A Wound in the Heart
"If you were looking for the definitive symbol of the
conflict between the cultures that had existed in the American West for
at least ten thousand years, and maybe longer, and the culture that was
just a building East of the Mississippi River, this culture of
technology, of commerce, of grasping after tomorrow before it arrives,
you couldn't come up with two more powerful symbols than the Railroad,
and the Buffalo, because when the Railroad met the Buffalo, the Iron
Age met the Stone Age, the machine arrived in the garden, and the West
was changed for ever."
T. H. Watkins
There was a man who killed a buffalo bull
to no purpose.
Only he wanted its blood on his hands.
It was a great, old noble beast and it was a long time blowing its life
away.
On the edge of the night,
the people gathered themselves up in their grief and shame.
Away in the West, they could see the hump and spine of the huge beast
which lay dying along the edge of the world.
They could see its bright blood run into the sky where it dried,
darkening, and was at last flecked with flakes of light.
N. Scott Momaday
The thing we had to have, we
businessmen with rifles, was one shot kills. We based our success on...
the overwhelming stupidity of the buffalo, unquestionably the stupidest
game animal in the world... If you wounded the leader... the rest of
her herd, whether it was three or thirty, would gather around her and
stupidly "mill" ... All you had to do... was pick them off one by
one... I once took 269 hides with 300 cartridges. Adventurous? No more
than shooting a beef critter in the barnyard... It was a harvest. We
were the harvesters.
Frank H. Mayer
Frank Mayer and thousands of other buffalo hunters swarmed
onto the plains. Some stopped shooting just long enough to cool their
over-heated rifle barrels with canteens of water. When the water ran
out, they urinated down the barrel and kept shooting.
Up and down the plains
those men ranged... Behind them came the skinners with their wagons.
They piled the hides and bones into the wagons until they were full,
and then took their loads to the new railroad stations... to be shipped
east to market. Sometimes there would be a pile of bones as high as a
man, stretching a mile along the railroad track.
Old Lady Horse
Thirty-two million pounds of buffalo bones made their way from
the plains to eastern factories, where they were ground into
fertilizer. Buffalo horns were turned into buttons, combs, knife
handles. Hooves became glue. All across western Kansas, the slaughter
went on -- perhaps as many as three million buffalo killed in the two
years since the coming of the railroad.
Where there were myriads of
buffalo the year before, there were now myriads of carcasses. The air
was foul with a sickening stench, and the vast plain, which only a
short twelvemonth before teemed with animal life, was a dead, solitary,
putrid desert.
Col. Richard Irving Dodge
Many Americans grew alarmed at the extent of the slaughter. In
the Spring of 1874, Congress passed a law to protect the buffalo. But
President Ulysses S. Grant refused to sign it, and the killing
continued. Hunters had already moved south of Kansas, onto hunting
grounds reserved by treaty for the Indians. The government did nothing
to stop them, and even provided the hunters with free ammunition.
You white people make a big talk, and sometimes
war, if an Indian kills a white man's ox to keep his wife and children
from starving. What do you think my people ought to say and do when
they themselves see their buffalo killed by your race when you are not
hungry?
Little Robe
The Indians sensed... that we were
taking away their birthright and that with every boom of a buffalo
rifle their tenure on their homeland became weakened and that
eventually they would have no homeland and no buffalo. So they did what
you and I would do if our existence were jeopardized: they fought.
Frank H. Mayer
In the summer of 1874, the Kiowas, Comanches, Arapahos and
southern Cheyenne rose up and drove out the hunters -- and any other
whites they came across. General Philip Sheridan ordered a massive
campaign, deploying five columns of troops to pursue the Indians
relentlessly during the summer and fall, depriving them of rest, or the
opportunity to hunt. By the next spring, virtually all of the resisting
bands on the southern Plains -- desperate now for food -- had been
driven back onto the reservations.
The buffalo hunters went right back to work. Within a year,
the herd on the southern plains had virtually disappeared.
One by one we put up our buffalo rifles... left
the ranges. And there settled over them a vast quiet... The buffalo was
gone... Maybe we served our purpose in helping abolish the buffalo;
maybe it was our ruthless harvesting of him which telescoped the
control of the Indian by a decade or maybe more. Or maybe I am just
rationalizing. Maybe we were just a greedy lot who wanted to get ours,
and to hell with posterity, the buffalo, or anyone else, just so we
kept our scalps on and our money pouches filled. I think maybe that is
the way it was.
Frank H. Mayer
"It would be hard to imagine anything more deeply hurtful
than the loss of something ineffably sacred. One can only guess and
imagine. We can't know what that is now. But certainly confusion, first
of all, I suppose. Why is this happening? Why are you killing the
buffalo? We do that, of course, but we do it in order to survive and we
do it in a sacred manner. But this wholesale slaughter must have been
first confusing, and then -- you know -- a devastation. A wound in the
heart that we cannot conceive of now."
N. Scott Momaday
 The
buffalo saw that their day was over. They could protect their people no
longer. Sadly, the last remnant of the great herd gathered in council,
and decided what they would do. One young woman got up very early...
and... peering through the haze, she saw the last buffalo herd appear
like in a spirit dream. Straight to Mount Scott the leader of the herd
walked. Behind him came the cows and their calves, and the few young
males who had survived. As the woman watched, the face of the mountain
opened. Inside Mount Scott the world was green and fresh, as it had
been when she was a small girl. The rivers ran clear, not red. Into
this world of beauty the buffalo walked, never to be seen again.
Old Lady Horse
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