Red Devils -20 Mark Kellogg's Younger Days - part 2
By jeand
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Aunt Lillie continued, “Well after that he kept trying to get jobs with the railway, which was being built across the Midwest, and he spent quite a bit of time in Brainard, and did a bit of writing from there too. He had a new pen name, Frontier, but I kept all the clippings from the things he wrote then too. Most of them were in the St. Paul Pioneer, as he was a syndicated writer, and when he wrote for one paper, a lot of the others took up his work. So that is pretty much how we kept track of him. He didn’t write often, and hardly ever came home.”
I had a look at the Pioneer columns. “He seems to spend a lot of his writing time talking about the Indians, and he didn’t seem to like them much.”
“Well, he felt sorry for them, but didn’t think they were very good people. He wrote admiringly of Indian life and lamented over what he thought was their predestined fate. He tried to get them a fair deal over their money from the government. But, he supported corralling the Indians to ease white civilization’s advancement. And he thought they were dirty, shiftless, thieving and not the sort of people you want living next door to you. I think it was a pretty typical opinion of lots of people,” Grandma said, implying that she was one who agreed with him.
“Well, he moved to Bismarck in 1873, and some people say it was because he already knew the man who wanted to start a newspaper there, Col. Lounsberry, but he also, apparently, had a friend called John Dunn from Brainerd who had moved there, and was encouraging him to come.”
“How do you know about Mr. Dunn?”
“Well this is taking the story on too quickly, but they were the people that got his things that were brought back from the Little Big Horn, and I wanted them for you girls to have, so I wrote them a letter - the next March it was - almost a year after Mark died.”
“What did you say?”
“Well I found out who they were because my friend Mr. Watson of La Crosse had been on the train with this John Dunn, the druggist from Bismarck, who was supposed to be Mark’s best friend. In my letter I said that I had heard that Mr. Dunn had in his possession your father’s trunk and valise and whatever it was that he left, and that I understood that he had said he wanted to send them on to his little girls, but he didn’t know where you lived. So I gave him our address, and said that I would be very much obliged if he would send the things on. I said I didn’t expect they were of much value, but they would be very much appreciated by you two in the future. I specifically asked for any writing that he had done, and I said there were likely to be some newspapers printed here when Brick Pomeroy was proprietor and I knew somebody who would pay money for them. I thought they might be in his trunk, and suggested that he ask Mr. Lounsberry if he knew where the trunk with the newspapers might be. I told him how sad we all were over Mark's senseless and terrible death among the Indians. And I told them that he had left two very nice little girls, aged 13 and 15. I told him that you had been living with us for about ten years, and that we were very much attached to you.” Hannah sniffed a bit, and Cora Sue put her arm around her.
“Don’t cry Grandma,” she said. “It’s all right.”
“They did know how to contact us! Col. Lounsberry certainly did. It was on the day that the Bismarck Tribune had the story that I got the telegram from the Bismarck Tribune office informing us of his death. They knew where we were. They only pretended. Anyway, you are wanting to know what I said in my letter. I told him that Mattie was a fine musician, and you were both good scholars and I told him that Mr. Bennett of the Herald had given a donation to each of you which was going to be a big help in your education. I asked them to send the trunk and things, whatever there was to me, and then I put my name and address in.”
“Did you get them?”
“No, I did not, and I can tell you that I think there is more than meets the eye in all of this.”
“What do you mean?”
“I think that his last writing said things about Custer that the newspaper man and his friend in Bismarck didn’t want people to know about, and so they didn’t want us to get our hands on them. I think that man Lounsberry told him not to reply or send us his things.”
“What sort of things are you thinking?”
“Well, maybe he said that he thought that Custer was drunk. Maybe he said that he was foolish. Maybe he said that he did what he did, because of the personal glory for him, rather than taking into consideration the safety of his men. I do know what Mr. Pomeroy thought, because one of his relatives sent me a copy of his article in his new paper, called Pomeoy’s Democrat. It was just a month after the massacre. He said that Mark had been employed by him privately to send information, and that he had sent a letter saying he anticipated disaster to the troops because of their ignorance of the method of warfare and their limited numbers.”
“I know from my reading about what the scouts said, that they all told him that there were too many hostile Indians, and they didn’t have a chance,” I added. “And one of the Indians said that he drank way too much whiskey - and she implied he was drinking just as he went into the attack.”
“And you know, that sentence that they always use in articles about him - 'We leave the Rosebud tomorrow and by the time this reaches you we will have met and fought the red devils with what result remains to be seen. I go with Custer and will be at the death.' I don’t think he wrote that on June 21st, as they implied he did. I think he wrote it on the 25th just as he was going into the battle, and yet they say there was no writing from him after the 21st. If you look carefully at his dispatch for the 21st, they were on the Powder River, not the Rosebud. And in that statement, he sounded as if he really doubted that they would survive. Up till then he had been so positive that they would have an easy time of it.”
“Do you think he had a premonition that he would die?”
“Well, here is a letter I got from him just before he left,” said Grandma. This was something entirely new to us, and she drew the envelope out of the silver tobacco box and we saw our Pa’s handwriting again for the first time in five years.
“I didn’t show you it at the time, because I thought he was fussing for nothing,” Grandma defended herself. “And then after he died, it turned out that he had nothing, and not a penny or a pencil did they send on to your girls. I think those so called friends of his in Bismarck will have his things. But I did try to get them for you.”
She was very shaken, when she took the letter out and handed it to me. I opened the letter and Cora Sue came and read it with me over my shoulder.
15th June, 1876
Dear Hannah,
I am going with Custer into the Indian war as a correspondent for the New York Herald and Chicago Tribune and I should also be doing some sketching and writing for Harper’s Weekly. We’ll be leaving in about a week’s time. But as there will be a certain risk in this sort of enterprise, I thought I would like to appraise you of what I have in mind for the girls.
I made a claim in the Black Hills, when I visited them last year, and you know they are full of gold. I don’t have the money to work it, but it should be worth something. And I also have a share in a coal mine near Bismarck, and I think that will be worth enough to educate and take care of the children. If I come through this all right, I expect we can have a good future.
I wish I could say I had been a better father to them. I seemed to always have been unfortunate as far as money matters go, all through life, and yet I preserved a healthy good nature through all my bad luck, and was just beginning to get a foot hold when stricken down by the red skins.
Give the girls a kiss from their daddy and tell them that I love them very much.
Love from Mark
April 1
Lillie is so big that she looks fit to bursting. She can hardly waddle around the house any more and Cora Sue and I are virtually doing all the housework and the cooking. It is just as well that we don’t have any more outings planned, as it is sure as anything we wouldn’t be allowed to go. She predicts that the baby is due somewhere around this week, so we shall have to extra careful of making sure she has someone near her. Grandma is all very well, but she can’t really deliver the baby.
Aunt Lillie has planned to have a midwife, Mrs. Mary Carver, a widow lady who's about 40, come in to help with the birth. But William’s brother’s wife, Sarah, whose children are grown up, said she could come. And his other brother John’s wife, who has three children still at home, said she could come to help, but not to stay long. She lives in New Haven.
There is a nursery all prepared with baby bed and bath and rocking chair. We are really all get quite excited about this event.
Mr. Barnum has sent complimentary tickets for us and our five other classmates to go to the opening of the circus. It will be in Bridgeport for only the one day, Saturday, May 8th. The tour starts in New York at the end of April, and carries on until the 9th of October.
Mr. Barnum told us when we were at his house a few weeks ago that he intended to merge his circus with that of his greatest rivals, James Bailey and James Hutchinson on March 10th this year. But for this year, it will continue to be called by its present name, Barnum’s Greatest Show on Earth.
He writes that he has been trying to buy the new baby elephant from Bailey, but Bailey wouldn’t sell, but this merger will mean that he gets it anyway. This is the first Indian elephant ever to be born in America. And he said he was also trying to buy an elephant from London Zoo, called Jumbo, the largest pachyderm in captivity.
Mr. Barnum included a flyer telling that one new main attraction will be his giant, Colonel Goshen. At present he stands seven feet eleven inches in his stocking feet, weighs 635 pounds, measures ninety one inches around the chest and ninety five inches round the waist. His arms are the thickness of saplings and his fist possesses the ponderosity of the hammer of Thor. The Colonel served in several eventful campaigns. He was in the Turkish army at Jerusalem, and fought through the Crimean war, the war of Italian independence and the campaign of Maximillian in Mexico.
But of course, we knew that we needed to take all Mr. Barnum's claims with a large pinch of salt.
April 12th
Lillie’s little baby girl was finally born after a very long and painful labor, and it died, poor thing. We were all devastated. The midwife, Mrs. Carver was here for more than a day, and did everything she could, but the baby was not breathing when she was born.
Now we have Easter to get through, with a short break from school, but neither Cora Sue now I have the interest or energy to get on with doing anything.
We have less than a month now until our essays must be completely done and handed in. I have done about three-quarters of the work, but just can’t seem to feel in the mood to finish it all off. But since I promised to send the New York Herald my finished essay before I hand it in on May 11th,I had better get a move on. Our graduation will be on May 21st.
There is so little left of our school career now. Both Cora Sue and I plan to go to go to Bridgeport City Normal School next September which was just established last year in 1879, to train to be teachers. We were planning on spending the summer getting to know our new cousin, but that won’t be the case. I only hope that Lillie will try for another baby again soon.
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Comments
sad, in some ways. Col.
sad, in some ways. Col. Goshen sounds like a mighty man.
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A vivd picture of Mark
A vivd picture of Mark emerging from these 2 parts today. The girls certainly grew up close to life's struggles and birth and deaths. Rhiannon
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You bring the reader so close
You bring the reader so close to this time, often history looks austere and too important for ordinary people to have lived in it. You remind me that history that will be is happening right now. Custer sounds like a loose cannon, so sad about the baby.
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Poor Lillie, to loose a baby
Poor Lillie, to loose a baby in childbirth is possibly one of the worst things to ever happen, it's just the thought of carrying that little one inside you for nine months and feel it kicking, then to loose it.
It's such a shame that Mark blamed the Indians for so much, I think that was his downfall...well at least for me it was.
Hopefully the girls will become stronger and independent now they know so much more about their father.
Very much enjoyed as always Jean.
Jenny.
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