The Gathering Storm
One of the results of the increasing number of
emigrants on the Oregon Trail was the Cayuse's conviction that their way
of life was in danger. Although the emigrants, up to now, had continued
on to the rich Willamette Valley, the Indians feared the day when the
settlers would stop on Cayuse land. The Cayuse were quick to identify
the Whitmans with the tide of settlers. Tom Hill, a Delaware Indian
living among the nearby Nez Percé, contributed to this
conviction. He told the Cayuse that before long the emigrants would be
taking their lands. This, after all, was what had happened to his own
people. He also said that the Whitmans were becoming rich from the sale
of their produce to the travelers, and he argued that this wealth should
be used in helping the Indians.
The Cayuse's concerns were intensified by the
increasing interest Dr. Whitman was showing in the emigrants. The doctor
himself foresaw that the Indians' mode of living would not be able to
withstand the encroachments of the aggressive settlers for very long. It
seemed obvious to him that the future of Oregon belonged to the whites.
As Whitman turned his attention more and more to the problems of
emigration, which he was forced to do by the very presence of the
travelers, there was naturally a decrease in the time and effort he
could devote to the Indians. Furthermore, the results of more than 10
years labor among the Cayuse offered little encouragement, and he feared
that the future would be little better. The Cayuse were quick to sense
this change. When they did, they lost their faith in the purpose of the
mission and in the missionaries themselves.
These growing resentments and suspicions were
heightened in the autumn of 1847 when a measles epidemic spread from
that year's wagon train to Cayuse villages. This was a new disease for
the Cayuse, and their bodies had little resistance to it. The effect of
the disease in the lodges was disastrous. Within 2 months about half the
Cayuse tribe died from measles or from the accompanying dysentery,
though the Whitmans tried desperately to relieve the suffering. Panic
stricken, the Cayuse lost completely their faith in Whitman's medicine
and turned to their traditional treatments. A sweat bath, followed by a
plunge into the cold river, practically assured their immediate
death.
With the wagons of 1847, a half-breed named Joe Lewis
had arrived at Waiilatpu. Whitman soon learned that Lewis was a
troublemaker, but had no success in getting rid of him. When the
epidemic struck, Lewis told the Cayuse that Whitman was spreading poison
in the air to kill off the tribe. He said that when all the Indians were
dead, Whitman was going to take their lands for himself. The more
desperate of the Indians believed Lewis and decided to rid themselves of
the doctor who now seemed a man of evil design. In this belief, they
were encouraged by Nicholas Finley, another half-breed living near the
mission. His lodge, a few hundred feet from the mission house, became a
headquarters for the malcontents.
In the minds of these Cayuse there was no question of
their right to dispose of Dr. Whitman. One of the practices of the tribe
for generations was that if a patient of a medicine man, or
tewat, should die, the sick person's relative could seek revenge
by killing the tewat. Since measles was a white man's disease and
since Whitman, a white doctor, surely knew the cure, they believed that
he was deliberately withholding that cure from them. Their people were
dying, and revenge should be extracted from tewat Whitman.
The Whitmans had long been aware of the dangers that
faced them because of the Indians' attitude toward medicine. But, with
their high sense of obligation and responsibility, they had threaded
their way through the maze of superstitions, sometimes at great risks,
but always with successuntil 1847.
Although the majority of the Cayuse had become
concerned with the events of that autumn, only a few extremists took
part in planning an attack on the mission. As November 1847 drew to a
close both the whites at the mission and the Cayuse leaders knew that a
crisis was at hand. This crisis grew out of a conflict between two
groups holding opposing ideas, each believing itself to be right. The
Whitmans believed they were fulfilling a destiny that God had determined
for them. The Cayuse believed they were doing what was necessary to
defend and preserve their land and their way of life.
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