But have to comment on the recent article in MuzzleBlast magazine
I was disappointed in the article too, Don. Mr. Woodfill seemed to regurgitate much of what John Baird had written almost 50 years ago.
For example, Mr. Woodfill states, “the Medina Hawken rifle consists of an 1830s made J. & S. Hawken half stock rifle, with an 1860s S. Hawken barrel and a store-bought 1859 Meier lock.”
John Baird had written in his first book, “The lock is marked A. Meier, St. Louis, and Hanson speaks of Adolphus Meier as being listed as a dealer in guns and pistols in St. Louis in 1859.” Baird’s reference was Charles E. Hanson, Jr.’s 1960 book
The Plains Rifle, pages 61-62.
Had Mr. Woodfill read Hanson’s
The Hawken Rifle: Its Place In History, he would have noticed on page 78 that Adolphus Meier was advertising in the
Missouri Republican newspapers in St. Louis as early as 1838. Hanson has Meier arriving in St. Louis in March 1837 (Hanson pg 37). The Medina Hawken could have been built in the 1830s with an Adolphus Meier lock, though not 1833.
Mr. Woodfill also relied heavily on Zethyl Gates’ small biography on Mariano Medina—almost to the point of plagiarism.
Gates:
It is reasonable to assume that Mariano helped Charles Autobees with the pack mules carrying liquid cargo to the fur forts and that he made the trip to St. Louis with him. We know Mariano first visited St. Louis in 1833.
Woodfill:
Mariano helped Charley with the pack mules carrying the liquid cargo to the fur forts, and accompanied him on Mariano’s first visit to St. Louis in 1833.
Mrs. Gates source for Mariano’s first trip to St. Louis is an 1878 article in the Denver
Rocky Mountain News and an undated article in the
Longmont Post. They are likely just repeating A. H. Jones’ recollection of when he thinks Medina acquired his rifle.
Mrs. Gates has a fanciful story of Medina being taken in by Charles Autobees and teaching Medina the “way of the Mountain Man”.
According to James E. Perkins,
Tom Tobin: Frontiersman, Charles Autobees (half-brother of Tom Tobin) was in the Idaho-Wyoming area in 1833 and on the payroll at Fort Hall until January 1836. He went to New Mexico after that. Perkins has Autobees working for Simeon Turley in the summer of 1836 and delivering whisky to the fur forts on the South Platte—Fort Vasquez and Fort Lupton. He supposedly made the first trip to St. Louis for Turley in the spring of 1837.
It is possible that Autobees and Medina crossed paths in the Taos area in the late 1830s, but we have no documentation to this effect. If Medina accompanied Autobees to St. Louis, it would have been in 1837, at the earliest, not 1833.
In reality, we know nothing of Mariano Medina’s trips to St. Louis or his early years in the Rocky Mountains as a trapper.