<p class="caption2"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</SPAN></p>
<p class="caption2">The Wild Pigeon of North America</p>
<p class="caption3">By Chief Pokagon,<SPAN name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</SPAN> from "The Chautauquan," November, 1895.
Vol. 22. No. 20.</p>
<div class="footnote pmb2">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></SPAN> Simon Pokagon, of Michigan, is a full-blooded Indian, the last Pottawattomie
chief of the Pokagon band. He is author of the "Red Man's
Greeting," and has been called by the press the "Redskin poet, bard, and
Longfellow of his race." His father, chief before him, sold the site of
Chicago and the surrounding country to the United States in 1833 for three
cents an acre. He was the first red man to visit President Lincoln after his
inauguration. In a letter written home at the time he said: "I have met
Lincoln, the great chief; he is very tall, has a sad face, but he is a good man,
I saw it in his eyes and felt it in his hand-shaking. He will help us get
payment for Chicago land." Soon after $39,000 was paid. In 1874 he
visited President Grant. He said of him: "I expected he would put on
military importance, but he treated me kindly, give me a cigar, and we
smoked the pipe of peace together." In 1893 he procured judgment
against the United States for over $100,000 still due on the sale of the
Chicago land by his father. He was honored on Chicago Day at the
World's Fair by first ringing the new Bell of Liberty and speaking in behalf
of his race to the greatest crowd ever assembled on earth. After his
speech "Glory Hallelujah" was sung before the bell for the first time on
the Fair grounds.</p>
</div>
<div class="dropcap">T</div>
<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">T</span>HE migratory or wild pigeon of North America
was known by our race as <i>O-me-me-wog</i>.
Why the European race did not accept that
name was, no doubt, because the bird so much resembled
the domesticated pigeon; they naturally called it a
wild pigeon, as they called us wild men.</p>
<p>This remarkable bird differs from the dove or domesticated
pigeon, which was imported into this country,
in the grace of its long neck, its slender bill and legs,
and its narrow wings. Its tail is eight inches long, having
twelve feathers, white on the under side. The two
center feathers are longest, while five arranged on either
side diminished gradually each one-half inch in length,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
giving to the tail when spread an almost conical appearance.
Its back and upper part of the wings and head
are a darkish blue, with a silken velvety appearance. Its
neck is resplendent in gold and green with royal purple
intermixed. Its breast is reddish-brown, fading toward
the belly into white. Its tail is tipped with white, intermixed
with bluish-black. The female is one inch shorter
than the male, and her color less vivid.</p>
<p>It was proverbial with our fathers that if the Great
Spirit in His wisdom could have created a more elegant
bird in plumage, form, and movement, He never did.
When a young man I have stood for hours admiring
the movements of these birds. I have seen them fly in
unbroken lines from the horizon, one line succeeding
another from morning until night, moving their unbroken
columns like an army of trained soldiers pushing
to the front, while detached bodies of these birds
appeared in different parts of the heavens, pressing forward
in haste like raw recruits preparing for battle. At
other times I have seen them move in one unbroken column
for hours across the sky, like some great river,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>
ever varying in hue; and as the mighty stream, sweeping
on at sixty miles an hour, reached some deep valley,
it would pour its living mass headlong down hundreds
of feet, sounding as though a whirlwind was abroad in
the land. I have stood by the grandest waterfall of
America and regarded the descending torrents in wonder
and astonishment, yet never have my astonishment, wonder,
and admiration been so stirred as when I have witnessed
these birds drop from their course like meteors
from heaven.</p>
<p>While feeding, they always have guards on duty, to
give alarm of danger. It is made by the watch-bird as
it takes its flight, beating its wings together in quick
succession, sounding like the rolling beat of a snare
drum. Quick as thought each bird repeats the alarm
with a thundering sound, as the flock struggles to rise,
leading a stranger to think a young cyclone is then being
born.</p>
<p>. . . About the middle of May, 1850, while in the
fur trade, I was camping on the head waters of the
Manistee River in Michigan. One morning on leaving
my wigwam I was startled by hearing a gurgling, rumbling
sound, as though an army of horses laden with
sleigh bells was advancing through the deep forests
towards me. As I listened more intently I concluded
that instead of the tramping of horses it was distant
thunder; and yet the morning was clear, calm and
beautiful. Nearer and nearer came the strange commingling
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
sounds of sleigh bells, mixed with the rumbling
of an approaching storm. While I gazed in wonder and
astonishment, I beheld moving toward me in an unbroken
front millions of pigeons, the first I had seen that
season. They passed like a cloud through the branches
of the high trees, through the underbrush and over the
ground, apparently overturning every leaf. Statue-like
I stood, half-concealed by cedar boughs. They fluttered
all about me, lighting on my head and shoulders; gently
I caught two in my hands and carefully concealed them
under my blanket.</p>
<p>I now began to realize they were mating, preparatory
to nesting. It was an event which I had long hoped to
witness; so I sat down and carefully watched their movements,
amid the greatest tumult. I tried to understand
their strange language, and why they all chatted in concert.
In the course of the day the great on-moving mass
passed by me, but the trees were still filled with them
sitting in pairs in convenient crotches of the limbs, now
and then gently fluttering their half-spread wings and
uttering to their mates those strange, bell-like wooing
notes which I had mistaken for the ringing of bells in
the distance.</p>
<p>On the third day after, this chattering ceased and all
were busy carrying sticks with which they were building
nests in the same crotches of the limbs they had occupied
in pairs the day before. On the morning of the
fourth day their nests were finished and eggs laid. The
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
hen birds occupied the nests in the morning, while the
male birds went out into the surrounding country to
feed, returning about ten o'clock, taking the nests, while
the hens went out to feed, returning about three o'clock.
Again changing nests, the male birds went out the second
time to feed, returning at sundown. The same routine
was pursued each day until the young ones were hatched
and nearly half grown, at which time all the parent
birds left the brooding grounds about daylight. On the
morning of the eleventh day, after the eggs were laid, I
found the nesting grounds strewn with egg shells, convincing
me that the young were hatched. In thirteen
days more the parent birds left their young to shift for
themselves, flying to the east about sixty miles, when
they again nested. The female lays but one egg during
the same nesting.</p>
<p>Both sexes secrete in their crops milk or curd with
which they feed their young, until they are nearly ready
to fly, when they stuff them with mast and such other
raw material as they themselves eat, until their crops
exceed their bodies in size, giving to them an appearance
of two birds with one head. Within two days after the
stuffing they become a mass of fat—"a squab." At this
period the parent bird drives them from the nests to
take care of themselves, while they fly off within a day
or two, sometimes hundreds of miles, and again nest.</p>
<p>It has been well established that these birds look after
and take care of all orphan squabs whose parents have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
been killed or are missing. These birds are long-lived,
having been known to live twenty-five years caged.
When food is abundant they nest each month in the
year.</p>
<p>Their principal food is the mast of the forest, except
when curd is being secreted in their crops, at which
time they denude the country of snails and worms for
miles around the nesting grounds. Because they nest
in such immense bodies, they are frequently compelled
to fly from fifty to one hundred miles for food.</p>
<p>During my early life I learned that these birds in
spring and fall were seen in their migrations from the
Atlantic to the Mississippi River. This knowledge,
together with my personal observation of their countless
numbers, led me to believe they were almost as inexhaustible
as the great ocean itself. Of course I had witnessed
the passing away of the deer, buffalo, and elk, but I
looked upon them as local in their habits, while these
birds spanned the continent, frequently nesting beyond
the reach of cruel man.</p>
<p>Between 1840 and 1880 I visited in the States of
Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan many brooding places that
were from twenty to thirty miles long and from three
to four miles wide, every tree in its limits being spotted
with nests. Yet, notwithstanding their countless numbers,
great endurance, and long life, they have almost
entirely disappeared from our forests. We strain our
eyes in spring and autumn in vain to catch a glimpse of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
these pilgrims. White men tell us they have moved
in a body to the Rocky Mountain region, where they
are as plenty as they were here, but when we ask red
men, who are familiar with the mountain country, about
them, they shake their heads in disbelief.</p>
<p>A pigeon nesting was always a great source of revenue
to our people. Whole tribes would wigwam in the
brooding places. They seldom killed the old birds,
but made great preparation to secure their young, out
of which the squaws made squab butter and smoked
and dried them by thousands for future use. Yet,
under our manner of securing them, they continued to
increase.</p>
<p>White men commenced netting them for market
about the year 1840. These men were known as professional
pigeoners, from the fact that they banded
themselves together, so as to keep in telegraphic communication
with these great moving bodies. In this
they became so expert as to be almost continually on
the borders of their brooding places. As they were
always prepared with trained stool-pigeons and flyers,
which they carried with them, they were enabled to
call down the passing flocks and secure as many by net
as they were able to pack in ice and ship to market. In
the year 1848 there were shipped from Catteraugus
County, N. Y., eighty tons of these birds; and from
that time to 1878 the wholesale slaughter continued
to increase, and in that year there were shipped from
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
Michigan not less than three hundred tons of birds.
During the thirty years of their greatest slaughter there
must have been shipped to our great cities 5,700 tons
of these birds; allowing each pigeon to weigh one-half
pound would show twenty-three millions of birds.
Think of it! And all these were caught during their
brooding season, which must have decreased their numbers
as many more. Nor is this all. During the same
time hunters from all parts of the country gathered at
these brooding places and slaughtered them without
mercy.</p>
<p>In the above estimate are not reckoned the thousands
of dozens that were shipped alive to sporting clubs for
trap-shooting, as well as those consumed by the local
trade throughout the pigeon districts of the United
States.</p>
<p>These experts finally learned that the birds while
nesting were frantic after salty mud and water, so they
frequently made, near the nesting places, what were
known by the craft as mud beds, which were salted,
to which the birds would flock by the million. In
April, 1876, I was invited to see a net over one of these
death pits. It was near Petoskey, Mich. I think I
am correct in saying the birds piled one upon another
at least two feet deep when the net was sprung, and
it seemed to me that most of them escaped the trap,
but on killing and counting, there were found to be
over one hundred dozen, all nesting birds.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When squabs of a nesting became fit for market,
these experts, prepared with climbers, would get into
some convenient place in a tree-top loaded with nests,
and with a long pole punch out the young, which would
fall with a thud like lead on the ground.</p>
<p>In May, 1880, I visited the last known nesting
place east of the Great Lakes. It was on Platt River
in Benzie County, Mich. There were on these
grounds many large white birch trees filled with nests.
These trees have manifold bark, which, when old, hangs
in shreds like rags or flowing moss, along their trunks
and limbs. This bark will burn like paper soaked in
oil. Here, for the first time, I saw with shame and pity
a new mode for robbing these birds' nests, which I look
upon as being devilish. These outlaws to all moral
sense would touch a lighted match to the bark of the
trees at the base, when with a flash—more like an explosion—the
blast would reach every limb of the tree, and
while the affrighted young birds would leap simultaneously
to the ground, the parent birds, with plumage
scorched, would rise high in air amid flame and smoke.
I noticed that many of these squabs were so fat and
clumsy they would burst open on striking the ground.
Several thousand were obtained during the day by this
cruel process.</p>
<p>That night I stayed with an old man on the highlands
just north of the nesting. In the course of the evening
I explained to him the cruelty that was being shown to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
the young birds in the nesting. He listened to me in
utter astonishment, and said, "My God, is that possible!"
Remaining silent a few moments with bowed
head, he looked up and said, "See here, old Indian, you
go out with me in the morning and I will show you a
way to catch pigeons that will please any red man and
the birds, too."</p>
<p>Early the next morning I followed him a few rods
from his hut, where he showed me an open pole pen,
about two feet high, which he called his bait bed. Into
this he scattered a bucket of wheat. We then sat in
ambush, so as to see through between the poles into the
pen. Soon they began to pour into the pen and gorge
themselves. While I was watching and admiring them,
all at once to my surprise they began fluttering and
falling on their sides and backs and kicking and quivering
like a lot of cats with paper tied over their feet.
He jumped into the pen, saying, "Come on, you red-skin."</p>
<p>I was right on hand by his side. A few birds flew out
of the pen apparently crippled, but we caught and caged
about one hundred fine birds. After my excitement
was over I sat down on one of the cages, and thought
in my heart, "Certainly Pokagon is dreaming, or this
long-haired white man is a witch." I finally said, "Look
here, old fellow, tell me how you did that." He gazed
at me, holding his long white beard in one hand, and
said with one eye half shut and a sly wink with the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
other, "That wheat was soaked in whisky." His answer
fell like lead upon my heart. We had talked
temperance together the night before, and the old man
wept when I told him how my people had fallen before
the intoxicating cup of the white man like leaves before
the blast of autumn. In silence I left the place, saying
in my heart, "Surely the time is now fulfilled, when
false prophets shall show signs and wonders to seduce,
if it were possible, even the elect."</p>
<p>I have read recently in some of our game-sporting
journals, "A warwhoop has been sounded against some
of our western Indians for killing game in the mountain
region." Now, if these red men are guilty of a
moral wrong which subjects them to punishment, I
would most prayerfully ask in the name of Him who
suffers not a sparrow to fall unnoticed, what must be
the nature of the crime and degree of punishment awaiting
our white neighbors who have so wantonly butchered
and driven from our forests these wild pigeons, the
most beautiful flowers of the animal creation of North
America.</p>
<p>In closing this article I wish to say a few words
relative to the knowledge of things about them that
these birds seem to possess.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1866 there were scattered throughout
northern Indiana and southern Michigan vast numbers
of these birds. On April 10, in the morning, they
commenced moving in small flocks in diverging lines
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
toward the northwest part of Van Buren County,
Mich. For two days they continued to pour into that
vicinity from all directions, commencing at once to build
their nests. I talked with an old trapper who lived
on the brooding grounds, and he assured me that the
first pigeons he had seen that season were on the day
they commenced nesting and that he had lived there
fifteen years and never known them to nest there
before.</p>
<p>From the above instance and hundreds of others I
might mention, it is well established in my mind beyond
a reasonable doubt, that these birds, as well as many
other animals, have communicated to them by some
means unknown to us, a knowledge of distant places,
and of one another when separated, and that they act
on such knowledge with just as much certainty as if
it were conveyed to them by ear or eye. Hence we
conclude it is possible that the Great Spirit in His
wisdom has provided them a means to receive electric
communications from distant places and with one another.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />