<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I. </h2>
<p><br/>
Kit Carson's Youth—His Visit to New Mexico—Acts as Interpreter and in<br/>
Various Other Employments—Joins a Party of Trappers and Engages in a<br/>
Fight with Indians—Visits the Sacramento Valley.<br/></p>
<p>"Kit Carson," the most famous hunter, scout and guide ever known in this
country, was a native of Kentucky, the scene of the principal exploits of
Daniel Boone, Simon Kenton, the Wetzel brothers and other heroic pioneers
whose names are identified with the history of the settlement of the West.</p>
<p>Christopher Carson was born in Madison county, December 24, 1809, and,
while he was still an infant, his father removed to Central Missouri,
which at that day was known as Upper Louisiana. It was an immense
wilderness, sparsely settled and abounding with wild animals and
treacherous Indians. The father of Carson, like most of the early
pioneers, divided his time between cultivating the land and hunting the
game in the forests. His house was made strong and was pierced with
loopholes, so as to serve him in his defence against the red men that were
likely to attack him and his family at any hour of the day or night. In
such a school was trained the wonderful scout, hunter and guide.</p>
<p>No advantages in the way of a common school education were within reach of
the youth situated as was Kit Carson. It is to be believed, however, that
under the tutelage of his father and mother, he picked up a fair knowledge
of the rudimentary branches, for his attainments in that respect were
above the majority of those with whom he was associated in after life.</p>
<p>While a mere stripling, Kit became known as one of the most skilful rifle
shots in that section of Missouri which produced some of the finest
marksmen in the world. It was inevitable that he should form a passion for
the woods, in which, like the great Boone, he would have been happy to
wander for days and weeks at a time.</p>
<p>When fifteen years old, he was apprenticed to a saddler, where he stayed
two years. At the end of that time, however, the confinement had become so
irksome that he could stand it no longer. He left the shop and joined a
company of traders, preparing to start for Santa Fe, the capital of New
Mexico, one of the most interesting towns in the southwest. The majority
of its population are of Spanish and Mexican origin and speak Spanish. It
is the centre of supplies for the surrounding country, and is often a
scene of great activity. It stands on a plateau, more than a mile above
the sea level, with another snow capped mountain rising a mile higher. The
climate is delightful and the supply of water from the springs and
mountains is of the finest quality.</p>
<p>Santa Fe, when first visited by the Spaniards in 1542, was a populous
Indian pueblo. It has been the capital of New Mexico for nearly two
hundred and fifty years. The houses of the ancient town are made of adobe,
one story high, and the streets are unpaved, narrow, crooked and ill
looking. The inhabitants are of a low order, scarcely entitled to be
ranked above the half civilized, though of late years the infusion of
western life and rugged civilization has given an impetus and character to
the place for which, through three centuries, it waited in vain.</p>
<p>The company to which young Kit Carson attached himself, was strongly armed
and it made the perilous journey, across rivers, mountains and prairies,
through a country infested with fierce Indians, without the loss of one of
their number. This immunity was due to their vigilance and knowledge of
the ways of the hostiles who, it may be said, were on all sides, from the
beginning to the end of their journey.</p>
<p>After reaching Santa Fe, Carson left the party and went to Taos, a small
station to the north of Santa Fe. There he stayed through the winter of
1826-27, at the home of a veteran pioneer, from whom he gained not only a
valuable knowledge of the country and its people, but became familiar with
the Spanish language—an attainment which proved invaluable to him in
after years. In the spring, he joined a party which set out for Missouri,
but before reaching its destination, another company of traders were met
on their way to Santa Fe. Young Carson joined them, and some days later
was back again in the quaint old capital of New Mexico.</p>
<p>The youth's engagement ended with his arrival in the town, but there was
nothing indolent in the nature of Carson, who immediately engaged himself
as teamster to a company about to start to El Paso, on the Rio Grande,
near the frontier of New Mexico. He did not stay long before drifting back
to Santa Fe, and finally to Taos, where he hired out as a cook during the
following winter, but had not wrought long, when a wealthy trader,
learning how well Carson understood the Spanish language, engaged him as
interpreter.</p>
<p>This duty compelled the youth to make another long journey to El Paso and
Chihuahua, the latter being the capital of the province of the same name,
and another of those ancient towns whose history forms one of the most
interesting features of the country. It was founded in 1691 and a quarter
of a century later, when the adjoining silver mines were in full
operation, had a population of 70,000, though today it has scarcely a
fifth of that number.</p>
<p>The position of interpreter was more dignified than any yet held by
Carson, and it was at his command, as long as he chose to hold it; but to
one of his restless nature it soon grew monotonous and he threw it up,
making his way once more to Taos. The employment most congenial to
Carson's nature, and the one which he had been seeking ever since he left
home, was that of hunter and trapper. The scarred veterans whom he met in
the frontier and frontier posts gave him many accounts of their trapping
experiences among the mountains and in the gloomy fastnesses where, while
they hunted the bear, deer, beaver and other animals, the wild Indian
hunted them.</p>
<p>Carson had been in Taos a short time only when he gained the opportunity
for which he was searching. A party of trappers in the employ of Kit's old
friend had just come to Taos, having been driven from their trapping
grounds by the Indians. The employer set about raising a party strong
enough to return to the trapping grounds, chastise the hostiles and resume
business. Knowing the skill and bravery of the young Kentuckian, the
gentleman made him an offer to join the party and Kit eagerly accepted it.</p>
<p>The Mexicans have never been particularly friendly toward their neighbors
north of the Rio Grande, and at that time a very strict law was in force
which forbade the issuance of any license to American citizens to trap
within Mexican territory. The company which mounted their horses and rode
out of Taos gave the authorities to understand that their errand was
simply to chastise the red men, whereas their real purpose was to engage
in trapping. With a view of misleading the officers, they took a
roundabout route which delayed their arrival in the section. Nevertheless,
the hunters were desirous of punishing the Indians who had taken such
liberties with the small party that preceded them. On one of the
tributaries of the Gila, the trappers came upon the identical band whom
they attacked with such fierceness that more than a dozen were killed and
the rest put to flight. The fight was a desperate one, but young as Carson
was, he acquitted himself in a manner which won the warmest praise of
those with him. He was unquestionably daring, skilful and sagacious, and
was certain, if his life was spared, to become one of the most valuable
members of the party.</p>
<p>Having driven the savages away, the Americans began or rather resumed
their regular business of trapping. The beavers were so abundant that they
met with great success. When the rodents seemed to diminish in number, the
hunters shifted their quarters, pursuing their profession along the
numerous streams until it was decided to divide into two parties, one of
which returned to New Mexico, while the other pushed on toward the
Sacramento Valley in California. Carson accompanied the latter, entering
the region at that early day when no white man dreamed of the vast wealth
of gold and precious metals which so crowded her soil and river beds that
the wonder is the gleaming particles had not been detected many years
before; but, as the reader knows, they lay quietly at rest until that
eventful day in 1848, when the secret was revealed by Captain Sutter's
raceway and the frantic multitudes flocked thither from the four quarters
of the earth.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />