After the winter became so severe
as to prevent the Indians from penetrating the country
and committing farther aggression, the inhabitants
became assured of safety, and devoted much of their
time to the erection of new forts, the strengthening
of those which had been formerly established, and
the making of other preparations, deemed necessary
to prevent the repetition of those distressing occurrences,
which had spread gloom and sorrow over almost every
part of North Western Virginia. That the savages
would early renew their exertions to destroy the frontier
settlements, and harrass their citizens, could not
for an instant be doubted. Revenge for the
murder of Cornstalk, and the other chiefs killed in
the fort by the whites, had operated to unite the
warlike nation of the Shawanees in a league with the
other Indians, against them; and every circumstance
seemed to promise increased exertions on their part,
to accomplish their purposes of blood and devastation.
Notwithstanding all which had been
suffered during the preceding season; and all, which
it was confidently anticipated, would have to be undergone
after the return of spring, yet did the whole frontier
increase in population, and in capacity to defend itself
against the encroachments of a savage enemy, aided
by British emissaries, and led on by American tories.
The accession to its strength, caused by the number
of emigrants, who came into the different settlements,
was indeed considerable; yet it was insufficient,
to enable the inhabitants to purchase by offensive
operations, exemption from invasion, or security
from the tomahawk and scalping knife. Assured
of this, Virginia extended to them farther assistance;
and a small body of regular troops, under the command
of General McIntosh, was appropriated to their defence.
In the spring of 1778, General McIntosh,
with the regulars and some militiamen, attached to
his command, descended the Ohio river from Fort Pitt,
to the mouth of Big Beaver a creek discharging
itself into that river from the north-west. This
was a favorable position, at which to station his
troops to effect the partial security of the frontier,
by intercepting parties of Indians on their way to
the settlements on the opposite side of the river,
and by pursuing and punishing them while engaged,
either in committing havoc, or in retreating to their
towns, after the consummation of their horrid purposes.
Fort McIntosh was accordingly erected here, and garrisoned;
a six pounder mounted for its defence.
From Wheeling to Point Pleasant, a
distance of one hundred and eighty-six miles, there
was then no obstacle whatever, presented to the advance
of Indian war parties, into the settlements on the
East and West Forks of the Monongahela, and their branches.
The consequences of this exposure had been always
severely felt; and never more so than after the establishment
of Fort McIntosh. Every impediment to their invasion
of one part of the country, caused more frequent irruptions
into others, where no difficulties were interposed
to check their progress, and brought heavier woes on
them. This had been already experienced,
in the settlements on the upper branches of the Monongahela,
and as they were the last to feel the effects of savage
enmity in 1777, so were they first to become sacrificed
to its fury in 1778.
Anticipating the commencement of hostilities
at an earlier period of the season, than usual, several
families retired into Harbert’s block-house,
on Ten Mile (a branch of the West Fork,) in the month
of February. And notwithstanding the prudent
caution manifested by them in the step thus taken;
yet, the state of the weather lulling them into false
security, they did not afterwards exercise the vigilance
and provident care, which were necessary to ensure
their future safety. On the third of March, some
children, playing with a crippled crow, at a short
distance from the yard, espied a number of Indians
proceeding towards them; and running briskly to the
house, told “that a number of red men
were close by.” John Murphey
stepped to the door to see if danger had really approached,
when one of the Indians, turning the corner of the
house, fired at him. The ball took effect, and
Murphey fell back into the house. The Indian springing
directly in, was grappled by Harbert, and thrown on
the floor. A shot from without, wounded Harbert,
yet he continued to maintain his advantage over the
prostrate savage, striking him as effectually as he
could with his tomahawk, when another gun was fired
at him from without the house. The ball passed
through his head, and he fell lifeless. His antagonist
then slipped out at the door, sorely wounded in the
encounter.
Just after the first Indian had entered,
an active young warrior, holding in his hand a tomahawk
with a long spike at the end, also came in. Edward
Cunningham instantly drew up his gun to shoot him;
but it flashed, and they closed in doubtful strife.
Both were active and athletic; and sensible of the
high prize for which they were contending, each put
forth his utmost strength, and strained his every
nerve, to gain the ascendency. For a while, the
issue seemed doubtful. At length, by great exertion,
Cunningham wrenched the tomahawk from the hand of
the Indian, and buried the spike end to the handle,
in his back. Mrs. Cunningham closed the contest.
Seeing her husband struggling closely with the savage,
she struck at him with an axe. The edge wounding
his face severely, he loosened his hold, and made
his way out of the house.
The third Indian, which had entered
before the door was closed, presented an appearance
almost as frightful as the object which he had in
view. He wore a cap made of the unshorn front
of a buffalo, with the ears and horns still attached
to it, and which hanging loosely about his head, gave
to him a most hideous aspect. On entering the
room, this infernal monster, aimed a blow with his
tomahawk at a Miss Reece, which alighting on her head,
wounded her severely. The mother of this girl,
seeing the uplifted arm about to descend on her daughter,
seized the monster by the horns; but his false head
coming readily off, she did not succeed in changing
the direction of the weapon. The father then
caught hold of him; but far inferior in strength and
agility, he was soon thrown on the floor, and must
have been killed, but for the timely interference
of Cunningham. Having succeeded in ridding
the room of one Indian, he wheeled, and sunk a tomahawk
into the head of the other.
During all this time the door was
kept by the women, tho’ not without great exertion.
The Indians from without endeavored several times to
force it open and gain admittance; and would at one
time have succeeded, but that, as it was yielding
to their effort to open it, the Indian, who had been
wounded by Cunningham and his wife, squeezing out
at the aperture which had been made, caused a momentary
relaxation of the exertions of those without, and
enabled the women again to close it, and prevent the
entrance of others. These were not however,
unemployed. They were engaged in securing such
of the children in the yard, as were capable of being
carried away as prisoners, and in killing and scalping
the others; and when they had effected this, despairing
of being able to do farther mischief, they retreated
to their towns.
Of the whites in the house, one only
was killed and four were wounded; and seven or eight
children in the yard, were killed or taken prisoners.
One Indian was killed, and two badly wounded.
Had Reece engaged sooner in the conflict, the other
two who had entered the house, would no doubt have
been likewise killed; but being a quaker, he looked
on, without participating in the conflict, until his
daughter was wounded. Having then to contend singly,
with superior prowess, he was indebted for the preservation
of his life, to the assistance of those whom he refused
to aid in pressing need.
On the eleventh of April, some Indians
visited the house of Wm. Morgan, at the Dunkard bottom
of Cheat river. They there killed a young man
by the name of Brain, Mrs. Morgan, (the mother of
William) and her grand daughter, and Mrs. Dillon and
her two children; and took Mrs. Morgan (the wife)
and her child prisoners. When, on their way home,
they came near to Pricket’s fort, they bound
Mrs. Morgan to a bush, and went in quest of a horse
for her to ride, leaving her child with her.
She succeeded in untying with her teeth, the bands
which confined her, and wandered the balance of that
day and part of the next before she came in sight of
the fort. Here she was kindly treated and in
a few days sent home. Some men going out from
Pricket’s fort some short time after, found at
the spot where Mrs. Morgan had been left by
the Indians, a fine mare stabbed to the heart. Exasperated
at the escape of Mrs. Morgan, they had no doubt vented
their rage on the animal which they had destined to
bear her weight.
In the last of April, a party of about
twenty Indians came to the neighborhoods of Hacker’s
creek and the West Fork. At this time the inhabitants
of those neighborhoods had removed to West’s
fort, on the creek, and to Richards’ fort on
the river; and leaving the women and children in them
during the day, under the protection of a few men,
the others were in the habit of performing the usual
labors of their farms in companies, so as to preserve
them from attacks of the Indians. A company of
men, being thus engaged, the first week of May, in
a field, now owned by Minter Bailey, on Hacker’s
creek, and being a good deal dispersed in various
occupations, some fencing, others clearing, and a
few ploughing, they were unexpectedly fired upon by
the Indians, and Thomas Hughes and Jonathan Lowther
shot down: the others being incautiously without
arms fled for safety. Two of the company, having
the Indians rather between them and West’s fort,
ran directly to Richards’, as well for their
own security as to give the alarm there. But
they had been already apprized that the enemy was at
hand. Isaac Washburn, who had been to mill on
Hacker’s creek the day before, on his return
to Richards’ fort and near to where Clement’s
mill now stands, was shot from his horse, tomahawked
and scalped. The finding of his body, thus cruelly
mangled, had given them the alarm, and they were already
on their guard, before the two men from Hacker’s
creek arrived with the intelligence of what had been
done there. The Indians then left the neighborhood
without effecting more havoc; and the whites were
too weak to go in pursuit, and molest them.
The determination of the Shawanees
to revenge the death of their Sachem, had hitherto
been productive of no very serious consequences.
A while after his murder, a small band of them made
their appearance near the fort at Point Pleasant;
and Lieutenant Moore was dispatched from the garrison,
with some men, to drive them off. Upon his advance,
they commenced retreating; and the officer commanding
the detachment, fearing they would escape, ordered
a quick pursuit. He did not proceed far before
he fell into an ambuscade. He and three of his
men were killed at the first fire; the
rest of the party saved themselves by a precipitate
flight to the fort.
In the May following this transaction,
a few Indians again came in sight of the fort.
But as the garrison had been very much reduced by
the removal of Captain Arbuckle’s company, and
the experience of the last season had taught them
prudence, Captain McKee forbore to detach any of his
men in pursuit of them. Disappointed, in their
expectations of enticing others to destruction, as
they had Lieutenant Moore in the winter, the Indians
suddenly rose from their covert, and presented an
unbroken line, extending from the Ohio to the Kanawha
river in front of the fort. A demand for the
surrender of the garrison, was then made; and Captain
McKee asked ’till the next morning to consider
of it. In the course of the night, the men were
busily employed in bringing water from the river,
expecting that the Indians would continue before the
fort for some time.
In the morning, Captain McKee sent
his answer by the grenadier squaw, (sister to Cornstalk,
and who, notwithstanding the murder of her brother
and nephew, was still attached to the whites, and was
remaining at the fort in the capacity of interpreter)
that he could not comply with their demand. The
Indians immediately began the attack, and for one
week kept the garrison closely besieged. Finding
however, that they made no impression on the fort,
they collected the cattle about it and instead of
returning towards their own country with the plunder,
proceeded up the Kanawha river towards the Greenbrier
settlement.
Believing their object to be the destruction
of that settlement, and knowing from their great force
that they would certainly accomplish it, if the inhabitants
were unadvised of their approach, Captain McKee despatched
two men to Col. Andrew Donnelly’s, (then
the frontier house,) with the intelligence. These
men soon came in view of the Indians; but finding
that they were advancing in detached groups, and dispersed
in hunting parties, through the woods, they despaired
of being able to pass them, and returned to the fort.
Captain McKee then made an appeal to the chivalry
of the garrison, and asked, “who would risk
his life to save the people of Greenbrier.”
John Pryor and Philip Hammond, at once stepped forward,
and replied “WE WILL.” They were
then habited after the Indian manner, and painted in
Indian style by the Grenadier Squaw, and departed
on their hazardous, but noble and generous undertaking.
Travelling, night and day, with great rapidity, they
passed the Indians at Meadow river, and arrived,
about sunset of that day at Donnelly’s fort,
twenty miles farther on.
As soon as the intelligence of the
approach of the Indians, was communicated by these
men, Col. Donnelly had the neighbors all advised
of it; and in the course of the night, they collected
at his house. He also dispatched a messenger
to Capt. John Stuart, to acquaint him with the
fact; and made every preparation to resist attack and
ensure their safety, of which his situation admitted.
Pryor and Hammond told them how, by the precaution
of Captain McKee, the garrison at Point Pleasant had
been saved from suffering by the want of water; and
advised them to lay in a plentiful supply, of that
necessary article. A hogshead was accordingly
filled and rolled behind the door of the kitchen,
which adjoined the dwelling house.
Early next morning, John Pritchet
(a servant to Col. Donnelly) went out for some
firewood, and while thus engaged, was fired at and
killed. The Indians then ran into the yard, and
endeavored to force open the kitchen door; but Hammond
and Dick Pointer (a negro belonging to Col. Donnelly)
who were the only persons within, aided by the hogshead
of water, prevented their accomplishing this object.
They next proceeded to cut it in pieces, with their
tomahawks. Hammond seeing that they would soon
succeed in this way, with the assistance of Dick,
rolled the hogshead to one side, and letting the door
suddenly fly open, killed the Indian at the threshold,
and the others who were near gave way. Dick then
fired among them, with a musket heavily charged with
swan shot, and no doubt with effect, as the yard was
crowded with the enemy; a war club with a swan shot
in it, was afterwards picked up near the door.
The men in the house, who were asleep
at the commencement of the attack, being awakened
at the firing of Hammond and Dick, now opened a galling
fire upon the Indians. Being chiefly up stairs
they were enabled to do greater execution, and fired
with such effect that, about one o’clock, the
enemy retired a small distance from the house.
Before they retired however, some of them succeeded
in getting under the floor, when they were aided by
the whites below in raising some of the puncheons
of which it was made. It was to their advantage
to do this; and well did they profit by it. Several
of the Indians were killed in this attempt to gain
admittance, while only one of the whites received
a wound, which but slightly injured his hand.
When intelligence was conveyed to
Capt. Stuart of the approach of so large a body
of savages, Col. Samuel Lewis was with him; and
they both exerted themselves to save the settlement
from destruction, by collecting the inhabitants at
a fort where Lewisburg now stands. Having succeeded
in this, they sent two men to Donnelly’s to learn
whether the Indians had advanced that far. As
they approached, the firing became distinctly audible,
and they returned with the tidings. Capt.
Stuart and Col. Lewis proposed marching to the
relief of Donnelly’s fort, with as many men
as were willing to accompany them; and in a brief
space of time, commenced their march at the head of
sixty-six men. Pursuing the most direct route
without regarding the road, they approached the house
on the back side; and thus escaped an ambuscade of
Indians placed near the road to intercept and cut off
any assistance which might be sent from the upper
settlements.
Adjoining the yard, there was a field
of well grown rye, into which the relief from Lewisburg,
entered about two o’clock; but as the Indians
had withdrawn to a distance from the house, there was
no firing heard. They soon however, discovered
the savages in the field, looking intently towards
Donnoly’s; and it was resolved to pass them.
Capt. Stuart and Charles Gatliff fired at them,
and the whole party rushed forward into the yard,
amid a heavy discharge of balls from the savage forces.
The people in the fort hearing the firing in the rear
of the house, soon presented themselves at the port
holes, to resist, what they supposed, was a fresh
attack on them; but quickly discovering the real cause,
they opened the gates, and all the party led on by
Stuart and Lewis, safely entered.
The Indians then resumed the attack,
and maintained a constant fire at the house, until
near dark, when one of them approached, and in broken
English called out, “we want peace.”
He was told to come in and he should have it; but
he declined the invitation to enter, and they all
retreated, dragging off those of their slain, who lay
not too near the fort.
Of the whites, four only were killed
by the enemy. Pritchet, before the attack commenced, James
Burns and Alexander Ochiltree, as they were coming
to the house early in the morning, and James
Graham while in the fort. It was impossible to
ascertain the entire loss of the Indians. Seventeen
lay dead in the yard; and they were known to carry
off others of their slain. Perhaps the disparity
of the killed, equalled, if it did not exceed the
disparity of the number engaged. There were twenty-one
men at Donnoly’s fort, before the arrival of
the reinforcement under Stuart and Lewis; and the
brunt of the battle was over before they came.
The Indian force exceeded two hundred men.
It was believed, that the invasion
of the Greenbrier country had been projected, some
time before it actually was made. During the preceding
season, an Indian calling himself John Hollis, had
been very much through the settlement; and was known
to take particular notice of the different forts,
which he entered under the garb of friendship.
He was with the Indians in the attack on Donnoly’s
fort; and was recognized as one of those who were
left dead in the yard.
On the morning after the Indians departed,
Capt. Hamilton went in pursuit of them with seventy
men; but following two days, without perceiving
that he gained on them, he abandoned the chase and
returned.
About the middle of June, three women
went out from West’s fort, to gather greens
in a field adjoining; and while thus engaged were
attacked by four Indians, lying in wait. One gun
only was fired, and the ball from it, passed through
the bonnet of Mrs. Hackor, who screamed aloud and
ran with the others towards the fort. An Indian,
having in his hand a long staff, with a spear in one
end, pursuing closely after them, thrust it at Mrs.
Freeman with such violence that, entering her back
just below the shoulder, it came out at her left breast.
With his tomahawk, he cleft the upper part of her head,
and carried it off to save the scalp.
The screams of the women alarmed the
men in the fort; and seizing their guns, they ran
out, just as Mrs. Freeman fell. Several guns were
fired at the Indian while he was getting her scalp,
but with no effect. They served however, to warn
the men who went out, that danger was at hand; and
they quickly came in.
Jesse Hughs and John Schoolcraft
(who were out) in making their way to the fort, came
very near two Indians standing by the fence looking
towards the men at West’s, so intently, that
they did not perceive any one near them. They
however, were observed by Hughs and Schoolcraft, who,
avoiding them, made their way in, safely, Hughs immediately
took up his gun, and learning the fate of Mrs. Freeman,
went with some others to bring in the corpse.
While there, he proposed to go and shew them, how
near he had approached the Indians after the alarm
had been given, before he saw them. Charles and
Alexander West, Chas. Hughs, James Brown and John
Steeth, went with him. Before they had arrived
at the place, one of the Indians was heard to howl
like a wolf; and the men with Hughs moved on in the
direction from which the sound proceeded. Supposing
that they were then near the spot, Jesse Hughs howled
in like manner, and being instantly answered, they
ran to a point of the hill and looking over it, saw
two Indians coming towards them. Hughs fired
and one of them fell. The other took to flight.
Being pursued by the whites, he sought shelter in a
thicket of brush; and while they were proceeding to
intercept him at his coming out, he returned by the
way he had entered, and made his escape. The wounded
Indian likewise got off. When the whites were
in pursuit of the one who took to flight, they passed
near to him who had fallen, and one of the men was
for stopping and finishing him; but Hughs called to
him, “he is safe let us have the
other,” and they all pressed forward. On
their return, however, he was gone; and although his
free bleeding enabled them to pursue his track readily
for a while, yet a heavy shower of rain soon falling,
all trace of him was quickly lost and could not be
afterwards regained.
On the 16th of June as Capt.
James Booth and Nathaniel Cochran, were at work in
a field on Booth’s creek, they were fired at
by the Indians. Booth fell, but Cochran,
being very slightly wounded, took to flight.
He was however, overtaken, and carried into captivity
to their towns. From thence he was taken to Detroit,
where he remained some time; and endeavoring to escape
from that place, unfortunately took a path which led
him immediately to the Maumee old towns. Here
he was detained a while, & then sent back to Detroit,
where he was exchanged, and from whence he made his
way home, after having had to endure much suffering
and many hardships. The loss of Booth was severely
felt by the inhabitants in that settlement. He
was not only an active and enterprising man, but was
endowed with superior talents, and a better education
than most of those who had settled in the country;
and on these accounts was very much missed.
In a few days after this transaction,
Benjamin Shinn, Wm. Grundy, and Benjamin Washburn,
returning from a lick on the head of Booth’s
creek, were fired on by the Indians, when near to
Baxter’s run. Washburn and Shinn escaped
unhurt, but Grundy was killed: he was brother
to Felix Grundy of Tennessee, whose father was then
residing at Simpson’s creek, at a farm afterwards
owned by Colonel Benjamin Wilson, senior.
This party of Indians continued for
some days, to prowl about the neighborhood, seeking
opportunities of committing murder on the inhabitants;
fortunately however, with but little success.
James Owens, a youth of sixteen years of age, was
the only one whom they succeeded in killing after
the murder of Grundy. Going from Powers’
fort on Simpson’s creek, to Booth’s creek,
his saddle girth gave way, and while he was down mending
it, a ball was discharged at him, which killed both
him and the horse.
Seeing that the whites, in that neighborhood,
had all retired to the fort; and being too weak, openly
to attack it, they crossed over to Bartlett’s
run, and came to the house of Gilbert Hustead, who
was then alone, and engaged in fixing his gun lock.
Hearing a noise in the yard, for which he was unable
to account, he slipped to the door, to ascertain from
whence it proceeded. The Indians were immediately
round it, and there was no chance for his escape.
Walking out with an air of the utmost pleasantry,
he held forth his hand to the one nearest him, and
asked them all to walk in. While in the house
he affected great cheerfulness, and by his tale
won their confidence and friendship. He told
them that he was a King’s man and unwilling to
live among the rebels; for which reason, when others
retired into the fort, he preferred staying at his
own house, anxiously hoping for the arrival of some
of the British Indians, to afford him an opportunity
of getting among English friends. Learning upon
enquiry, that they would be glad to have something
to eat, he asked one of them to shoot a fat hog which
was in the yard, that they might regale on it that
night, and have some on which to subsist while travelling
to their towns. In the morning, still farther
to maintain the deception he was practising, he broke
his furniture to pieces, saying “the rebels shall
never have the good of you.” He then accompanied
them to their towns, acting in the same, apparently,
contented and cheerful manner, ’till his sincerity
was believed by all, and he obtained leave to return
for his family. He succeeded in making his way
home, where he remained, sore at the destruction of
his property, but exulting in the success of his artifice.
While this party of Indians were thus
engaged, on Booth’s creek and in the circumjacent
country, a more numerous body had invaded the settlements
lower down, and were employed in the work of destruction
there. They penetrated to Coburn’s creek
unperceived, and were making their way (as was generally
supposed) to a fort not far from Morgantown, when
they fell in with a party of whites, returning from
the labors of the cornfield, and then about a mile
from Coburn’s fort. The Indians had placed
themselves on each side of the road leading to the
fort, and from their covert fired on the whites, before
they were aware of danger. John Woodfin being
on horseback, had his thigh broken by a ball; which
killed his horse and enabled them to catch him easily. Jacob
Miller was shot through the abdomen, and soon overtaken,
tomahawked and scalped. The others escaped
to the fort.
Woodfin was afterwards found on a
considerable eminence overlooking the fort, tomahawked
and scalped. The Indians had, most probably, taken
him there, that he might point out to them the least
impregnable part of the fortress, and in other respects
give them such information, as would tend to ensure
success to their meditated attack on it; but when
they heard its strength and the force with which it
was garrisoned, despairing of being able to reduce
it, in a fit of disappointed fury, they murdered him
on the spot.
Weakened by the severe loss sustained
in this bloody skirmish, had the Indians pushed forward
to attack the fort, in all human probability, it would
have fallen before them. There were at that day
very few settlements which could have maintained possession
of a garrison for any length of time, after having
suffered so great a diminution of the number of their
inhabitants, against the onsets of one hundred savages,
exercising their wonted energy: and still less
would they be able to leave their strong holds, and
cope with such superior force, in open battle.
Nor were the settlements, as yet, sufficiently contiguous
to each other, to admit of their acting in concert,
and combining their strength, to operate effectively
against their invaders. When alarmed by the approach
of the foe, all that they could generally do, was,
retire to a fort, and endeavor to defend it from assault.
If the savages, coming in numbers, succeeded in committing
any outrage, it usually went unpunished. Sensible
of their want of strength, the inhabitants rarely
ventured in pursuit, to harrass or molest the retiring
foe. When, however, they would hazard to hang
on their retreat, the many precautions which they
were compelled to exercise, to prevent falling into
ambuscades and to escape the entangling artifices
of their wily enemies, frequently rendered their enterprises
abortive, and their exertions inefficient.
According to the account given by
Nathaniel Cochran on his return from captivity, Washburn
was most severely beaten, on the first evening of
his arrival at their village, while running the gauntlet;
and although he succeeded in getting into the council
house, where Cochran was, yet he was so disfigured
and mutilated, that he could not be recognised by
his old acquaintance; and so stunned and stupified,
that he remained nearly all night in a state of insensibility.
Being somewhat revived in the morning, he walked to
where Cochran sat by the fire, and being asked if
he were not James Washburn, replied with a smile as
if a period had been put to his sufferings by the
sympathetic tone in which the question was proposed that
he was. The gleam of hope which flashed over
his countenance, was transient and momentary.
In a few minutes he was again led forth, that the
barbarities which had been suspended by the interposition
of night, might be revived; and he made to endure
a repetition of their cruelties. He was now feeble
and too much exhausted to save himself from the clubs
and sticks, even of the aged of both sexes. The
old men and the old women, who followed him, had strength
and activity enough to keep pace with his fleetest
progress, and inflict on him their severest blows.
Frequently he was beaten to the ground, and as frequently,
as if invigorated by the extremity of anguish, he
rose to his feet. Hobbling before his tormentors,
with no hope but in death, an old savage passed a knife
across his ham, which cutting the tendons, disabled
him from proceeding farther. Still they repeated
their unmerciful blows with all their energy.
He was next scalped, though alive, and struggling to
regain his feet. Even this did not operate to
suppress their cruelty. They continued to beat
him, until in the height of suffering he again exhibited
symptoms of life and exerted himself to move.
His head was then severed from his shoulders, attached
to a pole, and placed in the most public situation
in the village.
After the attack on the Washburns,
there were but two other outrages committed in the
upper country during that season. The cessation
on the part of the savages, of hostile incursions,
induced an abandonment of the forts, and the people
returned to their several homes, and respective occupations.
But aggression was only suspended for a time.
In October, two Indians appeared near the house of
Conrad Richards, and finding in the yard a little
girl at play, with an infant in her arms, they scalped
her and rushed to the door. For some time they
endeavored to force it open; but it was so securely
fastened within, that Richards was at liberty to use
his gun for its defence. A fortunate aim wounded
one of the assailants severely, and the other retreated,
helping off his companion. The girl who had been
scalped in the yard, as soon as she observed the Indians
going away, ran, with the infant still in her arms
and uninjured, and entered the house a
spectacle of most heart-rending wretchedness.
Soon after, David Edwards, returning
from Winchester with salt, was shot near the Valley
river, tomahawked and scalped; in which situation
he lay for some time before he was discovered.
He was the last person who fell a victim to savage
vengeance, in North Western Virginia in the year 1778.
The repeated irruptions of the Indians
during the summer of the year; and the frequent
murders and great devastation committed by them, induced
Government to undertake two expeditions into the Indian
country. One thousand men were placed under the
command of General McIntosh, some time in the fall,
and he received orders to proceed forthwith against
the Sandusky towns. Between two and three hundred
soldiers were likewise placed under Colonel Clarke,
to operate against the Canadian settlements in Illinois.
It was well known that the Governor of those settlements
was an indefatigable agent of British cruelty, stimulating
the savages to aggression, and paying them well for
scalps, torn alike from the heads of the aged matron
and the helpless infant. The settlements
in Kentucky, were constantly the theatre of outrage
and murder; and to preserve these from entire destruction,
it was necessary that a blow should be aimed, at the
hives from which the savages swarmed, and if possible,
that those holds, into which they would retire to
reap the rewards of their cruelties and receive the
price of blood, should be utterly broken up.
The success of those two expeditions could not fail
to check savage encroachments, and give quiet and
security to the frontier; and although the armies
destined to achieve it, were not altogether adequate
to the service required, yet the known activity and
enterprise of the commanding officers, joined to their
prudence and good conduct, and the bravery and indefatigable
perseverance and hardiness of the troops, gave promise
of a happy result.
The success of the expedition under
Colonel Clarke, fully realized the most sanguine
expectations of those, who were acquainted with the
adventurous and enterprising spirit of its commander;
and was productive of essential benefit to the state,
as well as of comparative security to the border settlements.
Descending the Ohio river, from Fort Pitt to the Falls,
he there landed his troops, and concealing his boats,
marched directly towards Kaskaskias. Their provisions,
which were carried on their backs, were soon exhausted;
and for two days, the army subsisted entirely on roots.
This was the only circumstance, which occurred during
their march, calculated to damp the ardor of the troops.
No band of savage warriors, had interposed to check
their progress, no straggling Indian, had
discovered their approach. These fortunate omens
inspired them with flattering hopes; and they pushed
forward, with augmented energy. Arriving before
Kaskaskias in the night, they entered it, unseen and
unheard, and took possession of the town and fort,
without opposition. Relying on the thick and
wide extended forests which interposed between them
and the American settlements, the inhabitants had been
lulled to repose by fancied security, and were unconscious
of danger until it had become too late to be avoided.
Not a single individual escaped, to spread the alarm
in the adjacent settlements.
But there still remained other towns,
higher up the Mississippi, which, if unconquered,
would still afford shelter to the savages and furnish
them the means of annoyance and of ravage. Against
these, Colonel Clarke immediately directed operations.
Mounting a detachment of men, on horses found at Kaskaskias,
and sending them forward, three other towns were reduced
with equal success. The obnoxious governor at
Kaskaskias was sent directly to Virginia, with the
written instructions which he had received from Quebec,
Detroit and Michillimacinac, for exciting the Indians
to war, and remunerating them for the blood which
they might shed.
Although the country within which
Colonel Clarke had so successfully carried on operations,
was considered to be within the limits of Virginia;
yet as it was occupied by savages and those who were
but little, if any, less hostile than they; and being
so remote from her settlements, Virginia had as yet
exercised no act of jurisdiction over it. But
as it now belonged to her, by conquest as well as charter,
the General Assembly created it into a distinct county,
to be called Illinois; a temporary government was
likewise established in it, and a regiment of infantry
and a troop of cavalry, ordered to be enlisted for
its defence, and placed under the command of its intrepid
and enterprising conqueror.
The expedition directed under General
McIntosh, was not equally successful. The difficulty
of raising, equipping, and organizing, so large a
force as was placed under his command, at so great
a distance from the populous district of the state,
caused the consumption of so much time, that the season
for carrying on effective operations had well nigh
passed before he was prepared to commence his march.
Anxious however, to achieve as much as could then
be effected for the security of the frontier, he penetrated
the enemy’s country, as far as Tuscarawa, when
it was resolved to build and garrison a fort, and
delay farther operations ’till the ensuing spring.
Fort Laurens was accordingly erected on the banks
of the Tuscarawa, a garrison of one hundred and fifty
men, under the command of Colonel John Gibson, left
for its preservation, and the main army returned to
Fort Pitt.