The destruction of the Roanoke settlement
in the spring of 1757, by a party of Shawanees, gave
rise to the campaign, which was called by the old
settlers the “Sandy creek voyage.”
To avenge this outrage, Governor Dinwiddie ordered
out a company of regulars (taken chiefly from the
garrison at Fort Dinwiddie, on Jackson’s river)
under the command of Capt. Audley Paul; a company
of minute-men from Boutetourt, under the command of
Capt. William Preston; and two companies from
Augusta, under Captains John Alexander and William
Hogg. In Capt. Alexander’s company,
John M’Nutt, afterwards governor of Nova Scotia,
was a subaltern. The whole were placed under the
command of Andrew Lewis.
Beside the chastisement of the Indians,
the expedition had for its object, the establishment
of a military post at the mouth of the Great Sandy.
This would have enabled them, not only to maintain
a constant watch over marauding parties of Indians
from that quarter; but to check the communication
between them and the post at Galliopolis; and thus
counteract the influence which the French there had
obtained over them.
The different companies detailed upon
the Shawanee expedition, were required to rendezvous
on the Roanoke, near to the present town of Salem
in Bottetourt, where Col. Lewis was then posted.
The company commanded by Capt. Hogg failed to
attend at the appointed time; and Col. Lewis
after delaying a week for its arrival, marched forward,
expecting to be speedily overtaken by it.
To avoid an early discovery by the
Indians, which would have been the consequence of
their taking the more public route by the Great Kenhawa;
and that they might fall upon the Indians towns in
the valley of the Scioto, without being interrupted
or seen by the French at Galliopolis, they took the
route by the way of New river and Sandy. Crossing
New river below the Horse-shoe, they descended it to
the mouth of Wolf creek; and ascending this to its
source, passed over to the head of Bluestone river;
where they delayed another week awaiting the arrival
of Capt. Hogg and his company. They
then marched to the head of the north fork of Sandy,
and continued down it to the great Burning Spring,
where they also remained a day. Here the salt
and provisions, which had been conveyed on pack
horses, were entirely exhausted. Two buffaloes,
killed just above the spring, were also eaten while
the army continued here; and their hides were hung
upon a beech tree. After this their subsistence
was procured exclusively by hunting.
The army then resumed their march;
and in a few days after, it was overtaken by a runner
with the intelligence that Capt. Hogg and his
company were only a day’s march in the rear.
Col. Lewis again halted; and the day after he
was overtaken by Hogg, he was likewise overtaken by
an express from Francis Fauquier with orders for
the army to return home; and for the disbanding of
all the troops except Capt. Paul’s regulars,
who were to return to Fort Dinwiddie.
This was one of the first of Gov.
Fauquier’s official acts; and it was far from
endearing him to the inhabitants west of the Blue ridge.
They had the utmost confidence in the courage and
good conduct of Col. Lewis, and of the officers
and men under his command they did not for
an instant doubt the success of the expedition, and
looked forward with much satisfaction, to their consequent
exemption in a great degree, from future attacks from
the Indians. It was not therefore without considerable
regret, that they heard of their countermanding orders.
Nor were they received by Lewis and
his men with very different feelings. They had
endured much during their march, from the inclemency
of the weather; more from the want of provisions They
had borne these hardships without repining; anticipating
a chastisement of the Indians, and the deriving of
an abundant supply of provisions from their conquered
towns They had arrived within ten miles
of the Ohio river, and could not witness the blasting
of their expectations, without murmuring. A council
of war was held disappointment and indignation
were expressed in every feature. A majority of
the officers were in favor of proceeding to the Ohio
river, under the expectation that they might fall
in with some of the enemy they marched
to the river and encamped two nights on its banks.
Discovering nothing of an enemy, they then turned
to retrace their steps through pathless mountains,
a distance of three hundred miles, in the midst of
winter and without provisions.
The reasons assigned by the friends
of Gov. Fauquier, for the issuing of those orders
were, that the force detailed by Gov. Dinwiddie,
was not sufficient to render secure an establishment
at the contemplated point near the Indian
towns on the Scioto within a few days journey
of several thousand warriors on the Miami in
the vicinity of the hostile post at Galliopolis and
so remote from the settled part of Virginia, that
they could not be furnished with assistance, and supplied
with provisions and military stores, without incurring
an expenditure, both of blood and money, beyond what
the colony could spare, for the accomplishment of
that object.
Had Capt. Hogg with his company,
been at the place of rendezvous at the appointed time,
the countermanding orders of the governor could
not have reached the army, until it had penetrated
the enemy’s country. What might have been
its fate, it is impossible to say the bravery
of the troops their familiar acquaintance
with the Indian mode of warfare their confidence
in the officers and the experience of many of them,
seemed to give every assurance of success While
the unfortunate result of many subsequent expeditions
of a similar nature, would induce the opinion that
the governor’s apprehensions were perhaps prudent
and well founded. That the army would soon have
had to encounter the enemy, there can be no doubt;
for although not an Indian had been seen, yet it seems
probable from after circumstances, that it had been
discovered and watched by them previous to its return.
On the second night of their march
homeward, while encamped at the Great falls, some
of Hogg’s men went out on the hills to hunt turkeys,
and fell in with a party of Indians, painted as for
war. As soon as they saw that they were discovered,
they fired, and two of Hogg’s men were killed the
fire was returned and a Shawanee warrior was wounded
and taken prisoner. The remaining Indians, yelling
their war whoop, fled down the river.
Many of the whites, thinking that
so small a party of Indians would not have pursued
the army alone, were of opinion that it was only an
advanced scout of a large body of the enemy, who were
following them: the wounded Indian refused to
give any information of their number or object.
A council of war was convoked; and much diversity of
opinion prevailed at the board. It was proposed
by Capt. Paul to cross the Ohio river, invade
the towns on the Scioto, and burn them, or perish
in the attempt. The proposition was supported by
Lieut. M’Nutt, but overruled; and the officers,
deeming it right to act in conformity with the governor’s
orders, determined on pursuing their way home.
Orders were then given that no more guns should be
fired, and no fires kindled in camp, as their safe
return depended very much on silence and secrecy.
An obedience to this order, produced
a very considerable degree of suffering, as well from
extreme cold as from hunger. The pack horses,
which were no longer serviceable (having no provisions
to transport) and some of which had given out for
want of provender, were killed and eaten. When
the army arrived at the Burning spring, the buffalo
hides, which had been left there on their way down,
were cut into tuggs, or long thongs, and eaten by
the troops, after having been exposed to the heat
produced by the flame from the spring. Hence
they called it Tugg river a name by which
it is still known. After this the army subsisted
for a while on beachnuts; but a deep snow falling these
could no longer be obtained, and the restrictions were
removed.
About thirty men then detached themselves
from the main body, to hunt their way home. Several
of them were known to have perished from cold and
hunger others were lost and never afterwards
heard of; as they had separated into small parties,
the more certainly to find game on which to live.
The main body of the army was conducted home by Col.
Lewis, after much suffering the strings
of their mocasons, the belts of their hunting shirts,
and the flaps of their shot pouches, having been all
the food which they had eaten for some days.
A journal of this campaign was kept
by Lieut. M’Nutt, a gentleman of liberal
education and fine mind. On his return to Williamsburg
he presented it to Governor Fauquier by whom it was
deposited in the executive archives. In this
journal Col. Lewis was censured for not having
proceeded directly to the Scioto towns; and for imposing
on the army the restrictions, as to fire and shooting,
which have been mentioned. This produced
an altercation between Lewis and M’Nutt, which
was terminated by a personal encounter.
During the continuance of this war,
many depredations were committed by hostile Indians,
along the whole extent of the Virginia frontier.
Individuals, leaving the forts on any occasion, scarcely
ever returned; but were, almost always, intercepted
by Indians, who were constantly prowling along the
border settlements, for purposes of rapine and murder.
The particulars of occurrences of this kind, and indeed
of many of a more important character, no longer exist
in the memory of man they died with them
who were contemporaneous with the happening of them.
On one occasion however, such was the extent of savage
duplicity, and such, and so full of horror, the catastrophe
resulting from misplaced confidence, that the events
which marked it, still live in the recollection of
the descendants of some of those, who suffered on
the theatre of treachery and blood.
On the south fork of the South Branch
of Potomac, in, what is now, the county of Pendleton,
was the fort of Capt. Sivert. In this fort,
the inhabitants of what was then called the “Upper
Tract,” all sought shelter from the tempest
of savage ferocity; and at the time the Indians appeared
before it, there were contained within its walls
between thirty and forty persons of both sexes and
of different ages. Among them was Mr. Dyer, (the
father of Col. Dyer now of Pendleton) and his
family. On the morning of the fatal day, Col.
Dyer and his sister left the fort for the accomplishment
of some object, and although no Indians had been seen
there for some time, yet did they not proceed far,
before they came in view of a party of forty or fifty
Shawanees, going directly towards the fort. Alarmed
for their own safety, as well as for the safety of
their friends, the brother and sister endeavored by
a hasty flight to reach the gate and gain admittance
into the garrison; but before they could effect this,
they were overtaken and made captives.
The Indians rushed immediately to
the fort and commenced a furious assault on it.
Capt. Sivert prevailed, (not without much opposition,)
on the besieged, to forbear firing ’till he should
endeavor to negotiate with, and buy off the enemy.
With this view, and under the protection of a flag
he went out, and soon succeeded in making the wished
for arrangement. When he returned, the gates were
thrown open, and the enemy admitted.
No sooner had the money and other
articles, stipulated to be given, been handed over
to the Indians, than a most bloody tragedy was begun
to be acted. Arranging the inmates of the fort,
in two rows, with a space of about ten feet between
them, two Indians were selected; who taking each his
station at the head of a row, with their tomahawks
most cruelly murdered almost every white person in
the fort; some few, whom caprice or some other cause,
induced them to spare, were carried into captivity, such
articles as could be well carried away were taken
off by the Indians; the remainder was consumed, with
the fort, by fire.
The course pursued by Capt. Sivert,
has been supposed to have been dictated by timidity
and an ill founded apprehension of danger from the
attack. It is certain that strong opposition was
made to it by many; and it has been said that his
own son raised his rifle to shoot him, when he ordered
the gates to be thrown open; and was only prevented
from executing his purpose, by the interference of
some near to him. Capt. Sivert was also
supported by many, in the plan which he proposed to
rid the fort of its assailants: it was known to
be weak, and incapable of withstanding a vigorous
onset; and its garrison was illy supplied with
the munitions of war. Experience might have taught
them, however, the futility of any measure of security,
founded in a reliance on Indian faith, in time of
hostility; and in deep and bitter anguish, they were
made to feel its realization in the present instance.
In the summer of 1761, about sixty
Shawanee warriors penetrated the settlements on James
river. To avoid the fort at the mouth of Looney’s
creek, on this river, they passed through Bowen’s
gap in Purgatory mountain, in the night; and ascending
Purgatory creek, killed Thomas Perry, Joseph Dennis
and his child and made prisoner his wife, Hannah Dennis.
They then proceeded to the house of Robert Renix, where
they captured Mrs. Renix, (a daughter of Sampson Archer)
and her five children, William, Robert, Thomas, Joshua
and Betsy Mr. Renix not being at home.
They then went to the house of Thomas Smith, where
Renix was; and shot and scalped him and Smith; and
took with them, Mrs. Smith and Sally Jew, a white
servant girl.
William and Audley Maxwell, and George
Matthews, (afterwards governor of Georgia,) were then
going to Smith’s house; and hearing the report
of the guns, supposed that there was a shooting match.
But when they rode to the front of the house and saw
the dead bodies of Smith and Renix lying in the yard,
they discovered their mistake; and contemplating for
a moment the awful spectacle, wheeled to ride back.
At this instant several guns were fired at them; fortunately
without doing any execution, except the cutting off
the club of Mr. Matthews’ cue. The door
of the house was then suddenly opened; the Indians
rushed out and raising the war cry, several of them
fired Audley Maxwell was slightly wounded
in the arm.
It appeared afterwards, that the Indians
had seen Matthews and the Maxwells coming; and
that some of them had crowded into the house, while
the others with the prisoners went to the north side
of it, and concealed themselves behind some fallen
timber. Mrs. Renix, after she was restored to
her friends in 1766, stated that she was sitting tied,
in the midst of four Indians, who laying their guns
on a log, took deliberate aim at Matthews; the others
firing at the Maxwells The sudden
wheeling of their horses no doubt saved the lives of
all three.
The Indians then divided, and twenty
of them taking the prisoners, the plunder and
some horses which they had stolen, set off by the
way of Jackson’s river, for the Ohio; the remainder
started towards Cedar creek, with the ostensible view
of committing farther depredations. But Matthews
and the Maxwells had sounded the alarm, and the
whole settlement were soon collected at Paul’s
stockade fort, at the Big spring near to Springfield.
Here the women and children were left to be defended
by Audley Maxwell and five other men; while the others,
forming a party of twenty-two, with George Matthews
at their head, set out in quest of the enemy.
The Indians were soon overtaken, and
after a severe engagement, were forced to give ground.
Matthews and his party followed in pursuit, as far
as Purgatory creek; but the night being very dark in
consequence of a continued rain, the fugitives effected
an escape; and overtaking their comrades with the
prisoners and plunder, on the next evening, at the
forks of the James and Cowpasture rivers, proceeded
to Ohio without further molestation.
When Matthews and his men, on the
morning succeeding the engagement, returned to the
field of battle, they found nine Indians dead; whom
they buried on the spot. Benjamin Smith, Thomas
Maury and the father of Sally Jew, were the only persons
of Matthews’ party, who were killed these,
together with those who had been murdered on the preceding
day, were buried near the fork of a branch, in (what
is now) the meadow of Thomas Cross sr.
In Boquet’s treaty with the
Ohio Indians, it was stipulated that the whites detained
by them in captivity were to be brought in and redeemed.
In compliance with this stipulation, Mrs. Renix was
brought to Staunton in 1767 and ransomed, together
with two of her sons, William, the late Col.
Renix of Greenbrier, and Robert, also of Greenbrier Betsy,
her daughter, had died on the Miami. Thomas returned
in 1783, but soon after removed and settled, on the
Scioto, near Chilicothe. Joshua never came back;
he took an Indian wife and became a Chief among the
Miamies he amassed a considerable fortune
and died near Detroit in 1810.
Hannah Dennis was separated from the
other captives, and allotted to live at the Chilicothe
towns. She learned their language; painted herself
as they do; and in many respects conformed to their
manners and customs. She was attentive to sick
persons and was highly esteemed by the Indians, as
one well skilled in the art of curing diseases.
Finding them very superstitious and believers in necromancy;
she professed witchcraft, and affected to be a prophetess.
In this manner she conducted herself, ’till
she became so great a favorite with them, that they
gave her full liberty and honored her as a queen.
Notwithstanding this, Mrs. Dennis was always determined
to effect her escape, when a favorable opportunity
should occur; and having remained so long with them,
apparently well satisfied, they ceased to entertain
any suspicions of such a design.
In June 1763, she left the Chilicothe
towns, ostensibly to procure herbs for medicinal
purposes, (as she had before frequently done,) but
really to attempt an escape. As she did
not return that night, her intention became suspected;
and in the morning, some warriors were sent in pursuit
of her. In order to leave as little trail as possible,
she had crossed the Scioto river three times, and was
just getting over the fourth time 40 miles below the
towns, when she was discovered by her pursuers.
They fired at her across the river without effect;
but in endeavoring to make a rapid flight, she had
one of her feet severely cut by a sharp stone.
The Indians then rushed across the
river to overtake and catch her, but she eluded them
by crawling into the hollow limb, of a large fallen
sycamore. They searched around for her some time,
frequently stepping on the log which concealed her;
and encamped near it that night. On the next
day they went on to the Ohio river, but finding no
trace of her, they returned home.
Mrs. Dennis remained at that place
three days, doctoring her wound, and then set off
for home. She crossed the Ohio river, at the mouth
of Great Kenhawa, on a log of driftwood, travelling
only during the night, for fear of discovery She
subsisted on roots, herbs, green grapes, wild cherries
and river muscles and entirely exhausted
by fatigue and hunger, sat down by the side of Greenbrier
river, with no expectation of ever proceeding farther.
In this situation she was found by Thomas Athol and
three others from Clendennin’s settlement, which
she had passed without knowing it. She had been
then upwards of twenty days on her disconsolate journey,
alone, on foot but ’till then, cheered
with the hope of again being with her friends.
She was taken back to Clendennin’s,
where they kindly ministered to her, ’till
she became so far invigorated, as to travel on horseback
with an escort, to Fort Young on Jackson’s river;
from whence she was carried home to her relations.
In the course of a few days after
Hannah Dennis had gone from Clendennins, a party of
about sixty warriors came to the settlement on Muddy
creek, in the county of Greenbrier. That region
of country then contained no inhabitants, but those
on Muddy creek, and in the Levels; and these are believed
to have consisted of at least one hundred souls.
The Indians came apparently as friends, and the French
war having been terminated by the treaty of the preceding
spring, the whites did not for an instant doubt their
sincerity. They were entertained in small parties
at different houses, and every civility and act of
kindness, which the new settlers could proffer, were
extended to them. In a moment of the most perfect
confidence in the innocense of their intentions, the
Indians rose on them and tomahawked and scalped all,
save a few women and children of whom they made prisoners.
After the perpetration of this most
barbarous and bloody outrage, the Indians (excepting
some few who took charge of the prisoners) proceeded
to the settlement in the Levels. Here, as at Muddy
creek, they disguised their horrid purpose, and wearing
the mask of friendship, were kindly received at the
house of Mr. Clendennin. This gentleman had just
returned from a successful hunt, and brought home
three fine elks these and the novelty of
being with friendly Indians, soon drew the
whole settlement to his house. Here too the Indians
were well entertained and feasted on the fruit of Clendennin’s
hunt, and every other article of provision which was
there, and could minister to their gratification.
An old woman, who was of the party, having a very
sore leg and having understood that Indians could
perform a cure of any ulcer, shewed it to one near
her; and asked if he could heal it The
inhuman monster raised his tomahawk and buried it
in her head. This seemed to be the signal of a
general massacre and promptly was it obeyed nearly
every man of the settlement was killed and the women
and children taken captive.
While this tragedy was acting, a negro
woman, who was endeavoring to escape, was followed
by her crying child. To save it from savage
butchery, she turned round and murdered it herself.
Mrs. Clendennin, driven to despair
by the cruel and unprovoked murder of her husband
and friends, and the spoliation and destruction of
all their property, boldly charged the Indians with
perfidy and treachery; and alleged that cowards only
could act with such duplicity. The bloody scalp
of her husband was thrown in her face the
tomahawk was raised over her head; but she did not
cease to revile them. In going over Keeny’s
knot on the next day, the prisoners being in the centre,
and the Indians in the front and rear, she gave her
infant child to one of the women to hold for a while. She
then stepped into the thicket unperceived, and made
her escape. The crying of the infant soon lead
to a discovery of her flight one of the
Indians observed that he could “bring the cow
to her calf,” and taking the child by the heels,
beat out its brains against a tree.
Mrs. Clendennin returned that night
to her home, a distance of ten miles; and covering
the body of her husband with rails and trash, retired
into an adjoining corn field, lest she might be pursued
and again taken prisoner. While in the corn field,
her mind was much agitated by contending emotions;
and the prospect of effecting an escape to the settlements,
seemed to her dreary and hopeless. In a moment
of despondency, she thought she beheld a man, with
the aspect of a murderer, standing near her; and she
became overwhelmed with fear. It was but the
creature of a sickly and terrified imagination; and
when her mind regained its proper tone, she resumed
her flight and reached the settlement in safety.
These melancholy events occurring
so immediately after the escape of Hannah Dennis;
and the unwillingness of the Indians that she should
be separated from them, has induced the supposition
that the party committing those dreadful outrages
were in pursuit of her. If such were the fact,
dearly were others made to pay the penalty of her
deliverance.
This and other incidents, similar
in their result, satisfied the whites that although
the war had been terminated on the part of the French;
yet it was likely to be continued with all its horrors,
by their savage allies. This was then, and has
since been, attributed to the smothered hostility
of the French in Canada and on the Ohio river;
and to the influence which they had acquired over the
Indians. This may have had its bearing on the
event; but from the known jealousy entertained by
the Indians, of the English Colonists; their apprehensions
that they would be dispossessed of the country, which
they then held (England claiming jurisdiction over
it by virtue of the treaty of Paris;) and their dissatisfaction
at the terms on which France had negotiated a peace,
were in themselves sufficient to induce hostilities
on the part of the Indians. Charity would incline
to the belief that the continuance of the war was
rightly attributable to these causes the
other reason assigned for it, supposing the existence
of a depravity, so deep and damning, as almost to stagger
credulity itself.
In October, 1764, about fifty Delaware
and Mingo warriors ascended the Great Sandy and came
over on New river, where they separated; and forming
two parties, directed their steps toward different
settlements one party going toward Roanoke
and Catawba the other in the direction
of Jackson’s river. They had not long passed,
when their trail was discovered by three men, (Swope,
Pack and Pitman) who were trapping on New river.
These men followed the trail till they came to where
the Indian party had divided; and judging from the
routes which, had been taken, that their object was
to visit the Roanoke and Jackson’s river settlements,
they determined on apprizing the inhabitants of their
danger. Swope and Pack set out for Roanoke and
Pitman for Jackson’s river. But before they
could accomplish their object, the Indians had reached
the settlements on the latter river, and on Catawba.
The Party which came to Jackson’s
river, travelled down Dunlap’s creek and crossed
James river, above Fort Young, in the night and unnoticed;
and going down this river to William Carpenter’s,
where was a stockade fort under the care of a Mr.
Brown, they met Carpenter just above his house and
killed him. They immediately proceeded to the
house, and made prisoners of a son of Mr. Carpenter,
two sons of Mr. Brown (all small children)
and one woman the others belonging to the
house, were in the field at work. The Indians
then dispoiled the house and taking off some horses,
commenced a precipitate retreat fearing
discovery and pursuit.
When Carpenter was shot, the report
of the gun was heard by those at work in the field;
and Brown carried the alarm to Fort Young. In
consequence of the weakness of this fort, a messenger
was despatched to Fort Dinwiddie, with the intelligence.
Capt. Paul (who still commanded there,) immediately
commenced a pursuit with twenty of his men; and passing
out at the head of Dunlap’s creek, descended
Indian creek and New river to Piney creek; without
making any discovery of the enemy. On Indian
creek they met Pitman, who had been running all the
day and night before, to apprise the garrison at Fort
Young of the approach of the Indians. Pitman
joined in pursuit of the party who had killed Carpenter;
but they, apprehending that they would be followed,
had escaped to Ohio, by the way of Greenbrier and Kenhawa
rivers.
As Capt. Paul and his men were
returning, they accidently met with the other party
of Indians, who had been to Catawba, and committed
some depredations and murders there. They were
discovered about midnight, encamped on the north bank
of New river, opposite an island at the mouth of Indian
creek. Excepting some few who were watching three
prisoners, (whom they had taken on Catawba, and who
were sitting in the midst of them,) they were lying
around a small fire, wrapped in skins and blankets.
Paul’s men not knowing that there were captives
among them, fired in the midst, killed three Indians,
and wounded several others, one of whom drowned himself
to preserve his scalp the rest of the party
fled hastily down the river and escaped.
In an instant after the firing, Capt.
Paul and his men rushed forward to secure the wounded
and prevent further escapes. One of the foremost
of his party seeing, as he supposed, a squaw sitting
composedly awaiting the result, raised his tomahawk
and just as it was descending, Capt. Paul threw
himself between the assailant and his victim; and
receiving the blow on his arm, exclaimed, “It
is a shame to hurt a woman, even a squaw.”
Recognising the voice of Paul, the woman named him.
She was Mrs. Catharine Gunn, an English lady, who had
come to the country some years before; and who, previously
to her marriage, had lived in the family of Capt.
Paul’s father-in-law, where she became acquainted
with that gentleman She had been taken captive
by the Indians, on the Catawba, a few days before,
when her husband and two only children were killed
by them. When questioned why she had not cried
out, or otherwise made known that she was a white prisoner,
she replied, “I had as soon be killed as not my
husband is murdered my children are slain my
parents are dead. I have not a relation in America every
thing dear to me here is gone I have no
wishes no hopes no fears I
would not have risen to my feet to save my life.”
The Indians had left all their guns,
blankets and plunder these together with
the three white captives, were taken by Capt.
Paul to Fort Dinwiddie.