CRUISE OF THE AURORA
CHAPTER X.
IN WHICH WE SING A SONG.
THE country has now become more pleasing in
character, and many of the islands, as we paddle
slowly by their shores, give evidences of great
fertility where cultivation has been bestowed on them.
Many of these islands have low stone wing dams
connecting them with the main shore, constructed for
the purpose of deepening the channel by diverting a
considerable body of water into it. When the waters of
the river are at so low a stage as now, the tops of
these dams come into view, and must of course be
avoided even by the canoeist; but at times of high
water they become submerged to such a depth that
steamboats are enabled to pass over them.
Towns are frequently passed on both sides of the
river, and at sunset we make our camp on the Ohio
shore below the little hamlet of Newport. At this
season of the year it is seldom that we have two
successive days of fine weather, and I am not
surprised, during the night, to hear the rain
pattering on my canvas roof. The day breaks cloudy and
dismal, but within two hours the wind changes, the
clouds part and the sun sheds his bright rays upon us,
while the wind springs up to a good sailing
breeze.
Music on the Waters.
Away we go; and the high hills echo my voice
as I give vent to my feelings and sing:
THE CANOEIST'S AULD LANG SYNE.
- We've come from ocean, river, lake,
- To nature's fairest shrine,
- While far and near the echoes wake,
- In rocks of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
-
- On waters bright, 'mid silvery spray,
- Who cares for storied Rhine?
- We'll camp at close of summer day,
- 'Neath trees of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
-
- This life so old our life renews,
- While man and boat combine
- With sail, or blade our own canoes,
- the craft of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
-
- Although our friendship count not years,
- 'Tis friendship, yours and mine;
- And parting hath a thought of tears,
- Like love of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
-
- Auld rocks, auld trees, auld craft, auld
ties,
- Auld waters, fresh or brine,
- Shall ever hold in our glad eyes,
- The charm of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
-
- Afloat, ashore, we'll meet again;
- Now here's my hand for thine;
- We'll meet again, we'll meet again
- For love of auld lang syne.
- (Chorus.)
At the wharfboat on the levee of the thriving city
of Marietta, Ohio, the next day, I was accosted by a
gentleman who, with Dr. Z.D. Walter, had been awaiting
our arrival; and with the kind friends met here, we
visited the points of interest, taking a peep into the
oldest church in the State, and the ancient Indian
mound, of which the citizens of Marietta feel justly
proud. This is one of the most prominent of the
numerous works of the mound builders. Its interior
remains a sealed mystery, through the whim of its
donor, who decreed that it should remain the property
of the city so long as not disturbed.
Singularly enough, the trading flatboat, that craft
peculiar to the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, was
presented to my sight on the Muskingum River. The
Rechabite had been floated down the Muskingum from
Zanesville, Ohio, loaded with earthenware and bound on
a trading trip along the shores of the Ohio. As a
village is approached the trader is worked into some
secure locality adjacent, where she will remain
sometimes for weeks, her stock being traded for cash
or barter, when she will move on to some other point.
Making an afternoon start from Marietta I bade goodbye
to my friends; the canoes were launched from the
wharfboat, and, accompanied by one of our new-made
acquaintances in his canoe, we head out into the
strong wind but delightfully rapid current. We had not
reckoned on so strong a wind, and by the time we
reached Neal's Island were prepared to make camp.
After supper our escort sat with us at the campfire,
then launched his canoe and paddled to Parkersburgh,
three miles below, where he boarded a steamer.
Blennerhassett and
Burr.
During the night I heard her passing our
camp, as she churned the water into dirty foam with
the huge wheel propelling her toward Marietta. Either
fog or rain seemed to be of everyday occurrence, and
the morning following our departure from Marietta was
no exception. In the thick fog we paddled with
caution, for the stream was full of steam craft.
Parkersburgh, at the mouth of the Little Kanawha
River, was scarcely visible through the fog; but we
were reminded that there are other oil-producing
regions than those of Pennsylvania by the amount of
oil on the current of the river that flows from the
oily soil of West Virginia. We caught a glimpse of
Belpré, opposite Parkersburgh, on the Ohio
shore, as we passed beneath the massive iron bridge
over which a heavily-laden train of cars was being
slowly drawn by two powerful engines. Two miles below
lay Blennerhassett's Island, made famous by the
exploits of the unprincipled Aaron Burr, in his
attempt to carry out his bold and extravagant dream of
wresting Mexico from Spain and taking the Ohio and
Mississippi valleys from the United States. All this
fertile region, with its varied climate, was to be
blended into one empire; the great lakes were to be
his boundary on the north, the Gulf of Mexico should
dash with its salt waters his southern shores, the
high peaks of the Rocky Mountains should guard the
west, while the towering Allegheny on the east should
protect him from invading foe. This was his dream, and
a fair one it was.
CHAPTER XI.
THE VAGABONDS' HIGHWAY.
THE day became uncomfortably warm as the fog
cleared away, and the sun sent his rays down out of a
cloudless sky; and at length a shady spot was chosen
on the Ohio shore, where we ate our dinner-supper
meal; and then we started on an evening paddle. Little
is gained by this sort of traveling though, as one
loses much of interest and subjects himself to many
little annoyances, not compensated for by the distance
gained. After three miles, the last one in darkness so
black that we frequently found our craft aground on
the low muddy shores, we swung around a bend and came
on a group of lights, which proved to be those of a
steamer tied to the shore for wooding up. Making camp
on a strange shore in darkness is a difficult
operation; but a smooth spot beneath a high bank of
clay was chosen, and hauling out we spread the canvas
roofs over our cabins and were soon enjoying our
well-earned repose. The heavy rumbling of a wagon
wakes me as the sun is glinting the water; and on
turning out I see, almost over my head, a six-mule
team drawing a huge wagon heavily laden with
tobacco.
River Thieves.
A passing boatman tells me that we are one
mile below Murraysville, W. Va. From this point in our
trip the selection of a camp site for the night
becomes an important consideration. It is an easy
matter to draw the craft out on a smooth, sloping
beach of clay and sand, but these places are not
always to be found at the proper time for ending the
day's run. The shores are now oftener precipitous
bluffs. Generally at the base of such a bluff there is
a short beach, but the danger that tons of loose earth
may fall on us forbids our making use of it, and again
the heavy swash from the passing steamers is so great
that we would be in constant danger of having our
cabins filled with water. The high bank of the river
is always on the convex side of the river, while on
the concave side there is usually found a bar with low
land running back from it. Hence, we choose the
concave side when practicable. Another objectionable
feature, and the one most to be guarded against, is
the army of tramps, unprincipled boatmen, and
scoundrels of all descriptions. The Ohio and
Mississippi rivers are the great western highways for
a large class of vagabonds who prey upon the country
as they pass through it. They travel singly and in
twos and threes. Stealing some valuable article from a
farmhouse or barn, they appropriate the first skiff
they can find, pull across and down the stream for a
hundred miles, and then abandoning the stolen boat
take passage on a steamer, flatboat or other craft and
escape to New Orleans or some Texas town; intercourse
with these desperadoes is to be avoided as much as
possible. In selecting our camp site for the night we
usually make as little show as possible.
For some days we had been warned of the dangers of
the Setart's Falls to our light boats. All day we had
been meeting with slight descents, where the current
would be perceptibly increased, and at times the waves
made by the swifter current meeting the almost
motionless waters of the pools, would cause our craft
to dance about with that motion which is so delightful
to the canoeist's soul; but nothing more alarming than
the wetting of the decks occurred. It was with much
amazement that, when toward the close of one day I
asked the whereabouts of Setart's Falls, I was asked,
"Why, didn't you come through them?"
The 2nd of November was a red-letter day for us.
Breaking camp at eight o'clock, we made sail with a
brisk down river breeze, which in the course of the
next two hours increased to half a canoe gale, giving
the Aurora's skipper, at least, all he wanted to do to
keep her right side up and avoid wetting her cargo.
The wind came down with a howl as we approached
Pomeroy, Ohio, opposite which is a long, low sandy
point jutting into the stream, forcing the water
through a narrow channel scarcely wider than a
steamer's breadth. And as ill luck would have it, we
here met an upward bound steamer. Unfortunately the
Aurora's lateen sails could not be taken from the mast
nor lowered without coming up into the wind, and from
the want of room I was unable to bear away. Thus I was
forced to take my chances of being run down by the
steamer or driven on to the bar by the force of the
wind; but I escaped both and shot by clear.
A Broken Spar.
Just as I cleared her I was caught in the
huge rollers from her great wheel, the wind swept down
and my craft went up one sea like a flash, when she
suddenly pitched into the trough with such force that
the long slender spar was snapped off at the masthead,
and overboard went the sail. So suddenly released from
the pressure, the boat rolled to windward until her
coaming was for an instant submerged. It was no time
then to mend the broken spar, we must make all we can
of the fine breeze. The sail was rolled up and stowed
below, and as the Comfort came down her skipper loaned
her unused mizzen to the Aurora, and I set the
borrowed sail aft, and with my own mizzen forward, I
managed to keep Barnacle in sight the rest of the day.
A huge campfire warmed all outdoors while we sat about
it that night; and while I brought up the log,
Barnacle fished the broken spar, that all might be in
readiness for a breeze on the morrow. As the brilliant
sparkle and flash of the silvery lamps above were
reflected from the diamond points of the heavy frost,
we turned into our snug quarters, well pleased with
the run of forty-four miles under sail alone.
The whipping of the little A.C.A. burgee on its
staff at the bow of my canoe awakened me at an early
hour. I found a brisk downriver breeze blowing.
Breakfast hurriedly eaten, canoes packed and white
wings spread, we went dancing toward the briny waters
of the Gulf. Well it was that we made the early start
and gained the help of the wind, as we had not made
more than twelve miles when it died out to a complete
calm and forced us to again take up the well-tried
double paddles. At noon we landed at the mouth of Big
Sandy Creek, the dividing line between West Virginia
and Kentucky. On the south shore is the town of
Cattellsburgh, Ky. The Sandy was pouring out a large
volume of discolored water, which bore on its bosom
great quantities of debris, in the shape of fence
rails, boards, cut timbers and trees. Some of the
latter had their great long roots with the slender
tendrils trailing after them, showing that there had
been a heavy storm at the headwaters and on the
tributaries.
As I knocked the ashes from my pipe and threw aside
"Round the World in Eighty Days," with which I had
beguiled the last two hours, I perceived that the
mercury was rapidly falling, warning us that the
weather tomorrow would savor more of winter than any
we had thus far had; and so it proved, for on turning
out in the early morning the marks of Jack Frost were
everywhere visible, and the canoe tent came off
without a wrinkle, making it necessary to thaw it
before the fire in order to stow it in its proper
place. Again the wind is in our faces, and the flying
spray frequently reaches far enough aft to wet the
woolen mittens, which in turn impart their cold
moisture to our chilled hands. The current is a strong
one, and by two o'clock we have made a distance of
thirty miles, when the river, making a sharp turn to
the east, gives us a fair wind and we again make sail
and reach the town of Portsmouth, Ohio, where we
receive our mail.
A Vision of the Old
Times.
Camping about three miles below the town, the
appetizing odor of fried beefsteak and onions,
together with that of fragrant coffee, filled the air
as the sun sent long, slanting shadows across the
waters.
During the night I was awakened by the deep toned
whistle of a towing steamer as she signaled her
approach to Portsmouth. Thoughts of the inventive
genius of the day fill my mind as I lay in my snug
quarters. I see far back in the years gone by the red
Indian, as he swiftly and silently descends the stream
in his birchen canoe or shapely dugout; the white man,
a few years later, encroaching on the domain of the
child of the forest in the rudely-built batteau, scow
or sailboat, is borne on its swiftly flowing current.
I see them in their vain attempts to stem the same
current in their endeavors to reach the upriver
country. Then comes the thought of the application of
steam to the conquering of the powerful current, where
wind as a motor, has only been partially successful.
As the Clermont was the first steam-propelled vessel
to ascend the Hudson, in 1807, so the New Orleans was
the first to part the waters of the Ohio and
Mississippi in 1811, making a successful trip from
Pittsburgh to New Orleans, and filling with awe the
minds of the children of the forest, who gazed upon
the puffing, fire-eating monster and called it
"penelore" (fire canoe).
Owing to the muddy condition of the shores our
canoes need a thorough overhauling, and under a bright
November sun we go about our housecleaning. A water
mark placed the night before shows that the never
stationary but always rising or falling Ohio is now
rising rapidly, and as our camp is but three or four
inches above the river surface, we search for a site
that will be well above the reach of the rising flood.
A paddle of eight miles brings us to a broad beach of
sand, fringed on its upper edge with a dense growth of
willows, while on the opposite side of the river is
the dismal-looking, tumbledown village of Quincy, Ky.
Here we camp and build a rousing fire, before which I
am seated, jotting down the notes of the day's run,
when we are much surprised at hearing voices on the
water and soon after the grating of a boat's prow on
the shore. Stepping out from the glare of the fire I
receive three visitors, who prove to be shanty
boatmen, who have their craft moored to the opposite
shore.
"Good evenin', strangers; we see yer
light, and thought as yer might hev a skiff ter
sell."
"No, we are simply on a pleasure trip and have
two canoes only," said I, pointing to the little
craft lying side by side.
"Well, now, ef thet ain't the purtiest trick I
ever did see. What mout sech a boat as thet cost,
stranger?"
"Hundred and fifty dollars."
"Great snaix. My woman's fust man had one as
cost fifty dollars, and I thought as she was ab'ut
the harns'mest thing I ever did see; but she
couldn't come nigh thet trick. Ain't yer 'fraid
thet a tramp'll come 'long and knife yer some night
and steal the little boat?
Tearin' Good Cider.
"There's plenty of um as would be
willin' ter do it if they got a chance. Say,
stranger, bring yer chum along, and come over to
our shanty and hev a game of seven-up. I ain't got
no whisky; but I hev got some tearin' good cider."
I deny having any knowledge of the game of seven-up
or a fondness for "tearin' cider," and excuse myself
on the plea that I am tired and must turn in. Taking
the hint, they depart, evidently satisfied that there
is no chance to make a haul from our camp or
pockets.
All the next day we are forced to remain in our
camp during a heavy downpour of rain, the rising
waters of the river by nightfall reaching almost to
our fireplace. The shores of the river are now in no
way particularly interesting, if we except the
tumbledown appearance of most of the buildings,
predominant among which are the decayed negro quarters
of the old slave days. The inhabitants of the Kentucky
shore have a particularly forlorn and wretched aspect.
Singularly enough, it is impossible to obtain a piece
of salt pork in this hog-raising region. Ask the
native what they live on, and the almost invariable
answer is, "Corn and bacon, but mostly corn."
CHAPTER XII.
SHANTYBOATS AND BOATMEN.
SHANTYBOATS, one of the peculiarities of the river,
are now met with daily, and their construction and the
characters of their occupants are a source of
interesting study. These craft are sometimes called
"family boats," and justly so, too, as they are often
the dwelling places of an entire family, who spend
their lives in floating on the river. Starting from
points high up on the Allegheny or Monongahela rivers
with the first signs of approaching winter, arriving
at Cairo they are joined by the fleet from the upper
Mississippi and Missouri, and together drift to the
Southern cities, or "tie up" within the mouth of some
small stream, spending the winter in trapping,
fishing, and in some cases stealing, until they
accumulate sufficient funds to pay for a tow by
steamer to some upriver port, when they again go to
"floating." These boats differ in their build and
fittings as much as the house of the planter differs
from the humble quarters of the negro laborer.
It often happens that a man, tiring of the
restraints imposed upon him by his better half, looks
about for a more congenial spirit, and having found
one whom he fondly believes will be attentive to his
wants, sewing on the buttons of his shirt and cooking
the stolen hog, he pictures to her active imagination
all the delights of shantyboat life, where she will
have nothing to do but drift with the ceaseless
current as she eats baked 'possum and dances to the
music of the fiddle or mouth organ, or swabs her gums
with the ever present snuff; so she ties the gaudily
trimmed hat on her head, seizes her European traveling
trunk, and casting into it her personal effects, hands
it over to her new lord and master, who shoulders it
to the floating home, while she follows with "The
Fiend of the Bloody Bayou" or "The Life of
Two-Fingered Bill" safely folded in her bosom.
Shipping a
Housekeeper.
On arriving in New Orleans the shantyboat is
sold for firewood while her captain engages a deck
passage for the Red River region, and his deserted
housekeeper, compelled to shift for herself, becomes
known in the low haunts of the city as the "Allegheny
Rose" or the "Mountain Gazelle," but never returns to
her far upriver home.
In strong contrast is the shantyboat of the honest
mechanic. His scow or boat is constructed of the best
white oak, thoroughly braced and fastened with
galvanized iron nails and screws, while the house,
50x15x10 ft., is built of fine white pine boards. The
roof is rain-proof and has in the center a skylight.
At either end is a door leading to the deck, while a
each side is a row of four windows with green blinds.
The hull is painted a lead color, the shanty a dark
brown. I took a peep into such a neat-looking craft
and was not a little surprised at what I saw. The
forward door admitted me into a sort of kitchen, where
were many things usually found in an ordinary country
kitchen, with a brightly polished cookstove and pots
and pans. Opening from this was a general living room,
the floor neatly covered with bright colored Canton
matting. The windows were surrounded prettily with
cheesecloth curtains, and on the walls hung small
tasty chromos and woodcuts. In one corner stood a
substantial table, on which was a family Bible and
other books; ranged along the side was a comfortable
lounge, and beneath one of the windows was a sewing
machine. Several ordinary chairs and a Boston rocker
were carefully arranged. Beyond was the comfortably
furnished bedroom from which a door opened to the
after deck. The good wife cares for this floating home
while moored to the levee in front of the town where
her husband works at his trade of carpenter. Work
becoming scarce in one locality, he floats his home
downstream to some more likely spot; or, engaging a
tow, is taken up river, and so goes from town to town,
and being a good mechanic, finds work when it is to be
had. His expenses are light; he has no rent nor taxes
to pay, and his fuel can be found in abundance along
the shore.
CHAPTER XIII.
A SHORT ONE, IN WHICH BARNACLE TAKES THE
CAKE.
WE frequently pass people along the bank who call
out to one another, "There goes two Injuns in canoes."
Once, when approaching a group of men, women and
children, I gave a whoop that made the air ring, while
it had a decidedly terrifying effect on the juvenile
members, who took to their heels in hot haste.
After a day's run of thirty-four miles under sail,
we made camp within twenty-five miles of Cincinnati.
On turning in we decided on making an early start,
that we may reach the Queen City before the close of
day. Reaching Maysville, Ky., I send Barnacle ashore
to procure some fresh bread. His tall, gaunt form,
around which his blue flannel shirt and trousers hang
as on a pole; his sharp-cut features and dark
complexion; the mat of still darker hair, surmounted
by a broad-rimmed slouch hat, attracts the attention
of the loungers and wharf rats, some of whom follow
him up the levee to see what his errand ashore may be.
He is absent so long that I begin to fear he may have
got into trouble, when I see him coming down the levee
with long, rapid strides. Bounding into his canoe, he
says: "Let's get out of this as quickly as possible."
Landing on some smooth rocks about a mile below the
town, we build our little fire, and while the water is
heating Barnacle explains to me his anxiety to make a
hasty departure from Maysville.
"You see this is election day, and every
mother's son composing the crowd in that town is
drunk, or nearly so. I went into the bakery, and
there found four fellows, all more or less drunk.
One in particular had more on board than his
companions, and when I asked the baker for two
loaves of bread, this Kentucky juice-guzzler told
him he wanted all the bread there was in the shop.
'There are but two loaves left, sir,' said the
mixer of flour and water, and this gentleman has
bought them.' 'He shan't have them,' replied Mr.
Kentuck, and reached out to take them from me. I
tell you there was a lively scrimmage there for a
minute or two."
I don't know what Barnacle did, he is noncommittal
on such matters; but I am satisfied that he cleaned
the quartet out -- he is capable of such a
performance. "To the victor belong the spoils," and we
have the bread.
CHAPTER XIV.
IN WHICH IS SHOWN THE WISDOM OF SITTING
STILL.
A HEAD wind sprang up and gave us a hard
afternoon's work, precluding the possibility of
reaching Cincinnati before night, and we went into
camp within seven miles of the city. Some time during
the night, as I lay awake listening to the ripple of
the waters along the shore, I heard a rich, clear
baritone voice singing, "Way down on the Suwanee
River," and looking out from my cabin window, I saw a
raft slowly drifting past, on which was seated the
musical being.
About mid-day on the morrow we came in sight of the
great pork-packing city of the West, and ere the
whistles had screeched out their announcement of the
commencement of the second half of the busy day we
passed under the first bridge that connects the city
of Cincinnati with Covington, Kentucky. Here a busy
scene meets our view. Both the Ohio and Kentucky
shores of the river are a mass of steamers of all
classes, both side wheel and "kick-ups," freight
barges and coal scows, together with small river craft
of every description. Ferryboats are crossing from
shore to shore, dodging the ever-present shantyboat
that always seems to be in the wrong place. We meet
the skippers of the craft belonging to the Cincinnati
Canoe Club, and by them are introduced to the sights
of the city. We spend a couple of delightful days at
their club house on the miniature Lake Ross, sailing
their canoes and enjoying their hospitality, for which
they are so famous.
November 16 sees us again afloat, and as we swiftly
pass beneath the magnificent suspension bridge
connecting Cincinnati with Covington, Ky., we wave our
hands in adieu to the friends and city that have
afforded us so much pleasure.
The river now runs through a narrow gorge. Steep
hills, attaining a height of three hundred feet,
sparsely wooded and seamed with deep ravines, wall it
in on both sides. The trees have been denuded of their
leaves through the effect of the frosts and winds of
the past two or three weeks, and their bare branches
are outlined against the bright sky, which is now
bathed in a crimson light by the setting sun. As we
had tumbled a large quantity of provisions into our
canoes without properly stowing, we made an early camp
on the wooded Kentucky shore, about ten miles below
the city.
Early in the morning, as our breakfast fire was
brightly blazing, we received a call from the owner of
the farm on whose waterfront we had made our camp.
After some pleasant conversation, he said that if we
would wait half an hour he would bring us some genuine
Kentucky leaf tobacco. Ah, ha! here was a chance to
smoke a pipe of unadulterated tobacco.
The Unadulterated
Leaf.
Of course we will wait. On his return he
handed me a large bunch of leaf tobacco, saying:
"I don't know whether you will like this
leaf; it ain't now'er's near as stout as we
ginerally smoke; it is some I cured fer my own
use."
So eager was I to smoke genuine unadulterated
tobacco that I soon had my pipe filled; and as I sat
by the fire and puffed away like a locomotive, I
thought I had never smoked finer tobacco in all the
long years that I had been a smoker. By and by,
though, my head began to feel queer, and I made
spasmodic clutches at the sides of the mess chest on
which I was seated, for fear that I would fall over
into the fire, which seemed to rise and fall as though
some subterranean agency was at work heaving it up and
down. I cast my eyes to the hilltops, and they were
going round and round, while the river seemed to have
changed its flow, and was now running up instead of
down. I dared not offer to rise, as I feared that
action would betray my condition to Barnacle and our
visitor, and so I remained on my seat until the
sensation had passed.
© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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