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PETER
SKENE
OGDEN
In December
1824, Ogden, with a brigade of 131, including women and children, pushed south from Flathead House
toward what would become Utah. Accompanying the
British was a group of seven Americans under Jedediah
Smith, a group whose presence Ogden found most irritating. By
May 5th the expedition had reached the Bear River, where the two outfits
parted company. Ogden’s
brigade had taken 3,000 beaver skins and had a successful hunt to this
point. Ogden
continued south along the Bear River to Cub Creek in present Cache Valley,
where he learned from Snake Indians that Americans (John H. Weber's
brigade of Ashley and Henry’s company) had
already trapped the area. The
British continued south through present-day Smithfield, Logan, Hyrum, and
into the Huntsville area via Paradise Canyon. After trapping the Ogden
Valley region, Ogden took his brigade across the divide south of
Huntsville and established his southernmost camp near present Mountain
Green. He then encountered a
party of fifteen Canadians and Spaniards lead by Etienne Provost, an
American working out of Santa Fe, Mexico.
Soon after
this, a second party of about 25 or 30 Americans, belonging to men in
Ashley’s employment, rode into Ogden’s encampment.
This group was part of John Weber’s brigade, and was headed by Johnson
Gardner. By this time, it
seemed to Ogden that the country was over-run with Americans who were
turning the region into a fur desert against the British.
Gardner was intent on bullying Ogden and his brigade and running
them out of “American Territory”.
Ogden refused to be intimidated stating that “it was not
determined between Great Britain and America to whom it
belonged” and that until the Hudson’s Bay Company “received orders
from the British Government to abandon the country” they would stay. The
discussion between Gardner and Ogden became quite heated and resulted in a
large number of Ogden’s engaged trappers defecting to the Americans and
taking more than 700 beaver skins with them.
Ironically, both parties were not inside the disputed Oregon
territory, but were well inside what was then Mexico.
Ogden, fearing additional desertion and losses, and also to avoid
possible diplomatic repercussions, retraced his steps, eventually
returning to Fort Nez Perce. For the next five years Ogden was engaged in trading, trapping and exploring the Snake River country from the Cascades to the Teton Range. In 1828-29 Ogden led his fifth and final of his expeditions to the interior. This expedition brought Ogden to what the Hudson’s Bay Company trappers called "Ogden's" or "Mary's" River, which was later renamed the Humbolt River by John C. Fremont. After the Whitman
Massacre in 1847, Peter Ogden would lead a small party of men to the
Cayuse Indians, where he negotiated the release of the surviving
captives. Ogden's
impact upon the fur trade was immense.
He remained active in the Hudson's Bay Company until a few months
prior to his death in 1854
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