THE DISCOVERY AND EARLY SETTLEMENT OF AMERICA
Discovery of the New World. Of
Florida. Conquest and cruelties of De Soto. The
wigwam. Colony at St. Mary. Sir
Walter Raleigh and his Colonies. Grant
of King James. Settlements in the Virginia. Adventures
of John Smith. Arrival of Lord Delaware. Terrible
massacres. Pressures of Colonists to the
West. Doherty Trade with Indians. Attempted
Colony on the Tennessee. Daniel Boone.
The little fleet of three small vessels,
with which Columbus left Palos in Spain, in search
of a new world, had been sixty-seven days at sea.
They had traversed nearly three thousand miles of ocean,
and yet there was nothing but a wide expanse of waters
spread out before them. The despairing crew were
loud in their murmurs, demanding that the expedition
should be abandoned and that the ships should return
to Spain. The morning of the 11th of October,
1492, had come. During the day Columbus, whose
heart had been very heavily oppressed with anxiety,
had been cheered by some indications that they were
approaching land. Fresh seaweed was occasionally
seen and a branch of a shrub with leaves and berries
upon it, and a piece of wood curiously carved had been
picked up.
The devout commander was so animated
by these indications, that he gathered his crew around
him and returned heartfelt thanks to God, for this
prospect that their voyage would prove successful.
It was a beautiful night, the moon shone brilliantly
and a delicious tropical breeze swept the ocean.
At ten o’clock Columbus stood upon the bows of
his ship earnestly gazing upon the western horizon,
hoping that the long-looked-for land would rise before
him. Suddenly he was startled by the distinct
gleam of a torch far off in the distance. For
a moment it beamed forth with a clear and indisputable
flame and then disappeared. The agitation of
Columbus no words can describe. Was it a meteor?
Was it an optical illusion? Was it light from
the land?
Suddenly the torch, like a star, again
shone forth with distinct though faint gleam.
Columbus called some of his companions to his side
and they also saw the light clearly. But again
it disappeared. At two o’clock in the morning
a sailor at the look out on the mast head shouted,
“Land! land! land!” In a few moments all
beheld, but a few miles distant from them, the distinct
outline of towering mountains piercing the skies.
A new world was discovered. Cautiously the vessels
hove to and waited for the light of the morning.
The dawn of day presented to the eyes of Columbus
and his companions a spectacle of beauty which the
garden of Eden could hardly have rivalled. It
was a morning of the tropics, calm, serene and lovely.
But two miles before them there emerged from the sea
an island of mountains and valleys, luxuriant with
every variety of tropical vegetation. The voyagers,
weary of gazing for many weeks on the wide waste of
waters, were so enchanted with the fairy scene which
then met the eye, that they seemed really to believe
that they had reached the realms of the blest.
The boats were lowered, and, as they
were rowed towards the shore, the scene every moment
grew more beautiful. Gigantic trees draped in
luxuriance of foliage hitherto unimagined, rose in
the soft valleys and upon the towering hills.
In the sheltered groves, screened from the sun, the
picturesque dwellings of the natives were thickly clustered.
Flowers of every variety of tint bloomed in marvellous
profusion. The trees seemed laden with fruits
of every kind, and in inexhaustible abundance.
Thousands of natives crowded the shore, whose graceful
forms and exquisitely moulded limbs indicated the
innocence and simplicity of Eden before the fall.
Columbus, richly attired in a scarlet
dress, fell upon his knees as he reached the beach,
and, with clasped hands and uplifted eyes, gave utterance
to the devout feelings which ever inspired him, in
thanksgiving to God. In recognition of the divine
protection he gave the island the name of San Salvador,
or Holy Savior. Though the new world thus discovered
was one of the smallest islands of the Caribbean Sea,
no conception was then formed of the vast continents
of North and South America, stretching out in both
directions, for many leagues almost to the Arctic
and Antarctic poles.
Omitting a description of the wonderful
adventures which ensued, we can only mention that
two years after this, the southern extremity of the
North American continent was discovered by Sebastian
Cabot. It was in the spring of the year and the
whole surface of the soil seemed carpeted with the
most brilliant flowers. The country consequently
received the beautiful name of Florida. It, of
course, had no boundaries, for no one knew with certainty
whether it were an island or a continent, or how far
its limits might extend.
The years rolled on and gradually
exploring excursions crept along the coast towards
the north, various provinces were mapped out with pretty
distinct boundaries upon the Atlantic coast, extending
indefinitely into the vast and unknown interior.
Expeditions from France had entered the St. Lawrence
and established settlements in Canada. For a time
the whole Atlantic coast, from its extreme southern
point to Canada, was called Florida. In the year
1539, Ferdinand De Soto, an unprincipled Spanish warrior,
who had obtained renown by the conquest of Peru in
South America, fitted out by permission of the king
of Spain, an expedition of nearly a thousand men to
conquer and take possession of that vast and indefinite
realm called Florida.
We have no space here to enter upon
a description of the fiendlike cruelties practiced
by these Spaniards. They robbed and enslaved without
mercy. In pursuit of gold they wandered as far
north as the present boundary of South Carolina.
Then turning to the west, they traversed the vast
region to the Mississippi river. The forests were
full of game. The granaries of the simple-hearted
natives were well stored with corn; vast prairies
spreading in all directions around them, waving with
grass and blooming with flowers, presented ample forage
for the three hundred horses which accompanied the
expedition. They were also provided with fierce
bloodhounds to hunt down the terrified natives.
Thus invincible and armed with the “thunder
and lightning” of their guns, they swept the
country, perpetrating every conceivable outrage upon
the helpless natives.
After long and unavailing wanderings
in search of gold, having lost by sickness and the
casualties of such an expedition nearly half their
number, the remainder built boats upon the Mississippi,
descended that rapid stream five hundred miles to
its mouth, and then skirting the coast of Texas, finally
disappeared on the plains of Mexico. De Soto,
the leader of this conquering band, died miserably
on the Mississippi, and was buried beneath its waves.
The whole country which these adventurers
traversed, they found to be quite densely populated
with numerous small tribes of natives, each generally
wandering within circumscribed limits. Though
these tribes spoke different languages, or perhaps
different dialects of the same language, they were
essentially the same in appearance, manners and customs.
They were of a dark-red color, well formed and always
disposed to receive the pale face strangers with kindliness,
until exasperated by ill-treatment. They lived
in fragile huts called wigwams, so simple in
their structure that one could easily be erected in
a few hours. These huts were generally formed
by setting long and slender poles in the ground, inclosing
an area of from ten to eighteen feet in diameter,
according to the size of the family. The tops
were tied together, leaving a hole for the escape
of smoke from the central fire. The sides were
thatched with coarse grass, or so covered with the
bark of trees, as quite effectually to exclude both
wind and rain. There were no windows, light entering
only through the almost always open door. The
ground floor was covered with dried grass, or the skins
of animals, or with the soft and fragrant twigs of
some evergreen tree.
The inmates, men, women and children,
seated upon these cushions, presented a very attractive
and cheerful aspect. Several hundred of these
wigwams were frequently clustered upon some soft
meadow by the side of a flowing stream, fringed with
a gigantic forest, and exhibited a spectacle of picturesque
loveliness quite charming to the beholder. The
furniture of these humble abodes was extremely simple.
They had no pots or kettles which would stand the
fire. They had no knives nor forks; no tables
nor chairs. Sharp flints, such as they could find
served for knives, with which, with incredible labor,
they sawed down small trees and fashioned their bows
and arrows. They had no roads except foot paths
through the wilderness, which for generations their
ancestors had traversed, called “trails.”
They had no beasts of burden, no cows, no flocks nor
herds of any kind. They generally had not even
salt, but cured their meat by drying it in the sun.
They had no ploughs, hoes, spades, consequently they
could only cultivate the lightest soil. With
a sharp stick, women loosened the earth, and then depositing
their corn or maize, cultivated it in the rudest manner.
These Indians acquired the reputation
of being very faithful friends, but very bitter enemies.
It was said they never forgot a favor, and never forgave
an insult. They were cunning rather than brave.
It was seldom that an Indian could be induced to meet
a foe in an open hand-to-hand fight. But he would
track him for years, hoping to take him unawares and
to brain him with the tomahawk, or pierce his heart
with the flint-pointed arrow.
About the year 1565, a company of
French Protestants repaired to Florida, hoping there
to find the liberty to worship God in accordance with
their interpretation of the teachings of the Bible.
They established quite a flourishing colony, at a
place which they named St. Marys, near the coast.
This was the first European settlement on the continent
of North America. The fanatic Spaniards, learning
that Protestants had taken possession of the country,
sent out an expedition and utterly annihilated the
settlement, putting men, women and children to the
sword. Many of these unfortunate Protestants were
hung in chains from trees under the inscription, “Not
as Frenchmen but as Heretics.” The blood-stained
Spaniards then established themselves at a spot near
by, which they called St. Augustine. A French
gentleman of wealth fitted out a well-manned and well-armed
expedition of three ships, attacked the murderers
by surprise and put them to death. Several corpses
were suspended from trees, under the inscription,
“Not as Spaniards, but as Murderers.”
There was an understanding among the
powers of Europe, that any portion of the New World
discovered by expeditions from European courts, should
be recognised as belonging to that court. The
Spaniards had taken possession in Florida. Far
away a thousand leagues to the North, the French had
entered the gulf of St. Lawrence. But little was
known of the vast region between. A young English
gentleman, Sir Walter Raleigh, an earnest Protestant,
and one who had fought with the French Protestants
in their religious wars, roused by the massacre of
his friends in Florida, applied to the British court
to fit out a colony to take possession of the intermediate
country. He hoped thus to prevent the Spanish
monarchy, and the equally intolerant French court,
from spreading their principles over the whole continent.
The Protestant Queen Elizabeth then occupied the throne
of Great Britain. Raleigh was young, rich, handsome
and marvelously fascinating in his address. He
became a great favorite of the maiden queen, and she
gave him a commission, making him lord of all the
continent of North America, between Florida and Canada.
The whole of this vast region without
any accurate boundaries, was called Virginia.
Several ships were sent to explore the country.
They reached the coast of what is now called North
Carolina, and the adventurers landed at Roanoke Island.
They were charmed with the climate, with the friendliness
of the natives and with the majestic growth of the
forest trees, far surpassing anything they had witnessed
in the Old World. Grapes in rich clusters hung
in profusion on the vines, and birds of every variety
of song and plumage filled the groves. The expedition
returned to England with such glowing accounts of the
realm they had discovered, that seven ships were fitted
out, conveying one hundred and eight men, to colonise
the island. It is quite remarkable that no women
accompanied the expedition. Many of these men
were reckless adventurers. Bitter hostility soon
sprang up between them and the Indians, who at first
had received them with the greatest kindness.
Most of these colonists were men unaccustomed
to work, and who insanely expected that in the New
World, in some unknown way, wealth was to flow in
upon them like a flood. Disheartened, homesick
and appalled by the hostile attitude which the much
oppressed Indians were beginning to assume, they were
all anxious to return home. When, soon after,
some ships came bringing them abundant supplies, they
with one accord abandoned the colony, and crowding
the vessels returned to England. Fifteen men
however consented to remain, to await the arrival of
fresh colonists from the Mother Country.
Sir Walter Raleigh, still undiscouraged,
in the next year 1587 sent out another fleet containing
a number of families as emigrants, with women and
children. When they arrived, they found Roanoke
deserted. The fifteen men had been murdered by
the Indians in retaliation for the murder of their
chief and several of his warriors by the English.
With fear and trembling the new settlers decided to
remain, urging the friends who had accompanied them
to hasten back to England with the ships and bring
them reinforcements and supplies. Scarcely had
they spread their sails on the return voyage ere war
broke out with Spain. It was three years before
another ship crossed the ocean, to see what had become
of the colony. It had utterly disappeared.
Though many attempts were made to ascertain its tragic
fate, all were unavailing. It is probable that
many were put to death by the Indians, and perhaps
the children were carried far back into the interior
and incorporated into their tribes. This bitter
disappointment seemed to paralyse the energies of
colonization. For more than seventy years the
Carolinas remained a wilderness, with no attempt to
transfer to them the civilization of the Old World.
Still English ships continued occasionally to visit
the coast. Some came to fish, some to purchase
furs of the Indians, and some for timber for shipbuilding.
The stories which these voyagers told on their return,
kept up an interest in the New World. It was indeed
an attractive picture which could be truthfully painted.
The climate was mild, genial and salubrious.
The atmosphere surpassed the far-famed transparency
of Italian skies. The forests were of gigantic
growth, more picturesquely beautiful than any ever
planted by man’s hand, and they were filled
with game. The lakes and streams swarmed with
fish. A wilderness of flowers, of every variety
of loveliness, bloomed over the wide meadows and the
broad savannahs, which the forest had not yet invaded.
Berries and fruits were abundant. In many places
the soil was surpassingly rich, and easily tilled;
and all this was open, without money and without price,
to the first comer.
Still more than a hundred years elapsed
after the discovery of these realms, ere any permanent
settlement was effected upon them. Most of the
bays, harbors and rivers were unexplored, and reposed
as it were in the solemn silence of eternity.
From the everglades of Florida to the firclad hills
of Nova Scotia, not a settlement of white men could
be found.
At length in the year 1607, a number
of wealthy gentlemen in London formed a company to
make a new attempt for the settlement of America.
It was their plan to send out hardy colonists, abundantly
provided with arms, tools and provisions. King
James I., who had succeeded his cousin Queen Elizabeth,
granted them a charter, by which, wherever they might
effect a landing, they were to be the undisputed lords
of a territory extending a hundred miles along the
coast, and running back one hundred miles into the
interior. Soon after, a similar grant was conferred
upon another association, for the region of North
Virginia, now called New England.
Under the protection of this London
Company, one hundred and five men, with no women or
children, embarked in three small ships for the Southern
Atlantic coast of North America. Apparently by
accident, they entered Chesapeake Bay, where they
found a broad and deep stream, which they named after
their sovereign, James River. As they ascended
this beautiful stream, they were charmed with the
loveliness which nature had spread so profusely around
them. Upon the northern banks of the river, about
fifty miles from its entrance into the bay, they selected
a spot for their settlement, which they named Jamestown.
Here they commenced cutting down trees and raising
their huts.
In an enterprise of this kind, muscles
inured to work and determined spirits ready to grapple
with difficulties, are essential. In such labors,
the most useless of all beings is the gentleman with
soft hands and luxurious habits. Unfortunately
quite a number of pampered sons of wealth had joined
the colony. Being indolent, selfish and dissolute,
they could do absolutely nothing for the prosperity
of the settlement, but were only an obstacle in the
way of its growth.
Troubles soon began to multiply, and
but for the energies of a remarkable man, Capt.
John Smith, the colony must soon have perished through
anarchy. But even Capt. John Smith with all
his commanding powers, and love of justice and of
law, could not prevent the idle and profligate young
men from insulting the natives, and robbing them of
their corn. With the autumnal rains sickness came,
and many died. The hand of well-organised industry
might have raised an ample supply of corn to meet
all their wants through the short winter. But
this had been neglected, and famine was added to sickness,
Capt. Smith had so won the confidence of the
Indian chieftains, that notwithstanding the gross
irregularities of his young men, they brought him supplies
of corn and game, which they freely gave to the English
in their destitution.
Captain Smith having thus provided
for the necessities of the greatly diminished colony,
set out with a small party of men on an exploring
expedition into the interior. He was waylayed
by Indians, who with arrows and tomahawks speedily
put all the men to death, excepting the leader, who
was taken captive. There was something in the
demeanor of this brave man which overawed them.
He showed them his pocket compass, upon which they
gazed with wonder. He then told them that if they
would send to the fort a leaf from his pocket-book,
upon which he had made several marks with his pencil,
they would find the next day, at any spot they might
designate, a certain number of axes, blankets, and
other articles of great value to them. Their
curiosity was exceedingly aroused; the paper was sent,
and the next day the articles were found as promised.
The Indians looked upon Captain Smith as a magician,
and treated him with great respect. Still the
more thoughtful of the natives regarded him as a more
formidable foe. They could not be blind to the
vastly superior power of the English in their majestic
ships, with their long swords, and terrible fire-arms,
and all the developments, astounding to them, of a
higher civilization. They were very anxious in
view of encroachments which might eventually give the
English the supremacy in their land.
Powhatan, the king of the powerful
tribe who had at first been very friendly to the English,
summoned a council of war of his chieftains, and after
long deliberation, it was decided that Captain Smith
was too powerful a man to be allowed to live, and
that he must die. He was accordingly led out
to execution, but without any of the ordinary accompaniments
of torture. His hands were bound behind him, he
was laid upon the ground, and his head was placed
upon a stone. An Indian warrior of herculean
strength stood by, with a massive club, to give the
death blow by crushing in the skull. Just as
the fatal stroke was about to descend, a beautiful
Indian girl, Pocahontas, the daughter of the king,
rushed forward and throwing her arms around the neck
of Captain Smith, placed her head upon his. The
Indians regarded this as an indication from the Great
Spirit that the life of Captain Smith was to be spared,
and they set their prisoner at liberty, who, being
thus miraculously rescued, returned to Jamestown.
By his wisdom Captain Smith preserved
for some time friendly relations with the Indians,
and the colony rapidly increased, until there were
five hundred Europeans assembled at Jamestown.
Capt. Smith being severely wounded by an accidental
explosion of gunpowder, returned to England for surgical
aid. The colony, thus divested of his vigorous
sway, speedily lapsed into anarchy. The bitter
hostility of the Indians was aroused, and, within
a few months, the colony dwindled away beneath the
ravages of sickness, famine, and the arrows of the
Indians, to but sixty men. Despair reigned in
all hearts, and this starving remnant of Europeans
was preparing to abandon the colony and return to the
Old World, when Lord Delaware arrived with several
ships loaded with provisions and with a reinforcement
of hardy laborers. Most of the idle and profligate
young men who had brought such calamity upon the colony,
had died. Those who remained took fresh courage,
and affairs began to be more prosperous.
The organization of the colony had
thus far been effected with very little regard to
the wants of human nature. There were no women
there. Without the honored wife there cannot
be the happy home; and without the home there can
be no contentment. To herd together five hundred
men upon the banks of a foreign stream, three thousand
miles from their native land, without women and children,
and to expect them to lay the foundation of a happy
and prosperous colony, seems almost unpardonable folly.
Emigrants began to arrive with their
families, and in the year 1620, one hundred and fifty
poor, but virtuous young women, were induced to join
the Company. Each young man who came received
one hundred acres of land. Eagerly these young
planters, in short courtship, selected wives from
such of these women as they could induce to listen
to them. Each man paid one hundred and fifty
pounds of tobacco to defray the expenses of his wife’s
voyage. But the wickedness of man will everywhere,
and under all circumstances, make fearful development
of its power. Many desperadoes joined the colony.
The poor Indians with no weapons of war but arrows,
clubs and stone tomahawks, were quite at the mercy
of the English with their keen swords, and death-dealing
muskets. Fifteen Europeans could easily drive
several hundred Indians in panic over the plains.
Unprincipled men perpetrated the grossest outrages
upon the families of the Indians, often insulting
the proudest chiefs.
The colonists were taking up lands
in all directions. Before their unerring rifles,
game was rapidly disappearing. The Indians became
fully awake to their danger. The chiefs met in
council, and a conspiracy was formed, to put, at an
appointed hour, all the English to death, every man,
woman and child. Every house was marked.
Two or three Indians were appointed to make the massacre
sure in each dwelling. They were to spread over
the settlement, enter the widely scattered log-huts,
as friends, and at a certain moment were to spring
upon their unsuspecting victims, and kill them instantly.
The plot was fearfully successful in all the dwellings
outside the little village of Jamestown. In one
hour, on the 22nd of March, 1622, three hundred and
forty-seven men, women and children were massacred
in cold blood. The colony would have been annihilated,
but for a Christian Indian who, just before the massacre
commenced, gave warning to a friend in Jamestown.
The Europeans rallied with their fire-arms, and easily
drove off their foes, and then commenced the unrelenting
extermination of the Indians. An arrow can be
thrown a few hundred feet, a musket ball more than
as many yards. The Indians were consequently
helpless. The English shot down both sexes, young
and old, as mercilessly as if they had been wolves.
They seized their houses, their lands, their pleasant
villages. The Indians were either slain or driven
far away from the houses of their fathers, into the
remote wilderness.
The colony now increased rapidly,
and the cabins of the emigrants spread farther and
farther over the unoccupied lands. These hardy
adventurers seemed providentially imbued with the
spirit of enterprise. Instead of clustering together
for the pleasure of society and for mutual protection,
they were ever pushing into the wild and unknown interior,
rearing their cabins on the banks of distant streams,
and establishing their silent homes in the wildest
solitudes of the wilderness. In 1660, quite a
number of emigrants moved directly south from Virginia,
to the river Chowan, in what is now South Carolina,
where they established a settlement which they called
Albermarle. In 1670, a colony from England established
itself at Charleston, South Carolina. Thus gradually
the Atlantic coast became fringed with colonies, extending
but a few leagues back into the country from the sea-shore,
while the vast interior remained an unexplored wilderness.
As the years rolled on, ship-loads of emigrants arrived,
new settlements were established, colonial States
rose into being, and, though there were many sanguinary
conflicts with the Indians, the Europeans were always
in the end triumphant, and intelligence, wealth, and
laws of civilization were rapidly extended along the
Atlantic border of the New World.
For many years there had been a gradual
pressure of the colonists towards the west, steadily
encroaching upon the apparently limitless wilderness.
To us it seems strange that they did not, for the sake
of protection against the Indians, invariably go in
military bands. But generally this was not the
case. The emigrants seem to have been inspired
with a spirit of almost reckless indifference to danger;
they apparently loved the solitude of the forest,
avoided neighbors who might interfere with their hunting
and trapping, and reared their humble cottages in
the wildest ravines of the mountains and upon the smooth
meadows which border the most solitary streams; thus
gradually the tide of emigration, flowing through
Indian trails and along the forest-covered vines,
was approaching the base of the Alleghany mountains.
But little was known of the character
of the boundless realms beyond the ridges of this
gigantic chain. Occasionally a wandering Indian
who had chased his game over those remote wilds, would
endeavor to draw upon the sand, with a stick, a map
of the country showing the flow of the rivers, the
line of the mountains, and the sweep of the open prairies.
The Ohio was then called the Wabash. This magnificent
and beautiful stream is formed by the confluence of
the Alleghany and the Monongahela rivers. It
was a long voyage, a voyage of several hundred miles,
following the windings of the Monongahela river from
its rise among the mountains of Western Virginia till,
far away in the north, it met the flood of the Alleghany,
at the present site of the city of Pittsburg.
The voyage, in a birch canoe, required, in the figurative
language of the Indians, “two paddles, two warriors
and three moons.”
The Indians very correctly described
the Ohio, or the Wabash, as but the tributary of a
much more majestic stream, far away in the west, which,
pouring its flood through the impenetrable forest,
emptied itself they knew not where. Of the magnitude
of this distant river, the Mississippi, its source,
rise and termination, they could give no intelligible
account. They endeavored to give some idea of
the amount of game to be found in those remote realms,
by pointing to the leaves of the forest and the stars
in the sky.
The settlers were deeply interested
and often much excited by the glowing descriptions
thus given them of a terrestrial Eden, where life
would seem to be but one uninterrupted holiday.
Occasionally an adventurous French or Spanish trader
would cross the towering mountains and penetrate the
vales beyond. They vied with the Indians in their
account of the salubrity of the climate, the brilliance
of the skies, the grandeur of the forests, the magnificence
of the rivers, the marvelous fertility of the soil
and the abundance of game.
As early as the year 1690 a trader
from Virginia, by the name of Doherty, crossed the
mountains, visited the friendly Cherokee nation, within
the present bounds of Georgia, and resided with the
natives several years. In the year 1730 an enterprising
and intelligent man from South Carolina, by the name
of Adair, took quite an extensive tour through most
of the villages of the Cherokees, and also visited
several tribes south and west of them. He wrote
an exceedingly valuable and interesting account of
his travels which was published in London.
Influenced by these examples several
traders, in the year 1740, went from Virginia to the
country of the Cherokees. They carried on pack
horses goods which the Indians valued, and which they
exchanged for furs, which were sold in Europe at an
enormous profit.
A hatchet, a knife, a trap, a string
of beads, which could be bought for a very small sum
in the Atlantic towns, when exhibited beyond the mountains
to admiring groups in the wigwam of the Indian, could
be exchanged for furs which were of almost priceless
value in the metropolitan cities of the Old World.
This traffic was mutually advantageous, and so long
as peaceful relations existed between the white man
and the Indian, was prosecuted with great and ever
increasing vigor. The Indians thus obtained the
steel trap, the keenly cutting ax, and the rifle,
which he soon learned to use with unerring aim.
He was thus able in a day to obtain more game than
with his arrows and his clumsy snares he could secure
in a month.
This friendly intercourse was in all
respects very desirable; and but for the depravity
of the white man it might have continued uninterrupted
for generations. But profligate and vagabond adventurers
from the settlements defrauded the Indians, insulted
their women, and often committed wanton murder.
But it would seem that the majority of the traders
were honest men. Ramsay, in his Annals of Tennessee,
writes, in reference to this traffic:
“Other advantages resulted from
it to the whites. They became thus acquainted
with the great avenues leading through the hunting
ground, and to the occupied country of the neighboring
tribes an important circumstance in the
condition of either peace or war. Further the
traders were an exact thermometer of the pacific or
hostile intention and feelings of the Indians with
whom they traded. Generally they were foreigners,
most frequently Scotchmen, who had not been long in
the country, or upon the frontier; who, having experienced
none of the cruelties, depredations or aggressions
of the Indians, cherished none of the resentment and
spirit of retaliation born with and everywhere manifested
by the American settler.
“Thus free from animosity against
the aborigines, the trader was allowed to remain in
the village, where he traded, unmolested, even where
its warriors were singing the war song or brandishing
the war club, preparatory to an invasion or massacre
of the whites. Timely warning was thus often
given by a returning packman to a feeble and unsuspecting
settlement, of the perfidy and cruelty meditated against
it.”
Game on the eastern side of the Alleghanies,
hunted down alike by white men and Indians, soon became
scarce. Adventurers combining the characters
of traders and hunters rapidly multiplied. Many
of the hunters among the white men far outstripped
the Indians in skill and energy. Thus some degree
of jealousy was excited on the part of the savages.
They saw how rapidly the game was disappearing, and
these thoughtful men began to be anxious for the future.
With no love for agriculture the destruction of the
game was their ruin.
As early as the year 1748 quite a
party of gentlemen explorers, under the leadership
of Doctor Thomas Walker of Virginia, crossed a range
of the Alleghany mountains, which the Indians called
Warioto, but to which Doctor Walker gave the name
of Cumberland, in honor of the Duke of Cumberland
who was then prime minister of England. Following
along this chain in a south-westerly direction, in
search of some pass or defile by which they could
cross the cliffs, they came to the remarkable depression
in the mountains to which they gave the name of Cumberland
Gap. On the western side of the range they found
a beautiful mountain stream, rushing far away, with
ever increasing volume, into the unknown wilderness,
which the Indians called Shawnee, but which Doctor
Walker’s party baptised with the name of Cumberland
River. These names have adhered to the localities
upon which they were thus placed.
In 1756 a feeble attempt was made
to establish a colony upon the Tennessee river, at
a spot which was called London. This was one
hundred and fifty miles in advance of any white settlement.
Eight years passed, and by the ravages of war the
little settlement went up in flame and smoke.
As the years rapidly came and went there were occasional
bursts of the tempests of war; again there would be
a short lull and blessed peace would come with its
prosperity and joy.
“In the year 1760, Doctor Walker
again passed over Clinch and Powell’s rivers
on a tour of exploration, into what is now Kentucky.
The Cherokees were then at peace with the whites,
and hunters from the back settlements began, with
safety, to penetrate deeper and further into the wilderness
of Tennessee. Several of them, chiefly from Virginia,
hearing of the abundance of game with which the woods
were stocked, and allured by the prospect of gain
which might be drawn from this source, formed themselves
into a company composed of Wallen, Seagys, Blevins,
Cox and fifteen others, and came into the valley,
since known as Carter’s Valley, in Hawkin’s
county, Tennessee. They hunted eighteen months
upon Clinch and Powell rivers. Wallen’s
Creek and Wallen’s Ridge received their name
from the leader of the company; as also did Wallen’s
Station which they erected in the Lee county, Virginia.
“They penetrated as far north
as Laurel Mountain, in Kentucky, where they terminated
their journey, having met with a body of Indians whom
they supposed to be Shawnees. At the head of one
of the companies that visited the West, this year,
came Daniel Boone from the Yadkin, in North Carolina,
and travelled with them as low as the place where Abingdon
now stands, and there left them.”
This is the first time the advent
of Daniel Boone to the western wilds has been mentioned
by historians or by the several biographers of that
distinguished pioneer and hunter. There is reason
however to believe that he hunted upon Watauga some
time earlier than this.