James D. Saules

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James D. Saules was a sailor of the United States Exploring Expedition. In 1841 he survived the sinking of the USS Peacock at the Columbia Bar. Saules subsequently was among the first black settlers of the Oregon Country. While residing in the Willamette Valley he became involved in the Cockstock incident.

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James D. Saules
Occupation(s)Sailor, Freight Business Owner
Known for US Exploring Expedition, first settler of Cape Disappointment, [1] Cockstock Incident

Early life

There is no definite birthplace of Saules. Based on onomastic information and historical accounts, Kenneth R. Coleman, author of a microhistory about Salues, considers North Carolina or Virginia to be probable. 1806 is suggested as his birth year. Regardless if Saules was born into slavery or not, he was free by 1833. [2]

Maritime career

Saules started sailing when he was about 15 years old. [3] Coleman considers the ports of Baltimore, Charleston, Norfolk, and Richmond as potential places where he began. [4] Saules was living in New Bedford when he joined the Winslow, a whaling ship based out of New Haven during 1833. [5] He served as a mate on the vessel, just below the captain. Stockpiles of salt meat on board the Winslow became putrid and scurvy developed among the crew. Nine men from the Winslow deserted on Cocos Island, with Saules likely among them. They were eventually picked up by the Almira, another whaling ship, and were subsequently taken to the port of Paita in Peru. [6]

U.S. Exploring Expedition

In the aftermath of the War of the Confederation, the Peruvian port city of Callao had many American mercenaries, [7] Saules may have been among them. The United States Exploring Expedition visited the port during July 1839 and hired Saules as a cook for the USS Peacock . [8] Saules' opportunity was rare for black men during the Antebellum of the United States. The job came with relative independence and separation from the crew. He also preformed as a musician, either as a fiddler or violinist. [9] [10]

The USS Peacock USS Peacock 1813.jpg
The USS Peacock

Saules served with the U.S. Exploring Expedition from July 1839 until October 1841. During the initial part of his service he visited Tuamotus, Tahiti, and Samoa. On 10 January 1840 the Peacock briefly visited Macquarie Island after leaving Port Jackson. [11] After a perilous encounter with icebergs the vessel returned to Sydney on 21 February for repairs. [12]

On 30 March the Peacock departed the Australian port for Fiji. [13] Once at the Fijian archipelago, in the orders of Lieutenant Charles Wilkes, the Peacock went to Rewa of Viti Levu island. Commander William L. Hudson sought to capture a man named Ro Veidovi, a brother of the reigning Roko Tui Dreketi, Ro Banuve. [14] Ro Veidovi was accused participating in the murder of the crew of the American Charles Daggett on Ono Island in 1836. [15]

Ro Vendovi. CANNIBAL CHIEF, VENDOVI.png
Ro Vendovi.

On 21 May, Ro Banuve along with his family and entourage, were invited onto the Peacock for entertainment. According to William Reynolds a staged ceremony was held for the visiting Fijians, with Saules a part of the ruse: [16]

"[Ro Banuve] was honored with one roll and a half of the drum, instead of three, the black steward of my mess, who flourished the sticks, breaking down in the middle of the second, so that this part of the show terminated in several abortive squeaks of the fife breathed by the Ship’s Cook." [17]

The Fijians were soon informed that the true purpose of their visit was to capture then as hostages. Captain Hudson explained that "meant them no harm, but it was his intention to detain them until Vendovi was brought off." [18] Ro Veidovi surrendered himself the following day. [14] While the American officers promised to not execute him, they insisted on taking Ro Veidovi back to East Coast of the United States. Agreeing to the proposal, Veidovi remained with the U.S. Exploring Expedition until its return to New York City in 1842, where he died from illness. [19]

The U.S. Exploring Expedition departed Fiji in August 1840. [20] En route to the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, supplies of flour, coffee, tea, and sugar on board the Peacock ran out. Its personnel were served "worm-infested bread, a daily pound of yams per man, and stinking beef that resembled mahogany." [21] Oahu was reached on 30 September. [22] After resupply the Peacock returned to Samoa, as Wilkes had found the previous survey inadequate.

The Peacock went to contemporary Kiribati after leaving Samoa. It visited Manra of the Phoenix Islands on 17 January 1841. [23] After several additional surveys of various atolls, on 3 April the Peacock reached Utiroa. A crewmember went missing after visiting the island. Almost the entire crew with Saules likely among them [24] killed a number of Kiribatians in the Battle of Drummond's Island. [25] The Peacock then sailed for Oahu, going through the Marshall Islands. The vessel reached the Hawaiian port on 14 June and received extensive repairs. [26]

Map of the Columbia Bar. Columbia river bar.jpg
Map of the Columbia Bar.

On 2 December the Peacock departed for the Pacific Northwest. [27] It reached the mouth of the Columbia River on 17 July 1841. In the afternoon of the following day Hudson ordered the Peacock to cross the Columbia Bar. Unfortunately, the Peacock soon hit a shoal and proceeded to be battered by the current. After struggling to keep it afloat throughout the night, the crew was rescued the following morning. The Peacock was soon destroyed thereafter. [28]

The crew abandoned the USS Peacock. Wreck of the Peacock. Drawn by A.T. Agate.png
The crew abandoned the USS Peacock.

The beleaguered Peacock crew was given aid by James Birnie and John McLoughlin of the Hudson's Bay Company and Clatsop Mission members Joseph H. Frost and Henry W. Kone. The fur traders and missionaries sent food, clothing, bedding, razors, and other amenities. The crew of the Peacock established residency near the original location of Fort Astoria. Rather than join the replacement USS Oregon, Saules deserted on 1 October 1841. Two other black servicemen, steward Warren Johnson and fellow cook Henry Evans joined Saules in desertion. [29] [30]

Settler

Cape Disappointment

Saules settled in contemporary Cape Disappointment, Washington state and initially found employment as a maritime pilot. While there he married a Chinookan woman from around contemporary Ilwaco, [31] and probably learned Chinook Jargon. [9]

A watercolor painting of Fort George in 1845. Fort George.jpg
A watercolor painting of Fort George in 1845.

In 1842 Saules began an enterprise shipping supplies between Fort George and Cathlamet. [10] He "threw his lot in with the colonizers" by participating in the transportation of "the goods and services that were crucial for the expansion of Euro-American economic power in the region." [32] Cathlamet was once the largest indigenous settlement of the Lower Columbia River. It had a predominantly mixed Chinookan population of Kathlamet, Chinook, and Wahkiakum peoples alongside some Cowlitz. [33]

Willamette Valley

Saules and his wife moved near Oregon City in the Willamette Valley. While living there he became embroiled in the Cockstock incident which was to have a profoud impact upon his life. [34] The problem started when another black pioneer, George Winslow, sold Saules a horse previously promised to a Molala man, Cockstock. After learning his horse was gone Cockstock confiscated the horse and made threats towards the two black men. Eventually, in early March 1844, violence between settlers and Cockstock erupted. Ultimately Henderson and Saules killed Cockstock out of defense for Anderson. Sub-Indian agent Elijah White paid off Cockstock's Wasco relatives to ease tensions. [34]

Oregon City in 1845, as depicted by Warre. Oregon City 1845 by Warre.jpg
Oregon City in 1845, as depicted by Warre.

Joseph Meek arrested Saules on 1 May 1844 for allegedly threatening to incite his Chinookan wife's relatives against Charles E. Pickette during an argument. [35] [36] Pickette, a "belligerent and eccentric Southerner... was adamantly pro-slavery, and harbored a notorious aversion to physical labor." [37] As the Provisional Government of Oregon denied Saules citizenship it is probable he received no legal representation or a fair trial. [38] In late July 1844 the first black exclusion law was decreed by the Provisional Government. [39] [40] It forbade both black slavery and the residence of any "free negros and mulattos" in Oregon. [41] As the Provisional Government was centered in the Willamette Valley, its authority didn't extend north of the Columbia River. [42]

Return to Cape Disappointment

Saules was forced back to Cape Disappointment, [36] [43] where he returned to sailing between Cathlamet and Fort George. When fur trader James Birnie relocated his family from Fort George to Cathlamet business activity increased for Saules. [44] Late in 1846 Saules' wife died. [35]

Modern Cape Disappointment USCG Cape Disappointment1.jpg
Modern Cape Disappointment

On 12 July 1846 the USS Shark reached the Columbia River. It was designed for combating Caribbean piracy. The vessal had an "inclination to lower its bow and dive under when pressed by the wind under full sail." [45] In the afternoon Henry H. Spalding, Asa Lovejoy, and William H. Gray arrived on a small boat. While there wasn't a regular pilot for the Columbia, they recommended employing Saules to reach Fort George. He was likely most familiar with scows, the most commonly used vessels on the Columbia by fur traders and settlers. [46] Saules "was also facing one of the world's most difficult rivers to navigate..." [47] Commanding officer Lieutenant Neil M. Howison described the subsequent events:

"[Saules] ordered the helm put up, head sheets aft, and yards braced, with an air that deceived me into the belief that he was fully competent to conduct the vessel, and he was put in charge of her. In twenty minutes he ran us hard ashore on Chinook shoal, where we remained several hours thumping severely." [3]

After the USS Shark freed itself from the shoal it awaited Alexander Lattie, the officer in charge of Fort George. The following morning Lattie succeeded in guiding the vessel to his fur trading post. Lattie was dismissed by the Hudson's Bay Company later that year. [48] Unable to secure another pilot, on 10 September the USS Shark attempted to exit the Columbia River but hit another shoal, sinking this time. [49] Saules likely witnessed the event, although his reaction isn't preserved in historical documentation. [50]

In 1848 Saules was captured and publicly flogged by white settlers. An observer of the violence stated "It was a shocking scene to witness" and that "Saul never recovered from his disgrace. His troubles affected his mind, and he became partially insane." [10]

Later life and legacy

The last records of Saules are in early 1850s of Cathlamet store ledgers. He is believed to have died during the time period. Coleman surmised Saules' experiences in Pacific Northwest:

"Saules lived in Oregon at a time when Anglo-Americans conquered the region. These were people who had difficulty imaging that racial difference would not leaf to violent social divisions. For the majority of them, the creation of their ideal community required the marginalization and often the removal of people they marked as nonwhite. Their racialist views compelled them to see black people not as fellow colonizers but as a threat to colonization itself." [51]

Place-names controversy

In 2016 Washington state Senator Pramila Jayapal proposed that 36 place names that contained racial slurs be renamed. In the area around Cape Disappointment were three locations named Jim Crow. Historians consider them references to Saules as he lived in the vicinity. [10] Some consider the place names to have been derived from the birds of the area, a logger, or a native chief. Although Senator Jayapal had suggested naming the three locations after Saules, in the end, they were renamed Beare Hill, Brookfield Point, and Harlows Creek. [52]

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References

  1. McDonald 1964.
  2. Coleman 2017, pp. 15–16.
  3. 1 2 Howison 1913, p. 5.
  4. Coleman 2017, pp. 18–19.
  5. Coleman 2017, p. 20.
  6. Coleman 2017, pp. 22–23.
  7. Stanton 1975, p. 112.
  8. Coleman 2017, pp. 26–27.
  9. 1 2 Scammon 1875, p. 273.
  10. 1 2 3 4 St. John 2016a.
  11. Stanton 1975, p. 152.
  12. Stanton 1975, p. 181.
  13. Stanton 1975, p. 186.
  14. 1 2 Mataitini 2009.
  15. Wilkes 1849, p. 105.
  16. Coleman 2017, p. 44.
  17. Reynolds 2004, p. 151.
  18. Wilkes 1849, pp. 127–128.
  19. Stanton 1975, pp. 199–200.
  20. Wilkes 1849, p. 367.
  21. Stanton 1975, p. 217.
  22. Wilkes 1849, p. 376.
  23. Stanton 1975, pp. 234–235.
  24. Coleman 2017, pp. 46–47.
  25. Stanton 1975, pp. 242–245.
  26. Stanton 1975, pp. 245–246.
  27. Wilkes 1844, p. 108.
  28. Stanton 1975, pp. 248–252.
  29. Bordwell 1991, p. 178.
  30. Coleman 2017, pp. 59–60.
  31. Coleman 2017, p. 61.
  32. Coleman 2017, p. 63.
  33. Strong 1906, pp. 3–4.
  34. 1 2 Savage 1928.
  35. 1 2 Coleman 2020b.
  36. 1 2 Nokes 2013.
  37. Coleman 2017, p. 103.
  38. Coleman 2017, pp. 101–102.
  39. Grover 1853, pp. 47, 50.
  40. Nemec 2019.
  41. McClintock 1995, p. 122.
  42. Davis 1972, p. 199.
  43. McClintock 1995, pp. 127–128.
  44. Coleman 2017, p. 62.
  45. Shine 2008, p. 538.
  46. Tetlow 1975.
  47. Coleman 2017, p. 133.
  48. Shine 2008, p. 555.
  49. Howison 1913, pp. 9–10.
  50. Coleman 2017, pp. 131–132.
  51. Coleman 2017, pp. 157–158.
  52. St. John 2016b.