THE BACKWOODSMEN OF THE ALLEGHANIE-1774.
Along the western frontier of the
colonies that were so soon to be the United States,
among the foothills of the Alleghanies, on the slopes
of the wooded mountains, and in the long trough-like
valleys that lay between the ranges, dwelt a peculiar
and characteristically American people.
These frontier folk, the people of
the up-country, or back-country, who lived near and
among the forest-clad mountains, far away from the
long-settled districts of flat coast plain and sluggish
tidal river, were known to themselves and to others
as backwoodsmen. They all bore a strong likeness
to one another in their habits of thought and ways
of living, and differed markedly from the people of
the older and more civilized communities to the eastward.
The western border of our country was then formed
by the great barrier-chains of the Alleghanies, which
ran north and south from Pennsylvania through Maryland,
Virginia, and the Carolinas, the trend of the valleys
being parallel to the sea-coast, and the mountains
rising highest to the southward. It was difficult
to cross the ranges from east to west, but it was both
easy and natural to follow the valleys between.
From Fort Pitt to the high hill-homes of the Cherokees
this great tract of wooded and mountainous country
possessed nearly the same features and characteristics,
differing utterly in physical aspect from the alluvial
plains bordering the ocean.
So, likewise, the backwoods mountaineers
who dwelt near the great watershed that separates
the Atlantic streams from the springs of the Watauga,
the Kanawha, and the Monongahela were all cast in the
same mould, and resembled each other much more than
any of them did their immediate neighbors of the plains.
The backwoodsmen of Pennsylvania had little in common
with the peaceful population of Quakers and Germans
who lived between the Delaware and the Susquehanna;
and their near kinsmen of the Blue Ridge and the Great
Smoky Mountains were separated by an equally wide
gulf from the aristocratic planter communities that
flourished in the tide-water regions of Virginia and
the Carolinas. Near the coast the lines of division
between the colonies corresponded fairly well with
the differences between the populations; but after
striking the foothills, though the political boundaries
continued to go east and west, those both of ethnic
and of physical significance began to run north and
south.
The backwoodsmen were Americans by
birth and parentage, and of mixed race; but the dominant
strain in their blood was that of the Presbyterian
Irish the Scotch-Irish as they were often
called. Full credit has been awarded the Roundhead
and the Cavalier for their leadership in our history;
nor have we been altogether blind to the deeds of
the Hollander and the Huguenot; but it is doubtful
if we have wholly realized the importance of the part
played by that stern and virile people, the Irish
whose preachers taught the creed of Knox and Calvin.
These Irish representatives of the Covenanters were
in the west almost what the Puritans were in the northeast,
and more than the Cavaliers were in the south.
Mingled with the descendants of many other races,
they nevertheless formed the kernel of the distinctively
and intensely American stock who were the pioneers
of our people in their march westward, the vanguard
of the army of fighting settlers, who with axe and
rifle won their way from the Alleghanies to the Rio
Grande and the Pacific.
The Presbyterian Irish were themselves
already a mixed people. Though mainly descended
from Scotch ancestors who came originally
from both lowlands and highlands, from among both
the Scotch Saxons and the Scotch Celts, many
of them were of English, a few of French Huguenot,
and quite a number of true old Milesian Irish extraction.
They were the Protestants of the Protestants; they
detested and despised the Catholics, whom their ancestors
had conquered, and regarded the Episcopalians by whom
they themselves had been oppressed, with a more sullen,
but scarcely less intense, hatred. They were a truculent
and obstinate people, and gloried in the warlike renown
of their forefathers, the men who had followed Cromwell,
and who had shared in the defence of Derry and in
the victories of the Boyne and Aughrim.
They did not begin to come to America
in any numbers till after the opening of the eighteenth
century; by 1730 they were fairly swarming across
the ocean, for the most part in two streams, the larger
going to the port of Philadelphia, the smaller to
the port of Charleston. Pushing through the long
settled lowlands of the seacoast, they at once made
their abode at the foot of the mountains, and became
the outposts of civilization. From Pennsylvania,
whither the great majority had come, they drifted
south along the foothills, and down the long valleys,
till they met their brethren from Charleston who had
pushed up into the Carolina back-country. In
this land of hills, covered by unbroken forest, they
took root and flourished, stretching in a broad belt
from north to south, a shield of sinewy men thrust
in between the people of the seaboard and the red
warriors of the wilderness. All through this
region they were alike; they had as little kinship
with the Cavalier as with the Quaker; the west was
won by those who have been rightly called the Roundheads
of the south, the same men who, before any others,
declared for American independence.
The two facts of most importance to
remember in dealing with our pioneer history are,
first, that the western portions of Virginia and the
Carolinas were peopled by an entirely different stock
from that which had long existed in the tide-water
regions of those colonies; and, secondly, that, except
for those in the Carolinas who came from Charleston,
the immigrants of this stock were mostly from the north,
from their great breeding-ground and nursery in western
Pennsylvania.
That these Irish Presbyterians were
a bold and hardy race is proved by their at once pushing
past the settled regions, and plunging into the wilderness
as the leaders of the white advance. They were
the first and last set of immigrants to do this; all
others have merely followed in the wake of their predecessors.
But, indeed, they were fitted to be Americans from
the very start; they were kinsfolk of the Covenanters;
they deemed it a religious duty to interpret their
own Bible, and held for a divine right the election
of their own clergy. For generations their whole
ecclesiastic and scholastic systems had been fundamentally
democratic. In the hard life of the frontier they
lost much of their religion, and they had but scant
opportunity to give their children the schooling in
which they believed; but what few meeting-houses and
school-houses there were on the border were theirs.
The numerous families of colonial English who came
among them adopted their religion if they adopted
any. The creed of the backwoodsman who had a creed
at all was Presbyterianism; for the Episcopacy of
the tide-water lands obtained no foothold in the mountains,
and the Methodists and Baptists had but just begun
to appear in the west when the Revolution broke out.
These Presbyterian Irish were, however,
far from being the only settlers on the border, although
more than any others they impressed the stamp of their
peculiar character on the pioneer civilization of the
west and southwest. Great numbers of immigrants
of English descent came among them from the settled
districts on the east; and though these later arrivals
soon became indistinguishable from the people among
whom they settled, yet they certainly sometimes added
a tone of their own to backwoods society, giving it
here and there a slight dash of what we are accustomed
to consider the distinctively southern or cavalier
spirit. There was likewise a large German admixture,
not only from the Germans of Pennsylvania, but also
from those of the Carolinas. A good many Huguenots
likewise came, and a few Hollanders and even
Swedes, from the banks of the Delaware, or perhaps
from farther off still.
A single generation, passed under
the hard conditions of life in the wilderness, was
enough to weld together into one people the representatives
of these numerous and widely different races; and the
children of the next generation became indistinguishable
from one another. Long before the first Continental
Congress assembled, the backwoodsmen, whatever their
blood, had become Americans, one in speech, thought,
and character, clutching firmly the land in which their
fathers and grandfathers had lived before them.
They had lost all remembrance of Europe and all sympathy
with things European; they had become as emphatically
products native to the soil as were the tough and supple
hickories out of which they fashioned the handles of
their long, light axes. Their grim, harsh, narrow
lives were yet strangely fascinating and full of adventurous
toil and danger; none but natures as strong, as freedom-loving,
and as full of bold defiance as theirs could have
endured existence on the terms which these men found
pleasurable. Their iron surroundings made a mould
which turned out all alike in the same shape.
They resembled one another, and they differed from
the rest of the world even the world of
America, and infinitely more the world of Europe in
dress, in customs, and in mode of life.
Where their lands abutted on the more
settled districts to the eastward, the population
was of course thickest, and their peculiarities least.
Here and there at such points they built small backwoods
burgs or towns, rude, straggling, unkempt villages,
with a store or two, a tavern, sometimes
good, often a “scandalous hog-sty,” where
travellers were devoured by fleas, and every one slept
and ate in one room, a small log school-house,
and a little church, presided over by a hard-featured
Presbyterian preacher, gloomy, earnest, and zealous,
probably bigoted and narrow-minded, but nevertheless
a great power for good in the community.
However, the backwoodsmen as a class
neither built towns nor loved to dwell therein.
They were to be seen at their best in the vast, interminable
forests that formed their chosen home. They won
and kept their lands by force, and ever lived either
at war or in dread of war. Hence they settled
always in groups of several families each, all banded
together for mutual protection. Their red foes
were strong and terrible, cunning in council, dreadful
in battle, merciless beyond belief in victory.
The men of the border did not overcome and dispossess
cowards and weaklings; they marched forth to spoil
the stout-hearted and to take for a prey the possessions
of the men of might. Every acre, every rood of
ground which they claimed had to be cleared by the
axe and held with the rifle. Not only was the
chopping down of the forest the first preliminary
to cultivation, but it was also the surest means of
subduing the Indians, to whom the unending stretches
of choked woodland were an impenetrable cover behind
which to move unseen, a shield in making assaults,
and a strong tower of defence in repelling counter-attacks.
In the conquest of the west the backwoods axe, shapely,
well-poised, with long haft and light head, was a
servant hardly standing second even to the rifle;
the two were the national weapons of the American
backwoodsman, and in their use he has never been excelled.
When a group of families moved out
into the wilderness they built themselves a station
or stockade fort; a square palisade of upright logs,
loop-holed, with strong blockhouses as bastions at
the corners. One side at least was generally
formed by the backs of the cabins themselves, all
standing in a row; and there was a great door or gate,
that could be strongly barred in case of need.
Often no iron whatever was employed in any of the
buildings. The square inside contained the provision
sheds and frequently a strong central blockhouse as
well. These forts, of course, could not stand
against cannon, and they were always in danger when
attacked with fire; but save for this risk of burning
they were very effectual defences against men without
artillery, and were rarely taken, whether by whites
or Indians, except by surprise. Few other buildings
have played so important a part in our history as
the rough stockade fort of the backwoods.
The families only lived in the fort
when there was war with the Indians, and even then
not in the winter. At other times they all separated
out to their own farms, universally called clearings,
as they were always made by first cutting off the
timber. The stumps were left to dot the fields
of grain and Indian corn. The corn in especial
was the stand-by and invariable resource of the western
settler; it was the crop on which he relied to feed
his family, and when hunting or on a war trail the
parched grains were carried in his leather wallet to
serve often as his only food. But he planted
orchards and raised melons, potatoes, and many other
fruits and vegetables as well; and he had usually a
horse or two, cows, and perhaps hogs and sheep, if
the wolves and bears did not interfere. If he
was poor his cabin was made of unhewn logs, and held
but a single room; if well-to-do, the logs were neatly
hewed, and besides the large living- and eating-room
with its huge stone fireplace, there was also a small
bedroom and a kitchen, while a ladder led to the loft
above, in which the boys slept. The floor was
made of puncheons, great slabs of wood hewed carefully
out, and the roof of clapboards. Pegs of wood
were thrust into the sides of the house, to serve instead
of a wardrobe; and buck antlers, thrust into joists,
held the ever-ready rifles. The table was a great
clapboard set on four wooden legs; there were three-legged
stools, and in the better sort of houses old-fashioned
rocking-chairs. The couch or bed was warmly covered
with blankets, bear-skins, and deer-hides.
These clearings lay far apart from
one another in the wilderness. Up to the door-sills
of the log-huts stretched the solemn and mysterious
forest. There were no openings to break its continuity;
nothing but endless leagues on leagues of shadowy,
wolf-haunted woodland. The great trees towered
aloft till their separate heads were lost in the mass
of foliage above, and the rank underbrush choked the
spaces between the trunks. On the higher peaks
and ridge-crests of the mountains there were straggling
birches and pines, hemlocks and balsam firs; elsewhere,
oaks, chestnuts, hickories, maples, beeches, walnuts,
and great tulip trees grew side by side with many
other kinds. The sunlight could not penetrate
the roofed archway of murmuring leaves; through the
gray aisles of the forest men walked always in a kind
of mid-day gloaming. Those who had lived in the
open plains felt when they came to the backwoods as
if their heads were hooded. Save on the border
of a lake, from a cliff top, or on a bald knob that
is, a bare hill-shoulder, they could not
anywhere look out for any distance.
All the land was shrouded in one vast
forest. It covered the mountains from crest to
river-bed, filled the plains, and stretched in sombre
and melancholy wastes towards the Mississippi.
All that it contained, all that lay hid within it
and beyond it, none could tell; men only knew that
their boldest hunters, however deeply they had penetrated,
had not yet gone through it, that it was the home
of the game they followed and the wild beasts that
preyed on their flocks, and that deep in its tangled
depths lurked their red foes, hawk-eyed and wolf-hearted.
Backwoods society was simple, and
the duties and rights of each member of the family
were plain and clear. The man was the armed protector
and provider, the bread-winner; the woman was the
housewife and child-bearer. They married young
and their families were large, for they were strong
and healthy, and their success in life depended on
their own stout arms and willing hearts. There
was everywhere great equality of conditions.
Land was plenty and all else scarce; so courage, thrift,
and industry were sure of their reward. All had
small farms, with the few stock necessary to cultivate
them; the farms being generally placed in the hollows,
the division lines between them, if they were close
together, being the tops of the ridges and the watercourses,
especially the former. The buildings of each
farm were usually at its lowest point, as if in the
centre of an amphitheatre. Each was on an average
of about 400 acres, but sometimes more. Tracts
of low, swampy grounds, possibly some miles from the
cabin, were cleared for meadows, the fodder being
stacked, and hauled home in winter.
Each backwoodsman was not only a small
farmer but also a hunter; for his wife and children
depended for their meat upon the venison and bear’s
flesh procured by his rifle. The people were restless
and always on the move. After being a little
while in a place, some of the men would settle down
permanently, while others would again drift off, farming
and hunting alternately to support their families.
The backwoodsman’s dress was in great part borrowed
from his Indian foes. He wore a fur cap or felt
hat, moccasins, and either loose, thin trousers, or
else simply leggings of buckskin or elk-hide, and
the Indian breech-clout. He was always clad in
the fringed hunting-shirt, of homespun or buckskin,
the most picturesque and distinctively national dress
ever worn in America. It was a loose smock or
tunic, reaching nearly to the knees, and held in at
the waist by a broad belt, from which hung the tomahawk
and scalping-knife. His weapon was the long, small-bore,
flint-lock rifle, clumsy, and ill-balanced, but exceedingly
accurate. It was very heavy, and when upright,
reached to the chin of a tall man; for the barrel
of thick, soft iron, was four feet in length, while
the stock was short, and the butt scooped out.
Sometimes it was plain, sometimes ornamented.
It was generally bored out or, as the expression
then was, “sawed out” to carry
a ball of seventy, more rarely of thirty or forty,
to the pound; and was usually of backwoods manufacture.
The marksman almost always fired from a rest, and
rarely at a very long range; and the shooting was
marvellously accurate.
In the backwoods there was very little
money; barter was the common form of exchange, and
peltries were often used as a circulating medium, a
beaver, otter, fisher, dressed buckskin or large bearskin
being reckoned as equal to two foxes or wildcats,
four coons, or eight minks. A young man inherited
nothing from his father but his strong frame and eager
heart; but before him lay a whole continent wherein
to pitch his farm, and he felt ready to marry as soon
as he became of age, even though he had nothing but
his clothes, his horses, his axe, and his rifle.
If a girl was well off, and had been careful and industrious,
she might herself bring a dowry, of a cow and a calf,
a brood mare, a bed well stocked with blankets, and
a chest containing her clothes the
latter not very elaborate, for a woman’s dress
consisted of a hat or poke bonnet, a “bed gown,”
perhaps a jacket, and a linsey petticoat, while her
feet were thrust into coarse shoepacks or moccasins.
Fine clothes were rare; a suit of such cost more than
200 acres of good land.
The first lesson the backwoodsmen
learnt was the necessity of self-help; the next, that
such a community could only thrive if all joined in
helping one another. Log-rollings, house-raisings,
house-warmings, corn-shuckings, quiltings, and the
like were occasions when all the neighbors came together
to do what the family itself could hardly accomplish
alone. Every such meeting was the occasion of
a frolic and dance for the young people, whisky and
rum being plentiful, and the host exerting his utmost
power to spread the table with backwoods delicacies bear-meat
and venison, vegetables from the “truck patch,”
where squashes, melons, beans, and the like were grown,
wild fruits, bowls of milk, and apple pies, which
were the acknowledged standard of luxury. At
the better houses there was metheglin or small beer,
cider, cheese, and biscuits. Tea was so little
known that many of the backwoods people were not aware
it was a beverage and at first attempted to eat the
leaves with salt or butter.
The young men prided themselves on
their bodily strength, and were always eager to contend
against one another in athletic games, such as wrestling,
racing, jumping, and lifting flour-barrels; and they
also sought distinction in vieing with one another
at their work. Sometimes they strove against
one another singly, sometimes they divided into parties,
each bending all its energies to be first in shucking
a given heap of corn or cutting (with sickles) an
allotted patch of wheat. Among the men the bravos
or bullies often were dandies also in the backwoods
fashions, wearing their hair long and delighting in
the rude finery of hunting-shirts embroidered with
porcupine quills; they were loud, boastful, and profane,
given to coarsely bantering one another. Brutally
savage fights were frequent; the combatants, who were
surrounded by rings of interested spectators, striking,
kicking, biting, and gouging. The fall of one
of them did not stop the fight, for the man who was
down was maltreated without mercy until he called
“enough.” The victor always bragged
savagely of his prowess, often leaping on a stump,
crowing and flapping his arms. This last was
a thoroughly American touch; but otherwise one of
these contests was less a boxing match than a kind
of backwoods pankration, no less revolting
than its ancient prototype of Olympic fame. Yet,
if the uncouth borderers were as brutal as the highly
polished Greeks, they were more manly; defeat was not
necessarily considered disgrace, a man often fighting
when he was certain to be beaten, while the onlookers
neither hooted nor pelted the conquered. We first
hear of the noted scout and Indian fighter, Simon
Kenton, as leaving a rival for dead after one of these
ferocious duels, and fleeing from his home in terror
of the punishment that might follow the deed.
Such fights were specially frequent when the backwoodsmen
went into the little frontier towns to see horse races
or fairs.
A wedding was always a time of festival.
If there was a church anywhere near, the bride rode
thither on horseback behind her father, and after
the service her pillion was shifted to the bridegroom’s
steed. If, as generally happened, there was no
church, the groom and his friends, all armed, rode
to the house of the bride’s father, plenty of
whisky being drunk, and the men racing recklessly
along the narrow bridle-paths, for there were few
roads or wheeled vehicles in the backwoods. At
the bride’s house the ceremony was performed,
and then a huge dinner was eaten, after which the
fiddling and dancing began, and were continued all
the afternoon, and most of the night as well.
A party of girls stole off the bride and put her to
bed in the loft above; and a party of young men then
performed the like service for the groom. The
fun was hearty and coarse, and the toasts always included
one to the young couple, with the wish that they might
have many big children; for as long as they could
remember the backwoodsmen had lived at war, while
looking ahead they saw no chance of its ever stopping,
and so each son was regarded as a future warrior,
a help to the whole community. The neighbors all
joined again in chopping and rolling the logs for the
young couple’s future house, then in raising
the house itself, and finally in feasting and dancing
at the house-warming.
Funerals were simple, the dead body
being carried to the grave in a coffin slung on poles
and borne by four men.
There was not much schooling, and
few boys or girls learnt much more than reading, writing,
and ciphering up to the rule of three. Where the
school-houses existed they were only dark, mean log-huts,
and if in the southern colonies, were generally placed
in the so-called “old fields,” or abandoned
farms grown up with pines. The schoolmaster boarded
about with the families; his learning was rarely great,
nor was his discipline good, in spite of the frequency
and severity of the canings. The price for such
tuition was at the rate of twenty shillings a year,
in Pennsylvania currency.
Each family did every thing that could
be done for itself. The father and sons worked
with axe, hoe, and sickle. Almost every house
contained a loom, and almost every woman was a weaver.
Linsey-woolsey, made from flax grown near the cabin,
and of wool from the backs of the few sheep, was the
warmest and most substantial cloth; and when the flax
crop failed and the flocks were destroyed by wolves,
the children had but scanty covering to hide their
nakedness. The man tanned the buckskin, the woman
was tailor and shoemaker, and made the deerskin sifters
to be used instead of bolting-cloths. There were
a few pewter spoons in use; but the table furniture
consisted mainly of hand-made trenchers, platters,
noggins, and bowls. The cradle was of peeled hickory
bark. Ploughshares had to be imported, but harrows
and sleds were made without difficulty; and the cooper
work was well done. Chaff beds were thrown on
the floor of the loft, if the house-owner was well
off. Each cabin had a hand-mill and a hominy
block; the last was borrowed from the Indians, and
was only a large block of wood, with a hole burned
in the top, as a mortar, where the pestle was worked.
If there were any sugar maples accessible, they were
tapped every year.
But some articles, especially salt
and iron, could not be produced in the backwoods.
In order to get them each family collected during the
year all the furs possible, these being valuable and
yet easily carried on pack-horses, the sole means
of transport. Then, after seeding time, in the
fall, the people of a neighborhood ordinarily joined
in sending down a train of peltry-laden pack-horses
to some large sea-coast or tidal-river trading town,
where their burdens were bartered for the needed iron
and salt. The unshod horses all had bells hung
round their neck; the clappers were stopped during
the day, but when the train was halted for the night,
and the horses were hobbled and turned loose, the
bells were once more unstopped. Several men accompanied
each little caravan, and sometimes they drove with
them steers and hogs to sell on the sea-coast.
A bushel of alum salt was worth a good cow and calf,
and as each of the poorly fed, undersized pack animals
could carry but two bushels, the mountaineers prized
it greatly, and instead of salting or pickling their
venison, they jerked it, by drying it in the sun or
smoking it over a fire.
The life of the backwoodsmen was one
long struggle. The forest had to be felled, droughts,
deep snows, freshets, cloudbursts, forest fires, and
all the other dangers of a wilderness life faced.
Swarms of deer-flies, mosquitoes, and midges rendered
life a torment in the weeks of hot weather. Rattlesnakes
and copperheads were very plentiful, and, the former
especially, constant sources of danger and death.
Wolves and bears were incessant and inveterate foes
of the live stock, and the cougar or panther occasionally
attacked man as well. More terrible still, the
wolves sometimes went mad, and the men who then encountered
them were almost certain to be bitten and to die of
hydrophobia.
Every true backwoodsman was a hunter.
Wild turkeys were plentiful. The pigeons at times
filled the woods with clouds that hid the sun and broke
down the branches on their roosting grounds as if a
whirlwind had passed. The black and gray squirrels
swarmed, devastating the corn-fields, and at times
gathering in immense companies and migrating across
mountain and river. The hunter’s ordinary
game was the deer, and after that the bear; the elk
was already growing uncommon. No form of labor
is harder than the chase, and none is so fascinating
nor so excellent as a training-school for war.
The successful still-hunter of necessity possessed
skill in hiding and in creeping noiselessly upon the
wary quarry, as well as in imitating the notes and
calls of the different beasts and birds; skill in
the use of the rifle and in throwing the tomahawk
he already had; and he perforce acquired keenness
of eye, thorough acquaintance with woodcraft, and the
power of standing the severest strains of fatigue,
hardship and exposure. He lived out in the woods
for many months with no food but meat, and no shelter
whatever, unless he made a lean-to of brush or crawled
into a hollow sycamore.
Such training stood the frontier folk
in good stead when they were pitted against the Indians;
without it they could not even have held their own,
and the white advance would have been absolutely checked.
Our frontiers were pushed westward by the warlike
skill and adventurous personal prowess of the individual
settlers; regular armies by themselves could have
done little. For one square mile the regular
armies added to our domain, the settlers added ten, a
hundred would probably be nearer the truth. A
race of peaceful, unwarlike farmers would have been
helpless before such foes as the red Indians, and no
auxiliary military force could have protected them
or enabled them to move westward. Colonists fresh
from the old world, no matter how thrifty, steady-going,
and industrious, could not hold their own on the frontier;
they had to settle where they were protected from the
Indians by a living barrier of bold and self-reliant
American borderers. The west would never have
been settled save for the fierce courage and the eager
desire to brave danger so characteristic of the stalwart
backwoodsmen.
These armed hunters, woodchoppers,
and farmers were their own soldiers. They built
and manned their own forts; they did their own fighting
under their own commanders. There were no regiments
of regular troops along the frontier. In the event
of an Indian inroad each borderer had to defend himself
until there was time for them all to gather together
to repel or avenge it. Every man was accustomed
to the use of arms from his childhood; when a boy
was twelve years old he was given a rifle and made
a fort-soldier, with a loophole where he was to stand
if the station was attacked. The war was never-ending,
for even the times of so-called peace were broken
by forays and murders; a man might grow from babyhood
to middle age on the border, and yet never remember
a year in which some one of his neighbors did not
fall a victim to the Indians.
There was everywhere a rude military
organization, which included all the able-bodied men
of the community. Every settlement had its colonels
and captains; but these officers, both in their training
and in the authority they exercised, corresponded
much more nearly to Indian chiefs than to the regular
army men whose titles they bore. They had no means
whatever of enforcing their orders, and their tumultuous
and disorderly levies of sinewy riflemen were hardly
as well disciplined as the Indians themselves.
The superior officer could advise, entreat, lead, and
influence his men, but he could not command them, or,
if he did, the men obeyed him only just so far as
it suited them. If an officer planned a scout
or campaign, those who thought proper accompanied him,
and the others stayed at home, and even those who
went out came back if the fit seized them, or perchance
followed the lead of an insubordinate junior officer
whom they liked better than they did his superior.
There was no compulsion to perform military duties
beyond dread of being disgraced in the eyes of the
neighbors, and there was no pecuniary reward for performing
them; nevertheless the moral sentiment of a backwoods
community was too robust to tolerate habitual remissness
in military affairs, and the coward and laggard were
treated with utter scorn, and were generally in the
end either laughed out, or “hated out,”
of the neighborhood, or else got rid of in a still
more summary manner. Among a people naturally
brave and reckless, this public opinion acted fairly
effectively, and there was generally but little shrinking
from military service.
A backwoods levy was formidable because
of the high average courage and prowess of the individuals
composing it; it was on its own ground much more effective
than a like force of regular soldiers, but of course
it could not be trusted on a long campaign. The
backwoodsmen used their rifles better than the Indians,
and also stood punishment better, but they never matched
them in surprises nor in skill in taking advantage
of cover, and very rarely equalled their discipline
in the battle itself. After all, the pioneer
was primarily a husbandman; the time spent in chopping
trees and tilling the soil his foe spent in preparing
for or practising forest warfare, and so the former,
thanks to the exercise of the very qualities which
in the end gave him the possession of the soil, could
not, as a rule, hope to rival his antagonist in the
actual conflict itself. When large bodies of
the red men and white borderers were pitted against
each other, the former were if any thing the more
likely to have the advantage. But the whites soon
copied from the Indians their system of individual
and private warfare, and they probably caused their
foes far more damage and loss in this way than in
the large expeditions. Many noted border scouts
and Indian fighters such men as Boon, Kenton,
Wetzel, Brady, McCulloch, Mansker grew
to overmatch their Indian foes at their own game, and
held themselves above the most renowned warriors.
But these men carried the spirit of defiant self-reliance
to such an extreme that their best work was always
done when they were alone or in small parties of but
four or five. They made long forays after scalps
and horses, going a wonderful distance, enduring extreme
hardship, risking the most terrible of deaths, and
harrying the hostile tribes into a madness of terror
and revengeful hatred.
As it was in military matters, so
it was with the administration of justice by the frontiersmen;
they had few courts, and knew but little law, and
yet they contrived to preserve order and morality with
rough effectiveness, by combining to frown down on
the grosser misdeeds, and to punish the more flagrant
misdoers. Perhaps the spirit in which they acted
can be best shown by the recital of an incident in
the career of the three McAfee brothers, who were
among the pioneer hunters of Kentucky. Previous
to trying to move their families out to the new country,
they made a cache of clothing, implements, and provisions,
which in their absence was broken into and plundered.
They caught the thief, “a little diminutive,
red-headed white man,” a runaway convict servant
from one of the tide-water counties of Virginia.
In the first impulse of anger at finding that he was
the criminal, one of the McAfees rushed at him to
kill him with his tomahawk; but the weapon turned,
the man was only knocked down, and his assailant’s
gusty anger subsided as quickly as it had risen, giving
way to a desire to do stern but fair justice.
So the three captors formed themselves into a court,
examined into the case, heard the man in his own defence,
and after due consultation decided that “according
to their opinion of the laws he had forfeited his
life, and ought to be hung”; but none of them
were willing to execute the sentence in cold blood,
and they ended by taking their prisoner back to his
master.
The incident was characteristic in
more than one way. The prompt desire of the backwoodsman
to avenge his own wrong; his momentary furious anger,
speedily quelled and replaced by a dogged determination
to be fair but to exact full retribution; the acting
entirely without regard to legal forms or legal officials,
but yet in a spirit which spoke well for the doer’s
determination to uphold the essentials that make honest
men law-abiding; together with the good faith of the
whole proceeding, and the amusing ignorance that it
would have been in the least unlawful to execute their
own rather harsh sentence all these were
typical frontier traits. Some of the same traits
appear in the treatment commonly adopted in the backwoods
to meet the case of painfully frequent
occurrence in the times of Indian wars where
a man taken prisoner by the savages, and supposed
to be murdered, returned after two or three years’
captivity, only to find his wife married again.
In the wilderness a husband was almost a necessity
to a woman; her surroundings made the loss of the
protector and provider an appalling calamity; and
the widow, no matter how sincere her sorrow, soon remarried for
there were many suitors where women were not over-plenty.
If in such a case the one thought dead returned, the
neighbors and the parties interested seem frequently
to have held a sort of informal court, and to have
decided that the woman should choose either of the
two men she wished to be her husband, the other being
pledged to submit to the decision and leave the settlement.
Evidently no one had the least idea that there was
any legal irregularity in such proceedings.
The McAfees themselves and the escaped
convict servant whom they captured typify the two
prominent classes of the backwoods people. The
frontier, in spite of the outward uniformity of means
and manners, is preeminently the place of sharp contrasts.
The two extremes of society, the strongest, best,
and most adventurous, and the weakest, most shiftless,
and vicious, are those which seem naturally to drift
to the border. Most of the men who came to the
backwoods to hew out homes and rear families were
stern, manly, and honest; but there was also a large
influx of people drawn from the worst immigrants that
perhaps ever were brought to America the
mass of convict servants, redemptioners, and the like,
who formed such an excessively undesirable substratum
to the otherwise excellent population of the tide-water
regions in Virginia and the Carolinas. Many of
the southern crackers or poor whites spring from this
class, which also in the backwoods gave birth to generations
of violent and hardened criminals, and to an even greater
number of shiftless, lazy, cowardly cumberers of the
earth’s surface. They had in many places
a permanently bad effect upon the tone of the whole
community.
Moreover, the influence of heredity
was no more plainly perceptible than was the extent
of individual variation. If a member of a bad
family wished to reform, he had every opportunity
to do so; if a member of a good family had vicious
propensities, there was nothing to check them.
All qualities, good and bad, are intensified and accentuated
in the life of the wilderness. The man who in
civilization is merely sullen and bad-tempered becomes
a murderous, treacherous ruffian when transplanted
to the wilds; while, on the other hand, his cheery,
quiet neighbor develops into a hero, ready uncomplainingly
to lay down his life for his friend. One who
in an eastern city is merely a backbiter and slanderer,
in the western woods lies in wait for his foe with
a rifle; sharp practice in the east becomes highway
robbery in the west; but at the same time negative
good-nature becomes active self-sacrifice, and a general
belief in virtue is translated into a prompt and determined
war upon vice. The ne’er-do-well of a family
who in one place has his debts paid a couple of times
and is then forced to resign from his clubs and lead
a cloudy but innocuous existence on a small pension,
in the other abruptly finishes his career by being
hung for horse-stealing.
In the backwoods the lawless led lives
of abandoned wickedness; they hated good for good’s
sake, and did their utmost to destroy it. Where
the bad element was large, gangs of horse thieves,
highwaymen, and other criminals often united with
the uncontrollable young men of vicious tastes who
were given to gambling, fighting, and the like.
They then formed half-secret organizations, often
of great extent and with wide ramifications; and if
they could control a community they established a
reign of terror, driving out both ministers and magistrates,
and killing without scruple those who interfered with
them. The good men in such a case banded themselves
together as regulators and put down the wicked with
ruthless severity, by the exercise of lynch law, shooting
and hanging the worst off-hand.
Jails were scarce in the wilderness,
and often were entirely wanting in a district, which,
indeed, was quite likely to lack legal officers also.
If punishment was inflicted at all it was apt to be
severe, and took the form of death or whipping.
An impromptu jury of neighbors decided with a rough
and ready sense of fair play and justice what punishment
the crime demanded, and then saw to the execution
of their own decree. Whipping was the usual reward
of theft. Occasionally torture was resorted to,
but not often; and to their honor be it said, the
backwoodsmen were horrified at the treatment accorded
both to black slaves and to white convict servants
in the lowlands.
They were superstitious, of course,
believing in witchcraft, and signs and omens; and
it may be noted that their superstition showed a singular
mixture of old-world survivals and of practices borrowed
from the savages or evolved by the very force of their
strange surroundings. At the bottom they were
deeply religious in their tendencies; and although
ministers and meeting-houses were rare, yet the backwoods
cabins often contained Bibles, and the mothers used
to instil into the minds of their children reverence
for Sunday, while many even of the hunters refused
to hunt on that day. Those of them who knew the
right honestly tried to live up to it, in spite of
the manifold temptations to backsliding offered by
their lives of hard and fierce contention. But
Calvinism, though more congenial to them than Episcopacy,
and infinitely more so than Catholicism, was too cold
for the fiery hearts of the borderers; they were not
stirred to the depths of their natures till other
creeds, and, above all, Methodism, worked their way
to the wilderness.
Thus the backwoodsmen lived on the
clearings they had hewed out of the everlasting forest;
a grim, stern people, strong and simple, powerful
for good and evil, swayed by gusts of stormy passion,
the love of freedom rooted in their very hearts’
core. Their lives were harsh and narrow; they
gained their bread by their blood and sweat, in the
unending struggle with the wild ruggedness of nature.
They suffered terrible injuries at the hands of the
red men, and on their foes they waged a terrible warfare
in return. They were relentless, revengeful,
suspicious, knowing neither ruth nor pity; they were
also upright, resolute, and fearless, loyal to their
friends, and devoted to their country. In spite
of their many failings, they were of all men the best
fitted to conquer the wilderness and hold it against
all comers.