Histories: Trempealeau Co. Historical Accounts:
"History of Trempealeau County Wisconsin, 1917":
Chapter 6:
Long
-As transcribed from pages 59 - 60
Major
Stephen H. Long led an expedition up the Mississippi in 1817. The
voyage was made in a six-oared skiff. The party camped near Trempealeau
on the night of Friday, July 11. In his entry for July 10 Long says,
"Passed the Black River on our right, coming in from the northeast. It
is navigable for pirogues somewhat more than 100 miles, to where the
navigation is obstructed by rapids. On this river is an abundance of
pine timber of an excellent quality. Much of the pine timber used at
St. Louis is cut here. This river, has three mouths, by which it
discharges itself into the Mississippi, the lowermost of which is
passable and communicates with the Mississippi twelve or fourteen miles
below the junction of the valleys of the two rivers. The bluffs along
the river today were unusually interesting. They were of an exceedingly
wild and romantic character, being divided into numerous detached
fragments, some of them of mountain size, while others in slender,
conical peaks seemed to tower aloft till their elevation rendered them
invisible. Here might the poet or bard indulge his fancy in the wildest
extravagance, while the philosopher would find a rich repast in
examining the numerous phenomena here presented to his view, and in
tracing the wonderful operations of nature that have taken place since
the first formation of the world. A little above the mouth of the Black
River, both shores of the Mississippi may be seen at the same time,
which is the only instance of the kind we have met with on our way from
Prairie du Chien to this place. One mile further ahead the bluffs on
both sides approach within 800 yards of each other, and the river, in
consequence, is narrower here than at any other place this side of
Prairie du Chien. Notwithstanding this contraction of its channel, the
river here imbosoms an island of considerable size. Encamped at sunset
on a small island.
"Saturday, July 12. Within a few yards of the island where we camped is
another, considerably smaller, which, for the sake of brevity, I called
the Bluff Island, as its former name is very long and difficult to
pronounce. It has been accounted a great curiosity by travelers. It is
remarkable for being the third island in the Mississippi from the Gulf
of Mexico to this place that has a rocky formation similar to that of
the neighboring bluffs, and nearly the same altitude. Pike, in his
account of it, states the height of it to be about 200 feet. We lay by
this morning for the purpose of ascertaining its altitude, which we
found by a trigometrical calculation, which my instruments would not
enable me to make with much accuracy, to be a little, more than 500
feet. It is a very handsome conical hill, but not sufficiently large to
deserve the appellation of mountain, although it is called by the name
of the Montaigne qui trompe de l'eau, or the mountain that is soaked in
the water."39
Long also describes in glowing terms the scenery from Trempealeau to Winona.
The party again landed at Trempealeau on the journey down the river,
Sunday, July 20. At their former camping place they found their axe
which they had lost there. They ascended Trempealeau Mountain and from
there viewed the Indian village at Winona.40
As before, Long waxed enthusiastic over the wonderful scenery. He
discovered that the bluffs which he had previously supposed to be the
main river bluffs were in fact a broken range of high bluff hills,
separated, from the main bluffs by the wide expanse of Trempealeau
prairie. He advances the theory that the Trempealeau bluffs are in
reality the eastern point of a promontory originally extending from the
Minnesota bluffs, and that,the natural course of the river was
originally between the Trempealeau bluffs and the main Wisconsin
bluffs, Trempealeau prairie being the river's natural bed. While on the
top of Trempealeau Mountain, Long and his companion were summoned by
three Indians, one of whom had been bitten in the leg by a rattlesnake.
The Indians at once cut out a piece of flesh containing the wounded
part and applied bandages above it. They refused, however, to allow
Long to wash the wound. A short time later Long ascended Queen Bluff
near Richmond. His observations there led him to believe that the
Mississippi was originally a vast lake filling all the valley, to a
height of many hundred feet above the present water level.
Resources
for the above information:
39
- Stephen H. Long, Voyage in a Six Oar Skiff to the Falls of St.
Anthony in 1817, Minn. Hist. Colls.; II, Part 1, 15-17, original
edition.
40 - Ibid., 47-50.
|
|