01 November 2010

Ch 6, Pt 2, "Nicolai's Anger," from "Legacy of the Chief"

Chapter 6, Pt 2: Nicolai's Anger
  watching the white man work
"Watching the White Man work"    -- National Park Service--WRST-- Collection

He could see the narrow boat approaching Eskilida’s camp just down river. The distinctive outline of Doc Billum wearing his top hat was unmistakable. Four other men on board actually operated the paddles of the primitive craft. After he checked the camp for fish, he would sometimes, but not always, head across the wide channel toward Taral. In the last few visits the Doc’s boat had skipped the lower camp. He must have known that no one was there.

When Nicolai realized that the Doc was looking his way, he jumped up and waved. He knew Doc would see him. As the boat approached the grassy promontory Nicolai noticed that the men operating it were young--probably sons and nephews of the Doc. All appeared to be teenagers.

It’s good to see that some of our men are out there helping us. At least the Doc has help. Wish I could say the same. Even my own son has gone off somewhere.

The narrow craft finally beached. The Doc stepped off first and headed immediately to Nicolai to greet him. The others waited near the boat for instructions from their leader. Doc brought the news which Nicolai feared.

The white men have found that they can get what they want with their alcohol. Our men have fallen prey to this curse, as have some of our women. The whites seek gold, pelts and scarce game and fish. But mostly it is gold. Some have even asked our men to lead them to the tsedi.”

Is there anyone across the river?

No one at Eskilida’s camp, not even your brother or any of his sons or your sons. They have all left for something they call a party upriver. It is like our potlatches in that there is much singing and dancing, but it is also unlike our ceremony, because there is not much food. The men swear at each other, fight and try to show how smart they are while acting stupid.

Nicolai did not want to hear this. He sat back down on the drift log. Billum sat next to him on the log and signaled the others to approach.

No wonder the white men are calling us siwash. We give them good reason to laugh at us and take advantage while pretending to be our friends.”

I have to get some of them back, skell’eh.”

Doc Billum shook his head sullenly as he noted Nicolai’s deep concern.

I will take you upriver. You may regret it. Do you have any fish here?
None were left at Eskilida’s. We spotted fish at Tonslahti, but my sons are hungry now.
We will pick up some of the fish on the way upriver
.”

Udzisyu, bring the men some thloo ka," he shouted.

Billum turned around. Surprisingly, the older woman who was quite some distance away, heard him. She waved at him and then shouted some words to two of the children. Billum could not hear her though the sounds of the river and the winds, but he was impressed to watch as two young girls each removed several dried fish from the poles and brought them to the six men at the river bank.

Udzisyu has always been there for me. She runs this camp by herself. Sometimes I don’t feel needed here anymore. I should have gone out hunting instead of waiting, but I really believed they needed me here.”

Nicolai smiled as he told this to Billum. The oldest girl went first to Nicolai to offer him the piece of salmon of his choosing. He declined and pointed to Doc Billum. The Doc accepted one piece of fish which one of the girls cut into pieces. The younger girl went to the four young men and passed the other pieces to them. They devoured the dry fish hungrily.

Udzisyu followed the two girls with a large kettle that had come up the Copper River many seasons before. She was a heavy, but pleasant-looking woman who appeared to be older than Nicolai. Her eyes revealed that she was wholly dedicated to the man. She went about her work silently and with a very slight smile. She stirred up the coals of the fire which was at the feet of Nicolai at the base of the drift log and began to heat up the water for tea. Nicolai asked her to leave the pot with the tea. She sent the children away for the cups, then returned to her work. When the two children left, Nicolai continued.

I have seen no one for days. My last hunting party was all very young men, much like your boat crew. They may not have gone where I sent them. The women and children here can tend to themselves. They have enough fish for a while.

My women are skilled at defending themselves. I have seen to that. We need to leave now and find the rest of my men. I had hoped they would be hunting. Even if I go out on my own to provide for my family, I can’t hunt for everyone. Winter is coming too soon and the game has left for the distant hills.”

The Doc had come with the four men because he needed them if he was to work his boat back upriver. The Copper was fast-moving and unforgiving. The long, narrow craft followed an upstream course which headed toward the northwest to avoid the extreme undercurrents where the Chitina River met the Copper just upriver from Taral. A water witch at the confluence of these two great rivers had taken the lives of many unsuspecting boaters who failed to appreciate the deadly hazards of this part of the river. All of the victims had been white prospectors and trappers.

Once Billum’s boat was safely out of reach of these life-threatening, madly swirling waters, the Doc pointed the vessel back to the eastern shore. The first stop would be the camp of Tonslahti, which was on the lower bank of the Kotsina River.

In a few years, the railroad would come through this area. The surveyors would choose the narrowest point just down river from the confluence with the Copper as the best place for the trestle crossing. This relatively narrow choke point was the only logical location for a railroad bridge, especially if it was to be a wooden trestle.

It was also one of the best places to dip net for salmon. The Natives dipped out the thloo ka by means of grass or spruce root nets. With the coming of the railroad the primitive dip nets would be replaced by the highly-efficient Columbia River fish wheels.

Tonslahti was in the best position to take advantage of the salmon runs through the area because it was just upstream from the narrow point, channeling the salmon. At least one family was always at Tonslahti to tend to the fishing and the smoking of the thloo ka. Today the camp was deserted. Some salmon still hung on racks over an untended and nearly dead fire as though whoever had been there had left in a hurry.

Nicolai’s anger was beginning to build again. This was a particularly bad time to waste any food--waste he could see with his own eyes. He directed the young men to take most the thloo ka aboard the boat. After a brief rest and a supper of fish and rice, which Doc Billum had obtained from the trading post at Lower Tonsina, the small party resumed their arduous journey, working their boat up the Copper River.
The boat party was heading toward Billum’s traditional grounds at Tonsina, where he provided a ferrying service for the white people who had built a trading post and a temporary town at the river confluence.
The western bank between the Kotsina and the Tonsina Rivers rises steeply into high, rugged, treeless mountains which mark the northern-most point of the Chugach Range. Sections of the bank are tree-covered all the way down to the river. The rest of the bank consists of stretches of tall cliffs which are loose and sandy, and which extend hundreds of feet upwards until meeting the rocky base of the mountains.

The eastern bank consists of a series of sandy bluffs which are not quite as tall and are more regular in height. Along the top of the abrupt rim was the traditional route which had begun to fall out of use. At the top of the bluffs is a relatively flat, large plateau which is choked with brush and punctuated with mud volcanoes. The plateau is steeply cut by fast moving glacial streams originating from the glaciers beyond the foothills which mark the end of the plateau and the beginning of Uk’eledi. The long smooth mound which is the active volcano is enormous, lying under a deep blanket of bright white snow which can blind the eyes from a great distance on a sunny day. It cannot be seen from the Copper, which lies between the steep bluffs that run very close to each bank in this section of the river. Uk’eledi last erupted thirteen years before just as the Lieutenant Allen party was leaving the valley after having confirmed the existence of the tsedi which would ultimately bring in the powerful big business interests of the east coast. Soon Uk’eledi would blow again. Significantly enough, this time it would mark the discovery of the Bonanza copper outcropping. Some would argue that it would also signify the end of the old Ahtna way of life. At this moment, though, all was peaceful.
  horses crossing
Pack train swimming the Copper River somewhere between Lower Tonsina and Tsedi-na   --Simpson Files

The Copper River spreads out below the steep sandy bluffs into many braided channels. The multitude of low-lying islands are heavy in the growth of brush and small trees. Drift logs are everywhere, usually caught up in the sandy banks of braided river terrain. The islands provide many excellent camping opportunities, but one must be constantly aware that the Copper River can rise very quickly and flood these islands. The journey of several miles had been strenuous because of the swiftness of the river. Nicolai and Doc Billum helped the young men paddle. All were relieved to finally turn the boat away from the main channel of the Copper River and into one of the larger channels of the Tonsina.
Upon pulling into the landing, the Doc began to feel greatly embarrassed. He had brought Nicolai to his own camp where, as was now quite loudly apparent, the party was well underway. The moment the boat entered the Tonsina River channel the men could hear the drum beats. Nicolai stepped off the boat first. Billum followed him. The younger ones stayed with the craft. In the advancing shadows of the northern Chugach Range, Nicolai spotted several new log cabins he had never before seen.

The noise of drum beating grew louder as the two men walked up the path. Soon they could hear the loud singing of several drunken people. With the sun dipping below the tall Chugach ridge just beyond Billum’s landing, it had become chilly, but a brightly burning fire was just ahead. A large number of men and several women, both white and Native, were dancing and singing to songs which Nicolai had never heard.
 
Must be white man music. Skell’eh was right. I should not have come. I can do nothing here.These men will not listen to me or anyone else. They follow a different leader now.
It is the c’uniis--the demon in the form of the utaeni.
Utaeni c’uniis--the demon whiskey. That is the new enemy.


He was angry in the same manner that the Bible has sometimes described its prophets of old--the ones who come across their followers engaged in some kind of despicable act forbidden by God.
Nicolai kept his thoughts to himself as he walked among the people scattered around the roaring fire. All of them were drinking, already drunk, or passed out. Even the last hunting party of young men he had sent out was here. Every one of those men was passed out and unaware of Nicolai’s presence. Most everyone else he had wondered about, both the young and the old, were there. Even one of his own daughters, who had taken up with a white man at Copper Center was there. Helen was drinking with the the others. Nicolai would not speak to her at all. Several other Indian women were there, many in the arms of the scraggly-looking white men, much to the disgust of Nicolai. The women acted in the same obnoxious and disrespectful manner as the men. No one attempted to stand up in deference to the chief, though several of them showed surprise and embarrassment and turned away as if to hide.
Nicolai was obviously not the chief there. The Utaeni c’uniis was the only chief.

A white man stood up unsteadily and headed toward Nicolai with a bottle of whiskey. Nicolai turned toward Doc Billum, who stood in the distance, between Nicolai and the boat. The young crew of four remained with the boat, thankfully choosing not to join in the party. Nothing good could be accomplished there. A moment’s glance had told the whole story. If Nicolai wanted to keep his boat crew, he knew he had to leave now. Not waiting for the white man to reach him with that bottle, Nicolai headed briskly back to the boat.

“Father! You’ve come. This is no place to be. I’m returning with you!”

It was his son Goodlataw.

“See-ya, I did not see you. You’re joining us?”

“You came for help, sta’. We will have more hunters soon. They will become weary of this, but I am returning with you now.”

Nicolai embraced his son. One returning with him was infinitely better than no one. All the better that it was his own son. Already Nicolai felt better, even though the victory was very small. Maybe it was not. It was his son. The tyone had much to contemplate. Winter with its possible starvation was now on the horizon. It was unavoidable.

The Doc, not forgetting the initial purpose of his trip, began throwing off the smoked salmon the men had taken from Tonslahti. His crew helped, keeping only enough for themselves for two or three days. If the men and women were going to be drunk and make fools of themselves among the whites, at least they would not starve. Nicolai and his party had seen to that.

“Tonslahti. We will stay there tonight. ”

“That’s good. We left enough thloo ka behind for our people will eat and be satisfied.”

“We need to net more thloo ka. If there is still a run going past Tonslahti, we had better stay there to take as many as we can. Food is running short.”

The Doc agreed, and the crew was underway. They took the east channel, choosing to stay as far away from the white man side as possible on the way down river. No one had directed the course. The young men themselves chose the river route back downstream. The late afternoon shadows had not yet reached the far bank, enabling the boat to return within the warm rays of the fleeting sun. The cold shadows began to overtake Tonslahti as the boat approached the landing.

Nicolai did not want to return to Taral. He needed to be alone with his son and his small crew to contemplate the very situation he had tried to avoid. The need to catch the salmon was just an excuse. But it was a very practical one.
  three generations
"Three generations of Billums"  --Candy Waugaman Collection

In a few days, the party will be over. I will return then, unless you need me here longer,” Doc Billum volunteered to Nicolai.

You can leave me and my son at the Kotsina after tonight if you wish, Skell eh. I need to be alone for a few days. We will take the boat left at Tonslahti to return to Taral. At least now I have my son to help.

The cold of the shadows moved quickly to replace the rays of the warm sun as the party pulled in to shore. A small pile of dry firewood had been stacked up near the fire pit. The young men wasted no time building up a much welcomed fire on what was becoming a very cold night. Winter was close by, but there was almost no winter food cache for Taral or anywhere else. The chief no longer felt like a chief. For nearly thirteen years he had dominated the lower part of the country. All the other chiefs had always consulted him on important matters. Those days were over. The respect he had worked so hard to gain and hold had been lost in a mere instant with the advent of white men and their alcohol.

Nicolai, though not really that old, felt ancient tonight. He saw himself as very much a part of the past. He had become a relic even before he was an old man. Never again would there be a true chief, much less a tyone. Nicolai was destined to be the last tyone of his people, except he had already become a tyone more in name than in fact. His people were lost. Nicolai was lost. He felt very alone tonight and knew he would need time alone to ponder the problem. His immediate concern was the matter of having enough food to survive the winter. The problem with the alcohol was more serious, but he would have to try to deal with that later, if at all.

Skell’eh, have the men gather up wood, heat up some lava stones and find a water container for a sezel. It will help me think.”

I will help them, Father.”

The men feel very badly, Nicolai. As do I. We will join you in the sezel. You need us to be with you.”
Nicolai was quiet for a moment as he considered Doc Billum’s words. “Can I have silence in the sezel?”
“Yes, Nicolai. Everyone knows you don’t like talk in the sezel. The young men will be quiet. We are with you, Nicolai. You will always be our tyone. It matters little what the others say or do. We believe in the old ways
.”

Nicolai had thought at first that he needed to be alone, but found himself grateful to have the sympathetic company. The youngest man would tend to the water and the others to the fire and rocks. All would sit in the hot sezel in complete silence, joining Nicolai so he would have the spiritual and moral support the men realized he needed.

It occurred to Nicolai that the scene he had witnessed at Tonsina must have been going on since late spring when the first whites arrived. He held no particular hatred for them, but they had introduced a new host of problems when Nicolai’s people already had enough just trying to survive.

No one ever became prosperous in this valley, unlike their Tlingit cousins who had the benefit of a much milder coastal climate in which to prosper. Life was harsh and unpredictable along the Copper River. The only good thing out of all this was that the trade had come to the Indians. They no longer had to work their way down the Copper River when it was iced over in March to bring native copper and pelts to Alaganik to trade for other goods. Everything was so much easier to obtain.

Regrettably, this included the alcohol.

No one had confided with him about all these strange and wild parties of the white man--not even Billum, whom Nicolai trusted so highly. The thought occurred to Nicolai that even the Doc had held back from him this knowledge of what was happening to his people. That was not good. Even though he had grown to suspect the worst, the tyone had been taken by surprise. This was at a time when everyone would be needed to participate in the hunting and fishing as winter approached. Nicolai once again found himself sitting on a drift log facing the smooth-flowing river. The wind had ceased, but it was cold. His son had built a small fire at his feet and the son sat beside him, tending the fire and heating water for tea, but saying nothing. Nicolai turned around to look back at the Doc and his crew. Billum was idly stirring a stick in another fire his own sons had built, looking at nothing in particular. Doc knew that the tyone knew. That long-standing relationship of friendship and trust had been violated.

No matter now. Such things were secondary to survival. It was upon Nicolai, as usual, to try to provide for his people. Yet he would never look at Doc Billum, or his men, or even his own daughter in the same way. He was not even sure about his son. At least Goodlataw had chosen to return with him without any prodding. Nicolai never saw Goodlataw until his son approached him at the landing, asking to leave with him.

He was sure that in some way they had all abused his trust. Worse, all had dishonored tradition, bypassing the long-standing authority of a tyone whose authority was based on the confidence of the people who had granted him his power, which sometimes meant the difference between life and death, thirteen years before.

He had earned his position the hard way, as had all the old-time chiefs, by proving that he was better suited than anyone else to protect and provide for his people. He was still protecting and providing for them, but now only reluctantly because he could see no else to take his place. Not even his son could do that. The tyone was extremely agitated.

Forget the minor violation of friendships, confidences and trusts which had been built up over these years. Nicolai began to look more critically at himself.
 
Where was I while all this was happening?
I should have known. Maybe I did, but just did not want to admit it to myself.
Maybe I am too proud of being supreme chief to admit that if I look around me, I no longer really am. I should have known. I should have. I should have done something. Acted. Tried to gather my people back from this new illness, this madness which has infected our valley.
But even if I had acted earlier, would they listen? Would it have mattered? What could I have done before now? Why did I fail to act? I should have known. I probably did know. Yes, I knew something was wrong. But I have never before had to follow my people to make sure they did the right thing. Either it is done or it is not.
I am not my peoples’ parent. But I feel like a parent tonight, like I am already burying my sons and my daughters. What am I to do? What am I to do now?



The chief caught himself. He was engaging in useless self-doubt. He was still needed by his people. Maybe now more than ever. His role as tyone was not yet over. Not just yet. He turned his thoughts to his beloved Denyii Tsedi Na where he had grown up. He needed to bring a sense of peace to himself. The Tsedi Na, land of the mountain sheep and goats, where one could look, seemingly forever upon the distant world from dizzying heights which few Indians or whites had ever experienced was the place which would bring him his peace. Tomorrow he would begin to craft a plan.

Nicolai, get up! The sezel is ready and it is cold out here! The young men will not enter until you have taken your place inside. Nor will I,” Billum shouted.

“Nor will I, father.”

Nicolai looked into the eyes of his son gratefully.

 
  Goodlataw
"I know that you are here to stay and that you will not go away.  Nor will we leave.  We have always been here and we will always be here.  One day you may leave, but we will not.  This is the only home we have known.  Our ancestors are buried here.  This land is our life.  It has always provided for us."  --Chief Nicolai talking to members of the McClellan party at Taral, 1899.
Chief Goodlataw  --Charles Bunnell Collection, 58-1026-2126, UAF Archives


Continue with

Ch 6, Pt 1: "Nicolai's Anger," from "Legacy of the Chief"

Chapter 6, Pt 1: "Nicolai's Anger" 
from "Legacy of the Chief"



Nicolai v2

The Great Tyone, Skolai Nicolai  --AMHA


The tyone was slow to anger. He had
been building up to this for some time. Nicolai was visibly angry and
made no attempt to hide his emotions. Never had he seen such a
disappointing salmon run. The women and children kept their distance
from him. His temper was legendary. It seemed best to leave Nicolai
alone when he was in this sullen mood which could quickly flash into a
fearsome display of rage.

The extensive fish-trapping operations in the Copper River delta area on
the far side of the Chugach Range, encouraged by the presence of
large-scale cannery operations at Orca Inlet, were taking their toll.
Nicolai was aware of the canneries, but did not realize until much later
that the fish traps would have a drastic effect on the Copper River
salmon runs.


Salmon was always dependable when game was scare. This year the game
seemed to have vanished. A huge number of whites coming down the
Klaw’tee na had overwhelmed the small number of Ahtnas in Chief
Stickwan’s territory. The white prospectors had taken their rifles into
the wilderness along both banks of the Copper River and decimated the
game.




netting salmon
The extensive
fish-trapping operations in the Copper River delta area on the
south side of the Chugach Range, encouraged by the presence of
large-scale cannery operations at Orca Inlet, were taking their
toll.  Nicolai was aware of the canneries, but did not
realize until much later that the fish traps would have a
drastic effect on the Copper River salmon runs.
A Native girl
using a spruce root net to dip net on the Copper River --AMHA,
Richard M. Jones, B82.51.36
     
 


The first indications that things were changing were the incessant
smoke-filled skies caused by a series of forest fires. The smoke
emanated from area centering on the lake at the base of Klutina Glacier.
The word had spread quickly that large numbers of trees had been cut by
an ongoing invasion of prospectors in the upper western reaches of the
valley. Forest fires were becoming commonplace, causing the first
disruptions to the local game. Nicolai was always wary of smoke-filled
skies. He knew all too well the prophetic raven story which warned of
times which would be marked by events such as this.


It had not taken long before some of these prospectors began extending
beyond Stickwan’s area into the lower valley which was controlled by
Nicolai. These men seemed to be searching for everything, but gold was
on the top of the list. Persistent rumors that gold had been found up
the Nizina valley near the traditional home of Nicolai brought the first
wave of these men into the Chitina River area. The newcomers were
welcomed for the items they offered to trade for salmon, furs and even
game meat, but it soon Nicolai’s people were overwhelmed by the huge
numbers of whites.


White men’s clothing, guns, tobacco, tea, and cooking implements became
common. But so did other things, such as smallpox, tuberculosis, and
whiskey.


Nicolai watched all this activity from the relative safety and isolation
of Taral. He had warned his people at every opportunity to stay away
from the whiskey. Perhaps the diseases could not be avoided, but the
effects of the whiskey could.

 


The white men are well practiced in the art of trading. They know how to make us look like fools. They have no regrets for what they do 
and they treat us as if we were children. 

It would be best not to trade with them at all. If you must have whiskey, you should only trade for the fish or the game which you and your family can spare. But it is far better that you share with your less fortunate neighbor than trade for whiskey with the whites. If 
 they ask you to show them gold or copper for whiskey, better that you flee than make a deal with the white devil spirits. They care nothing for us or for our ways. They claim to be our friends, but they do not know what that means
.




Summer had moved into fall. Winter was on the way. Not enough salmon had
been caught for the tyone to sustain his people over the coming winter.
He began dispatching his hunting parties into the distant mountains in a
futile search for more game. The hunting parties came back with very
little except the news that prospecting camps had sprung up everywhere
in the Nizina valley. The tyone watched his hunting area diminish
drastically as the whites moved in.


Nicolai would have gone out to head the hunting parties himself, except
that the early beginnings of the influx of whites into his area was
becoming a matter of great concern to him. He felt that he should not
leave his women and children alone at a time when so many prospectors
were pouring into the country.

The hunting parties were not successful. Lately they had not even been
returning to Taral or Tonslahti. The chief came to believe that some
other force he could not quite see was at work. Perhaps is was the
c’uniis which had entered with the whites, or even Yaabel himself. The
men who returned remained silent. They avoided work. Instead they seemed
anxious to head upriver into the white man’s new settlement areas,
especially the trading post at the Lower Tonsina.




Doc Billum home
Doc Billum's
home at Lower Tonsina
.  --Candy Waugaman Collection

 

The moment the boat entered the Tonsina River channel the men could hear the drum beats. 
Nicolai stepped off the boat first. Billum followed him. The younger ones
stayed with the craft. In the advancing shadows of the northern Chugach
Range, Nicolai spotted several new log cabins he had never before seen.
The noise of drum beating grew louder as the two men walked up the path.
Soon they could hear the loud singing of several drunken people. With
the sun dipping below the tall Chugach ridge just beyond Billum’s
landing, it had become chilly, but a brightly burning fire was just
ahead. A large number of men and several women, both white and Native,
were dancing and singing to songs which Nicolai had never heard.
Nicolai was obviously not the chief there. The white devil spirit's whiskey 
was the only chief.



Taral Creek had created a small promontory as it flowed into the Copper
River which allowed a commanding view of the river in both directions.
It was low-lying, sandy and grassy. The brush along the main shore was
thick enough to offer some protection from the winds which swept up the
valley, but Nicolai sat beyond the protection of the brush on a drift
log beached at the edge of the promontory. He had built a fire earlier
to keep the chill off. It had finally turned to hot coals, which he idly
stirred. He reached over to grab another log to throw on the fire. The
constant light breeze helped keep the fire alive. Even though the breeze
was uncomfortable, the fire helped alleviate the sting of the cold winds
which blew glacier dust and sand in his face.


He peered in the direction of Woods Canyon, observing Eskilida’s fish
camp on the west bank. Eskilida’s grandsons had cleared the area off,
leaving a good view of two caches on poles and three small cabins by a
large fire pit. He had seen no activity either there or at the camp
farther down the river in days. Nicolai could hear nothing except the
constant sound of the Copper River. He detected no shouting, no drum
beats, nothing.




Taral view
Looking
down river toward Woods Canyon, Copper River, CRNW Railway
surveyed right-of-way on the right, Taral on the left (east
bank).  
--Julie Sweeney Collection, 97-139-667, UAF Archives


The most distant camp could only be seen late at night when the fire
burned in the pit. He had seen no fires in that direction since early in
the season. Because most of the Indians who once lived on the east side
had now moved to the west bank, having became attracted to whatever the
white man had to offer, these camps were usually busy with activity. Not
now. All the people seemed to have vanished along with the game Nicolai
sought.


Nicolai turned from the river to look up the bank toward the small row
of cabins which was his domain. He was the only adult male at Taral. The
rest were women and children, including those of his son Goodlataw, who
was also absent. Some of men were off in a hunt up the Hanagita River,
but most had crossed the Copper River in the last few months and had not
returned. Nicolai reluctantly concluded that it was time he saw for
himself what was happening in the much larger world which existed
somewhere beyond his limited range of vision across the Copper River.


Nicolai had no boats left at Taral, but his old ally Doc Billum would be
coming by soon with one of his boats on Billum’s routine run to check on
the many fish camps. Nicolai sat out on the wind-swept promontory so he
could spot the boat early and signal it in case the Doc failed to head
in his direction.


Doc Billum was tall and imposing, towering well above Nicolai. Most men
deeply respected and even feared the Doc, but Billum had long since
recognized that Nicolai, who was a shorter and somewhat younger man, was
more formidable, even though not ordinarily threatening by nature. The
two had developed a respect and liking for each other that would last a
lifetime, though they rarely had an opportunity to visit each other
until the later years when most everyone would move to the more
convenient location of Chittyna village.


Ch 5: "A Warning from Uk'eledi," from "Legacy of the Chief"


Chapter 5: "A Warning from Uk'eledi,"
from "Legacy of the Chief" 








Mt Wrangell
Uk'eledi  (pronounced kelth-edi ) "The
One that Smokes"   --USGS ~1904

After Nicolai left Lt. Henry Allen and his
expedition at Tsetsaan’ Na’ where they would continue on toward the
headwaters of the Tanana Valley, the tyone began the long trip down the
Copper River alone with his brother Eskilida in sight of Hwniindi
K’elt’aeni--”the one who controls the weather from upriver” and Hwdaandi
K’elt’aeni -- “the one who controls the weather from down-river.”

From Tsetsaan’ Na’ the Hwniindi K’elt’aeni is stunning. The mountain can
be seen from Mendaesde and even well beyond into the distant east. In
between this and the lower Hwdaandi K’elt’aeni first appears Uk’eledi.
As one eventually approaches our lower Ahtna home of Taral, it is
Uk’eledi (Mt Wrangell) which dominates. 


Two times in Nicolai’s lifetime, the chief watched as Uk’eledi erupted,
sending out enormous ash plumes. Now known as Mount Wrangell, it was
first said to erupt to warn of the coming of the Russians--long before
they actually entered the interior. As Eskilida and Nicolai paddled
down-river approaching the village of Klaa te’kaa , the great rounded
mountain, capped heavily with ice, burst forth, spewing ash high into
the heavens. Soon ash began raining back upon the earth, layering the
entire valley in a choking cloud of fine whites and grays.


This is a sign from the Great Creator,” he said to Eskilida.


But we have been told since we were children that the smoke means the
sleep-doctors are fighting among themselves. Is that not what you
remember from the old tales, Nicolai
?”


Does that look like our own ancestors are fighting, Soon-ga? This is
not our ancestors we are witnessing. It’s different this time. The Great
Creator is revealing himself
.


It’s the warning we have long expected. The Creator is showing his
anger. He is angry with us and he’s giving us a warning. The white man
has come to stay. Now we know it is to be. We must prepare ourselves
.”





Evening Shadows
Evening falls on an Ahtna
camp near Tsedi-na --Simpson files


Eskilida looked into the sky toward Uk’eledi with the same expression of
anxiety which was mirrored in the face of his younger brother Nicolai.
He did not envy Nicolai. Eskilida could see that this was only the
beginning. Nicolai was the one who was ordained to lead his people
through this ordeal. This too had been predicted.


One great chief, who would be a very young man, would be there at the
time of the Great Change to guide his people. He would not survive it.
They returned to Taral in silence. Both men had much to consider. It was
disturbing. Nicolai did not feel ready for the challenge which lay
ahead.

The next few years were quiet ones. Life went on as usual and the memory
of Lieutenant Henry Allen and his party began to fade. The tyone alone
remembered only too clearly what had happened. He was plagued with
nightmares over the Great Change. Just as the chiefs before him had
waited for the vengeful return of the Russians, the tyone awaited the
return of the Americans with their lust for the mountain of copper.


Fifteen years later Uk’eledi erupted one final time. This occurred the
summer following the winter when Nicolai revealed the location of the
Nicolai Prospect to Edward Gates. Nicolai was in the sezel of his thlen
nee cheelth, his summer home in Taral.


Nicolai had already passed on the role of chief to his son Goodlataw.
The new chief left the sezel for more water. He felt a strong need to
leave the sezel,
and offered to bring in more water. Although Goodlataw was the new
chief, the others in the sezel were all his elders. He returned in only
moments without the water, quite shaken, summoning Nicolai and the
others outside to view the tall dark column of ashes coming out of
Uk’eledi. Nicolai emerged from his steam bath, accompanied by Eskilida
and Skilly. All of them stood ked’eh-had-eh and dripping from the
effects of the hot steam. The four men looked up into the blackening
skies in wide-eyed wonderment. This time the eruption had a much darker
character. It was June of 1900. In another month, two men named Jack
Smith and Clarence Warner would discover the fabulously rich Bonanza
lode.


Nicolai, Eskilida, Skilly, and Goodlataw stood naked and alone. The new
chief had only left the sezel long enough to grab more water from
outside the entryway when he realized that the sky was darkening.


Engii! This is the end!


It is not engii, and it is not the end, See-ah. It is a c’enaa--a
warning from the Great Creator.



“We stand before Him as we were born--ked’eh-had-eh--naked, but also
humbled. It is only fitting that we view him in his anger in this way.
Only if we are truly humble can we hope to escape his wrath.


The Creator has long remained silent, but no more. This is His c’enaa.
He is warning us that we must remain as we are--humble but prepared to
protect the land of the Uk’eledi and our own people from the c’uniis of
the white man. What lies ahead can no longer be predicted. All we know
is that we are here now. What happens tomorrow now that the white man
has arrived with his white devil spirits--the c’uniis-- is not for us to
know. What I can tell you all is that we must hold onto each other as
the Saghani utsuuy. As the people of the Raven Clan we are also the
Children of the Earth. It will be left to us alone to protect this land
from the Yaabel which has followed the white man with his c’uniis into
our ‘Atna’tuuTs’itu’
. ”


The four men watched grimly as the heavy clouds began to descend upon
the valley. The grayish fine ashes were thick, making it difficult to
breathe.


We can do no more. Let us return to the sezel and contemplate the Great
Change in silence
.”


The four men disappeared into the sezel behind the large log structure
which was the summer family home of Nicolai. Outside the ashes began to
rain down, but within the heavily-steamed sezel the four men--three from
the older generation and one of the new Ahtna leaders breathed uneasily as
each quietly contemplated their very uncertain futures.



Taral House
Chief Goodlataw's house at Taral, Anchorage
Museum of HIstory & Art, B74.36.26g



Continue with
Chapter 6: "Nicolai's Anger"

Ch 4, Pt 2: The Russian C'eyigge'

Chapter 4, Pt 2: The Russian C'eyigge' , 
from "Legacy of the Chief"


  Doc Billum family
The tyone was well aware of the recent history of the U.S. Cavalry regarding the harsh treatment of the Native inhabitants of the western United States. He was already coming to realize that everything he was trying to achieve was in danger of being ultimately lost.  If nothing else, he sought to buy as much time as possible for his people to adjust to a different future than they had every known.  Their continued existence as Ahtnas had to be assured.  At some point into the conversation (with Lieutenant Henry Allen) it had dawned on Nicolai that the world of his ancestors would probably be buried with him.
Doc Billum and his Family at Lower Tonsina, circa 1910.  --AMHA, B71.14.25



It may well have been the lure of the copper was the deciding factor in the lieutenant’s decision to alter his planned route at additional risk to his small expedition. After the party had time to recuperate, they left their cache at Taral. Skilly led Lieutenant Allen’s group through the mountainous pathway which followed the Hanagita Valley, heading east toward the high glacier country along a difficult trail which finally ended at Nicolai’s village of C’ena’Tsedi.

When he finally arrived at Nicolai’s winter camp near the Chitistone River, the lieutenant, who was a relatively young man himself, must have been quite startled to realize that the tyone was only eighteen years old. Nicolai was enormously relieved when he saw that he was facing a representative of the U.S. Army rather than of the Russian imperial navy--a party Nicolai would have been obliged to kill on the spot. 

Lieutenant Allen, acting on instructions to determine whether peace could be made with the interior Indians, soon realized that he chose correctly by following Skilly to this remote place. The lieutenant soon had little doubt in his mind that Nicolai was the man who spoke for the people of the Copper River valley--’Atna’tuuTs’itu’.

Nicolai was determined to maintain the upper hand. For several hours he pretended to be unable to understand the lieutenant. Yet he understood English reasonably well, thanks to the presence of prospector John Bremner, who had stayed at Taral several months in the last year.

The lieutenant was in an unusually unique  position because he had some familiarity with the Apache language. He was the first white man to recognize that the Apache and Athabascan languages were related.

He was anxious to make an accommodation with the chief, having been instructed to try to pave the way toward peaceful relations between the Native leaders and the U.S. Army. Lieutenant Allen had an earnest quality which Nicolai soon recognized. The tyone ultimately accepted his sincerity. At the same time, Nicolai was acutely aware that the lieutenant could only be the point man for some vast unknown and possibly deadly power.


Allen drawing of Nicolai
from "An Expedition to the Copper, Tanana and Koyukuk River in 1885, Lt. Henry Allen



Skilly witnessed the event. He believed that the lieutenant was suitably impressed by our young chief. Lieutenant Allen drew a simple sketch of the chief and some of his women and children at the camp. The drawing has survived to this day and is well known. Upon seeing this drawing, the chief was impressed and flattered. He finally began to talk with Lieutenant Allen in the English language. 

The lieutenant wanted three things. He needed a fresh supply of food so he could return to his own cache at Taral. His provisions had already run low. Beyond that he wanted access to additional provisions for the longer trip up the Copper River. Nicolai had already greeted the party in the traditional way as honored guests. They held a great feast which demonstrated the chief’s recognition of Lieutenant Allen as an official representative of high standing. The Lieutenant found that he was treated far better than he had reason to expect.


  Eskilida Camp view 2
The tyone alone understood that the 1885 Allen Expedition was only the beginning . . .He was plagued with nightmares over the Great Change.  Just as the chiefs before him had waited for the vengeful return of the Russians, the tyone awaited the return of the Americans with their lust for gold, or worse--the mountain of copper.  Fifteen years later Uk'eledi erupted one final time.  This occurred the summer following the winter when Nicolai revealed the location of the Nicolai Prospect to Edward Gates.
Eskilida fish camp at CRNW mile 125 sites on the west bank of the Copper River in view of Mt. Wrangell.  --UAF, E.B. Schrock, 84-80-51
 A close view of Eskilida camp looking east across the Copper River  --Simpson Files
Eskilda Camp view 1



The second request was that the chief personally accompany the lieutenant’s party up the Copper River. Nicolai was reluctant to return with Lieutenant Allen to Taral only to guide the party up the Copper River. At first he would not agree, but he contemplated the possibilities for trade and the implications of a U.S. Army official expedition entering his territory. Ultimately he recognized that it was the role the tyone of Taral to guide the party through his country. He did not agree to go beyond Taral, however, until after the party had already returned to that encampment.

His presence proved to be crucial to the expedition. It guaranteed that the party would be able to proceed through the valley in peace and with a good supply of food. Everywhere they went there was a welcoming feast honoring the tyone and his personal guests. Although Nicolai only guided the expedition as far as Tazlina, the Indians far up river, particularly the war-like Mendaesde, understood that Lieutenant Allen was to be recognized as the honored guest of the chief.

With successive chiefs at each village, Lieutenant Allen had to negotiate for provisions, using what he brought from the coast for trading stock. Fortunately the expedition still had the full cache it had left at Taral. Their supplies included tea, tobacco and other highly valued items the lieutenant would need to trade with the various chiefs. None of the village leaders would deal with the lieutenant without first consulting Nicolai. The tyone ensured that the party paid dearly for their supply of food and his continued support in the Copper River valley. Undoubtedly Lieutenant Allen was relieved when Nicolai finally turned back at Tazlina. He felt as though he had been taken by a very cunning young chief. It had been an expensive trip.

Most important and far-reaching of his three requests was the last one. Lieutenant Allen wanted the chief to reveal or at least confirm that there really was a rich source of the legendary copper. Although Nicolai refused to show the U.S. Army party the location of his tsedi, Nicolai confirmed that native copper existed everywhere. The presence of copper at the camp was readily apparent anyway, mainly due to the large number of copper gun shells. The lieutenant also saw several pieces of copper which could only have been taken from a rich vein. When he asked Nicolai to point out the direction of the richest of the tsedi, the tyone turned toward the northwest, to the ridges which extend from K’als’i Tl’aadi. He pointed in the direction of the Nicolai Prospect.

Skilly related to us that the small group of white men in the party turned silent. The tyone said nothing. He simply pointed. But there was something in the manner in which he did this which gave the party the impression that they had just learned of a sacred place. The lieutenant, the sergeant, the private and the prospector all sat in stunned silence after Nicolai waved his arm toward the mountain ridge. Until then, the only known copper existed in the occasional nuggets which were revealed by the many small streams in the area. The tyone had just pointed in the direction of the true mother lode which all white men sought. They were certain of it. Every one of them sensed the historic impact of the moment.

It was the beginning of the end for the old Ahtna ways. The white man finally had something resembling official confirmation that the legendary copper lode really existed in the Wrangells. It was only a matter of finding a way to the source and a means to transport it to the coast. That would come soon enough.
The men had many things to discuss. Grandfather asked the lieutenant about the Russians. This was when the lieutenant assured Nicolai that the dreaded and hated Russians were long gone, never to return. The lieutenant inquired about the massacres, but Nicolai had very little to say. He did not want to discuss the matter. Better to keep silent about it.

When Lieutenant Allen mistakenly said that the American government had purchased Alaska from the Russians, he received a long, thoughtful stare from the chief. Nicolai, after an uncomfortable silence, finally asked how the Russians could sell this land when the Russians themselves had never successfully laid claim to it. Indeed the Mendaesde slaughtered the Russians at Batzulnetas close to the headwaters of the Copper River many years before. The Russians never returned. They had no claim.

The tyone wanted to know how any man could believe he might own land in the same way that he owned his weapons or his clothes--or his wives. Men would be born and then they would die, but the land would always be there. The lieutenant never attempted to explain the western concept of land ownership and the chief did not want to hear it.

Nicolai then told Henry Allen that he considered the lieutenant and his party to be guests of his Ahtna hosts, in a land which had always been and always would be that of the ‘Atna’tuuTs’itu’. No other men had been known to live in this remote, rugged, mountainous country in the extreme north end of North America. Nicolai did not mention that we had ancient tales of other men who had been here at the time of the Atna’ Ben --an enormous lake said to have once covered all but the highest points of land which were themselves covered by glaciers.

The tyone was aware of the recent history of the U.S. Cavalry regarding the harsh treatment of the native inhabitants of the western United States. He was already coming to realize that everything he was trying to achieve was in danger of being ultimately lost. If nothing else, he wanted to buy as much time as possible for his people to adjust to a very different future. Their continued existence as Ahtnas had to be assured. At some point into the conversation it had dawned on Nicolai that the world of his ancestors would probably be buried with him.

Nicolai’s deep concerns not lost on Lieutenant Allen. He politely listened to the chief and thoughtfully considered what he had said. He reassured his host that he was not the lead man in a massive military invasion. The Army did not have the resources to accomplish that, in any case. The lieutenant failed to add that instead the incursion would come gradually. At first, nothing would happen at all.
Neither man held any illusions. They were acutely aware that they had just become significant pawns in an enormous twist of history. Neither wanted to dishonor the other, for there was nothing to be gained. Both made the best of what each man suspected to be the inevitable. The lieutenant now held the door open with the foot of the American government. In time the railroad would come and the door would be opened wide. The Indians saved the cavalry only to be sideswiped by the coming freight train.

 
  blasting in Woods Canyon
The Indians saved the cavalry only to be sideswiped by the coming freight train.
Blasting the railbed in Woods Canyon - 1910 --John R. Van Cleve Collection


 
Copper River Natives, including Horse Creek Mary, Anchorage Museum of History & Art, B62.1A.138