
Chapter I Farewell to the Old Southern Home II First Winter in the Willamette Valley III Indian Outbreak of 1855 IV In Which Various Experiences Are Discussed V Taking Revenge on Marauding Snakes VI One Bad Tale From Canyon City History VII Col. Thompson's First Newspaper Venture VIII History of the Modoc Indians IX The Ben Wright Massacre X Treaty With the Modocs Made XI Battle in the Lava Beds XII The Peace Commission's Work XIII Three Days Battle In the Lava Beds XIV Trailing the Fugitives XV The Great Bannock War XVI Snake Uprising in Eastern Oregon XVII Bannocks Double on Their Tracks XVIII Another Attack That Miscarried XIX Reign of the Vigilantes XX Passing of the Mogans XXI The Lookout Lynching
Chapter I.
Chapter II.
Chapter III.
Chapter IV.
Chapter V.
Chapter VI.
Chapter VII.
Chapter VIII.
Chapter IX.
The narrative opens with a vivid farewell to a Southern home and the daunting decision to leave familiar fields for the untamed West. The author recounts the painstaking preparation of wagons, oxen, and provisions, painting a picture of families—men, women, and children—pressed into cramped carts and bound for a distant promise of gold. The journey across three thousand miles of trackless prairie is described in stark terms, emphasizing both the physical hardships and the fierce determination that propelled these early pioneers forward.
Upon reaching the Willamette Valley, the tone shifts to the raw reality of frontier life. The newcomer confronts a landscape populated by restless Native tribes, sudden outbreaks of violence, and the relentless challenges of building a settlement from scratch. Through candid anecdotes—from encounters with hostile forces to the daily struggle against nature’s unforgiving elements—the memoir captures the courage, resourcefulness, and gritty optimism that defined this formative era of American expansion.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (315K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1846–1934
A frontier newspaperman and veteran of the Modoc War, he turned a life in the early American West into vivid memoir and local history. His writing carries the feel of firsthand witness, mixing adventure, hardship, and the everyday texture of pioneer life.
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