Tribal Fever
Twenty-five years ago this month, smallpox was officially eradicated. For the Indians of the high plains, it came a century and a half too late
- By Landon Y. Jones
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
It was a bold and seemingly quixotic undertaking. The Indians were profoundly embittered toward the white traders who had inflicted the malady upon them, and some sought revenge. Chardon himself received several death threats and narrowly escaped an assassination attempt at FortClark. In a speech found among Chardon’s papers— the authenticity of which is doubted by some scholars—the dying Mandan chief Four Bears denounced the whites as “a set of Black harted Dogs, they have deceived Me, them that I always considered as Brothers, has turned Out to be My Worst enemies.” Four Bears allegedly went on to say that “my face is so rotten” that “even the Wolves will shrink in horror at seeing me,” and urged his warriors to “rise all together and Not leave one of them alive.”
The War Department, feeling pressure from church groups to take action to relieve the Indians’ suffering, approved Pilcher’s plan. But the agent needed to locate a doctor willing to enter the dangerous borderlands on the Middle and Upper Missouri, at a wage of $6 a day, to vaccinate the Indians. Who would risk such a perilous trip?
Pilcher would find his man in an unlikely spot: the roughhouse streets and saloons of St. Louis. Dr. Joseph DePrefontaine, who was apparently having little success in medicine, had started a new career in theatrical management—and had become notorious for his barroom carousing. In March 1838, DePrefontaine had been ordered out of his employer’s theater for rolling on the floor and singing during a performance of Hamlet. Undeterred, DePrefontaine took his revenge by writing newspaper articles attacking the theater.
Swallowing whatever doubts he may have harbored, and with no other applicants breaking down his door, Pilcher hired DePrefontaine. By April 1838, ten months after smallpox first hit the Mandan, the two men were ready to head up the Missouri to look for Sioux. At the St. Louis levee, they boarded the steamboat Antelope and proceeded upriver, making the usual stops at FortLeavenworth and the Black Snake Hills near present-day St. Joseph, Missouri.
Once past Council Bluffs, in what is now Iowa, Pilcher and DePrefontaine prepared to face tribes angry at whites and suspicious of vaccinations. Instead, they were astonished to find that the Indians had not only lost their fear of vaccinations but were eagerly seeking them. The two men stopped to vaccinate the Oto, Omaha and Santee Sioux. Just below the Sioux Agency at the mouth of the White River, they found “three or four thousand” Sioux who had gathered for the annual distribution of presents and annuities mandated by the Indians’ treaties with the U.S. government. “Having explained to the Indians the object of the physician, he commenced vaccinating,” Pilcher reported later in a letter to Clark. DePrefontaine soon found himself so inundated by “the mass of men, women and children that crowded around me” that he gave up any effort “to keep an account of ages, sexes, etc.” Working rapidly, he ran out of the vaccine supplied by the War Department and was forced to acquire more on his own, presumably from traders.
After the food and supplies were distributed to the hungry tribes, the Indians quickly departed, Pilcher wrote, like “a flock of Crows rising from a dead carcass—they are suddenly gone, and in a few hours are spread over the Country in every direction, in numerous small bands.” The two men continued upriver, vaccinating isolated bands of Yankton, Oglala and Saone. By the time the Antelope reached FortPierre, 1,500 miles above St. Louis, DePrefontaine estimated he had given 3,000 vaccinations, though Pilcher believed the actual total was far larger.
But DePrefontaine had not yet located several large bands of nomadic Lakota still hunting somewhere in the vast plains between the Missouri River and Rocky Mountains. Pilcher furnished him with more vaccine and sent him overland on horseback. His instructions were to find the Sioux, or to return to FortPierre in three weeks.
Unfortunately, the mission was only a partial success. De- Prefontaine himself fell ill from an unnamed malady “in the Prairies and was not so successful in finding the Indians as I anticipated,” Pilcher reported. Still, DePrefontaine located “several small bands, and operated on all that he found.”
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Comments (1)
Great article - really enjoyed finding this in my subscription!
For more information on Joshua Pilcher, the hatter, fur trader, Indian agent and Superintendent of Indian Affairs, please visit my website "Early St. Louis" at the following:
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~earlystlouis/joshuapilcher.html
Posted by Patricia Davidson-Peters on March 3,2010 | 10:42 AM