How Claiborne executed
his orders the battle
of the holy ground red
eagle’s famous leap
General Claiborne construed as liberally
as he dared the order from General Flournoy which
permitted him to drive the Creeks across the border,
and to pursue them as far as the neighboring towns.
He adopted the frontier notion of nearness when deciding
whether or not a particular town that he wanted to
strike was sufficiently near the dividing line between
the white settlements and the Creek Nation.
His orders were to establish a fort
at Weatherford’s Bluff, and to remain in that
neighborhood until he should be joined by Jackson’s
army and the Georgia troops, who were now advancing
under command of General Floyd.
The force with which he advanced to
execute this order was a motley one. There were
three hundred volunteers, who were the main reliance
of the commander. There was a small dragoon force,
composed of good men. Pushmatahaw, the Choctaw
warrior, with his followers accompanied the expedition,
and a small force of militiamen completed the little
army.
Arriving at Weatherford’s Bluff
on the 17th of November, Claiborne proceeded without
delay to build a stockade fort inclosing nearly an
acre of ground, within which he built three block-houses,
while for defence against an assault from the river
side of the encampment he established a battery on
the bank. The work, when finished, was christened
Fort Claiborne, and from it the present town of Claiborne
on the same spot inherited the commander’s name.
Here, on the 28th of November, Claiborne
was reinforced by the Third Regiment of United States
Infantry, under command of Colonel Russell, and in
order that concert of action might be secured, he wrote
hence to General Jackson at the Ten Islands, reporting
the situation of affairs on the southern side of the
field, and informing the Tennessee commander, of whose
starvation he had heard, that abundant supplies of
food awaited his coming.
His activity knew no bounds.
He sent trustworthy messengers to Pensacola to learn
the situation of affairs there, and ascertained through
them that the British were there with a considerable
fleet and abundant supplies both for the Indians and
for their own troops, whose presence there threatened
a descent upon Mobile or New Orleans. He wrote
at once to Governor Blount, of Tennessee, informing
him of these facts. He sent messengers also to
Mount Vernon, instructing Colonel Nixon, who commanded
there, to garrison Fort Pierce, a little post a few
miles from the ruins of Fort Mims, and suppress a
recently awakened activity among the Indians in that
quarter.
The alertness of Claiborne’s
intelligence and his unwearied devotion to duty made
him an especially fit man for the important charge
that was laid upon him. A close study of his
career shows him to have been indeed so capable a
man in military affairs, that we may fairly regret
that his field of operations was too small and too
remote from the centres of American life to permit
him to secure the fame which he fairly earned.
General Claiborne was not thinking
of fame, however, but of making fierce war upon the
Creeks and reducing them to subjection. He knew
that Red Eagle with a strong force was at Econachaca,
or the Holy Ground, and he determined to attack him
there. The Holy Ground was one hundred and ten
miles from Fort Claiborne, and it could not be, with
any strictness of construction, considered a “neighboring”
town; but the order which restricted Claiborne’s
excursions into the Creek Nation to the neighboring
towns was couched in terms which did not admit of precise
definition, and as he really wanted to march to the
Holy Ground, the gallant general determined to regard
it as a place within his immediate neighborhood.
He did not know, in truth, precisely where it was,
and there were neither roads nor paths through the
woods to guide him to it, but he believed, with Suwarrow,
the Russian commander, that a general can always find
his enemy when he really wants to do so, and in this
case Claiborne very earnestly wished to find and to
fight Weatherford.
Accordingly he prepared to march.
He was in poor condition for such an undertaking certainly,
his force being weak in numbers, ill assorted, and
in fact rather unwilling to go. Nine of his captains,
eight lieutenants, and five ensigns sent him a written
remonstrance against what they believed to be the
mad undertaking. These officers directed their
commander’s attention to several ugly facts with
respect to his situation. They reminded him that
the weather was cold and inclement; that the troops
were badly shod and insufficiently supplied with clothing;
that there was scarcely a possibility of feeding them
regularly upon so long a march into the literally pathless
forest; and finally that the term of service for which
many of the men had enlisted would soon come to an
end.
The remonstrance was earnest, but
perfectly respectful. The officers who signed
it assured General Claiborne that if he should adhere
to his determination they would go with him without
murmuring, and do their duty. As there was nothing
set forth in the remonstrance which Claiborne did
not know or had not duly considered already, it made
no change in his mind. He set his motley army
in motion, determined to take all responsibility,
dare all dangers, and endure all hardships for the
sake of accomplishing the purpose which he had so
long cherished, of carrying the war into the centre
of the Creek Nation. How heavy the load of responsibility
which he thus took upon himself was, and how firm his
courage in assuming it must have been, we may understand
when we reflect that defeat in his attempt would certainly
have subjected him to a charge of criminal and reckless
disobedience of orders in undertaking such an expedition
at all. No such charge was ever preferred, because
officers are not usually haled before a court-martial
for winning battles.
The force with which he set out consisted
of the Third Regiment of United States troops, under
Colonel Russell; a squadron of cavalry, commanded
by Major Cassels; one battalion of militia, led by
Major Smoot, whom the reader will remember as one
of the leaders at the battle of Burnt Corn; Colonel
Carson’s Mississippi volunteers, and Pushmatahaw’s
Choctaws, to the number of one hundred and fifty, making
a total of about one thousand men. Dale was a
captain now in Smoot’s command, and accompanied
the expedition in that capacity.
The march was begun early in December,
through a country without roads, infested with Indians
whose force could never be guessed, and in weather
which was extremely unfavorable. Toilsomely the
column advanced north-eastwardly, or nearly so, to
a point eighty miles from Fort Claiborne, in what
is now Butler County, Alabama. There Claiborne
took the precaution to build a stockade fort, which
he named Fort Deposit, and placed within it his baggage,
his artillery, his supply wagons, and his sick men.
Leaving this fort with a garrison
of one hundred men, Claiborne marched on toward the
Holy Ground, which lay some thirty miles away.
His men speedily consumed the three days’ rations
of flour which they had drawn before beginning the
march from Fort Deposit, and when the army arrived
at the Indian stronghold its supply of pork, the only
remaining article of food, was nearly exhausted.
Whatever was to be done must be done quickly, in order
that the troops might not starve before reaching Fort
Deposit on the return march.
The Holy Ground was a newly-established
town, upon a spot chosen by Red Eagle because of its
natural strength as a defensive position. It lay
upon the eastern bank of the Alabama River, just below
what is now Powell’s Ferry, in the present Lowndes
County, Alabama. The site of the town was a high
bluff overlooking the river, and protected on the land
side by marshes and deep ravines.
Here Red Eagle had gathered his forces
in considerable strength, and hither had fled the
remnants of various defeated bodies of Creeks, with
their women and children. The prophets Sinquista
and Josiah Francis, who were present, declared the
soil to be sacred, and assured their comrades that
no white troops would be permitted by the Great Spirit
to cross the swamps and ravines which surrounded it.
Red Eagle, having more faith in defensive
works than in supernatural interferences at the behest
of his prophets, whose characters he probably understood
pretty accurately, added to the natural strength of
the place by picket and log fortifications, making
it as difficult to assault successfully as he could.
In this central camp of refuge there
were as many as two hundred houses, and during the
two or three months which had elapsed since the town
was established many of the prisoners taken by the
Indians in battle had been brought hither and murdered.
When Claiborne advanced to attack the place, preparations
were making in the public square for the burning of
a number of unfortunate captives, among whom were one
white woman, Mrs. Sophia Durant, and several half-breeds.
Claiborne arrived on the 23d of December,
and made his dispositions for the assault without
delay. He advanced in three columns, leading the
centre in person. The Indians, as soon as they
learned of Claiborne’s approach, made preparations
for defence. They carried their women and children
across the river and concealed them in the thick woods
on the other side.
The savages made the first attack,
falling violently upon the right column of Claiborne’s
force under Colonel Carson. The onset was repulsed
after a brief engagement, the Indians becoming panic-stricken
for some reason never explained, and retreating.
Weatherford led the attack, and for a time contested
the field very stubbornly; but his men failing in
courage in spite of all that he could do, he was powerless
to maintain his ground.
Major Cassels, who with his squadron
of cavalry had been ordered to occupy the river bank,
failed to do so, and fell back instead upon Carson’s
regiment; and that gallant officer, seeing the gap
thus produced, advanced his line and occupied the
ground. Meantime, however, the mischief had been
done. Cassels’s failure had left a road
of escape open to the Indians at the critical moment,
and hundreds of them fled and swam the river to the
thick woods on the other side.
When the Indian line broke and the
retreat began, the nature of the ground, crossed as
it was by ravines and dotted with marshes, made any
thing like vigorous and systematic pursuit impossible.
Perhaps their consciousness that escape by flight
was easy helped to induce the Indians to abandon the
struggle when they did. However that may be, they
fled, and Weatherford could not rally them. Seeing
himself left alone, with no followers to maintain
the struggle, he was forced to choose between flight
and capture. Flight, however, was not now by any
means easy. He was mounted upon a superb gray
horse which carried him in his flight with the speed
of the wind, but he was not long in discovering that
Carson had closed the gap through which he had hoped
to escape. His enemies were on every side of
him but one, and on that side was the high bluff.
The story of what he did, as it is commonly told, is
a very marvellous one. A bluff about one hundred
feet high at the Holy Ground is shown to travellers,
who are told that Red Eagle, seeing no other way of
escape, boldly dashed spurs into his horse and forced
him to make the fearful leap to the river below!
As the story is usually told in print it is somewhat
less marvellous, but is still sufficiently so to serve
the purposes of a popular legend. It is that a
ravine passed through the upper part of the bluff,
reducing its height to about fifty feet, and that
Red Eagle made a leap on his horse from that height.
This version of the story is so gravely told in books
that are not romances, that the author of the present
volume once cited it in print in justification of
an incident in a work of fiction, believing at the
time that the legend was well authenticated.
In examining authorities more carefully, as he was
bound to do before writing of the incident in a serious
work of this kind, he finds that the leap was much
less wonderful than has been represented. Mr.
Pickett, in his History of Alabama, gives us the following
account, which he assures us he had from Red Eagle’s
own lips:
“Coursing with great rapidity
along the banks of the Alabama, below the town, on
a gray steed of unsurpassed strength and fleetness,
which he had purchased a short time before the commencement
of hostilities of Benjamin Baldwin, late of Macon
County, [he] came at length to the termination of
a kind of ravine, where there was a perpendicular bluff
ten or fifteen feet above the surface of the river.
Over this with a mighty bound the horse pitched with
the gallant chief, and both went out of sight beneath
the waves. Presently they rose again, the rider
having hold of the mane with one hand and his rifle
firmly grasped in the other. Regaining his saddle,
the noble animal swam with him to the Autauga side.”
The battle over, Claiborne found his
loss to be one man killed and six others wounded.
Thirty Indians were found dead on the ground.
The number of their wounded is not known. Claiborne
destroyed the town, with every thing in it.
The army was now reduced almost to
starvation, their only food being a little corn, which
they parched and ate as they could. An alarm having
been given by a party of men who were sent up the river
in pursuit of fugitives, however, Claiborne marched
in that direction during the night of December 24th,
and pitched his tent on Weatherford’s plantation,
where he ate his Christmas breakfast of parched corn.
Having destroyed all the buildings in the neighborhood,
Claiborne’s work in this region was done, and
he hastened back to Fort Deposit, where he fed his
troops before beginning his return march to Fort Claiborne.
The army had been nine days without meat.
The term of service for which Carson’s
volunteers had enlisted had now expired, and as soon
as the column arrived at Fort Claiborne the men were
mustered out. In a letter to the Secretary of
War, Claiborne reported that these men went home nearly
naked, without shoes, and with their pay eight months
in arrears. Their devotion to the cause, as it
was shown in their cheerfulness and good conduct during
their toilsome march, was, in view of all the circumstances,
highly honorable to them.
Leaving Colonel Russell in command
of Fort Claiborne, General Claiborne returned to Mount
Vernon, partly because he had fully accomplished all
that his orders from Flournoy permitted him to do,
and partly because the discharge of his Mississippi
volunteers had reduced his army to sixty men, and
even these had but a month longer to serve!
Colonel Russell was no sooner left
in command at Fort Claiborne than he instituted proceedings
designed to fix the responsibility for the sufferings
of the men during the campaign and for the blunder
at the Holy Ground where it belonged. He ordered
a court of inquiry in each case, but Major Cassels
was permitted to escape censure on the ground that
his guide had misled him. For the failure of the
food supply the contractor was held responsible, as
it was shown that General Claiborne had given him
strict orders to provide abundant supplies for the
expedition.
In order that the story of the Fort
Claiborne army may be finished here before returning
to the Ten Islands and following Jackson through his
more important part of the campaign, we may depart
for the moment from the chronological order of events
to tell the story of an unsuccessful attempt which
Colonel Russell made to invade the Creek Nation from
Fort Claiborne, in the February following the events
already described.
It was Colonel Russell’s purpose
to march to the Old Towns on the Cahawba River, and
thence to attack the Indians wherever he could find
them, establishing his base of supplies at that point.
He provided a barge, loaded it with food for the troops,
and putting Captain Denkins in command of it, with
a piece of artillery as his armament, he directed
that officer to ascend the Alabama River to the mouth
of the Cahawba River, and thence to make his way up
the Cahawba to Old Towns, where the army would meet
him. Then, with his regiment reinforced by an
infantry company from the neighborhood of Fort Madison
under command of Captain Evan Austill, and a cavalry
company commanded by Captain Foster the
two forming a battalion under the lead of Sam Dale,
who was now a Major Colonel Russell marched
to the appointed place of rendezvous.
There he learned that the barge had
not arrived, and as he had marched with but six days’
provisions his situation was a critical one. To
hasten the coming of the barge he despatched a canoe
manned by Lieutenant Wilcox and five men in search
of Captain Denkins. This party, while making
its way down the river, travelling at night and hiding
in the cane on the banks by day, was attacked by Indians.
Lieutenant Wilcox and three of his companions were
made prisoners, the other two escaping and making
their way through many hardships to the settlements,
where they arrived in a famished condition.
Captain Denkins had passed the mouth
of the Cahawba River by mistake, and had gone a considerable
distance up the Alabama River before discovering his
error. When he did discover it, he knew that it
was now too late for him to think of carrying out
his original instructions. He knew that before
he could possibly reach the Old Towns, the army would
be starved out and compelled to retreat.
He therefore determined to return
to Fort Claiborne. On his way down the river
he discovered the canoe, and found in it Wilcox scalped
and dying, and his two companions already dead.
Meantime Colonel Russell had waited
two days at the Old Towns for the coming of the barge,
and then, being wholly without provisions, began his
return march, saving his army from starvation by killing
and eating his horses on the route.