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Christopher
"Kit" Carson 1809-1868
CARSON, Christopher, better
known as "Kit Carson," soldier, born in Madison County, Kentucky,
24 December, 1809; died at Fort Lynn, Col., 23 May, 1868. While he was
an infant his parents emigrated to what is now Howard County, Missouri,
but was then a wilderness. At the age of fifteen he was apprenticed to
a saddler, with whom he continued two years, and then he joined a hunting
expedition, thus beginning the adventurous life that made him one of the
most picturesque figures of western history.
For eight years he was on the plains, leading the life of a trapper, until
he was appointed hunter for the garrison at Bent's Fort, where he remained
eight years more. After a short visit to his family he met, for the first
time, General (then Lieutenant) John C. Fremont, by whom his experience
in the backwoods was at once appreciated, and by whom, also, he was engaged
as guide in his subsequent explorations. In this capacity he was eminently
useful, and to him is probably due much of the success of those explorations.
He was perhaps better known to a larger number of Indian tribes than any
other white man, and from his long life among them learned their habits
and customs, understood their mode of warfare, and spoke their language
as his mother tongue. No one man did more than he in furthering the settlement
of the northwestern wilderness.
In 1847 Carson was sent to Washington as bearer of dispatches, and was
then appointed second lieutenant in the mounted rifles, U. S. army. This
appointment, however, was negated by the senate. In 1853 he drove 6,500
sheep over the mountains to California, a hazardous undertaking at that
time, and, on his return to Laos, was appointed Indian agent in New Mexico.
Under this appointment he was largely instrumental in bringing about the
treaties between the United States and the Indians.
He was an instinctive judge of character, and, knowing the Indians so
thoroughly, his cool judgment and wisdom in dealing with them, even under
the most trying circumstances, enabled him to render important services
to the U. S. government. During the civil war he repeatedly rendered great
service to the government in New Mexico, Colorado, and the Indian territory,
and was brevetted brigadier-general for his meritorious conduct. At its
close, he resumed his duties as Indian agent. In this relation to the
Indians he visited Washington, in the winter and early spring of 1868,
in company with a deputation of the red men, and made a tour of several
of the northern and eastern states. Unlike most of the trappers and guides,
General Carson was a man of remarkable modesty, and in conversation never
boasted of his own achievements. See "Life of Kit Carson, the Great
Western Hunter," by Charles Burdett (Philadelphia, 1869). - Edited
Appleton's American Biography
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