<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<p class="center">THE SURVEYORS</p>
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<p class="cap_1">THE entire Little Crow reservation consisted
of about two million acres of land,
four-fifths of which was unopened and
lay west of Megory County. Of the
two million acres, perhaps one million, five hundred
thousand ranged from fair to the richest of loam
soil, underlaid with clay. The climatic condition
is such that all kinds of crops grown in the central
west, can be grown here. Two hundred miles north,
corn will not mature; two hundred miles south,
spring wheat is not grown; two hundred west, the
altitude is too high to insure sufficient rainfall to
produce a crop; but the reservation lands are in
such a position that winter wheat, spring wheat,
oats, rye, corn, flax, and barley do well. Ever
since the drouth of '94, all crops had thrived, the
rainfall being abundant, and continuing so during
the first year of settlement. Oristown and other
towns on the route of the railroad had waited
twenty years for the extension, and now the citizens
of Oristown estimated it would be at least ten years
before it extended its line through the reservation;
while the settlers, to the number of some eight thousand,
hoped they would get the road in five years.
However, no sleep was lost in anticipation. The
nearest the reservation came to getting a railroad
that summer was by the way of a newspaper in
Megory, whose editor spent most of his time building
roads into Megory from the north, south, and the
east.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span>
In reality, the C. & R.W. was the only road
likely to run to the reservation, and all the towns
depended on its extension to overcome the long,
burdensome freighting with teams.</p>
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<p>With all the country's local advantages, its
geographical location was such as to exclude roads
from all directions except the one taken by the
C. & R.W. To the south lay nine million acres
of worthless sand hills, through which it would
require an enormous sum of money to build a road.
Even then there would be miles of track which
would practically pay no interest on the investment.
At that time there was no railroad extending the
full length of the state from east to west, most lines
stopping at or near the Missouri River. Since then
two or three lines have been built into the western
part of the state; but they experienced much
difficulty in crossing the river, owing to the soft
bottom, which in many places would not support a
modern steel bridge. For from one to two months in
the spring, floating ice gives a great deal of trouble
and wreaks disaster to the pontoon.</p>
<p>A bird's eye view of the Little Crow shows it to
look something like a bottle, the neck being the
Missouri River, with the C. & R.W. tracks creeping
along its west bank. This is the only feasible route
to the Reservation and the directors of this road were
fully aware of their advantageous position. The
freight rates from Omaha to Oristown (a distance
of two hundred and fifty miles) being as high as
from Omaha to Chicago, a distance of five hundred
miles.</p>
<p>But getting back to the settlers around and in
the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span>
little towns on the Little Crow. The first thing
to be considered in the extension was, that the
route it took would naturally determine the future
of the towns. Hedrick, Kirk, and Megory were
government townsites, strung in a northwesterly
direction across the country, ranging from eight
to fifteen miles apart, the last being about five miles
and a half east of the west line of the county. Now
the county on the west was expected to be thrown
open to settlement soon, would likely be opened
under the lottery system, as was Megory county.
After matters had settled this began to be discussed,
particularly by the citizens of Megory, five and one-half
miles from the Tipp County line. This
placed Megory in the same position to handle the
crowds coming into the next county, as Oristown
had for Megory County, excepting Megory would
have an advantage, for Tipp County was twice as
large as Megory. When this was all considered,
the people of Megory began to boost the town on
the prospects of a future boom. The only uncertain
feature of the matter then to be considered was
which way the road would extend. That was where
the rub came in, which way would the road go?
This became a source of continual worry and speculation
on the part of the towns, and the men who felt
inclined to put money into the towns in the way of
larger, better, and more commodious buildings;
but when they were encouraged to do so, there was
always the bogy "if." If the railroad should miss
us, well, the man owning the big buildings was
"stung," that was all, while the man with the shack
could load it on two or four wagons, and with a
few<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span>
good horses, land his building in the town the
railroad struck or started. This was, and is yet,
one of the big reasons shacks are so numerous in
a town in a new country, which expects a road but
knows not which way it will come; and the officials
of the C. & R.W. were no different from the directors
of any other road. They were "mum" as
dummies. They wouldn't tell whether the road
would ever extend or not.</p>
<p>The Oristown citizens claimed it was at one time
in the same uncertainty as the towns to the west,
and for some fifteen or twenty years it had waited
for the road. With the road stopping at Oristown,
they argued, it would be fully ten years before it
left, and during this time it could be seen, Oristown
would grow into an important prairie city, as it
should. Everything must be hauled into Oristown,
as well as out. So it can be seen that Oristown
would naturally boom. While nothing had been
raised to the west to ship out, as yet, still there was
a growing population on the reservation and thousands
of carloads of freight and express were being
hauled into and from Oristown monthly, for the
settlers on the reservation; which filled the town with
railroad men and freighters. Crops had been good,
and every thing was going along smoothly for the
citizens and property owners of Oristown. Not a
cloud on her sky of prosperity, and as the trite saying
goes: "Everything was lovely, and the goose hung
high," during the first year of settlement on the
Little Crow.</p>
<p>And now lest we forget Calias. Calias was located
one and one-half miles east, and three miles
south<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</SPAN></span>
of Megory, and five miles straight west of
Kirk. If the C. & R.W. extending its line west,
should strike all the government townsites, as was
claimed by people in these towns, who knew nothing
about it, and Calias, it would have run from Kirk
to Megory in a very unusual direction. Indeed, it
would have been following the section lines and it
is common knowledge even to the most ignorant,
that railroads do not follow section lines unless the
section lines are directly in its path. If the railroad
struck Kirk and Megory, it was a cinch it
would miss Calias. If it struck Calias, perched on
the banks of the Monca Creek, the route the
Nicholsons, as promoters of the town, claimed it
would take; the road would miss all the towns but
Calias. This would have meant glory and a fortune
for the promotors and lot holders of the town. It
would also have meant that my farm, or at least a
part of it, would in time be sold for town lots.</p>
<p>After I got so badly overreached in dealing in
horses, for a time the opinion was general that the
solitary negro from the plush cushions of a P——n
would soon see that growing up with a new country
was not to his liking, and would be glad to sell at
any old figure and "beat it" back to more ease and
comfort. This is largely the opinion of most of
the white people, regarding the negro, and they are
not entirely wrong in their opinion. I was quite
well aware that such an opinion existed, but contrary
to expectations, I rather appreciated it. When
I broke out one hundred and twenty acres with
such an outfit as I had, as against many other real
farmers who had not broken over forty acres, with
good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</SPAN></span>
horses and their knowledge of breaking prairie,
acquired in states they had come from, I began to
be regarded in a different light. At first I was
regarded as an object of curiosity, which changed
to appreciation, and later admiration. I was not
called a free-go-easy coon, but a genuine booster
for Calias and the Little Crow. I never spent a
lonesome day after that.</p>
<p>The Nicholson Brothers, however, gave the settlers
no rest, and created another sensation of railroad
building by their new contention that the
railroad would not be extended from Oristown, but
that it would be built from a place on the Monca
bottom two stations below Oristown, where the
track climbed a four per cent grade to Fairview,
then on to Oristown. They offered as proof of
their contention that the C. & R.W. maintained
considerable yardage there, and it does yet. Why
it did, people did not know, and this kept everybody
guessing. Some claimed it would go up the Monca
Valley, as Nicholson claimed. This much can be
said in favor of the Nicholsons, they were good
boosters, or "big liars," as their rivals called them,
and if one listened long and diligently enough they
would have him imagine he could hear the exhaust
of a big locomotive coming up the Monca Valley.
While the people in the government townsites persisted
loudly that the C. & R.W. had contracted
with the government before the towns were located,
to strike these three towns, and that the government
had helped to locate them; that furthermore, the
railroad would never have left the Monca Valley,
which it followed for some twenty miles after leaving
the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</SPAN></span>
banks of the Missouri. All of which sounded
reasonable enough, but the government and the
railroad had entered into no agreement whatever,
and the people in the government towns knew it,
and were uneasy.</p>
<p>I had been on my claim just about a year, when
one day Rattlesnake Jack's father came from
his home on the Jim River and sold me her homestead
for three thousand dollars. My dreams were
at last realized, and I had become the owner of
three hundred and twenty acres of land; but my
money was now gone, when I had paid the one
thousand, five hundred dollars down on the Rattle
Snake Jack place, giving her back a mortgage for
the remaining one thousand, five hundred at seven
per cent interest, and it was a good thing I did, too.
I bought the place early in April and in June the
Interior Department rejected the proof she had
offered the November before, on account of lack of
sufficient residence and cultivation. The proof
had been accepted by the local land office, and a
final receipt for the remaining installments of the
purchase price, amounting to four hundred and eighty
dollars, was issued. A final receipt is considered
to be equivalent to a patent or deed, but when
Rattlesnake Jack's proof of residence got to the
General Land Office in Washington, in quest of a
patent, the commissioner looked it over, figured up
the time she actually put in on the place, and rejected
the proof, with the statement that it only
showed about six month's actual residence. At
that time eight month's residence was required, with
six months within which to establish residence;
but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</SPAN></span>
no proof could be accepted until after the claimant
had shown eight month's actual and continuous
residence.</p>
<p>From the time the settlers began to commute or
prove up on the Little Crow, all proofs which
did not show fully eight month's residence, were
rejected. This was done mostly by the Register
and Receiver of the Local Land Office, and many
were sent back on their claims to stay longer.
Many proofs were also taken by local U.S. Commissioners,
County Judges, and Clerks of Courts, but
these officers rarely rejected them, for by so doing
they also rejected a four dollar and twenty-five
cent fee. About one-third of the persons who
offered proof at that time had them turned down at
the Local Land Office. This gave the local Commissioners,
County Judges, and Clerks of Courts,
a chance to collect twice for the same work. It
may be interesting to know that a greater percentage
of proofs rejected were those offered by women.
This was perhaps not due to the fact that the ladies
did not stay on their claims, so much as it was conscientiousness.
They could not make a forcible
showing by saying that they had been there every
night, like the men would claim, but would say instead
that they had stayed all night with Miss So-and-So
this time and with another that time, and
by including a few weeks' visit at home or somewhere
else, they would bungle their proofs, so they were
compelled to try again.</p>
<p>A short time after this and evidently because so
many proofs had been sent back, the Interior
Department made it compulsory for the claimant
to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</SPAN></span>
put in fourteen months' actual residence on the
claim, before he could offer proof. With fourteen
months, they were sure to stay a full eight months
at least. This system has been very successful.</p>
<p>When Rattlesnake Jack was ordered back, after
selling me the place, she wanted me to sign a quit
claim deed to her and accept notes for the money
I had paid, which might have been satisfactory had
it not been that she thought I had stopped to look
back and failed to see the rush of progress the Little
Crow was making; that the long anticipated news
had been spread, and was now raging like a veritable
prairie fire, and stirred the people of the Little Crow
as much as an active stock market stirs the bulls
on the stock exchange. The report spread and
stirred the everyday routine of the settlers and the
finality of humdrum and inactivity was abrupt.
It came one day in early April. The rain had kept
the farmers from the fields a week. It had been
raining for nearly a month, and we only got a clear
day once in a while. This day it was sloppy without,
and many farmers were in from the country.
We were all listening to a funny story Ernest Nicholson
was telling, and "good fellows" were listening
attentively. Dr. Salter, a physician, had just been
laid on a couch in the back room of the saloon,
"soused to the gills," when in the door John M.
Keely, a sort of ne'er do well popular drummer,
whose proof had been rejected some time before,
and who had come back to stay "a while longer",
stumbled into the door of the local groggery. He
was greeted with sallies and calls of welcome, and
like many of the others, he was "feeling good."
He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</SPAN></span>
sort of leaned over, and hiccoughing during the
intervals, started "I've," the words were spoken
chokingly, "got news for you." He had by now got
inside and was hanging and swinging at the same
time, to the bar. Then before finishing what he
started, called "Tom," to the bar tender, "give me
a whiskey before I", and here he leaned over and
sang the words "tell the boys the news." "For
the love of Jesus Keel" exclaimed the crowd in
chorus "tell us what you know." He drained the
glass at a gulp and finally spit it out. "The surveyors
are in Oristown."</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</SPAN></span></p>
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