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1932 Stories

A HOME HUNTER

By Wilden Harris, Dist. 205

Mathias Trumbo was a Scotchman. He came direct from Scotland. He was married at the age of twenty-three. The Indians were angry at the white people at the time of my story, so he went to the fort at Ottawa for protection.

He soon grew tired of fort life, so he took his long rifle and started out to find a home for his wife, children and himself.

Mathias forded the Fox river at Dayton and went up the east side until he came to the second stream on that side. He followed this stream to its head. The stream started at a spring. He drank from the spring and found it to be clean and cool. He looked around the spring and saw tracks of game. Then looking out from the spring he saw a large prairie covered with all kinds of wild flowers. He decided this would be a good place for his cabin. For here was plenty of cold, pure water, plenty of game, enough ground for what little farming he wanted to do. He intended to make his living by hunting and trapping. He took another drink of the cool water and started back to the fort. On the way he shot a deer, which he hung up in a tree so that the wolves could not get it.

The next morning he took his broad ax and went back to the place selected for his home. He made just a common cabin with only one room, two beds, one on legs and another on the floor in a corner, a large fireplace, two chairs and a table. In the spring another cabin took the place of this one.

There were a lot of Indians around in the woods. At one time five Indians came to the cabin, the woman was much frightened for she was all alone. Her husband had been away all day in the woods hunting. The redmen walked silently to the door of the cabin. The chief knocked at the door and waited till it was opened by the woman. The chief made signs that they were hungry and wanted something to eat. The woman had a cake and some meat on the table. She took them out of the room and placed them on a stump just outside of the cabin. The Indians squatted around the stump and began to eat. They used their fingers to tear the meat apart.

When they had eaten all of the meat and cake, the chief gave a shrill whistle with his fingers. Out of the woods came two more Indians. They looked at the crumbs and bones on the stump with greedy eyes. The woman saw how hungry they were so she went back into the cabin and got some more meat. She had no cake left. The two Indians made short work of it.

The chief took from the bags that the other Indians had brought, two beaver skins. He laid them on the stump to pay for the food the woman gave them. The two Indians picked up the bags and all walked silently away into the forest.

When the Indians were gone she picked up the two skins and saw that they were in the best of shape.

One time five families were moving to another part of the country when they lost one of the little girls. They were at the fort at Ottawa when they missed her. Mathias and two more men started out to hunt her. When they came to the place where the people had moved from they found only ashes and moccasin tracks of Indians. Then they knew that the Indians had got the little girl. They found the Indians on a small creek about one-half mile north of the place where the Grove schoolhouse now stands. The three men were captured before they could get away. They tied all three of them up till night. The first man to be cut loose started fighting as soon as the last rope fell from his body. All the Indians fell upon him with whoops of joy, for they wanted action. The man was killed, but he left some battered Indians behind him. One Indian's nose was broken and blood was streaming from it. Another had an eye that was turning to a pretty black.

The second man was hanged. When it came Mathias' time one Indian said it would be a good night for a fire. At once all the Indians began to gather wood for a fire. When they had the fire started they untied Mathias. As soon as he was free he jerked loose from his captors and jumped into the creek. He swam along under the water and came up under the bank for air. After he had gone far enough he got out of the creek and went back to the fort. The little girl was returned to her parents by the Indians.

Mathias' children grew up and married. Mathias lived to be ninety years of age.

Today the third generation occupy the land that their forefathers fought for and tamed. His grandson sold the hilly part of the farm because it is much easier to make a living on the fertile plains.

One of the men who occupy the land is Franklin Trumbo. He has some of the old things his great-grandfather had, such as a candle maker, yoke for oxen, and an old flute.

There is a large rock about one-half mile back from his house in his pasture. On this rock is carved the date and who settled the land.

The spring that Mathias found is still running. It is over one hundred years old. It has cut a deep ditch, with three falls of about ten feet high. One of the largest falls fell a year ago. The rock was about one foot thick and twenty feet wide.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 36.


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