<SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter IV</h2>
<h2 align="center">The Stickeen River</h2>
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<p>The most interesting of the short excursions we made from Fort
Wrangell was the one up the Stickeen River to the head of steam
navigation. From Mt. St. Elias the coast range extends in a broad,
lofty chain beyond the southern boundary of the territory, gashed by
stupendous cañons, each of which carries a lively river, though
most of them are comparatively short, as their highest sources lie in
the icy solitudes of the range within forty or fifty miles of the
coast. A few, however, of these foaming, roaring streams--the Alsek,
Chilcat, Chilcoot, Taku, Stickeen, and perhaps others--head beyond the
range with some of the southwest branches of the Mackenzie and
Yukon.</p>
<p>The largest side branches of the main-trunk cañons of all
these mountain streams are still occupied by glaciers which descend in
showy ranks, their messy, bulging snouts lying back a little distance
in the shadows of the walls, or pushing forward among the cotton-woods
that line the banks of the rivers, or even stretching all the way
across the main cañons, compelling the rivers to find a channel
beneath them.</p>
<p>The Stickeen was, perhaps, the best known of the rivers that cross
the Coast Range, because it was the best way to the Mackenzie River
Cassiar gold-mines. It is about three hundred and fifty miles long,
and <!-- Page 45 --> is navigable for small steamers a hundred and
fifty miles to Glenora, and sometimes to Telegraph Creek, fifteen
miles farther. It first pursues a westerly course through grassy
plains darkened here and there with groves of spruce and pine; then,
curving southward and receiving numerous tributaries from the north,
it enters the Coast Range, and sweeps across it through a magnificent
cañon three thousand to five thousand feet deep, and more than
a hundred miles long. The majestic cliffs and mountains forming the
cañon walls display endless variety of form and sculpture, and
are wonderfully adorned and enlivened with glaciers and waterfalls,
while throughout almost its whole extent the floor is a flowery
landscape garden, like Yosemite. The most striking features are the
glaciers, hanging over the cliffs, descending the side cañons
and pushing forward to the river, greatly enhancing the wild beauty of
all the others.</p>
<p>Gliding along the swift-flowing river, the views change with
bewildering rapidity. Wonderful, too, are the changes dependent on the
seasons and the weather. In spring, when the snow is melting fast, you
enjoy the countless rejoicing waterfalls; the gentle breathing of warm
winds; the colors of the young leaves and flowers when the bees are
busy and wafts of fragrance are drifting hither and thither from miles
of wild roses, clover, and honeysuckle; the swaths of birch and willow
on the lower slopes following the melting of the winter avalanche
snow-banks; the bossy cumuli swelling in white and purple piles above
the highest peaks; gray rain-clouds wreathing <!-- Page 46 --> the
outstanding brows and battlements of the walls; and the breaking-forth
of the sun after the rain; the shining of the leaves and streams and
crystal architecture of the glaciers; the rising of fresh fragrance;
the song of the happy birds; and the serene color-grandeur of the
morning and evening sky. In summer you find the groves and gardens in
full dress; glaciers melting rapidly under sunshine and rain;
waterfalls in all their glory; the river rejoicing in its strength;
young birds trying their wings; bears enjoying salmon and berries; all
the life of the cañon brimming full like the streams. In autumn
comes rest, as if the year's work were done. The rich hazy sunshine
streaming over the cliffs calls forth the last of the gentians and
goldenrods; the groves and thickets and meadows bloom again as their
leaves change to red and yellow petals; the rocks also, and the
glaciers, seem to bloom like the plants in the mellow golden light.
And so goes the song, change succeeding change in sublime harmony
through all the wonderful seasons and weather.</p>
<p>My first trip up the river was made in the spring with the
missionary party soon after our arrival at Wrangell. We left Wrangell
in the afternoon and anchored for the night above the river delta, and
started up the river early next morning when the heights above the
“Big Stickeen” Glacier and the smooth domes and copings
and arches of solid snow along the tops of the cañon walls were
glowing in the early beams. We arrived before noon at the old
trading-post <!-- Page 47 --> called “Buck's” in front of
the Stickeen Glacier, and remained long enough to allow the few
passengers who wished a nearer view to cross the river to the terminal
moraine. The sunbeams streaming through the ice pinnacles along its
terminal wall produced a wonderful glory of color, and the broad,
sparkling crystal prairie and the distant snowy fountains were
wonderfully attractive and made me pray for opportunity to explore
them.</p>
<p>Of the many glaciers, a hundred or more, that adorn the walls of
the great Stickeen River Cañon, this is the largest. It draws
its sources from snowy mountains within fifteen or twenty miles of the
coast, pours through a comparatively narrow cañon about two
miles in width in a magnificent cascade, and expands in a broad fan
five or six miles in width, separated from the Stickeen River by its
broad terminal moraine, fringed with spruces and willows. Around the
beautifully drawn curve of the moraine the Stickeen River flows,
having evidently been shoved by the glacier out of its direct course.
On the opposite side of the cañon another somewhat smaller
glacier, which now terminates four or five miles from the river, was
once united front to front with the greater glacier, though at first
both were tributaries of the main Stickeen Glacier which once filled
the whole grand cañon. After the main trunk cañon was
melted out, its side branches, drawing their sources from a height of
three or four to five or six thousand feet, were cut off, and of
course became separate glaciers, occupying cirques and branch
cañons along the tops and sides of <!-- Page 48 --> the walls.
The Indians have a tradition that the river used to run through a
tunnel under the united fronts of the two large tributary glaciers
mentioned above, which entered the main cañon from either side;
and that on one occasion an Indian, anxious to get rid of his wife,
had her sent adrift in a canoe down through the ice tunnel, expecting
that she would trouble him no more. But to his surprise she floated
through under the ice in safety. All the evidence connected with the
present appearance of these two glaciers indicates that they were
united and formed a dam across the river after the smaller tributaries
had been melted off and had receded to a greater or lesser height
above the valley floor.</p>
<p>The big Stickeen Glacier is hardly out of sight ere you come upon
another that pours a majestic crystal flood through the evergreens,
while almost every hollow and tributary cañon contains a
smaller one, the size, of course, varying with the extent of the area
drained. Some are like mere snow-banks; others, with the blue ice
apparent, depend in massive bulging curves and swells, and graduate
into the river-like forms that maze through the lower forested regions
and are so striking and beautiful that they are admired even by the
passing miners with gold-dust in their eyes.</p>
<p>Thirty-five miles above the Big Stickeen Glacier is the “Dirt
Glacier,” the second in size. Its outlet is a fine stream,
abounding in trout. On the opposite side of the river there is a group
of five glaciers, one of them descending to within a hundred feet of
the river.</p>
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<p>Near Glenora, on the northeastern flank of the main Coast Range,
just below a narrow gorge called “The Cañon,”
terraces first make their appearance, where great quantities of
moraine material have been swept through the flood-choked gorge and of
course outspread and deposited on the first open levels below. Here,
too, occurs a marked change in climate and consequently in forests and
general appearance of the face of the country. On account of
destructive fires the woods are younger and are composed of smaller
trees about a foot to eighteen inches in diameter and seventy-five
feet high, mostly two-leaved pines which hold their seeds for several
years after they are ripe. The woods here are without a trace of those
deep accumulations of mosses, leaves, and decaying trunks which make
so damp and unclearable mass in the coast forests. Whole
mountain-sides are covered with gray moss and lichens where the forest
has been utterly destroyed. The river-bank cottonwoods are also
smaller, and the birch and contorta pines mingle freely with the coast
hemlock and spruce. The birch is common on the lower slopes and is
very effective, its round, leafy, pale-green head contrasting with the
dark, narrow spires of the conifers and giving a striking character to
the forest. The “tamarac pine” or black pine, as the
variety of <i>P. contorta</i> is called here, is yellowish-green, in
marked contrast with the dark lichen-draped spruce which grows above
the pine at a height of about two thousand feet, in groves and belts
where it has escaped fire and snow avalanches. There is another
handsome spruce hereabouts, <!-- Page 50 --> <i>Picea alba</i>, very
slender and graceful in habit, drooping at the top like a mountain
hemlock. I saw fine specimens a hundred and twenty-five feet high on
deep bottom land a few miles below Glenora. The tops of some of them
were almost covered with dense clusters of yellow and brown cones.</p>
<p>We reached the old Hudson's Bay trading-post at Glenora about one
o'clock, and the captain informed me that he would stop here until the
next morning, when he would make an early start for Wrangell.</p>
<p>At a distance of about seven or eight miles to the northeastward of
the landing, there is an outstanding group of mountains crowning a
spur from the main chain of the Coast Range, whose highest point rises
about eight thousand feet above the level of the sea; and as Glenora
is only a thousand feet above the sea, the height to be overcome in
climbing this peak is about seven thousand feet. Though the time was
short I determined to climb it, because of the advantageous position
it occupied for general views of the peaks and glaciers of the east
side of the great range.</p>
<p>Although it was now twenty minutes past three and the days were
getting short, I thought that by rapid climbing I could reach the
summit before sunset, in time to get a general view and a few pencil
sketches, and make my way back to the steamer in the night. Mr. Young,
one of the missionaries, asked permission to accompany me, saying that
he was a good walker and climber and would not delay me or cause any
trouble. I strongly advised him not to go, <!-- Page 51 --> explaining
that it involved a walk, coming and going, of fourteen or sixteen
miles, and a climb through brush and boulders of seven thousand feet,
a fair day's work for a seasoned mountaineer to be done in less than
half a day and part of a night. But he insisted that he was a strong
walker, could do a mountaineer's day's work in half a day, and would
not hinder me in any way.</p>
<p>“Well, I have warned you,” I said, “and will not
assume responsibility for any trouble that may arise.”</p>
<p>He proved to be a stout walker, and we made rapid progress across a
brushy timbered flat and up the mountain slopes, open in some places,
and in others thatched with dwarf firs, resting a minute here and
there to refresh ourselves with huckleberries, which grew in abundance
in open spots. About half an hour before sunset, when we were near a
cluster of crumbling pinnacles that formed the summit, I had ceased to
feel anxiety about the mountaineering strength and skill of my
companion, and pushed rapidly on. In passing around the shoulder of
the highest pinnacle, where the rock was rapidly disintegrating and
the danger of slipping was great, I shouted in a warning voice,
“Be very careful here, this is dangerous.”</p>
<p>Mr. Young was perhaps a dozen or two yards behind me, but out of
sight. I afterwards reproached myself for not stopping and lending him
a steadying hand, and showing him the slight footsteps I had made by
kicking out little blocks of the crumbling surface, instead of simply
warning him to be careful. <!-- Page 52 -->
Only a few seconds after giving this warning, I was startled by a
scream for help, and hurrying back, found the missionary face
downward, his arms outstretched, clutching little crumbling knobs on
the brink of a gully that plunges down a thousand feet or more to a
small residual glacier. I managed to get below him, touched one of his
feet, and tried to encourage him by saying, “I am below you. You
are in no danger. You can't slip past me and I will soon get you out
of this.”</p>
<p>He then told me that both of his arms were dislocated. It was
almost impossible to find available footholds on the treacherous rock,
and I was at my wits' end to know how to get him rolled or dragged to
a place where I could get about him, find out how much he was hurt,
and a way back down the mountain. After narrowly scanning the cliff
and making footholds, I managed to roll and lift him a few yards to a
place where the slope was less steep, and there I attempted to set his
arms. I found, however, that this was impossible in such a place. I
therefore tied his arms to his sides with my suspenders and necktie,
to prevent as much as possible inflammation from movement. I then left
him, telling him to lie still, that I would be back in a few minutes,
and that he was now safe from slipping. I hastily examined the ground
and saw no way of getting him down except by the steep glacier gully.
After scrambling to an outstanding point that commands a view of it
from top to bottom, to make sure that it was not interrupted by sheer
precipices, I concluded that with <!-- Page 53 --> great care and the
digging of slight footholds he could be slid down to the glacier,
where I could lay him on his back and perhaps be able to set his arms.
Accordingly, I cheered him up, telling him I had found a way, but that
it would require lots of time and patience. Digging a footstep in the
sand or crumbling rock five or six feet beneath him, I reached up,
took hold of him by one of his feet, and gently slid him down on his
back, placed his heels in the step, then descended another five or six
feet, dug heel notches, and slid him down to them. Thus the whole
distance was made by a succession of narrow steps at very short
intervals, and the glacier was reached perhaps about midnight. Here I
took off one of my boots, tied a handkerchief around his wrist for a
good hold, placed my heel in his arm pit, and succeeded in getting one
of his arms into place, but my utmost strength was insufficient to
reduce the dislocation of the other. I therefore bound it closely to
his side, and asked him if in his exhausted and trembling condition he
was still able to walk.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he bravely replied.</p>
<p>So, with a steadying arm around him and many stops for rest, I
marched him slowly down in the starlight on the comparatively smooth,
unassured surface of the little glacier to the terminal moraine, a
distance of perhaps a mile, crossed the moraine, bathed his head at
one of the outlet streams, and after many rests reached a dry place
and made a brush fire. I then went ahead looking for an open way
through the bushes to where larger wood could be had, made a
<!-- Page 54 --> good lasting fire of resiny silver-fir roots, and a
leafy bed beside it. I now told him I would run down the mountain,
hasten back with help from the boat, and carry him down in comfort.
But he would not hear of my leaving him.</p>
<p>“No, no,” he said, “I can walk down. Don't leave
me.”</p>
<p>I reminded him of the roughness of the way, his nerve-shaken
condition, and assured him I would not be gone long. But he insisted
on trying, saying on no account whatever must I leave him. I therefore
concluded to try to get him to the ship by short walks from one fire
and resting-place to another. While he was resting I went ahead,
looking for the best way through the brush and rocks, then returning,
got him on his feet and made him lean on my shoulder while I steadied
him to prevent his falling. This slow, staggering struggle from fire
to fire lasted until long after sunrise. When at last we reached the
ship and stood at the foot of the narrow single plank without side
rails that reached from the bank to the deck at a considerable angle,
I briefly explained to Mr. Young's companions, who stood looking down
at us, that he had been hurt in an accident, and requested one of them
to assist me in getting him aboard. But strange to say, instead of
coming down to help, they made haste to reproach him for having gone
on a “wild-goose chase” with Muir.</p>
<p>“These foolish adventures are well enough for Mr.
Muir,” they said, “but you, Mr. Young, have a work to do;
you have a family; you have a church, and <!-- Page 55 --> you have no
right to risk your life on treacherous peaks and
precipices.”</p>
<p>The captain, Nat Lane, son of Senator Joseph Lane, had been
swearing in angry impatience for being compelled to make so late a
start and thus encounter a dangerous wind in a narrow gorge, and was
threatening to put the missionaries ashore to seek their lost
companion, while he went on down the river about his business. But
when he heard my call for help, he hastened forward, and elbowed the
divines away from the end of the gangplank, shouting in angry
irreverence, “Oh, blank! This is no time for preaching! Don't
you see the man is hurt?”</p>
<p>He ran down to our help, and while I steadied my trembling
companion from behind, the captain kindly led him up the plank into
the saloon, and made him drink a large glass of brandy. Then, with a
man holding down his shoulders, we succeeded in getting the bone into
its socket, notwithstanding the inflammation and contraction of the
muscles and ligaments. Mr. Young was then put to bed, and he slept all
the way back to Wrangell.</p>
<p>In his mission lectures in the East, Mr. Young oftentimes told this
story. I made no record of it in my notebook and never intended to
write a word about it; but after a miserable, sensational caricature
of the story had appeared in a respectable magazine, I thought it but
fair to my brave companion that it should be told just as it
happened.</p>
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