<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h4>On the Monongahela—The over-mountain
path—Redstone Old Fort—The Youghiogheny—Braddock's
defeat.</h4>
<p><span class="smcap">In camp near Charleroi, Pa.</span>, Friday,
May 4.—Pilgrim, built for the glassy lakes
and smooth-flowing rivers of Wisconsin, had
suffered unwonted indignities in her rough
journey of a thousand miles in a box-car. But
beyond a leaky seam or two, which the Doctor
had righted with clouts and putty, and
some ugly scratches which were only paint-deep,
she was in fair trim as she gracefully lay
at the foot of the Brownsville shipyard this
morning and received her lading.</p>
<p>There were spectators in abundance.
Brownsville, in the olden day, had seen many
an expedition set out from this spot for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page2" id="page2"></SPAN></span>
grand tour of the Ohio, but not in the personal
recollection of any in this throng of
idlers, for the era of the flatboat and pirogue
now belongs to history. Our expedition is a
revival, and therein lies novelty. However,
the historic spirit was not evident among our
visitors—railway men, coal miners loafing
out the duration of a strike, shipyard hands
lying in wait for busier times, small boys
blessed with as much leisure as curiosity, and
that wonder of wonders, a bashful newspaper
reporter. Their chief concern centered in the
query, how Pilgrim could hold that goodly
heap of luggage and still have room to spare
for four passengers? It became evident that
her capacity is akin to that of the magician's
bag.</p>
<p>"A dandy skiff, gents!" said the foreman
of the shipyard, as we settled into our seats—the
Doctor bow, I stroke, with W—— and the
Boy in the stern sheets. Having in silence
critically watched us for a half hour, seated on
a capstan, his red flannel shirt rolled up to his
elbows, and well-corded chest and throat bared
to wind and weather, this remark of the foreman
was evidently the studied judgment of an
expert. It was taken as such by the good-natured
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page3" id="page3"></SPAN></span>
crowd, which, as we pushed off into
the stream, lustily joined in a chorus of "Good-bye!"
and "Good luck to yees, an' ye don't
git th' missus drowndid 'fore ye git to Cairo!"</p>
<p>The current is slight on these lower reaches
of the Monongahela. It comes down gayly
enough from the West Virginia hills, over
many a rapid, and through swirls and eddies
in plenty, until Morgantown is reached; and
then, settling into a more sedate course, is at
Brownsville finally converted into a mere mill-pond,
by the back-set of the four slack-water
dams between there and Pittsburg. This
means solid rowing for the first sixty miles of
our journey, with a current scarcely perceptible.</p>
<p>The thought of it suggests lunch. At the
mouth of Redstone Creek, a mile below Dunlap
Creek, our port of departure, we turn in to
a shaly beach at the foot of a wooded slope,
in semi-rusticity, and fortify the inner man.</p>
<p>A famous spot, this Redstone Creek. Between
its mouth and that of Dunlap's was
made, upon the site of extensive Indian fortification
mounds, the first English agricultural
settlement west of the Alleghanies. It is unsafe
to establish dates for first discoveries, or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page4" id="page4"></SPAN></span>
for first settlements. The wanderers who,
first of all white men, penetrated the fastnesses
of the wilderness were mostly of the
sort who left no documentary traces behind
them. It is probable, however, that the first
Redstone settlement was made as early as
1750, the year following the establishment of
the Ohio Company, which had been chartered
by the English crown and given a half-million
acres of land west of the mountains and south
of the Ohio River, provided it established
thereon a hundred families within seven years.</p>
<p>"Redstone Old Fort"—the name had reference
to the aboriginal earthworks—played
a part in the Fort Necessity and Braddock
campaigns and in later frontier wars; and,
being the western terminus of the over-mountain
road known at various historic periods as
Nemacolin's Path, Braddock's Road, and
Cumberland Pike, was for many years the
chief point of departure for Virginia expeditions
down the Ohio River. Washington, who
had large landed interests on the Ohio, knew
Redstone well; and here George Rogers Clark
set out (1778) upon flatboats, with his rough-and-ready
Virginia volunteers, to capture the
country north of the Ohio for the American
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page5" id="page5"></SPAN></span>
arms—one of the least known, but most momentous
conquests in history.</p>
<p>Early in the nineteenth century, Redstone
became Brownsville. But, whether as Redstone
or Brownsville, it was, in its day, like
most "jumping off" places on the edge of
civilization, a veritable Sodom. Wrote good
old John Pope, in his Journal of 1790, and in
the same strain scores of other veracious chroniclers:
"At this Place we were detained about
a Week, experiencing every Disgust which
Rooks and Harpies could excite." Here thrived
extensive yards in which were built flatboats,
arks, keel boats, and all that miscellaneous
collection of water craft which, with their
roisterly crews, were the life of the Ohio before
the introduction of steam rendered vessels of
deeper draught essential; whereupon much of
the shipping business went down the river to
better stages of water, first to Pittsburg, thence
to Wheeling, and to Steubenville.</p>
<p>All that is of the past. Brownsville is still
a busy corner of the world, though of a different
sort, with all its romance gone. To the
student of Western history, Brownsville will
always be a shrine—albeit a smoky, dusty
shrine, with the smell of lubricators and the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page6" id="page6"></SPAN></span>
clang of hammers, and much talk thereabout
of the glories of Mammon.</p>
<p>The Monongahela is a characteristic mountain
trough. From an altitude of four or five
hundred feet, the country falls in sharp steeps
to a narrow alluvial bench, and then a broad
beach of shale and pebble; the slopes are
broken, here and there, where deep, shadowy
ravines come winding down, bearing muddy
contributions to the greater flood. The higher
hills are crowned with forest trees, the lower
ofttimes checkered with brown fields, recently
planted, and rows of vines trimmed low to
stakes, as in the fashion of the Rhine. The
stream, though still majestic in its sweep, is
henceforth a commercial slack-water, lined
with noisy, grimy, matter-of-fact manufacturing
towns, for the most part literally abutting
one upon the other all of the way down to
Pittsburg, and fast defiling the once picturesque
banks with the gruesome offal of coal mines
and iron plants. Surprising is the density of
settlement along the river. Often, four or five
full-fledged cities are at once in view from our
boat, the air is thick with sooty smoke belched
from hundreds of stacks, the ear is almost
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page7" id="page7"></SPAN></span>
deafened with the whirr and roar and bang of
milling industries.</p>
<p>Tipples of bituminous coal-shafts are ever
in sight—begrimed scaffolds of wood and iron,
arranged for dumping the product of the mines
into both barges and railway cars. Either
bank is lined with railways, in sight of which
we shall almost continually float, all the way
down to Cairo, nearly eleven hundred miles
away. At each tipple is a miners' hamlet; a
row of cottages or huts, cast in a common
mold, either unpainted, or bedaubed with that
cheap, ugly red with which one is familiar in
railway bridges and rural barns. Sometimes
these huts, though in the mass dreary enough,
are kept in neat repair; but often are they
sadly out of elbows—pigs and children promiscuously
at their doors, paneless sash stuffed
with rags, unsightly litter strewn around,
misery stamped on every feature of the homeless
tenements. Dreariest of all is a deserted
mining village, and there are many such—the
shaft having been worked out, or an unquenchable
subterranean fire left to smolder in neglect.
Here the tipple has fallen into creaking
decrepitude; the cabins are without windows
or doors—these having been taken to some
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page8" id="page8"></SPAN></span>
newer hamlet; ridge-poles are sunken, chimneys
tottering; soot covers the gaunt bones,
which for all the world are like a row of skeletons,
perched high, and grinning down at you
in their misery; while the black offal of the
pit, covering deep the original beauty of the
once green slope, is in its turn being veiled
with climbing weeds—such is Nature's haste,
when untrammeled, to heal the scars wrought
by man.</p>
<p>A mile or two below Charleroi is Lock No.
4, the first of the quartet of obstructions between
Brownsville and Pittsburg. We are
encamped a mile below the dam, in a cozy
little willowed nook; a rod behind our ample
tent rises the face of an alluvial terrace, occupied
by a grain-field, running back for an hundred
yards to the hills, at the base of which is
a railway track. Across the river, here some
two hundred and fifty yards wide, the dark,
rocky bluffs, slashed with numerous ravines,
ascend sharply from the flood; at the quarried
base, a wagon road and the customary railway;
and upon the stony beach, two or three rough
shelter-tents, housing the Black Diamond
Brass Band, of Monongahela City, out on a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page9" id="page9"></SPAN></span>
week's picnic to while away the period of the
strike.</p>
<p>It was seven o'clock when we struck camp,
and our frugal repast was finished by lantern-light.
The sun sets early in this narrow trough
through the foothills of the Laurel range.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="smcap">McKeesport, Pa.</span>, Saturday, May 5th.—Out
there on the beach, near Charleroi, with
the sail for an awning, Pilgrim had been converted
into a boudoir for the Doctor, who,
snuggled in his sleeping-bag, emitted an occasional
snore—echoes from the Land of Nod.
W—— and our Boy of ten summers, on their
canvas folding-cots, were peacefully oblivious
of the noises of the night, and needed the kiss
of dawn to rouse them. But for me, always
a light sleeper, and as yet unused to our airy
bedroom, the crickets chirruped through the
long watches.</p>
<p>Two or three freighters passed in the night,
with monotonous swish-swish and swelling
wake. It arouses something akin to awe, this
passage of a steamer's wake upon the beach,
a dozen feet from the door of one's tent.
First, the water is sucked down, leaving for a
moment a wet streak of sand or gravel, a dozen
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page10" id="page10"></SPAN></span>
feet in width; in quick succession come heavy,
booming waves, running at an acute angle with
the shore, breaking at once into angry foam,
and wasting themselves far up on the strand,
for a few moments making bedlam with any
driftwood which chances to have made lodgment
there. When suddenly awakened by
this boisterous turmoil, the first thought is
that a dam has broken and a flood is at hand;
but, by the time you rise upon your elbow, the
scurrying uproar lessens, and gradually dies
away along a more distant shore.</p>
<p>We were slow in getting off this morning.
But the dense fog had been loath to lift; and
at first the stove smoked badly, until we discovered
and removed the source of trouble.
This stove is an ingenious contrivance of the
Doctor's—a box of sheet-iron, of slight weight,
so arranged as to be folded into an incredibly
small space; a vast improvement for cooking
purposes over an open camp-fire, which Pilgrim's
crew know, from long experience in far
distant fields, to be a vexation to eyes and soul.</p>
<p>Coaling hamlets more or less deserted were
frequent this morning—unpainted, windowless,
ragged wrecks. At the inhabited mining
villages, either close to the strand or well up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page11" id="page11"></SPAN></span>
on hillside ledges, idle men were everywhere
about. Women and boys and girls were stockingless
and shoeless, and often dirty to a degree.
But, when conversed with, we found
them independent, respectful, and self-respecting
folk. Occasionally I would, for the mere
sake of meeting these workaday brothers of
ours, with canteen slung on shoulder, climb the
steep flight of stairs cut in the clay bank, and
on reaching the terrace inquire for drinking
water, talking familiarly with the folk who
came to meet me at the well-curb.</p>
<p>There are old-fashioned Dutch ovens in
nearly every yard, a few chickens, and often
a shed for the cow, that is off on her daily
climb over the neighboring hills. Through
the black pall of shale, a few vegetables struggle
feebly to the light; in the corners of the
palings, are hollyhocks and four-o'clocks; and,
on window-sills, rows of battered tin cans,
resplendent in blue and yellow labels, are the
homes of verbenas and geraniums, in sickly
bloom. Now and then, a back door in the
dreary block is distinguished by an arbored
trellis bearing a grape-vine, and furnishing for
the weary housewife a shady kitchen, <i>al fresco</i>.
As a rule, however, there is little attempt to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page12" id="page12"></SPAN></span>
better the homeless shelter furnished by the
corporation.</p>
<p>We restocked with provisions at Monongahela
City, a smart, newish town, and at Elizabeth,
old and dingy. It was at Elizabeth,
then Elizabethtown, that travelers from the
Eastern States, over the old Philadelphia Road,
chiefly took boat for the Ohio—the Virginians
still clinging to Redstone, as the terminus of
the Braddock Road. Elizabethtown, in flatboat
days, was the seat of a considerable boat-building
industry, its yards in time turning out
steamboats for the New Orleans trade, and
even sea-going sailing craft; but, to-day, coal
barges are the principal output of her decaying
shipyards.</p>
<p>By this time, the duties of our little ship's
company are well defined. W—— supervises
the cuisine, most important of all offices; the
Doctor is chief navigator, assistant cook, and
hewer of wood; it falls to my lot to purchase
supplies, to be carrier of water, to pitch tent
and make beds, and, while breakfast is being
cooked, to dismantle the camp and, so far as
may be, to repack Pilgrim; the Boy collects
driftwood, wipes dishes, and helps at what he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page13" id="page13"></SPAN></span>
can—while all hands row or paddle through the
livelong day, as whim or need dictates.</p>
<p>Lock No. 3, at Walton, necessitated a portage
of the load, over the left bank. It is a
steep, rocky climb, and the descent on the
lower side, strewn with stone chips, destructive
to shoe-leather. The Doctor and I let Pilgrim
herself down with a long rope, over a shallow
spot in the apron of the dam.</p>
<p>At six o'clock a camping-ground for the night
became desirable. We were fortunate, last
evening, to find a bit of rustic country in which
to pitch our tent; but all through this afternoon
both banks of the river were lined with
village after village, city after city, scarcely a
garden patch between them—Wilson, Coal
Valley, Lostock, Glassport, Dravosburg, and
a dozen others not recorded on our map, which
bears date of 1882. The sun was setting behind
the rim of the river basin, when we
reached the broad mouth of the Youghiogheny
(pr. Yock-i-o-gai'-ny), which is implanted
with a cluster of iron-mill towns, of which
McKeesport is the center. So far as we could
see down the Monongahela, the air was thick
with the smoke of glowing chimneys, and the
pulsating whang of steel-making plants and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page14" id="page14"></SPAN></span>
rolling-mills made the air tremble. The view
up the "Yough" was more inviting; so, with
oars and paddle firmly set, we turned off our
course and lustily pulled against the strong
current of the tributary. A score or two of
house-boats lay tied to the McKeesport shore or
were bolstered high upon the beach; a fleet of
Yough steamers had their noses to the wharf;
a half-dozen fishermen were setting nets; and,
high over all, with lofty spans of iron cobweb,
several railway and wagon bridges spanned
the gliding stream.</p>
<p>It was a mile and a half up the Yough before
we reached the open country; and then only
the rapidly-gathering dusk drove us ashore,
for on near approach the prospect was not
pleasing. Finally settling into this damp,
shallow pocket in the shelving bank, we find
broad-girthed elms and maples screening us
from all save the river front, the high bank in
the rear fringed with blue violets which emit
a delicious odor, backed by a field of waving
corn stretching off toward heavily-wooded
hills. Our supper cooked and eaten by lantern-light,
we vote ourselves as, after all,
serenely content out here in the starlight—at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page15" id="page15"></SPAN></span>
peace with the world, and very close to Nature's
heart.</p>
<p>There come to us, on the cool evening
breeze, faint echoes of the never-ceasing clang
of McKeesport iron mills, down on the Monongahela
shore. But it is not of these we
talk, lounging in the welcome warmth of the
camp-fire; it is of the age of romance, a hundred
and forty odd years ago, when Major
Washington and Christopher Gist, with famished
horses, floundered in the ice hereabout,
upon their famous midwinter trip to Fort Le
Bœuf; when the "Forks of the Yough" became
the extreme outpost of Western advance,
with all the accompanying horrors of frontier
war; and later, when McKeesport for a time
rivaled Redstone and Elizabethtown as a center
for boat-building and a point of departure
for the Ohio.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="smcap">Pittsburg</span>, Sunday, May 6th.—Many of
the trees are already in full leaf. The trillium
is fading. We are in the full tide of
early summer, up here in the mountains, and
our long journey of six weeks is southward and
toward the plain. The lower Ohio may soon
be a bake-oven, and the middle of June will
be upon us before far-away Cairo is reached.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page16" id="page16"></SPAN></span>
It behooves us to be up and doing. The river,
flowing by our door, is an ever-pressing invitation
to be onward; it stops not for Sunday,
nor ever stops—and why should we, mere
drift upon the passing tide?</p>
<p>There was a smart thunder-shower during
breakfast, followed by a cool, cloudy morning.
At eleven o'clock Pilgrim was laden. A south-eastern
breeze ruffled the waters of the Yough,
and for the first time the Doctor ordered up
the sail, with W—— at the sheet. It was not
long before Pilgrim had the water "singing at
her prow." With a rush, we flew past the
factories, the house-boats, and the shabby
street-ends of McKeesport, out into the Monongahela,
where, luckily, the wind still held.</p>
<p>At McKeesport, the hills on the right are of
a relatively low altitude, smooth and well
rounded. It was here that Braddock, in his
slow progress toward Fort Duquesne, first
crossed the Monongahela, to the wide, level
bottom on the left bank. He had found the
inner country to the right of the river and
below the Yough too rough and hilly for his
march, hence had turned back toward the
Monongahela, fording the river to take advantage
of the less difficult bottom. Some
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page17" id="page17"></SPAN></span>
four miles below this first crossing, hills reapproach
the left bank, till the bottom ceases;
the right thenceforth becomes the more favorable
side for marching. With great pomp, he
recrossed the Monongahela just below the
point where Turtle Creek enters from the east.
Within a hillside ravine, but a hundred yards
inland, the brilliant column fell into an ambuscade
of Indians and French half-breeds,
suffering that heart-sickening defeat which will
ever live as one of the most tragic events in
American history.</p>
<p>The noisy iron-manufacturing town of Braddock
now occupies the site of Braddock's defeat.
Not far from the old ford stretches the
great dam of Lock No. 2, which we portaged,
with the usual difficulties of steep, stony banks.
Braddock is but eight miles across country
from Pittsburg, although twelve by river. We
have, all the way down, an almost constant
succession of iron and steel-making towns,
chief among them Homestead, on the left
bank, seven miles above Pittsburg. The great
strike of July, 1892, with its attendant horrors,
is a lurid chapter in the story of American industry.
With shuddering interest, we view the
famous great bank of ugly slag at the base of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page18" id="page18"></SPAN></span>
the steel mills, where the barges housing the
Pinkerton guards were burned by the mob.</p>
<p>To-day, the Homesteaders are enjoying
their Sunday afternoon outing along the town
shore—nurses pushing baby carriages, self-absorbed
lovers holding hands upon riverside
benches, merry-makers rowing in skiffs or
crossing the river in crowded ferries; the electric
cars, following either side of the stream
as far down as Pittsburg, crowded to suffocation
with gayly-attired folk. They look little
like rioters; yet it seems but the other day
when Homestead men and women and children
were hysterically reveling in atrocities akin to
those of the Paris commune.</p>
<p>Approaching Pittsburg, the high steeps are
everywhere crowded with houses—great masses
of smoke-color, dotted all over with white
shades and sparkling windows, which seem, in
the gray afternoon, to be ten thousand eyes
coldly staring down at Pilgrim and her crew
from all over the flanking hillsides.</p>
<p>Lock No. 1, the last barrier between us and
the Ohio, is a mile or two up the Monongahela,
with warehouses and manufacturing
plants closely hemming it in on either side.
A portage, unaided, appears to be impossible
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page19" id="page19"></SPAN></span>
here, and we resolve to lock through. But it
is Sunday, and the lock is closed. Above, a
dozen down-going steamboats are moored to
the shore, waiting for midnight and the resumption
of business; while below, a similar
line of ascending boats is awaiting the close
of the day of rest. Pilgrim, however, cannot
hang up at the levee with any comfort to her
crew; it is necessary, with evening at hand,
and a thunder-storm angrily rising over the
Pittsburg hills, to get out of this grimy pool,
flanked about with iron and coal yards, chimney
stacks, and a forest of shipping, and to
quickly seek the open country lower down on
the Ohio. The lock-keepers appreciated our
situation. Two or three sturdy, courteous
men helped us carry our cargo, by an intricate
official route, over coils of rope and chains,
over lines of shafting, and along dizzy walks
overhanging the yawning basin; while the
Doctor, directed to a certain chute in midstream,
took unladen Pilgrim over the great
dam, with a wild swoop which made our eyes
swim to witness from the lock.</p>
<p>We had laboriously been rowing on slack-water,
all the way from Brownsville, with the
help of an hour's sail this morning; whereas,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page20" id="page20"></SPAN></span>
now that we were in the strong current below
the dam, we had but to gently paddle to glide
swiftly on our way. A hundred steamers,
more or less, lay closely packed with their
bows upon the right, or principal city wharf.
It was raining at last, and we donned our
storm wraps. No doubt yellow Pilgrim,—thought
hereabout to be a frail craft for these
waters,—her crew all poncho-clad, slipping
silently through the dark water swishing at their
sterns, was a novelty to the steamboat men, for
they leaned lazily over their railings, the officers
on the upper deck, engineers and roustabouts
on the lower, and watched us curiously.</p>
<p>Our period of elation was brief. Black
storm-clouds, jagged and portentous, were
scurrying across the sky; and by the time we
had reached the forks, where the Monongahela,
in the heart of the city, joins forces with
the Alleghany, Pilgrim was being buffeted
about on a chop sea produced by cross currents
and a northwest gale. She can weather an
ordinary storm, but this experience was too
much for her. When a passing steamer threw
out long lines of frothy waves to add to the
disturbance, they broke over our gunwales;
and W—— with the coffee pot and the Boy
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page21" id="page21"></SPAN></span>
with a tin basin were hard pushed to keep the
water below the thwarts.</p>
<p>Seeking the friendly shelter of a house-boat,
of which there were scores tied to the left
bank, we trusted our drenched luggage to the
care of its proprietor, placed Pilgrim in a snug
harbor hard by, and, hurrying up a steep flight
of steps leading from the levee to the terrace
above, found a suburban hotel just as its office
clock struck eight.</p>
<p>Across the Ohio, through the blinding storm,
the dark outlines of Pittsburg and Allegheny
City are spangled with electric lamps which
throw toward us long, shimmering lances of
light, in which the mighty stream, gray, mysterious,
tempest-tossed, is seen to be surging
onward with majestic sweep. Upon its bosom
we are to be borne for a thousand miles. Our
introduction has been unpropitious; it is to be
hoped that on further acquaintance we may
be better pleased with La Belle Rivière.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page22" id="page22"></SPAN></span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />