BOON AND THE LONG HUNTERS; AND THEIR
HUNTING IN NO-MAN’S-LAND 1769-1774.
The American backwoodsmen had surged
up, wave upon wave, till their mass trembled in the
troughs of the Alleghanies, ready to flood the continent
beyond. The peoples threatened by them were dimly
conscious of the danger which as yet only loomed in
the distance. Far off, among their quiet adobe
villages, in the sun-scorched lands by the Rio Grande,
the slow Indo-Iberian péons and their monkish
masters still walked in the tranquil steps of their
fathers, ignorant of the growth of the power that
was to overwhelm their children and successors; but
nearer by, Spaniard and Creole Frenchman, Algonquin
and Appalachian, were all uneasy as they began to
feel the first faint pressure of the American advance.
As yet they had been shielded by the
forest which lay over the land like an unrent mantle.
All through the mountains, and far beyond, it stretched
without a break; but towards the mouth of the Kentucky
and Cumberland rivers the landscape became varied
with open groves of woodland, with flower-strewn glades
and great barrens or prairies of long grass.
This region, one of the fairest in the world, was the
debatable ground between the northern and the southern
Indians. Neither dared dwell therein, but
both used it as their hunting-grounds; and it was
traversed from end to end by the well marked war traces
which they followed when they invaded each other’s
territory. The whites, on trying to break through
the barrier which hemmed them in from the western
lands, naturally succeeded best when pressing along
the line of least resistance; and so their first great
advance was made in this debatable land, where the
uncertainly defined hunting-grounds of the Cherokee,
Creek, and Chickasaw marched upon those of northern
Algonquin and Wyandot.
Unknown and unnamed hunters and Indian
traders had from time to time pushed some little way
into the wilderness; and they had been followed by
others of whom we do indeed know the names, but little
more. One explorer had found and named the Cumberland
river and mountains, and the great pass called Cumberland
Gap. Others had gone far beyond the utmost limits
this man had reached, and had hunted in the great bend
of the Cumberland and in the woodland region of Kentucky,
famed amongst the Indians for the abundance of the
game. But their accounts excited no more than a
passing interest; they came and went without comment,
as lonely stragglers had come and gone for nearly
a century. The backwoods civilization crept slowly
westward without being influenced in its movements
by their explorations.
Finally, however, among these hunters
one arose whose wanderings were to bear fruit; who
was destined to lead through the wilderness the first
body of settlers that ever established a community
in the far west, completely cut off from the seaboard
colonies. This was Daniel Boon. He was born
in Pennsylvania in 1734, but when only a boy had
been brought with the rest of his family to the banks
of the Yadkin in North Carolina. Here he grew
up, and as soon as he came of age he married, built
a log hut, and made a clearing, whereon to farm like
the rest of his backwoods neighbors. They all
tilled their own clearings, guiding the plow among
the charred stumps left when the trees were chopped
down and the land burned over, and they were all,
as a matter of course, hunters. With Boon hunting
and exploration were passions, and the lonely life
of the wilderness, with its bold, wild freedom, the
only existence for which he really cared. He
was a tall, spare, sinewy man, with eyes like an eagle’s,
and muscles that never tired; the toil and hardship
of his life made no impress on his iron frame, unhurt
by intemperance of any kind, and he lived for eighty-six
years, a backwoods hunter to the end of his days.
His thoughtful, quiet, pleasant face, so often portrayed,
is familiar to every one; it was the face of a man
who never blustered or bullied, who would neither
inflict nor suffer any wrong, and who had a limitless
fund of fortitude, endurance, and indomitable resolution
upon which to draw when fortune proved adverse.
His self-command and patience, his daring, restless
love of adventure, and, in time of danger, his absolute
trust in his own powers and resources, all combined
to render him peculiarly fitted to follow the career
of which he was so fond.
Boon hunted on the western waters
at an early date. In the valley of Boon’s
Creek, a tributary of the Watauga, there is a beech
tree still standing, on which can be faintly traced
an inscription setting forth that “D. Boon
cilled a bar on (this) tree in the year 1760." On
the expeditions of which this is the earliest record
he was partly hunting on his own account, and partly
exploring on behalf of another, Richard Henderson.
Henderson was a prominent citizen of North Carolina,
a speculative man of great ambition and energy.
He stood high in the colony, was extravagant and fond
of display, and his fortune being jeopardized he hoped
to more than retrieve it by going into speculations
in western lands on an unheard of scale; for he intended
to try to establish on his own account a great proprietary
colony beyond the mountains. He had great confidence
in Boon; and it was his backing which enabled the
latter to turn his discoveries to such good account.
Boon’s claim to distinction
rests not so much on his wide wanderings in unknown
lands, for in this respect he did little more than
was done by a hundred other backwoods hunters of his
generation, but on the fact that he was able to turn
his daring woodcraft to the advantage of his fellows.
As he himself said, he was an instrument “ordained
of God to settle the wilderness.” He inspired
confidence in all who met him, so that the men
of means and influence were willing to trust adventurous
enterprises to his care; and his success as an explorer,
his skill as a hunter, and his prowess as an Indian
fighter, enabled him to bring these enterprises to
a successful conclusion, and in some degree to control
the wild spirits associated with him.
Boon’s expeditions into the
edges of the wilderness whetted his appetite for the
unknown. He had heard of great hunting-grounds
in the far interior from a stray hunter and Indian
trader, who had himself seen them, and on May
1, 1769, he left his home on the Yadkin “to wander
through the wilderness of America in quest of the country
of Kentucky." He was accompanied by five other
men, including his informant, and struck out towards
the northwest, through the tangled mass of rugged
mountains and gloomy forests. During five weeks
of severe toil the little band journeyed through vast
solitudes, whose utter loneliness can with difficulty
be understood by those who have not themselves dwelt
and hunted in primaeval mountain forests. Then,
early in June, the adventurers broke through the interminable
wastes of dim woodland, and stood on the threshold
of the beautiful blue-grass region of Kentucky; a
land of running waters, of groves and glades, of prairies,
cane-brakes, and stretches of lofty forest. It
was teeming with game. The shaggy-maned herds
of unwieldy buffalo the bison as they should
be called had beaten out broad roads through
the forest, and had furrowed the prairies with trails
along which they had travelled for countless generations.
The round-horned elk, with spreading, massive antlers,
the lordliest of the deer tribe throughout the world,
abounded, and like the buffalo travelled in bands
not only through the woods but also across the reaches
of waving grass land. The deer were extraordinarily
numerous, and so were bears, while wolves and panthers
were plentiful.
Wherever there was a salt spring the
country was fairly thronged with wild beasts of many
kinds. For six months Boon and his companions
enjoyed such hunting as had hardly fallen to men of
their race since the Germans came out of the Hercynian
forest.
In December, however, they were attacked
by Indians. Boon and a companion were captured;
and when they escaped they found their camp broken
up, and the rest of the party scattered and gone home.
About this time they were joined by Squire Boon, the
brother of the great hunter, and himself a woodsman
of but little less skill, together with another adventurer;
the two had travelled through the immense wilderness,
partly to explore it and partly with the hope of finding
the original adventurers, which they finally succeeded
in doing more by good luck than design. Soon
afterwards Boon’s companion in his first short
captivity was again surprised by the Indians, and this
time was slain the first of the thousands
of human beings with whose life-blood Kentucky was
bought. The attack was entirely unprovoked.
The Indians had wantonly shed the first blood.
The land belonged to no one tribe, but was hunted
over by all, each feeling jealous of every other intruder;
they attacked the whites, not because the whites had
wronged them, but because their invariable policy
was to kill any strangers on any grounds over which
they themselves ever hunted, no matter what man had
the best right thereto. The Kentucky hunters were
promptly taught that in this no-man’s-land,
teeming with game and lacking even a solitary human
habitation, every Indian must be regarded as a foe.
The man who had accompanied Squire
Boon was terrified by the presence of the Indians,
and now returned to the settlements. The two brothers
remained alone on their hunting-grounds throughout
the winter, living in a little cabin. About the
first of May Squire set off alone to the settlements
to procure horses and ammunition. For three months
Daniel Boon remained absolutely alone in the wilderness,
without salt, sugar, or flour, and without the companionship
of so much as a horse or a dog. But the solitude-loving
hunter, dauntless and self-reliant, enjoyed to the
full his wild, lonely life; he passed his days hunting
and exploring, wandering hither and thither over the
country, while at night he lay off in the canebrakes
or thickets, without a fire, so as not to attract
the Indians. Of the latter he saw many signs,
and they sometimes came to his camp, but his sleepless
wariness enabled him to avoid capture. Late in
July his brother returned, and met him according to
appointment at the old camp. Other hunters also
now came into the Kentucky wilderness, and Boon joined
a small party of them for a short time. Such
a party of hunters is always glad to have any thing
wherewith to break the irksome monotony of the long
evenings passed round the camp fire; and a book or
a greasy pack of cards was as welcome in a camp of
Kentucky riflemen in 1770 as it is to a party of Rocky
Mountain hunters in 1888. Boon has recorded in
his own quaint phraseology an incident of his life
during this summer, which shows how eagerly such a
little band of frontiersmen read a book, and how real
its characters became to their minds. He was
encamped with five other men on Red River, and they
had with them for their “amusement the history
of Samuel Gulliver’s travels, wherein he gave
an account of his young master, Glumdelick, careing
[sic] him on a market day for a show to a town called
Lulbegrud.” In the party who, amid such
strange surroundings, read and listened to Dean Swift’s
writings was a young man named Alexander Neely.
One night he came into camp with two Indian scalps,
taken from a Shawnese village be had found on a creek
running into the river; and he announced to the circle
of grim wilderness veterans that “he had been
that day to Lulbegrud, and had killed two Brobdignags
in their capital.” To this day the creek
by which the two luckless Shawnees lost their lives
is known as Lulbegrud Creek.
Soon after this encounter the increasing
danger from the Indians drove Boon back to the valley
of the Cumberland River, and in the spring of 1771
he returned to his home on the Yadkin.
A couple of years before Boon went
to Kentucky, Steiner, or Stoner, and Harrod, two hunters
from Pittsburg, who had passed through the Illinois,
came down to hunt in the bend of the Cumberland, where
Nashville now stands; they found vast numbers of buffalo,
and killed a great many, especially around the licks,
where the huge clumsy beasts had fairly destroyed
most of the forest, treading down the young trees and
bushes till the ground was left bare or covered with
a rich growth of clover. The bottoms and the
hollows between the hills were thickset with cane.
Sycamore grew in the low ground, and towards the Mississippi
were to be found the persimmon and cottonwood.
Sometimes the forest was open and composed of huge
trees; elsewhere it was of thicker, smaller growth.
Everywhere game abounded, and it was nowhere very wary.
Other hunters of whom we know even the names of only
a few, had been through many parts of the wilderness
before Boon, and earlier still Frenchmen had built
forts and smelting furnaces on the Cumberland, the
Tennessee, and the head tributaries of the Kentucky.
Boon is interesting as a leader and explorer; but
he is still more interesting as a type. The west
was neither discovered, won, nor settled by any single
man. No keen-eyed statesman planned the movement,
nor was it carried out by any great military leader;
it was the work of a whole people, of whom each man
was impelled mainly by sheer love of adventure; it
was the outcome of the ceaseless strivings of all
the dauntless, restless backwoods folk to win homes
for their descendants and to each penetrate deeper
than his neighbors into the remote forest hunting-grounds
where the perilous pleasures of the chase and of war
could be best enjoyed. We owe the conquest of
the west to all the backwoodsmen, not to any solitary
individual among them; where all alike were strong
and daring there was no chance for any single man
to rise to unquestioned preeminence.
In the summer of 1769 a large band
of hunters crossed the mountains to make a long
hunt in the western wilderness, the men clad in hunting-shirts,
moccasins, and leggings, with traps, rifles, and dogs,
and each bringing with him two or three horses.
They made their way over the mountains, forded or
swam the rapid, timber-choked streams, and went down
the Cumberland, till at last they broke out of the
forest and came upon great barrens of tall grass.
One of their number was killed by a small party of
Indians; but they saw no signs of human habitations.
Yet they came across mounds and graves and other remains
of an ancient people who had once lived in the land,
but had died out of it long ages before the incoming
of the white men.
The hunters made a permanent camp
in one place, and returned to it at intervals to deposit
their skins and peltries. Between times they
scattered out singly or in small bands. They hunted
all through the year, killing vast quantities of every
kind of game. Most of it they got by fair still-hunting,
but some by methods we do not now consider legitimate,
such as calling up a doe by imitating the bleat of
a fawn, and shooting deer from a scaffold when they
came to the salt licks at night. Nevertheless,
most of the hunters did not approve of “crusting”
the game that is, of running it down on
snow-shoes in the deep mid-winter snows.
At the end of the year some of the
adventurers returned home; others went north into
the Kentucky country, where they hunted for several
months before recrossing the mountains; while the remainder,
led by an old hunter named Kasper Mansker, built
two boats and hollowed out of logs two pirogues
or dugouts clumsier but tougher craft than
the light birch-bark canoes and started
down the Cumberland. At the French Lick, where
Nashville now stands, they saw enormous quantities
of buffalo, elk, and other game, more than they had
ever seen before in any one place. Some of their
goods were taken by a party of Indians they met, but
some French traders whom they likewise encountered,
treated them well and gave them salt, flour, tobacco,
and taffia, the last being especially prized, as they
had had no spirits for a year. They went down
to Natchez, sold their furs, hides, oil, and tallow,
and some returned by sea, while others, including
Mansker, came overland with a drove of horses that
was being taken through the Indian nations to Georgia.
From the length of time all these men, as well as
Boon and his companions, were absent, they were known
as the Long Hunters, and the fame of their hunting
and exploring spread all along the border and greatly
excited the young men.
In 1771 many hunters crossed over
the mountains and penetrated far into the wilderness,
to work huge havoc among the herds of game. Some
of them came in bands, and others singly, and many
of the mountains, lakes, rivers, and creeks of Tennessee
are either called after the leaders among these old
hunters and wanderers, or else by their names perpetuate
the memory of some incident of their hunting trips.
Mansker himself came back, a leader
among his comrades, and hunted many years in the woods
alone or with others of his kind, and saw and did
many strange things. One winter he and those who
were with him built a skin house from the hides of
game, and when their ammunition gave out they left
three of their number and all of their dogs at the
skin house and went to the settlements for powder
and lead. When they returned they found that
two of the men had been killed and the other chased
away by the Indians, who, however, had not found the
camp. The dogs, having seen no human face for
three months, were very wild, yet in a few days became
as tame and well trained as ever. They killed
such enormous quantities of buffalo, elk, and especially
deer, that they could not pack the hides into camp,
and one of the party, during an idle moment and in
a spirit of protest against fate, carved on the
peeled trunk of a fallen poplar, where it long remained,
the sentence: “2300 deer skins lost; ruination
by God!” The soul of this thrifty hunter must
have been further grieved when a party of Cherokees
visited their camp and took away all the camp utensils
and five hundred hides. The whites found the
broad track they made in coming in, but could not find
where they had gone out, each wily redskin then covering
his own trail, and the whole number apparently breaking
up into several parties.
Sometimes the Indians not only plundered
the hunting camps but killed the hunters as well,
and the hunters retaliated in kind. Often the
white men and red fought one another whenever they
met, and displayed in their conflicts all the cunning
and merciless ferocity that made forest warfare so
dreadful. Terrible deeds of prowess were done
by the mighty men on either side. It was a war
of stealth and cruelty, and ceaseless, sleepless watchfulness.
The contestants had sinewy frames and iron wills,
keen eyes and steady hands, hearts as bold as they
were ruthless. Their moccasined feet made no
sound as they stole softly on the camp of a sleeping
enemy or crept to ambush him while he himself still-hunted
or waylaid the deer. A favorite stratagem was
to imitate the call of game, especially the gobble
of the wild turkey, and thus to lure the would-be
hunter to his fate. If the deceit was guessed
at, the caller was himself stalked. The men grew
wonderfully expert in detecting imitation. One
old hunter, Castleman by name, was in after years
fond of describing how an Indian nearly lured him
to his death. It was in the dusk of the evening,
when he heard the cries of two great wood owls near
him. Listening attentively, he became convinced
that all was not right. “The woo-woo call
and the woo-woo answer were not well timed and toned,
and the babel-chatter was a failure. More than
this, they seemed to be on the ground.”
Creeping cautiously up, and peering through the brush,
he saw something the height of a stump between two
forked trees. It did not look natural; he aimed,
pulled trigger, and killed an Indian.
Each party of Indians or whites was
ever on the watch to guard against danger or to get
the chance of taking vengeance for former wrongs.
The dark woods saw a myriad lonely fights where red
warrior or white hunter fell and no friend of the
fallen ever knew his fate, where his sole memorial
was the scalp that hung in the smoky cabin or squalid
wigwam of the victor.
The rude and fragmentary annals of
the frontier are filled with the deeds of men, of
whom Mansker can be taken as a type. He was a
wonderful marksman and woodsman, and was afterwards
made a colonel of the frontier militia, though, being
of German descent, he spoke only broken English.
Like most of the hunters he became specially proud
of his rifle, calling it “Nancy”; for
they were very apt to know each his favorite weapon
by some homely or endearing nickname. Every forest
sight or sound was familiar to him. He knew the
cries of the birds and beasts so well that no imitation
could deceive him. Once he was nearly taken in
by an unusually perfect imitation of a wild gobbler;
but he finally became suspicious, and “placed”
his adversary behind a large tree. Having perfect
confidence in his rifle, and knowing that the Indians
rarely fired except at close range partly
because they were poor shots, partly because they
loaded their guns too lightly he made no
attempt to hide. Feigning to pass to the Indian’s
right, the latter, as he expected, tried to follow
him; reaching an opening in a glade, Mansker suddenly
wheeled and killed his foe. When hunting he made
his home sometimes in a hollow tree, sometimes in
a hut of buffalo hides; for the buffalo were so plenty
that once when a lick was discovered by himself and
a companion, the latter, though on horseback, was
nearly trampled to death by the mad rush of a herd
they surprised and stampeded.
He was a famous Indian fighter; one
of the earliest of his recorded deeds has to do with
an Indian adventure. He and three other men were
trapping on Sulphur Fork and Red River, in the great
bend of the Cumberland. Moving their camp, they
came on recent traces of Indians: deer-carcases
and wicker frames for stretching hides. They feared
to tarry longer unless they knew something of their
foes, and Mansker set forth to explore, and turned
towards Red River, where, from the sign, he thought
to find the camp. Travelling some twenty miles,
he perceived by the sycamore trees in view that he
was near the river. Advancing a few steps farther
he suddenly found himself within eighty or ninety yards
of the camp. He instantly slipped behind a tree
to watch. There were only two Indians in camp;
the rest he supposed were hunting at a distance.
Just as he was about to retire, one of the Indians
took up a tomahawk and strolled off in the opposite
direction; while the other picked up his gun, put
it on his shoulder, and walked directly towards Mansker’s
hiding-place. Mansker lay close, hoping that he
would not be noticed; but the Indian advanced directly
towards him until not fifteen paces off. There
being no alternative, Mansker cocked his piece, and
shot the Indian through the body. The Indian
screamed, threw down his gun, and ran towards camp;
passing it he pitched headlong down the bluff, dead,
into the river. The other likewise ran to camp
at the sound of the shot; but Mansker outran him,
reached the camp first, and picked up an old gun that
was on the ground; but the gun would not go off, and
the Indian turned and escaped. Mansker broke
the old gun, and returned speedily to his comrades.
The next day they all went to the spot, where they
found the dead Indian and took away his tomahawk,
knife, and bullet-bag; but they never found his gun.
The other Indian had come back, had loaded his horses
with furs, and was gone. They followed him all
that day and all night with a torch of dry cane, and
could never overtake him. Finding that there
were other bands of Indians about, they then left their
hunting grounds. Towards the close of his life
old Mansker, like many another fearless and ignorant
backwoods fighter, became so much impressed by the
fiery earnestness and zeal of the Methodists that he
joined himself to them, and became a strong and helpful
prop of the community whose first foundations he had
helped to lay.
Sometimes the hunters met Creole trappers,
who sent their tallow, hides, and furs in pirogues
and bateaux down the Mississippi to Natchez or
Orleans, instead of having to transport them on pack-horses
through the perilous forest-tracks across the mountains.
They had to encounter dangers from beasts as well
as men. More than once we hear of one who, in
a canebrake or tangled thicket, was mangled to death
by the horns and hoofs of a wounded buffalo. All
of the wild beasts were then comparatively unused
to contact with rifle-bearing hunters; they were,
in consequence, much more ferocious and ready to attack
man than at present. The bear were the most numerous
of all, after the deer; their chase was a favorite
sport. There was just enough danger in it to make
it exciting, for though hunters were frequently bitten
or clawed, they were hardly ever killed. The
wolves were generally very wary; yet in rare instances
they, too, were dangerous. The panther was a much
more dreaded foe, and lives were sometimes lost in
hunting him; but even with the panther, the cases
where the hunter was killed were very exceptional.
The hunters were in their lives sometimes
clean and straight, and sometimes immoral, with a
gross and uncouth viciousness. We read of one
party of six men and a woman, who were encountered
on the Cumberland River; the woman acted as the wife
of a man named Big John, but deserted him for one
of his companions, and when he fell sick persuaded
the whole party to leave him in the wilderness to
die of disease and starvation. Yet those who
left him did not in the end fare better, for they were
ambushed and cut off, when they had gone down to Natchez,
apparently by Indians.
At first the hunters, with their small-bore
rifles, were unsuccessful in killing buffalo.
Once, when George Rogers Clark had long resided in
Kentucky, he and two companions discovered a camp of
some forty new-comers actually starving, though buffalo
were plenty. Clark and his friends speedily relieved
their necessities by killing fourteen of the great
beasts; for when once the hunters had found out the
knack, the buffalo were easier slaughtered than any
other game.
The hunters were the pioneers; but
close behind them came another set of explorers quite
as hardy and resolute. These were the surveyors.
The men of chain and compass played a part in the
exploration of the west scarcely inferior to that
of the heroes of axe and rifle. Often, indeed,
the parts were combined; Boon himself was a surveyor.
Vast tracts of western land were continually being
allotted either to actual settlers or as bounties
to soldiers who had served against the French and
Indians. These had to be explored and mapped and
as there was much risk as well as reward in the task,
it naturally proved attractive to all adventurous
young men who had some education, a good deal of ambition,
and not too much fortune. A great number of young
men of good families, like Washington and Clark, went
into the business. Soon after the return of Boon
and the Long Hunters, parties of surveyors came down
the Ohio, mapping out its course and exploring
the Kentucky lands that lay beside it.
Among the hunters, surveyors, and
explorers who came into the wilderness in 1773 was
a band led by three young men named McAfee, typical
backwoodsmen, hardy, adventurous, their frontier recklessness
and license tempered by the Calvinism they had learned
in their rough log home. They were fond of hunting,
but they came to spy out the land and see if it could
be made into homes for their children; and in their
party were several surveyors. They descended the
Ohio in dugout canoes, with their rifles, blankets,
tomahawks, and fishing-tackle. They met some
Shawnees and got on well with them; but while their
leader was visiting the chief, Cornstalk, and listening
to his fair speeches at his town of Old Chilicothe,
the rest of the party were startled to see a band
of young Shawnee braves returning from a successful
foray on the settlements, driving before them the
laden pack-horses they had stolen.
They explored part of Kentucky, and
visited the different licks. One, long named
Big Bone Lick, was famous because there were scattered
about it in incredible quantity the gigantic remains
of the extinct mastodon; the McAfees made a tent by
stretching their blankets over the huge fossil ribs,
and used the disjointed vertebrae as stools on which
to sit. Game of many kinds thronged the spaces
round the licks; herds of buffalo, elk, and deer,
as well as bears and wolves, were all in sight at
once. The ground round about some of them was
trodden down so that there was not as much grass left
as would feed a sheep; and the game trails were like
streets, or the beaten roads round a city. A little
village to this day recalls by its name the fact that
it stands on a former “stamping ground”
of the buffalo. At one lick the explorers met
with what might have proved a serious adventure.
One of the McAfees and a companion were passing round
its outskirts, when some others of the party fired
at a gang of buffaloes, which stampeded directly towards
the two. While his companion scampered up a leaning
mulberry bush, McAfee, less agile, leaped behind a
tree trunk, where he stood sideways till the buffalo
passed, their horns scraping off the bark on either
side; then he looked round to see his friend “hanging
in the mulberry bush like a coon."
When the party left this lick they
followed a buffalo trail, beaten out in the forest,
“the size of the wagon road leading out of Williamsburg,”
then the capital of Virginia. It crossed the Kentucky
River at a riffle below where Frankfort now stands.
Thence they started homewards across the Cumberland
Mountains, and suffered terribly while making their
way through the “desolate and voiceless solitudes”;
mere wastes of cliffs, crags, caverns, and steep hillsides
covered with pine, laurel, and underbrush. Twice
they were literally starving and were saved in the
nick of time by the killing, on the first occasion,
of a big bull elk, on the next, of a small spike buck.
At last, sun-scorched and rain-beaten, foot-sore and
leg-weary, their thighs torn to pieces by the stout
briars, and their feet and hands blistered and
scalded, they came out in Powell’s Valley, and
followed the well-worn hunter’s trail across
it. Thence it was easy to reach home, where the
tale of their adventures excited still more the young
frontiersmen.
Their troubles were ended for the
time being; but in Powell’s Valley they met
other wanderers whose toil and peril had just begun.
There they encountered the company which Daniel
Boon was just leading across the mountains, with the
hope of making a permanent settlement in far distant
Kentucky. Boon had sold his farm on the Yadkin
and all the goods he could not carry with him, and
in September, 1773, he started for Kentucky with his
wife and his children; five families, and forty men
besides, went with him, driving their horses and cattle.
It was the first attempt that was made to settle a
region separated by long stretches of wilderness from
the already inhabited districts; and it was doomed
to failure. On approaching the gloomy and forbidding
defiles of the Cumberland Mountains the party was
attacked by Indians. Six of the men, including
Boon’s eldest son, were slain, and the cattle
scattered; and though the backwoodsmen rallied and
repulsed their assailants, yet they had suffered such
loss and damage that they retreated and took up their
abode temporarily on the Clinch River.
In the same year Simon Kenton, afterwards
famous as a scout and Indian fighter, in company with
other hunters, wandered through Kentucky. Kenton,
like every one else, was astounded at the beauty and
fertility of the land and the innumerable herds of
buffalo, elk, and other game that thronged the trampled
ground around the licks. One of his companions
was taken by the Indians, who burned him alive.
In the following year numerous parties
of surveyors visited the land. One of these was
headed by John Floyd, who was among the ablest of the
Kentucky pioneers, and afterwards played a prominent
part in the young commonwealth, until his death at
the hands of the savages. Floyd was at the time
assistant surveyor of Fincastle County; and his party
went out for the purpose of making surveys “by
virtue of the Governor’s warrant for officers
and soldiers on the Ohio and its waters."
They started on April 9, 1774, eight
men in all, from their homes in Fincastle
County. They went down the Kanawha in a canoe,
shooting bear and deer, and catching great pike and
catfish. The first survey they made was one of
two thousand acres for “Colo. Washington”;
and they made another for Patrick Henry. On the
way they encountered other parties of surveyors, and
learned that an Indian war was threatened; for a party
of thirteen would-be settlers on the upper Ohio had
been attacked, but had repelled their assailants,
and in consequence the Shawnees had declared for war,
and threatened thereafter to kill the Virginians and
rob the Pennsylvanians wherever they found them.
The reason for this discrimination in favor of the
citizens of the Quaker State was that the Virginians
with whom the Indians came chiefly in contact were
settlers, whereas the Pennsylvanians were traders.
The marked difference in the way the savages looked
at the two classes received additional emphasis in
Lord Dunmore’s war.
At the mouth of the Kanawha the
adventurers found twenty or thirty men gathered together;
some had come to settle, but most wished to explore
or survey the lands. All were in high spirits,
and resolute to go to Kentucky, in spite of Indian
hostilities. Some of them joined Floyd, and raised
his party to eighteen men, who started down the Ohio
in four canoes. They found “a battoe loaded
with corn,” apparently abandoned, and took about
three bushels with them. Other parties joined
them from time to time, as they paddled and drifted
down stream; and one or two of their own number, alarmed
by further news of Indian hostilities, went back.
Once they met a party of Delawares, by whom they were
not molested; and again, two or three of their number
encountered a couple of hostile savages; and though
no one was hurt, the party were kept on the watch
all the time. They marvelled much at the great
trees one sycamore was thirty-seven feet
in circumference, and on a Sunday, which
they kept as a day of rest, they examined with interest
the forest-covered embankments of a fort at the mouth
of the Scioto, a memorial of the mound-builders who
had vanished centuries before.
When they reached the mouth of the
Kentucky they found two Delawares and a squaw,
to whom they gave corn and salt. Here they split
up, and Floyd and his original party spent a week
in the neighborhood, surveying land, going some distance
up the Kentucky to a salt lick, where they saw a herd
of three hundred buffalo. They then again embarked,
and drifted down the Ohio. On May 26th they met
two Delawares in a canoe flying a red flag; they had
been sent down the river with a pass from the commandant
at Fort Pitt to gather their hunters and get them home,
in view of the threatened hostilities between the Shawnees
and Virginians. The actions of the two Indians
were so suspicious, and the news they brought was
so alarming, that some of Floyd’s companions
became greatly alarmed, and wished to go straight on
down the Mississippi; but Floyd swore that he would
finish his work unless actually forced off. Three
days afterwards they reached the Falls.
Here Floyd spent a fortnight, making
surveys in every direction, and then started off to
explore the land between the Salt River and the Kentucky.
Like the others, he carried his own pack, which consisted
of little but his blanket and his instruments.
He sometimes had difficulties with his men; one of
them refused to carry the chain one day, and went
off to hunt, got lost, and was not found for thirty-six
hours. Another time it was noticed that two of
the hunters had become sullen, and seemed anxious
to leave camp. The following morning, while on
the march, the party killed an elk and halted for breakfast;
but the two hunters walked on, and, says the journal,
“we never saw them more”; but whether
they got back to the settlements or perished in the
wilderness, none could tell.
The party suffered much hardship.
Floyd fell sick, and for three days could not travel.
They gave him an “Indian sweat,” probably
building just such a little sweat-house as the Indians
use to this day. Others of their number at different
times fell ill; and they were ever on the watch for
Indians. In the vast forests, every sign of a
human being was the sign of a probable enemy.
Once they heard a gun, and another time a sound as
of a man calling to another; and on each occasion they
redoubled their caution, keeping guard as they rested,
and at night extinguishing their camp-fire and sleeping
a mile or two from it.
They built a bark canoe in which to
cross the Kentucky, and on the 1st of July they met
another party of surveyors on the banks of that stream.
Two or three days afterwards, Floyd and three companions
left the others, agreeing to meet them on August 1st,
at a cabin built by a man named Harwood, on the south
side of the Kentucky, a few miles from the mouth of
the Elkhorn. For three weeks they surveyed and
hunted, enchanted with the beauty of the country.
They then went to the cabin, several days before the
appointed time; but to their surprise found every
thing scattered over the ground, and two fires burning,
while on a tree near the landing was written, “Alarmed
by finding some people killed and we are gone down.”
This left the four adventurers in a bad plight, as
they had but fifteen rounds of powder left, and none
of them knew the way home. However there was
no help for it, and they started off. When they
came to the mountains they found it such hard going
that they were obliged to throw away their blankets
and every thing else except their rifles, hunting-shirts,
leggings, and moccasins. Like the other parties
of returning explorers, they found this portion of
their journey extremely distressing; and they suffered
much from sore feet, and also from want of food, until
they came on a gang of buffaloes, and killed two.
At last they struck Cumberland Gap, followed a blazed
trail across it to Powell’s Valley, and on August
9th came to the outlying settlements on Clinch River,
where they found the settlers all in their wooden
forts, because of the war with the Shawnees.
In this same year many different bodies
of hunters and surveyors came into the country, drifting
down the Ohio in pirogues. Some forty men
led by Harrod and Sowdowsky founded Harrodsburg,
where they built cabins and sowed corn; but the Indians
killed one of their number, and the rest dispersed.
Some returned across the mountains; but Sowdowsky and
another went through the woods to the Cumberland River,
where they built a canoe, paddled down the muddy Mississippi
between unending reaches of lonely marsh and forest,
and from New Orleans took ship to Virginia.
At that time, among other parties
of surveyors there was one which had been sent by
Lord Dunmore to the Falls of the Ohio. When the
war broke out between the Shawnees and the Virginians,
Lord Dunmore, being very anxious for the fate of these
surveyors, sent Boon and Stoner to pilot them in;
which the two bush veterans accordingly did, making
the round trip of 800 miles in 64 days. The outbreak
of the Indian war caused all the hunters and surveyors
to leave Kentucky; and at the end of 1774 there were
no whites left, either there or in what is now middle
Tennessee. But on the frontier all men’s
eyes were turned towards these new and fertile regions.
The pioneer work of the hunter was over, and that
of the axe-bearing settler was about to begin.