'Stephen Harriman Long' (
December 30,
1784 –
September 4,
1864) was a
U.S. engineer, explorer, and military officer. As an inventor, he is noted for his developments in the design of
steam locomotives. As an Army officer, he led a pioneering scientific expedition throughout a large area of the
Great Plains, which he famously described as the "
Great American Desert".
Longs Peak in
Colorado is named for him.
Biography
Long was born in
Hopkinton, New Hampshire, the son of Moses and Lucy (Harriman) Long. He received an A.B. from
Dartmouth College in
1809 and an A.M. from Dartmouth in
1812. In
1814, he was commissioned a lieutenant of engineers in the
United States Army. In March
1819 he married Martha Hodgkins of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The following month, as a brevet major in the U.S. Army, he was appointed to lead an expedition through the
American West, in areas acquired in the
Louisiana Purchase. The specific purpose of the voyage was to the find the sources of the
Platte,
Arkansas, and
Red rivers. For a time in the summer of
1823, his expedition was joined by
Italian explorer
Giacomo Beltrami. After the expedition, he spent several years helping to survey and build the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. In
1826 he received his first patent for his work on
railroad steam locomotives. Long received many more patents for locomotive design and worked with other Army engineers in planning and building the railroad.
In
1832, along with
William Norris and several other business partners, he formed the
American Steam Carriage Company. The business was dissolved in
1834 due to the difficulties in placing Long's locomotive designs into production.
Colonel Long received a leave of absence to work on the newly incorporated
Western & Atlantic Railroad in
Georgia. His yearly salary was established at $5,000, the contract was signed
May 12,
1837 and he served as the chief engineer for the W&A until
November 3,
1840.
[1] He arrived in north Georgia in late May and his surveying began in July and by November he had submitted an initial report which the construction followed almost exactly.
[2]
In
1838 he was appointed to a position in the newly formed U.S. topographical engineers corps. He died in
Alton, Illinois in
1864.
Major Long and the Long Expedition
Major Long was the leader of the first scientific exploration up the
Platte River. His party included several scientists who studied the geography and natural resources of the area. Eventually, Long became one of the most prolific explorers of the period, covering 26,000 miles in five expeditions. Like most engineers, Long was college-trained, interested in searching for order in the natural world, and willing to work with the modern technology of the time. Engineers had basically two unique points of view that set them apart from the other pioneers — geographic and technological.
First expedition
His first expedition was his most famous. In July 1819, he joined Gen.
Henry Atkinson's
Yellowstone Expedition bound from
St. Louis to the
Rockies on the
steamboat ''Western Engineer''. This was the first steamboat to travel up the
Missouri River into the
Louisiana Purchase territory. By September 17, the steamboat arrived at
Fort Lisa, a trading fort belonging to
William Clark's
Missouri Fur Company. It was about five miles south of
Council Bluffs. Long's group built their winter quarters nearby and called it "Engineer Cantonment."
Within a month, Long returned to the east coast, and by the following May, his orders had changed. Instead of exploring the
Missouri River, President
James Monroe decided to have Long lead an expedition up the
Platte to the mountains and back along the border with the Spanish colonies. Exploring that border was vital, since
John Quincy Adams had just concluded the treaty with
Spain, which drew a new U. S. border to the
Pacific. On June 6,
1820, Long and 19 men traveled up the north bank of the Platte and met
Pawnee and
Otoe Indians. On October 14, 1820, 400
Omaha assembled at a meeting with Long; Chief
Big Elk made the following speech:
:"Here I am, my Father; all these young people you see around here are yours; although they are poor and little, yet they are your children. All my nation loves the whites and always have loved them. Some think, my Father, that you have brought all these soldiers here to take our land from us but I do not believe it. For although I am a poor simple Indian, I know that this land will not suit your farmers. If I even thought your hearts bad enough to take this land, I would not fear it, as I know there is not wood enough on it for the use of the white."
After finding and naming Longs Peak and the
Rocky Mountains, they journeyed down the
South Platte River to the
Arkansas River watershed. The expedition was then split, and Long led his group towards the
Red River. They missed it, ran into hostile Indians and had to eventually eat their own horses to survive before they finally met the other part of the expedition at Belle Point in
Oklahoma. Long and his party of scientists would learn much to tell the nation and have the opportunity to show the
U.S. flag.
Report
In his report of the
1820 expedition, Long wrote that the Plains from
Nebraska to
Oklahoma were "unfit for cultivation and of course uninhabitable by a people depending upon agriculture." On the map he made of his explorations, he called the area a "Great Desert." Long felt the area labeled the "Great Desert" would be better suited as a buffer against the
Spanish,
British, and
Russians, who shared the continent with the
Americans. He also commented that the eastern wooded portion of the country should be filled up before the republic attempted any further extension westward. He commented that sending settlers to that area was out of the question. Given the technology of the 1820s, Long was right. There was little timber for houses or fuel, minimal surface water, sandy soil, hard winters, vast herds of bison (
buffalo), hostile Indians, and no easy means of communication. However, it's ironic that the native tribes had been living there for centuries and that, by the end of the 19th century, the "Great Desert" had become the nation's breadbasket.
Legacy
There were two key results of Long's expedition -- a very accurate description of Indian customs and Indian life as they existed among the Omaha, Otoes, and Pawnees and his description of the land west of the Missouri River.
References
★ Johnston, James Houstoun, ''Western and Atlantic Railroad of the State of Georgia'', Atlanta, 1931
★
★
Nebraska Studies website
Notes
1. Johnston, p.19
2. Johnston, p.22