[39] On page 248 of his “North American Indians,” vol. I, Mr. Catlin declares pointedly that “these animals are, truly speaking, gregarious, but not migratory; they graze in immense and almost incredible numbers at times, and roam about and over vast tracts of country from east to west and from west to east as often as from north to south, which has often been supposed they naturally and habitually did to accommodate themselves to the temperature of the climate in the different latitudes.” Had Mr. Catlin resided continuously in any one locality on the great buffalo range, he would have found that the buffalo had decided migratory habits. The abundance of proof on this point renders it unnecessary to eater fully into the details of the subject.
[40] Our Wild Indians, p. 283, et seq.
[41] American Field, July 24, 1886, p. 78.
[42] Plains of the Great West, p. 125.
[43] By the Red River half-breeds only.
[44] On one occasion, which is doubtless still remembered with bitterness by many a Crow of the Custer Agency, my old friend Jim McNaney backed his horse Ogalalla against the horses of the whole Crow tribe. The Crows forthwith formed a pool, which consisted of a huge pile of buffalo robes, worth about $1,200, and with it backed their best race-horse. He was forthwith “beaten out of sight” by Ogalalla, and another grievance was registered against the whites.
[45] Schoolcraft’s History, Condition and Prospects of the Indian Tribes, iv, p. 107.
[46] Westover MSS., i, p. 172.
[47] Quoted by Professor Allen, “American Bisons,” p. 107.
[48] The American Bison, p. 197.