At the trial, she was the only witness. She knew little English and the court could find no one to translate her Athapaskan. Regan, who pleaded self-defense, was found innocent and released.
After the trial, Anna insisted on returning home to her children immediately. The judge explained that the court would pay her way back by the same river route she had come, but that she would have to wait until breakup in the spring. Until then, the way was locked in ice and snow, and boats were useless.
So a determined Anna decided to walk overland. The distance was at least 400 miles, the midwinter weather was severe, she didn’t know the way, and she’d be crossing Eskimo country.
There was no stopping her, so the judge gave her a document explaining that she was a responsibility of the court and was going by foot from Nome to her home on the Koyukuk River. It warned that anyone who harmed her would be punished by the United States government, and concluded, “The court will appreciate any help or guidance this woman receives.”
“Show this to people. They will help,” the judge promised.
Although Anna didn’t know the route across the windswept, mostly treeless coastal land, she knew that Schilikuk lived on the Kobuk River, which she had learned was somewhere beyond Candle, on the north side of the Seward Peninsula. So she set out to walk to Candle.
The well-traveled, snowy trails between Nome and Candle were packed, so Anna did not need snowshoes. When she became confused, she waited until someone came along and showed them her note. Each time she received directions.
She walked from sunup until dark. Each night she wrapped herself in a blanket and burrowed into a snowbank for the insulation it provided, or shivered near a small fire. She stopped at roadhouses along the way for food and rest. Invariably, when the owners read her note, they refused the gold coins she offered in payment. Usually they tried to dissuade her from continuing her long, dangerous journey, but when they sensed her determination they gave her food, matches, and other supplies. Soon word spread along the trail about the tiny Indian woman who was returning to her family in the distant Interior.
Anna’s moccasins were worn out when she reached Candle near the end of March. A miner and his wife took her into their home, and she made several new pairs of moccasins while regaining her strength. In late April, the Koyukon “month of the spring crust,” she set out again, now on snowshoes, with a small pack on her back, walking north and east into country with no human trails.
In May, the Koyukon “month boats are put in the water,” near the Arctic Circle light floods the land around the clock although snow still lingers. Anna traveled mostly at night when it was cool and the snow was crisp and frozen and easy to walk on, and she rested during the warm days when the snow became too mushy to support her. Rivers were still frozen, so she had no difficulty crossing them.
Using the sun as her guide, she traveled toward where people had said the Kobuk River lay. Spring storms delayed her, but she pressed on, some days traveling only a few miles. A lone prospector she encountered gave her several ptarmigan and some matches. He was the last person she saw for weeks. Days passed in a blur.
Breakup came in June, and the ice in the Kobuk River went out. This is a major turning point in the North, for without ice on the rivers, travelers must build rafts to cross deep rivers. Bogs, frozen and level in winter, become impassible, and travelers must detour around them. Anna walked upstream, following a bank of the deep and swift Kobuk as the easiest and most direct route into the mountains that separate the coast from the Interior. For food she snared rabbits, ate roots, and found berries of the previous year that became exposed when the snow melted. In this Koyukon “month when everything grows,” swarms of mosquitoes hatched, adding to her hardship.
One July morning she awoke to see an Eskimo boy staring at her from a few feet away. In a moment he was gone. With a sinking heart, she remembered his look of elation. Weary and weak from hunger, she was sure that he would return with other Eskimos to kill her.
Soon a small band of Eskimos called to her from a distance. Anna thought that her end had come. She didn’t try to escape, for she knew it was hopeless. When the Eskimos neared, her heart leaped, for with the boy she had seen, and several other Eskimos, was Schilikuk, the trader friend of her father.
His words warmed her heart. “I saw your father two months ago. He had word you were walking home and asked me to watch for you. My son has been waiting for you along the river every day.”
Anna rested, regaining her strength in the home of the hospitable Eskimo. “You had better stay with me until March, when your father and I trade again,” Schilikuk told her one day. “You can go with me to the trading place.”
“No. I must get back to my children. I’ve been gone nearly a year now. I won’t wait until March,” she declared.
Schilikuk, seeing her determination, persuaded her to stay at least until snow came again and the rivers froze so she could travel more easily. Each winter he trapped at the head of the 100-mile-distant Pah River. Anna agreed to wait and go with him to the Pah. From there she faced a ten-day walk across the mountains to the Hogatza River and her father’s home.
Fall came, and finally, snow fell and the rivers froze. The Eskimo family loaded sleds, harnessed dogs, and started the journey to the headwaters of the Pah. Several times they stopped for a few days to hunt caribou. They reached the trapping grounds in November.
A few days later the old Eskimo walked with Anna to the top of the low divide that separates the coast from the Koyukuk drainage of Interior Alaska. He pointed across No Man’s Land toward the distant Hogatza River, saying, “There is your home. You’ll have to go alone from here. I don’t dare take you any farther.”
She was dressed in warm furs. Her pack held caribou meat and dried fish, warm blankets, matches, and an axe. On her small feet she wore moccasins she had made for herself and snowshoes made by Schilikuk. After thanking him, she set out alone down the slope, bravely heading for the spruce forests of Koyukuk country.
Now she was in the kind of land she knew. Timber was abundant, so firewood and shelter were easy to find. She spent the nights next to the trunks of big spruce trees, sheltered by thick green branches and warmed by fires she built of dead lower limbs. Green spruce branches, piled deep, insulated her from the snow and provided her with a comfortable bed.
After ten days of solitude, Anna came upon snowshoe tracks. She followed them for a day until, suddenly, she recognized the place: she was only five miles from her father’s winter cabin. She stopped and forced herself to eat, because she wanted to walk to her father with her head up, strong and proud, not tottering as if exhausted from her long trek.
As Anna approached the cabin, chained sled dogs set up a clamor. The door was flung open, and a man stepped out, rifle in hand.
“Who comes?” he called in the Koyukon Athapaskan.
“It is me, Anna,” she replied in the same tongue.
The man was Hog River Johnny, her brother. Their reunion was joyous, for the two were close. When she told of her long solo trek home, he could scarcely believe it.
“Tell me again,” he asked, wanting to hear repeatedly about various adventures she had experienced.
The reunion was tinged with sadness, for her father had died the previous summer. But her children were well. News of Anna’s overland journey from Nome spread swiftly by moccasin telegraph. No Koyukon hunter, much less a slip of an unarmed woman, had ever dared to traverse the forbidden Eskimo land to the west. Not only had she braved the fierce Eskimos, she had traveled on foot for hundreds of miles, much of it alone, during parts of two winters. She was regarded with awe by the close-knit Koyukon people for years.
My uncle Weaselheart, another of my mother’s brothers, once told me that the family was convinced that my mother would never return. When they learned that she had started her long trek, they thought she would be seized by some Eskimo wanting a woman. Such an act would have been much easier than the raids that Eskimos on
ce made into Koyukuk country to steal women. Many tales of such raids were told and retold among the Koyukon people, and, of course, those raids perpetuated the traditional war.
Weaselheart also told me that for the help Schilikuk gave Anna, our family rewarded him with many gifts, including a large pile of wolverine furs of the finest quality.
Ned Regan returned to the Koyukuk, wanting to take up with Old Mama where he had left off, but she would have nothing to do with him. The Indians of the Koyukuk felt that his killing of Victor Bifelt had been too cold-blooded, and it made them uneasy around him. He left the Koyukuk never to return.
During my nearly century of life (Sidney Huntington was still alive at this May 2010 updating), I have watched with pleasure as the ancient hostility between the Koyukon Athapaskans and the Eskimos has gradually disappeared. Today there is only friendly rivalry between our peoples. And the legend of the long overland journey made by my mother from Nome to the Koyukuk is still recounted by the Koyukon people.
2
KALLYHOCUSES
Nine years after my mother’s great trek, I was born at Hughes, Alaska, on May 10, 1915. Hughes is still a cluster of log cabins, a tiny Koyukon village on the south bank of the Koyukuk River. My English-Scot father, James S. Huntington, was born in 1867 in Buffalo, New York. He was one of the thousands of gold rushers who, in 1897, stampeded to the frontier mining camp of Dawson, Yukon Territory.
He often talked of the excitement of Dawson—the saloons, dance halls, banks, tent stores, mud streets, and the milling mob. Under the watchful eyes of the redcoats (Canadian mounted police), each of the thousands of stampeders was seeking his or her fortune.
In Alaska, my father prospected, mined, trapped, freighted with horse-drawn river scows, hauled mail and passengers by dog team, and owned his own trading posts. Around 1904 he hauled mail by sled dog over the ninety-mile route from Tanana and Fort Gibbon to Louse Point on the Yukon River. Fort Gibbon was on the outskirts of the Koyukon village of Tanana at the junction of the Yukon and Tanana rivers. With the gold rush to Alaska, the army had established military camps, pretentiously calling them “forts,” along the prospectors’ routes of travel. There was Fort Davis at Nome, Fort Gibbon at Tanana, Fort Egbert at Eagle, and several others. Telegraphic communication was established between the forts and with the states (Alaska was a territory).
Dad liked being a mail-team driver. All sleds were required by law to give right-of-way to mail teams, and the mail driver was given preferential treatment at roadhouses, receiving the best bunk, the best seat at the table, and the first hotcakes at breakfast.
Dad became friends with many of the Indians, and eventually he became very protective of them. It was illegal to sell liquor to Indians, and he frequently fought the Army authorities at Gibbon, and others, who conveniently forgot the ban on Indian use of alcohol.
Trapping of marten, which had become scarce, was illegal. Asking Indians not to trap was like asking fish not to swim. Indian trappers continued to accumulate contraband marten furs, and several of Dad’s Indian friends asked him if he would market the furs for them. Unfortunately, a fur warden caught him with the illegal furs and he was jailed at Tanana. In those days you remained in jail until trial.
Dad’s trial was to be held at Rampart, sixty-one miles northeast of Tanana on the south bank of the Yukon, a three-day walk. During the early 1900s, 1,500 people lived there, and it was the location of the main court for the region.
Monkey John, an Indian friend who lived near Tanana, visited Dad in jail. Dad had left most of his money in Monkey John’s keeping, and frequently stayed with him.
“You want to get away?” asked Monkey John.
“Sure, but there’s no safe place to go.”
“You can go to the headwaters of the Tanana and then to the Copper River country,” said Monkey John. “A long time ago people traveled that way.”
“That’s a long way to go alone and afoot,” said Dad.
“They can’t catch you once you get away. We’ll help. I’ll talk to Chief Thomas,” promised Monkey John. Chief Thomas, of Nenana, was the powerful leader of the Athapaskan Indians of Interior Alaska, and was widely known and respected.
After meeting with Chief Thomas, Monkey John returned to the jail. “When they take you to Rampart, we’ll have everything ready. At the first camp, there’s a cabin. That’s where you go over the hill.”
“What good will it be for me to go over the hill?” Dad asked.
“We’ll wait for you on top of the hill. It will be night. Be sure to wear mittens and a good parka. When you get to the cabin and it gets dark, tell them you’re going to the outhouse. Those fellows won’t bother to go out with you in the dark. As soon as you get out of the cabin, run. You’ll find a pair of snowshoes along the trail. They’ll be rigged backwards. Put them on and come up that hill. We’ll be waiting for you there.”
“Snowshoes, rigged backwards?” Dad asked.
“Yes. The tail will be in front. That’ll fool them. They won’t know which direction you’ve walked,” Monkey John grinned.
“All right,” Dad agreed.
In a few days, a U.S. marshal and a guard escorted Dad from Tanana on the trail to Rampart. At the first rest cabin, before going to bed, Dad told the marshal he had to go to the outhouse.
“Go ahead,” he said.
“He can’t go far in this weather,” the marshal told the guard. “Don’t worry about him.”
Dad headed downriver on a dead run. In a mile he came to a pair of snowshoes standing upright in the snow. The shoes hadn’t been there when they had passed earlier.
As promised, the harness on the snowshoes was rigged backwards. He put the crazy things on, wondering whether he could walk with them. But he found that walking was easy; his friends had made sure they were balanced. And anyone seeing his tracks would assume they were made by a man coming down the hill rather than one going up.
On the hilltop, Dad found Monkey John and two other Indians. I don’t know the exact route Dad followed in his escape, but various Indians passed him from area to area, providing him with dogs, a sled, food, and other necessities. Chief Thomas’s name was the key to help all the way. Monkey John had returned Dad’s savings, so he was well financed. He arrived at Valdez, caught a ship to Seattle, and traveled east to New York to see his mother.
After running away from home as a kid, he now arrived home triumphantly, with enough money to buy and furnish a new home for his mother.
After a year and a half in New York, Alaska beckoned, and Dad returned to Nulato. Soon he encountered the former marshal he had escaped from, who had lost his job for allowing a prisoner to escape.
“How in hell did you get away? We patrolled for miles up and down the river looking for you. We found snowshoe tracks coming down the hills into the river, but none leaving. How did you do it?”
Dad grinned. “I flew!”
For some reason, the charges against Dad had been dropped.
My mother had married James Huntington in September 1908. One of my first memories is of the spring flood at Hughes in 1918 when I turned three. As the water rose, Dad drilled holes with an auger through planks of our cabin porch deck. He then tied the porch to a tree to keep it from floating away. I learned then that I couldn’t walk on water when I stepped off the porch and promptly sank. My father fished me out and turned me upside down to drain the water out.
Another memory is of a pair of tiny snowshoes that my uncle Little William made for me—a Christmas gift following my second birthday. I was tremendously proud of them. One day at Hughes I was walking on the snow with these shoes when two gigantic horses came down the trail toward me. I started to scamper out of their way, and fell headfirst into the deep snow. I hollered my little head off.
The horses, in tandem, were pulling two bobsleds. Phil Main, who, like most miners of the day had a huge beard, rode the lead horse. He used the horses to freight supplies from Hughes to his gold-mining camp at nearby Indian
Creek. He leaped off, scooped me up snowshoes and all, and put me on one of those big horses. Thrilled but terrified, I quit crying. I vividly remember the warmth, smell, and movement of that horse under my short legs.
That spring and summer, I developed a habit of wandering off into the bushes. I watched jacksnipe flitting high in the sky as they made their unique, wing-whistling, twittering mating sounds and then landed out of my sight. I’d trot into the bushes trying to find these little long-beaked brown birds. Since a three-year-old doesn’t have much business going out in the bush where he could easily get lost, fall into the river, or meet a hungry bear, my parents scolded, gently at first.
Finally, in exasperation, my father warned, “Better not go back there! There are kallyhocuses out there!”
“What’s a kallyhocus?” I asked.
“A kallyhocus has a great big, long beak, and one big eye in the middle of his head, and if you get close to one it’ll raise hell with you.”
His warning stopped my wandering for a time, and I feared kallyhocuses for many years.
The following spring, Dad planted a garden at Hughes. He cut seed potatoes so that each chunk had an eye which would sprout into a plant. I talked him out of two pieces so I could plant my own garden. Eagerly, I watched the first green sprouts come out of the soil, then the leaves. Fascinated, I regarded each plant as my own and from that experience came a lifelong love of gardening.
That same year a new gold strike attracted a rush of prospectors to Hog River. The Hog flows into the spruce-lined Koyukuk River forty miles south of the Arctic Circle. The mines near Hughes were playing out, so my father decided to move his trading post to Hog River.
Shadows on the Koyukuk Page 2