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William
Craig
William Craig was
born in Greenbriar County,
Virginia (now West Virginia) in 1807. He received an
education, and it appears probable that he may have attended a military
school. When he was about 18
years old an event occurred which caused him to suddenly depart for the
West. Either a man was killed
in self-defense, or Craig beat a schoolmate and was expelled from military
school. In either case Craig
departed suddenly for
St. Louis. This puts Craig in
St. Louis about 1825, where he may have entered the fur trade.
However, there is no solid documentation of Craig’s involvement
in the fur trade until 1829, at which time Craig, Joe
Meek and Robert Newell began their close friendship and association.
In 1829 Craig, Meek, and Newell probably accompanied William Sublette to the
mountains to attend the Pierre’s Hole Rendezvous for the company of Smith, Sublette, and Jackson.
While at the rendezvous, the men would have met the other partners in the
company, Jedediah Smith and David Jackson.
At this time Smith returned from his second, disastrous expedition to California. After this rendezvous, Smith
took a fur brigade, including Craig, up into the
Madison, Gallatin
and
Yellowstone River
country (near the present northern boundary of
Yellowstone
National Park.) Late in the year the
brigade was attacked by Blackfoot Indians, and dispersed into smaller
parties. By late December the
parties had reunited and went into winter camp in the Green River
valley.
It is not certain
when, but sometime when living and traveling amongst the Nez Perce
Indians, Craig, Meek, and Newell all took Nez Perce wives.
Craig was legally married to his woman on
July 6, 1838. This event probably took
place at the 1838 Rendezvous and was
officiated by missionaries traveling west under the protection of the
supply train.
Smith, Sublette
and Jackson fielded two brigades, which departed for the spring hunt on
April 1, 1830. Jackson led one brigade west for a hunt in the
Snake River
country, and Smith led a brigade north into the Three Forks country.
Although Craig is not documented as accompanying Smith, Meek and
Newell did and it is probable that Craig was there as well.
The Three Forks country was rich in furs, but dangerous, and had
not been systematically trapped since Andrew Henry had been driven out by
Blackfoot Indians ten years earlier. This
year Smith’s brigade would have both a successful spring hunt and luck
in avoiding Blackfoot Indians. The
brigade returned in time for the 1830
Rendezvous at Wind River
. While at this years
rendezvous, the partnership of Smith, Sublette and Jackson would be
dissolved, and its assets sold to a new set of partners organized as the
Rocky Mountain Fur Company.
For the next two
and one-half years it appears likely that Craig remained with the Rocky
Mountain Fur Company. By 1832
the Rocky Mountain Fur Company was in financial trouble, having gone
deeply into debt to its suppliers, William Sublette and Robert Campbell.
To make matters worse, the American Fur Company, would commence its
efforts to dominate the fur trade in the Northern Rocky Mountains
in this year, taking aim squarely on the Rocky Mountain Fur Company.
After the 1832 Rendezvous at
Pierre’s Hole, the Rocky Mountain Fur Company split into two brigades for the
fall hunt. Milton
Sublette would take one brigade, including Craig, west to the
Snake River
country, down to the
Humboldt River
and then back to the Three Forks country.
The other brigade, led by Fitzpatrick went north into Blackfoot
country. Fitzpatrick, in
addition to the dangers of conducting a hunt in Blackfoot territory, had
to contend with a brigade of the American Fur Company, led by Drips and
Vanderburgh, who were shadowing every move made by Fitzpatrick’s
brigade. The American Fur
Company had two objectives: to learn the locations of the best hunting
areas, and to spoil the hunt for Fitzpatrick.
This high-stakes game of cat and mouse would end when Vanderburgh
was killed in a skirmish with Blackfoot Indians.
Warren Ferris, a trapper with the American Fur Company, provides a
description of events immediately leading up to Vanderburgh’s
death.
Both the Rocky
Mountain Fur Company and American Fur Company brigades went into winter
camp on the Salmon River, near present day Salmon, Idaho.
Captain Bonneville and his fur brigade also joined them in this
area. Later in the winter, all
three groups moved south to the Snake River Plains where they camped near
the future location of Nathaniel Wyeth’s Fort
Hall. Following the spring
hunt and Rendezvous of 1833, Craig, Meek
and Newell joined Bonneville’s group.
Bonneville had appointed Joe Walker to lead a brigade to
California, ostensibly for the purpose of trapping beaver, but variously described
as an expedition to steal Spanish horses, or to gather military
intelligence regarding Spanish California.
After spending
several months in Spanish country, and with conspicuously little success
in harvesting beaver, Walker’s brigade returned to the
Bear River
area where they rejoined Captain Bonneville.
Their course took them eastward across present day northern Nevada. Due to a lack of water in
that country,
Walker’s brigade followed the
Humboldt River, where Craig would pull off a memorable practical joke on
Walker. (See
Walker’s Plunge).
For the next two
years there is little known of Craig’s activities.
It is possible that he continued trapping in the northern
Rockies
with
Walker.
During the summer or fall of 1836, Craig settled down in Brown’s Hole
(present day
Northwestern Colorado
) where he formed a partnership with Philip Thompson and Prewitt Sinclair.
Together they established a small post called Fort Davy Crockett
for the purpose of trading with Ute and Shoshoni Indians.
Wislizenus (reference) provides a
description of Fort Davy Crockett in 1839: “On August
17th we reached Fort
Crocket. It is situated close by the Green River
on its left bank. The river
valley here is broad, and has good pasturage and sufficient wood. The
fort itself is the worst thing of the kind that we have seen on our
journey. It is a low one-story
building, constructed of wood and clay, with three connecting wings, and
no enclosure. Instead of cows
the fort had only some goats. In
short, the whole establishment appeared somewhat poverty-stricken, for
which reason it is also known to the trappers by the name of
Fort
Misery
(Fort de Misere). The fort
belongs to three Americans: Thompson, Gray [Craig] and Sinclair. The
latter was at the fort, and received us very kindly but regretted his
inability to offer us any supplies. For
our store of meat was exhausted, and we had hoped to supply ourselves here
with new provisions. But the
people at the fort seemed to be worse off than we were. The
day before they had bought a lean dog from the Indians for five dollars,
and considered its meat a delicacy.”
With the decline
in the beaver trade in 1839, many mountain men took to horse-stealing
forays into Spanish California. Philip
Thompson organized one such foray, except his party stole horses from the
Hudson’s Bay Company at Fort Hall, and from Shoshoni Indians somewhere between
Fort Hall and Fort Davy Crockett. When
Craig, Meek, Newell and
Walker
heard of the theft, they intercepted the horse thieves, and by show of
force, retook the horses and returned them to their owners.
This action was taken not just as an act of conscience.
The Indians (just like the whites in reverse) tended to assign
blame for acts of theft or murder to all whites, and therefore all whites
were at risk until retribution was obtained.
The horses were returned primarily to maintain peace in the country
rather than as an act of justice. Shortly
after this incident the partnership between Craig, Thompson and Sinclair
broke up.
At the 1840 Rendezvous, the last of the
mountain rendezvous, Craig met the missionary party of Reverend Harvey
Clark and agreed to escort it to Fort Hall.
After this Craig took up
farming (in the present day
Walla Walla
area), first near Reverend Spalding’s mission and later ten miles
further to the south.
Although now a
settler, Craig remained a friend with the people of his wife, the Nez
Perce. By the mid 1840’s
thousands of wagonloads of immigrants were moving into
Oregon
and
California. This was a time of
relentless, crushing change for the Indians.
Although Craig was not able to save their culture or their lands,
he did prevent much bloodshed on both sides, and was perhaps able to
obtain the best deal possible for the Indians at that time.
As the territories developed, Craig was active politically and
civically. He remained
involved in Indian affairs, and at various times served as Indian Agent to
different tribes in the
Old
Oregon Territory
.
Craig died of a stroke in 1869. He
was survived at that time by his wife, one son and three daughters.
For more information about William Craig see:
The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West, Vol. 2, edited
by LeRoy R Hafen, published 1965 by the Arthur H Clark Company.
Beall,
Thomas. Recollections of Wm. Craig, published in the Lewiston
Morning Tribune, March 3, 1918.

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