Pioneer Life; Or, Thirty Years a Hunter. Being Scenes and Adventures in the Life of Philip Tome, Fifteen Years Interpreter for Cornplanter and Gov. Blacksnake, Chiefs on the Allegany River
Fine Hardcover Salem, Ayer Company Publishers, 1989. Book. Fine. Hardcover. First Thus. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Rust cloth, lettered in white. As issued. Pictorial dust jacket shows price-clipped front flap, which may be original to issue as all copies seem to show it, otherwise as issued, now in mylar. ix,173 pp. 1st ed. thus, facsimile reprint of the 1928 Aurand limited edition..
Absolutely amazing! I can't get over how well this guy (who lived at the time of The War of 1812, and out in the PA Boonies) could write as well as he does ! He recounts the methods used to hunt and trap such animals as Elk & Bear. He even traps Elk & floats them down the river to Pittsburg alive.
The writer was very repetitive in his hunting stories. The book became much more enjoyable when he related the history of the region and its people in the later part of the narrative.
Thirty Years a Hunter is an apt title for this book as it was all about hunting game in the late 1700's. I found much of it interesting, the techniques used in the day to hunt wolves, bear, elk, rattlesnake, deer, eel, fish, panthers (mountain lions), fox et all.
I also found interesting the stories of the hunting trips, through my home state of Pennsylvania, walking for days to track the herd or a single animal even though they were everywhere in the state. Walking up to four foot of snow and digging in it to find more firewood to stay warm and ward off frost bite. Walking for 15 miles a day through the dense forest. Talking with Chief Cornplanter about herd migration and the like.
But after a while the book became redundant, I mean, how many elk hunts can you read about? Over and over it was the same thing after the beginning of the book explained the hunts. These hunters took a good bit of meat but it was used, no waster, thankfully.
Bottom line for me, I could have learned just as much without the redundancy by reading an internet article.
If you enjoy traveling with the author through the life of a hunter procurer in the late 1700’s to early 1800’s, this is your book. There’re numerous historical names and events contemporarily that encourages the reader to stop and investigate the same for a broader understanding of the times.....
None of this happened. Everything is just fabrication...of a person having nothing but armchair imagination. The writer has only a loose concept of how creeks run....and therefore in describing ascent of a stream....actually describes lay-of-land that one would encounter in descent of a stream-system.
A little tedious and repetitive with the trips but the descriptions of the places, distances and people are unbelievable. The reports towards the end of the book are top quality, including the verification of facts in the book. Blow away.
A bit repetitive, and a tad hard for me to believe. The amount of animals killed and the exploitation of resources was a bit hard to believe. I don't think the woods of PA supported that many critters, agriculture aided in supplying a food source and raw woods wouldn't have been able to support that many animals. Plus, I've trekked through 3 feet of snow and no easy task, he makes it sound like a summer stroll with stream crossings. And wet anything in snow country can definitely lead straight to loss of limbs. But they all gladly plunged through. They also did a lot of betting and boasting too.
I wasn't too excited by the hunting stories (guess what! abundant game in Pennsylvania in the early 1800s!) but was more interested in reading between the lines for glimpses of the pioneer life. The story of how the family arrives at its cabin with snow falling, expecting it to have been built, but finding it incomplete, establishing a mill, interactions with Cornplanter, etc. are quite interesting. The final chapters of 'Reminiscences of Cornplanter" and "Indian Eloquence" are worthwhile, although the latter closes with letters from missionaries on the reservations.
I definitely tell Tome was a Pennsylvanian. There is a special way that Pennsylvanians speak- and it comes out in his writing. Who else will describe a wolf "sauntering out" for a deer? Other than that; I enjoyed reading about animals which are expatriated from Pennsylvania, namely: wolves and panthers. Growing up I heard stories about panthers (rarely did we call them "mountain lions" in my house) and was always afraid of them. But, it is a fresh perspective on Pennsylvania history that I would not otherwise have had.