Wah-to-yah and the Taos Trail : or Prairie travel and scalp dances, with a look at los rancheros from muleback and the Rocky Mountain campfire
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Wah-to-yah and the Taos Trail : or Prairie travel and scalp dances, with a look at los rancheros from muleback and the Rocky Mountain campfire
(The Western frontier library, v.5)
University of Oklahoma Press, 1973, c1955
New ed
- : pbk
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Note
Discription based on 4th printing 1979
"First printing of paperback edition, 1973"--T.p. verso
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the bright morning of his youth Lewis H. Garrard traveled into the wild and free Rocky Mountain West and left us this fresh and vigorous account, which, says A. B. Guthrie, Jr., contains in its pages ""the genuine article-the Indian, the trader, the mountain man, their dress, and behavior and speech and the country and climate they lived in.""On September 1, 1846, Garrard, then only seventeen years old, left Westport Landing (now Kansas City) with a caravan under the command of the famous trader Ceran St. Vrain, bound for Bent's Fort (Fort William) in the southeastern part of present-day Colorado. After a lengthy visit at the fort and in a camp of the Cheyenne Indians, early in 1847 he joined the little band of volunteers recruited by William Bent to avenge the death of his brother, Governor Charles Bent of Taos, killed in a bloody but brief Mexican and Indian uprising in that New Mexican pueblo. In fact, Garrard's is the only eyewitness account we have of the trial and hanging of the ""revolutionaries"" at Taos.
Many notable figures of the plains and mountains dot his pages: traders St. Vrain and the Bents; mountain men John L. Hatcher, Jim Beckwourth, Lucien B. Maxwell, Kit Carson, and others; various soldiery traveling to and from the outposts of the Mexican War; and explorer and writer George F. Ruxton.
by "Nielsen BookData"