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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1920)
PAG E 4 T H E C H E M A W A A M E R IC A N AM ERICAN W ILD HORSES W hen the S p an iard s cam e to A m erica they b ro u g h t the first horses to the co n tin en t, says a w riter in O ur Dumb A nim als. T h e anim als escaped and w ere left behind by the S paniards to become the paren t stock of fu tu re herds of wild horses th a t ranged th e plains from Mexico to as far n o rth as Saskatchew an and possibly fu rth er. H orses from early A m erican settlers escaped tim e to tim e or were ru n off by th e wild horse bands and added to the blood. Indian trib es cau g h t them in num bers and re-dom esticated them , using them as a m eans of tran sp o rtatio n w hich they had never know n before th e advent of the S paniards. Indeed, it was the possession of horses th a t m ade the plains In d ian tribes possible, and later m ade roam ing w arriors of them , for they never traveled far before they had horses. Some tribes becam e horse breeders and tu rn ed out fine stock; the C om anches of T ex as were alm ost like A rabs in th is m atter, and th e C heyenne tribes of W yom ing gained fame as p roducers of th e fam ous “ p in to ” or “ p a in te d ” (sp o tte d ) horses of the plains. B rands of wild horses could be found alm ost a n y w here w here feed and w ater conditions w ere favorable, as late as the 8()’s. T w o such bands ranged in the sand hills of N ebraska betw een the P latte and N iobrara rivers, the habitat of one band being aro u n d the head of Dismal river and the ran g e of the o th er band being along the L oup river. W ild horse herds w ere alw ays led (an d strictly herded into individual b an d s) by in d iv id u al stallions who looked after their charges w ith alm ost hum an in telligence, leading them to feed and w ater and g u a rd ing them from d an g er of every sort. T h ese stallions w ould fight each other and any wild enem y such as the grizzly bear, w ith all the w ild ferocity of a tig er. T hey would even attack man if he was afoot aird alone, as many an Indiatr or w hite h o rse-h u n ter can te stify . T h e tw o stallion leaders of these N ebraska sand-hill herds were well know n u p and dow n th e plains for a num ber of years and every device and plan was tried to “ g e t” them . O ne was a coal-black tro tte r w ith long sw eeping m ane and tail— as beautiful an anim al as ever ran free under the sky. T h e o th er was a bay pacer w ith cream m ane and tail th a t sw ept the ground and gave him a com et-like appearance w hile ru n n in g at full speed. Tw o finer horse never lived, I verily believe. In d ian s tried to “ walk them d o w n ” by k ee p in g them m oving slowly all th e tim e, w ith o u t a chance to feed or get to w ater, b u t th ey never could get eith er one. Cow-men tried en circlin g th e herds and “ ro p in g ” them m any tim es. T h is m ethod resulted in th e cap tu re of the bay stallion on the head of the M iddle L oup about 1885. T h e black stallion was “ creased ” by a rifle shot th ro u g h the top of the neck bv a single h u n te r who th u s captured the big fellow a year or so after th e bay was cau g h t. T h e black was cap tu red miles to the n o rth w est of his old range in the sage brush desert of W y o m ing after nearly all his band had been captured by cow boys on reg u la r organized horse h u n ts th at often resulted in the cap tu re of a w hole herd at once. T h e horse was th e u nit of value in trade am ong all th e plains Ind ian s; th e man who owned “ m any h o rses” was rich— he who owned none was poor. A wife was valued by a certain num ber of horses, the m ore desirable the wife th e greater th e num ber of horses she w ould b rin g to her father w hen m arriage day came aro u n d . N ex t to the buffalo, the horse was th e most valuable of all plains anim als to the In d ian tribes. In d ian s had alw ays used dogs for pack anim als up to the tim e they got horses from th e increase of the S panish herds, so it is only n atu ral perhaps to find th e Sioux calling th e horse S h u n k sto n k a, literally “ b ig -d o g ” because they could pack all their stuff on his back ju s t as they alw ays had packed it for tra n s p o rtatio n on dogs before. T h e B lackfeet took a som ew hat d ifferent view of th e anim al and called it P ono-kom -i-ta, w hich m eans elk-dog or m ore nearly “ lik e-elk -lik e-d o g ,’’u n d o u b te d ly th is nam e was selected because, in size, th e horse w as “ lik e -th e -e lk ” but w ith o u t his big horns and, be cause, th e y could pack th e ir belongings on the horse, he was “ lik e -th e-d o g ” who had alw ays been their pack anim al before. T herefore th e nam e “ elk -d o g ” as above. T h e Crow In d ian s who lived in th e Y ellow stone riv er co untry called th e horse e-cheta. Ju st w hat th is nam e m eans I never learned but it is likely som ew hat sim ilar to the o thers. T h e last w ild-horse herds th a t I know7 of were ra n g in g in W ashington and O regon, but they were cap tu red several years ago and as far as I know th e real wild horse of the plains is gone forever now , th e nearest approach today being the ranch horses w hich still run th e open ran g e here and th ere. F U N OF D E N T IST R Y W ild and disheveled, w atery of eve and trem bling of lim b, he b urst into the d e n tis t’s consulting-room and addressed the d en tist in gasping tones: Do you give gas here?’ ’ “ Y e s,” replied the d en tist. “ Does it p u t a man to sleep?” “ Of c o u rse .” “ N o th in g would w ake him ?” “ N o th in g . B u t—” “ W ait a bit: you could break his jaw or black his eye w ithout him feeling it?” “ My dear sir, of course, I — ” “ It lasts about half a m inute, d o e sn ’t it?” “ Y e s.” W ith a w’ild w’hoop of joy and relief the exciled m an threw7 off his coat and w aistcoat. “ N o w ,” he yelled, as he tu g g ed at his shirt, “ get ver gas-engine ready. I w ant you to pull a porous- p la s ttr off mv b a c k .”