On the 8th of October, 1738, Oglethorpe
set out from Frederica in an open boat, with two others
attending it; and, after rowing two days and two nights,
arrived at Savannah. “He was received, at
the water-side, by the magistrates, and saluted by
the cannon from the fort, and by the militia under
arms; and the people spent the night in rejoicing,
making bonfires," &c. But, notwithstanding
this show of public joy, he had soon to learn particulars
of the situation of the inhabitants, that rendered
his visit unpleasant to himself, and not very welcome
to some of those to whom it was made. Those who
were duly sensible of his disinterested devotedness
to the advancement and welfare of the settlement,
were actuated, on this occasion, by a principle of
real regard and gratitude; those who were apprehensive
that their conduct in his absence might be investigated
and disapproved, joined in the acclaim, that they
might conciliate his favor; and those who had been
discontented grumblers, did not care openly to exhibit
indications of dissatisfaction.
On the day after his arrival he received
information that the grand jury of Savannah had prepared
a representation, “stating their grievances,
hardships, and necessities,” and complaining
of the conduct of Mr. Thomas Causton, the first magistrate
of the town, and keeper of the public store.
They alleged that he had expended much larger sums
than the Trustees authorized, and thus brought the
Colony in debt; that he had assumed powers not delegated
to him, and had been partial and arbitrary in many
of the measures which he had pursued.
Upon an investigation of these allegations,
Oglethorpe, as Governor-General of the Colony, deemed
it expedient to displace him; to issue an order that
the books, papers, and accounts, belonging to the
stores, should be delivered to Thomas Jones, Esq.,
who had come over with the transports with the appointment
of Advocate of the Regiment; and that security should
be given by Causton, to answer the charges against
him, by an assignment of his estate at Oakstead, and
his improvements elsewhere. The office thus rendered
vacant was supplied by the appointment of Colonel
William Stephens, who had been sent over with the
commission of Secretary for the affairs of the Trustees
in the Province.
He had been at Savannah before, for
in , is this remark; “All which was evident
to myself, as well from what I observed, when here
formerly, as more especially now, since my arrival.”
And again, , mentioning Mr. Fallowfield, “a
constable, whose temper I was better acquainted with,
having lodged at his house during my former abode
here.”
After the departure of General Oglethorpe,
he was President of the Council, and acting Governor
from July 11, 1743, to April 8, 1757, when he was
succeeded by Henry Parker, Esq.]
The great mismanagement of the trust-funds
which had been sent for the support of the Colony,
rendered it also necessary to retrench the ordinary
issues, “that something might remain for the
necessary support of life among the industrious part
of the community, who were not to be blamed.”
On the 11th, Tomo Chichi came to wait
upon the General. He had been very ill; but the
good old man was so rejoiced at the return of his
respected friend, that he said it made him moult like
the eagle. He informed him that several Indian
chiefs were at Yamacraw to pay their respects to him,
and to assure him of their fidelity.
This embassy consisted of the Micos
or chiefs of the Ocmulgees, the Chehaws, the Ouchasees,
and the Parachacholas, with thirty of their warriors,
and fifty-two attendants. As they walked up the
hill, they were saluted by a battery of cannon, and
then conducted to the town-hall by a corps of militia,
where the General received them. They told him
that the Spaniards had decoyed them to St. Augustine,
on pretence that he was there; but they found that
they were imposed upon, and therefore turned back
with displeasure, though they were offered great presents
to induce them to fall out with the English.
These single-hearted foresters had now come to remove
from the mind of their pledged friend all apprehension
of their alienation, and to assure him that their
warriors shall attend his call. They closed their
conference with a pressing invitation to him to come
up to their towns in the course of the summer; and,
with his promise to do so, they took a respectful
leave.
On the 17th the General called the
inhabitants to assemble at the town-hall, and “there
made a pathetic speech to them;" which he began
by thanking them for the measures which they had pursued
for mutual help and the common good. He apprized
them of the great exertions made by the Trustees to
support, protect, and defend the Colony; but that
their being obliged to maintain the garrisons, and
lay in various stores till the arrival of the troops,
and the dear price of provisions the last year, occasioned
such an increased demand upon them, that they would
not be able to continue further allowance, nor assume
further responsibilities, unless a supply should be
granted by parliament. This state of embarrassment
he greatly regretted, inasmuch as those whom he addressed
were suffering by the failure of their crops.
He told them that, with surprise and great grief, he
found that there was more due from the public store
than there were goods and articles in it to pay; but
that he had given orders that all persons should be
paid as far as these effects would go. He said
that he was fully aware of the privations already
felt, and of the greater to which they were exposed;
and, therefore, informed those who, on this account,
or for any reason, supposed that they could better
their condition by going out of the Province, that
they had his full consent to do so. At the same
time he requested such to come to his quarters, and
acquaint him with their grievances, their wishes, and
their purposes, and he would give them his best advice,
and all the aid in his power. How many, or how
far any, availed themselves of this overture, is not
known; but the writer who has given an account of
this address, adds, “It is remarkable that not
one man chose to leave the Province, though they very
well knew that they must endure great hardships before
the next crop should come in, for there was very little
money stirring, and very few had provisions sufficient
to keep them till next year. However, they all
seemed resolved rather to stay, than to leave the
country now in its distress.”
To lessen the demands upon the Trustees,
Oglethorpe made retrenchments in the public expenditures.
He disbanded the troop of Rangers, who guarded the
country on the land side, though they offered to serve
without pay; but he deemed it improper that they should
be on service without remuneration. The garrisons
were relieved by the regiments; so that that expense
ceased. He aimed to reconcile the disaffected,
by his good offices; and to gain their affections
by unexpected and unmerited liberalities. With
very timely largesses he assisted the orphans,
the widows, and the sick; and contributed towards the
relief of the most destitute; but, adds the writer
of the letter above quoted, “we are apprehensive
such contributions cannot last long, unless assisted
from England, for the expenses are too great for any
single man to bear.”
The General pursued, with anxious
scrutiny, his investigation into the management of
business, and found the charges and accounts to be
very perplexed, and the result evincing mismanagement
and unfaithfulness. “He settled the officers,
civil and military, among whom changes had taken place;
filled vacancies; and took the most judicious measures
that the whole municipal establishment should be properly
organized. Then, calling them all to his lodgings,
he gave it in charge that they should do their duties
with care and vigilance. He exhorted them to
use their best endeavors to preserve peace; especially
at this time, when ill-disposed persons, taking advantage
of people’s uneasiness at those inevitable pressures
under which they labored, and must necessarily for
some time be subjected to, might craftily incite them
to insurrection. Withal, he recommended earnestly
to them to preserve unanimity among themselves, which
would strengthen and support a due authority, and
restrain the licentious into due obedience."
On Wednesday morning, October 25th,
Oglethorpe set out for the south, leaving, as Col.
Stephens remarks, “a gloomy prospect of what
might ensue; and many sorrowful countenances were
visible under the apprehensions of future want; which
deplorable state the Colony has fallen into, through
such means as few or none of the settlers had any
imagination of, till the Trustees, in their late letters,
awakened them out of their dream; and the General,
when he came, laid the whole open, and apprized them
that they were but little removed from a downright
bankruptcy. Now was a time when it would be fully
apparent, who were the most valuable among them, by
showing a hearty endeavor to contribute, what in them
lay, to appease the rising discontents, and wait with
patience to see better things, which were not yet to
be despaired of."
It appears that Mr. Causton discovered
not only reluctance and perversity in explaining and
authenticating his accounts; but, by disingenuous
insinuations reflected on the conduct of Oglethorpe,
“as if he very well knew that extraordinary
occasions had created these great exceedings, which
the Trustees approving of, he [Causton] was given
up to be driven to utter ruin." Mr. Jones deemed
it necessary to write to the General to inform him
of the reflections which had thus been cast upon his
honor, and of the impediments which he himself met
in the business assigned to him. Upon the receipt
of this letter, Oglethorpe set out on a return to
Savannah, where he arrived early in the morning of
Saturday, November 11th, and, as the bell was ringing
for attendance on prayers, he went and joined the orisons
of the congregation. This was more grateful to
his feelings than the military salute and parade of
the preceding visit; and the devotional exercises
in which he engaged soothed his vexed spirit, and the
petition for pardon of offences against God produced
a livelier disposition in his heart of lenity and
forgiveness towards those who had offended against
him. In the course of the day, he looked again
into the concerns of the store, and despatched some
other affairs of consequence. In the evening
he sent for Mr. Causton, when, “in a very mild
manner, and gentler terms than could be expected,
upon such a provocation, he reprehended him for the
freedom he had taken with his name, and advised him
to use no delays or shifts in making up his accounts.”
On Sunday he attended public worship;
and after that took boat, and went back to the south.
In both these visits to Savannah,
Oglethorpe discovered among the inhabitants indications
of the prevalence of not only a dissatisfied, but
of a factious spirit; more to be lamented than a failing
harvest, or a stinted market.
It was extremely mortifying to him
to perceive that his greatest exertions and most assiduous
services were underrated; his devotedness to their
welfare unacknowledged; and his sacrifices and exposures
that he might establish them in security and peace,
were not merely depreciated, but miscalled and dishonored.
While he was zealously engaged in strengthening the
Colony, by locating large accessions of brave and
industrious settlers on the frontiers, and erecting
forts, and supplying them with troops and ammunition,
the people who were “sitting under their own
vines and fig-trees, with none to molest or make them
afraid,” and who had been best and longest provided
for, were insensible to the hardships and dangers
to which others were exposed; and, cavilling at the
circumstances in which they were placed, complained
as if he must be personally accountable for certain
restrictions in the plan of settlement, and subsequent
financial and commercial affairs, to which the Trustees
had deemed it proper to subject them; restrictions
which might have been submitted to by them with as
good a grace as they were by the Saltzburgers at Ebenezer
and the Scots at Darien, “who murmured not,
neither were unthankful.” In fact, it was
very apparent, that by their indolence and improvidence
these dissatisfied ones had brought upon themselves
the chief of the evils which they suffered. Their
allegations, therefore, were unreasonable, and the
disposition which dictated them criminally ungrateful.
But Oglethorpe, instead of reproaching the discontented
for their ingratitude, and the murmurers for their
unkind imputations, stifled his own justifiable feelings
of displeasure, in the hope that such forbearance
would refute the injustice of theirs. Well might
the poet exclaim:
“What magnanimity! May
ne’er again
Unkind returns thy generous
ardor chill,
Nor causeless censure give thy bosom
pain,
Nor thankless hearts
reward thy good with ill!
“But honoring gratitude its
column raise,
To bear inscriptions
of deserved praise;
And when through age the record
is obscure,
A nobler let posterity procure.”