<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<h4>ARRIVAL OF SECOND RELIEF, OR REED-GREENWOOD PARTY—FEW SURVIVORS STRONG
ENOUGH TO TRAVEL—WIFE'S CHOICE—PARTINGS AT DONNER CAMP—MY TWO
SISTERS AND I DESERTED—DEPARTURE OF SECOND RELIEF PARTY.</h4>
<p>It was the first of March, about ten days after the arrival of the
First Relief, before James Reed and William McCutchen succeeded in
reaching the party they had left long months before. They, together
with Brit Greenwood, <SPAN name="IAnchorM15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexM15">Hiram Miller</SPAN>,
<SPAN name="IAnchorJ2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexJ2">Joseph Jondro</SPAN>,
<SPAN name="IAnchorS40"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexS40">Charles Stone</SPAN>,
<SPAN name="IAnchorT27"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexT27">John Turner</SPAN>,
<SPAN name="IAnchorD4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexD4">Matthew Dofar</SPAN>, <SPAN name="IAnchorC1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexC1">Charles Cady</SPAN>, and
<SPAN name="IAnchorC11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexC11">Nicholas Clark</SPAN> constituted the
Second Relief.</p>
<p>They reported having met the First Relief with eighteen refugees at the
head of Bear Valley, three having died <i>en route</i> from the cabins.
Among the survivors Mr. Reed found his wife, his daughter Virginia, and
his son James F. Reed, Jr. He learned there from his anxious wife that
their two younger children, Martha J. and Thomas K. Reed, had also left
the cabin with her, but had soon given out and been carried back and
left at the mountain camp by Messrs. Glover and Moutrey, who then
retraced their steps and rejoined the party.</p>
<p>Consequently this Reed-Greenwood party, realizing that this was no time
for tarrying, had hurried on to the lake cabins, where Mr. Reed had the
happiness of finding his children still alive. There he and five
companions encamped upon the snow and fed and soothed the unfortunates.
Two members continued on to Aunt Betsy's abode, and Messrs. Cady and
Clark came to ours.</p>
<p>This Relief had followed the example of its predecessor in leaving
supplies at marked caches along the trail for the return trip.
Therefore, it reached camp with a frugal amount for distribution. The
first rations were doled out with careful hand, lest harm should come
to the famishing through overeating, still, the rescuers administered
sufficient to satisfy the fiercest cravings and to give strength for
the prospective journey.</p>
<p>While crossing Alder Creek Valley to our tent that first afternoon,
Messrs. Cady and Clark had seen fresh tracks of a bear and cubs, and in
the evening the latter took one of our guns and went in pursuit of the
game which would have been a godsend to us. It was dark when he
returned and told my mother that he had wounded the old bear near the
camp, but that she had escaped with her young through the pines into a
clump of tamarack, and that he would be able to follow her in the
morning by the blood-stains on the snow.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the two men who had come to Aunt Betsy's with food thought
it best not to tell her that her son William had died <i>en route</i> to the
settlement with the First Relief. They selected from among her
children in camp, Solomon, Mary, and Isaac, as able to follow a leader
to the lake cabins, and thence to go with the outgoing Second Relief,
across the mountains. Hopefully, that mother kissed her three children
good-bye, and then wistfully watched them depart with their rescuers on
snowshoes. She herself was strong enough to make the journey, but
remained because there was no one to help to carry out her two youngest
children.</p>
<p>Thirty-one of the company were still in the camps when this party
arrived, nearly all of them children, unable to travel without
assistance, and the adults were too feeble to give much aid to the
little ones upon the snow. Consequently, when my father learned that
the Second Relief comprised only ten men, he felt that he himself would
never reach the settlement. He was willing to be left alone, and
entreated mother to leave him and try to save herself and us children.
He reminded her that his life was almost spent, that she could do
little for him were she to remain, and that in caring for us children
she would be carrying on his work.</p>
<p>She who had to choose between the sacred duties of wife and mother,
thought not of self. She looked first at her helpless little children,
then into the face of her suffering and helpless husband, and tenderly,
unhesitatingly, announced her determination to remain and care for him
until both should be rescued, or death should part them.</p>
<SPAN name="image-20"><!-- Image 20 --></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="img/020.jpg" height-obs="300" width-obs="511" alt="From an old drawing made from description furnished by Wm. G. Murphy. ARRIVAL OF RELIEF PARTY, FEBRUARY 18, 1847">
</center>
<h5>From an old drawing made from description furnished by Wm. G. Murphy. ARRIVAL OF RELIEF PARTY, FEBRUARY 18, 1847</h5>
<hr>
<SPAN name="image-21"><!-- Image 21 --></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="img/021.jpg" height-obs="300" width-obs="430" alt="Photograph by Lynwood Abbott. DONNER LAKE">
</center>
<h5>Photograph by Lynwood Abbott. DONNER LAKE</h5>
<hr>
<p>Perplexities and heartaches multiplied with the morning hours of the
following day. Mr. Clark, being anxious to provide more food, started
early to hunt the wounded bear. He had not been gone long, when
Mr. Stone arrived from the lake cabins and told Mr. Cady that the other
members of the Relief had become alarmed at gathering storm clouds, and
had resolved to select at once the ablest among the emigrants and
hasten with them across the summit, and to leave Clark, Cady, and
himself to cut the necessary fuel for the camps, and otherwise assist
the sufferers until the Third Relief should reach them.</p>
<p>Cady and Stone, without waiting to inform Clark, promptly decided upon
their course of action. They knew the scarcity of provisions in camp,
the condition of the trail over the mountains, the probability of long,
fierce March storms, and other obstacles which might delay future
promised relief, and, terror-stricken, determined to rejoin their
party, regardless of opposition, and return to the settlement.</p>
<p>Mother, fearing that we children might not survive another storm in
camp, begged Messrs. Cady and Stone to take us with them, offering them
five hundred dollars in coin, to deliver us to Elitha and Leanna at
Sutter's Fort. The agreement was made, and she collected a few
keepsakes and other light articles, which she wished us to have, and
which the men seemed more than willing to carry out of the mountains.
Then, lovingly, she combed our hair and helped us to dress quickly for
the journey. When we were ready, except cloak and hood, she led us to
the bedside, and we took leave of father. The men helped us up the
steps and stood us up on the snow. She came, put on our cloaks and
hoods, saying, as if talking to herself, "I may never see you again,
but God will take care of you."</p>
<p>Frances was six years and eight months old and could trudge along quite
bravely, but Georgia, who was little more than five, and I, lacking a
week of four years, could not do well on the heavy trail, and we were
soon taken up and carried. After travelling some distance, the men left
us sitting on a blanket upon the snow, and went ahead a short distance
where they stopped and talked earnestly with many gesticulations. We
watched them, trembling lest they leave us there to freeze. Then
Frances said,</p>
<p>"Don't feel afraid. If they go off and leave us, I can lead you back to
mother by our foot tracks on the snow."</p>
<p>After a seemingly long time, they returned, picked us up and took us on
to one of the lake cabins, where without a parting word, they left us.</p>
<p>The Second Relief Party, of which these men were members, left camp on
the third of March. They took with them seventeen refugees—the Breen
and Graves families, Solomon Hook, Isaac
and <SPAN name="IAnchorD58"></SPAN><SPAN href="#IndexD58">Mary Donner</SPAN>, and Martha
and Thomas, Mr. Reed's two youngest children.</p>
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