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  • Texas | Columns | "Texas Tales"

    The Forgotten Indian Traveler
    Compulsion and Curiosity

    by Mike Cox
    Mike Cox
    One of the modest benefits of getting older is that some young people actually find it interesting to listen to your recollections. When that happens, it allows those of a certain age to feel a bit more relevant and opens the possibility that the bright-eyed listener might actually learn something – even if years go by before they realize it.

    That’s a dynamic that played out in the early 1850s at a military post on the western frontier of Texas. Fortunately for posterity, the younger person later wrote about the time he spent with the older one. Unfortunately, he’s bound to have left a lot of fascinating details unreported.

    The men were Richard Irving Dodge, a young Army officer who would serve in the military for 41 years and John Conner, a noted Delaware Indian. (The Army employed Delawares as scouts.) The meeting – actually, a series of interactions – happened at Fort Martin Scott, a garrison established in December 1848 a couple of miles east of the relatively new German settlement of Fredericksburg.

    Second Lt. Dodge, an 1848 West Point graduate assigned to the 8th Infantry, was stationed at the Hill Country fort for a time during the post’s brief interval of military value. That came in the first few years of the 1850s when the post and the nearby community amounted to the last vestiages of civilization for west-bound travelers. Beyond Fredericksburg lay only wild, open country and hostile Indians.

    At first, those who lived in and around Fredericksburg considered themselves reasonably safe from Indians. But by 1850, despite a peace treaty between the area Germans and the Comanches made three years earlier, trouble seemed eminent. Escorted by troops from Fort Martin Scott, Indian agent John Rollins met on the San Saba River with several war-minded bands and worked out another accord. What came to be known as the Fort Martin Scott Treaty turned out to be one of the few such covenants in the history of the Old West that both parties continued to honor.
    Too new to the military to have played much of a role in this peace-keeping effort, Dodge became acquainted with Conner and quickly understood he was no ordinary man. How much time they spent together is not clear, but with a new treaty in place, Fort Martin Scott soon lost its military relevance. The post was abandoned in 1853.

    Thirty years went by before Dodge got around to writing about his experiences at Fort Martin Scott in his classic book, “The Wild Indians.”
    Conner, Dodge wrote, “was then [at the time of their meeting at Fort Martin Scott] a man of about fifty years, and was justly renowned as having a more minute and extensive personal knowledge of the North American continent than any other man ever had or probably will have. He was fond of telling of his adventures, and boy-like, I was never tried of listening to them; so we soon became great friends.”

    Born in 1802 near a bend in the White River in present-day Hamilton County, Indiana, Conner was the first child of pioneer trader William Conner and Mekinges, a Delaware woman. William Conner had only been in Indiana for a year or two. Mekinges had grown up in one of the first of the Delawares who came to Indiana in 1795.

    “He told me that when a boy of eighteen or nineteen,” Dodge wrote of Conner, “he conceived the most intense desire to see the ocean.”

    This wanderlust arose when his band was on the Mississippi in Illinois.

    “There were too many white people towards the East, so he decided to go West,” Dodge continued. “Traveling on foot, generally alone, but occasionally with white or red trappers, he made his way to the mouth of the Columbia River, then south along the Pacific coast for many miles, until he came to a country occupied by Mexicans [possibly present California.”]

    Continuing his journey all the way to Durango in the Chihuauan Desert, Conner developed an affinity for Mexico and its people. He learned to speak Spanish “with…ease and fluency.”

    Finally ready to see his people again, Conner traveled north from Mexico into Texas in 1824 only to discover that some elements of his tribe had a few years earlier split off from the others and settled in Texas at the invitation of the Spanish government. From then until the late 1850s, when he moved to Kansas, he spent most of his time in Texas. During that interval, he married and acquired land. Conner also became a friend and ally to Sam Houston.

    While the long adventure that brought him to Texas would stand as the longest continuous journey he ever made, life on the trail clearly appealed to Conner. Still, in 1858 he became principal chief of all the Delawares. (Eventually he settled in Oklahoma, where he died around 1872.)

    “In repeated journeys [he] crossed and recrossed, north, south, east and west, the vast expanse of wilderness, until he seemed to know every stream and mountain of the whole great continent west of the Mississippi River,” Dodge went on. “His brain seemed to be a vast reservoir of landmarks, arranged in sequence, ready for use for journeys in any direction or for any distance.”

    And that was all Dodge had to say about this remarkable yet relatively unknown figure.


    © Mike Cox - June 21, 2012 column
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