PIONEER HISTORY OF KANSAS
by Adolph Roenigk
CHAPTER XXXVIII
NORTHWESTERN KANSAS, Continued
Buffalo Hunters and Robe Merchants; The Solomon River;
Hunting Expeditions; Otoe and Omaha Indians
Tanning Robes on the Solomon River
In the days when millions of buffaloes were roaming on the buffalos range from the Dakotas to the panhandle of Texas, buffalo robes were in everyday use and were nearly as common as blankets are today. In the winter time when the ground was covered with snow it was an ordinary practice for people to go sleigh riding wrapped up in a buffalo robe. Merchants, harness shops, and such dealers as dealt in blankets generally kept buffalo robes for sale.
Prior to the settlement of the country, in the days of the trappers, and the American Fur Company, trading with the Indians and trappers was the main occupation of the merchants in the West, and forutnes were made in the fur business. In this connection I will mention one firm that I knew and did business with, while I was engaged in the saddlery business in Clifton. I refer to W. C. Lobenstein of Leavenworth, who, beginning in a small way in the fifties, accumulated a fortune, organized a firm which became one of the leading wholesale houses on the Missouri river with branch houses at Fort Worth, Texas and Helena, Montana. The robe and furt trade had been his main line of business for years, later wholesale saddlery and leather was added, and it was then that I did business with the firm. One of this firms traveling salesmen named Robinson told me the firm shipped forty thousand hides to England in a year, clearing one dollar profit on each in this deal.
It was said W. C. Lobenstein was a Jew, but those who knew him best said he was a German by birth and came from central Germany, and that he was not an Iraelite. He, having become wealthy, and being up in years, retired from business in the later seventies, and with his only daughter departed from this country to Switzerland, where he lived until he died some years later.
While I was in the saddlery business at Clifton I kept buffalo robes for sale, which I generally bought from the above firm.
One day in the summer of 1878 a man by the name of John
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P. RaRthbun came along with a two-horse wagonload of buffalo robes, which he was bringing from the Ote Indian reservation located in northeastern Kansas on the Nebraska line, where he had the robes tanned by that tribe of Indians. He lived on the Solomon river in Osborn County and was on his way home, selling the robes to merchants and whoever wished to buy along the route.
John P. Rathbun was an early settler and buffalo hunter in Osborn County. He was not of the ordinary type of hunter who simply slew the noble bison for their hides, leaving the carcass go to waste. He was more enterprising and businesslike than the ordinary hunter. He and his associates in hunting made use of the meat and tallow as well as the hides whenever it was possible to do so.
Associated with John P. Rathbun was his brother Ed and several other men who lived in that vicinity, who accompanied him on several hunting expeditions to the buffalo range. Among these men was Wm. H. Nicholson, a well-educated man who did the wise thing of keeping a diary, which is now in the possession of his brother-in-law, D. O. Bancroft. Having heard of
D. O. Bancroft, the owner of the diary
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The First Settler in Osborne County--How Covert Met His
Death--Covert Creek Named for Him--Other
Creeks Named In Memory of the Affair
While interviewing old-timers in Osborne County I made the acquaintance of Jeff Durfey, the first settler in Osborne County. He was born in 1845 and served three years in the Thirtieth Wisconsin Infantry during the Civil War. He came to Osborne County from Dane County, Wisconsin, in 1870, by the way of Nebraska, and settled on a homestead on Covert creek, where he has resided ever since. Much of the time in the early seventies he spent hunting buffaloes, traveling over the western country in a half dozen states, and many are the interesting stories he tells of those times. Covert creek is one of the best timbered streams in Osborne County. In places there are forty to eighty acres of timber in a body. One of these heavy timbered sections he
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selected for his homestead and built his home at the outer edge of it. In this timber the buffaloes congregated after their return from the south in the spring of the year. The timber was a help to them in shedding their winters fur coat. Durfey said when he first saw this timber the lower parts of the trunks of trees were covered with buffalo fur which was clinging to the rough bark in wads, showing where these animals had rubbed in order to relieve themselves of their winters coat. Enough of this fur could be gathered to fill a mattress in a short time.
On the east side of this creek the country is hilly, and in the deep bottoms between the bluffs grows luxurious grass, affording good pasture for stock late in the fall, during most of the winter and early spring. In these hills the buffalo were found at times when they were scarce on the open prairie.
Here the savages had been well supplied with the comforts of Indian life. With plenty of timber for shelter, firewood for their lodges, springs of clear water close by, everything was near at hand for a permanent Indian home.
When Mr. Durfey selected this site for his first cabin there was evidence about this vicinity to show that he was not the first inhabitant to choose this place for a home. Signs of a former Indian village were noticeable all around this vicinity. Lodge poles were lying in quantities all around in the timber, that had been left on the ground when the village was being moved to another location. On the prairie near by there were numerous stakes driven into the ground and scaffold made to dry meat. Mr. Durfey said he gathered several wagon loads of poles and hauled them home to use for firewood, and the stakes that were left in the ground so interferred with the breaking of the sod that he had to remove the stakes before he could proceed with the plow.
Very little is known and different stories have been told about the killing of Covert, by Indians, after whom these creeks were named. All the creeks in this vicinity flow from the south to the north into the Solomon river. Mr. Durfey says Covert was killed in 1869. Others give the time earlier. To substantiate his statement, Mr. Durfey told the following: Covert was associated with a man named Carr. The two men, together with a team and wagon, came from Salina to this creek to hunt buffalo. They camped eight miles south of his farm near where the village of Covert is now located. Con-
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tinuing, he said; He and some other parties saw the place shortly after he came here in 1870 and things looked comparatively fresh. The remains of the wagon were still there at the Covert camp; it had been chopped to pieces and utterly ruined by the savages. The spokes had been chopped from the wagon wheels and were lying on the ground; a number of these were gathered up by the men and taken home, and were used for picket pins for a long time afterwards.
Mr. Durfey tells this story how Covert was killed: Covert had a muzzle-loading rifle. He had been out hunting the day before the Indians appeared, and had lost his powder horn. On the morning of this fatal day he went out trying to find his powder horn, when the Indians suddenly appeared and cut him off from the camp. Just how he was killed is not known. (He did not find his powder horn because it was found later by someone herding cattle.) Carr was in camp and seeing the Indians coming abandoned everything and made his way on foot to Pipe creek, Ottawa County, where he came from.
The creeks on both sides, east and west, of Covert creek, all flowing north, received their names in memory of this affair. They are named: Kill creek, Indian creek, Covert creek and Carr creek. Mr. Durfey said the surveyors, or those who placed the names of those creeks on the maps, got the names mixed. The names of the creeks were meant to be placed on the map in rotation, commencing on the east, as follows: Indian creek, Kill creek, Covert creek and Carr creek, which meant: Indian Kill Covert, Carr got away.
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