
Are These the Whitmans?
Based
on Waiilatpu Press article
Vol. 16, No. 1
Winter, 1995
Park
Rangers are looking at pieces of broken glass for the answer to a
25 year old question. Are two sketches in the Royal Ontario Museum
in Toronto, Canada, really sketches of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman?
If so, they are the only two likenesses of the Whitmans that were
ever made while they lived at Whitman Mission. The story begins with
the Canadian artist Paul Kane, who visited Whitman Mission in July,
1847.
Paul
Kane had spent the winter of 1842 in London, England, where he met
the American artist George Catlin. Catlin had documented the culture
of the American Indian with his pictures and had a gallery of his
paintings in London. Kane was fascinated by Catlin's paintings. Returning
to Canada, Kane found the Indian way of life was disappearing. He
decided to do as Catlin had done and record what remained of Canadian
Indians' way of life.
Sir
George Simpson, Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, permitted Kane
to travel west with the company's fur brigade. They left on May 9,
1846. After crossing the Rocky Mountains, Kane continued along the
Columbia River to Oregon and arrived at Fort Vancouver on December
6, 1846. He spent the winter sketching the region around Fort Vancouver.
On
July 18, 1847, Kane started for Whitman's Mission. In Wanderings of
an Artist, Kane wrote that he remained at Whitman Mission four days,
but his journal states that he stayed two days. Dr. Whitman accompanied
Kane to the lodge of Tiloukaikt and Tomahas (two of the Cayuse who
were to kill Whitman 4 months later) where Kane sketched them.
Among
the Kane sketches in the Royal Ontario Museum is one labeled "The
Whitman Mission." Kane does not mention sketching the mission's "T"-shaped
house in his journal, but it would appear that he had. Neither did
he mention sketching Marcus and Narcissa Whitman. Kane did not label
or give titles to everything he drew.
Ross
Woodbridge, a student of the Whitman story, went to the Royal Ontario
Museum to study a collection of 500 Kane sketches and paintings. He
was hoping to find something of interest about the Whitmans. He not
only found the drawing of the Mission House, but also two sketches
that resembled the Whitman and Prentiss (Narcissa's) families. The
resemblances are so striking that many believe they are the Whitmans
themselves. From those images found by Woodbridge in the Royal Ontario
Museum, the artist Drury Haight painted portraits of the Marcus and
Narcissa based on the sketches. The paintings hang in the lobby of
Whitman Mission National Historic Site Visitor Center.
But
could one really know? Is there any proof? Could these be the only
sketches drawn from life of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman? Many artists
have painted the Whitmans, using descriptions written by people who
stayed at the mission, or who were assisted by relatives of Marcus
or Narcissa who had last seen the missionaries in New York, before
they left for the Oregon Country. It is not surprising that all the
portraits are different.
We
do not know which image of Marcus and of Narcissa is most accurate.
No one with the "new" technique of photography came to Whitman Mission
before the Whitmans' deaths in November, 1847. The sketches were torn
or cut from a larger sketch book. The sketch of "Narcissa" is about
4" by 5 1/8", with the pupils of her eyes only ¼" apart. The "Marcus"
sketch is about 3 ½" by 4 7/8" with the distance from his chin to
his eye at ½". These are small sketches!
In
the Kane sketch of "Narcissa" is the vague outline of a large fruit
tray or compote (this does not appear in the Haight painting). It
appears that there is a base, a stem, and then an essentially flat,
circular tray with about a one inch lip or rim along the circumference.
If we can find the compote in the artifact collection that was excavated
from the mission, then we would have some strong evidence that the
sketch of "Narcissa" with the compote actually did come from Whitman
Mission.
When
the Whitmans were killed, some of the buildings were ransacked, and
many of the Whitman's possessions were destroyed. A glass compote,
if it did exist, would probably not survive the destruction that occurred
November 29, 1847. Archeologists could expect to find the solid glass
stem, most fragments of the glass base, and at least some of the glass
tray, especially the curved rim pieces. The compote glass should be
distinctive from flat window glass, because it should have regular
lines or grooves in it, or some kind of decoration, and be thicker
than window glass fragments in the collection.
Every
piece of glass in the artifact collection must be inspected for this
project. Flat fragments of window glass will be set aside, then pieces
that could have come from the base and the tray of the compote hopefully
can be identified. Three glass stems have already been located - the
easiest part of a compote to identify, and also the strongest.
It
will take some time to study every piece of glass. Out of the 35,000
item collection there are approximately 6,000 artifacts made of glass.
The artifact collection is one of the most important resources at
the park.
Park
rangers are dedicated to preserving the artifacts, while using them
in an effort to support the circumstantial evidence that already exists.
Rangers will be able to provide visitors with new information about
Marcus and Narcissa Whitman as the collections are studied.