In the year 1774, the peace, which
had subsisted with but little violation since the
treaty of 1765, received an interruption, which checked
for a while the emigration to the North Western frontier;
and involved its infant settlements in a war with
the Indians. This result has been attributed
to various causes. Some have asserted that it
had its origin in the murder of some Indians on the
Ohio river both above and below Wheeling, in the spring
of that year. Others suppose it to have been
produced by the instigation of British emissaries,
and the influence of Canadian traders.
That it was not caused by the murders
at Captina, and opposite the mouth of Yellow creek,
is fairly inferrible from the fact, that several Indians
had been previously murdered by the whites in a period
of the most profound tranquillity, without having led
to a similar issue; or even given rise to any act
of retaliation, on the part of the friends or countrymen
of those, who had been thus murdered.
At different periods of time, between
the peace of 1765, and the renewal of hostilities
in 1774, three Indians were unprovokedly killed by
John Ryan, on the Ohio, Monongahela and Cheat rivers.
The first who suffered from the unrestrained licentiousness
of this man, was an Indian of distinction in his tribe,
and known by the name of Capt. Peter; the other
two were private warriors. And but that Governor
Dunmore, from the representations made to him, was
induced to offer a reward for his apprehension,
which caused him to leave the country, Ryan would
probably have continued to murder every Indian, with
whom he should chance to meet, wandering through the
settlements.
Several Indians were likewise killed
on the South Branch, while on a friendly visit to
that country, in the interval of peace. This deed
is said to have been done by Henry Judah, Nicholas
Harpold and their associates; and when Judah was arrested
for the offence, so great was the excitement among
those who had suffered from savage enmity, that he
was rescued from confinement by upwards of two hundred
men, collected for that especial purpose.
The Bald Eagle was an Indian of notoriety,
not only among his own nation, but also with the inhabitants
of the North Western frontier; with whom he was in
the habit of associating and hunting. In one of
his visits among them, he was discovered alone, by
Jacob Scott, William Hacker and Elijah Runner, who,
reckless of the consequences, murdered him, solely
to gratify a most wanton thirst for Indian blood.
After the commission of this most outrageous enormity,
they seated him in the stern of a canoe, and with
a piece of journey-cake thrust into his mouth, set
him afloat in the Monongahela. In this situation
he was seen descending the river, by several, who
supposed him to be as usual, returning from a friendly
hunt with the whites in the upper settlements, and
who expressed some astonishment that he did not stop
to see them. The canoe floating near to the shore,
below the mouth of George’s creek, was observed
by a Mrs. Province, who had it brought to the bank,
and the friendly, but unfortunate old Indian decently
buried.
Not long after the murder of the Bald
Eagle, another outrage of a similar nature was committed
on a peaceable Indian, by William White; and for which
he was apprehended and taken to Winchester for trial.
But the fury of the populace did not suffer him to
remain there awaiting that event. The prison
doors were forced, the irons knocked off him and he
again set at liberty.
But a still more atrocious act is
said to have been soon after perpetrated. Until
then the murders committed, were only on such as were
found within the limits of white settlements, and on
men & warriors. In 1772, there is every reason
to believe, that women and children likewise became
victims to the exasperated feelings of our own
citizens; and this too, while quietly enjoying the
comforts of their own huts, in their own village.
There was at that time an Indian town
on the Little Kenhawa, (called Bulltown) inhabited
by five families, who were in habits of social and
friendly intercourse with the whites on Buchannon and
on Hacker’s creek; frequently visiting and hunting
with them. There was likewise residing on Gauley
river, the family of a German by the name of Stroud.
In the summer of that year, Mr. Stroud being from home,
his family were all murdered, his house plundered,
and his cattle driven off. The trail made by
these leading in the direction of Bulltown, induced
the supposition that the Indians of that village had
been the authors of the outrage, and caused several
to resolve on avenging it upon them.
A party of five men, (two of whom
were William White and William Hacker, who had
been concerned in previous murders) expressed a determination
to proceed immediately to Bulltown. The remonstrance
of the settlement generally, could not operate to
effect a change in that determination. They went;
and on their return, circumstances justified the belief
that the pre-apprehension of those who knew the temper
and feelings of White and Hacker, had been well founded;
and that there had been some fighting between them
and the Indians. And notwithstanding that they
denied ever having seen an Indian in their absence,
yet it was the prevailing opinion, that they had destroyed
all the men, women and children at Bulltown, and threw
their bodies into the river. Indeed, one of the
party is said to have, inadvertently, used expressions,
confirmatory of this opinion; and to have then justified
the deed, by saying that the clothes and other things
known to have belonged to Stroud’s family, were
found in the possession of the Indians. The village
was soon after visited, and found to be entirely desolated,
and nothing being ever after heard of its former inhabitants,
there can remain no doubt but that the murder of Stroud’s
family, was requited on them.
Here then was a fit time for the Indians
to commence a system of retaliation and war, if they
were disposed to engage in hostilities, for offences
of this kind alone. Yet no such event was the
consequence of the killing of the Bulltown Indians,
or of those other murders which preceded that outrage;
and it may be hence rationally concluded, that the
murders on the Ohio river did not lead to such an event.
If however, a doubt should still remain, that doubt
is surely removed by the declaration of Logan himself.
It was his family that was killed opposite Yellow
creek, about the last of April; and in the following
July (after the expedition against the Wappatomica
towns, under Col. McDonald) he says, “the
Indiens are not angry on account of those murders,
but only myself.” The fact is, that hostilities
had commenced before the happening of the affair at
Captina, or that near Yellow creek; and these, instead
of having produced that event, were the consequence
of the previous hostile movements of the Indians.
The relative situation of the American
colonies and the mother country, is matter of general
history, and too well known to require being repeated
here. It is equally well known too, that from
the first establishment of a colony in Canada, the
Canadians obtained an influence over the Natives,
greater than the Anglo-Americans were ever able to
acquire; and that this influence was frequently exercised
by them, to the great annoyance, and manifest injury
of the latter. France and England have been long
considered as natural enemies; and the inhabitants
of their respective plantations in America, entertained
strong feelings of jealousy towards each other.
When by the treaty of Paris, the French possessions
in North America (which had not been ceded to Spain,)
were transferred to Great Britain, those feelings
were not subdued. The Canadians still regarded
themselves as a different people. Their national
prejudices were too great to be extinguished by an
union under the same prince. Under the influence
of these prejudices, and the apprehension, that the
lucrative commerce of the natives might, by the competition
of the English traders, be diverted from its accustomed
channels, they may have exerted themselves to excite
the Indians to war; but that alone would hardly have
produced this result. There is in man an inherent
partiality for self, which leads him to search for
the causes of any evil, elsewhere than in his own
conduct; and under the operation of this propensity
to assign the burden of wrong to be borne by others,
the Jesuits from Canada and Louisiana were censured
for the continuation of the war on the part of the
Indians, after it had been terminated with their allies
by the treaty of 1763. Yet that event was, no
doubt, justly attributable to the erection of forts,
and the location of land, in the district of country
claimed by the natives, in the province of Pennsylvania.
And in like manner, the origin of the war of 1774 may
fairly be charged to the encroachments which were then
being made on the Indian territory. To be convinced
of this, it is necessary to advert to the promptitude
of resistance on the part of the Natives, by which
those encroachments were invariably met; and to recur
to events happening in other sections of the country. Events,
perhaps no otherwise connected with the history of
North Western Virginia, than as they are believed
to have been the proximate causes of an hostility,
eventuating in the effusion of much of its blood; and
pregnant with other circumstances, having an important
bearing on its prosperity and advancement.
In the whole history of America, from
the time when it first became apparent that
the occupancy of the country was the object of the
whites, up to the present period, is there perhaps
to be found a solitary instance, in which an attempt,
made by the English to effect a settlement in a wilderness
claimed by the Natives, was not succeeded by immediate
acts of hostility on the part of the latter. Every
advance of the kind was regarded by them, as tending
to effect their expulsion from a country, which they
had long considered as their own, and as leading,
most probably, to their entire extinction as a people.
This excited in them feelings of the most dire resentment;
stimulating to deeds of cruelty and murder, at once
to repel the encroachment and to punish its authors.
Experience of the utter futility of those means to
accomplish these purposes, has never availed to repress
their use, or to produce an acquiesence in the wrong.
Even attempts to extend jurisdiction over a country,
the right of soil in which was never denied them,
have ever given rise to the most lively apprehensions
of their fatal consequences, and prompted to the employment
of means to thwart that aim. An Indian sees no
difference between the right of empire and the right
of domain; and just as little can he discriminate
between the right of property, acquired by the actual
cultivation of the earth, and that which arises from
its appropriation to other uses.
Among themselves they have lines of
demarkation, which distinguish the territory of one
nation from that of another; and these are of such
binding authority, that a transgression of them by
neighboring Indians, leads invariably to war.
In treaties of purchase, and other conventional arrangements,
made with them by the whites, the validity of their
rights to land, have been repeatedly recognized; and
an infraction of those rights by the Anglo-Americans,
encounters opposition at its threshold. The history
of every attempt to settle a wilderness, to which
the Indian title was not previously extinguished,
has consequently been a history of plunder, conflagration
and massacre.
That the extension of white settlements
into the Indian country, was the cause of the war
of 1774, will be abundantly manifested by a recurrence
to the early history of Kentucky; and a brief review
of the circumstances connected with the first attempts
to explore and make establishments in it. For
several reasons, these circumstances merit a passing
notice in this place. Redstone and Fort Pitt (now
Brownsville and Pittsburgh) were for some time, the
principal points of embarkation for emigrants to that
country; many of whom were from the establishments
which had been then not long made, on the Monongahela.
The Indians, regarding the settlements in North Western
Virginia as the line from which swarmed the adventurers
to Kentucky, directed their operations to prevent
the success of these adventurers, as well against
the inhabitants of the upper country, as against them.
While at the same time, in the efforts which were
made to compel the Indians to desist from farther
opposition, the North Western Virginians frequently
combined their forces, and acted in conjunction,
the more certainly to accomplish that object.
In truth the war, which was then commenced, and carried
on with but little intermission up to the treaty of
Fort Greenville in 1795 was a war in which they were
equally interested, having for its aim the indiscriminate
destruction of the inhabitants of both those sections
of country, as the means of preventing the farther
extension of settlements by the whites.
When Kentucky was first begun to be
explored, it is said not to have been claimed in individual
property by any nation of Indians. Its extensive
forests, grassy plains and thick cane brakes, abounding
with every variety of game common to such latitudes,
were used as common hunting grounds, and considered
by them, as open for all who chose to resort to them.
The Cherokees, the Chickasaws, the Cataubas, and the
Chicamaugas, from the south east; and the Illinois,
the Peorías, the Delawares, the Mingoes and Shawanees
from the west, claimed and exercised equal rights
and privileges within its limits. When the tribes
of those different nations would however meet there,
frequent collisions would arise between them; and
so deadly were the conflicts ensuing upon these, that,
in conjunction with the gloom of its dense forests,
they acquired for it the impressive appellation of
“the dark and bloody ground.” But
frequent and deadly as may have been those conflicts,
they sprang from some other cause, than a claim to
exclusive property in it.
In the summer of 1769, Daniel Boone,
in company with John Finley (who had previously hunted
through the country) and a few other men, entered
Kentucky, and travelled over much of its surface, without
meeting with an Indian, until the December following.
At this time Boone and John Steward (one of his companions,)
while on a hunting excursion, were discovered by a
party of Indians, who succeeded in making them prisoners.
After a detention of but few days, these men effected
their escape; & returning to their old camp, found
that it had been plundered, and their associates,
either killed or taken into captivity. They were
shortly after joined by a brother of Daniel Boone
and another man, from North Carolina, who were so fortunate
in wandering through the wilderness, as to discover
the only, though temporary residence of civilized
man within several hundred miles. But the Indians
had become alarmed for the possession of that country;
and fearing that if Boone and Steward should be suffered
to escape to the settlements, they might induce others
to attempt its permanent occupancy, they sought with
vigilance to discover and murder them. They succeeded
in killing Steward; but Daniel Boone and his brother,
then the only persons left (the man who came out with
the younger Boone having been killed by a wolf,) escaped
from them, and soon after returned to North Carolina.
The Indians were not disappointed
in their expectations. The description given
of the country by the Boones, soon led others to attempt
its settlement; and in 1773, six families and about
forty men, all under the guidance of Daniel Boone,
commenced their journey to Kentucky with a view
of remaining there. Before they proceeded far,
they were attacked in the rear by a party of Indians,
who had been observing their movements; and who in
the first fire killed six of the emigrants and dispersed
their cattle. Nothwithstanding that, in the engagement
which ensued upon this attack, the assailants were
repulsed, yet the adventurers were so afflicted at
the loss of their friends, and dispirited by such
serious and early opposition, that they abandoned
their purpose for a time, and returned to the inhabited
parts of Tennessee.
The Indians elated with their success
in defeating this first attempt at the settlement
of Kentucky, and supposing that the route pursued by
the party which they had driven back, would be the
pass for future adventurers, determined on guarding
it closely, and checking, if possible, every similar
enterprise. But while their attention was directed
to this point, others found their way into the country
by a different route and from a different direction.
The Virginia troops, who had served
in the Canadian war, had been promised a bounty in
Western lands. Many of them being anxious to
ascertain their value, and deeming this a favorable
period for the making of surveys, collected at Fort
Pitt in the fall of 1773; and descending the Ohio
river to its falls, at Louisville, proceeded from
thence to explore the country preparatory to a perfection
of their grants.
About the same time too, General Thompson
of Pennsylvania, commenced an extensive course of
surveys, of the rich land on the North Fork of Licking;
and other individuals following his example, in the
ensuing winter the country swarmed with land adventurers
and surveyors. So sensible were they all, that
these attempts to appropriate those lands to their
own use, would produce acts of hostility, that they
went prepared to resist those acts; and the first
party who took up their abode in Kentucky, no sooner
selected a situation for their residence, than they
proceeded to erect a fort for their security. The
conduct of the Indians soon convinced them that their
apprehensions were not ill founded; and many of them,
in consequence of the hostile movements which were
being made, and the robberies which were committed,
ascended the Ohio river to Wheeling.
It is not known that any murders were
done previously to this, and subsequently to the attack
and repulse of the emigrants who were led on by Boone
in 1773. This event happened on the tenth day
of October; and it was in April the ensuing year,
that the land adventurers retired to Wheeling.
In this interval of time, nothing could, perhaps,
be done by the Indians, but make preparation
for hostilities in the spring. Indeed it very
rarely happens, that the Indians engage in active
war during the winter; and there is, moreover, a strong
presumption, that they were for some time ignorant
of the fact that there were adventurers in the country;
and consequently, they knew of no object there, on
which their hostile intentions could operate. Be
this as it may, it is certain that, from the movements
of the Indians at the close of the winter, the belief
was general, that they were assuming a warlike attitude,
and meditating a continuance of hostilities.
War was certainly begun on their part, when Boone and
his associates, were attacked and driven back to the
settlement; and if it abated for a season, that abatement
was attributable to other causes, than a disposition
to remain quiet and peaceable, while the country was
being occupied by the whites.
If other evidence were wanting, to
prove the fact that the war of 1774 had its origin
in a determination of the Indians to repress the extension
of white settlements, it could be found in the circumstance,
that although it was terminated by the treaty with
Lord Dunmore, yet it revived as soon as attempts were
again made to occupy Kentucky, and was continued with
increased ardour, ’till the victory obtained
over them by General Wayne. For, notwithstanding
that in the struggle for American liberty, those Indians
became the allies of Great Britain, yet when independence
was acknowledged, and the English forces withdrawn
from the colonies, hostilities were still carried on
by them; and, as was then well understood, because
of the continued operation of those causes, which
produced the war of 1774. That the Canadian traders
and British emissaries, prompted the Indians to aggression,
and extended to them every aid which they could, to
render that aggression more effectually oppressive
and overwhelming, is readily admitted. Yet this
would not have led to a war, but for the encroachments
which have been mentioned. French influence, united
to the known jealousy of the Natives, would have been
unavailingly exerted to array the Indians against
Virginia, at the commencement of Braddock’s
war, but for the proceedings of the Ohio company, and
the fact that the Pennsylvania traders represented
the object of that association to be purely territorial.
And equally fruitless would have been their endeavor
to involve them in a contest with Virginians
at a later period, but for a like manifestation of
an intention to encroach on their domain.
In the latter end of April 1774, a
party of land adventurers, who had fled from the dangers
which threatened them below, came in collision with
some Indians, near the mouth of Captina, sixteen miles
below Wheeling. A slight skirmish ensued, which
terminated in the discomfiture of the whites, notwithstanding
they had only one man wounded, and one or two of the
enemy were killed. About the same time, happened
the affair opposite the mouth of Yellow creek; a stream
emptying into the Ohio river from the northwest, nearly
midway between Pittsburg and Wheeling.
In consequence of advices received
of the menacing conduct of the Indians, Joshua Baker
(who lived at this place) was preparing, together
with his neighbors, to retire for safety, into some
of the nearer forts, or to go to the older and more
populous settlements, remote from danger. There
was at that time a large party of Indians, encamped
on both sides of Yellow creek, at its entrance into
the river; and although in their intercourse at Baker’s,
they had not manifested an intention of speedily commencing
depredations, yet he deemed his situation in the immediate
contiguity of them, as being far from secure, and
was on the eve of abandoning it, when a party of whites,
who had just collected at his house, fired upon and
killed some Indians, who were likewise there. Among
them were the brother and daughter of the celebrated
chief, Logan.
In justification of this conduct it
has been said, that on the preceding evening a squaw
came over from the encampment and informed Mrs. Baker
that the Indians meditated the murder of her family
on the next day; and that before the firing
at Baker’s, two canoes, containing Indians painted
and armed for war, were seen to leave the opposite
shore. Under these circumstances, an apparently
slight provocation, and one, which would not perhaps
have been, otherwise heeded, produced the fatal result.
As the canoes approached the shore, the party from
Baker’s commenced firing on them, and notwithstanding
the opposition made by the Indians, forced them to
retire.
An interval of quiet succeeded the
happening of these events; but it was as the solemn
stillness which precedes the eruption of an earthquake,
when a volcanic explosion has given notice of its
approach; rendered more awful by the uncertainty
where its desolating influence would be felt.
It was however, a stillness of but short duration.
The gathering storm soon burst over the devoted heads
of those, who had neglected to seek a shelter from
its wrath. The traders in the Indian country
were the first victims sacrificed on the altar of
savage ferocity; and a general massacre of all the
whites found among them, quickly followed. A
young man, discovered near the falls of Muskingum
and within sight of White Eyes town, was murdered,
scalped; literally cut to pieces, and the mangled members
of his body, hung up on trees. White Eyes, a
chief of the friendly Delawares, hearing the scalp
halloo, went out with a party of his men; and seeing
what had been done, collected the scattered limbs of
the young man, and buried them. On the next day,
they were torn from the ground, severed into smaller
pieces, and thrown dispersedly at greater distances
from each other.
Nor did the colonial government of
Virginia neglect the security of her frontier citizens.
When intelligence of the hostile disposition of the
Natives, reached Williamsburg, the house of Burgesses
was in session; and measures were immediately adopted,
to prevent massacres, and to restore tranquillity.
That these objects might be the more certainly accomplished,
it was proposed by General Andrew Lewis (then a delegate
from Bottetourt,) to organize a force, sufficient to
overcome all intermediate opposition, and to carry
the war into the enemy’s country. In accordance
to this proposition, orders were issued by Governor
Dunmore for raising the requisite number of troops,
and for making other necessary preparations for the
contemplated campaign; the plan of which was concerted
by the Governor, Gen. Lewis and Colonel Charles Lewis
(then a delegate from Augusta.) But as some time must
necessarily have elapsed before the consummation of
the preparations which were being made; and as much
individual suffering might result from the delays
unavoidably incident to the raising, equipping and
organizing a large body of troops, it was deemed
advisable to take some previous and immediate step
to prevent the invasion of exposed and defenceless
portions of the country. The best plan
for the accomplishment of this object was believed
to be, the sending of an advance army into the Indian
country, of sufficient strength to act offensively,
before a confederacy could be formed of the different
tribes, and their combined forces be brought into the
field. A sense of the exposed situation of their
towns in the presence of an hostile army, requiring
the entire strength of every village for its defence,
would, it was supposed, call home those straggling
parties of warriors, by which destruction is so certainly
dealt to the helpless and unprotected. In conformity
with this part of the plan of operations, four hundred
men, to be detailed from the militia west of the mountains,
were ordered to assemble at Wheeling as soon as practicable.
And in the mean time, lest the surveyors and land
adventurers, who were then in Kentucky, might be discovered
and fall a prey to the savages, Daniel Boone was sent
by the Governor to the falls of Ohio, to conduct them
home from thence, through the wilderness; the only
practicable road to safety, the Ohio river being so
effectually guarded as to preclude the hope of escaping
up it.
Early in June, the troops destined
to make an incursion into the Indian country, assembled
at Wheeling, and being placed under the command of
Colonel Angus McDonald, descended the Ohio to the mouth
of Captina. Debarking, at this place, from their
boats and canoes, they took up their march to Wappatomica,
an Indian town on the Muskingum. The country
through which the army had to pass, was one unbroken
forest, presenting many obstacles to its speedy advance,
not the least of which was the difficulty of proceeding
directly to the point proposed. To obviate this,
however, they were accompanied by three persons in
the capacity of guides; whose knowledge of the
woods, and familiarity with those natural indices,
which so unerringly mark the direction of the principal
points, enabled them to pursue the direct course. When
they had approached within six miles of the town,
the army encountered an opposition from a party
of fifty or sixty Indians lying in ambush; and before
these could be dislodged, two whites were killed,
and eight or ten wounded; one Indian was
killed, and several wounded. They then proceeded
to Wappatomica without further molestation.
When the army arrived at the town,
it was found to be entirely deserted. Supposing
that it would cross the river, the Indians had retreated
to the opposite bank, and concealing themselves behind
trees and fallen timber, were awaiting that movement
in joyful anticipation of a successful surprise. Their
own anxiety and the prudence of the commanding officer,
however, frustrated that expectation. Several
were discovered peeping from their covert, watching
the motion of the army; and Colonel McDonald, suspecting
their object, and apprehensive that they would recross
the river and attack him in the rear, stationed videttes
above and below, to detect any such purpose, and to
apprise him of the first movement towards effecting
it. Foiled by these prudent and precautionary
measures and seeing their town in possession of the
enemy, with no prospect of wresting it from them, ’till
destruction would have done its work, the Indians sued
for peace; and the commander of the expedition consenting
to negotiate with them, if he could be assured of
their sincerity, five chiefs were sent over as hostages,
and the army then crossed the river, with these in
front.
When a negotiation was begun, the
Indians asked, that one of the hostages might be permitted
to go and convoke the other chiefs, whose presence,
it was alleged, would be necessary to the ratification
of a peace. One was accordingly released; and
not returning at the time specified, another was then
sent, who in like manner failed to return. Colonel
McDonald, suspecting some treachery, marched forward
to the next town, above Wappatomica, where another
slight engagement took place, in which one Indian
was killed and one white man wounded. It was
then ascertained, that the time which should have
been spent in collecting the other chiefs, preparatory
to negotiation, had been employed in removing their
old men, their women and children, together with what
property could be readily taken off, and for making
preparations for a combined attack on the Virginia
troops. To punish this duplicity and to render
peace really desirable, Col. McDonald burned
their towns and destroyed their crops; and being
then in want of provisions, retraced his steps to
Wheeling, taking with him the three remaining hostages,
who were then sent on to Williamsburg.
The inconvenience of supplying provisions
to an army in the wilderness, was a serious obstacle
to the success of expeditions undertaken against the
Indians. The want of roads, at that early period,
which would admit of transportation in wagons, rendered
it necessary to resort to pack horses; and such was
at times the difficulty of procuring these, that,
not unfrequently, each soldier had to be the bearer
of his entire stock of subsistence for the whole campaign.
When this was exhausted, a degree of suffering ensued,
often attended with consequences fatal to individuals,
and destructive to the objects of the expedition.
In the present case, the army being without provisions
before they left the Indian towns, their only sustenance
consisted of weeds, an ear of corn each day, and occasionally,
a small quantity of venison: it being impracticable
to hunt game in small parties, because of the vigilance
and success of the Indians, in watching and cutting
off detachments of this kind, before they could accomplish
their purpose and regain the main army.
No sooner had the troops retired from
the Indian country, than the savages, in small parties,
invaded the settlements in different directions, seeking
opportunities of gratifying their insatiable thirst
for blood. And although the precautions which
had been taken, lessened the frequency of their success,
yet they did not always prevent it. Persons leaving
the forts on any occasion, were almost always either
murdered or carried into captivity, a lot
sometimes worse than death itself.
Perhaps the first of these incursions
into North Western Virginia, after the destruction
of the towns on the Muskingum, was that made by a
party of eight Indians, at the head of which was the
Cayuga chief Logan. This very celebrated
Indian is represented as having hitherto, observed
towards the whites, a course of conduct by no means
in accordance with the malignity and steadfast implacability
which influenced his red brethren generally; but was,
on the contrary, distinguished by a sense of humanity,
and a just abhorrence of those cruelties so frequently
inflicted on the innocent and unoffending, as well
as upon those who were really obnoxious to savage enmity.
Such indeed were the acts of beneficence which characterized
him, and so great his partiality for the English,
that the finger of his brethren would point to his
cabin as the residence of Logan, “the friend
of white men.” “In the course of
the French war, he remained at home, idle and inactive;”
opposed to the interference of his nation, “an
advocate for peace.” When his family fell
before the fury of exasperated men, he felt himself
impelled to avenge their deaths; and exchanging the
pipe of peace, for the tomahawk of war, became active
in seeking opportunities to glut his vengeance.
With this object in view, at the head of the party
which has been mentioned, he traversed the county
from the Ohio to the West Fork, before an opportunity
was presented him of achieving any mischief. Their
distance from what was supposed would be the theatre
of war, had rendered the inhabitants of that section
of country, comparatively inattentive to their safety.
Relying on the expectation that the first blow would
be struck on the Ohio, and that they would have sufficient
notice of this to prepare for their own security, before
danger could reach them, many had continued to perform
the ordinary business of their farms.
On the 12th day of July, as William
Robinson, Thomas Hellen and Coleman Brown were pulling
flax in a field opposite the mouth of Simpson’s
creek, Logan and his party approached unperceived and
fired at them. Brown fell instantly; his body
perforated by several balls; and Hellen and Robinson
unscathed, sought safety in flight. Hellen
being then an old man, was soon overtaken and made
captive; but Robinson, with the elasticity of youth,
ran a considerable distance before he was taken; and
but for an untoward accident might have effected an
escape. Believing that he was outstripping his
pursuers, and anxious to ascertain the fact, he looked
over his shoulder, but before he discovered the Indian
giving chase, he ran with such violence against a
tree, that he fell, stunned by the shock and lay powerless
and insensible. In this situation he was secured
with a cord; and when he revived, was taken back to
the place where the Indians had Hellen in confinement,
and where lay the lifeless body of Brown. They
then set off to their towns, taking with them a horse
which belonged to Hellen.
When they had approached near enough
to be distinctly heard, Logan (as is usual with them
after a successful scout,) gave the scalp halloo,
and several warriors came out to meet them, and conducted
the prisoners into the village. Here they passed
through the accustomed ceremony of running the gauntlet;
but with far different fortunes. Robinson, having
been previously instructed by Logan (who from the
time he made him his prisoner, manifested a kindly
feeling towards him,) made his way, with but little
interruption, to the council house; but poor Hellen,
from the decrepitude of age, and his ignorance of
the fact that it was a place of refuge, was sadly beaten
before he arrived at it; and when he at length came
near enough, he was knocked down with a war club,
before he could enter. After he had fallen, they
continued to beat and strike him with such unmerciful
severity, that he would assuredly have fallen a victim
to their barbarous usage, but that Robinson (at some
peril for the interference) reached forth his hand
and drew him within the sanctuary. When he had
however, recovered from the effects of the violent
beating which he had received, he was relieved from
the apprehension of farther suffering, by being adopted
into an Indian family.
A council was next convoked to resolve
on the fate of Robinson; and then arose in his breast,
feelings of the most anxious inquietude. Logan
assured him, that he should not be killed; but the
council appeared determined that he should die, and
he was tied to the stake. Logan then addressed
them, and with much vehemence, insisted that Robinson
too should be spared; and had the eloquence displayed
on that occasion been less than Logan is believed
to have possessed, it is by no means wonderful
that he appeared to Robinson (as he afterwards said)
the most powerful orator he ever heard. But commanding
as his eloquence might have been, it seems not to have
prevailed with the council; for Logan had to interpose
otherwise than by argument or entreaty, to succeed
in the attainment of his object. Enraged at the
pertinacity with which the life of Robinson was sought
to be taken, and reckless of the consequences, he drew
the tomahawk from his belt, and severing the cords
which bound the devoted victim to the stake, led him
in triumph, to the cabin of an old squaw, by whom
he was immediately adopted.
After this, so long as Logan remained
in the town where Robinson was, he was kind and attentive
to him; and when preparing to go again to war, got
him to write the letter which was afterwards found
on Holstein at the house of a Mr. Robertson, whose
family were all murdered by the Indians. Robinson
remained with his adopted mother, until he was redeemed
under the treaty concluded at the close of the Dunmore
campaign.