Hunting with the Bow & Arrow. Saxton T. Pope

Hunting with the Bow & Arrow - Saxton T. Pope


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       Saxton T. Pope

      Hunting with the Bow & Arrow

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664646286

       I

       THE STORY OF THE LAST YANA INDIAN

       II

       HOW ISHI MADE HIS BOW AND ARROW AND HIS METHODS OF SHOOTING

       III

       ISHI'S METHODS OF HUNTING

       IV

       ARCHERY IN GENERAL

       V

       HOW TO MAKE A BOW

       VI

       HOW TO MAKE AN ARROW

       VII

       ARCHERY EQUIPMENT

       VIII

       HOW TO SHOOT

       IX

       THE PRINCIPLES OF HUNTING

       X

       THE RACCOON, WILDCAT, FOX, COON, CAT, AND WOLF

       XI

       DEER HUNTING

       XII

       BEAR HUNTING

       XIII

       MOUNTAIN LIONS

       XIV

       GRIZZLY BEAR

       XV

       ALASKAN ADVENTURES

       A CHAPTER OF ENCOURAGEMENT

       BY STEWART EDWARD WHITE

       THE UPSHOT

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The glory and romance of archery culminated in England before the discovery of America. There, no doubt, the bow was used to its greatest perfection, and it decided the fate of nations. The crossbow and the matchlock had supplanted the longbow when Columbus sailed for the New World.

      It was, therefore, a distinct surprise to the first explorers of America that the natives used the bow and arrow so effectively. In fact, the sword and the horse, combined with the white man's superlative self-assurance, won the contest over the aborigines more than the primitive blunderbuss of the times. The bow and arrow was still more deadly than the gun.

      With the gradual extermination of the American Indian, the westward march of civilization, and the improvement in firearms, this contest became more and more unequal, and the bow disappeared from the land. The last primitive Indian archer was discovered in California in the year 1911.

      When the white pioneers of California descended through the northern part of that State by the Lassen trail, they met with a tribe of Indians known as the Yana, or Yahi. That is the name they called themselves. Their neighbors called them the Nozi, and the white men called them the Deer Creek or Mill Creek Indians. Different from the other tribes of this territory, the Yana would not submit without a struggle to the white man's conquest of their lands.

      The Yana were hunters and warriors. The usual California natives were yellow in color, fat and inclined to be peaceable. The Yana were smaller of stature, lithe, of reddish bronze complexion, and instead of being diggers of roots, they lived by the salmon spear and the bow. Their range extended over an area south of Mount Lassen, east of the Sacramento River, for a distance of fifty miles.

      From the earliest settlement of the whites, hostilities existed between them. This resulted in definitely organized expeditions against these Indians, and the annual slaughter of hundreds.

      The last big round-up of Mill Creek Indians occurred in 1872, when their tribe was surprised at its seasonal harvest of acorns. Upon this occasion a posse of whites killed such a number of natives that it is said the creek was damned with dead bodies. An accurate account of these days may be obtained from Watterman's paper on the Yana Indians. [Footnote: Vol. 13, No. 2, Am. Archaeology and Ethnology.]

      During one of the final raids upon the Yana, a little band of Indian women and children hid in a cave. Here they were discovered and murdered in cold blood. One of the white scouting party laconically stated that he used his revolver to blow out their brains because the rifle spattered up the cave too much.

      So it came to pass, that


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