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
James G. Swan, Promoter
The Last Wilderness
University of Washington Press, 1955
P. 90-100

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Copyright, 1955, Murray Morgan
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This information may not be reprinted in any manner without the written permission of the author.

James G. Swan, Promoter

spacerNorman Smith's only peer on the peninsula, as a promoter of unbuilt railroads, was James G. Swan of Port Townsend, a vastly different type. Swan was a sort of Renaissance figure in the rain forest: scientist, author, judge, ethnologist, collector of art, collector of customs, teacher, oyster-grower, promoter, linguist, fish commissioner, diplomat, historian, deputy sheriff, admiralty lawyer, journalist, trader, artist, and representative for the Northern Pacific.
spacer In 1848 it would have seemed easy to predict the course of swan's life; hard work, shrewd trading, gradually accumulating wealth and respect in his native Boston, where his family had lived since before the Revolution and owned, in fact, some land the Battle of Bunker Hill had been fought on a good life, but unexceptional. It was not at all the one he lived.
spacerSwan had been born in 1818, married in 1841, and was the father of a girl and a boy. He had read for the law and was doing well as a ship chandler. He was a grave little man with a rather thin voice, something of a scholar, it seemed; at least he always had a book thrust in the pocket of his coat.
spacerThen gold was discovered in California, and the respectable, conventional Mr. Swan sold out his shipping business, left his family, and took passage on the Rob Roy for San Francisco.
spacerIn 1851 Swan was working as purser on a Sacramento River steamer, the Tehama. One of the passengers, Captain Charles J. W. Russell, a big oyster and clam-huckster from Willapa Harbor, just north of the Columbia, invited Swan to come north for a visit, which he did.
spacerAfter spending a year with Russell, Swan went into the oyster business himself. It was mainly a matter of persuading the Indians to bring to him huge Willapa oysters, big as plates, which were put in barrels and sent to San Francisco. Success in the oyster business depended for the most part on maintaining good relations with the Indians, who pried the crop from the harbor rocks at low tide.
spacerSwan was as good a friend as the peninsula Indians ever had. He learned their language - not just the Chinook trading jargon, but the individual tongues of the varied tribes; he studied their art and their culture, viewing both with far less condescension than that shown by other observers of the period.
spacerAs a Boston man with an interest in ships, he was particularly impressed with their great canoes, and though normally the writing in his journals is cool and objective, well adapted to scientific description, excitement shows through whenever he writes of the great black dugouts:

The canoe which I had purchased was a beauty. She was forty-six feet long and six feet wide, and had thirty Indians in her when she crossed the bar at the mouth of the Bay. She was the largest canoe that had been brought from up the coast, although the Indians round Vancouver's and Queen Charlotte's islands have canoes capable of carrying one hundred warriors.

These canoes are beautiful specimens of naval architecture. Formed of a single log of cedar, they present a model of which a white mechanic might well be proud.

spacerIn the summer of 1854 Swan was appointed customs collector for the coast between Willapa Harbor and Cape Flattery, a district that assured him of some exciting canoe rides. At the time there were only two white men known to be living in the entire stretch, and one of them was William O'Leary, a singularly taciturn Irishman who had holed up in a cabin beside a small stream emptying into Grays Harbor and went twenty years without speaking to anyone. Swan's district was not overburdened with customs receipts.
spacerHis main function was to keep an eye on British and Russian traders, who sometimes visited the coast to trade with the Indians for sealskins, whale oil, dogfish oil, and an occasional sea otter pelt.
spacerWhen Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens undertook to negotiate a treaty with the coastal Indians he chose Swan as an aide. On a cold, foggy February morning, Swan rode with the governor and twelve other white men to the meeting ground in a grove of trees on a bluff above the beach-site of the present town of Cosmopolis - where there had already gathered representatives of the various tribes.
The negotiations broke down over the question of a reservation. Governor Stevens insisted that the Indians all retire to one reservation around Lake Quinault. Nakarty, a leader of the Chinooks, stated the case of those who refused.
spacer"We are willing to sell our land," said Nakarty, "but we do not want to go away from our homes. Our fathers and mothers and ancestors are buried there, and by them we wish to bury our dead and be buried ourselves. We wish, therefore, each to have a place on his own land where we can live, and you may have the rest; but we can't go north among the other tribes. We are not friends and if we went together we should fight, and soon we all would be killed."
spacerSwan felt this was a legitimate argument, and though at the time he was not able to convince the governor, a treaty providing separate reservation was negotiated the following year by Indian Agent Mike Simmons, a pioneer from Tumwater, who, though illiterate, was an authority on Indian languages and Indian customs.
spacerIn 1856 Governor Stevens became Congressman Stevens, and with him to Washington, D. C., went Swan as private secretary. While in the capital he became friends with the administrators of the Smithsonian Institution, which was then only ten years old; later he was to gather several of their most important collections. He also found time to write his first book, The Northwest Coast, or Three Years' Residence in Washington Territory.
spacerSwan returned to the Territory in 1858 and settled in Port Townsend, thus raising its population to 531. He saw in the settlement "an inevitable New York," which was par for the course; most Puget Sound pioneers considered their communities certain to suffer in the near future the blessings of overcrowding. Seattle's pioneers referred to their first cabins as New York Alki, "Alki" being jargon for by-and-by. At Whiskey Flat, as Dungeness was then called, the saying was, "We're as big as New York, only the town ain't built yet."
spacerIn 1859 Swan became associated with a trading post at Neah Bay, where Samuel Hancock, a Virginia-born handyman, had tried unsuccessfully to establish a post in 1845. Hancock was one of the more colorful pioneers. He started west without even twenty-five cents to contribute toward the hire of a pilot for the covered wagon train he joined, but with skill enough as wheel-maker, brick-baker, kiln-builder, and coal prospector to earn an interesting living in the Puget Sound country. He came to Neah Bay on an impulse and set himself up to trade in whale oil and otter skins, but the Makahs were not inclined to cooperate.
spacerThey boycotted his store, broke his canoe, threatened his life. He spent one night crouched in his cabin with four Colt revolvers loaded and an Indian boy as hostage. The next day, according to his account in his autobiography (a book that reads in spots like fiction, and probably is), he bluffed the Makahs into tolerance by pretending to write a letter to President Millard Fillmore, tattling on them. He tore up the letter when they rebuilt his canoe. But he soon gave up on the trading post.
spacerSwan did not fare much better. He soon abandoned trading for teaching, accepting appointment as a teacher for the Indian Service. It was a trying experience. The Makahs were suspicious of the school. They looked on it as an instrument for turning Indian children into imitation white men, which it was.
spacerThe Makahs were not interested in Shakespeare or the Tudors or Latin, or even in methods of growing cotton. One of Swan's rare bursts of impatience with the Indians came when some of the Makahs asked him to pay them for sending their children to his classes.
spacerOne evening shortly after the end of the Civil War, while Swan was still on the reservation, the smoke of a steamer was observed on the horizon. Steamers were rare on the Pacific. Swan thought this might be the Confederate raider Shenandoah, then still at large, coming in to bombard the lighthouse on Tatoosh, or perhaps to ravage Port Townsend. He ordered the employees of the Indian Agency to run up the American flag and stand by to repel attack.
spacerThe steamer entered the harbor after dark and anchored far out. The men ashore spent an anxious night until, with the dawn, they made her out to be Her Majesty's Ship Devastation, just in from the Queen Charlottes.
spacerIn 1866 Swan returned to Port Townsend to practice law. He served seven years as probate judge, taking time out on one occasion to act as a deputy sheriff. That was when no one else wanted the assignment of arresting twenty-six Clallams who had surprised a party of Vancouver Island Indians on Dungeness spit and killed them all. Swan brought back the offenders for trial.
spacerHe also served as assistant United States Fisheries Commissioner and engaged in a loud scientific argument with Henry Elliott over the swimming habits of seal pups. But the last thirty years of Swan's life centered on his efforts to get a railroad for Port Townsend. That endeavor proved more frustrating than teaching school at Neah Bay.
spacerWhen the Northern Pacific was slowly pushing its line north from the Columbia River to Puget Sound in 1871, Swan called a meeting of Port Townsend business leaders and persuaded them to offer the railroad a large amount of local property if it would bend the line north and bring it to tidewater at Port Townsend. Any chance of that dream coming true ended with the collapse of Jay Cooke, that flower of inflation. The N. P. terminus went to Tacoma, which was cheaper.
spacerFor nearly fifteen years Swan worked to raise the interest of editors and financiers in a railroad to Port Townsend. He sat at his desk "amidst Hydah gods and Cape Flattery devils, images in stone and wood, and implements of savage warfare," as one visitor put it, and wrote, with a stub pen dipped in purple ink, long, almost indecipherable letters on the merits of Port Townsend's harbor and the riches awaiting the sponsors of a railroad.
spacerLocal businessmen incorporated the Port Townsend Southern railroad in 1887. It was to run to Portland, and the only thing, it needed to be a success was money. When no one offered to put up the money the populace, in approved fashion, started laying track themselves and laid the standard mile before diving up.
spacerThe Oregon Improvement Company, a subsidiary of the Union Pacific, agreed in 1890 to take over the franchise if Port Townsend would help out with a subsidy of a hundred thousand dollars. The gift was bundled up by popular subscription. Fifteen hundred laborers started laying track down to Hood Canal. This was the dream come true.
spacerPort Townsend boomed. Population doubled to 3500 and doubled again. Waterfront lots sold for ten thousand dollars, and lots out of sight of water - in fact, out of reach of water - brought a thousand. Farmers who the year before had had trouble buying flour for the kitchen sold their homesteads for as much as a hundred thousand; Tom Bracken got a record $160,000 for his 160 acres. Real-estate transactions for 1890 totaled $4,594,695.93
spacerSo was faith rewarded. And most of the old settlers promptly reinvested in Port Townsend. The ships that would come to meet the railroad would need a dry-dock; the inhabitants ponied up to subsidize construction of a floating dry-dock. A smelter had been started at nearby Irondale, and Port Townsend helped finance a rail factory that was to use its iron. The town was sure to grow to twenty thousand, and the old timers raised sandstone warehouses and office buildings and hotels to meet the needs of the newcomers; for themselves they built on the bluff a handsome array of tall clapboard houses, capped with widows' walks.
spacerThe rails reached from Port Townsend to Quilcene before the bottom dropped out of everything. Brandon Satterlee has described how the news struck one community on the fine:

It was one of those wonderful days when nature seems to cry out for all her creatures to luxuriate. Frank and I were setting type for the next issue; Father had been writing at his paperstrewn table and had arisen to fill his trusty corncob, when we heard the rumble of Telegrapher Lord's handcar.

He entered the shop and handed Father a telegram with the remark, 'Here's something for you, Sat, that I don't think you'll like,' and immediately left. Father opened the envelope, read the message and dropped heavily in his chair. He stared at it a long time; then came over to my case. I thought I detected a note of worry in his voice as he said:

'Let me have your stick, Brandon. I'll finish this take and you go up to Fil Hamilton's and tell him to come down here as soon as can be and bring the squire with him.'

I was glad to get outside, and raced up the track like a pupil on the last day of school. I found Hamilton in his orchard and delivered my message. He looked puzzled.

'What's up, Dub?'

'I don't know,' was all I could reply.

'Come out to the barn while I hitch up and you can ride back with me.' On our way to the barn we stopped in the store and Fil told Squire McArdle. By the time we had the horse hitched to the buggy, he was at the barn. The men seemed to sense disaster and the trip to the office was made principally in silence.

Charley Hamilton, Lou Seitzinger and Jay Bristow were at the office when we entered. 'What's up, Sat?' was Hamilton's quick greeting. He ignored the other men. Father walked over to the table and picked up the telegram. 'I'm afraid this is it,' he said with a sigh; then read:

'The jig is up. Reliable word reached me that Portland court today appointed receiver for 0. I. Co. This kills all hope that road will be extended. SWAN.'

spacerFrank had not stopped the rapid motions of typesetting, and the click of the type as he dropped them into the stick sounded like hammer blows in the long, deathlike silence that filled the room while the men absorbed the full import of this news. Hamilton opened his mouth in amazement, and the squire began to make the familiar nervous motion with his hands.
spacerFrom outside came the soothing plop, plop, plop, as each bucket of the water wheel passed under the spout of the flume and received its quota of water, and then the splash, splash, splash as it was discharged into the stream at the low point of revolution. In a Madrona tree nearby a colony of crows set up a raucous scolding, while over the bay a flock of graceful, screaming gulls circled above the white sails of a yawl.
spacerIt was the comedian, Bristow, who broke the impressive silence with Len Flickinger's favorite expression, "Therein be hell poppin' an' no pitch hot." Bristow could afford to be facetious - he was the least affected.
spacerHamilton shot a meaningful glance at Father, and McArdle said in a low tone, "Let's go out on the beach." They went out together, and the other men, taking the hint, started up the track toward the townsite to spread the gruesome news. I picked up my composing stick where Father had laid it down when we came in. Through the window beside my case I saw three troubled men sit on a log at highwater mark. I would have given much to hear their conversation. Frequently Hamilton arose and took a few nervous steps back and forth.
spacerWhen Frank filled his stick and dumped the type on the galley, he broke the silence:

"Did you hear that telegram Dad read?" he asked.

"Yes. Doesn't sound very good, does it?""Not a bit. Judge Swan would never send a message like that if it wasn't true. Nobody in the world wants to see the road extended more than he. I wonder what will become of us."

spacerThat was in Quilcene. In Port Townsend it was even worse. The real-estate boom collapsed. Those who had become suddenly rich became suddenly bankrupt. The floating dry-dock was towed off to Dockton, down the sound. The machines in the nail factory were sold for junk. Cobwebs gathered in the sandstone warehouses. For a time even the brothels closed.
spacerJudge Swan was one of those who stayed on. He still believed. He still wrote long letters in his tiny hand. In time even Port Townsend found his faith a bit funny. It was his habit to go each evening to a small restaurant near Union Dock to eat a quiet meal and read the paper. One evening a young man decided to have some fun at the judge's expense.
spacerTaking a seat near Swan's, he launched a discussion on the economic future of Puget Sound. His central theme was that the future of Port Townsend was as nothing when compared to the possibilities of Seattle. Within a year, he predicted, no right-thinking man with a decent desire to better himself would remain in a tomb like Port Townsend unless Seattle saw fit to raise a twenty-foot fence to keep out those who would share in her inevitable wealth.
spacerJudge Swan laid down his paper. He listened in silence to the young man's monologue. At last he rose and walked over to the table and leaned closer, as if to make certain he had heard correctly.
spacerThen, certain no mistake had been made, he raised his heavy cane and brought it down with an echoing thump across the youth's shoulders. That attended to, he shot his cuffs, straightened his black frock coat, stroked his beard, and stalked from the restaurant with the air, said an enraptured observer, of one who has performed a meritorious deed and has done it most effectually.
spacerJudge Swan died in 1900, still believing.
spacerNo railroad has yet been built to connect Port Angeles or Port Townsend with the transcontinental lines.

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