War with the Creeks. Patriotism of Crockett. Remonstrances
of his
Wife. Enlistment. The Rendezvous. Adventure
of the
Scouts. Friendlier Indians. A
March through the Forest. Picturesque
Scene. The Midnight Alarm. March
by Moon-light. Chagrin of
Crockett. Advance into Alabama. War’s
Desolations. Indian
Stoicism. Anecdotes of Andrew Jackson. Battles,
Carnage, and Woe.
The awful massacre at Fort Mimms,
by the Creek Indians, summoned, as with a trumpet
peal, the whole region to war. David Crockett
had listened eagerly to stories of Indian warfare
in former years, and as he listened to the tales of
midnight conflagration and slaughter, his naturally
peaceful spirit had no yearnings for the renewal of
such sanguinary scenes. Crockett was not a quarrelsome
man. He was not fond of brawls and fighting.
Nothing in his life had thus far occurred to test
his courage. Though there was great excitement
to be found in hunting, there was but little if any
danger. The deer and all smaller game were harmless.
And even the grizzly bear had but few terrors for a
marksman who, with unerring aim, could strike him with
the deadly bullet at the distance of many rods.
But the massacre at Fort Mimms roused
a new spirit in David Crockett. He perceived
at once, that unless the savages were speedily quelled,
they would ravage the whole region; and that his family
as well as that of every other pioneer must inevitably
perish. It was manifest to him that every man
was bound immediately to take arms for the general
defence. In a few days a summons was issued for
every able-bodied man in all that region to repair
to Winchester, which, as we have said, was a small
cluster of houses about ten miles from Crockett’s
cabin.
When he informed his wife of his intention,
her womanly heart was appalled at the thought of being
left alone and unprotected in the vast wilderness.
She was at a distance of hundreds of miles from all
her connections. She had no neighbors near.
Her children were too young to be of any service to
her. If the dreadful Indians should attack them,
she had no one to look to for protection. If anything
should happen to him in battle so that he should not
return, they must all perish of starvation. These
obvious considerations she urged with many tears.
“It was mighty hard,”
writes Crockett, “to go against such arguments
as these. But my countrymen had been murdered,
and I knew that the next thing would be that the Indians
would be scalping the women and children all about
there, if we didn’t put a stop to it. I
reasoned the case with her as well as I could, and
told her that if every man would wait till his wife
got willing for him to go to war, there would be no
fighting done until we all should be killed in our
own houses; that as I was as able to go as any man
in the world, and that I believed it was a duty I
owed to my country. Whether she was satisfied
with this reasoning or not she did not tell me, but
seeing I was bent on it, all she did was to cry a
little, and turn about to her work.”
David Crockett hastened to Winchester.
There was a large gathering there from all the hamlets
and cabins for many miles around. The excitement
was intense. The nation of Creek Indians was a
very powerful one, and in intelligence and military
skill far in advance of most of the Indian tribes.
Mr. Crockett was one of the first to volunteer to
form a company to serve for sixty days, under Captain
Jones, who subsequently was a member of Congress from
Tennessee. In a week the whole company was organized,
and commenced its march to join others for the invasion
of the Creek country. It was thought that by carrying
the war directly into the Indian towns, their warriors
might be detained at home to protect their wives and
children, and could thus be prevented from carrying
desolation into the settlements of the whites.
In the mean time David Crockett revisited
his humble home, where his good but anxious and afflicted
wife fitted him out as well as she could for the campaign.
David was not a man of sentiment and was never disposed
to contemplate the possibility of failure in any of
his plans. With a light heart he bade adieu to
his wife and his children, and mounting his horse,
set out for his two months’ absence to hunt up
and shoot the Indians. He took only the amount
of clothing he wore, as he wished to be entirely unencumbered
when he should meet the sinewy and athletic foe on
the battle-field.
This company, of about one hundred
mounted men, commenced its march for an appointed
rendezvous called Beatty’s Spring. Here
they encamped for several days, waiting the arrival
of other companies from distant quarters. Ere
long there was collected quite an imposing army of
thirteen hundred men, all on horseback, and all hardy
backwoodsmen, armed with the deadly rifle. A
more determined set of men was perhaps never assembled.
While they were thus gathering from far and near, and
making all preparations to burst upon the foe in one
of war’s most terrific tempests, Major Gibson
came, and wanted a few men, of tried sagacity and
hardihood, to accompany him on a reconnoitring tour
across the Tennessee River, down through the wilderness,
into the country of the Creek Indians. It was
a very hazardous enterprise. The region swarmed
with savages. They were very vigilant. They
were greatly and justly exasperated. If the reconnoitring
party were captured, the certain doom of its members
would be death by the most dreadful tortures.
Captain Jones pointed out David Crockett
as one of the most suitable men for this enterprise.
Crockett unhesitatingly consented to go, and, by permission,
chose a companion by the name of George Russel, a young
man whose courage and sagacity were far in advance
of his years.
“I called him up,” writes
Crockett, “but Major Gibson said he thought
he hadn’t beard enough to please him; he wanted
men, not boys. I must confess I was a little
nettled at this; for I know’d George Russel,
and I know’d there was no mistake in him; and
I didn’t think that courage ought to be measured
by the beard, for fear a goat would have the preference
over a man. I told the Major he was on the wrong
scent; that Russel could go as far as he could, and
I must have him along. He saw I was a little
wrathy, and said I had the best chance of knowing,
and agreed that it should be as I wanted it.”
The heroic little band, thirteen in
number, well armed and well mounted, set out early
in the morning on their perilous enterprise.
They crossed the Tennessee River, and directing their
steps south, through a region almost entirely uninhabited
by white men, journeyed cautiously along, keeping
themselves concealed as much as possible in the fastnesses
of the forest. They crossed the river, at what
was called Ditto’s Landing, and advancing about
seven miles beyond, found a very secluded spot, one
of nature’s hiding-places, where they took up
their encampment for the night.
Here they chanced to come across a
man by the name of John Haynes, who for several years
had been a trader among the Indians. He was thoroughly
acquainted with the whole region about to be traversed,
and consented to act as a guide. For the next
day’s march, instructed by their guide, the
party divided into two bands, following along two
obscure trails, which came together again after winding
through the wilderness a distance of about twenty
miles. Major Gibson led a party of seven, and
David Crockett the other party of six.
The Cherokee Indians, a neighboring
nation, powerful and warlike, were not in alliance
with the Creeks in this war. They were, at that
time, in general friendly to the whites. Many
of their warriors were even induced to join the whites
and march under their banners. On each of the
trails that day to be passed over, there was the lodge
of a Cherokee Indian. Both of them were friendly.
Each of the parties was to collect all the information
possible from these Indians, and then to meet where
the trails came together again.
When Crockett arrived at the wigwam
of the Indian he met with a very friendly reception.
He also found there a half-breed Cherokee, by the
name of Jack Thompson. This man, of savage birth
and training, but with the white man’s blood
in his veins, offered to join the reconnoitring party.
He however was not ready just then to set out, but
in a few hours would follow and overtake the band
at its night’s encampment.
It was not safe to encamp directly
upon the trail, lest some Creek war-party should be
passing along, and should discover them. It was
necessary to seek concealment where even the prying
eyes of the savage would with difficulty search them
out. The cry of the shriek-owl is exceedingly
shrill, and can be heard at a great distance.
A particular spot on the trail was designated, near
which Crockett would seek his secret encampment.
When Jack Thompson reached that spot, he was to imitate
the cry of the owl. Crockett would respond, and
thus guide the Indian to his retreat. As night
approached, Crockett, with his party, found a deep
and dark ravine, where, encircled by almost impenetrable
thickets, he hid his men and the horses. No campfires
could be built. It was ten o’clock in the
night when, in the distance, he heard the signal shriek
of the owl, a cry too common to arrest the attention
of any Indian bands who might be in the vicinity.
Jack, guided by a responsive cry, soon found the place
of concealment, and there the party remained through
the night.
The next morning after breakfast they
set out to join Major Gibson and his band; but, in
some way, they had lost track of him, and he could
not be found. Some were alarmed, as, in so small
a band, they were entering the domains of their powerful
foe. Crockett taunted them with their fears;
and indeed fear kept them together. The party
consisted now of seven, including the Indian guide.
Most of them determined to press on. The two
or three who were in favor of going back dared not
separate from the rest.
At the distance of about twenty miles,
Jack Thompson told them that there was a village of
friendly Cherokee Indians. As he was leading
them through obscure trails toward that place, they
came across the hut of a white man, by the name of
Radcliff, who had married a Creek woman, and had been
adopted into their tribe. The man had two nearly
grown-up boys, stout, burly fellows, half-breeds by
birth, and more than half savage in character and
training. The old man’s cabin was slightly
above the usual style of Indian wigwams.
It was in a region of utter solitude.
There Radcliff had taught his barbarian
boys some of the arts of industry. He had cleared
quite a space of ground around his hut, and was raising
a supply of corn and potatoes ample for his family
wants. With these vegetable productions, and
with the game which the rifle supplied them, they
lived in abundance, and free from most of those cares
which agitate a higher civilization.
But the old man was quite agitated
in receiving and entertaining his unwelcome guests.
He was an adopted Creek, and ought to be in sympathy
with his nation. He was bound to regard the white
men as his enemies, to withhold from them all important
information, and to deliver them up to the Creeks
if possible. Should he be suspected of sympathy
with the white men, the tomahawk of the savage would
soon cleave his brain. He entreated Crockett
immediately to leave him.
“Only an hour ago,” said
he, “there were ten Creek warriors here, all
on horseback, and painted and armed. Should they
come back and discover you here, they would certainly
kill you all, and put me and my family to death also.”
But Crockett, instead of being alarmed
by this intelligence, was only animated by it.
He assured Radcliff that he could desire no better
luck than to meet a dozen Indians on the war-path.
He considered his party quite strong enough to meet,
at any time, three times their number. Evening
was approaching, and the full moon, in cloudless brilliance,
was rising over the forest, flooding the whole landscape
with extraordinary splendor. After feeding their
horses abundantly and feasting themselves from the
fat larder of their host, they saddled their steeds
and resumed their journey by moonlight.
The trail still led through the silent
forest. It was, as usual, very narrow, so that
the horses walked along in single file. As there
was danger of falling into an ambush, not a word was
spoken, and, as noiselessly as possible, they moved
onward, every eye on the eager lookout. They
had been thus riding along when Crockett, in the advance,
heard the noise of some animals or persons apparently
approaching. At a given signal, instantly the
whole party stopped. Every man grasped his rifle,
ready in case of need, to leap from his horse, and
select the largest tree near him as a rampart for
the battle.
All solicitude was, however, soon
dispelled by seeing simply two persons advancing along
the trail on Indian ponies. They proved to be
two negro slaves who had been captured by the Indians,
and who, having escaped, were endeavoring to make
their way back to their former master. They were
brothers, and being both very stout men, and able to
speak the Indian as well as the English language, were
esteemed quite a powerful reinforcement to the Crockett
party.
They rode quietly along another hour
and a half, when toward midnight they saw in the distance
the gleam of camp-fires, and heard shouts of merriment
and revelry. They knew that these must come from
the camp of the friendly Cherokees, to which their
Indian guide, Jack Thompson, was leading them.
Soon a spectacle of wonderful picturesque beauty was
opened to their view.
Upon the banks of a beautiful mountain
stream there was a wide plateau, carpeted with the
renowned blue-grass, as verdant and soft as could be
found in any gentleman’s park. There was
no underbrush. The trees were two or three yards
from each other, composing a luxuriant overhanging
canopy of green leaves, more beautiful than art could
possibly create. Beneath this charming grove,
and illumined by the moonshine which, in golden tracery,
pierced the foliage, there were six or eight Indian
lodges scattered about.
An immense bonfire was crackling and
blazing, throwing its rays far and wide through the
forest. Moving around, in various engagements
and sports, were about forty men, women, and children,
in the fringed, plumed, and brilliantly colored attire
of which the Indians were so fond. Quite a number
of them, with bows and arrows, were shooting at a
mark, which was made perfectly distinct by the blaze
of pitch-pine knots, a light which no flame of candle
or gas could outvie. It was a scene of sublimity
and beauty, of peace and loveliness, which no artist
could adequately transfer to canvas.
The Cherokees received very cordially
the newcomers, took care of their horses, and introduced
them to their sports. Many of the Indians had
guns, but powder and bullets were too precious to be
expended in mere amusements. Indeed, the Indians
were so careful of their ammunition, that they rarely
put more than half as much powder into a charge as
a white man used. They endeavored to make up
for the deficiency by creeping nearer to their prey.
Crockett and his men joined these
barbarians, merry in their pleasant sports. Such
are the joys of peace, so different from the miseries
of demoniac war. At length the festivities were
closed, and all began to prepare to retire to sleep.
The Cherokees were neutral in the
war between the whites and the Creek Indians.
It was very important for them to maintain this neutrality
strictly, that they might not draw down upon themselves
the vengeance of either party. Some of the Cherokees
now began to feel anxious lest a war-party of the
Creeks should come along and find them entertaining
a war-party of whites, who were entering their country
as spies. They therefore held an interview with
one of the negroes, and requested him to inform Mr.
Crockett that should a war-party come and find his
men in the Cherokee village, not only would they put
all the white men to death, but there would be also
the indiscriminate massacre of all the men, women,
and children in the Cherokee lodges.
Crockett, wrapped in his blanket,
was half asleep when this message was brought to him.
Raising his head, he said to the negro, in terms rather
savoring of the spirit of the braggadocio than that
of a high-minded and sympathetic man:
“Tell the Cherokees that I will
keep a sharp lookout, and if a single Creek comes
near the camp to-night, I will carry the skin of his
head home to make me a moccasin.”
When this answer was reported to the
Indians they laughed aloud and dispersed. It
was not at all improbable that there might be an alarm
before morning. The horses were therefore, after
being well fed, tied up with their saddles upon them,
that they might be instantly mounted in case of emergence.
They all slept, also, with their arms in their hands.
Just as Crockett was again falling
into a doze, a very shrill Indian yell was heard in
the forest, the yell of alarm. Every man, white
and red, was instantly upon his feet. An Indian
runner soon made his appearance, with the tidings
that more than a thousand Creek warriors had, that
day, crossed the Coosa River, but a few leagues south
of them, at what was called the Ten Islands, and were
on the march to attack an American force, which, under
General Jackson, was assembling on another portion
of the Coosa River.
The friendly Indians were so greatly
alarmed that they immediately fled. Crockett
felt bound to carry back this intelligence as speedily
as possible to the headquarters from which he had come.
He had traversed a distance of about sixty miles in
a southerly direction. They returned, by the
same route over which they had passed. But they
found that a general alarm had pervaded the country,
Radcliff and his family, abandoning everything, had
fled, they knew not where. When they reached
the Cherokee town of which we have before spoken, not
a single Indian was to be seen. Their fires were
still burning, which showed the precipitancy with
which they had taken flight. This rather alarmed
the party of the whites. They feared that the
Indian warriors were assembling from all quarters,
at some secret rendezvous, and would soon fall upon
them in overwhelming numbers. They therefore did
not venture to replenish the Indian fires and lie
down by the warmth of them, but pushed rapidly on
their way.
It chanced to be a serene, moonlight
night. The trail through the forest, which the
Indian’s foot for countless generations had trodden
smooth, illumined by the soft rays of the moon, was
exceedingly beautiful. They travelled in single
file, every nerve at its extreme tension in anticipation
of falling into some ambush. Before morning they
had accomplished about thirty miles. In the grey
dawn they again reached Mr. Brown’s. Here
they found grazing for their horses, and corn and
game for them selves.
Horses and riders were equally fatigued.
The weary adventurers were in no mood for talking.
After dozing for an hour or two, they again set out,
and about noon reached the general rendezvous, from
which they had departed but a few days before.
Here Crockett was not a little disappointed in the
reception he encountered. He was a young, raw
backwoodsman, nearly on a level with the ordinary savage.
He was exceedingly illiterate, and ignorant.
And yet he had the most amazing self-confidence, with
not a particle of reverence for any man, whatever
his rank or culture. He thought no one his superior.
Colonel Coffee paid very little respect to his vainglorious
report. In the following characteristic strain
Crockett comments on the event:
“He didn’t seem to mind
my report a bit. This raised my dander higher
than ever. But I know’d that I had to be
on my best behavior, and so I kept it all to myself;
though I was so mad that I was burning inside like
a tar-kiln, and I wonder that the smoke had not been
pouring out of me at all points. The next day,
Major Gibson got in. He brought a worse tale
than I had, though he stated the same facts as far
as I went. This seemed to put our Colonel all
in a fidget; and it convinced me clearly of one of
the hateful ways of the world. When I made my
report I was not believed, because I was no officer.
I was no great man, but just a poor soldier.
But when the same thing was reported by Major Gibson,
why then it was all true as preaching, and the Colonel
believed it every word.”
There was indeed cause for alarm.
Many of the Indian chiefs displayed military ability
of a very high order. Our officers were frequently
outgeneralled by their savage antagonists. This
was so signally the case that the Indians frequently
amused themselves in laughing to scorn the folly of
the white men. Every able-bodied man was called
to work in throwing up breastworks. A line of
ramparts was speedily constructed, nearly a quarter
of a mile in circuit. An express was sent to
Fayetteville, where General Jackson was assembling
an army, to summon him to the rescue. With characteristic
energy he rushed forward, by forced marches day and
night, until his troops stood, with blistered feet,
behind the newly erected ramparts.
They felt now safe from attack by
the Indians. An expedition of eight hundred volunteers,
of which Crockett was one, was fitted out to recross
the Tennessee River, and marching by the way of Huntsville,
to attack the Indians from an unexpected quarter.
This movement involved a double crossing of the Tennessee.
They pressed rapidly along the northern bank of this
majestic stream, about forty or fifty miles, due west,
until they came to a point where the stream expands
into a width of nearly two miles. This place
was called Muscle Shoals. The river could here
be forded, though the bottom was exceedingly rough.
The men were all mounted. Several horses got
their feet so entangled in the crevices of the rocks
that they could not be disengaged, and they perished
there. The men, thus dismounted, were compelled
to perform the rest of the campaign on foot.
A hundred miles south of this point,
in the State of Alabama, the Indians had a large village,
called Black Warrior. The lodges of the Indians
were spread over the ground where the city of Tuscaloosa
now stands. The wary Indians kept their scouts
out in all directions. The runners conveyed to
the warriors prompt warning of the approach of their
foes. These Indians were quite in advance of the
northern tribes. Their lodges were full as comfortable
as the log huts of the pioneers, and in their interior
arrangements more tasteful. The buildings were
quite numerous. Upon many of them much labor had
been expended. Luxuriant corn-fields spread widely
around, and in well-cultivated gardens they raised
beans and other vegetables in considerable abundance.
The hungry army found a good supply
of dried beans for themselves, and carefully housed
corn for their horses. They feasted themselves,
loaded their pack-horses with corn and beans, applied
the torch to every lodge, laying the whole town in
ashes, and then commenced their backward march.
Fresh Indian tracks indicated that many of them had
remained until the last moment of safety.
The next day the army marched back
about fifteen miles to the spot where it had held
its last encampment. Eight hundred men, on a
campaign, consume a vast amount of food. Their
meat was all devoured. They had now only corn
and beans. The soldiers were living mostly on
parched corn. Crockett went to Colonel Coffee,
then in command, and stating, very truthfully, that
he was an experienced hunter, asked permission to
draw aside from the ranks, and hunt as they marched
along. The Colonel gave his consent, but warned
him to be watchful in the extreme, lest he should
fall into an Indian ambush.
Crockett was brave, but not reckless.
He plunged into the forest, with vigilant gaze piercing
the solitary space in all directions. He was
alone, on horseback. He had not gone far when
he found a deer just killed by a noiseless arrow.
The animal was but partially skinned, and still warm
and smoking. The deer had certainly been killed
by an Indian; and it was equally certain that the
savage, seeing his approach, had fled. The first
thought of Crockett was one of alarm. The Indian
might be hidden behind some one of the gigantic trees,
and the next moment a bullet, from the Indian’s
rifle, might pierce his heart.
But a second thought reassured him.
The deer had been killed by an arrow. Had the
Indian been armed with a rifle, nothing would have
been easier, as he saw the approach of Crockett in
the distance than for him to have concealed himself,
and then to have taken such deliberate aim at his
victim as to be sure of his death. Mounting the
horse which Crockett rode, the savage might have disappeared
in the wilderness beyond all possibility of pursuit.
But this adventure taught Crockett that he might not
enjoy such good luck the next time. Another Indian
might be armed with a rifle, and Crockett, self-confident
as he was, could not pretend to be wiser in woodcraft
than were the savages.
Crockett dismounted, took up the body
of the deer, laid it upon the mane of his horse, in
front of the saddle, and remounting, with increasing
vigilance made his way, as rapidly as he could, to
the trail along which the army was advancing.
He confesses to some qualms of conscience as to the
right of one hunter thus to steal away the game killed
by another.
It was late in the afternoon when
he reached the rear. He pressed along to overtake
his own company. The soldiers looked wistfully
at the venison. They offered him almost any price
for it. Crockett was by nature a generous man.
There was not a mean hair in his head. This generosity
was one of the virtues which gave him so many friends.
Rather boastfully, and yet it must be admitted truthfully,
he writes, in reference to this adventure:
“I could have sold it for almost
any price I would have asked. But this wasn’t
my rule, neither in peace nor war. Whenever I
had anything and saw a fellow-being suffering, I was
more anxious to relieve him than to benefit myself.
And this is one of the true secrets of my being a poor
man to the present day. But it is my way.
And while it has often left me with an empty purse,
yet it has never left my heart empty of consolations
which money couldn’t buy; the consolation of
having sometimes fed the hungry and covered the naked.
I gave all my deer away except a small part, which
I kept for myself, and just sufficient to make a good
supper for my mess.”
The next day, in their march, they
came upon a drove of swine, which belonged to a Cherokee
farmer. The whites were as little disposed as
were the Indians, in this war, to pay any respect to
private property. Hundreds of rifles were aimed
at the poor pigs, and their squealing indicated that
they had a very hard time of it. The army, in
its encampment that night, feasted very joyously upon
fresh pork. This thrifty Cherokee was also the
possessor of a milch cow. The animal was speedily
slaughtered and devoured.
They soon came upon another detachment
of the army, and uniting, marched to Ten Islands,
on the Coosa River, where they established a fort,
which they called Fort Strother, as a depot for provisions
and ammunition. They were here not far from the
centre of the country inhabited by the hostile Indians.
This fort stood on the left bank of the river, in
what is now St. Clair County, Alabama. It was
a region but little explored, and the whites had but
little acquaintance with the nature of the country
around them, or with the places occupied by the Indians.
Some scouts, from the friendly Creeks, brought the
intelligence that, at the distance of about eight miles
from the fort, there was an Indian town, where a large
party of warriors was assembled in preparation for
some secret expedition. A large and select band
was immediately dispatched, on horseback, to attack
them by surprise. Two friendly Creeks led them
with Indian sagacity through circuitous trails.
Stealthily they approached the town, and dividing their
force, marched on each side so as to encircle it completely.
Aided by their Creek guides, this important movement
was accomplished without the warriors discovering
their approach. The number of the whites was so
great that they were enabled to surround the town with
so continuous a line that escape was impossible for
any enclosed within that fearful barrier of loaded
rifles wielded by unerring marksmen. Closer and
more compactly the fatal line was drawn. These
movements were accomplished in the dim morning twilight.
All being ready, Captain Hammond,
and a few rangers, were sent forward to show themselves,
and to bring on the fight. The moment the warriors
caught sight of them, one general war-whoop rose from
every throat. Grasping their rifles, they rushed
headlong upon the rangers, who retired before them.
They soon reached one portion of the compact line,
and were received with a terrible fire, which struck
many of them down in instant death. The troops
then closed rapidly upon the doomed Indians, and from
the north, the south, the east, and the west, they
were assailed by a deadly storm of bullets.
Almost immediately the Indians saw
that they were lost. There was no possibility
of escape. This was alike manifest to every one,
to warrior, squaw, and pappoose. All surrendered
themselves to despair. The warriors threw down
their weapons, in sign of surrender. Some rushed
into the lodges. Some rushed toward the soldiers,
stretching out their unarmed hands in supplication
for life. The women in particular, panic-stricken,
ran to the soldiers, clasped them about the knees,
and looked up into their faces with piteous supplications
for life. Crockett writes:
“I saw seven squaws have
hold of one man. So I hollered out the Scriptures
was fulfilling; that there was seven women holding
to one man’s coat-tail. But I believe it
was a hunting-shirt all the time. We took them
all prisoners that came out to us in this way.”
Forty-six warriors, by count, threw
down their arms in token of surrender, and ran into
one of the large houses. A band of soldiers pursued
them, with the apparent intent of shooting them down.
It was considered rare sport to shoot an Indian.
A woman came to the door, bow and arrow in hand.
Fixing the arrow upon the string, she drew the bow
with all the strength of her muscular arm, and let
the arrow fly into the midst of the approaching foe.
It nearly passed through the body of Lieutenant Moore,
killing him instantly. The woman made no attempt
to evade the penalty which she knew weald follow this
act. In an instant twenty bullets pierced her
body, and she fell dead at the door of the house.
The infuriate soldiers rushed in and
shot the defenceless warriors mercilessly, until every
one was fatally wounded or dead. They then set
the house on fire and burned it up, with the forty-six
warriors in it. It mattered not to them whether
the flames consumed the flesh of the living or of
the dead.
There was something very remarkable
in the stoicism which the Indians ever manifested.
There was a bright-looking little Indian boy, not more
than twelve years of age, whose arm was shattered by
one bullet and his thigh-bone by another. Thus
terribly wounded, the poor child crept from the flames
of the burning house. There was no pity in that
awful hour to come to his relief. The heat was
so intense that his almost naked body could be seen
blistering and frying by the fire. The heroic
boy, striving in vain to crawl along, was literally
roasted alive; and yet he did not utter an audible
groan.
The slaughter was awful. But
five of the Americans were killed. One hundred
and eighty-six of the Indians were either killed or
taken prisoners. The party returned with their
captives the same day to Fort Strother. The army
had so far consumed its food that it was placed on
half rations. The next day a party was sent back
to the smouldering town to see if any food could be
found. Even these hardy pioneers were shocked
at the awful spectacle which was presented. The
whole place was in ruins. The half-burned bodies
of the dead, in awful mutilation, were scattered around.
Demoniac war had performed one of its most fiend-like
deeds.
On this bloody field an Indian babe
was found clinging to the bosom of its dead mother.
Jackson urged some of the Indian women who were captives
to give it nourishment. They replied:
“All the child’s friends
are killed. There is no one to care for the helpless
babe. It is much better that it should die.”
Jackson took the child under his own
care, ordered it to be conveyed to his tent, nursed
it with sugar and water, took it eventually with him
to the Hermitage, and brought it up as his son.
He gave the boy the name of Lincoyer. He grew
up a finely formed young man, and died of consumption
at the age of seventeen.
Jackson was a very stern man.
The appeals of pity could seldom move his heart.
Still there were traits of heroism which marked his
character. On the return march, a half-starved
soldier came to Jackson with a piteous story of his
famished condition. Jackson drew from his pocket
a handful of acorns, and presenting a portion to the
man, said:
“This is all the fare I have. I will share
it with you.”
Beneath one of the houses was found
quite a large cellar, well stored with potatoes.
These were eagerly seized. All the other stores
of the Indians the insatiable flames had consumed.
Starvation now began to threaten the army. The
sparsely settled country afforded no scope for forage.
There were no herds of cattle, no well-replenished
magazines near at hand. Neither was there game
enough in the spreading wilderness to supply so many
hungry mouths. The troops were compelled to eat
even the very hides of the cattle whom they had driven
before them, and who were now all slaughtered.
While in this forlorn condition, awaiting
the arrival of food, and keeping very vigilant guard
against surprise, one night an Indian, cautiously
approaching from the forest, shouted out that he wished
to see General Jackson, for he had important information
to communicate. He was conducted to the General’s
tent. The soldiers knew not the news which he
brought. But immediately the beat of drums summoned
all to arms. In less than an hour a strong party
of cavalry and infantry, in the darkness, were on
the march. General Andrew Jackson was one of the
most energetic of men. The troops crossed the
Coosa River to the eastern shore, and as rapidly as
possible pressed forward in a southerly direction
toward Talladega, which was distant about thirty miles.
Gradually the rumor spread through the ranks that General
Jackson had received the following intelligence:
At Talladega there was a pretty strong fort, occupied
by friendly Indians. They had resolutely refused
to take part in the war against the Americans.
Eleven hundred hostile warriors, of the Creek nation,
marched upon the fort, encamped before it, and sent
word to the friendly Indians within the palisades,
that if they did not come out and join them in an expedition
against the whites, they would utterly demolish the
fort and take all their provisions and ammunition.
The Creeks were in sufficient strength to accomplish
their threat.
The friendly Indians asked for three
days to consider the proposition. They stated
that if, at the end of this time, they did not come
out to join them in an expedition against the whites,
they would surrender the fort. The request was
granted. Instantly an Indian runner was dispatched
to inform General Jackson, at Fort Strother, of their
danger and to entreat him to come to their aid.
Hence the sudden movement.
The Creek warriors had their scouts
out, carefully watching, and were speedily apprised
of the approach of General Jackson’s band.
Immediately they sent word into the fort, to the friendly
Indians there, that the American soldiers were coming,
with many fine horses, and richly stored with guns,
blankets, powder, bullets, and almost everything else
desirable. They promised that if the Indians would
come out from the fort, and help them attack and conquer
the whites, they would divide the rich plunder with
them. They assured them that, by thus uniting,
they could easily gain the victory over the whites,
who were the deadly foes of their whole race.
The appeal was not responded to.
A little south of the fort there was
a stream, which, in its circuitous course, partially
encircled it. The bank was high, leaving a slight
level space or meadow between it and the stream.
Here the hostile Indians were encamped, and concealed
from any approaches from the north. It was at
midnight, on the 7th of December, that Jackson set
out on this expedition. He had with him, for
the occasion, a very strong force, consisting of twelve
hundred infantry and eight hundred cavalry.
When they reached the fort, the army
divided, passing on each side, and again uniting beyond,
as they approached the concealed encampment of the
enemy. While passing the fort, the friendly Indians
clambered the palisades, and shouted out joyously
to the soldiers “How-de-do, brother how-de-do,
brother?”
The lines, meeting beyond the fort,
formed for battle. No foe was visible. Nearly
a thousand warriors, some armed with arrows, but many
with rifles, were hidden, but a few rods before them,
beneath the curving bank, which was fringed with bushes.
Major Russel, with a small party, was sent cautiously
forward to feel for the enemy, and to bring on the
battle. He was moving directly into the curve,
where a concentric fire would soon cut down every
one of his men.
The Indians in the fort perceived
his danger, and shouted warning to him. He did
not understand their language. They made the most
earnest gestures. He did not comprehend their
meaning. Two Indians then leaped from the fort,
and running toward him, seized his horse by the bridle.
They made him understand that more than a thousand
warriors, with rifle in hand and arrows on the string,
were hidden, at but a short distance before him, ready
to assail him with a deadly fire. The account
which Crockett gives of the battle, though neither
very graphic nor classic, is worthy of insertion here,
as illustrative of the intellectual and moral traits
of that singular man.
“This brought them to a halt;
and about this moment the Indians fired upon them,
and came rushing forth like a cloud of Egyptian locusts,
and screaming like all the young devils had been turned
loose with the old devil of all at their head.
Russel’s company quit their arses and took into
the fort. Their horses ran up to our line, which
was then in view. The warriors then came yelling
on, meeting us, and continued till they were within
shot of us, when we fired and killed a considerable
number of them. They broke like a gang of steers,
and ran across to the other line.
“And so we kept them running,
from one line to the other, constantly under a heavy
fire, till we had killed upwards of four hundred of
them. They fought with guns and also with bow
and arrows. But at length they made their escape
through a part of our line, which was made up of drafted
militia, which broke ranks, and they passed. We
lost fifteen of our men, as brave fellows as ever
lived or died. We buried them all in one grave,
and started back to our fort. But before we got
there, two more of our men died of wounds they had
received, making our total loss seventeen good fellows
in that battle.”