George Rogers Clark and the Revolution
Among the many men of sterling quality
who for various reasons came out to Kentucky, was
one stalwart, well-trained, military genius known in
history as General George Rogers Clark. His first
trip to Kentucky was semi-official, as a representative
of the Virginia Legislature, to visit the various
forts and settlements and to report progress to the
state government. He found the settlers in dire
need of powder. Reporting this to the Virginia
authorities, he succeeded in securing for the settlers
a quantity, which was yet insufficient to defend them
against the Indians.
Of Clark’s second appearance
in Kentucky, General Ray, who was at that time a boy
of sixteen, living at Harrodsburg (or Harrod’s
Station as it was then called), gives the following
account: “I had come down to where I now
live, about four miles from Harrodsburg, to turn some
horses on the range. I had killed a small blue-winged
duck that was feeding in my spring, and had roasted
it nicely by a fire on the brow of the hill. While
waiting for the duck to cool, I was startled by the
sudden appearance of a fine, soldierly-looking man.
’How do you do, my little fellow? What is
your name? Aren’t you afraid of being in
the woods by yourself?’ Answering his inquiries,
I invited him to partake of my duck, which he did,
without leaving me a bone to pick, his appetite was
so keen. Had I known him then as I did afterwards,
he would have been welcome to all the game I could
have killed. Having devoured my duck, he asked
me questions about the settlers, the Indians and the
condition of affairs in the locality.” These
the boy answered as well as he could, and then ventured
to ask the name of his guest. “My name
is Clark,” was the response, “and I have
come out here to see how you brave fellows are doing
in Kentucky, and to lend you a helping hand, if necessary.”
With the universal consent of the
settlers, Clark naturally assumed the military leadership
of the territory, visiting all the fortifications,
looking after their military stores, drilling the men,
and otherwise strengthening the defenses of the pioneers.
Clark made other trips to Virginia in behalf of the
frontiersmen, but since the resources of Virginia
were severely taxed by the necessary support given
to the other colonies during the Revolutionary War,
he received little or no encouragement, and practically
nothing in the way of military supplies. It is
stated that he provided the necessities at his own
expense, defraying the cost of transportation and
distribution. Later, powder was made by the settlers
of Kentucky by leaching saltpetre from the soil in
various sections and combining it with charcoal and
other ingredients.
The English army officers formed alliances
with the Indian tribes living north of the Ohio River
in the territory now composing Ohio, Indiana and Illinois
and incited them to frequent attacks on the Kentucky
settlements, with the hope that they would the sooner
capture the State of Virginia by an approach from
the west. Clark, as military commander of Kentucky,
sent spies into this northern country to determine
the location of the fortresses and the number of English
and Indians in each. One of these spies was the
celebrated Simon Kenton, who was not content with locating
the enemy but attempted to recapture a lot of horses
stolen from Kentucky by the Indians on a former raid.
Kenton and his companions were not able to travel
fast with the number of horses they had secured, and
when they were attacked by a band of Indians, Kenton’s
companions were slain and he was captured. The
Indians hated him cordially and began to beat him
unmercifully, calling him the “hoss-steal.”
They easily could have murdered Kenton on the spot,
but since he had proved such a terrible foe to them
in the past, they preferred to enjoy their capture
all the more by torturing him for awhile. He
was carried by the Indians to Chillicothe, where he
was several times forced to run the gauntlet.
Finally, when tied to the stake to be burned, he was
recognized by his boyhood friend, Simon Girty, who
sent him to Detroit, from which place he made his escape
and returned to Kentucky, reporting to General Clark
the conditions as he had found them.
Other spies returned, and from the
general reports General Clark thought it necessary
to make another appeal to Virginia for aid. In
1778, Governor Patrick Henry of Virginia gave to Clark
a commission as commanding officer to take such soldiers
as he could secure in Virginia, together with his
Kentuckians, and go against the British and Indians
north of the Ohio River. Leaving Corn Island,
now Louisville, he and his brave followers marched
northward through swamps and swam streams, capturing
every fortification to which they came. Among
these were Kaskaskia and Vincennes. By this heroic
deed of Clark’s the great territory north of
the Ohio River was secured from the British, and became
a part of Virginia’s territory. Clark continued
at the head of military affairs in Kentucky, but his
greatest work was done before he was thirty years of
age.