|
Iowa History Project |
THE PALIMPSEST
VOL. 11 JANUARY 1921 NO. 1
The setting down of this experience of
the earlier years of Reuben and David Williams has sprung from a desire to place
on record, while they may yet be told by one of the participants, the details of
what has always been, in our immediate family circle an exceedingly thrilling
incident of my father's boyhood days. The dates, places, and other facts of the
story are historically accurate David Williams is now 76 years old and, retired,
lives in Gridley, California. Reuben Williams died in October, 1898, at Trosky,
Minnesota, in his 62nd year.
The vast grassy prairies of northern Iowa which have
since made it famous as an agricultural State, were at first shunned by the
early settlers No doubt the chief reasons for avoiding the prairies was the
difficulty of obtaining fuel, and the absence of protection against the cold
winds of winter As settlements became closer, the more venturesome began to
establish prairie homes across the miles of bleak plain, then essentially
destitute of obstruction of any kind, the winds had opportunity to gain their
full force. In winter the deeply drifted snow obliterated all landmarks. Travel
from one point to another was often possible only on snow-shoes, although at
times the solid icy crust of the snow would carry the weight of a horse.
Blizzards were of common occurrence and fatalities not
infrequent. In the face of a blinding whirl of snow all familiar objects
vanished. Dependence on sheer Indian instinct, an intuitive sense of distance
and direction, was often the only chance of safety, And especially real was the
danger if night came on. Reliance on native instinct, however, was, not always,
assurance of a safe return to shelter. From these early days have come down
vivid accounts of suffering endured and lives lost. The story that follows,
however, is of two boys who passed a night in the teeth of a bewildering
snowstorm and yet escaped with their lives. I have heard it told by my father
many times and I give the details here in his own words.
IRA A. WILLIAMS
PORTLAND, OREGON DECEMBER, 1920
The winter of 1856-57 was the hardest the settlers then
in Iowa had ever seen. Father had a large family and was poor. We boys all had
to work at whatever we could get to do, Reuben, who was the oldest, had hired
out to Mr. Horace Green for a few months. Green lived over on Willow Creek some
three miles from our place and about four miles northwest of Masonic Grove (now
Mason City). Willow Creek is the outlet to Clear Lake and runs through Mason
City. Mr. Green kept a lot of cattle and always had several pairs of big oxen.
His house was on the open prairie, without a sign of a tree or other windbreak
for protection. Nor had he yet even been able to build any sheds for his cattle.
It was late in December and Mr. Green had gone to
Dubuque to get a load of supplies.
A creaking, canvas-covered wagon slowly came to a halt as the oxen, tired from the long
journey, ceased straining at the yoke. The driver looked about him at the expanse of prairie, unbroken except for the timber which fringed an occasional water course. Far behind lay his old home. Days before he had crossed the Mississippi, and leaving the busy river town had pushed westward until he had passed all signs of habitation and reached this virgin prairie. Nowhere was a sheltering roof to be seen except the covered wagon whose protection was given to the women and children. The only table upon which to partake of the plain meals of corn bread and bacon was the green earth.