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- catalog alternative "Nine years in the Rocky Mountains, 1834-1843".
- catalog contributor b9041314.
- catalog contributor b9041315.
- catalog contributor b9041316.
- catalog coverage "Northwestern States Description and travel.".
- catalog coverage "Yellowstone National Park History 19th century.".
- catalog created "c1921.".
- catalog date "1921".
- catalog date "c1921.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1921.".
- catalog description "Expedition left Independence, Mo. [Missouri], April 28, 1834, headed by Nathaniel J. Wyeth -- Meeting with Captain B. S. Bonneville and party ; Establishment of the trading post at Fort Hall -- Snake Valley, a winter resort for trappers ; Hunting party suffers from hunger ; One member lost -- Description of a "fall hunt" ; Abram Patterson drowned ; Attacked by Indians, one man wounded -- "Jackson's Hole" ; A dismal Fourth of July experience which terminates without serious mishap ; Lost -- In the Yellowstone country ; A Garden of Eden inhabited by a small party of Snake Indians -- Encounter with the Blackfeet Indians ; Join Bridger's party for protection and assistance -- Dispatched for horses ; Perfidy of leader suspected ; Two days without water ; Finally reaches Fort Hall -- Enlistment expires and the author joins Bridger's company as a trapper ; Bull meat straight -- ".
- catalog description "Fort William [Montana, North Dakota] ; A cool reception ; Sioux sign language ; Three miles of deer in one band -- Captain Fontanell [Fontenelle] arrives with property stolen the month previous ; Leave for Powder River with supplies -- Spring hunt ; A trapper's equipment ; Canadian trapper has encounter with grizzly bear without serious injury -- Battle with the Blackfeet in which the trappers were the aggressors and victors -- Routine experiences followed by the regular July (1838) rendezvous on Green River ; Fall hunt -- Returned to Fort Hall and remained in that vicinity till January, 1839 ; Spring hunt -- Another viewpoint of what is now known as the Yellowstone National Park -- Wounded by arrows of Blackfeet ; Hair-raising experience ; Hospitable reception at Fort Hall -- Old partners "splint blankets" ; Supply train reaches Fort Hall, June 14, 1840 -- A winter with the Indians near Great Salt Lake ; Christmas dinner a l'Indian -- ".
- catalog description "Rendezvous at Green River ; Meeting Revs. [Reverends] [Marcus] Whitman and [Henry] Spaulding [i.e., Spalding] and their wives, [Narcissa, Eliza] on their way to Oregon -- Interesting description of what is now known as Yellowstone National Park -- Laughable and serious engagements with bands of Blackfeet Indians ; "Howell's Encampment" -- Brilliant display of "Northern Lights" probably averts annihilation of the camp by Indians -- Another rendezvous at Green River ; Making "good" Indians ; Arrival of wagon train and supplies -- Back again to the hunting grounds ; Solitary reflections on a peak of the Rockies -- Thieving Indians steal most of the horses ; A 'whistling' elk scares the tenderfoot camptender -- Main party fails to keep appointment at "Howell's Encampment" ; Stampeded buffalo -- Threatened and robbed by the Crow Indians, the hunters proceed afoot to Fort William, enduring great hardship -- ".
- catalog description "Solitary hunting bouts early spring of 1841, near the Great Salt Lake -- A visit to the Eutaw [Utah] Indian village ; Cordial treatment at their hands -- Back to Fort Hall ; Escorted missionary to Green River and back ; Partners re-unite -- Closing incidents of an interesting experience ; The author leaves the mountains for Oregon -- The hunter's farewell [poem] -- Appendix: The wolverine, carcajou, or glutton ; The wolf ; The panther ; The marmot ; The porcupine ; The badger ; The ground hog ; The grizzly bear ; The black bear ; The mountain sheep or big horn ; The gazelle or mountain antelope ; The black-tailed deer ; The rabbit ; The elk ; The buffalo or bison ; The beaver ; The Snake Indians ; The Crow Indians.".
- catalog extent "1 p. l., [v]-xviii p., 1 l., [7]- 149 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Journal of a trapper.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Journal of a trapper.".
- catalog issued "1921".
- catalog issued "c1921.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "[Boise, Id., Syms-York Company, inc.]".
- catalog relation "Journal of a trapper.".
- catalog spatial "Northwestern States Description and travel.".
- catalog spatial "Northwestern States.".
- catalog spatial "Yellowstone National Park History 19th century.".
- catalog subject "Crow Indians History 19th century.".
- catalog subject "F597 .R93".
- catalog subject "Frontier and pioneer life Northwestern States.".
- catalog subject "Fur trade Northwestern States.".
- catalog subject "Russell, Osborne, 1814-1892.".
- catalog subject "Siksika Indians History 19th century.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Expedition left Independence, Mo. [Missouri], April 28, 1834, headed by Nathaniel J. Wyeth -- Meeting with Captain B. S. Bonneville and party ; Establishment of the trading post at Fort Hall -- Snake Valley, a winter resort for trappers ; Hunting party suffers from hunger ; One member lost -- Description of a "fall hunt" ; Abram Patterson drowned ; Attacked by Indians, one man wounded -- "Jackson's Hole" ; A dismal Fourth of July experience which terminates without serious mishap ; Lost -- In the Yellowstone country ; A Garden of Eden inhabited by a small party of Snake Indians -- Encounter with the Blackfeet Indians ; Join Bridger's party for protection and assistance -- Dispatched for horses ; Perfidy of leader suspected ; Two days without water ; Finally reaches Fort Hall -- Enlistment expires and the author joins Bridger's company as a trapper ; Bull meat straight -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Fort William [Montana, North Dakota] ; A cool reception ; Sioux sign language ; Three miles of deer in one band -- Captain Fontanell [Fontenelle] arrives with property stolen the month previous ; Leave for Powder River with supplies -- Spring hunt ; A trapper's equipment ; Canadian trapper has encounter with grizzly bear without serious injury -- Battle with the Blackfeet in which the trappers were the aggressors and victors -- Routine experiences followed by the regular July (1838) rendezvous on Green River ; Fall hunt -- Returned to Fort Hall and remained in that vicinity till January, 1839 ; Spring hunt -- Another viewpoint of what is now known as the Yellowstone National Park -- Wounded by arrows of Blackfeet ; Hair-raising experience ; Hospitable reception at Fort Hall -- Old partners "splint blankets" ; Supply train reaches Fort Hall, June 14, 1840 -- A winter with the Indians near Great Salt Lake ; Christmas dinner a l'Indian -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Rendezvous at Green River ; Meeting Revs. [Reverends] [Marcus] Whitman and [Henry] Spaulding [i.e., Spalding] and their wives, [Narcissa, Eliza] on their way to Oregon -- Interesting description of what is now known as Yellowstone National Park -- Laughable and serious engagements with bands of Blackfeet Indians ; "Howell's Encampment" -- Brilliant display of "Northern Lights" probably averts annihilation of the camp by Indians -- Another rendezvous at Green River ; Making "good" Indians ; Arrival of wagon train and supplies -- Back again to the hunting grounds ; Solitary reflections on a peak of the Rockies -- Thieving Indians steal most of the horses ; A 'whistling' elk scares the tenderfoot camptender -- Main party fails to keep appointment at "Howell's Encampment" ; Stampeded buffalo -- Threatened and robbed by the Crow Indians, the hunters proceed afoot to Fort William, enduring great hardship -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Solitary hunting bouts early spring of 1841, near the Great Salt Lake -- A visit to the Eutaw [Utah] Indian village ; Cordial treatment at their hands -- Back to Fort Hall ; Escorted missionary to Green River and back ; Partners re-unite -- Closing incidents of an interesting experience ; The author leaves the mountains for Oregon -- The hunter's farewell [poem] -- Appendix: The wolverine, carcajou, or glutton ; The wolf ; The panther ; The marmot ; The porcupine ; The badger ; The ground hog ; The grizzly bear ; The black bear ; The mountain sheep or big horn ; The gazelle or mountain antelope ; The black-tailed deer ; The rabbit ; The elk ; The buffalo or bison ; The beaver ; The Snake Indians ; The Crow Indians.".
- catalog title "Journal of a trapper; or, Nine Years in the Rocky Mountains, 1834-1843; being a general description of the county, climate, rivers, lakes, mountains, etc., and a view of the life led by a hunter in those regions, by Osborne Russell ...".
- catalog title "Nine years in the Rocky Mountains, 1834-1843".
- catalog type "text".