Murray's People: A collection of essays about fthe fascinating people who settled and developed the Pacific Northwest

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Murray C. Morgan
Robinson at Nisqually
Puget's Sound: A Narrative of Early Tacoma and the Southern Sound
University of Washington Press, 1979
P. 47-51

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Copyright, 1960, Murray Morgan
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This information may not be reprinted in any manner without the written permission of the author.

Robinson at Nisqually

spacerOn the morning of April 29, [1841] a day of haze and high wind, the Vincennes and Porpoise were racing north through the murk under heavy sail. Suddenly, about 10 A.M., "Breakers under the lee! Breakers under the lee!" The white water was less than a pistol shot distant. The helmsmen fought to hold the ships clear.
spacer R. B. Robinson, a purser's clerk on the Vincennes, stood transfixed,

...waiting with breathless interest, expecting every moment to feel the strike, our ship driving bows completely under. A man aloft reported land on the lee bow, over breakers. The Captain would not believe it, at first, as his reckoning places us at some distance from land. We were going at a tremendous rate through the water and in less than a minute I saw land myself from the weather passway about one point on the lee bow.

It looked very high, shaped like a sugar loaf, and real dismal through the mist and spray. The sea was breaking tremendous heavy against it, and over some smaller ones just showing their heads out of the water alongside it. We lay well up and weathered it by about a third of a mile. As we passed abreast of it we saw an aperture through the center of it of considerable size, and leeward was a still higher and larger rock or island.

As we weathered it we passed clear of the breakers and left as we thought all danger astern but just as we were congratulating ourselves on our narrow escape the cry of Breakers Ahead and to Leeward brought all hands to stations. We had but faint hope of saving the old barkey. We got a cast of lead in five fathoms, the breakers making a clean breach over the bows and almost drowning the armorers who were shackling the chains.

As we were just passing out of this dangerous situation a large rock was discovered about a pistol shot to leeward but it was passed almost as soon as discovered and we were out of the labyrinth of dangers triumphant and grateful for our miraculous deliverance. We now stood off again to get an offing. Had this occurred at night instead of daylight, not a soul of our whole crew would have lived to reach land.

spacerWilkes praised all hands for their seamanship, a compliment not returned. George Sinclair, sailing master of the Porpoise, felt they had escaped disaster by good luck, not good management. The commander, he wrote, "Insisted on running by his own reckoning and as a matter of course, and thereby he came within an ace of losing both vessels."
spacerTwo days beyond their brush with disaster on the Point Grenville rocks, the ships anchored in Discovery Bay, forty-nine years to the day after Vancouver.
spacerWilkes was unsure how the presence of United States naval vessels, obviously sent to strengthen their country's claim in the disputed land north of the Columbia, would be received by the Hudson's Bay Company garrison at Fort Nisqually. To test the British attitude, Wilkes dispatched a message by longboat asking the help of a pilot and interpreter. After waiting a week he decided that no answer was answer enough and started south on his own. the next day, off Whidbey Island, a day so gusty that the Vincennes' lee guns sometimes went muzzle under, a dugout came alongside with William Heath, a dark-haired Englishman off the HBC supply ship Cowlitz.
spacerHeath piloted them to Port Orchard, where they spent the night. The next morning the Vincennes' crew put on a display of bad seamanship. They set out a light warping anchor while raising their heavy bower anchor and began to set sail; the kedge failed to hold and the ship drifted ashore. They worked her clear before she was hard aground but then the starboard anchor was let go by mistake.
spacer"We were hum-bugging around for two hours," the purser lamented, concerned that all this took place under British eyes. But the cruise south under clearing skies calmed even Wilkes.
spacerThe Americans took the west channel past Vashon Island and anchored about 7:30 P.M. across from Point Defiance, a mile north of the Narrows and only a cable's length (720 feet) from shore, Wilkes remarking the extraordinary deepness of the water, seventeen fathoms (102 feet).
spacer"We have a splendid view of Mt. Ranier, which is conical & covered about 2/3 of its height with snow," said the first American to describe it. "Last evening the weather cleared sufficiently to see it and also Mt. Baker at the Entrance of Admiralty Inlet. If the weather should prove calm in the morning I shall make a survey of this part of the Sound. I deem it highly important because vessels are likely to be detained here in consequence of the difficulty in getting through the Narrows, which I trust we shall pass tomorrow and reach the Fort."
spacerThe morning brought favorable wind and tide so no surveying was done. Again they had trouble keeping the ships off shore when they raised anchor, but once underway, clear sailing.
spacer"This is one of the most Majestic sheets of Warter I ever saw in all my life," observed the usually dour John W. W. Dyes, one of the scientists' helpers, who specialized in taxidermy and temperance lectures to his mates. "The forrist trees of the largist size grow to the Very Warter's Edge where you may cut a mast or stick for a Line of Battle Ship. I never saw Sutch large forrist trees in any part of the world before. This is principally Pine tho there is considerable oak maple and other branch wood common in the U States."
spacerWilkes too admired the waterway: "Nothing can be more striking than the beauty of these waters without a shoal or rock or any danger whatever for the whole length of this Internal Navigation, the finest in the world."
spacerAt eight that morning, Tuesday, May 11, 1841, the Vincennes and Porpoise dropped anchor below the bluff just south of Sequalitchew Creek, a little seaward of the blackhulled, paddlewheeled Beaver, the first steamship on the Northwest Coast. "Appears to be a fine vessel," commented purser's steward Robinson. From the water they could see no sign of the fort, but soon a boat bearing two officers rowed out to the flagship.
spacerFor the first time, British and American officials faced each other on the water their countries coveted. Alexander Canfield Anderson, the slight, thoughtful chief trader at Nisqually, and Henry McNeill, the burly, short-tempered captain of the Beaver, introduced themselves to Wilkes. They promised the Americans "all assistance in their power" or, Wilkes added skeptically in his journal, "at least that was their offer. A few days will show the extent of it."
spacerAnderson meant it. The Hudson's Bay Company gave Wilkes some supplies, loaned or sold equipment, helped line up Indian guides and interpreters, showed the Americans around the post. The fort begun by Heron was complete now. As described by the Vincennes' armorer, William Brisco, the stockade was an oblong, 200 by 250 feet, of "upright posts eight or ten feet high, at each corner a Sentry Box or house large enough to hold fifteen or Twenty persons, perforated with holes of sufficient size to admit the muzzle of a musket."
spacerLieutenant Sinclair noted that "the site was never chosen by an Engineer or wasn't calculated to stand a seige, as its inmates are compelled to go nearly a mile to get their water." Besides, "the Stockade is falling to decay and they are about to build another in a better site."
spacerThe new establishment was to be farther north, closer to the farm and dairy. Wilkes inspected the farm and was surprised to find peas about eight inches high, strawberries and gooseberries in full blossom, and lettuce already gone to seed, some plants three feet high. Out on the plain wheat was growing but not doing well: "They do not average even two Bushels to the acre. I think Rye would have answered better."
spacerRobinson, the purser's steward, hiked up the Nisqually valley about fifteen miles to an Indian fishing station:

We descended a bluff covered with Pine about 200 feet deep & almost immediately came to the river which ran very Swift. It is about 30 yards wide and close to the banks were several huts, just erected, and a basket work dam, just finished.

The stakes for the dam were about 3 inches apart, and there was a double line of them, about four feet apart, and cross pieces to support them both, & on which the Indians stand and spear the Salmon as they leap the barrier. Between the two rows of stakes are nets spread to catch those who fall between the lines. They catch a great quantity of salmon, which they dispose of to the company agents.

spacerWhen the fish were brought to the Station, Nisqually women cut out the backbones and chopped off the heads. The salter placed them in a large hogshead with a quantity of coarse salt. There they remained for several days until they became quite firm. The pickle this process produced was boiled in a large copper kettle; the blood which was floated by the boiling was skimmed, leaving the pickle clear.
spacerThe salmon were then taken out and packed in forty-two-gallon casks, more salt was added, and the casks were sealed and laid on their sides with the bunghole left open. The pickle recovered from the boiling process was poured in until the cask was full. A circle of clay about four inches high was made around the bunghole, into which the oil from the salmon rose. The oil was skimmed, and as the salmon absorbed the pickle more was poured in.
spacerWhen the oil ceased to rise, the clay circle was removed and the cask sealed. Salmon cured in this manner would keep at least three years. The preserved salmon was sent to Vancouver and relayed to the interior posts as emergency food. Any surplus was sold in the Hawaiian Islands.
spacerBut livestock remained the principal source of income at Nisqually. Robinson noted "horned cattle in great abundance" and about a thousand sheep. "I am astonished that our Country should let them get such a secure footing as they already have got on this land."
spacerWilkes was busy organizing parties to chart the shore and survey the interior. Anderson gave him permission to build two log workshops on the hill above the Sequalitchew. One housed the telescopes and the pendulum clock which was used ashore to check the accuracy of the ships' chronometers; the other served as a storehouse and as drafting room for the chart makers.
spacerUnder one corner of the observatory, Carpenter Amos Chick buried two pennies, one minted in 1817, the other in 1838, both borrowed from John Dyes, and a bit of doggerel written by Robinson about the British/American rivalry for land still occupied by the Nisqually.

Though far from our homes, yet still in our land
True Yankee enterprise will ever expand
And publish to all, each side of the main
We triumphed once and can do it again.
A problem, a problem, oh! hear great and small
The true owners of the country are still on their soil
Whilst Jonathan and John Bull are growling together
For land which by rights belongs not to either.
Philosopher, listen & solve me this doubt
Which has troubled so many wiseacres about.
By what right does the Bull claim pasturage here
Whilst he has plenty of pasturage elsewhere?

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