Death on the River of Doubt

Home > Other > Death on the River of Doubt > Page 11
Death on the River of Doubt Page 11

by Samantha Seiple


  Roosevelt, Kermit. Diary. 1913–1914.

  . The Happy Hunting-Grounds. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1920.

  . The Long Trail. New York: Metropolitan Publications, 1921.

  Roosevelt, Theodore. Diary. 1878.

  . Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Ethel (about Kermit while on Safari). June 24, 1909. Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Harvard College Library.

  . Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Kermit (about Kermit’s injuries). September 2, 1913. Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Harvard College Library.

  . The Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, ed. Elting E. Morison, John M. Blum, and John J. Buckley. 8 vols. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1951–54.

  . “My Life as a Naturalist.” American Museum Journal, May 1918. http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/picks-from-the-past/12449/my-life-as-a-naturalist.

  . Theodore Roosevelt: An Autobiography. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1923.

  . Theodore Roosevelt’s Letters to His Children, ed. Joseph Bucklin Bishop, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1919.

  . Through the Brazilian Wilderness. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1914.

  The Seattle Star. “Bats That Suck Your Big Toe, Diamonds in Rivers, Sweet Milk Trees—These Are Some Things Teddy Found in Jungles.” May 16, 1914.

  Smith, Francis Gow. “Brazil’s Daniel Boone.” The Charleston Daily Mail. May 12, 1929.

  The South American. “Colonel Roosevelt’s ‘Rio da Duvida’ ” Vol. III, No. 4, July 1914.

  The Sun. “T.R. Puts His River Duvida on the Map for Scientists.” May 27, 1914.

  The Syracuse Journal (Syracuse, Indiana). “Roosevelt Had Terrible Time.” May 21, 1914.

  The Washington Herald. “Roosevelt, Addressing 3,500 People, Tells of Putting River on Map.” May 27, 1914.

  Wynne, Arthur. “Steady Job Catching the Jabiru Bird.” The Fort Wayne News and Sentinel (Fort Wayne, Indiana). April 19, 1919.

  INDEX

  For your reference, the page numbers that appear in the print version of this book are listed below. They do not match the page numbers in your eBook. Please use the “Search” function on your eReading device to find terms of interest. Page numbers in boldface indicate illustrations or photographs as they appear in the print version of the book.

  Africa, Roosevelt’s safari in, 29–30, 48

  Amazon jungle. See also animals; insects; Rio da Dúvida (River of Doubt); Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition; trees

  dangers of traveling in, 10–11

  expedition plans, 10, 37, 40–44

  American Geographical Society, 189

  American Museum of Natural History

  African specimens hunted for, 29–30, 30

  South American specimens hunted for, 10, 45, 52, 84, 140

  as South American trip sponsor, 42–44, 59–60

  Anglo Brazilian Iron Company, 8–9

  animals

  buffalo, 29

  bush deer, 144

  camouflage of, 85–86

  coral snake, 87

  curassow, 101, 102

  guan, 95

  jacare-tinga bird, 175

  jaguar, 45, 54

  monkeys, 86, 113, 114, 144, 163–164, 170, 186–188

  peccary, 114, 115

  piranhas, 73–75, 74

  pirarara, 170

  sloth, 85, 86

  tapir, 3, 54, 97

  taxidermy of, 15, 64

  vultures, 140

  Anopheles mosquitoes, 102–103

  Antonio, Joaquim, 177

  araputanga tree, 125

  Audubon, John James, 15

  barrigudo (woolly monkeys), 86, 144, 163–164

  Bell, John Graham, 15

  boroshudas, 92

  Brazil. See also Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition

  Cinta Larga Indians, 3, 116–118, 188

  Indian Protection Service, 67–68

  Navaitê Indians, 83–84, 90

  Nhambiquara Indians, 65–69, 66, 83–84, 90

  Pareci Indians, 67

  Rio de Janeiro, 7–8

  Rondon hired by government of, 37, 40–41, 132

  Rondônia named by, 189

  Roosevelt in Rio de Janeiro, 33–37, 36

  Sugar Loaf peak, 7, 38

  Telegraphic Commission, 40, 52, 188

  buffalo, conservation of, 29

  Bull Moose Party (Progressive Party), 31

  Bullock, Seth, 49

  Cabral, Pedro Álvares, 65

  Cajazeira, José Antonio, 78, 79

  canoe travel and, 120

  malaria treated by, 103

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony, 121–124, 122–123

  Roosevelt’s illnesses and injuries treated by, 135, 156, 160, 165, 174

  camaradas (canoeists and laborers)

  bare feet of, 87, 92, 120

  food rations, 55–56, 145

  illnesses of, 163, 174–175

  work of, 69, 76, 78, 99–101, 100, 103–104

  camouflage, of animals, 85–86

  canja (stew), 95

  cannibalism, 117

  canoes, 70–71

  construction of, 99–104, 100, 125–126

  loss of, 98–99, 115, 119–120, 134, 143, 148

  moved through water by ropes, 5, 107, 129, 134–138, 143–146, 145–146

  paddles for, 170, 173

  plan to abandon canoes, 139–141

  portage of, 89–90, 92–94, 93, 96, 97

  Carow, Edith (Roosevelt), 25, 28, 33, 42

  Cherrie, George

  arm injury of, 60–64

  on canoe loss, 98–99, 101, 148

  celebration at end of journey, 179

  on Cinta Larga Indians, 117–118

  on difficulty of journey, 170, 173, 175

  drowning of camarada and, 107, 111

  on food theft, 126

  health of, during expedition, 134

  hiring of, 59–60, 62–63

  hunting by, 84–88, 164

  insects and, 91–92

  on murder by camarada, 151, 155

  at National Geographic Society presentation, 184

  on piranhas, 73, 74–75

  on plan to abandon canoes, 139–140

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony, 121–124, 122–123

  on river’s course, 75–76, 89, 147

  Roosevelt’s health during expedition and, 143, 145, 146, 157, 165

  on search for Julio de Lima, 168–169

  views on Roosevelt, 80–81

  on work of team members, 76

  Cinta Larga Indians, 3, 116–118, 188

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 156–157

  Convention Hall (Washington, D.C.), 183

  Correia, Antonio, 138, 152, 170

  Correia, Luiz, 78, 169–170, 175

  Craveiro, Pedrinho, 149, 150

  curare (poisonous plant extract), 65

  da Fonseca, Hermes, 36

  dysentery, 134, 175

  1st U.S. Volunteer Cavalry (Rough Riders), 25, 25–26

  fish. See animals

  food

  bush deer as, 144

  canja (stew), 95

  food poisoning from, 175–176

  scarcity of, 144–145

  hunted and gathered during expedition, 85, 94–95, 101, 133, 147, 163–164

  jacare-tinga bird as, 175

  monkeys as, 186–188

  palm tops as, 101, 119

  pirarara as, 170

  rations chart, 130–131

  theft of, 126, 127–128, 145, 149

  Franca (cook), 95, 126, 135, 170

  guan. See animals

  Guaporé (Rondônia), 189

  Harris, Cornwallis, 49

  Harvard University, 19–21

  Henrique (camarada), 76

  Illustrated Natural History, The (Wood), 12

  Indian Protection Service (Brazil), 67–68

  insects

  Anopheles mosquitoes, 102–103, 103

  boroshudas, 92

  camaradas bitten by
, 120

  honey of bees, as food source, 94–95

  insect repellent, 92

  piums, 54

  termites, 91–92

  ticks, 134

  walking stick insect, 85

  Isabel (princess of Portugal), 36

  jacare-tinga bird, 175

  jaguar. See animals

  “Kubla Khan” (Coleridge), 156–157

  Lee, Arthur Hamilton, 31

  Lima, Julio de

  food theft by, 127–128, 145–149

  hiring of, 79

  murder by, 150–153, 165–166, 167–171

  work of, 92

  Lobo (dog), 75, 113–118

  Lyra, João Salustiano, 79

  canoe movement and portage by, 94, 105, 106–110, 138, 140, 143, 145–146, 155

  on murder among camarada, 151

  navigation and mapping work of, 76–77, 163, 165–166, 168

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony and, 121–124, 122–123

  Maine (U.S. battleship), 25

  malaria, 102–103, 133–134, 174–175

  mapping

  fixed-station surveying method, 76–77

  importance of first map of Rio da Dúvida (River of Doubt), 95–96, 127–132, 179–180, 183–188, 187

  map of South America (1913), 2

  moveable sighting process, 105

  Rio Capitão Cardoso discovery, 167–168

  Roosevelt’s drawing of, 181

  Markham, Sir Clements, 184

  Marques, Raymundo José, 177–178

  McKinley, William, 26

  Medora, North Dakota, 22, 22–24

  monkeys

  barrigudo (woolly monkeys), 86, 144, 163–164

  consumed by fish, 170

  Roosevelt on monkeys as food, 186–188

  spider monkeys, 113, 114

  Morgan, J. P., 26–27

  Morley, John, 29

  mosquitoes, 102–103

  Müller, Lauro, 36–37, 40–41

  National Geographic Society, 183–188, 187

  National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian Institution), 29–30

  Navaitê Indians, 83–84, 90

  New York City, Roosevelt’s nomination as mayor of, 24

  New York State

  Roosevelt as governor of, 26

  Roosevelt’s election to Assembly of, 21, 22

  Nhambiquara Indians, 65–69, 66, 83–84, 90

  Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 29–30, 42–44

  Paishon, Paixão, 99, 120, 128, 148–153

  Palacio Guanabara (Rio de Janeiro), 35–36

  Panama Canal, construction of, 29

  Pareci, Antonio, 78, 116, 163, 169–170

  Pareci Indians, 67

  Peary, Robert, 184–185, 188

  peccary, 114, 115

  Pedro II, Dom (emperor of Brazil), 36

  piranhas, 73–75, 74

  pirarara, 170

  piums, 54

  portage, 88–90, 92–94, 93, 96–97

  Portraits of the Game and Wild Animals of Southern Africa (Harris), 49

  Progressive Party (Bull Moose Party), 31

  quinine, 103

  Republican Party

  Roosevelt nominated for New York City mayor by, 24

  Roosevelt nominated for New York State governor by, 26

  Taft nominated for president by, 31

  Rio Capitão Cardoso, 167–168

  Rio da Dúvida (River of Doubt), 50–51

  canoes on first day of journey, 70–71

  description of, 40–44

  length of, 184

  mapping of, 76–77, 95–96, 105, 167–168, 179–180, 181

  National Geographic Society presentation, 183–188, 187

  native populations living on, 3, 65–69, 66, 83–84, 90, 116–118, 188

  renamed Rio Roosevelt, 121–124, 122–123, 189

  river rapids, 88–90, 92–94, 96–97

  Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 7–9, 33, 35–36, 36

  Rio Kermit, 121

  Rio Roosevelt, naming of, 121–124, 122–123

  Rondon, Cândido Mariano da Silva, 39, 96, 136–137, 144. See also Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition

  childhood of, 37–38

  Cinta Larga Indians and, 113–118

  concern for Roosevelt’s health, 160–161, 163–164, 165

  expedition planning by, 55–58

  first meeting with Roosevelt, 46, 52

  health of, 174

  hiring of, for expedition, 37, 40–44, 132

  jobs of, 38–40

  Julio de Lima and, 155, 165–166, 167–171leadership style of, 75, 79, 80, 99, 109, 169

  mapping methods of, 105, 127–132, 167–168

  on murder of camarada, 151

  Nhambiquara Indians and, 65–69, 66

  recognition of, 188, 189

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony, 121–124, 122–123

  Roosevelt’s trip plans and, 40–44

  Rondônia, 189

  Roosevelt, Alice (daughter), 22, 28

  Roosevelt, Alice (first wife), 22

  Roosevelt, Archie (son), 9, 28

  Roosevelt, Belle (daughter-in-law), 47, 189

  Roosevelt, Edith Carow (second wife), 25, 28, 33, 42

  Roosevelt, Eleanor (daughter-in-law), 48

  Roosevelt, Ethel (daughter), 49

  Roosevelt, Kermit (son), 9, 28, 30

  African safari of, 29–30, 48

  bridge collapse accident and, 9–10

  celebration of expedition by, 179

  concern for father’s health, 139, 146, 157–161, 165, 173–174

  drowning of camarada and, 106–111

  on food theft, 127–128

  health of, during expedition, 163, 174–175, 176

  job with Anglo Brazilian Iron Company, 8

  marriage of, 47, 189

  on murder of camarada, 168

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony, 121–124, 122–123

  rope skills of, 140, 145–146

  travel to River of Doubt, 33, 46–52, 50–51, 59

  views on father, 81

  work of, during expedition, 76, 90, 94, 101

  Roosevelt, Martha (mother), 22

  Roosevelt, Quentin (son), 28

  Roosevelt, Teddy, Jr. (son), 28

  Roosevelt, Theodore “Teddy,” 6, 12, 18, 20, 27, 28, 96, 136–137, 191

  African safari of, 29–30, 48

  assassination attempt on, 42, 43

  childhood of, 11–15, 17

  death of, 189–190

  deaths of parents and first wife, 21–22

  early political career of, 21, 24–27

  education of, 19–21

  expedition members’ views of, 80–81

  expedition plans of, 9–10, 37, 40–44

  expedition team members chosen, 59–65, 62–63

  health of, after expedition, 185

  health of, before expedition, 15, 34–35

  health of, during expedition, 1–5, 102–103, 133–135, 139–141, 143–146, 148, 155–161, 158–159, 163, 173–174

  hunting by, 84–88

  insects and, 91–92, 94

  mapping and surveying, 77, 95–96, 128–132, 167–168, 181, 183–188, 187

  on murder of camarada, 150–153, 165, 167–168

  National Geographic Society presentation by, 183–188, 187

  nickname of, 19

  in North Dakota, 22–24

  observations about expedition, 78, 83, 119, 178–179

  as president, 27–29

  presidential election of 1812 and, 30–31

  Rio Roosevelt naming ceremony, 121–124, 122–123

  River of Doubt drawing by, 181

  Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition’s travel to River of Doubt, 45–55

  as Rough Rider, 25–26

  snake attack on, 87–88

  speaking tour in South America, 8, 31, 33–37

  sports training by, 17–18

  travel to River of Doubt, 50–51, 53, 54

  views of Nhambiquara Ind
ians, 69

  wildlife collecting and hunting by, 10, 13–15, 14, 17, 29–31, 30, 84–88

  Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition. See also animals; Brazil; camaradas (canoeists and laborers); canoes; food; insects; Rio da Dúvida (River of Doubt); trees

  beginning of, 45–55, 50–51, 52, 53, 54, 70–71

  civilization found by, 173–181

  drowning of camarada during, 106–111

  food rations chart, 130–131

  members of, 59–65, 62–63

  murder of camarada during, 150–153, 155, 165, 167–171

  Rio Roosevelt name and, 121–124, 122–123

  river rapids and portage for canoes, 88–90, 92–94, 93, 96–97

  Rough Riders, 25–26

  Royal Geographic Society, 189

  rubber trees, 105

  San Juan Hill, Battle of, 26

  Schrank, John, 42

  Simplicio (camarada), 76, 106–111

  sloth. See animals

  Smithsonian Institution, 29

  Spanish-American War, 25, 25–26

  spider monkeys. See monkeys

  St. Anthony’s fire, 174

  Sugar Loaf peak (Brazil), 7, 38

  Superior War College, 38

  surveying, fixed-station method of, 76–77, 129. See also mapping

  Taft, William, 30

  tamandua (lesser anteater), 60, 61

  tapir. See animals

  taxidermy, 15, 64

  Telegraphic Commission (Brazil), 40, 52, 188

  trees

  araputanga tree, 125

  for canoe construction, 99, 100, 125–126

  canopy of, 86

  palm tops as food, 101, 119

  rubber trees, 105

  tatajuba tree, 125

  Trigueiro (dog), 106, 107

  U.S. Navy, Roosevelt as assistant secretary of, 25

  Vandyck (steamship), 7, 35

  vultures. See animals

  Wilson, Woodrow, 31

  Wood, J. G., 12

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I want to give a big thank you to Marisa Polansky, Paige Hazzan, Jessica Regel, and Kelly Smith for their enthusiasm and encouragement. I also want to thank Ellen Duda for another eye-catching book cover.

  Thank you to the staff of the Manuscript Division at the Library of Congress, who gave me access to Kermit’s diary. To touch the actual diary that survived the trip down the River of Doubt a century later was truly a thrill in researching this story. A heartfelt thanks to my husband, Todd, who took photos of the delicate pages while I carefully turned them.

  I am also grateful to Rodrigo Piquet, Chefia do Núcleo de Biblioteca e Arquivo do Museu do Índio in Brazil, for his assistance. Muito obrigado!

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  SAMANTHA SEIPLE is the author of Ghosts in the Fog: The Untold Story of Alaska’s World War II Invasion; Byrd & Igloo: A Polar Adventure; and Lincoln’s Spymaster: Allan Pinkerton, America’s First Private Eye. She has worked as a competitive intelligence specialist for a Fortune 500 company, as a librarian, and as a production and copy editor. Her education includes degrees in English, journalism, and library and information science. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina.

 

‹ Prev