Wild Imaginations

cowboy on horseback at sunrise

During the nineteenth century the cattle business boomed in the western states. These early pioneers faced many difficult challenges; the greatest challenge was overcoming their own fears and prejudices of the unknown. The frontiersmen’s lives became a symbol for an American dream—“the Cowboy Hero,” whereas the Native American’s image was misrepresented and exploited by American businessmen eager to make a buck, no matter what it cost the Native Americans.

The eastern states saw these men and women as Frontier Heros, people that tamed a harsh land and fought the savage Natives that resided in that land. Janice Rushing gives us an idea of how the East understood life in the West, and how the Easterners viewed the natives that inhabited the land, “In addition to these natural challenges, pioneer heroes also struggled with human evil” (Gerster and Cords 96).

As stories of the frontiersmen lives made their way back to the eastern states they became greatly exaggerated. These tales became the symbols of good verses evil where our “cowboy hero” always fights the “savage Indians” which must be conquered. The people began to see blood thirsty savages behind every tree and bush. Noises in the night became the war cries of the battle hungry warriors. Families would flee their homes to escape from attacking Indians that were never there, flee from attacks that only occurred in the vivid imaginations stirred by fear.

Man’s fear and an active imagination can be a very large obstacle to overcome for some individuals. Often fear can spread rumors or myths, just as a wildfire spreads in a dry forest on a hot, windy day. Glenda Riley gives many accounts of fear spreading myths through the western towns. Riley tells of a group of families on April of 1857 that heard the “Indians are up on the Des Moines River and are going to come down to kill us” (Gerster and Cords 27). The families abandoned their homes, and sent out spies “to see if there were any Indians around” (Gerster and Cords 27). They found that they had deserted their homes for nothing.

Riley tells of another instance of a young man in the Ackley area. He woke his neighbors up yelling out “Wild Indians.” It was discovered in the morning that the Wild Indians turned out to be a man carrying a feather-bed mattress in the night (Gerster and Cords 27).

Native Americans had good examples and bad examples of their tribes, just as any culture does. Caroline Phelps was a newly married young woman who moved to southeastern Iowa in the 1830’s with her husband to trade with the Indians. Caroline mentions that the Indians often drank excessively and fought with each other, but she wasn’t afraid of them. Phelps also mentions the Indian women she became friends with. She attended the Indian ceremonies and their dances. Phelps’ daughter was even treated by the Indian doctor. When an Indian friend died, they mourned for their friend just as they would have mourned for a member of their family (Gerster and Cords 27-28).

A Marshall County woman recalls an account during the late 1840’s when she and her husband had been trading with a tribe of local Indians. On one occasion her husband was physically attacked by one of the Indians over a dispute. The woman recalls that a large group of his people came to her cabin to apologize for his behavior. “They spoke very indignantly of the Indian who had so badly misused us, and said he was a bad Indian, and often quarreled and fought with his own people.” She remembers that most of the Indians treated them kindly (Gerster and Cords 28).

Riley goes on to say how one young German girl remembers her Aunt Liz taking her to the Indian’s village and the squaws would give them brightly colored beads that they had made. She remembers treasuring them greatly. Her memories of the Indians were that they were very kind and she remembers an Indian that visited her family “that spoke very good English” (Gerster and Cords 28).

One woman even received a proposal of marriage from the son of a “powerful Indian chieftain”(Gerster and Cords 28). He was willing to give up his whole way of life and learn to live like the white man if that is what it took for this woman to accept his marriage proposal. This hardly seems like the acts of a “savage” man.

Another widely circulated myth was that the white women hated the Native Americans. It was believed that the Native Americans dragged these women off and raped them; these women chose to return to their homes and not stay with their captors. Riley explains that these “sagas of abduction, rape, and escape; made a thrilling story, meant to titillate Americans of the nineteenth century while venting their hatred of the Native Americans” (Gerster and Cords 26).

American society has always expected women to behave in a certain manner. American culture would like us to believe in the myth that women of the nineteenth century were pure, and prim and proper, gentle creatures. If it came to be known that women actually had desires, this would go against everything that we believed, and our nation has always hated cultures that we didn’t understand. Mixed marriages were not easily accepted in this time period. Researcher Dawn L. Gherman, believed that “women of this time period actually had a streak of ‘wildness’ in their make up which caused them to occasionally long for the natural, the free, and the unrestrained qualities which they perceived in the lives of Native Americans” (Gerster and Cords 26). If Gherman were right in her conclusion that some women fantasized about being “white squaws” this idea would never be condoned by those that already hated the Indians (Gerster and Cords 26).

The majority of the Frontiersmen were obviously not afraid of the Native American, because their lives were full of many social events. The women organized quilting and literary societies. These events were meant to bring about socializing in their communities. They attended balls, circuses, and masquerades. They had parties in which they danced all night in elegant homes (Gerster and Cords 24).

Churches were built and there were camp meetings held; the townspeople pitched tents and camped out for two and three weeks at a time. There were also log-rollings to clear the land so they could build houses. They held house-warmings and played cards or checkers. The local fiddle player would bring families together and they would dance all night. These are hardly the activities of a town that was threatened with being attacked by local “savages” (Gerster and Cords 24).

The settlers saw the country change quickly. School and churches were built. The towns began to grow and the railroads came; roads began to be built. The settlers began building bridges and soon the small villages began to resemble “up-to-date-towns with all the improvements of the city” (Gerster and Cords 24). It would have been hard for the Indians to sneak in and attack the settlers without someone noticing. Many of the settlers were beginning to set up trading with the Indians and they were becoming friends with them. It just doesn’t make sense that the Indians would come in and attack the settlers for no reason. Minor disputes are naturally going to occur as they do in any neighborhood, but that doesn’t make the Indians “Savage Beasts.”

Cattle became a flourishing business in the West. Many Southerners emigrated to the Western states, giving birth to the symbol of the, “Cowboy Hero.” Commercial business played this American idol for every cent they could get. David Brion Davis writes, “There have been romances written and movies produced idealizing these phases of American history, but little boys do not dress up like Paul Bunyan and you do not see harpooners on cereal packages. Yet America has had many episodes fully as colorful and of longer duration than the actual cowboy era” (Gerster and Cords 31).

The image of what the cowboy stood for was exploited by big business. The “cowboy hero” was an easy trade mark for commerce. Can’t you just picture a big, strong, carved cowboy outside the store selling covered wagons, or on the front of the store where the guns are sold? Many books were written based on the tales of the innocent women being saved by our brave “cowboy” legend fighting off the “savage” Indians, and of course our hero always won. David Brion Davis writes about the Ten-Gallon Hero, “Despite the incongruities, the cowboy myth exists in fact, and as such is probably a more influential social force than the actual cowboy ever was. It provides the frame work for an expression of common ideals of morality and behavior. And while a commercial success, the hero cowboy must satisfy some basic want in American culture” (Gerster and Cords 31).

The views of the cowboys and the Indians according to the eastern states were unrealistically based on stories revolving around the lives of the Frontier Heros and not from actual experiences of the actual average Westerner. Janice Rushing sums up the images of the lives that the Eastern states believed the Westerners lived, describing the danger, violence and evils that they faced in everyday life.

Rushing notes that in addition to these natural challenges, pioneer heroes also struggled with human evil. According to Rushing, this meant the Native American or the outlaw. “Whatever its form,” she observes, “evil is to be respected for its fierceness and strength” and its ability to provide “a fitting challenge for the frontier hero.” This combination of beauty and cruelty on the limitless frontier also gives the Myth much of its compelling power. “It can inspire ordinary people to conquer immense hazards,” Calder writes, or “it can defeat them totally” . . . (Gerster and Cords 96).

Myth and Reality have its place in American lives. Myth can give men the capability to dream bigger dreams and make American lives better, just as the Frontiersmen did, but we also need to be grounded in reality. A civilization should not be deemed evil out of the fear of other men based on misunderstandings of their cultures. In all reality, the frontiersmen probably learned many useful skills from the Native Americans about the land. If we forget the actual facts of history preferring to live only in the fantasy, then man has already defeated himself.

Recommend0 recommendationsPublished in Senior Chatters

Related Articles

Responses