<h2 class="sc"><SPAN name="v_completeness_of_the_extermination" id="v_completeness_of_the_extermination"></SPAN>V. Completeness of the Extermination.</h2>
<p class="center">(May 1, 1889.)</p>
<p>Although the existence of a few widely-scattered individuals enables us
to say that the bison is not yet absolutely extinct in a wild state,
there is no reason to hope that a single wild and unprotected individual
will remain alive ten years hence. The nearer the species approaches to
complete extermination, the more eagerly are the wretched fugitives
pursued to the death whenever found. Western hunters are striving for
the honor (?) of killing the last buffalo, which, it is to be noted, has
already been slain about a score of times by that number of hunters.</p>
<p>The buffaloes still alive in a wild state are so very few, and have been
so carefully “marked down” by hunters, it is possible to make a very
close estimate of the total number remaining. In this enumeration the
small herd in the Yellowstone National Park is classed with other herds
in captivity and under protection, for the reason that, had it not been
for the protection afforded by the law and the officers of the Park, not
one of these buffaloes would be living to-day. Were the restrictions of
the law removed now, every one of those animals would be killed within
three months. Their heads alone are worth from $25 to $50 each to
taxidermists, and for this reason every buffalo is a prize worth the
hunter’s winning. Had it not been for stringent laws, and a rigid
enforcement of them by Captain Harris, the last of the Park buffaloes
would have been shot years ago by Vic. Smith, the Rea Brothers, and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_522"></SPAN></span>
other hunters, of whom there is always an able contingent around the
Park.</p>
<p>In the United States the death of a buffalo is now such an event that it
is immediately chronicled by the Associated Press and telegraphed all
over the country. By reason of this, and from information already in
hand, we are able to arrive at a very fair understanding of the present
condition of the species in a wild state.</p>
<p>In December, 1886, the Smithsonian expedition left about fifteen
buffaloes alive in the bad lands of the Missouri-Yellowstone divide, at
the head of Big Porcupine Creek. In 1887 three of these were killed by
cowboys, and in 1888 two more, the last death recorded being that of an
old bull killed near Billings. There are probably eight or ten
stragglers still remaining in that region, hiding in the wildest and
most broken tracts of the bad lands, as far as possible from the cattle
ranches, and where even cowboys seldom go save on a round-up. From the
fact that no other buffaloes, at least so far as can be learned, have
been killed in Montana during the last two years, I am convinced that
the bunch referred to are the last representatives of the species
remaining in Montana.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1886 Mr. B. C. Winston, while on a hunting trip about
75 miles west of Grand Rapids, Dakota, saw seven buffaloes—five adult
animals and two calves; of which he killed one, a large bull, and caught
a calf alive. On September 11, 1888, a solitary bull was killed 3 miles
from the town of Oakes, in Dickey County. There are still three
individuals in the unsettled country lying between that point and the
Missouri, which are undoubtedly the only wild representatives of the
race east of the Missouri River.</p>
<p>On April 28, 1887, Dr. William Stephenson, of the United States Army,
wrote me as follows from Pilot Butte, about 30 miles north of Rock
Springs, Wyoming:</p>
<p>“There are undoubtedly buffalo within 50 or 60 miles of here, two having
been killed out of a band of eighteen some ten days since by cowboys,
and another band of four seen near there. I hear from cattlemen of their
being seen every year north and northeast of here.”</p>
<p>This band was seen once in 1888. In February, 1889, Hon. Joseph M.
Carey, member of Congress from Wyoming, received a letter informing him
that this band of buffaloes, consisting of twenty-six head, had been
seen grazing in the Red Desert of Wyoming, and that the Indians were
preparing to attack it. At Judge Carey’s request the Indian Bureau
issued orders which it was hoped would prevent the slaughter. So, until
further developments, we have the pleasure of recording the presence of
twenty-six wild buffaloes in southern Wyoming.</p>
<p>There are no buffaloes whatever in the vicinity of the Yellowstone Park,
either in Wyoming, Montana, or Idaho, save what wander out of that
reservation, and when any do, they are speedily killed.</p>
<p>There is a rumor that there are ten or twelve mountain buffaloes still <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_523"></SPAN></span>
on foot in Colorado, in a region called Lost Park, and, while it lacks
confirmation, we gladly accept it as a fact. In 1888 Mr. C. B. Cory, of
Boston, saw in Denver, Colorado, eight fresh buffalo skins, which it was
said had come from the region named above. In 1885 there was a herd of
about forty “mountain buffalo” near South Park, and although some of the
number may still survive, the indications are that the total number of
wild buffaloes in Colorado does not exceed twenty individuals.</p>
<p>In Texas a miserable remnant of the great southern herd still remains in
the “Pan-handle country,” between the two forks of the Canadian River.
In 1886 about two hundred head survived, which number by the summer of
1887 had been reduced to one hundred, or less. In the hunting season of
1887-’88 a ranchman named Lee Howard fitted out and led a strong party
into the haunts of the survivors, and killed fifty-two of them. In May,
1888, Mr. C. J. Jones again visited this region for the purpose of
capturing buffaloes alive. His party found, from first to last,
thirty-seven buffaloes, of which they captured eighteen head, eleven
adult cows and seven calves; the greatest feat ever accomplished in
buffalo-hunting. It is highly probable that Mr. Jones and his men saw
about all the buffaloes now living in the Pan-handle country, and it
therefore seems quite certain that not over twenty-five individuals
remain. These are so few, so remote, and so difficult to reach, it is to
be hoped no one will consider them worth going after, and that they will
be left to take care of themselves. It is greatly to be regretted that
the State of Texas does not feel disposed to make a special effort for
their protection and preservation.</p>
<p>In regard to the existence of wild buffaloes in the British Possessions,
the statements of different authorities are at variance, by far the
larger number holding the opinion that there are in all the Northwest
Territory only a few almost solitary stragglers. But there is still good
reason for the hope, and also the belief, that there still remain in
Athabasca, between the Athabasca and Peace Rivers, at least a few
hundred “wood buffalo.” In a very interesting and well-considered
article in the London <i>Field</i> of November 10, 1888, Mr. Miller Christy
quotes all the available positive evidence bearing on this point, and I
gladly avail myself of the opportunity to reproduce it here:</p>
<p>“The Hon. Dr. Schulz, in the recent debate on the Mackenzie River basin,
in the Canadian senate, quoted Senator Hardisty, of Edmonton, of the
Hudson’s Bay Company, to the effect that the wood buffalo still existed
in the region in question. ‘It was,’ he said, ‘difficult to estimate how
many; but probably five or six hundred still remain in scattered bands.’
There had been no appreciable difference in their numbers, he thought,
during the last fifteen years, as they could not be hunted on horseback,
on account of the wooded character of the country, and were, therefore,
very little molested. They are larger than the buffalo of the great
plains, weighing at least 150 pounds more. They are also coarser haired
and straighter horned.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_524"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“The doctor also quoted Mr. Frank Oliver, of Edmonton, to the effect
that the wood buffalo still exists in small numbers between the Lower
Peace and Great Slave Rivers, extending westward from the latter to the
Salt River in latitude 60 degrees, and also between the Peace and
Athabasca Rivers. He states that ‘they are larger than the prairie
buffalo, and the fur is darker, but practically they are the same
animal.’ ...Some buffalo meat is brought in every winter to the Hudson’s
Bay Company’s posts nearest the buffalo ranges.</p>
<p>“Dr. Schulz further stated that he had received the following testimony
from Mr. Donald Ross, of Edmonton: The wood buffalo still exists in the
localities named. About 1870 one was killed as far west on Peace River
as Port Dunvegan. They are quite different from the prairie buffalo,
being nearly double the size, as they will dress fully 700 pounds.”</p>
<p>It will be apparent to most observers, I think, that Mr. Ross’s
statement in regard to the size of the wood buffalo is a random shot.</p>
<p>In a private letter to the writer, under date of October 22, 1887, Mr.
Harrison S. Young, of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s post at Edmonton,
writes as follows:</p>
<p>“The buffalo are not yet extinct in the Northwest. There are still some
stray ones on the prairies away to the south of this, but they must be
very few. I am unable to find any one who has personal knowledge of the
killing of one during the last two years, though I have since the
receipt of your letter questioned a good many half-breeds on the
subject. In our district of Athabasca, along the Salt River, there are
still a few wood buffalo killed every year, but they are fast
diminishing in numbers and are also becoming very shy.”</p>
<p>In his “Manitoba and the Great Northwest” Prof. John Macoun has this to
say regarding the presence of the wood buffalo in the region referred
to:</p>
<p>“The wood buffalo, when I was on the Peace River in 1875, were confined
to the country lying between the Athabasca and Peace Rivers north of
latitude 57° 30', or chiefly in the Birch Hills. They were also said to
be in some abundance on the Salt and Hay Rivers, running into the Save
River north of Peace River. The herds thirteen years ago [now nineteen]
were supposed to number about one thousand, all told. I believe many
still exist, as the Indians of that region eat fish, which are much
easier procured than either buffalo or moose, and the country is much
too difficult for white men.”</p>
<p>All this evidence, when carefully considered, resolves itself into
simply this and no more: The only evidence in favor of the existence of
any live buffaloes between the Athabasca and Peace Rivers is in the form
of very old rumors, most of them nearly fifteen years old; time enough
for the Indians to have procured fire-arms in abundance and killed all
those buffaloes two or three times over.</p>
<p>Mr. Miller Christy takes “the mean of the estimates,” and assumes <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_525"></SPAN></span>that
there are now about five hundred and fifty buffaloes in the region
named. If we are to believe in the existence there of any stragglers his
estimate is a fair one, and we will gladly accept it. The total is
therefore as follows:</p>
<h4><i>Number of American bison running wild and unprotected on January 1, 1889.</i></h4>
<div class="center">
<table border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="number running wild">
<tr><td align="left">In the Pan-handle of Texas</td><td align="center"><tt> 25</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">In Colorado</td><td align="center"><tt> 20</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">In southern Wyoming</td><td align="center"><tt> 26</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">In the Musselshell country, Montana</td><td align="center"><tt> 10</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">In western Dakota</td><td align="center"><tt> 4</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Total number in the United States</td><td align="center"><tt> 85</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">In Athabasca, Northwest Territory (estimated) </td><td align="center"><tt>550</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Total in all North America</td><td align="center"><tt>635</tt></td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Add to the above the total number already recorded in captivity (256)
and those under Government protection in the Yellowstone Park (200), and
the whole number of individuals of <i>Bison americanus</i> now living is
1,091.</p>
<p>From this time it is probable that many rumors of the sudden appearance
of herds of buffaloes will become current. Already there have been three
or four that almost deserve special mention. The first appeared in
March, 1887, when various Western newspapers published a circumstantial
account of how a herd of about three hundred buffaloes swam the Missouri
River about 10 miles above Bismarck, near the town of Painted Woods, and
ran on in a southwesterly direction. A letter of inquiry, addressed to
Mr. S. A. Peterson, postmaster at Painted Woods, elicited the following
reply:</p>
<p>“The whole rumor is false, and without any foundation. I saw it first in
the —— newspaper, where I believe it originated.”</p>
<p>In these days of railroads and numberless hunting parties, there is not
the remotest possibility of there being anywhere in the United States a
herd of a hundred, or even fifty, buffaloes which has escaped
observation. Of the eighty-five head still existing in a wild state it
may safely be predicted that not even one will remain alive five years
hence. A buffalo is now so great a prize, and by the ignorant it is
considered so great an honor(!) to kill one, that extraordinary
exertions will be made to find and shoot down without mercy the “last
buffalo.”</p>
<p>There is no possible chance for the race to be perpetuated in a wild
state, and in a few years more hardly a bone will remain above ground to
mark the existence of the must prolific mammalian species that ever
existed, so far as we know.</p>
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