KENTUCKY ORGANIZED AS A STATE
Peace with England. Order
of a Kentucky Court. Anecdotes. Speech
of Mr. Dalton. Reply of Piankashaw. Renewed
Indications of Indian Hostility. Conventions
at Danville. Kentucky formed into a State. New
Trials for Boone.
The close of the war of the Revolution,
bringing peace between the colonies and the mother
country, deprived the Indians of that powerful alliance
which had made them truly formidable. Being no
longer able to obtain a supply of ammunition from
the British arsenals, or to be guided in their murderous
raids by British intelligence, they also, through
their chiefs, entered into treaties of peace with the
rapidly-increasing emigrants.
Though these treaties with the Indians
prevented any general organization of the tribes,
vagabond Indians, entirely lawless, were wandering
in all directions, ever ready to perpetrate any outrage.
Civil society has its highway robbers, burglars and
murderers. Much more so was this the case among
these savages, exasperated by many wrongs; for it
cannot be denied that they were more frequently sinned
against than sinning. Their untutored natures
made but little distinction between the innocent and
the guilty. If a vagabond white man wantonly shot
an Indian and many were as ready to do
it as to shoot a wolf the friends of the
murdered Indian would take revenge upon the inmates
of the first white man’s cabin they encountered
in the wilderness. Thus it was necessary for
the pioneers to be constantly upon their guard.
If they wandered any distance from the fort while
hunting, or were hoeing in the field, or ventured
to rear a cabin on a fertile meadow at a distance
from the stations, they were liable to be startled
at any hour of the day or of the night by the terrible
war-whoop, and to feel the weight of savage vengeance.
This exposure to constant peril influenced
the settlers, as a general rule, to establish themselves
in stations. This gave them companionship, the
benefits of co-operative labor, and security against
any small prowling bands. These stations were
formed upon the model of the one which Daniel Boone
had so wisely organized at Boonesborough. They
consisted of a cluster of bullet-proof log-cabins,
arranged in a quadrangular form, so as to enclose
a large internal area. All the doors opened upon
this interior space. Here the cattle were gathered
at night. The intervals between the cottages
were filled with palisades, also bullet-proof.
Loop-holes through the logs enabled these riflemen
to guard every approach to their fortress. Thus
they had little to fear from the Indians when sheltered
by these strong citadels.
Emigration to Kentucky began very
rapidly to increase. Large numbers crossed the
mountains to Pittsburgh, where they took flat boats
and floated down the beautiful Ohio, la belle rivière,
until they reached such points on its southern banks
as pleased them for a settlement, or from which they
could ascend the majestic rivers of that peerless State.
Comfortable homesteads were fast rising in all directions.
Horses, cattle, swine, and poultry of all kinds were
multiplied. Farming utensils began to make their
appearance. The hum of happy industry was heard
where wolves had formerly howled and buffalo ranged.
Merchandise in considerable quantities was transported
over the mountains on pack horses, and then floated
down the Ohio and distributed among the settlements
upon its banks. Country stores arose, land speculators
appeared, and continental paper money became a circulating
medium. This money, however, was not of any very
great value, as may be inferred from the following
decree, passed by one of the County Courts, establishing
the schedule of prices for tavern-keeping:
“The Court doth set the following
rates to be observed by keepers in this county:
Whiskey, fifteen dollars the half-pint; rum, ten dollars
the gallon; a meal, twelve dollars; stabling or pasturage,
four dollars the night.”
Under these changed circumstances,
Colonel Boone, whose intrepidity nothing could daunt,
and whose confidence in the protective power of his
rifle was unbounded, had reared for himself, on one
of the beautiful meadows of the Kentucky, a commodious
home. He had selected a spot whose fertility
and loveliness pleased his artistic eye.
It is estimated that during the years
1783 and 1784 nearly twelve thousand persons emigrated
to Kentucky. Still all these had to move with
great caution, with rifles always loaded, and ever
on the alert against surprise. The following
incident will give the reader an idea of the perils
and wild adventures encountered by these parties in
their search for new and distant homes.
Colonel Thomas Marshall, a man of
much note in those days, had crossed the Alleghanies
with his large family. At Pittsburgh he purchased
a flat-boat, and was floating down the Ohio.
He had passed the mouth of the Kanawha River without
any incident of note occurring. About ten o’clock
one night, as his boat had drifted near the northern
shore of the solitary stream, he was hailed by a man
upon the bank, who, after inquiring who he was, where
he was bound, etc., added:
“I have been posted here by
order of my brother, Simon Gerty, to warn all boats
of the danger of permitting themselves to be decoyed
ashore. My brother regrets very deeply the injury
he has inflicted upon the white men, and to convince
them of the sincerity of his repentance, and of his
earnest desire to be restored to their society, he
has stationed me here to warn all boats of the snares
which are spread for them by the cunning of the Indians.
Renegade white men will be placed upon the banks,
who will represent themselves as in the greatest distress.
Even children taken captive will be compelled, by
threats of torture, to declare that they are all alone
upon the shore, and to entreat the boats to come and
rescue them.
“But keep in the middle of the
river,” said Gerty, “and steel your heart
against any supplications you may hear.”
The Colonel thanked him for his warning,
and continued to float down the rapid current of the
stream.
Virginia had passed a law establishing
the town of Louisville, at the Falls of the Ohio.
A very thriving settlement soon sprang up there.
The nature of the warfare still continuing
between the whites and the Indians may be inferred
from the following narrative, which we give in the
words of Colonel Boone:
“The Indians continued to practice
mischief secretly upon the inhabitants in the exposed
part of the country. In October a party made
an incursion into a district called Crab Orchard.
One of these Indians having advanced some distance
before the others, boldly entered the house of a poor
defenseless family, in which was only a negro man,
a woman and her children, terrified with apprehensions
of immediate death. The savage, perceiving their
defenseless condition, without offering violence to
the family, attempted to capture the negro, who happily
proved an over-match for him, and threw the Indian
on the ground.
“In the struggle, the mother
of the children drew an axe from the corner of the
cottage and cut off the head of the Indian, while her
little daughter shut the door. The savages soon
appeared, and applied their tomahawks to the door.
An old rusty gun-barrel, without a lock, lay in the
corner, which the mother put through a small crevice,
and the savages perceiving it, fled. In the meantime
the alarm spread through the neighborhood; the armed
men collected immediately and pursued the savages
into the wilderness. Thus Providence, by means
of this negro, saved the whole of the poor family
from destruction.”
The heroism of Mrs. Merrill is worthy
of being perpetuated, not only as a wonderful achievement,
but as illustrative of the nature of this dreadful
warfare. Mr. Merrill, with his wife, little son
and daughter, occupied a remote cabin in Nelson County,
Kentucky. On the 24th of December, 1791, he was
alarmed by the barking of his dog. Opening the
door to ascertain the cause, he was instantly fired
upon by seven or eight Indians who had crept near
the house secreting themselves behind stumps and trees.
Two bullets struck him, fracturing the bones both of
his leg and of his arm. The savages, with hideous
yells, then rushed for the door.
Mrs. Merrill had but just time to
close and bolt it when the savages plunged against
it and hewed it with their tomahawks. Every dwelling
was at that time a fortress whose log walls were bullet
proof. But for the terrible wounds which Mr.
Merrill had received, he would with his rifle shooting
through loop-holes, soon have put the savages to flight.
They, emboldened by the supposition that he was killed,
cut away at the door till they had opened a hole sufficiently
large to crawl through. One of the savages attempted
to enter. He had got nearly in when Mrs. Merrill
cleft his skull with an ax, and he fell lifeless upon
the floor. Another, supposing that he had safely
effected an entrance, followed him and encountered
the same fate. Four more of the savages were in
this way despatched, when the others, suspecting that
all was not right, climbed upon the roof and two of
them endeavored to descend through the chimney.
The noise they made directed the attention of the inmates
of the cabin to the new danger.
There was a gentle fire burning upon
the hearth. Mr. Merrill, with much presence of
mind, directed his son, while his wife guarded the
opening of the door with her ax, to empty the contents
of a feather bed upon the fire. The dense smothering
smoke filled the flue of the chimney. The two
savages, suffocated with the fumes, after a few convulsive
efforts to ascend fell almost insensible down upon
the hearth. Mr. Merrill, seizing with his unbroken
arm a billet of wood, despatched them both. But
one of the Indians now remained. Peering in at
the opening in the door he received a blow from the
ax of Mrs. Merrill which severely wounded him.
Bleeding and disheartened he fled alone into the wilderness,
the only one of the eight who survived the conflict.
A white man who was at that time a
prisoner among the Indians and who subsequently effected
his escape, reported that when the wounded savage
reached his tribe he said to the white captive in broken
English:
“I have bad news for the poor
Indian. Me lose a son, me lose a broder.
The squaws have taken the breech clout, and fight
worse than the long knives.”
But the Indians were not always the
aggressors. Indeed it is doubtful whether they
would ever have raised the war-whoop against the white
man, had it not been for the outrages they were so
constantly experiencing from unprincipled and vagabond
adventurers, who were ever infesting the frontiers.
The following incident illustrates the character and
conduct of these miscreants:
A party of Indian hunters from the
South wandering through their ancient hunting grounds
of Kentucky, accidentally came upon a settlement where
they found several horses grazing in the field.
They stole the horses, and commenced a rapid retreat
to their own country. Three young men, Davis,
Caffre and McClure, pursued them. Not being able
to overtake the fugitives, they decided to make reprisals
on the first Indians they should encounter. It
so happened that they soon met three Indian hunters.
The parties saluted each other in a friendly manner,
and proceeded on their way in pleasant companionship.
The young men said that they observed
the Indians conversing with one another in low tones
of voice, and thus they became convinced that the
savages meditated treachery. Resolving to anticipate
the Indians’ attack, they formed the following
plan. While walking together in friendly conversation,
the Indians being entirely off their guard, Caffre,
who was a very powerful man, was to spring upon the
lightest of the Indians, crush him to the ground,
and thus take him a prisoner. At the same instant,
Davis and McClure were each to shoot one of the other
Indians, who, being thus taken by surprise, could offer
no resistance.
The signal was given. Caffre
sprang upon his victim and bore him to the ground.
McClure shot his man dead. Davis’ gun flashed
in the pan. The Indian thus narrowly escaping
death immediately aimed his gun at Caffre, who was
struggling with the one he had grappled, and instantly
killed him. McClure in his turn shot the Indian.
There was now one Indian and two white men. But
the Indian had the loaded rifle. McClure’s
was discharged and Davis’ missed fire.
The Indian, springing from the grasp of his dying
antagonist, presented his rifle at Davis, who immediately
fled, hotly pursued by the Indian. McClure, stopping
only to reload his gun, followed after them.
Soon he lost sight of both. Davis was never heard
of afterwards. Doubtless he was shot by the avenging
Indian, who returned to his wigwam with the white
man’s scalp.
McClure, after this bloody fray, being
left alone in the wilderness, commenced a return to
his distant home. He had not proceeded far before
he met an Indian on horseback accompanied by a boy
on foot. The warrior dismounted, and in token
of peace offered McClure his pipe. As they were
seated together upon a log, conversing, McClure said
that the Indian informed him by signs that there were
other Indians in the distance who would soon come
up, and that then they should take him captive, tie
his feet beneath the horse’s belly and carry
him off to their village. McClure seized his
gun, shot the Indian through the heart, and plunging
into the forest, effected his escape.
About this same time Captain James
Ward, with a party of half a dozen white men, one
of whom was his nephew, and a number of horses, was
floating down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh.
They were in a flat boat about forty-five feet long
and eight feet wide. The gunwale of the boat
consisted of but a single pine plank. It was beautiful
weather, and for several days they were swept along
by the tranquil stream, now borne by the changing
current towards the one shore, and now towards the
other. One morning when they had been swept by
the stream within about one hundred and fifty feet
of the northern shore, suddenly several hundred Indians
appeared upon the bank, and uttering savage yells opened
upon them a terrible fire.
Captain Ward’s nephew, pierced
by a ball in the breast, fell dead in the bottom of
the boat. Every horse was struck by a bullet.
Some were instantly killed; others, severely wounded,
struggled so violently as to cause the frail bark
to dip water, threatening immediate destruction.
All the crew except Captain Ward were so panic-stricken
by this sudden assault, that they threw themselves
flat upon their faces in the bottom of the boat, and
attempted no resistance where even the exposure of
a hand would be the target for a hundred rifles.
Fortunately Captain Ward was protected
from this shower of bullets by a post, which for some
purpose had been fastened to the gunwale. He
therefore retained his position at the helm, which
was an oar, striving to guide the boat to the other
side of the river. As the assailants had no canoes,
they could not attempt to board, but for more than
an hour they ran along the banks yelling and keeping
up an almost constant fire. At length the boat
was swept to the other side of the stream, when the
miscreants abandoned the pursuit, and disappeared.
Quite a large party of emigrants were
attacked by the Indians near what is now called Scagg’s
Creek, and six were instantly killed. A Mrs.
McClure, delirious with terror, fled she knew not where,
followed by her three little children and carrying
a little babe in her arms. The cries of the babe
guided the pursuit of the Indians. They cruelly
tomahawked the three oldest children, and took the
mother and the babe as captives. Fortunately
the tidings of this outrage speedily reached one of
the settlements. Captain Whitley immediately
started in pursuit of the gang. He overtook them,
killed two, wounded two, and rescued the captives.
Such were the scenes enacted during a period of nominal
peace with the Indians.
There has been transmitted to us a
very curious document, giving an account of a speech
made by Mr. Dalton, a Government agent, to a council
of Indian chiefs, upon the announcement of peace with
Great Britain, and their reply. Mr. Dalton said:
“MY CHILDREN, What
I have often told you is now come to pass. This
day I received news from my great chief at the Falls
of the Ohio. Peace is made with the enemies of
America. The white flesh, the Americans, French,
and Spanish, this day smoked out of the peace-pipe.
The tomahawk is buried, and they are now friends.
I am told the Shawanese, the Delawares, Chickasaws,
Cherokees, and all other red flesh, have taken the
Long Knife by the hand. They have given up to
them the prisoners that were in their hands.
“My children on the Wabash,
open your ears and let what I tell you sink into your
hearts. You know me. Near twenty years I
have been among you. The Long Knife is my nation.
I know their hearts. Peace they carry in one
hand and war in the other. I leave you to yourselves
to judge. Consider and now accept the one or
the other. We never beg peace of our enemies.
If you love your women and children, receive the belt
of wampum I present you. Return me my flesh you
have in your villages, and the horses you stole from
my people in Kentucky. Your corn fields were never
disturbed by the Long Knife. Your women and children
lived quiet in their houses, while your warriors were
killing and robbing my people. All this you know
is the truth.
“This is the last time I shall
speak to you. I have waited six moons to hear
you speak and to get my people from you. In ten
nights I shall leave the Wabash to see my great chief
at the Falls of the Ohio, where he will be glad to
hear from your own lips what you have to say.
Here is tobacco I give you. Smoke and consider
what I have said.”
Mr. Dalton then presented Piankashaw,
the chief of the leading tribe assembled in council,
with a belt of blue and white wampum. Piankashaw
received the emblem of peace with much dignity, and
replied:
“MY GREAT FATHER THE LONG KNIFE, You
have been many years among us. You have suffered
by us. We still hope you will have pity and compassion
upon us, on our women and children. The sun shines
on us, and the good news of peace appears in our faces.
This is the day of joy to the Wabash Indians.
With one tongue we now speak. We accept your peace-belt.
“We received the tomahawk from
the English. Poverty forced us to it. We
were followed by other tribes. We are sorry for
it. To-day we collect the scattered bones of
our friends and bury them in one grave. We thus
plant the tree of peace, that God may spread its branches
so that we can all be secured from bad weather.
Here is the pipe that gives us joy. Smoke out
of it. Our warriors are glad you are the man we
present it to. We have buried the tomahawk, have
formed friendship never to be broken, and now we smoke
out of your pipe.
“My father, we know that the
Great Spirit was angry with us for stealing your horses
and attacking your people. He has sent us so much
snow and cold weather as to kill your horses with
our own. We are a poor people. We hope God
will help us, and that the Long Knife will have compassion
on our women and children. Your people who are
with us are well. We shall collect them when
they come in from hunting. All the prisoners
taken in Kentucky are alive. We love them, and
so do our young women. Some of your people mend
our guns, and others tell us they can make rum out
of corn. They are now the same as we. In
one moon after this we will take them back to their
friends in Kentucky.
“My father, this being the day
of joy to the Wabash Indians, we beg a little drop
of your milk to let our warriors see that it came from
your own breast. We were born and raised in the
woods. We could never learn to make rum.
God has made the white men masters of the world.”
Having finished his speech, Piankashaw
presented Mr. Dalton with three strings of blue and
white wampum as the seal of peace. All must observe
the strain of despondency which pervades this address,
and it is melancholy to notice the imploring tones
with which the chief asks for rum, the greatest curse
which ever afflicted his people.
The incessant petty warfare waged
between vagrant bands of the whites and the Indians,
with the outrages perpetrated on either side, created
great exasperation. In the year 1784 there were
many indications that the Indians were again about
to combine in an attack upon the settlements.
These stations were widely scattered, greatly exposed,
and there were many of them. It was impossible
for the pioneers to rally in sufficient strength to
protect every position. The savages, emerging
unexpectedly from the wilderness, could select their
own point of attack, and could thus cause a vast amount
of loss and misery. For a long time it had been
unsafe for any individual, or even small parties,
unless very thoroughly armed, to wander beyond the
protection of the forts. Under these circumstances,
a convention was held of the leading men of Kentucky
at the Danville Station, to decide what measures to
adopt in view of the threatened invasion. It was
quite certain that the movement of the savages would
be so sudden and impetuous that the settlers would
be compelled to rely mainly upon their own resources.
The great State of Virginia, of which
Kentucky was but a frontier portion, had become rich
and powerful. But many weary leagues intervened,
leading through forests and over craggy mountains,
between the plains of these distant counties and Richmond,
the capital of Virginia. The convention at Danville
discussed the question whether it were not safer for
them to anticipate the Indians, and immediately to
send an army for the destruction of their towns and
crops north of the Ohio. But here they were embarrassed
by the consideration that they had no legal power
to make this movement, and that the whole question,
momentous as it was and demanding immediate action,
must be referred to the State Government, far away
beyond the mountains. This involved long delay,
and it could hardly be expected that the members of
the General Court in their peaceful homes would fully
sympathize with the unprotected settlers in their
exposure to the tomahawk and the scalping knife.
Several conventions were held, and
the question was earnestly discussed whether the interests
of Kentucky did not require her separation from the
Government of Virginia, and her organization as a self-governing
State. The men who had boldly ventured to seek
new homes so far beyond the limits of civilization
were generally men of great force of character and
of political foresight. They had just emerged
from the war of the Revolution, during which all the
most important questions of civil polity had been
thoroughly canvassed. Their meetings were conducted
with great dignity and calm deliberation.
On the twenty-third of May, 1785,
the convention at Danville passed the resolve with
great unanimity that Kentucky ought to be separated
from Virginia, and received into the American Union,
upon the same basis as the other States. Still
that they might not act upon a question of so much
importance without due deliberation, they referred
the subject to another convention to be assembled
at Danville in August. This convention reiterated
the resolution of its predecessor; issued a proclamation
urging the people everywhere to organise for defence
against the Indians, and appointed a delegation of
two members to proceed to Richmond, and present their
request for a separation to the authorities there.
“The Legislature of Virginia
was composed of men too wise not to see that separation
was inevitable. Separated from the parent State
by distance and by difficulties of communication,
in those days most formidable, they saw that Kentuckians
would not long submit to be ruled by those whose power
was so far removed as to surround every approach to
it with the greatest embarrassment. It was, without
its wrongs, and tyranny and misgovernment, the repetition
of the circumstances of the Crown and Colonies; and
with good judgment, and as the beautiful language
of the Danville convention expressed it, with sole
intent to bless its people, they agreed to a dismemberment
of its part, to secure the happiness of the whole."
It is not important here to enter
into a detail of the various discussions which ensued,
and of the measures which were adopted. It is
sufficient to say that the communication from Kentucky
to the Legislature of Virginia was referred to the
illustrious John Marshall, then at the commencement
of his distinguished career. He gave to the request
of the petitioners his own strong advocacy. The
result was, that a decree was passed after tedious
delays, authorising the formal separation of Kentucky
from Virginia. On the fourth of February, 1791,
the new State, by earnest recommendation of George
Washington, was admitted into the American Union.
It does not appear that Colonel Boone
was a member of any of these conventions. He
had no taste for the struggles in political assemblies.
He dreaded indeed the speculator, the land jobber,
and the intricate decisions of courts, more than the
tomahawk of the Indian. And he knew full well
that should the hour of action come, he would be one
of the first to be summoned to the field. While
therefore others of the early pioneers were engaged
in these important deliberations, he was quietly pursuing
those occupations, congenial to his tastes, of cultivating
the farm, or in hunting game in the solitude of the
forests. His humble cabin stood upon the banks
of the Kentucky River, not far from the station at
Boonesborough. And thoroughly acquainted as he
was with the habits of the Indians, he felt quite
able, in his bullet-proof citadel, to protect himself
from any marauding bands which might venture to show
themselves so near the fort.
It seems to be the lot of humanity
that life should be composed of a series of storms,
rising one after another. In the palace and in
the cottage, in ancient days and at the present time,
we find the sweep of the inexorable law, that man
is born to mourn.
“Sorrow is for the
sons of men,
And weeping for earth’s daughters.”
The cloud of menaced Indian invasion
had passed away, when suddenly the sheriff appears
in Boone’s little cabin, and informs him that
his title to his land is disputed, and that legal
proceedings were commenced against him. Boone
could not comprehend this. Kentucky he regarded
almost his own by the right of his discovery.
He had led the way there. He had established
himself and family in the land, and had defended it
from the incursions of the Indians. And now, in
his advancing years, to be driven from the few acres
he had selected and to which he supposed he had a
perfect title, seemed to him very unjust indeed.
He could not recognise any right in what seemed to
him but the quibbles of the lawyers. In his autobiography
he wrote in reference to his many painful adventures:
“My footsteps have often been
marked with blood. Two darling sons and a brother
have I lost by savage hands, which have also taken
from me forty valuable horses and abundance of cattle.
Many dark and sleepless nights have I been a companion
for owls, separated from the cheerful society of men,
scorched by the summer’s sun, and pinched by
the winter’s cold, an instrument ordained to
settle the wilderness.”
Agitated by the thought of the loss
of his farm and deeply wounded in his feelings, as
though a great wrong had been inflicted upon him, Boone
addressed an earnest memorial to the Legislature of
Kentucky. In this he stated that immediately
after the troubles with the Indians had ceased, he
located himself upon lands to which he supposed he
had a perfect title; that he reared his house and
commenced cultivating his fields. And after briefly
enumerating the sacrifices he had made in exploring,
settling and defending Kentucky, he said he could not
understand the justice of making a set of complicated
forms of law, superior to his actual occupancy of
the land selected, as he believed when and where it
was, it was his unquestioned right to do so.
But the lawyers and the land speculators
were too shrewd for the pioneer. Colonel Boone
was sued; the question went to the courts which he
detested, and Boone lost his farm. It was indeed
a very hard case. He had penetrated the country
when no other white man trod its soil. He discovered
its wonderful resources, and proclaimed them to the
world. He had guided settlers into the region,
and by his sagacity and courage, had provided for
their wants and protected them from the savage.
And now in his declining years he found himself driven
from his farm, robbed of every acre, a houseless,
homeless, impoverished man. The deed was so cruel
that thousands since, in reading the recital, have
been agitated by the strongest emotions of indignation
and grief.