busy during the
week planting corn nothing of interest
occurred
Sunday June 7th 1857
Father went to the Mission Church I
remained at home or rather where we were
stopping to attend to the cattle I had a
short season of prayer I can only
acknowledge with shame, that I have not
that ardent love for the Savior that I
do not enjoy such refreshing seasons of
prayer as I did when first I knew my
Redeemer. It seemed to me that I never
had more sweet com- munion with the Lord
than at times along the road especially
on some Sabbaths. When I first had a
hope I could but wonder at the coldness
and indifference of many christians and
I thought I never could live so far from
the Savior but I have learned by
experience what I have often heard that
there is no dependence to be placed upon
self; our only hope for freedom from the
thrall- dom of sin & for a life of
holiness here upon the earth depends as
much upon the aid of Heaven as does our
final redemption. Nothing of particular
interest occurred during the week busy
putting in corn potatoes beans peas etc
weather pleasant but quite warm. The
Indians I have noticed are very willing
to re- ceive any thing which may be
offered them they never need urging.
I must now make a cursory review of the
few incidents of interest from June 8th
until the time I started to look of the
country in the direction of Walnut
River. Soon after we finished planting
our corn I went to Kan. City with Mr.
Shepherd to get a load of provisions &
groceries to speculate a little on.
There was some chance for trading with
the Indians and we had money lying idle
so that I thought we might try and get a
little of the money back spent on the
road. Like the milkmaid in the
Elementary spellingbook I counted the
profits before I had them I thought I
should make a fine sum on that load go
several times more & in the aggregate do
something handsome. But it finally
occurred to me that I should be making
my money from industrious farmers & the
profit if I had any would be taken from
their pockets & put into mine without
due compensation on their part. I find I
could not satisfy the Golden Rule in
that way. I do not hereby infer that
noone has a right to sell goods at a
profit but came to the conclusion that I
was not rightly constituted for a
peddler or traveling grocery. I was
shocked at the amount of liquor drunk
literally poured down human throats in
Kan. City every merchant from the
wholesale dealer down to the "Pies and
Cakes" man keeps a full supply of the
flaming murderer. In short judging from
what I saw, pure water must be a
beverage seldom tasted; thought by the
mighty champions of Kansas City to be
fit only for children & weak women
On Sabbaths we attended Church at the
Bap. mission. The missionary usually
delivered his discourses to an
interpreter who translated it for the
Indians but the interpreter was absent
at this time on a delegation to Wash. so
that those Indians who could not
understand English were deprived of the
benefit of the sermon. The Mission
Church is a large log building with good
floor & windows & comfortable seats. The
minister is a truly devoted follower of
our blessed master. His sermons rich in
practical thoughts and deep in the
truths which relate to the soul & its
eternity were delivered in the most
simple and plain language. Those sermons
which tell men most plainly of their
duty to God & man, that show them their
faults without plastering them over with
some sentimental or fancied virtues are
best calculated to do good such were
this missionary' s and they made an
impression on my mind which will remain
long after many discourses in fancy
rhetoric shall have faded from memory.
The singing was strikingly impressive
the tunes are such as are sung by
Churches in the states and the Hymns
also translated into the language of the
Ottawa ind. The services were closed
with prayer by a native preacher in the
language of the Indians.
I went to meeting at Centropolis on two
Sabbaths preaching by Methodists. My
time during the week was mostly occupied
in working in the corn, picking
gooseberries & mulberries, churning
cooking, washing dishes etc I am a firm
believer In "woman' s Rights'' I think
she has sole right to the household
affairs or the management of them & I
have no desire to encroach upon her
'Sphere' of action. Those Indians seem
not to have made that mental & moral
progress under the loving laborious toil
of the self denying missionaries which
we might hope for & expect. It requires
much time to change savage people to a
civilized people. Could those
missionaries who labor so earnestly for
the souls of their ______ fellows reap
the full harvest of the seed sown, could
the good seed planted by them have
opportunity to grow unchoked by the
tares of the enemy: in short did not so
many whites, citizens of a christian
nation so shamefully cheat abuse them &
set such examples of wickedness there
might be encouraging hope that their
1abor of love would be amply repaid by a
rich harvest of souls.
On the morning of July 14 I started in
company with three others in search of
c1aims. We had a large two horse wagon
covered with India rubber cloth, water
proof; we armed ourselves with three
rifles, three pistols, one revolver &
several bowie knives; we were thus
particular on account of a report from
Walnut R. that the Indians had driven a
company of settlers away from there.
Some rumors stated that the squatters
were compelled to flee for their lives,
Weather very dry no water running in any
of the streams except in the ___ & Fall
R. The grass on the upland prairie was
generally very dry and in some, places
it was burned off. There was nothing of
interest occurred during the trip. After
we left the settle- ment we took the
precaution to have our firearms ready
for use. On the Neosho we found quite a
company of Sac Indians encamped. In the
evening I went down to the R, to see the
Inds. fish. The lndians carried torches
formed of tall weeds lighted at one end.
The light from these torches showed to
the keen eye of the Redskin the form of
the victim. At Willow Spring creek about
8 miles S. of Ver. for the first time a
wild Turkey. So little was known about
this part of Kan. at that time that we
could get but vague & unsatisfactory
answers to our queries about it. Fall
River or S. Ver. as it was then called
was entirely unknown to al- most
everybody. We found some people on Fall
R. _____ not certain whether to stop or
not they thought it very doubtful about
their having any neighbors for some
years to come. On we went to the famous
Walnut we saw some good situations
before we left Fall R. on it & on
smaller streams between it & Ver but we
were bent on seeing all we could bear of
and then take choice. Struck Walnut at
the embryo town of Eldorado found some
settlers, very sanguine that their
country would be immediately settled up.
Found plenty of vacant claims with good
timber on them. The bottoms were
beautiful but the grass on them was very
much parched up by drought this fact
more than anything else prejudiced us
from settling there. There was still
another stream further West about 12
miles called Whitewater this was
favorably represented but was too near
the terminus of civilization or rather
likely to be for the present. Took
claims on the Walnut about 6 miles above
Eldorado.
July 25, 1857
Started back, passed through Burlington
on the Neosho. Business seemed quite
brisk for an interior town in so new a
settlement a stream saw mill just
started, a very good Hotel up besides
some log cabins. Stopped over the
Sabbath at B. heard Rev. Mr. Dennis
Presiding Elder of the Methodist
Episcopol Church. Preaching under the
shade of trees, nature's meeting House.
Mr. Den. is a very energetic speaker
seems a very dedicated and earnest
worker in his Master' s vineyard.
Reached our temporary home July 28,
found all well. Made arrangements to
start as soon as possible. Started Aug.
5 for our permanent homes to be. Could
not leave the old mill with its
associations without some feelings of
sadness I was very anxious to go and yet
it did quite drown all feelings of
attachment which clustered around the
Indian Settlement. There after six weeks
of tiresome travel through scenes to
which l was wholly un- accustomed with
no home but for a day we first found
temporary home a rest for a season of
rest of ourselves & for our jaded but
ever faithful beasts. But away we went
my father & uncle a Mr. LiIlie who
joined us that morning & myself. Two
wagons yoke of oxen a pair of horses, 3
cows & 6 head of young cattle was unwell
the 2nd day quite sick at Bur. where we
stopped until joined by Messers Ashmore
Pratt Prather & Combs. All moved on
together and reached Fall River Aug. 12.
After looking around and consulting two
days concluded to settle found a spring
& claimed the land 302 acres adjacent
for a town site. Commenced building a
house immediately for a school house.
was taken sick after working one day.
claims were taken to be afterwards
divided or drawn by the members. A short
time after we commenced two gentlemen -
P.D. Ridenour & Frank___called upon us &
wished to go into the organization of a
town company with us which it was agreed
they should do for a consideration on
their part. Sept first my father started
for Wis.. together with Messers Prat &
Combs going to Ill. &, Messers Ashmore &
Prather going back to Apponcose (?) for
their families leaving Mr. Lillie, Mr.
Ashmore's son John - my uncle & myself
to do as best we could until they came
back I was still sick; my uncle was
taken severely sick a short time after
they left was very low when Mr. Ashmore
& family came back brought some medicine
which relieved him. Time which before
Mr. Ashmor' s family came hung rather
heavily on my hands now passed more
swiftly.
Oct. 2, 1857 Some one took the liberty
to ride off our horses last night being
careful to let no one know it for fear
they might not get leave; spent two or
three days in fruitless search and then
started for Kan. City to meet my father
and mother Mr. Ashmore & George in
company -- my uncle improving in health,
felt quite well myself although very
weak. Found considerable im- provement
had been made in Johnson Co. since I was
last there in June. Met my father and
mother felt much relieved after being
alone as it were so long. Nothing of
particular interest occurred on the
road. Picked some crabapples near old
Bap. Miss. found an abundance of melons
along the way reached home (home though
but a mere cabin of rudest build if
around it cluster pleasant associations
& dear memories or if but a home in our
anticipation around which our hearts
affections have twined like the tendrils
of the vine is dearer than all the earth
besides)
Oct 27, 1957 Found all well and
prosperous. Surveyors came on to survey
the town site surveyed a part of it
only, felt quite buoyant in regard to
the future prospects of our town in
hopes to have a sawmill in a short time
Black- smith Shop etc moved into our
house about Nov. 6 felt remarkably well
never any healthier. There is a kind of
excitement to life in a new country a
per- son is brought into scenes with
which he is not familiar, there is
constantly something new and novel,
there is pleasure felt in starting new,
in opening a farm where before nothing
but the Deer & the Antelope have roamed
over the prairie free as the air they
breathe except when pursued by the
nimble arrows of the Red Man. Here where
the Wolf's howl has pealed forth upon
the still night air unheard by human
ears, where the grass has sprung up in
living green - the lap of generous
nature - where ten thousand flowers have
blossomed but to "waste their sweetness
on the desert air" where the trees
natures temples have been vocal with the
thanksgiving songs of the birds whose
notes were heard only by the ear of Him
who gave them life, here I fain would
make my home would plow & fence & build
& see the work of my own hands make what
was once a lonely waste a thrifty home.
One morning a neighbor living on
Bachelor Creek 6 miles off, came over
here and claimed protection he said that
his life had been threatened by some men
who accused him of stealing some horses
one of them had lost. he said he know
the men that they were from Kan. River
near Manhattan that they were part of a
gang of horse thieves whose headquarters
were in that vicinity. The men he said
had gone to the Verdigris to got more
men intending to come back and hang him.
We of course promised him that he should
not be lynched without a fair trial, he
said that was all he wanted for he could
prove an "Alibi". In the afternoon Mr.
Ashmore went over to his house and not
coming back so soon as we expected Mr.
Lillle & (I?) started over about
Sundown; after going 4 miles met two of
the family coming toward Eureka (the
name we had given to our town) both
crying, said that the men had taken
their cattle & cowing with them that
they had abused their mother etc. I
really pitied them from the bottom of my
heart. We turned our course & came back
with them, in about an hour the company
came cattle and all. As the night was
still I could hear distinctly the tramp-
ing of the cattle, the men talking & the
bells on the cattle & when I thought
that they were driving them away from a
home that possessed little else &
robbing what I supposed to an innocent
family those sounds had a strange sad
meaning as they broke the stillness of
the air. On they came & after organising
a meet- ing an extemporaneous court of
inquiry was held. Mr. Godwin the man
from whom the horses had bean stolen
said that Mr. Nodine the prisoner had
been around where he lived a few days
before the horses were taken & that his
son Seneca had been at work in the
neighborhood until within a short time
before the horses were missing: he
stated that he had tracked the horses
down to Bachelor Creek near where Mr.
Nodine lives, that two men answering to
the description of Fred Nodine' s
Son-in-law & Sen. had been seen with
horses coming in this direction. Further
John & William Carroll neighbors to B.d.
had seen a wagon at N' s house with a
pair of whippletrees on it, where the
whippletrees came from & where the wagon
went to could not be satisfactorily
accounted for. On the other hand N. said
that he could prove that he did not
steal the horses because he was not
thereabouts at the time that the horses
were stolen stated that he knew nothing
about it his son or son in law might
have taken them for ought he knew. A
vote was taken on the question whether
it was thought that he knew about the
horses being stolen all but three voted
in the affirmative. Most of them were in
favor of whipping him at least to make
him tell about the horses this I
strongly pro- tested against as being
unfair in the premiser no posative being
given to show that such was the case,
none spoke openly of lynching him in the
evening but it was manifest that this
was the wish of many. It was finally
determined by the company to take the
cattle & wagon as they belonged ___ who
no doubt had stolen the horses. I was
perhaps more excited than I had ever
been before I was unused to such scenes
men who looked themselves as though they
would do about anything bad seeking to
whip or hang an old man who had not been
proven guilty was too much for me calmly
to hear. The cattle were taken but repl
- yed by Fred in the Win. We commenced a
prayer meeting about the fifth of
December. Mr. Ashmore, Prather, Lillie,
Father & myself were the only adult
males present the others consisted of
Mrs. Ashmore & four Mrs. Prather &
mother. Perhaps this could not be called
the first prayer meeting as Mr. Lillle,
John Ashmore & myself had a season of
prayer in the schoolhouse in Sep. before
any of the folks got back. It had ever
been my earnest desire & prayer that our
settlement might be commenced in prayer
& grow in moral strength as its members
increased.
Sunday evening Feb. 20, 1859
Has been a day of some doubts and clouds
with me. Sab. School was well attended
children seem considerably interested,
everything is auspicious for an
increasingly interesting and profitable
school but a look of the services of a
good Superintendent and experienced
teachers. Feel altogether unqualified in
any particular for the faithful
discharge of the duties of
Superintendent. Feel that perhaps I
should not take any post of responsi-
bilty, I am so weak and sinful. Am
resolved in the strength of God to live
more Christlike, to make more watchful,
earnest and persevering efforts to
overcome my many besetting sins, to keep
my body in subjection, to provide things
honest in the sight of all men and to
avoid as much as possible the appearance
of evil. resolved to make greater
exertions for the conversion of souls
unto God, to use direct personal
influence with men to turn them from
death.
Sunday Feb. 27,1859
The resolutions above seem to had but
little influence on my life during the
past week. I find myself vastly too much
engrossed by the things of the present
life. I feel that I am not free from the
bondage of sin, I am bound, chained,
held down by a subserviency to the
beggarly elements of this world to the
indulgence of carnal appetites and
desires. I feel that there is a great
work to be accomplished here, the
foundation of a mighty superstructure is
being laid in this community the young
twig of society is now putting forth its
tender shoots and as it is now inclined
so will be its future growth in a great
measure. There is need of earnest
Christians of deep and fervent piety to
labor in this part of the Lord's
vineyard. The world is all ripe - as far
at least as ripeness in sin is concerned
- ready for the harvest but the laborers
are few. Sabbath School today was quite
interesting notwithstanding the house
was somewhat uncomfortable. Scholars
manifest much interest in their school,
attend very regularly and learn their
lessons quite well. I trust the hand of
the Lord is in the work my faith is
strengthened when I see such marked
fruits with the aid of so feeble
instrumentality. My prayer is that God
may continue and increase his blessing,
that those dear children and youth may
be disciplined in the army of God to
hate the worldly and manifest (?) for
truth and Jesus.
I feel at times a burning desire to be
up and doing, engaged about my master's
business and then I am so prone to sin
to wander from God and the path of duty,
to get careless and to leave myself
unguarded against temp- tation and to
give way to my evil inclinations that I
feel that there is an incubus upon me
weighing me down to earth. May God in
his mercy grant to give me strength to
throw off the shackles of sin and to
engage heartily in the Redeemer's work
upon earth! Resolved! That with the Holy
Spirit's aid I will struggle with my
passions until victory declares in favor
of the Redeemer; That I will strive to
attain unto a higher Christian life.
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Walter Cole
Topeka, Ks 66611
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