Some of the old
residents will remember Jim Kimsey. He was from Southern Illinois,
therefore did not know much about fighting Indians before he came to
Colorado. But one thing he soon learned was that he was afraid of them. He
said: "Nobody as knows 'em can help being 'fraid of 'em; white folks are
hard enough to fight, but Indians are worse, 'cause a fellow keeps
thinking what they would do to ye when they gets a chance." He was out
after Indians once with Jim Pinkerton and Sam Ashcraft. He said: "I am a
good shot at an antelope; can bring them down every time ; but I had five
fair shots at an old Indian's back, a big, broad shouldered fellow, too,
I'd judge weighed two hundred pounds, but I never made no impression on
him."
I have been out with Jim a number of times, and, as he says,
he is a good shot. We were out together once on Beaver creek. The whole
country was black with buffalo: there seemed to be thousands of them
moving north. The Indians had received a permit from the governor of the
state to go to Beaver Creek to hunt buffalo. Ouray, Douglas and Colorow,
who were Ute Indians, and their band, with Curtis, their interpreter,
arrived at the creek in the evening and had a big powwow that night. The
next morning they said they would show us how to hunt buffalo. They
started out in groups of four, two bucks and two squaws, on their ponies.
There was a ridge perhaps a quarter of a mile from camp. We went up on
that to watch them. The two bucks made a run for the herd and cut out the
one they wanted; then one would fire at it, and if he missed the other
would fire. As soon as the buffalo was killed the bucks would ride back to
camp and the squaws would take charge. They would skin it, cut up the meat
and pack it on their ponies and take it into camp.
The Sioux,
Cheyennes and Arapahoes claimed this hunting ground, but they camped about
thirty-five or forty miles from there. The Utes found out where they were
camped and made a raid on them, stole their ponies and struck out for the
mountains. The others got on the trail of the Utes and followed them. When
they overtook the Utes there was quite a fight and they got their ponies
back and some of the Utes' ponies. But the government had to interfere and
get back the Ute ponies, because the governor gave them permission to hunt
on the grounds belonging to the Sioux, Cheyennes and Arapahoes.
That was the good old time to hunt in Colorado. I brought home twenty-six
hind quarters from yearlings up to four year olds. My brother, R.
Patterson, had twenty-seven hind quarters, and Kimsey had twenty-six. I
hung mine up in a sod house and we had buffalo meat all winter, also
antelope meat by the wholesale. While we were down there old Chief Douglas
came to me and wanted me to give him oats for his horse. He said: "My
horse 'Merican horse; no stand ridin' 'out oats." I said: "My horse is
American horse, too, and can't stand to pull this load of buffalo back
home without oats, and I have only enough for one." So I would not give
any.
After we had started home and were about six miles from camp,
we met two Englishmen from Greeley, going after a load of buffalo. They
had small guns, wholly unfit for such hunting, and the Indians had got in
their wagon and stole their grub, so we gave them something to eat. They
then wanted us to kill them a load, but some of the boys in our crowd
thought we ought to have a little fun with them first.
They shot
one buffalo and just crippled it, then told the men they did not want to
waste any more ammunition, but for one of them to go for him with a knife,
as it did not have any horns. The calf got the best of them and knocked
them down. The boys then called out, "Tail him." "Cut his ham strings,"
etc. The men went for the calf again, but were knocked down the second
time. The boys thought they had fun enough, so they killed some buffalo to
load their wagon and sent them on their way rejoicing. We always had good
times when we were out, but I think this was our last buffalo hunt.
Other Resources
Some of the Pioneers of Colorado
Source: True History of some of the Pioneers of Colorado, by Miss
Luella Shaw, Press of Carson Harper Co, Denver, Colorado, 1909 |
Colorado Resources
Other Genealogy Resources
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