Among the An-ko-me-nums, or Flathead Tribes of Indians of the Pacific Coast
THOMAS CROSBY. From a photo taken in 1874
Or Flathead Tribes of Indians of the Pacific Coast,
REV. THOMAS CROSBY
Missionary to the Indians of British Columbia.
TORONTO WILLIAM BRIGGS 1907
Entered according to Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year one thousand nine hundred and seven, by William Briggs, at the Department of Agriculture.
I have been requested to write a few words of introduction to this deeply interesting volume, and I gladly comply, although the task may seem to be quite superfluous. Thomas Crosby, or anything he may write, needs no introduction, at least in Methodist circles. For a generation his name has been a household word, and from time to time brief accounts of his heroic labors have found their way through the press into many homes. But these accounts were fragmentary and incomplete. They presented some striking incidents, but no connected story of the man and his work. Such a story Crosby alone could supply, and many will be glad that he has been induced to begin it; and the hope will be general that other volumes may follow, covering what is by far the most interesting period of his life.
It is but seldom that men who lay the foundations of empire get credit for the achievement. Their work, for the most part, is done underground and out of sight. They are content to take up the work that lies nearest, leaving results with God, and are more concerned about doing their work faithfully than claiming credit for themselves. And yet all the while they are laying the only foundations on which an enduring civilization can rest, and are better entitled to the name and fame of empire-builders than some who have claimed the credit without doing the work. If it be true that he is a benefactor of his race who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew before, much more is he a benefactor whose spiritual husbandry transforms a savage into a citizen—a pagan into a saint.
A conflict like that in which Thomas Crosby spent his life was no mere holiday parade. It was a grapple to the death with the powers of evil, in which no quarter was asked or given. He gave his life for the redemption of a people for whose souls no man cared, and fought—sometimes almost single-handed—a life-long battle against superstition, immorality, and godlessness of every kind. No marvel, therefore, if he incurred the bitter enmity of the witch-doctor, the whiskey-trader, and the libertine, and by “lewd fellows of the baser sort” was the best-hated man in British Columbia. But he has his reward. By the converting grace of God some bitter foes were transformed into ardent friends; and as he searched society’s rubbish-heaps for lost jewels, here and there he found a pearl of great price that more than compensated for all his toil. Many will join in the prayer that years of useful service may still be his, and that his declining years may be brightened by further displays of saving power among the Red Men of the Pacific Coast.
Thomas Crosby
---
INTRODUCTION.
CONTENTS.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
The Indians of British Columbia.
Early Traders.
In Search of the “Book of Heaven.”
First Impressions.
No Chinook for Me.
Amusing Mistakes.
No Swearing in Indian.
The Lord’s Prayer in Chinook.
“Poor Little Quee-lawt!”
An Awful Night.
Tools.
Clothing and Ornaments.
Painting and Tattooing.
Strange and Cruel Customs.
Flattening the Head.
Other Cruel Practices.
The Sad State of Heathen Womanhood.
First Christian Marriage.
Methods of Cooking.
Feasts.
Music and Dancing.
White Man’s Dance vs. Indian Dance.
Potlatching.
Gambling.
Death and Burial.
Did Not Know He Was Dead.
Rising from the Grave.
Mourning for the Dead.
“You Don’t Understand My Sick.”
Retaliation for a Supposed Insult.
The Law in Our Own Hands.
“Oh, Let Me Have Just a Little, Sir!”
Up To My Neck in the Sea.
The Whiskey Synagogue.
In a Tight Box.
“Indian Pray One Eye Open and One Eye Shut.”
Murder and Reprisals.
“A Life for a Bottle of Whiskey.”
A Dangerous Trip.
Canoe Better than Steamboat.
“Spul-queet-sa!” (“A Ghost! A Ghost!”)
Some More Exciting Experiences.
Abraham and Sarah.
Here and There.
An Old Croaker in a Canoe.
Millions of Mosquitoes.
“A Parson after His Bitters.”
Indians Respect the Sabbath.
A Medical Missionary.
The Beginning of the Revival.
The Visit of the First Gospel Messenger.
First Camp-Meeting.
Education of the Children.
The Visit of Dr. Punshon.
“The Genuine Article.”
The Fruit of Missions.
A Service at Kamloops.
In the Nicola Valley.
Amos Cushan.
The Boy Preacher.
The End Came All Too Soon.
The Old Captain of Sumas Lake.
The Redeemed Slave.
An Indian Class-Leader.
Salvation in a Bar-room.
FOOTNOTES:
Transcriber’s Notes: