Page:A Century of Dishonor.pdf/87

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THE CHEYENNES.
69

at one dollar a pound; ten-cent calico at one dollar a yard; corn at seventy-tive cents a gallon, and higher.

In 1847 a law was passed by Congress forbidding the introduction of whiskey into the Indian country, and even the partial enforcement of this law had a most happy effect. Foremost among those to acknowledge the benefits of it were the traders themselves, who said that the Indians’ demand for substantial articles of trade was augmented two hundred per cent.: “They enjoy much better health, look much better, and are better people. * * * You now rarely ever hear of a murder committed, whereas when whiskey was plenty in that country murder was a daily occurrence.” These Indians themselves were said to be “opposed to the introduction of ardent spirits into their country; * * * but, like almost all other Indians, will use it if you give it to them, and when under its influence are dangerous and troublesome.” There were at this time nearly forty-six thousand of these Upper Missouri Indians. Five bands of them—“the Sioux, Cheyennes, Gros Ventres, Mandans, and Poncas”—were “excellent Indians, devotedly attached to the white man,” living “in peace and friendship with our Government,” and “entitled to the special favor and good opinion of the Department for their uniform good conduct and pacific relations.”

In 1848 it was estimated from the returns made by traders that the trade of this agency amounted to $400,000. Among the items were 25,000 buffalo tongues. In consequence of this prosperity on the part of the Indians, there was a partial cessation of hostilities on the whites; but it was still a perilous journey to cross the plains, and in 1849 the necessity for making some sort of treaty stipulations with all these wild tribes begins to be foreed emphatically upon the attention of the United States Government. A safe highway across the continent must be opened. It is a noticeable thing, however, that, even as late as this in the history of our diplomatic relations with the Indian, his right to a certain control as well as occu-