Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

Jean Baptiste Charbonneau (February 11, 1805 – May 16, 1866) was an American explorer and guide, fur trapper and trader, military scout during the Mexican-American War, alcalde (mayor) of Mission San Luis Rey de Francia, and a gold prospector and hotel operator in California. He spoke French and English, and learned German and Spanish during his six years in Europe from 1823-1829. He also spoke Shoshone and other western American Indian languages, learned during his years of trading.

Son of Sacagawea, a Shoshone, and Toussaint Charbonneau, her French-Canadian husband, who worked as a trapper and interpreter for the Lewis and Clark Expedition of 1804-1806, Jean Baptiste was born during the travel. He was taken by his parents as an infant across the country. The Expedition co-leader William Clark and other European Americans nicknamed the boy Little Pomp or Pompy. He lived with Clark in St. Louis, Missouri as a boy, where he attended St. Louis academy. Clark paid for his education

Charbonneau's image appears with that of his mother on the United States Sacagawea dollar silver coin. He is the only child ever depicted on United States currency. Pompeys Pillar on the Yellowstone River in Montana and the community of Charbonneau, Oregon[1] are named for him.

Contents

Childhood

Jean Baptiste Charbonneau was born to Sacagawea, a Shoshone, and her husband, the French-Canadian trapper Toussaint Charbonneau, in early 1805 at Fort Mandan in North Dakota. This was during the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which wintered there in 1804–05. The senior Charbonneau had been hired by the expedition as an interpreter and, learning that his pregnant wife was Shoshone, the captains Lewis and Clark agreed to bring her along. They knew they would need to negotiate with the Shoshone for horses and guides at the headwaters of the Missouri River. Meriwether Lewis noted the boy's birth in his journal:

The party that were ordered last evening set out early this morning. the weather was fair and could wind N. W. about five oclock this evening one of the wives of Charbono was delivered of a fine boy. It is worthy of remark that this was the first child which this woman had boarn and as is common in such cases her labour was tedious and the pain violent; Mr. Jessome informed me that he had freequently administered a small portion of the rattle of the rattle-snake, which he assured me had never failed to produce the desired effect, that of hastening the birth of the child; having the rattle of a snake by me I gave it to him and he administered two rings of it to the woman broken in small pieces with the fingers and added to a small quantity of water. Whether this medicine was truly the cause or not I shall not undertake to determine, but I was informed that she had not taken it more than ten minutes before she brought forth perhaps this remedy may be worthy of future experiments, but I must confess that I want faith as to it's [sic] efficacy.—[2]

The infant Charbonneau traveled from North Dakota to the Pacific Ocean and back, carried along in the expedition's boats or upon his mother's back. His presence is often credited by historians with reassuring the native tribes which the expedition encountered. They believed that no war party would travel with a woman and child.

In April 1807, about two years after the expedition, the Charbonneau family moved to St. Louis, at Clark's invitation. Toussaint Charbonneau and Sacagawea departed for the Mandan villages in April 1809 and left the boy Jean Baptiste to live with Clark. In November 1809, the parents returned to St. Louis to try farming, but left again in April 1811. Jean Baptiste continued to reside with Clark.

Clark's two-story home, built in 1818, contained an illuminated museum 100 feet (30 m) long by 30 feet (9.1 m) wide. Its walls were decorated with national flags and life-size portraits of George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette, Indian artifacts and mounted animal heads. Upon visiting the museum, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, a geologist and ethnographer, wrote,

"Clark evinces a philosophical taste in the preservation of many subjects of natural history. We believe this is the only collection of specimens of art and nature west of Cincinnati, which partakes of the character of a museum, or cabinet of natural history."[3]

As a boy, Charbonneau learned from the vast collection.

Clark paid for Charbonneau's education at the St. Louis academy, a Jesuit Catholic school, although the expense was considerable for the time. The school's single classroom was then located in the storehouse of Clark's friend, the trader Joseph Robidoux. The Brothers James and George Kennerly paid for Charbonneau's supplies for 1820 and were reimbursed by Clark:

From June through September 1820 and in 1822, the boy Charbonneau boarded with Louis Tesson Honoré, a Clark family friend and member of his church, Christ Episcopal.[6]:67 The general had helped organize the church in 1819. They lived in St. Ferdinand Township in St. Louis County, Missouri near Charbonneau's father's 320 acres (1.3 km2) of land.

Adult life

On June 21, 1823, at age eighteen, Charbonneau met Duke Friedrich Paul Wilhelm of Württemberg, the nephew of King Freidrich I Wilhelm Karl of Württemberg.[7] Charbonneau was working at a Kaw Indian trading post on the Kansas River near present-day Kansas City, Kansas. Wilhelm was traveling in America on a natural history expedition to the northern plains with Jean Baptiste's father, Toussaint Charbonneau, as his guide. On October 9, 1823, he invited the younger Charbonneau to return to Europe with him, which was agreed upon.

The two set sail on the Smyrna from St. Louis in December 1823. Jean Baptiste lived at the duke's palace in Württemberg for nearly six years, where he learned German and Spanish, and improved his English and French. The latter was still the dominant language of St. Louis, which had first enabled his conversations with the Duke.[6]:71 According to a 1932 translation of Wilhelm's journal by the historian Louis C. Butscher, Wilhelm wrote that Charbonneau was "…a companion on all my travels over Europe and northern Africa until 1829."[6]:75[8] Other scholars question the accuracy of Butscher's translation. For instance, in 2001 Albert Furtwangler, noting two more recent translations of the duke's journals[9][10], suggests that Charbonneau's role in Wilhelm's court may have been less intimate than Butscher's perhaps romanticized account implied. Charbonneau may have been hired as a servant, rather than invited as a companion. As support, he notes the apparent lack of further contact between the two men after Charbonneau's return to America.[11][12] As with many aspects of his life, little is known for certain about Charbonneau's time in Europe.

Children

Parish records in Wuerttemberg show that while there, Charbonneau fathered a child with Anastasia Katharina Fries, a soldier's daughter. The baby, Anton Fries, died a few months after his birth.[11]:{{{1}}}

Nearly two decades later, while in California as alcalde, Charbonneau was recorded as the father of another child. On May 4, 1848, Maria Cantarina Charguana was born to Margarita Sobin, a Luiseño woman, and Charbonneau. Sobin, 23 at the time, traveled to Mission San Fernando Rey de España near Los Angeles for the infant girl's baptism, performed on May 28, 1848, and recorded by Father Blas Ordaz as entry #1884. Margarita Sobin later married Gregory Trujillo, and some of their descendants are members of the La Jolla band of Mission Indians.[13]

Trapper and hunter

In November 1829, Charbonneau returned to St. Louis, where he was hired by Joseph Robidoux as a fur trapper for the American Fur Company, to work in Idaho and Utah.[6]:84[14] He attended the 1832 Pierre's Hole rendezvous while working for the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. There he fought in the bloodiest non-military conflict that preceded the Plains Indian wars, which began in 1854.[6]:88

From 1833–49 Charbonneau worked in the fur trade in the Rocky Mountain Trapping System[15] with other mountain men, such as Jim Bridger, James Beckwourth and Joe Meek.[16]

From 1840–42 he worked from Fort Saint Vrain, floating bison hides and tongues 2,000 miles (3,200 km) down the South Platte River to St. Louis. On one of the voyages, he camped with Captain John C. Frémont on a cartographic expedition. In 1843, he guided Sir William Drummond Stewart, a Scottish baronet, on his second long trip to the American West, which was a lavish hunting expedition.[17]

Seeking employment again, in 1844 Charbonneau went to Bent's Fort in Colorado, where he was a chief hunter, and worked also as a trader with southern Plains Indians. William Boggs, a traveler who met him, wrote that Charbonneau "…wore his hair long, [and] was…very high strung…" He reported, "…it was said Charbenau (sic) was the best man on foot on the plains or in the Rocky Mountains."[18]

Mexican-American War

In October 1846, Charbonneau, Antoine Leroux and Pauline Weaver were hired as scouts by General Stephen W. Kearny. Charbonneau’s experience with military marches, such as with James William Abert[6]:128 in August 1845 along the Canadian River, and his fluency in Indian languages qualified him for the position. Kearny directed him to join Colonel Philip St. George Cooke and Lieutenant William H. Emory on an arduous march from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to San Diego, California, a distance of 1,100 miles (1,800 km). Their mission was to guide 20 huge Murphy supply wagons to California for the military during the Mexican-American War.[6]:136 A Mormon contingent of 339 men accompanied U.S. cavalry on the uncharted trail. The marchers became known as the Mormon Battalion. A memorial to the battalion was erected at the San Pedro River, one mile (1.6 km) north of the US–Mexico border near the present-day ghost town of Palominas, Arizona. Cooke noted that from November 16, 1846, to January 21, 1847, Charbonneau assisted 29 times on the march.[6]:150 Eight of the 20 wagons reached Mission San Luis Rey de Francia, four miles (6 km) from today’s Oceanside, California, and the leaders counted the expedition as a success.

Cooke wrote, "History may be searched in vain for an equal march of infantry."[19] Known as the Gila Trail, the wagon road was used by settlers, miners, stagecoaches of the Butterfield Stage line and cattlemen driving longhorns to feed the gold camps. Parts of the route became the Southern Pacific Railroad and U.S. Route 66. In February 1848, knowledge gained about the region was used as the basis of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which established the United States-Mexico border in December 1853 following the Mexican-American War.[6]:151

Alcalde

In November 1847, Charbonneau accepted an appointment from Colonel John D. Stevenson as alcalde (mayor) at Mission San Luis Rey de Francia. This position made him the only civilian authority, a combined sheriff, lawyer and magistrate, in a post-war region covering about 225 square miles (580 km2). From 1834–50, the lands were owned by rancheros through land-grants.

The landed elite traditionally hired local American Indians, mainly Luiseño, to do the agricultural work. Many functioned in virtual servitude, and some racheros paid them only with liquor. Trying to correct abuses, in November 1847, Colonel Richard Barnes Mason, the territorial governor, ordered Charbonneau to force the sale of a large ranch owned by the powerful Jose Antonio Pico, whose family was politically connected. His brother Pio Pico had been the last governor of California under Mexico.[20] On January 1, 1848, Mason banned the sale of liquor to Indians. Such ordinances attacked the foundation of ranchero society; the changes led to United States civilian control during the post-war occupation.[6]:161 Although Charbonneau was assisted by Captain J. D. Hunter, as he negotiated with Pico, he saw that local resistance would make enforcing Mason's orders difficult. Charbonneau resigned his post in August 1848, soon to be followed by Hunter. California statehood on September 9, 1850, ended the post-war difficulties.

Gold mining

In September 1848, Charbonneau arrived in Placer County, California at the American River, near what is now Auburn. Arriving early in what became known as the California Gold Rush, he joined only a handful of prospectors. Panning was not done during the hard Sierra Nevada winter or spring runoff, so in June 1849, he joined Jim Beckwourth and two others at a camp on Buckner's Bar to mine the river at the Big Crevice. This claim "…was shallow and paid well."[21] Charbonneau lived at a site known as Secret Ravine, one of 12 ravines around Auburn. A successful miner, he kept working in the area for nearly sixteen years.

Charbonneau could afford the mining region's highly inflated cost of living. For example, at a time when a good wage in the West was $30 per month, it cost $8–16 per day to live in Auburn.[6]:176 Transiency was high but Charbonneau was still there in 1860, working as the hotel manager at the Orleans Hotel.[22] By 1858 many miners had left the California fields for other gold rushes. In 1866, he departed for other opportunities at age 61. He most likely headed for Montana to prospect for gold, although sites such as at Silver City and DeLamar in Idaho Territory were much closer.[6]:190

Death

In April 1866, Charbonneau left Auburn, California for an unknown purpose. Before leaving he visited the Placer Herald newspaper and visited with an editor, who wrote later in his obituary, "..he was about [his purpose was] returning to familiar scenes."[23] Some of those "familiar scenes" may have been where he had in and worked as a mountain man east of the Great Basin. His destination also may have been the Owyhee Mountains, where rich placer deposits were discovered in May 1863. Or perhaps he sought to reach Alder Gulch near Virginia City, Montana, because it had produced $31,000,000 in gold by late 1865. Other possible destinations were the Bannock, Montana gold strikes or—as noted above—the mines at Silver City (formerly Ruby City), Delamar or Boonville.[24]

His route and travel method likely took him on a stagecoach over Donner Summit and east along the well-traveled Humboldt River Trail to Winnemucca, Nevada, then north to army Camp McDermitt near the Idaho border.[6]:197 Passing the camp in rugged terrain, the men reached the Owyhee River crossing at present-day Rome, Oregon, where an accident occurred and Charbonneau went into the river. The accident's cause is unknown, but there are several possibilities. He may have been on a stagecoach operated by the Boise-Silver City-Winnemucca stage company that began its route in 1866 out of Camp McDermitt and in crossing the river, the coach sank.[6]:198 Or he may have been on horseback and fallen off the river bank or slipped out of the saddle while crossing. The Owyhee River in snowmelt may have turned into whitewater. Other possibilities are he was injured on the land journey, inhaled alkali dust, or fell ill from drinking contaminated water.[6]:199

The ill Charbonneau was taken to Inskip Station in Danner, Oregon, built in 1865, about 33 miles (53 km) from the river and west of Jordan Valley. It is now a ghost town. The former stage coach, mail stop and general store served travelers to Oregon and the California gold fields. It had its own well, and Charbonneau may have deteriorated from drinking the water.[6]:200 After his death there, his body was taken one-quarter mile north and interred at 42.9518°N 117.339°W.

Charbonneau died on May 16, 1866. A death notice was sent by an unknown writer, likely one of two fellow travelers on the journey east, to the Owyhee Avalanche newspaper and it said he died on pneumonia.[25] This is the first documented evidence of his death.[6]:201 The Placer Herald obituary writer opined that he succumbed to the infamous "Mountain Fever", to which many illnesses in the West were attributed.

His grave site, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is on 1 acre (4,000 m2) of land. (It is near the Anderson General Store, which is intact and appears to be in 1940s condition.) Now contained within the 6,000 acres (24 km2) Ruby Ranch, the site was donated to Malheur County, Oregon by the owners. The gravesite has three historical markers. In 1971 the Malheur County Daughters of the American Revolution placed a marker. In 1973 the Oregon Historical Society installed a marker, reading:

Oregon History

Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

1805–1866

This site marks the final resting place of the youngest member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Born to Sacagawea and Toussaint Charbonneau at Fort Mandan (North Dakota), on February 11, 1805, Baptiste and his mother symbolized the peaceful nature of the "Corps of Discovery." Educated by Captain William Clark at St. Louis, Baptiste at 18 traveled to Europe where he spent six years becoming fluent in English, German, French and Spanish. Returning to American in 1829, he ranged the far west for nearly four decades as mountain man, guide, interpreter, magistrate, and forty-niner. In 1866, he left the California gold fields for a new strike in Montana, contracted pneumonia enroute, reached "Inskips Ranche" here, and died on May 16, 1866.

In 2000 a third marker was dedicated by Lehmi-Shoshone family descendants. As the son of Sacagawea, a Northern Shoshone who lived in the Lemhi Valley, Charbonneau was considered one of their people.

Earlier in the twentieth century, some people argued that Charbonneau had died and was buried at the Shoshone Wind River Indian Reservation. Dr. Charles Eastman, a Santee Sioux, did research that appeared to establish that Charbonneau's mother Sacagawea died at the reservation on April 9, 1884. Some people believe that Charbonneau died in 1885 and was buried next to her. By this tradition, memorials in their names were erected in 1933 at Ft. Washakie.[26] Eastman did his research in 1924–25, listening and interpreting oral history. But, that tradition has been superseded by documentary evidence for both Charbonneau and Sacagawea.

In 1964 an edited nineteenth-century journal was published that included the information that Sacagawea died much earlier, on December 20, 1812, of a "putrid fever" (possible following childbirth) at Fort Manuel Lisa on the Missouri River.[27] Four 19th-century documents support this earlier date, including a statement by William Clark years after the 1805–07 Lewis and Clark expedition that "Secarjawea was dead."[28]

Legacy and honors

See also

References

  1. ^ a b McArthur, Lewis A; Lewis L. McArthur (2003) [1928], Oregon Geographic Names (seventh ed.), Portland, OR: Oregon Historical Society Press, p. 190, ISBN 0-87595-277-1 
  2. ^ Lewis, Meriwether; Clark, William; Floyd, Charles (1904), Original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804–1806, 1, p. 257, http://books.google.com/books/about/Original_journals_of_the_Lewis_and_Clark.html?id=kvAtAAAAYAAJ .
  3. ^ Schoolcraft, Henry R (1825), Travels in the Central portions of the Mississippi Valley, New York: J. and J. Harper, p. 294 .
  4. ^ Scott's Lesson textbook formally dealt with elocution, language and speaking.
  5. ^ Abstract of Expenditures by Captain W. Clark as Superintendent of Indian Affairs, 1822, American State Papers, 2, USA: Department of the Interior, 1834, p. 289 .
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Ritter, Michael (2005), Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, Man of Two Worlds, Charleston: Booksurge, ISBN 1-59457-868-0 .
  7. ^ Gastel Lloyd, Brigitte; Theroff, Paul (January 18, 2002) .
  8. ^ Hebard, Grace (1932), Sacajawea: Guide and Interpreter of Lewis and Clark, Glendale, CA: Clarke, pp. 119–24 .
  9. ^ Wilhelm, Paul (1973), Travels in North America 1822–1824, trans. Nitske, W Robert, Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma Press .
  10. ^ Wilhelm, Paul (1938), trans. Bek, William, "First Journey to North America in the Years 1822 to 1824", South Dakota Historical Collections (19) .
  11. ^ a b Furtwangler, Albert (Fall, 2001), "Sacagawea's Son as a Symbol", Oregon Historical Quarterly 102 (3) .
  12. ^ Morris, Larry E (2004), The Fate of the Corps, New Haven: Yale University Press .
  13. ^ "Maria Canatarina Charguana, child of Margarita Sobin," First Book of Baptisms. May 28, 1848, entry #1884, Plaza Church, Los Angeles, California
  14. ^ Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, Idaho State Historical Society Reference Series .
  15. ^ Wishart, David J (1979), The Fur Trade of the American West, 1807–1840, A Geographical Synthesis, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, pp. 125–27 .
  16. ^ United States National Park Service: "Jean Baptiste Charbonneau," The Lewis and Clark Journey of Discovery
  17. ^ Victor, Frances, ed. (1870), The River of the West: Life and Adventure in the Rocky Mountains and Oregon, Hartford: Bliss & Co, p. 474 .
  18. ^ Hafen LeRoy, "The W.M. Boggs Manuscript About Bent's Fort, Kit Carson, the Far West and Life Among the Indians," The Colorado Magazine 7 (March, 1930): pp. 45-69
  19. ^ Bieber, Ralph, ed. (1938), Exploring Southwestern Trails, 1846–1854, Glendale: Arthur H Clark, p. 104 .
  20. ^ See this page for Portrait of Jose Antonio Pico, the elder brother of Pio Pico and Andrés Pico, USC, http://digarc.usc.edu/search/controller/view/chs-m19419.html .
  21. ^ Angel, Myron; Fairchilds, MD (1882), History of Placer County, Oakland: Thompson and West, p. 229 .
  22. ^ Eighth Decennial Census, 1860
  23. ^ "Obituary", Placer Herald, July 7, 1866 .
  24. ^ Lindgren, Waldemar (1899), Report on Florida Mountain, Idaho State Historical Society Reference .
  25. ^ Owyhee Avalanche (Ruby City, ID), June 2, 1866 .
  26. ^ Note: See photo of Charbonneau's memorial on this page, which gives his death as 1885 and says he was buried west of that site in the Wind River Mountains.
  27. ^ Luttig, John. Journal of a Fur Trading Expedition on the Upper Missouri, 1812–13, ed. Stella Drumm, New York: Argosy-Antiquarian Ltd., 1964
  28. ^ Ottoson, Dennis R (Spring, 1976), "Toussaint Charbonneau, A Most Durable Man", South Dakota History (6): 152 .

Further reading

Fiction: