Having grown up in the well-manicured rolling hills of southern Ireland
and then York, Pennsylvania, Henrietta Haller was a bit overwhelmed by her
first glimpse of the Pacific Northwest. In a letter to her mother, written
shortly after her arrival at Fort Vancouver, she said, "Everything is a
surprise to me on the Pacific Coast. I had heard and read of Astoria but
could scarcely realize it would be such a small village. Also I could not
understand the virgin woods and entirely uncultivated country." She was
impressed by the Columbia River. "It is a magnificent river, larger
than any I have ever seen but the La Plata. The banks are very high and
picturesque-far superior to the Hudson. There are four snow-covered
mountains to be seen from the river, but it has generally been
cloudy."
After a few days at Fort Vancouver, Companies H and I were transferred to
Fort Dalles. Hennie wrote,
We went up the Columbia from the Cascades to the Dalles in a
small steamer, the Allen, with a tiny locomotive engine for a motor. The
propeller threw water on the deck at every revolution. The dining table was
on deck. At night we passengers slept on and under it. Our baggage was towed
on a raft. It took us part of two days and a night to get there.
The fort, though it had been operating for a couple of years, was still
being built. The officers' quarters were open shells, some yet lacking
roofs. Hennie wrote, "Our quarters are of rough hewn logs chinked with
marl and full of bed bugs which, with every precaution, we are not able to
keep out of our beds altogether." The job of getting settled was an
ongoing chore. Fortunately, most of their baggage came through undamaged.
According to Hennie, "The body of my dark green silk alone is
spotted-nothing broken. Everything looked as nice and smooth as if it had
not been moved at all, but we have lost a good many things, such as our two
boxes of claret, our firkin of butter and three of our hens."
Improving and adjusting to their new quarters took some doing, noted
Hennie:
Gran has, with some old boards, made, in a great part by his own
labor, a pig pen and a chicken house. We have 12 hens and 20 half grown
chickens, which cost us $26, and one sow with 5 pigs, $25 more. Eggs are
$1.50 a dozen but our hens will lay enough for our use. Everything we
brought is worth a great deal to us. The price of soap is $11 a bar. The
Indians give high prices for old clothes. I got $75 for an old military
coat. Old shirts and pants also sell well. I wish we had brought a chest of
old clothes. We hope to get the things we need in that way.
We get Commissary things at the same price as we used to. If we only had
vegetables for the winter we could get on. Potatoes cost $6 to $7 a bushel.
Salmon, three feet long, we get for 25 cents. It is without exception the
most delicious fish I have ever tasted and though we have been eating them
everyday since we came here we are not in the least tired, only sorry the
season is nearly at end. We have salted a panel and pickled a bucketful for
winter.
The garden is nearly a mile off through sand and burrs so I cannot go there
often. Our cow cost us $90 and gives very rich milk but not much of it, as
she has been let run wild with her calf. We hope she will improve with
attention. We take only two quarts of milk, leaving the rest for the calf.
That's the way they treat cows in this country.
Gran also wrote about settling in:
The so-called quarters was a mere log shell with a roof to it.
By my wits and with my own hands together with soldier's assistance for
which I pay occasionally, I have got a good chicken house, a good pigpen and
an apology for a stable. We have two horses, one cost $103 and the other
$25. The lat[t]er has run away but will be brought back, I think, by bad
weather. I bought a wagon for $30 and sold it for $50. I received $75 for my
stove. An old frock coat, too small for me, was fixed up a little and
brought $20. An old pair of straps sold for $6. I expect to make a small
profit on my Mexican embroidery. The Indians are very fond of embroidery,
especially such as officers wear.
Hennie complained about the weather:
The Dalles is a healthy post but the climate is not very
pleasant with high winds and drought all summer, generally cold winters
though during one we had no snow and not much frost... I wish we had rain.
Everything is so parched. It never rains from April to September and
consequently nothing will grow except by irrigation. Our quarters are
perched on top of a hill surrounded by sand and pine trees, the latter being
thinly scattered. The wind blows at 10 or 11 am and continues blowing a
perfect gale all day, raising clouds of dust, which fills the eyes, mouths,
and nostrils. There is up here not a single green thing to be seen except
for the trees and how they grow I can't imagine for the ground as far as
they have dug our root cellar [is] as dry as tinder.
"I spend most of my time with the children, the cow and calf, the pigs,
and chickens."
In November Hennie opined,
Mai does not give me a moment's peace. I cannot write at
night&*#151;I am generally too tired. Morris creeps in a sitting position.
The floors are very rough and he scratches his legs and wears out his
diapers. Mai has christened the bobtailed nag "Selina." He is
gentle as a lamb and can go very fast, too. We go out riding about once a
week. I cannot go oftener though I would like to for I have never enjoyed
riding before. We always ride along the river bottom to get mushrooms of
which there are great quantities.
You would not expect to hear that we have much company in such an out of the
way place but we have had someone to dinner or supper two or three times a
week for ever so long. Sometimes they are people Gran has some reason for
inviting; other times Indian chiefs-all unexpected. I never make any
differences. We generally have pork and some kind of vegetable and dried
apple pie, the crust being made from biscuit dough. Our fare is wholesome
enough if it has no other recommendation.
The eastern relatives were quite concerned about the local Indians, but
Hennie reassured them:
We are not under any apprehension about the Indians here for
they are not able, if they were willing, to hurt us. The Nez Perces and the
Cayuses are powerful and warlike, but they are friendly to the whites though
not to the Wishrams and Wascoes about here. The whites are too necessary to
the Indians in trading and in various other ways for them to wish to get rid
of us, I think.
The Indians can be troublesome though. I have been a great deal bothered by
the Cayuse Indians. They were down trading last week and paid us constant
visits which were not very edifying as they did not know much more of the
Chinook jargon-the court language of all of these tribes-than we did. We, of
course, do not know either the Nez Perce or Cayuse tongue. We have to learn
Indian instead of their learning English and I suppose I'll be able to
"wak wak" pretty well before we leave this country.
Tonight we have been entertaining Kaskala, the chief of the Wascoes. He is a
neighbor and the only Indian with the exception of William, his interpreter,
that I am ever glad to see. I really quite like them but hope they won't
come too often.
We are not concerned with the Indians about our children. I keep them close
to the house because of snakes.
As the first year drew to a close, Hennie noted, "Our porch looks
nice hung with clean canvas. I feel quite comfortable now. Our yard is
nearly fenced in and we will be able to keep out those villainous pigs and
chickens, not our own, that come and torment us. I intend trying to raise a
few flowers around the house next summer."
Wildlife presented an ongoing problem. Hennie wrote, "We have
wolves. Those great wretches come into our yards in broad daylight but only
early in the morning. They sometimes attack and kill young cows so we have
to make sure our calves are shut up carefully. The coyotes and prairie
wolves pick only on chickens."
On New Year's Day, 1854, Hennie reported, "The day before Christmas
a hen that had laid astray brought us seven little chicks, which are
thriving well. Our little sow was found up the creek with a litter of seven
pigs-pretty little spotted and black things." And later, "Since
New Year's Day we have had real winter. The river is frozen nearly across
and it is very cold. All of the hills and mountains are covered with snow,
but we have had only a light sprinkling here. Our communication with the
outside world is cut off and will be as long as the cold weather
lasts."
By mid January several inches of snow had fallen. Hennie continued to
fume about the cost of things: "The Commissary price of pork is
doubleit is now 14 cents a pound and flour is $7 a barrel. We pay 15
cents a pound for beef. It is very hard to save money here but we do some,
for we are getting out of debt. I wish we were at home."
By spring things began to improve. Hennie wrote: "The children are
very well and very good. They both are growing fast. I made 5 dresses for my
self this last winter and a great many aprons, dresses and sacks for the
children besides a great deal of other sewing and some knitting." She
reported:
We now have 17 pigs. We find beautiful wild flowers now. They
have been blooming ever since the middle of February. The frogs have been
singing for weeks.
I have the loveliest little mare you ever saw. She has black eyes but
everything else is white. She eats out of my hand and has not a single trick
or fault. She only cost us four good blankets, a pair of greasy pantaloons
and two old white shirts. Her tail reaches within two inches of the ground.
I often put my arms around her neck and kiss her. I wish you were here just
for riding but there is not another inducement but perfect health in this
place.
In April Hennie wrote, "Gran has made me a little garden and if I
can keep the chickens off will have some comfort with it. I now have nearly
80 chickens." Their diet had more variety, too, as Hennie reported,
I got a present of six buffalo tongues today. They are splendid.
Salmon are running, but we do not have any yet. I rode out the other day to
see a large flock of sheep that were being brought across the plains by the
Indian agent. Mutton will make a valuable addition to our larder. He made us
a present of 14 of the sheep. We got some pemmican, which is dried buffalo
meat, and fat from the gentleman who gave us the buffalo tongues.
In May the salmon were back and the price of shoes had dropped. Hennie
noted:
We got fresh salmon again and they are delicious. We get small
ones for 121/2 cents. We have had radishes and lettuce this spring. I got a
good pair of shoes for $2. A pair that I got last winter lasted only a
month. There are wild roses in profusion along the streams. There are plenty
of fine gooseberries and currants-black, red, and yellow-and another berry I
have not seen before, and some strawberries. I have preserved them all. They
are a great treat for us. Morris is getting fatter since I weaned him. His
dresses and aprons are of a jaded kind, being Mai's castoffs. He wears a
green gingham sunbonnet. I guess I'll dress him like a girl until he is
about 8 years old. Their amusements are riding stick horses and playing
Indian and Lion.
In all of this Hennie had the help of a young girl called Mary who came
with the family from York. She had been paid eight dollars a month, and
Hennie reported, "She seems to be contented and never says a word about
her wages. She is everything I could wish for. She was disheartened when we
first came here and told us it would kill her to stay the winter but she
did. Gran gave her $20 a month since $8 would not anything like keep her in
clothes." Mary got married that summer, leaving Hennie to try to get
along with an old soldier to help with the cooking and cleaning.
The letters stopped at this point, but in November 1854 Gran described an
important event:
About 5 pm as Hennie was dishing up the dinner she remarked she
ought to lie down. Soon after she called and asked to see Mrs. Roper for
whom I sent. I also sent for Mrs. MacCullough, and these had hardly arrived
before she told me to call the doctor. He arrived and had not been here long
before I heard him say, "It's all right," and then I heard a lusty
bawling. It was over in less than an hour's time. A lovely daughter,
Charlotte, was born at 6 pm."
Presumably, Hennie was too busy with the new arrival to write more.
Still, it is remarkable that so much was written and somehow saved. Letters
took as long as six months to reach their destination, if they got there at
all.
Martin N. Chamberlain retired after 38 years as an
educator. He is also a retired captain of the United States Naval Reserve.
Granville (of Haller's Defeat) and Henrietta Haller were his grandparents.