It was somewhere around the 3rd
of October in 1879, when we left Hewins for Belvedere. The round up out there would start about the
10th and we had to be there. It took
about 10 days by wagon, but Grandpa said by riding good horses we could make it
in about 5 days or maybe 6 easy, and sooner if we pushed somewhat. We crossed a lot of country and forded a lot
of creeks and rivers the next few days.
And we got into Medicine Lodge the evening of the 4th day. That night I slept in my first hotel. We got a room with 2 beds for 75 cents and
breakfast cost 30 cents extra.
We left Medicine Lodge at 4:30 that morning and rode in the dark for the
first hour and a half. There had been
trees along the creeks and stuff ever since we left Hewins, but now as the sun
peeked up and the dawn come in, I could tell that this was a different
country. The only trees we saw that day
were near springs or creeks. The deer
and antelope were everywhere and even a Buffalo
now and then. But Grandpa said there
were not many Buffalo left
here. They were mostly up north, the ones that were
left.
We made the ranch about 8 that
night and I got my first look at how rough the plains could be. As we rode in some of the ranch hands came
out to take our horses, and they told Grandpa they had found the foreman, Zeke,
out by Turkey Creek. And some Indians
had really worked him over. We went in
the ranch house to see what had happened and Grandma had Zeke laying on the table under the lamp that she had hanging from
the rafter. His shirt was off and he had
a big bandage around his ribs. One pant
leg was cut off and his leg was bandaged.
Also his head was wrapped up and bloody.
Grandma said, “Well, William it’s about time you got back before
everyone on this ranch got butchered.”
Come to find out Indians had jumped Zeke at the Sand Creek Crossing and
shot him in the leg and chest. When he
took the hit in the chest, he fell from his horse. He saw them coming for him. He thought he was dead anyway so he just
acted that way. Those red devils kicked
him a couple of times. Then when he
didn’t move they lifted his scalp. When
they left, he got up grabbed some mud and packed mud on his head and started
walking home.
Some of the fellas from the ranch
met him on the way and brought him to Grandma for fixing. She had been working on him for about 4
hours, and she thought he would live.
She said the shot that got him in the chest had got a rib and stopped. She just dug that bullet out. The one in the leg had lodged and she had to
really work to get it out.
Zeke had lost the front part of
his scalp and some blood, but he had several good Indian fights left in
him. Zeke swore, if he ever found that
Indian with his scalp, he would know it.
And by God he‘d kill him and bury his scalp. He said a man should be buried all in one
piece or at least all of his pieces.