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Murray C. Morgan
The Ms. Chief and the Big Trees

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Copyright, 1960, Murray Morgan
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The Ms. Chief and the Big Trees

spacerWhile the two vessels Lieutenant Charles Wilkes had used in charting Puget Sound were working down the coast to assist the men off the brig Peacock which had been wrecked on the ominous Columbia River bar, a shore party went by canoe from Fort Nisqually to Grays Harbor.
spacerAs with most activities of the Wilkes Expedition, the canoe survey was conducted amid controversy. Robert E. Johnson, a young lieutenant with a weakness for medicinal whiskey was assigned to lead the party. Then Wilkes learned that while on a trip to Eastern Washington, Johnson had rewarded a Hudson's Bay Company employee who helped him with a bowie-knife pistol.
spacerThe cut-and-shoot weapon was government issue. Wilkes was upset. He wrote an amendment to Johnson's orders stating that no government property was to be disposed of "...except through absolute necessity," in which decision the officer who accompanies you must decide.
spacerThe officer accompanying Johnson was Passed Midshipman Henry Eld. Johnson, protested that the order made a lieutenant subject to veto by an inferior. Wilkes didn't like back talk. He ordered Johnson to go below and think things over for five minutes.
spacerWhen Johnson reappeared he was wearing an Indian hat of spruce root. Wilkes would not listen to him as "...he was dressed very unofficerlike... and showed marked disrespect in his manner and dress to the rules of the Ship and Navy."
spacerAgain he sent Johnson below, this time with orders to be ready to leave in five minutes, only to have him reappear "..in some temper and in the same dress."
spacerWilkes had Johnson arrested on the spot. He put Eld in command and named Passed Midshipman George Colvocoresses as second-in-command. (When the expedition returned to the United states in 1842, Johnson was court martialled on charges of illegally disposing of government property and of disobeying a proper order. He was acquitted on both counts.).
spacerMeanwhile the canoe party made the first American crossing between Puget Sound and Grays Harbor. Besides the midshipmen, the surveying expedition consisted of Marine Sergeant Simeon Stearns, Privates George Rogers and Samuel Dinsman, Seamen Thomas Ford and Henry Waltham, a half Indian interpreter called Joe, and William D. Brackenridge, the expedition's civilian horticulturalist.
spacerBrackenridge was a dour thirty year old Scot, a practical man rather than a scholar. He had been hired because it was hoped his experience as a nurseryman in Philadelphia might enable him to keep botanical specimens alive on the long voyage home.
spacerBrackenridge, whose salty journal is in the possession of the Maryland Historical Society was no admirer of the deposed Lieutenant Johnson. He was especially critical of the young officer for keeping the party on short supplies in Eastern Washington. At Fort Colville he groused:
spacer"Tis a fact as singular as tis true that after starving for ten days we arrived this place with not less than fifteen lbs pork, 3 whole cheese, 3 cases of sardines...Had I the least idea that such conduct would be approved by the Commander, I would certainly have taken the shortest way for the Untied States, namely across the Rocky Mountains.
spacerNor did Brackenridge approve of Johnson's successor, describing Eld and Colvocoresses as "...about the poorest hands to conduct an expedition of this sort that I have ever fallen in with." It was a trip to try men's patience.
spacerThe canoes purchased form the Indians at Nisqually were rotten and leaky. The party's bread was soaked and spoiled on the first day's paddle to the southern extremity of the Sound.
spacerThere Eld negotiated with an unusual Indian chief for horses and porters to carry their canoes and gear across the portage to a tributary of the Chehalis River.
spacerThe chief was a woman. She impressed the Americans deeply. "The squaw chief seemed to exercises more authority than any chief that had been met with; indeed her whole character and conduct placed her much above those around her.
spacerHer horses were remarkably fine animals; her dress was neat, and her whole establishment bore the indications of Indian opulence. Although her husband was present, he seemed under such good discipline as to warrant the belief that the wife ....wore the breeches."
spacerTheir canoe trip down the "Sachal" and the "Chickeeles" was difficult, "...the turns were sometimes so short that the larger canoe would be in contact with thickets on the banks at both ends" and mosquitoes added to their exasperation. But they were impressed by the magnificence of the trees, and by a stand of planks on the south bank of the Chehalis, rudely carved, painted with bright red pigment, of which "...nothing could be learned as to origin."
spacerEld sketched the carvings on the planks and he and Brackenridge wrote the first American description of the huge pines (Douglas fir) of the Grays Harbor hinterland. Wilkes summarized their timber cruise in his official Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition published in 1845.
spacer"Some of these had been burnt, and in consequence had fallen. Mr. Eld thus had an opportunity of measuring them. One that was not selected as the largest, for there were many of equal if not greater length and diameter was measured, and the part that lay in one piece was found to be two hundred feet long; another piece of the same tree was twenty-five feet long and at the small end still ten inches in diameter.
spacer"Allowing twelve feet for the portion destroyed by fire, Mr. Eld thought twenty-five feet ought to be added for its top; which makes the whole tree when growing 260 feet. Others were believed to exceed this, both in height and diameter."
spacerSmall wonder that when the Gold Rush to California created an immense demand for boards and timbers in the early 1850s lumbermen looked north to Washington Territory.

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