<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXXVIII. </h2>
<p>Letter from General W. T. Sherman, and from General J. F. Rusling.<br/></p>
<p>In closing the life of Kit Carson, it will be appropriate to add two
letters, which were furnished at our request:</p>
<p>912 GARRISON AVENUE, ST. LOUIS, MO., JUNE 25, 1884.</p>
<p>"Kit Carson first came into public notice by Fremont's Reports of the
Exploration of the Great West about 1842-3. You will find mention of Kit
Carson in my memoirs, vol. I, p. 46, 47, as bringing to us the first
overland mail to California in his saddle bags. I saw but little of him
afterwards till after the Civil War, when, in 1866, I was the Lieutenant
General commanding the Military Division of the Missouri, with
headquarters in St. Louis, and made a tour of my command, including what
are now Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Reaching Fort Garland, New
Mexico, in September of October, 1866, I found it garrisoned by some
companies of New Mexico Volunteers, of which Carson was Colonel or
commanding officer. I stayed with him some days, during which we had a
sort of council with the Ute Indians, of which the chief Ouray was the
principal feature, and over whom Carson exercised a powerful influence.</p>
<p>"Carson then had his family with him—wife and half a dozen children,
boys and girls as wild and untrained as a brood of Mexican mustangs. One
day these children ran through the room in which we were seated, half clad
and boisterous, and I inquired, 'Kit, what are you doing about your
children?'</p>
<p>"He replied: 'That is a source of great anxiety; I myself had no
education,' (he could not even write, his wife always signing his name to
his official reports). 'I value education as much as any man, but I have
never had the advantage of schools, and now that I am getting old and
infirm, I fear I have not done right by my children.'</p>
<p>"I explained to him that the Catholic College, at South Bend, Indiana,
had, for some reason, given me a scholarship for twenty years, and that I
would divide with him—that is let him send two of his boys for five
years each. He seemed very grateful and said he would think of it.</p>
<p>"My recollection is that his regiment was mustered out of service that
winter, 1866-7, and that the following summer, 1867, he (Carson) went to
Washington on some business for the Utes, and on his return toward New
Mexico, he stopped at Fort Lyon, on the upper Arkansas, where he died. His
wife died soon after at Taos, New Mexico, and the children fell to the
care of a brother in law, Mr. Boggs, who had a large ranche on the
Purgation near Fort Lyon. It was reported of Carson, when notified that
death was impending, that he said, 'Send William, (his eldest son) to
General Sherman who has promised to educate him.' Accordingly, some time
about the spring of 1868, there came to my house, in St. Louis, a stout
boy with a revolver, Life of Kit Carson by Dr. Peters, United States Army,
about $40 in money, and a letter from Boggs, saying that in compliance
with the request of Kit Carson, on his death bed, he had sent William
Carson to me. Allowing him a few days of vacation with my own children, I
sent him to the college at South Bend, Ind., with a letter of explanation,
and making myself responsible for his expenses. He was regularly entered
in one of the classes, and reported to me regularly. I found the
'Scholarship' amounted to what is known as 'tuition,' but for three years
I paid all his expenses of board, clothing, books, &c., amounting to
about $300 a year. At the end of that time, the Priest reported to me that
Carson was a good natured boy, willing enough, but that he had no taste or
appetite for learning. His letters to me confirmed this conclusion, as he
could not possibly spell. After reflection, I concluded to send him to
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to the care of General Langdon C. Easton, United
States Quartermaster, with instructions to employ him in some capacity in
which he could earn his board and clothing, and to get some officer of the
garrison to teach him just what was necessary for a Lieutenant of Cavalry.
Lieutenant Beard, adjutant of the Fifth Infantry did this. He (William
Carson) was employed, as a 'Messenger,' and, as he approached his
twenty-first year, under the tuition of Lieutenant Beard, he made good
progress. Meantime I was promoted to General in Chief at Washington, and
about 1870, when Carson had become twenty-one years of age, I applied in
person to the President, General Grant, to give the son of Kit Carson, the
appointment of Second Lieutenant Ninth United States Cavalry, telling him
somewhat of the foregoing details. General Grant promptly ordered the
appointment to issue, subject to the examination as to educational
qualifications, required by the law. The usual board of officers was
appointed at Fort Leavenworth and Carson was ordered before it. After
careful examination, the board found him deficient in reading, writing and
arithmetic. Of course he could not be commissioned. I had given him four
years of my guardianship, about $1,000 of my own money, and the benefit of
my influence, all in vain. By nature, he was not adapted to 'modern uses.'
I accordingly wrote him that I had exhausted my ability to provide for
him, and advised him to return to his uncle Boggs on the Purgation to
assist him in his cattle and sheep ranche.</p>
<p>"I heard from him by letter once or twice afterward, in one of which he
asked me to procure for him the agency for the Utes. On inquiry at the
proper office in Washington, I found that another person had secured the
place of which I notified him, and though of late years I have often been
on the Purgation, and in the Ute country, I could learn nothing of the
other children of Kit Carson, or of William, who for four years was a sort
of ward to me.</p>
<p>"Since the building of railroads in that region, the whole character of
its population is changed, and were Kit Carson to arise from his grave, he
could not find a buffalo, elk or deer, where he used to see millions. He
could not even recognize the country with which he used to be so familiar,
or find his own children, whom he loved, and for whose welfare he felt so
solicitous in his later days.</p>
<p>"Kit Carson was a good type of a class of men most useful in their day,
but now as antiquated as Jason of the Golden Fleece, Ulysses of Troy, the
Chevalier La Salle of the Lakes, Daniel Boone of Kentucky, Irvin Bridger
and Jim Beckwith of the Rockies, all belonging to the dead past.</p>
<p>"Yours Truly,</p>
<p>"W. T. SHERMAN."</p>
<p>"TRENTON, N. J., June 23, 1884.</p>
<p>"In accordance with your request to give my recollections of Kit Carson, I
would say that I met and spent several days with him in September, 1866,
at and near Fort Garland, Colorado, on the headwaters of the Rio Grande. I
was then Brevet Brigadier General and Inspector United States Volunteers,
on a tour of inspection of the military depots and posts in that region
and across to the Pacific. General Sherman happened there at the same
time, on like duty as to his Military Division, and our joint talks, as a
rule, extended far into the night and over many subjects. 'Kit' was then
Brevet Brigadier General United States Volunteers, and in command of Fort
Garland, and a wide region thereabouts—mostly Indian—which he
knew thoroughly. Fort Garland was a typical frontier post, composed of log
huts chinked with mud, rough but comfortable, and in one of these Kit then
lived with his Mexican wife and several half breed children.</p>
<p>"He was then a man apparently about fifty years of age. From what I had
read about him, I had expected to see a small, wiry man, weather-beaten
and reticent; but found him to be a medium sized, rather stoutish, and
quite talkative person instead. His hair was already well-silvered, but
his face full and florid. You would scarcely regard him, at first sight,
as a very noticeable man, except as having a well knit frame and full,
deep chest. But on observing him more closely, you were struck with the
breadth and openness of his brow, bespeaking more than ordinary
intelligence and courage; with his quick, blue eye, that caught everything
at a glance apparently—an eye beaming with kindliness and
benevolence, but that could blaze with anger when aroused; and with his
full, square jaw and chin, that evidently could shut as tight as Sherman's
or Grant's when necessary. With nothing of the swashbuckler or Buffalo
Bill—of the border ruffian or the cowboy—about him, his
manners were as gentle, and his voice as soft and sympathetic, as a
woman's. What impressed one most about his face was its rare kindliness
and charity—that here, at last, was a natural gentleman, simple as a
child but brave as a lion. He soon took our hearts by storm, and the more
we saw of him the more we became impressed with his true manliness and
worth. Like everybody else on the border, he smoked freely, and at one
time drank considerably; but he had quit drinking years before, and said
he owed his excellent health and preeminence, if he had any, to his habits
of almost total abstinence. In conversation he was slow and hesitating at
first, approaching almost to bashfulness, often seemingly at a loss for
words; but, as he warmed up, this disappeared, and you soon found him
talking glibly, and with his hands and fingers as well—rapidly
gesticulating—Indian fashion. He was very conscientious, and in all
our talks would frequently say: 'Now, stop gentlemen! Is this right?'
'Ought we to do this?' 'Can we do that?' 'Is this like human nature?' or
words to this effect, as if it was the habit of his mind to test
everything by the moral law. I think that was the predominating feature of
his character—his perfect honesty and truthfulness—quite as
much as his matchless coolness and courage. Said Sherman to me one day
while there: 'His integrity is simply perfect. The red skins know it, and
would trust Kit any day before they would us, or the President, either!'
And Kit well returned their confidence, by being their steadfast,
unswerving friend and ready champion.</p>
<p>"He talked freely of his past life, unconscious of its extraordinary
character. Born in Kentucky, he said, he early took to the plains and
mountains, and joined the hunters and trappers, when he was so young he
could not set a trap. When he became older, he turned trapper himself, and
trapped all over our territories for beaver, otter, etc., from the
Missouri to the Pacific, and from British America to Mexico. Next he
passed into Government employ, as an Indian scout and guide, and as such
piloted Fremont and others all over the Plains and through the Rocky and
Sierra Nevada Mountains. Fremont, in his reports, surrounded Kit's name
with a romantic valor, but he seems to have deserved it all, and more. His
good sense, his large experience, and unfaltering courage, were invaluable
to Fremont, and it is said about the only time the Pathfinder went
seriously astray among the Mountains was when he disregarded his (Kit's)
advice, and endeavored to force a passage through the Rockies northwest of
Fort Garland. Kit told him the mountains could not be crossed at that time
of the year; and, when Fremont nevertheless insisted on proceeding, he
resigned as guide. The Pathfinder, however, went stubbornly forward, but
got caught in terrible snowstorms, and presently returned—half of
his men and animals having perished outright from cold and hunger. Next
Kit became United States Indian Agent, and made one of the best we ever
had. Familiar with the language and customs of the Indians, he frequently
spent months together among them without seeing a white man, and indeed
became a sort of half Indian himself. In talking with us, I noticed he
frequently hesitated for the right English word; but when speaking bastard
Spanish (Mexican) or Indian, with the Ute Indians there, he was as fluent
as a native. Both Mexican and Indian, however, are largely pantomime,
abounding in perpetual grimace and gesture, which may have helped him
along somewhat. Next, when the rebellion broke out, he became a Union
soldier, though the border was largely Confederate. He tendered his
services to Mr. Lincoln, who at once commissioned him Colonel, and told
him to take care of the frontier, as the regulars there had to come East
to fight Jeff Davis. Kit straightway proceeded to raise the First Regiment
of New Mexico Volunteers, in which he had little difficulty, as the New
Mexicans knew him well, and had the utmost confidence in him. With these,
during the war, he was busy fighting hostile Indians, and keeping others
friendly, and in his famous campaign against the Navajos, in New Mexico,
with only six hundred frontier volunteers captured some nine thousand
prisoners. The Indians withdrew into a wild canyon, where no white man, it
was said, had ever penetrated, and believed to be impregnable. But Kit
pursued them from either end, and attacked them with pure Indian strategy
and tactics; and the Navajos finding themselves thus surrounded, and their
supplies cut off, outwitted by a keener fighter than themselves,
surrendered at discretion. Then he did not slaughter them, but marched
them to a goodly reservation, and put them to work herding and planting,
and they had continued peaceable ever since.</p>
<p>"Kit seemed thoroughly familiar with Indian life and character, and it
must be conceded, that no American of his time knew our aborigines better—if
any so well. It must be set down to their credit, that he was their stout
friend—no Boston philanthropist more so. He did not hesitate to say,
that all our Indian troubles were caused originally by bad white men, if
the truth were known, and was terribly severe on the brutalities and
barbarities of the border. He said the Indians were very different from
what they used to be, and were yearly becoming more so from contact with
border ruffians and cowboys. He said he had lived for years among them
with only occasional visits to the settlements, and he had never known an
Indian to injure a Pale Face, where he did not deserve it; on the other
hand, he had seen an Indian kill his brother even for insulting a white
man in the old times. He insisted that Indians never commit outrages
unless they are first provoked to them by the borderers, and that many of
the peculiar and special atrocities with which they are charged are only
their imitation of the bad acts of wicked white men. He pleaded for the
Indians, as 'pore ignorant critters, who had no learnin', and didn't know
no better,' whom we were daily robbing of their hunting grounds and homes,
and solemnly asked: 'What der yer 'spose our Heavenly Father, who made
both them and us, thinks of these things?' He was particularly severe upon
Col. Chivington and the Sand Creek massacre of 1864, which was still fresh
in the public mind, said he; 'jist to think of that dog Chivington, and
his dirty hounds, up thar at Sand Creek! Whoever heerd of sich doings
'mong Christians!'</p>
<p>"'The pore Indians had the Stars and Stripes flying over them, our old
flag thar, and they'd bin told down to Denver, that so long as they kept
that flying they'd be safe enough. Well, then, one day along comes that
durned Chivington and his cusses. They'd bin out several day's huntin'
Hostiles, and couldn't find none nowhar, and if they had, they'd have
skedaddled from 'em, you bet! So they jist lit upon these Friendlies, and
massacreed 'em—yes, sir, literally massacreed 'em—in cold
blood, in spite of our flag thar—yes, women and little children,
even! Why, Senator Foster told me with his own lips (and him and his
Committee come out yer from Washington, you know, and investigated this
muss), that that thar durned miscreant and his men shot down squaws, and
blew the brains out of little innocent children—pistoled little
papooses in the arms of their dead mothers, and even worse than this!—them
durned devils! and you call sich soldiers Christians, do ye? and pore
Indians savages!'</p>
<p>"'I tell you what, friends; I don't like a hostile Red Skin any more than
you do. And when they are hostile, I've fit 'em—fout 'em—and
expect to fight 'em—hard as any man. That's my business. But I never
yit drew a bead on a squaw or papoose, and I despise the man who would.
'Taint nateral for men to kill women and pore little children, and none
but a coward or a dog would do it. Of course when we white men do sich
awful things, why these pore ignorant critters don't know no better than
to foller suit. Pore things! Pore things! I've seen as much of 'em as any
man livin', and I can't help but pity 'em, right or wrong! They once owned
all this country, yes, Plains and Mountains, buffalo and everything, but
now they own next door to nuthin, and will soon be gone.'</p>
<p>"Alas, poor Kit! He has already 'gone to the Happy Hunting Grounds.' But
the Indians had no truer friend, and Kit Carson would wish no prouder
epitaph than this. In talking thus he would frequently get his grammar
wrong, and his language was only the patois of the Border; but there was
an eloquence in his eye, and a pathos in his voice, that would have
touched a heart of stone, and a genuine manliness about him at all times,
that would have won him hosts of friends anywhere. And so, Kit Carson,
good friend, brave heart, generous soul, hail and farewell!</p>
<p>"Hoping these rough recollections may serve your purpose, I remain</p>
<p>"Very respectfully,</p>
<p>"Your obedient servant,</p>
<p>"JAMES F. RUSLING."</p>
<p>The following tribute to the matchless scout, hunter and guide is from the
Salt Lake Tribune:</p>
<p>He wrote his own biography and left it where the edition will never grow
dim. The alphabet he used was made of the rivers, the plains, the forests,
and the eternal heights. He started in his youth with his face to the
West; started toward where no trails had been blazed, where there was
naught to meet him but the wilderness, the wild beast, and the still more
savage man. He made his lonely camps by the rivers, and now it is a
fiction with those who sleep on the same grounds that the waters in their
flow murmur the great pathfinder's name. He followed the water courses to
their sources, and guided by them, learned where the mountains bent their
crests to make possible highways for the feet of men. He climbed the
mountains and "disputed with the eagles of the crags" for points of
observation; he met the wild beast and subdued him; he met the savage of
the plains and of the hills, and, in his own person, gave him notice of
his sovereignty in skill, in cunning and in courage. To the red man he was
the voice of fate. In him they saw a materialized foreboding of their
destiny. To them he was a voice crying the coming of a race against which
they could not prevail; before which they were to be swept away.</p>
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