Hugh Glass True Story

Hugh Glass True Story 5,5/10 7343 reviews

Here Lies Hugh Glass is the true account of the man behind The Revenant. The brain software review. In it, Jon T. Coleman excavates not just his subject, but also the myth of a nation he unwittingly helped to birth. The following is from his author’s note.

In Here Lies Hugh Glass, I tell a story about a man famous for nearly being killed by a grizzly bear in the Rocky Mountains in 1823. There’s not much left of this man. He contributed one letter to history. He spoke to people, but the writers who tracked him through twice-removed conversations only disfigured him further with their literary ambitions, calling him America’s Odysseus, a laughable honorific for a working-class guy whose major talent, accident proneness, made him more Homer Simpson than Homeric. Undocumented, the man disappeared into his surroundings. That’s why I picked him. I’m a historian of culture but also of nature, animals, landscapes, biomes, and habitats. Environments intrigue me as much as people.

The story of Hugh Glass and his environments calls into question the central conceit of biographies: that individual human lives tower above all else. Unlike Jesus, Attila the Hun, or Benjamin Franklin, Glass remains almost wholly lost in time. His predilections, his appearance, as well as his opinions are unknowable. His work as a hired hunter rendered him barely visible. Even his saving grace, the regional authors who seized upon the stories of western workers remade by nature to secure national fame, did so for their own purposes. Stripped of his past, his personality, and his individuality, Glass surrendered the lead role in his own drama. He shared the bill with the environments that claimed parts of him.

Glass arrived at the same end as most. Ordinary people tend to vanish. Birth certificates, parish records, and tombstones mark their existence, but the memories, the tastes, the passions, and the individual flourishes, all the hiccups in form, carriage, and delivery that separate one mortal pilgrim from another, erode quickly. Style may be the most perishable substance on earth. Hugh Glass was an ordinary man with exemplary style, and glimmers of his humor and his rebelliousness have withstood the ravages of grizzly bears, hard labor, and literary abduction. Yet the information that has survived evokes as much loss as satisfaction. Forever incomplete, he is a reminder of the deletions awaiting us all.

What follows is more a missing-person report than a biography. But instead of cursing the holes in his paperwork, I intend to plumb the absences surrounding Glass. The gaps in the record open onto his environs; they made him an American environmentalist of a sort. A vocalist rather than a writer, Glass didn’t produce a memorable tome—a Walden, A Sand County Almanac, or a Silent Spring—but he contributed to American environmental thought in his own way. Glass withstood a posse of consumers—the fauna, bosses, and literati out to swallow him—and his staying power leads the history of American environmentalism in new and unsettling directions.

Indeed, Hugh Glass reverses the emphasis and order of the phrase. Instead of highlighting individual thinkers contemplating the nation’s environmental practices and values, he shows how groups of Americans used the violently altered bodies of working-class hunters out West to define their nation. Instead of American environmentalism, Glass serves up environmental Americanism. By stressing the relationship between the environment and nationalism, his story underscores the links between marginal people laboring in far-off places and the rise of American exceptionalism. Americans looked to the outskirts of their society and their population centers to define their nation as unique and chosen for greatness, and Hugh Glass, a hunter physically transformed by nature on the country’s frontier, surfaced as a bit player in a nation-building drama. His ordeals rooted environmental history in the thick of early-nineteenth-century American history.

Americans, of course, were kidding themselves when they imagined that environments created exceptional nations. Neither born nor planted, nations rise and fall on the words, thoughts, and deeds of people. Families, homes, regions, religions, classes, genders, races, and ethnicities bolster and erode national identities. To placate crosshatched loyalties, nation-builders biologized and sanctified the nation, binding it together with myths that suggested the polity had both earthly and otherworldly origins. In 1839, John L. O’Sullivan, the writer, party activist, and coiner of the phrase “manifest destiny,” cobbled together these origin myths in his essay “The Great Nation of Futurity.” God, he wrote, had selected the United States to “smite unto death the tyranny of kings, oligarchs, hierarchs, and carry the glad tidings of peace and good.” O’Sullivan pleaded with American artists to turn away from Europe, ancient Greece, and Rome for instruction and inspiration. Writers especially should look at their own continent to find the “vigorous national heart of America.” The nexus of the nation thrummed in “the wilderness,” where “the great masses—the agricultural and mechanical populations”—worshipped at the “sacred altars of intellectual freedom.” This, O’Sullivan wrote, “was the seed that produced individual equality, and political liberty, as its natural fruits, and this is our true nationality.” God had entrusted America’s awesomeness to the grunts in the sticks.

Hugh Glass, who died six years before O’Sullivan published his essay, would have been surprised that he and his coworkers were founding a nation when they stripped the hides off beavers in the Rocky Mountains. No one mistook their camps for altars, and not all the laborers in them were equal, free, or American. A motley crew gathered in the camps: African American slaves, mulatto freemen, Indian men and women from many tribes, various white Americans from states like Missouri, Illinois, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, French-speaking contract workers (engagés) from St. Khichdi serial episode 2 hotstar. Louis, Mexican nationals, Canadian voyageurs, and British fur company proles. Hunting in the West mingled races, genders, nations, cultures, and languages. It was an unlikely birthplace of American futurity. Yet, for some nationalists, the riffraff laboring on the political, geographic, and social fringes manifested America’s genius.

I will follow Glass—hunt him if you will—through three environments. But I warn you: Glass didn’t experience them neatly in a row, and neither will you. His cultural, social, and nonhuman environments washed over him as overlapping waves; his battered form will churn to the surface only every so often.

Books, authors, and readers made up Glass’s cultural environment. In 1825, James Hall, a semiprofessional regional author stationed in southern Illinois, latched on to Glass and published a story about his exploits in a Philadelphia literary magazine. A judge and lawyer, Hall resembled other aspiring writers in the towns along the Mississippi River and its tributaries. These men hoped to create a market for western American literature, a niche that would allow them to quit their day jobs as clergymen, missionaries, lawyers, bankers, clerks, and printers. They looked to the nation’s hinterlands to find distinctly American source material, and they wrote about the violence done to and committed by frontiersmen.

Bondage and rivers animated Glass’s social environment. Recruited on the wharfs of St. Louis, Glass belonged to a working population that moved up and down the Mississippi River and its feeder streams. Some of these workers sold their labor for wages, but only a minority. Most workers weren’t free. Black slaves, wives, children, apprentices, soldiers, servants, and prisoners received little or no remuneration for their work, and they faced state-sanctioned violence if they disobeyed their masters. Still, many did rebel. Advertisements in newspapers throughout the watershed offered bounties for returned runaways. Rivers connected masters to international markets. They made owning slaves and contracting servants profitable. Kernel repair. But the waters transported disgruntled workers as readily as furs, whiskey, hemp, and salted pork. Rivers underpinned and undermined the labor system that mixed coerced and free labor, and as fur companies tried to move this system up the Missouri River and into the Rocky Mountains, bosses and workers constantly renegotiated the terms of their service.

Animals were the central players in Glass’s nonhuman environment. As a hunter, Glass followed, observed, and killed deer, elk, antelope, ducks, bears, raccoons, coyotes, and wolves. Bison robes and beaver pelts drew him west; horses and mules carried him there. The meat of all beasts, including horses and dogs, sustained him. His relationships with Native Americans, his employers, and his coworkers revolved around animal fur and flesh. He wore the skins of animals, ingested their tissue, and acquired their status. To many observers, western fur trappers looked, smelled, and were no better than animals. Hunting stories often transposed hunters and their quarry, and this reversal of identity underwrote the hunters’ nationalistic potential.

The physical transformation of laboring bodies promised the emergence of a national body. Environmental Americanism brought a measure of fame to an obscure hunter and his environments. Environmental Americanism taught a nation to take pride and pleasure in catastrophic workplace injuries. Environmental Americanism valorized white male survivalists, editing women and people of color out of the nation’s origin stories. Environmental Americanism converted multicultural, multiracial (including multiple versions of blackness and whiteness), multigendered, and multinational fur hunting expeditions into the seedbeds of a unified white male American identity.

Then again, perhaps the missing parts of Hugh Glass can help me salvage an alternative past, one that blends humor and rambunctiousness to upend expectations rather than certify destinies. We’ll see. Glass rose from the grave once; he might have another round in him.

Jon T. Coleman is a professor of American history at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Here Lies Hugh Glass: A Mountain Man, a Bear, and the Rise of the American Nation and Vicious: Wolves and Men in America, which won the W. Turrentine Jackson Prize and the John H. Dunning Prize. Coleman lives in South Bend, Indiana.

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THE TRUE STORY OF HUGH GLASS-


In this Post I thought I would write the true story of HughGlass, then add a bit about the Movie the Reverent. I haven't seen the moviebut it looks very good. I have always like history and true story type if theyare done well. And it would seem that since Leonardo DiCaprio finally got anOscar for his role in best Actor, I believe that it must be a great film. Butlet get into the heart of the story. The man 'Hugh Glass' who inspired thefilm. The story starts out like it always does with the attack of the GrizzlyBear. I guess because it was so brutal. They say that any man that saw HugeGlass after the attack was Gone! They only had to look at what little theshe-grizzly 3-inch claws had left of the old trapper (Hugh Glass). At leastwhat they could make out through the blood, which was everywhere.
His shreddedscalp, face, chest, arms and hand. To see how she-grizzly chewed into hisshoulder and his entire back too. They had only to listen to the blood bubblefrom the rip in his throat with his every breath Hugh tried to take. Whatastonished them all was that he breathe at all. Again. And yet again, again Andagain..Tough as they'd found the old coon-(a term mountain men used todescribe themselves) to be that summer of 1823 as they challenged the UpperMissouri tribes to reach the beaver streams for the furs. Major Andrew Henryand his nine trappers would have been incredulous if they'd known how indestructibleHuge Glass was and his story had proved to be.. That he would become thesubject of controversy would not have surprised them at all! That some menwould even call him a liar and accuse him of slandering a gallant comrade mighthave puzzled them all. It would seem back in the days of 1823, his companionsfelt the notion that it was impossible to think that Hugh Glass could crawlinto American as a legend, & to become an epic hero of a story and poeticwould have made them all laugh. To them looking at him, after the she-grizzlyattack he was going to die, any minute, any fool could see that! During thosetimes of 1823 they were dealing with hostile natives which had already finishedoff 17 of their brigade. Arikara (also known as Ree). Indians had killed 15 ina June 2, 1823 attack that forced them off their Missouri River keel-boats andthat route to the mountains closed-set them trudging west up the Grand Rivervalley. As anyone can see it was a rough live for both groups of people. TheNative American Indians were just trying to survive as they were here first andof course the Trappers were also trying to make a living too. But both believedthat each were taking their land and their people. In August two-thirds of thetrappers were gone, yet several of them still nursed their scars from thebattles, including Old Glass, who'd taken a ball in his thigh.
That hadn'tstopped him still from his trade TRAPPING FURS. However, it was the she-grizzlythat had finally done him in. Since the attack, Glass was concerned oldcompared to most of his fellow mountain men. Nearing in his early 40's. Glasswas old enough to be the father of young men like Jim Bridger, who wasbeginning his second year as a trapper. However, the young trappers would allcall Glass 'old' but with a measure of affection and respect. Glass was aloner, who often insisted on going his own way. His willful foray up the drawfor ripe plums, which had ended in “Old Ephraim's ' embrace, was typical forGlass. But his skills and courage had served them all well. He was Tall andpowerfully built, he wasn't a man to run away from any fight. This could be agood/bad trade on Glass personality being that he ended in many fights and thelast one was a Grizzly Bear that almost killed him. It would seem that one ortwo of the somber groups that ringed his (Glass) dying ground thought Glassdeserved to lose this battle with the Grizzly. He'd exposed them all to greaterrisk. By the U.S. Army had made a sham of punishing the Arikara village (AmericanIndians) for the devastating June attack. If a couple of frustrated trappershadn't torched the Arikara village on their own, the Rees could have laughed intheir faces. They were uncowed and on the prod. Henry had ordered his smallcrew to stick close together as they hurried cross the country toward his furpost in the Yellowstone River. He allowed only two designated hunters andwanted no unnecessary gunfire. This of course is leading up to Glass encounterwith the Grizzly Bear attack. Even with all the precautions that were made,they would lose two more men in a recent night attack. Plus others sufferedwounds. You see they don't realize how smart the Indians are. These people havebeen having to protect their own for thousands of years so they know what to dowhen it comes to tackle war moves. When the attacking warriors proved to beusually friendly Mandarins, the trappers knew the Ree contempt was spreading tothe – Assiniboines, Sioux, and Hidatsas could well emulate the Blackfeet whoalready considered any white man fair game.To draw any moreattention would me death. However, the gunshots were needed to finish off theGrizzly & her tow yearling to safe Glass life that was echoed through thegully. So, too did the screams of Glass. They had to get their 18thfatality underground and move. Now... The amazing thing was Glass was stillbreathing.
Even Thought Glass knew he was dying, he nursed the wounded JohnGardner. Gardner had entrusted Glass with his last message to his family backin Virginia, if something were to happen to him. Being such a young man, Glassfelt it was up to him to write something to his family. So even in muchterrible pain in which Hugh Glass was in he wrote these messages to theyoung men to their families that their young boys died at battle. So in hiswriting Glass had gained enough education to express himself clearly andgracefully in writing. Glass had proved more than just an equal to hissensitive task. This is what Glass wrote to the family of John Gardner; “Mypainful duty it is to tell you of the death of your son.., 'Glass wrote theyoung man's father. ‘He lived a short while after he was shot and asked me toinform you of his sad fate. We brought him to the ship where he soon died. Mr.Smith a young man of our company made a powerful prayer which moved us allgreatly and I am persuaded John died in peace..”
To the amazement of his crew, the scribe himself would notoblige and follow them. They tore strips from shirts and wounds as best as theycould, they all were sure that Glass would be dead by morning. So when the sunwoke them all, Glass was still breathing.
I did find an interesting know historical run down of the lifeof Huge Glass that you all might find to be interesting. I know I havemyself..In 1823, Glass went up into the Missouri River with a party led byWilliam Ashley, then split off with another group led by Ashley's partnerAndrew Henry. Andrew Henry brought them all to Yellowstone River. There on theGrand River on the borders between North and South Dakota, is where Glassencountered a Grizzly bear in a thicket while he was sent ahead to hunt for thenightly meat for dinner. Hugh Glass
encounter the Grizzly bear while lookingfor meat for the groups’ dinner. He was ripped wide opened & was leftclinging to life not really knowing if he would live through the night. Theyall feared that the Arikaras Indians would find their party if they stayed, toolong. So Henry leader of the group left only a few men (2) it is said inhistory, though not definitely either – There is Jim Bridger and a companion bythe name of Fitzpatrick with Hugh Glass, to bury him when he inevitably dies.The two left after five days, when their fear overcame them; convincingthemselves that Hugh Glass was on his way to death at any time, They tookGlass's rifle and possibility all his survival supplies too. They showed Henrytheir leader these items as proof of Hugh Glass death. Well, after the mendeserted Glass to their fear that the Native Indians would come for them and theytruly believed that he would die. Glass woke up and rested by a spring day fornearly ten days. He then crawled 350 miles to Fort Kiowa, on the MissouriRiver, in the southeastern part of present-day South Dakota. He then traveledto Henry's Post at the Junction of the Bighorn River and the Yellowstone.


Bythen Glass seemed to drop the idea of avenging himself, he only held a grudgeagainst Fitzpatrick not Bridger though no one will ever know why? So, Glassheaded for Fort Atkinson in search for Fitzpatrick, but his quarry had enlistedand was protected by the Army at the Fort. So Glass go back his rifle, and thatwas the end of that matter. However, it seems that Fitzpatrick was killed bythe Arikaras Indians near the Missouri River in 1833. It would seem beyondthat, most of the tale is put together by what they think what happen to Glass.Lots of speculation of what happened when Glass encountered the Grizzly.What we do know is it was a Mother Grizzly. The question was? Did the bear havetwo young cubs with her? There were a lot of questions that were un-answered.1) Did Ashley offer the men money to stay with Glass? 2) Did Bridger go on tobecome a famous mountain man? However, who was Fitzpatrick? 3) What wasBridger's & Fitzpatrick's relationship with Glass/? These are just a fewquestions that some have tried to answer in his historical life and in theHollywood movie too. It would seem that most of thedetails of Glass life came from a Book called' MAN, A BEAR, AND THE RISE OF THEAMERICAN NATION' this book takes the scant details of the life of Huge Glassand explains what the man might have meant to be like in the 19th-centuryAmericans.
What you will be reading next is the true saga of Hugh Glasslife after his attack of the grizzly that was pieced together by several of hiscontemporaries that wrote each their own version of what had happen in respectto the Mountain Man Hugh Glass. It is said that a respected mountain man by thename George C. Young had the opportunity to talk with Glass directly, whilewriting his memoirs. As well as with a trapper by the name of Allen (HiramAllen was one of Major Henry's in 1823 Brigade) Later Glass had record havechanging his name to Dutton I believe. However, it is hard to read some of thehistory so I don't know if this is truly true?
Allen recalled that Major Henry ordered branches to be cut for astretcher that they carried the groaning Glass, for at least two days or more.Whatever the distance it was, too little and too late, plus too painful andtook too long in the opinion of the men carrying the very injured
So in the year 1824 when Glass staggered up to the pickets ofthe new stockade of the mouth of the Bighorn River there was no cannon boomed welcome?No one threw open the gates either. All the men inside, warm and woozy form passingthe New Year’s keg, were focused on the disbelief on the emaciated ruin. Whatcould be only a gaunt, frozen corpse walking into their midst carrying a rife.Terror gripped their hearts for a moment. But only a moment. This frozen corpsetalked. Identified himself too. Incredibly they found out it was Old Hugh GlassALIVE! Well, guess who was there! Indeed Fitzgerald was there, but he hadenlisted in April, and the Army declined to let a civilian to execute a solder.Glass had to be satisfied with the knowledge that he’d shamed his betrayer, pursecollected by sympathetic troopers and the solid weight of his rifle again inhis hand. Before long, Glass joined a trading party heading for Santa Fe
andfor nine more years Glass continued as a free trapper always independent livinglife on his own terms.However in theearly 1833, The Arikaras Indians finally succeeded in ending his life. And thisis how it went down… Glass and two other trappers were caught while walkingdown the iced over Yellowstone. So that is how the life of Hugh Glass ended. At least he was able to live his life freely for almost 10years. And the way he wanted, as a Mountain trapper. I never did find out if he had a Indian wife or a son like it stated in the movie. But It seems unlikely.

LEONARDO DICAPRIO'S IN THE REVENANT-
Through snow and ice, frozen rivers and temperatures, plunging into 40 degrees below, Leonardo DiCaprio suffered for nine agonizing months filming his latest movie, the Revenant. 'I can name 40 sequence's that were some of the most of the difficult things I've ever had cone in my filming as an actor, 'said the 40-year old of Titanic & The Wolf of Wall Street, that was up for an Oscar nomination for best Actor in a Film.(which he did win)
He had said, 'Whether it was up for an Oscar nomination for best Actor in a film or not, It was going in and out of frozen rivers or sleeping in animal carcasses or what I ate on the set; he would grimaces, recalling the raw liver torn fresh from a bison. 'Enduring freezing cold and possible hypothermia constantly! Filming was so grueling that many of the crew members had quit and the director Alejandro Inarritu, who won this year's Oscar for Birdman, admits 'it was very scary and very challenging too. Once crew member, called it 'A living Hell'. Yet DiCaprio's nightmare
Filming experience was a walk in the park compared with the real life ordeal of the 19th century frontiersman whose traumatic adventure DiCaprio portrayed. Being savaged by a Grizzly bear and left for dead, Glass dragged his broken body across the South Dakota's wilderness, through forest and rivers, traveling more than 200miles while clinging to life.Trying to find safety at the most remote frontier settlements. His
incredible will to survive made Glass a frontier legend and while DiCaprio's film takes some dramatic liberties, Glass's true exploits are no less extraordinary. Glass was born in Pennsylvania to Irish parents around 1783. Glass found adventure as a sailor and pirate.
The only bit of information that I could find about Hugh Glass, maybe living with the Pawnee Indians was when it was later rumored that he was captured by the leaders in the tribe, then whom he lived for several years. There he became quite skilled with their talents/ as scouts and hunters. It is said he might have eventually wed a Pawnee woman. Traveled to St. Louis in 1821, accompanying several Pawnee delegates that were invited to meet with the United States authorities. This is the only information that I could find that links Huge to a wife. However I could find nothing that links him to a son. In August 1823
Hugh had wandered ahead of his party that he had joined, hunting deer and buffalo for the trappers to eat when he accidentally stumbled upon a Mother-Grizzly & her cubs. Hugh Glass nearly ended his days with that encounter as meat for the Grizzly; says historian Professor Jon Coleman, author of Here Lies Hugh 'A female Grizzly bear attacked him. She caught him as he scrambled up a tree, slicing a gash with a forclaw from scalp to his hamstring. 'She had bit Glass head, punctured his throat and ripped a hunk from his rear. The Grizzly tore him nearly to pieces and she actually swallowed a few mouthfuls before Glass's associates managed to shoot and kill her! Glass ribs were visible through the gaping wounds in his backside.
His face was terribly slashed, his neck ripped wide open and his broken leg was crippled. So basically Glass seemed doomed. In August of 1823 Glass's companions left him for dead after a horrific grizzly bear attack. The trappers laid Glass shattered body on a litter and dragged him with them up to 3days, but he posed great danger to the party's progress through very hostel Indian Territory. Why you might ask? Because they
had to move dangerously slow. And all were very worried that the indians were going to kill them or even worst scalp them. So the Veteran Trapper John Fitzpatrick and the 17-year old Jim Bridger volunteered to stay with Glass until his two companions became to fearful for the Indians attacking them. Sadly through their fear they threw Glass barely conscious body in the grave -but still alive and lift him for dead. Showing what cowards they were, they even took Glass priced gun, ammunition, knives, flint and steel. They basically condemned Glass to almost certain death by taking all his protection against the elements of the harvest lands that he was left on, plus the fact that he was without any form of medications to help with infections that will come very soon with his deep gashes. Even with all these odds against him. Glass refused to die. After setting his badly broken leg in a makeshift splint by himself, Huge began to crawl across hostile indian Territory towards Fort Kiowa. DiCaprio's Frontiersman drags himself for weeks through an unforgiving winter wilderness and Glass feat is no less astonishing despite the fact that he was actually attacked by a female grizzly bear in the summer and they battled heat rather than than cold. Glass's wounds had festered appallingly and faced with life-threatening gangrene. So Glass decided to apply handfuls of maggots from rotting animals carcasses that he would find crawling in the forest to eat the necrotic flesh that was on his entire backside and his neck too. Well, it may be completly gross but it did save his life. You would be amazed the thinks that you would to safe you own life.Glass was also tormented by very high fevers too. This probably do to the gangrene and massive infections all over his body. It took him over two months to crawl the 100miles to the Cheyenne River. How he did this is by surviving on insects, roots, berries and rattlesnakes. He even chased a pack of wolves away from a freshly -killed bison calf. allowing him to feast on the meat, a scene that made DiCaprio gag eating raw bison liver during the filming. Glass spent his days, drying strips of the meat he found and regaining his strength before limping on head. He had honed his resilience with a lifetime of adventures. A sailor in his youth, he was captured by the notorious Louisiana Pirate Jean Lafitte and forced to join his crew experiencing 'Cruel Murders' that were a daily thing. After two bloodthirst years under the skull and crossbones, Glass eventually jumped ship in the Gulf of Mexico, swimming two miles to freedom in hostile Louisana territory. So he fleed north, Glass was captured by the Wolf Pawnee tribe who planned his execution. But they ultimately adopted him. He lived, hunted and even fought with the tribal wars with the Pawnee for four years, learning the wilderness survival before departing to become a fur trapper. His venture up the Missouri River had barely begun when his party was attacked by the Arickara Indians, were the ones that attacked their party. killing 14 trappers and wounding 10 of them including Glass, who was shot in the leg. Some would say that Glass was best described as in his forties as 'Bold, daring and reckless and eccentric to a high degree. However, he was nevertheless a man of great talents and intellectual as well as bodily powerful - A superman if you will. His bravery was conspicuous beyond all his other qualities for the perilous life he led..After his Grizzly attack Glass was driven by a thirst for revenge on the two trappers who had left him for dead. Still fresh in his mind of crawling across the wilderness, narrowly escaping death in a buffalo stampede and was nearly caught by an Arickara Indian war party. Then finally reaching the Cheyenne River Glass crafted a crude raft from a fallen tree and floated downstream. An encounter with a friendly Native American trible probably saved his life. They tended to his wounds, feeding him ans sheltering Glass as he recovered before continuing downriver to Fort Kiowa. Glass spent many months recovering with the friendly Native Americans tribe before setting out to seek revenge on the men who deserted him. It took him over a year to track them down. First was Bridger, arriving in the depths of winter frost-encrusted like a Revenant - someone who has returned from the grave. Bridger pleaded for his life, vowing that he had been near death and that the hostile Indian war parties had been nearby. Showing a compassion that had been denied him, Glass spared the teenager because of his youth and went in search of Fitzpatrick who still had Glass stolen gun. Yet by that time Glass caught up with Fitzpatrick had joined the US Army. Realizing that he would face the death penalty for killing a US soldier Glass spared his life as well but recovered his gun. Glass returned to his love of fur trapping, exploring the wild West from New Mexico to Oregon for almost 10years living free as he always loved. But in 1833 his life of freedom and living would truly come to an end by the hard Warriors Arickara Indians, who had finally catch up with him. It would seem that while crossing the frozen lakes he wasn't as keen watching his surroundings as he was as a younger man. And while he crossed the froze lake; Big Horn River Montana he was the age of 53 killed and scalped by these Indians. He was then buried in a unmarked grave. However, it would seem that later he was lay to rest in a much nicer grave site. Some say the Hugh Glass was a myth that endured throughout history. I say it was true history of a mountain man, who endured throughout history, But survied a Grizzly attack that most don't live to tell the tale. In his later years he became more of a lover since that day of the attack. I believe that DiCaprio has added even more drama to Hugh Glass legend and his life that was hard, violent life, and violently portrayed tool The Actor Dicaprio has done many brillent movies and this is one of his best. He has been up for many OSCAR'S AND HE FINALLY RECIVED ONE FOR REVENANT. Although I still remember his first big movie and he did great on that one to even though he was young.I also included two images of a real grizzly paw so that you all can get the idea on how big this paw is as it clawed down Hugh Glass head to toe..

Well, I hope that you all enjoyed my version of the story of Hugh Glass and Leonardo DiCaprio's Oscar proformance in Revenant.
WENDY