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new members - Poindexter Descendants Association

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POINDEXTER POINDEXTER POINDEXTER DESCENDANTS DESCENDANTS DESCENDANTS ASSOCIATION<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

OCTOBER OCTOBER 2007 2007 NEWSLETTER<br />

NEWSLETTER<br />

NEWSLETTER<br />

Father was still alive and choked out that I should try. to get away, but mother did not want me to go.<br />

Father said, "He'll be killed here anyway." He died a little while after I left. Lynn Bowers took off her<br />

heavy skirt so that she could run faster, and we both sneaked away toward Grange Hall, through the high<br />

bunch grass. Joe Moore kept firing until his ammunition was gone. I was found near Grange Hall by<br />

Frank Fenn and another settler found Lynn. It was a terrible experience!<br />

Hill Beachey Norton<br />

ten years old<br />

Most of that night I had been scouting over the prairie northerly and westerly for a distance of a mile or<br />

so from the Grange Hall which at that time comprised about all there was of the present city of<br />

Grangeville.... About one and a half miles northwesterly from the Hall, I detected some person crawling<br />

through the tall grass about one hundred yards away. I rode my horse toward the person whom I had<br />

thought to be an Indian skulking in the grass. Getting near I saw it was a white person and when within<br />

perhaps twenty paces he arose to his feet and clapped his hands, exclaiming "It's Mr. Fenn-it's Mr.<br />

Fenn," And I recognized him as Hill Norton, a boy who had attended school under my instruction the year<br />

before.<br />

Mounting the boy on the crup behind me I started my horse on a gallop for the Hall .... Upon arriving at<br />

the Hall, I found some four or five men assembled there....<br />

No time was lost in starting west over the stage road to find the survivors of the attack. Charles L. Rice, . .<br />

. James Adkison, . . . and I, just the three of us, rode off in a hurry to the scene of the attack.<br />

Mrs. Norton ... was under the wagon shot through both legs and helpless. Her husband lay dead within a<br />

few feet of the wagon. We hustled Mrs. Norton into the wagon in which there were already Lew Day, shot<br />

in three places, and ]oe Moore, shot through the hip. Both died a few days later. We had no chance to<br />

pick up Norton's body because the Indians were almost upon us. I mounted the "off" horse and Rice<br />

mounted the "near" one and we started plying halter ropes as whips to urge the horses to their best speed.<br />

Adkison rode my saddle horse on that eventful trip<br />

Fortunately for us, from the point where the wagon had stood, there was a long, gradual slope in the<br />

direction of Grange Hall and our horses had no pull to make. All that was necessary was to keep them in<br />

the road and encourage them to win the race. There was encouragement aplenty for those halter ropes<br />

never "missed a lick.' Before we reached the foot of the slope the Indians had appeared at the top of the<br />

hill and it seemed that they would surely overhaul us when we had to drag the wagon over relatively level<br />

ground. just then, however, quite a large relief party hove in sight riding hard from the direction of<br />

Grange Hall.... The advance of the hostiles was checked and shortly, as the volunteer party drew nearer,<br />

the Indians turned about, abandoned the chase and enabled their prey to escape.<br />

Frank Fenn<br />

Mount Idaho volunteer<br />

Soon a second relief party returned to the scene of the attack.<br />

... We were not long in reaching the place where the Norton Party had been attacked. I was off to the<br />

right of the road and a few hundred yards from the wrecked wagon, when I saw some object not far from<br />

me. I rode up and there lay Johnny Chamberlain cold in death, and his oldest girl was lying on his arm.<br />

She too was beyond all earthly harm.<br />

Luther P. Wilmot<br />

Mount Idaho volunteer<br />

17 of 17

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