last day of November 2014, so a little recollection by Mr. Kurz during his adventures in the United States (this time 1850 summer and 1851)
First, our author bought yet another horse, he named her Fashion:
'On August 7 I
bought a dainty black mare with white feet — 
all four white. 
She
is a genuine mustang. What a joy to wander 
about the forest,
where Fashion carries me to distances I could 
not otherwise
accomplish and so widens the sphere of my observa- 
tions. With
Fashion's aid I have been able to visit often the 
Hundred-and-Two River (so named because it is said to be 102 miles 
long), to bathe in
its clear waters, to sketch groups of trees on its 
shores that are
hardly surpassed by those on the Cahokia.' 
then Mr Kurz met the Potawatomis, who had been forced to migrate to Kansas from the Old Northwest:
''Potawatomi fromKansas and those on the land known as the 
"PlattePurchase" visited one another frequently, I made sketches 
of some of them and,
in exchange, furnished the young fellows with 
10-cent pieces of
rods out of which they make arrows for the 
hunting season. 
'At 20 feet they hit
small objects with great accuracy; at a greater 
distance the least
movement of the air may exert an adverse effect. 
At 100 feet they fly
the arrows with great skill but can not be sure 
of piercing the
heart of the animal.'
Later that autumn of 1850 Kurz decided to invest in horses and the following story developed:
''In the autumn
newspapers began to publish articles about a plan 
that was being
considered by the United States Government, in con- 
nection with the
highway to California and Oregon, to enter into 
negotiations with
the Indian tribes concerned and for that purpose to 
invite the most
notable men among them to a conference next sum- 
mer at Fort Laramie.
At once it occurred to me that I might enjoy 
an agreeable
adventure and at the same time make it profitable 
if I would
occasionally buy good horses, ride about the country on 
horseback, sell the
animals at a profit next spring at Salt Lake, then, 
on my return,
attend, if possible, that most interesting assembly at 
Fort Laramie and
witness the signing of the treaty. 
Then, of course,
horses declined in value. I lost a great deal of 
money. The cost of
feeding the animals was out of proportion to 
the amount their
work brought me. I was too fond of them and 
spent too much
taking care of them. 
One misfortune after
another induced me to sell the horses and 
give up the idea of
going to Salt Lake. 
 
 
 
 
First, I suffered
the loss 
 
 
 
 
of an excellent mare
that I lent to an acquaintance who wished to 
attend a Christmas
ball at Rochester. After he had run a race on 
a bet, after the
manner of Americans, and over a rough, frozen road, 
he left my fine
animal standing in front of a public house all in a 
sweat and without
the protection of a blanket. In spite of all efforts 
to save her, the
mare died from pneumonia. I suffered another 
mishap in a pasture
where I allowed my four horses to exercise on 
a beautiful March
day. A boy took great delight in playing tricks 
on the spirited
animals and, to give himself further amusement, set 
a dog on them just
to see them run an extended course. Having 
become once
frightened, they did not stop running for several miles, 
until they were far
into the forest. After a long search I came up 
with them at last
but, as I drew nearer, calling gently to them, and 
w'as sure of getting
hold of at least one of them, Avhinnying, they 
turned abruptly
about, extended their legs, shook their manes and, 
in a trice, had
disappeared from view. 
For the reason that
Lily, one of my mares, appeared to be going 
in the direction of
the place where she had been bred, I thought I 
should find all of
them next morning at her old home. So early 
in the day I hired a
horse and rode over there, through a region 
that was unfamiliar
to me. My road, a most romantic one, led 
through a
magnificent forest, over two beautiful streams, and across 
a waste. Not a trace
of my horses anywhere ! Then I remained at 
home two days,
hoping that my runaways might be induced by 
hunger to return or
else that some news might come to me concern- 
ing their
whereabouts. But they did not return. No news came. 
On the fifth day
after their flight I hired another horse and rode 
to the place where
two other mares of mine had been bred, i. e., to 
the "Round
Prairie" on the high road to Fort Kearney near Newark. 
There, fully 9 miles
from the city, I heard specifically that they had 
been seen.
Fortunately, they had kept together and were so wild 
and spirited that no
one could catch them; otherwise I should cer- 
tainly have lost one
or the other. A young farmer who had seen 
the two colts and
knew the range of their earlier pasture mounted 
his horse and helped
me trace them. For several hours we followed 
them from one farm
to another. It was perfectly evident that they 
wanted to play with
their former companions and were searching 
for them, and as the
brutes went visiting around in their old neigh-
borhood and tarried
here and there with their former playmates 
we drew constantly
nearer. 
Still following the
trace we came, late in the evening, into the 
highroad again,
where dust made it impossible any longer to dis- 
tinguish their
tracks. 
Well, I spent the
night in Newark. Next morning, the sixth day 
of their "spree,"
I was up with the sun to follow any trace I might
find on the highway.
Over a wide stretch I searched but could find 
neither on the right
nor on the left any tracks made by sixteen feet. 
I did find a place
beside the road where they had lain down together, 
but on what night?
That was a puzzle too difficult for my wits to 
solve. My only
possible clue was fresh dung. After breakfast I 
mounted my hired pad
with the intention of going home, hoping that 
my straying animals
would instinctively return, finally, to the place 
where they had
received good nurture and rich forage. Upon my 
inquiry at a farm on
the highway I was told that toward sunset the 
previous evening
four horses — according to the description, they 
must be mine —
were seen prancing along the way in the direction of 
Savannah. 
A little farther on,
where the road from Marysville branches off 
from the highroad to
Fort Kearney, I heard from a countryman 
living there that
during the night four horses wanted to rest on the 
straw lying in front
of his fence, that the roan mare (my Bet) had 
already lain down
but, for fear that their presence might tempt his 
own beasts to break
out, he had driven them away. Which way they 
went he did not
know. 
"Home, of
course, to their own comfortable stalls," I said to myself. 
I rode rapidly back
to Savannah in happy expectation. There I 
found no trace of my
runaways' return. So, after I had eaten, I 
had to mount a fresh
horse and renew the search. Following my 
latest clue, I rode
until the evening in all directions, through forest 
and over plain,
without result. Vexed and tired, I returned to the 
Savannah road.
Suddenly I was aroused from my ill-humored 
reverie by hearing
some one call out as I was passing a farm, 
"Hulloa,
Dutchman!" Turning my head, I saw a man sitting on 
his fence. He called
out again, "Look here ! Are them your 
horses?" Sure
enough, there they were, evidently half -starved. 
There was no grass.
At best, they could only have fed on tender 
buds just appearing
on the shrubs. Besides, they had been racing 
about the country
without rest. 
Several hours
earlier, the man said, those hungry horses had
stopped at his
fence, cast longing looks toward his stacks of corn, 
and then made known
their desires by an eager neighing. He took 
them in, because he
had heard that I was searching for them. The 
birds were caught,
to be sure, but I had trouble still to get them in 
hand. So wildly they
ran about, so persistently parried our efforts 
on every hand, that
I thought they must be possessed with the devil. 
Finally we got them
in a corner and held them in fear by cracking 
a whip until I had
bridled them. I saddled the filly, because she 
remained
uncontrollable longer than the others. Then I paid the 
man for his
assistance and set out home on a gallop. Never in my 
life have I ridden
as fast; the horses seemed really running a race 
with one another to
see which could reach home first. I thought 
I should he jerked
off the saddle. 
I had hardly got my
team of four in good condition again when 
they ran away with
me and plunged with the vehicle down a hill. 
To practice driving
a four-in-hand and to accustom the horses to 
that mode of
traveling I took drives every day in the vicinity. I 
got excellent
practice on the usual American roads, for they abounded 
in stumps, steep
slopes, and many running streams, but to learn 
how to manage with
sloughs, ditches, narrow passes, curves, and 
the turning of
corners I chose the forest road to Nodaway Island, 
to the
Hundred-and-Two, and along the Little Platte River, all the 
way out to the
parade ground. The horses pulled so well together, 
traveled with such
uniform gait, were so instantly responsive to 
the rein, always
stood so quietly when halted, backed without plung- 
ing, trotted so well
without need of the whip, and the roan mare 
proved such an
excellent lead horse, I was planning with much 
pleasure to take a
journey with them to Deseret. 
In April I drove
alone to St. Joseph to talk over plans for the 
journey with my
future traveling companion. On my return, about 
3 miles from
Savannah, the offside horse cast a shoe on her left rear 
foot. I stopped
immediately, for she seemed to be limping. Since 
no one was there to
take the reins, I threw them lightly on the seat 
cushion and went to
examine the hoof. In spite of the care I took, 
stroking her
soothingly and speaking gently, the instant I attempted 
to raise her foot
she gave a leap and off and away all of them went 
over stock and
stone, up hill and down dale, as if in a mad pursuit. 
I tried at once to
seize the bridle rein of the lead horse but, in run- 
ning, I stumbled
over a stump and fell. When I got up I saw the 
vehicle plunging on
— here a cushion hurled away, there my cloak. 
"Adieu, je t'ai
vu!" I thought. "Confound it all!' 
I ran after them, of
course, as fast as I could. I had an idea 
that they were stuck
fast in the forest. Sure enough, below the 
first hill, I found
Bet wallowing in the dust, trying to get free 
from the harness and
the long lines that were wound about her. 
Having set her free,
I ordered her to get up. She could hardly 
stand ! She was
trembling in every limb and spread her feet wide 
apart for fear of
falling. She had lost her head entirely. I led 
her away from the
road and tied her tight and fast at a spot where 
there was grass;
then I went in search of the others. About a 
hundred feet farther
on I found Lily, Bet's companion, standing, 
bewildered, in the
road. 
Aside from a wound
in her left rear shank, inflicted, most likely, 
by the jDole, she
had suffered no injury. I swung myself lightly 
upon her back and
went on after the two shaft horses and the hack. 
I found them at the
top of the hist steep hill as one approaches 
Savannah.
Fortunately they could go no farther; they had hardly 
come out alive from
the creek below. The two horses were caught 
in some bushes and
the vehicle was jammed against a tree. The 
horse on the right
had thrown her hind leg over the pole and was 
evidently forced to
stop. The vehicle had most probably been car- 
ried on until it was
held fast by striking the tree trunk. 
I disentangled the
beasts from their harness to see what damage 
had been done. Lily
had suffered no injury — was only lamed. The 
hack could stand on
its wheels, to be sure, but many screws were 
gone. I went back to
bring Bet, the cushion, and my cloak. Then, 
having harnessed
Lily and the colt together, I led them slowly home. 
The horses had to be
cared for and doctored ; the vehicle and harness 
had to be mended.    
 
 
 
 
Finally, at the end
of April I was ready for my journey; my 
wagon was provided
with a canvas top and provisioned with zwie- 
bach, smoked meat,
butter, eggs, sugar, tea, cooking and drinking 
utensils, oats and
corn meal for the horses, a saddle, a double-bar- 
reled shotgun, a
hunting knife, and four 30-foot cords with iron pins. 
The last-named were
to be used for tying the horses. 
My intended
companion on the journey, a young American, was 
to wait in St.
Joseph and be ready to set out with me on the first 
of May.
Notwithstanding that he had detained me with his prom- 
ises to go, Steiner
refused, when I arrived in St. Joseph, to con- 
sider taking the
trip. He had not the means, he said, to provide his 
own personal outfit.
Now, I had asked nothing more of him than 
that he bring his
own provisions, and, in return for his seat in my 
wagon, that he look
after the vehicle on the journey, while I took 
care of the horses. 
A fine predicament!
To travel with four horses and a wagon 
alone was not to be
considered, for both team and vehicle would 
have to be
constantly guarded. To find another trustworthy per- 
son to go with me
could not be done at once. Therefore, my grand 
display with
four-in-hand came to a sudden end. I determined 
to sell both wagon
and team. But now, when I wanted a purchaser, 
nobody would buy.
Earlier, when I did not wish to part with my 
horses, I had many
advantageous offers. 
May 9. Lily and the
colt sold in Weston. Bet placed on a farm 
so that she may grow
strong again. Such a fine mare one is justified 
in giving the best
attention ; she will certainly bring $60 more. The 
wagon and harness as
well as the large mare, Landy, left behind 
to be sold, so that
on my return I shall have some funds. Trip to 
Salt Lake and Fort
Laramie given up''
 ...thus ended this horse story 
enjoy



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