Fur trade and Crow tribe As a young man in 1824 Beckwourth joined General
William Ashley's
Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He worked as a
wrangler during Ashley's expedition to explore the
Rocky Mountains. In the following years, Beckwourth became known as a prominent trapper and
mountain man. In July 1825,
rendezvous, trapper and colleague
Caleb Greenwood told the campfire story of Beckwourth's being the child of a Crow chief. He claimed Beckwourth had been stolen as a baby by raiding
Cheyenne and sold to whites. This lore was widely believed, as Beckwourth had adopted Native American dress and was taken by some people as an Indian. Later that year, Beckwourth claimed to have been captured by Crow while trapping in the border county between the territories of Crow, Cheyenne, and
Blackfoot. According to his account, he was mistaken for the lost son of a Crow chief, so they admitted him to the nation. Independent accounts suggest his stay with the Crow was planned by the Rocky Mountain Fur Company to advance its trade with the tribe. Beckwourth married the daughter of a
chief. (Marriages between Native Americans and fur trappers and traders were common for the valuable alliances they provided both parties.) For the next eight to nine years, Beckwourth lived with a Crow band, who named him "Bull's Robe." He rose in their society from warrior to chief (a respected man) and leader of the "Dog Clan". According to his book, he eventually ascended to the highest-ranking war chieftaincy of the Crow tribe. He still trapped but did not sell his or Crow furs to his former partners of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. Instead, he sold to
John Jacob Astor's competing
American Fur Company. Beckwourth participated in raids by the Crow on neighboring nations and the occasional white party. Sometimes such raids escalated to warfare, most often against bands of their traditional Blackfoot enemy. In 1837, when the American Fur Company did not renew his contract, Beckwourth returned to St. Louis. He volunteered with the United States Army to fight in the
Second Seminole War in
Florida. In his book, he claims to have been a soldier and courier. According to historical records, he was a civilian wagon master in the baggage division. During one trade exchange Beckwourth may have helped to spread
smallpox to an Indian tribe. When Little Robe had complained to fur trapper
Jim Bridger that "white men" were responsible for destroying his people, Bridger replied that Whites didn't do that, "he told Little Robe how Jim Beckwourth a
Mulatto...had done this evil thing," by trading infected blankets with the Indians, and pointing out that "Beckwourth...was a Negro, and therefore not a white man." From 1838 to 1840, Beckwourth was an Indian trader to the Cheyenne, on the
Arkansas River, working out of
Fort Vasquez, Colorado, near
Platteville. In 1840, he moved to
Bent, St. Vrain & Company. Later that same year, Beckwourth became an independent trader. In 1842, Beckwourth moved to new settlement at
Pueblo, Colorado with a wife (or consort), Maria Luisa Sandoval and a child Matilda. In 1843, he departed for California and when he returned to Pueblo in 1846 Luisa was married (in the informal style of the mountains) to
John Brown. In 1844, Beckwourth traded on the
Old Spanish Trail between the Arkansas River and California, then controlled by Mexico. When the
Mexican–American War began in 1846, Beckwourth returned to the United States. He brought along nearly 1,800 stolen Mexican horses as spoils of war. In the war, he served as a
courier with the
U.S. Army and helped suppress the
Taos Revolt. His former employer,
Charles Bent, then interim governor of
New Mexico, was slain in that revolt.
Business By 1848 and the start of the
Gold Rush, Beckwourth went to California. He first opened a store at
Sonoma. He soon sold and went to
Sacramento, then a boomtown close to the mines, to live as a professional card player. In 1850, Beckwourth was credited with discovering what came to be called
Beckwourth Pass, a low-elevation pass through the Sierra Nevada mountain chain. In 1851, he improved what became the Beckwourth Trail, originally a Native American path through the mountains. It began near
Pyramid Lake and the
Truckee Meadows east of the mountains, climbed to the pass named for him, and went along a ridge, between two forks of
Feather River, before passing down through the gold fields of northern California, and on to
Marysville. The trail spared the settlers and gold seekers about and several steep grades and dangerous passes, such as
Donner Pass. By his account, the business communities of the gold towns in California were supposed to fund the making of the trail. However, when Beckwourth tried to collect his payment in 1851 after leading a party, Marysville suffered from two huge fires and town leaders were unable to pay. (In 1996, in recognition of his contribution to the city's development and of the outstanding debt to him, the City of Marysville officially renamed the town's largest park as Beckwourth Riverfront Park.) Beckwourth began ranching in the Sierra. His ranch, trading post, and hotel, in today's
Sierra Valley, were the starting of the settlement of
Beckwourth, California. In the winter of 1854/55, the itinerant judge Thomas D. Bonner stayed in the hotel, and on winter nights Beckwourth told him his life story. Bonner wrote it down, edited the material the following year, and offered the book to
Harper & Brothers in New York.
The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth was published in 1856.
Military service In 1859, Beckwourth returned to Missouri briefly but settled later that year in
Denver,
Colorado Territory. Working as a storekeeper in the employ of
Louis Vasquez, Beckwourth was appointed as an
Indian agent by the government. In 1864, Beckwourth was hired as a scout by
United States Army officer
John Chivington, who commanded the
3rd Colorado Cavalry Regiment. The regiment subsequently served in a campaign against the Cheyenne and
Apache as part of the
Colorado War. Chivington's men perpetrated the
Sand Creek massacre on November 29, 1864, in which the U.S. Army slaughtered an estimated 70-163 Cheyenne people, who had camped in an area suggested by the previous commander of
Fort Lyon as a safe place and were flying an American flag to show their peaceful intentions. Outraged by his involvement in the massacre, the Cheyenne banned Beckwourth from trading with them. Well into his sixties by then, Beckwourth returned to trapping. In 1866, during
Red Cloud's War, the United States Army again employed him as a scout at
Fort Laramie and
Fort Phil Kearny. ==Death==