Jesse
Chisholm
(1805? - March 4, 1868)
He
was an Indian trader, guide, and interpreter, born in the Hiawassee region
of Tennessee, probably in 1805 or 1806. He is chiefly famous for being the
namesake to the Chisholm Trail, which ranchers used to drive their cattle
to eastern markets. Chisholm
had built a number of trading posts in what is now western Oklahoma before
the American Civil War. Ironically,
he never drove cattle on the trail named for him.
His
father, Ignatius Chisholm, was of Scottish ancestry and had worked as a
merchant and slave trader in the Knoxville area in the 1790s. Around 1800
he married a Cherokee woman in the Hiawassee area, with whom he had three
sons; Jesse was the eldest. Sometime thereafter Ignatius Chisholm
separated from Jesse's mother and moved to Arkansas Territory. Jesse
Chisholm was evidently taken to Arkansas by his mother with Tahlonteskee's
group in 1810. During the late 1820s he moved to the Cherokee Nation and
settled near Fort Gibson in what is now eastern Oklahoma.
Chisholm
became a trader and in 1836 married Eliza Edwards, daughter of James
Edwards, who ran a trading post in what is now Hughes County, Oklahoma.
Chisholm took trade goods west and south into Plains Indian country, was
fluent in fourteen dialects, established small trading posts, and was soon
in demand as a guide and interpreter. He was universally trusted for his
fairness and neutrality, critical assets as diverse and often hostile
cultures interacted for the first time. Eventually he interpreted at
treaty councils in Texas, Indian Territory, and Kansas.
He
was active in Texas for nearly twenty years. While president of the
Republic of Texas, Sam Houston, who probably met Chisholm at Fort Gibson
between 1829 and 1833 (and married Chisholm's aunt), called on him to
contact the prairie Indian tribes of West Texas. Chisholm played a major
role as guide and interpreter for several Indian groups at the Tehuacana
Creek councils beginning in Spring 1843, when he coaxed several tribes to
the first council on Tehuacana Creek near the Torrey Brothers trading post
eight miles south of the site of present Waco.
Over
the next year and a half he continued to offer his services to Houston,
and on October 7, 1844, Chisholm got Comanches and others to attend a
meeting at Tehuacana, where Houston spoke. In February 1846, while
visiting the Torreys' post from a trip south of San Antonio, Chisholm was
hired to bring Comanches to a council at Comanche Peak (Glen Rose today).
The meeting was held on May 12. Finally, on December 10, 1850, Chisholm
assembled representatives from seven tribes at a council on the San Saba
River. At some of these meetings and on trading trips he was able to
rescue captives held by Indians.
By
1858 Chisholm ended his trips into Texas and confined his activities to
western Oklahoma. He left the Cherokee Nation and settled in the Creek
Nation, near the mouth of the Little River, in what is now Hughes County,
where he made his home. At various times he had trading posts out on the
edge of the Great Plains, including one near the site of Lexington (in
what is now Cleveland County) and one at Council Grove (near what is now
Oklahoma City). Much of his trading was done by taking wagons and going to
the villages of the Comanche and other tribes of the Great Plains.
At
various times he rescued captive children and youths from the Comanches
and Kiowas. Most of these were Mexicans. He adopted them and
reared them with his own family, treating them just as he did his own
children. He went to Kansas with the Creek exiles, in the latter part of
1861, but soon drifted west to the site of what is now Wichita, Kansas,
where the Wichita, Waco and other refugee tribes from Southwestern
Oklahoma were encamped.
During
the Civil War he served the Confederacy as a trader with the Indians, but
by 1864 he was an interpreter for Union officers. During the war, Chisholm
resided at the site of Wichita, Kansas; Chisholm Creek in the present city
is named for him. In 1865, Chisholm and James R. Mead loaded a train of
wagons at Fort Leavenworth and established a trading post at Council Grove
on the North Canadian River near the site of the Overholser Lake dam in
present Oklahoma City.
Many
of his Wichita friends followed, and their route later became the Chisholm
Trail, which connected Texas ranches with markets on the railroad in
Kansas. Chisholm attempted to arrange an Indian council at the Little
Arkansas in 1865, but some tribes held out. In 1867, with the aid of Black
Beaver, famous Delaware leader and guide, he induced the plains tribes to
meet government representatives in a council that resulted in the Medicine
Lodge Treaty.
Chisholm
died of food poisoning after eating rancid bear meat at Left Hand Spring,
near the site of present Geary, Oklahoma, on April 4, 1868. His grave is
marked.
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