Ohio History Journal

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Brief Biography of William Henry Holmes 517

Brief Biography of William Henry Holmes  517

of powwow as we could, traded some matches for some

arrows and gave them bread to eat. It appears that they

were really trying to find their lariats and possibly to

claim them. We watched them so closely that they

failed to steal anything and we saw them depart at last

with feelings of relief. These fellows came more nearly

up to my notion of what bad Indians were than any

mortals I had heretofore seen.

We mounted double guard for the night, determined

to protect ourselves to the utmost. I think I recognized

two of the Indians as the same we met on the 25th of

July between the Mancos camp and La Plata mines.

That party of four had doubtless been following us

since that time and probably lay in wait until we got

out of the Southwest. They were cowardly scamps who

would not have dared harm us, if it had been likely to

endanger themselves. They knew that we slept and

worked by our needle-guns, and doubtless moved with

great caution in consequence.

 

FIRST ASCENT OF THE MOUNTAIN OF THE HOLY

CROSS

BY W. H. HOLMES, OF THE HAYDEN SURVEY OF THE

TERRITORIES, 1873

Until the middle of June, the great front range of

the Rocky Mountains in Colorado had been crowned

with an unbroken covering of snow, and the higher

peaks were forbidding enough to cool the ardor of the

most ambitious mountaineer. Our party spent a few

months on the plains and pine-covered foot-hills watch-

ing impatiently the faces of the mountains. We marked

how the snow line moved gradually upward, how the