WHEN WE LEFT Zebulon Montgomery Pike on Feb. 28, 1807, he had just
departed from Colorado. He and six privates were in the company of
Spanish soldiers who were escorting him to the provincial capital of
Santa Fé from his stockade southwest of Alamosa in the San Luis
Valley.
Dr. John Hamilton Robinson, one civilian who traveled with Pike, was
already in Santa Fé. The rest of the Pike party was strung along
more than a hundred miles of snowy rough country.
Baronet Vasquez, the other civilian, was the translator. He was in
Cañon City with Private Patrick Smith, where they kept the
horses and much of the expedition's non-essential equipment, like
formal uniforms and Indian presents -- the plan had been for Pike to
find a route to the Red River, then come back for the horses, gear, and
men left along the trail.
Privates Thomas Dougherty and John Sparks, both with frostbitten
feet and unable to walk, were camped at Horn Creek in the Wet Mountain
Valley. Hugh Menaugh, left in Huerfano Park on the east side of Medano
Pass in January because he could walk no farther, had been brought to
the stockade by a rescue party headed by Corporal Jeremiah Jackson on
Feb. 18. Jackson had also reached Doughtery and Sparks, assuring them
that they would be rescued.
On Feb. 19, Pike had dispatched Sergeant William E. Meek and Private
Theodore Miller to head back to Vasquez and Smith in Cañon City.
There they were to assemble the horses -- now presumably rested and in
shape for travel -- and pack the gear, pick up Dougherty and Sparks on
the way back, and join the others at the stockade where they would
build boats and float home down the Red River.