THE INRUSH OF SETTLERS, 1784-1787
At the beginning of 1784 peace was
a definite fact, and the United States had become
one among the nations of the earth; a nation young
and lusty in her youth, but as yet loosely knit, and
formidable in promise rather than in actual capacity
for performance.
The Western Frontier.
On the western frontier lay vast and
fertile vacant spaces; for the Americans had barely
passed the threshold of the continent predestined
to be the inheritance of their children and children’s
children. For generations the great feature in
the nation’s history, next only to the preservation
of its national life, was to be its westward growth;
and its distinguishing work was to be the settlement
of the immense wilderness which stretched across to
the Pacific. But before the land could be settled
it had to be won.
The valley of the Ohio already belonged
to the Americans by right of conquest and of armed
possession; it was held by rifle-bearing backwoods
farmers, hard and tenacious men, who never lightly
yielded what once they had grasped. North and
south of the valley lay warlike and powerful Indian
confederacies, now at last thoroughly alarmed and angered
by the white advance; while behind these warrior tribes,
urging them to hostility, and furnishing them the
weapons and means wherewith to fight, stood the representatives
of two great European nations, both bitterly hostile
to the new America, and both anxious to help in every
way the red savages who strove to stem the tide of
settlement. The close alliance between the soldiers
and diplomatic agents of polished old-world powers
and the wild and squalid warriors of the wilderness
was an alliance against which the American settlers
had always to make head in the course of their long
march westward. The kings and the peoples of
the old world ever showed themselves the inveterate
enemies of their blood-kin in the new; they always
strove to delay the time when their own race should
rise to wellnigh universal supremacy. In mere
blind selfishness, or in a spirit of jealousy still
blinder, the Europeans refused to regard their kinsmen
who had crossed the ocean to found new realms in new
continents as entitled to what they had won by their
own toil and hardihood. They persisted in treating
the bold adventurers who went abroad as having done
so simply for the benefit of the men who stayed at
home; and they shaped their transatlantic policy in
accordance with this idea. The Briton and the
Spaniard opposed the American settler precisely as
the Frenchman had done before them, in the interest
of their own merchants and fur-traders. They
endeavored in vain to bar him from the solitudes through
which only the Indians roved.
All the ports around the Great Lakes
were held by the British; their officers, military
and civil, still kept possession, administering the
government of the scattered French hamlets, and preserving
their old-time relations with the Indian tribes, whom
they continued to treat as allies or feudatories.
To the south and west the Spaniards played the same
part. They scornfully refused to heed the boundary
established to the southward by the treaty between
England and the United States, alleging that the former
had ceded what it did not possess. They claimed
the land as theirs by right of conquest. The
territory which they controlled stretched from Florida
along a vaguely defined boundary to the Mississippi,
up the east bank of the latter at least to the Chickasaw
Bluffs, and thence up the west bank; while the Creeks
and Choctaws were under their influence. The Spaniards
dreaded and hated the Americans even more than did
the British, and they were right; for three fourths
of the present territory of the United States then
lay within the limits of the Spanish possessions.
Thus there were foes, both white and
red, to be overcome, either by force of arms or by
diplomacy, before the northernmost and the southernmost
portions of the wilderness lying on our western border
could be thrown open to settlement. The lands
lying between had already been conquered, and yet
were so sparsely settled as to seem almost vacant.
While they offered every advantage of soil and climate
to the farmer and cultivator, they also held out peculiar
attractions to ambitious men of hardy and adventurous
temper.
The Rush of Settlers
With the ending of the Revolutionary
War the rush of settlers to these western lauds assumed
striking proportions. The peace relieved the
pressure which had hitherto restrained this movement,
on the one hand, while on the other it tended to divert
into the new channel of pioneer work those bold spirits
whose spare energies had thus far found an outlet
on stricken fields. To push the frontier westward
in the teeth of the forces of the wilderness was fighting
work, such as suited well enough many a stout soldier
who had worn the blue and buff of the Continental
line, or who, with his fellow rough-riders, had followed
in the train of some grim partisan leader.
The people of the New England States
and of New York, for the most part, spread northward
and westward within their own boundaries; and Georgia
likewise had room for all her growth within her borders;
but in the States between there was a stir of eager
unrest over the tales told of the beautiful and fertile
lands lying along the Ohio, the Cumberland, and the
Tennessee. The days of the early pioneers, of
the men who did the hardest and roughest work, were
over; farms were being laid out and towns were growing
up among the felled forests from which the game and
the Indians had alike been driven. There was still
plenty of room for the rude cabin and stump-dotted
clearing of the ordinary frontier settler, the wood-chopper
and game hunter. Folk of the common backwoods
type were as yet more numerous than any others among
the settlers. In addition there were planters
from among the gentry of the sea-coast; there were
men of means who had bought great tracts of wild land;
there were traders with more energy than capital;
there were young lawyers; there were gentlemen with
a taste for an unfettered life of great opportunity;
in short there were adventurers of every kind.
All men who deemed that they could
swim in troubled waters were drawn towards the new
country. The more turbulent and ambitious spirits
saw roads to distinction in frontier warfare, politics,
and diplomacy. Merchants dreamed of many fortunate
ventures, in connection with the river trade or the
overland commerce by packtrain. Lawyers not only
expected to make their living by their proper calling,
but also to rise to the first places in the commonwealths,
for in these new communities, as in the older States,
the law was then the most honored of the professions,
and that which most surely led to high social and political
standing. But the one great attraction for all
classes was the chance of procuring large quantities
of fertile land at low prices.
Value of the Land.
To the average settler the land was
the prime source of livelihood. A man of hardihood,
thrift, perseverance, and bodily strength could surely
make a comfortable living for himself and his family,
if only he could settle on a good tract of rich soil;
and this he could do if he went to the new country.
As a matter of course, therefore, vigorous young frontiersmen
swarmed into the region so recently won.
These men merely wanted so much land
as they could till. Others, however, looked at
it from a very different standpoint. The land
was the real treasury-chest of the country. It
was the one commodity which appealed to the ambitious
and adventurous side of the industrial character at
that time and in that place. It was the one commodity
the management of which opened chances of procuring
vast wealth, and especially vast speculative wealth.
To the American of the end of the eighteenth century
the roads leading to great riches were as few as those
leading to a competency were many. He could not
prospect for mines of gold and of silver, of iron,
copper, and coal; he could not discover and work wells
of petroleum and natural gas; he could not build up,
sell, and speculate in railroad systems and steamship
companies; he could not gamble in the stock market;
he could not build huge manufactories of steel, of
cottons, of woollens; he could not be a banker or
a merchant on a scale which is dwarfed when called
princely; he could not sit still and see an already
great income double and quadruple because of the mere
growth in the value of real estate in some teeming
city. The chances offered him by the fur trade
were very uncertain. If he lived in a sea-coast
town, he might do something with the clipper ships
that ran to Europe and China. If he lived elsewhere,
his one chance of acquiring great wealth, and his best
chance to acquire even moderate wealth without long
and plodding labor, was to speculate in wild land.
Land Speculators
Accordingly the audacious and enterprising
business men who would nowadays go into speculation
in stocks, were then forced into speculation in land.
Sometimes as individuals, sometimes as large companies,
they sought to procure wild lands on the Wabash, the
Ohio, the Cumberland, the Yazoo. In addition
to the ordinary methods of settlement by, or purchase
from private persons, they endeavored to procure grants
on favorable terms from the national and State legislatures,
or even from the Spanish government. They often
made a regular practice of buying the land rights
which had accrued in lieu of arrears of pay to different
bodies of Continental troops. They even at times
purchased a vague and clouded title from some Indian
tribe. As with most other speculative business
investments, the great land companies rarely realized
for the originators and investors anything like what
was expected; and the majority were absolute failures
in every sense. Nevertheless, a number of men
made money out of them, often on quite a large scale;
and in many instances, where the people who planned
and carried out the scheme made nothing for themselves,
they yet left their mark in the shape of settlers
who had come in to purchase their lands, or even in
the shape of a town built under their auspices.
Land speculation was by no means confined
to those who went into it on a large scale. The
settler without money might content himself with staking
out an ordinary-sized farm; but the new-comer of any
means was sure not only to try to get a large estate
for his own use, but also to procure land beyond any
immediate need, so that he might hold on to it until
it rose in value. He was apt to hold commissions
to purchase land for his friends who remained east
of the mountains. The land was turned to use
by private individuals and by corporations; it was
held for speculative purposes; it was used for the
liquidation of debts of every kind. The official
surveyors, when created, did most of their work by
deputy; Boone was deputy surveyor of Fayette County,
in Kentucky.
Some men surveyed and staked out their own claims;
the others employed professional surveyors, or else
hired old hunters like Boone and Kenton, whose knowledge
of woodcraft and acquaintance with the most fertile
grounds enabled them not only to survey the land, but
to choose the portions best fit for settlement.
The lack of proper government surveys, and the looseness
with which the records were kept in the land office,
put a premium on fraud and encouraged carelessness.
People could make and record entries in secret, and
have the land surveyed in secret, if they feared a
dispute over a title; no one save the particular deputy
surveyor employed needed to know. The litigation
over these confused titles dragged on with interminable
tediousness. Titles were often several deep on
one “location,” as it was called; and
whoever purchased land too often purchased also an
expensive and uncertain lawsuit.
The two chief topics of thought and
conversation, the two subjects which beyond all others
engrossed and absorbed the minds of the settlers, were
the land and the Indians. We have already seen
how on one occasion Clark could raise no men for an
expedition against the Indians until he closed the
land offices round which the settlers were thronging.
Every hunter kept a sharp lookout for some fertile
bottom on which to build a cabin. The volunteers
who rode against the Indian towns also spied out the
land and chose the best spots whereon to build their
blockhouses and palisaded villages as soon as a truce
might be made, or the foe driven for the moment farther
from the border. Sometimes settlers squatted on
land already held but not occupied under a good title;
sometimes a man who claimed the land under a defective
title, or under pretence of original occupation, attempted
to oust or to blackmail him who had cleared and tilled
the soil in good faith; and these were both fruitful
causes not only of lawsuits but of bloody affrays.
Among themselves, the settlers’ talk ran ever
on land titles and land litigation, and schemes for
securing vast tracts of rich and well watered country.
These were the subjects with which they filled their
letters to one another and to their friends at home,
and the subjects upon which these same friends chiefly
dwelt when they sent letters in return. Often well-to-do men visited
the new country by themselves first, chose good sites
for their farms and plantations, surveyed and purchased
them, and then returned to their old homes, whence
they sent out their field hands to break the soil and
put up buildings before bringing out their families.
Lines Followed in the Western
Movement.
The westward movement of settlers
took place along several different lines. The
dwellers in what is now eastern Tennessee were in close
touch with the old settled country; their Western
farms and little towns formed part of the chain of
forest clearings which stretched unbroken from the
border of Virginia down the valleys of the Watauga
and the Holston. Though they were sundered by
mountain ranges from the peopled regions in the State
to which they belonged, North Carolina, yet these
ranges were pierced by many trails, and were no longer
haunted by Indians. There were no great obstacles
to be overcome in moving in to this valley of the
upper Tennessee. On the other hand, by this time
it held no very great prizes in the shape of vast
tracts of rich and unclaimed land. In consequence
there was less temptation to speculation among those
who went to this part of the western country.
It grew rapidly, the population being composed chiefly
of actual settlers who had taken holdings with the
purpose of cultivating them, and of building homes
thereon. The entire frontier of this region was
continually harassed by Indians; and it was steadily
extended by the home-planting of the rifle-bearing
backwoodsmen.
The Cumberland Country.
The danger from Indian invasion and
outrage was, however, far greater in the distant communities
which were growing up in the great bend of the Cumberland,
cut off, as they were, by immense reaches of forest
from the seaboard States. The settlers who went
to this region for the most part followed two routes,
either descending the Tennessee and ascending the
Cumberland in flotillas of flat-boats and canoes, or
else striking out in large bodies through the wilderness,
following the trails that led westward from the settlements
on the Holston. The population on the Cumberland
did not increase very fast for some years after the
close of the Revolutionary War; and the settlers were,
as a rule, harsh, sturdy backwoodsmen, who lived lives
of toil and poverty. Nevertheless, there was
a good deal of speculation in Cumberland lands; great
tracts of tens of thousands of acres were purchased
by men of means in the old districts of North Carolina,
who sometimes came out to live on their estates.
The looseness of the system of surveying in vogue is
shown by the fact that where possible these lands
were entered and paid for under a law which allowed
a warrant to be shifted to new soil if it was discovered
that the first entry was made on what was already claimed
by some one else.
Hamlets and homesteads were springing
up on the left bank of the upper Ohio, in what is
now West Virginia; and along the streams flowing into
it from the east. A few reckless adventurers were
building cabins on the right bank of this great river.
Others, almost as adventurous, were pushing into the
neighborhood of the French villages on the Wabash and
in the Illinois. At Louisville men were already
planning to colonize the country just opposite on
the Ohio, under the law of the State of Virginia,
which rewarded the victorious soldiers of Clark’s
famous campaign with grants in the region they had
conquered.
Movement of Settlers to Kentucky.
The great growth of the west took
place in Kentucky. The Kentucky country was by
far the most widely renowned for its fertility; it
was much more accessible and more firmly held, and
its government was on a more permanent footing than
was the case in the Wabash, Illinois, and Cumberland
regions. In consequence the majority of the men
who went west to build homes fixed their eyes on the
vigorous young community which lay north of the Ohio,
and which already aspired to the honors of statehood.
The Wilderness Road to Kentucky.
The immigrants came into Kentucky
in two streams, following two different routes the
Ohio River, and Boone’s old Wilderness Trail.
Those who came overland, along the latter road, were
much fewer in number than those who came by water;
and yet they were so numerous that the trail at times
was almost thronged, and much care had to be taken
in order to find camping places where there was enough
feed for the horses. The people who travelled
this wilderness road went in the usual backwoods manner,
on horseback, with laden packtrains, and often with
their herds and flocks. Young men went out alone
or in parties; and groups of families from the same
neighborhood often journeyed together. They struggled
over the narrow, ill-made roads which led from the
different back settlements, until they came to the
last outposts of civilization east of the Cumberland
Mountains; scattered block-houses, whose owners were
by turns farmers, tavern-keepers, hunters, and Indian
fighters. Here they usually waited until a sufficient
number had gathered together to furnish a band of
riflemen large enough to beat off any prowling party
of red marauders; and then set off to traverse by
slow stages the mountains and vast forests which lay
between them and the nearest Kentucky station.
The time of the journey depended, of course, upon
the composition of the travelling party, and upon the
mishaps encountered; a party of young men on good horses
might do it in three days, while a large band of immigrants,
who were hampered by women, children, and cattle,
and dogged by ill-luck, might take three weeks.
Ordinarily six or eight days were sufficient.
Before starting each man laid in a store of provisions
for himself and his horse; perhaps thirty pounds of
flour, half a bushel of corn meal, and three bushels
of oats. There was no meat unless game was shot.
Occasionally several travellers clubbed together and
carried a tent; otherwise they slept in the open.
The trail was very bad, especially at first, where
it climbed between the gloomy and forbidding cliffs
that walled in Cumberland Gap. Even when undisturbed
by Indians, the trip was accompanied by much fatigue
and exposure; and, as always in frontier travelling,
one of the perpetual annoyances was the necessity for
hunting up strayed horses.
The Travel down the Ohio.
The chief highway was the Ohio River;
for to drift down stream in a scow was easier and
quicker, and no more dangerous, than to plod through
thick mountain forests. Moreover, it was much
easier for the settler who went by water to carry
with him his household goods and implements of husbandry;
and even such cumbrous articles as wagons, or, if he
was rich and ambitious, the lumber wherewith to build
a frame house. All kinds of craft were used,
even bark canoes and pirogues, or dugouts; but
the keel-boat, and especially the flat-bottomed scow
with square ends, were the ordinary means of conveyance.
They were of all sizes. The passengers and their
live stock were of course huddled together so as to
take up as little room as possible. Sometimes
the immigrants built or bought their own boat, navigated
it themselves, and sold it or broke it up on reaching
their destination. At other times they merely
hired a passage. A few of the more enterprising
boat owners speedily introduced a regular emigrant
service, making trips at stated times from Pittsburg
or perhaps Limestone, and advertising the carriage
capacity of their boats and the times of starting.
The trip from Pittsburg to Louisville took a week or
ten days; but in low water it might last a month.
Numbers of the Immigrants.
The number of boats passing down the
Ohio, laden with would-be settlers and their belongings,
speedily became very great. An eye-witness stated
that between November 13th and December 22d, of 1785,
thirty-nine boats, with an average of ten souls in
each, went down the Ohio to the Falls; and there were
others which stopped at some of the settlements farther
up the river. As time went on
the number of immigrants who adopted this method of
travel increased; larger boats were used, and the
immigrants took more property with them. In the
last half of the year 1787 there passed by Fort Harmar
146 boats, with 3196 souls, 1371 horses, 165 wagons,
191 cattle, 245 sheep, and 24 hogs. In the year ending
in November, 1788, 967 boats, carrying 18,370 souls,
with 7986 horses, 2372 cows, 1110 sheep, and 646 wagons, went down
the Ohio. For many years this great river was
the main artery through which the fresh blood of the
pioneers was pumped into the west.
There are no means of procuring similar
figures for the number of immigrants who went over
the Wilderness Road; but probably there were not half
as many as went down the Ohio. Perhaps from ten
to twenty thousand people a year came into Kentucky
during the period immediately succeeding the close
of the Revolution; but the net gain to the population
was much less, because there was always a smaller,
but almost equally steady, counter-flow of men who,
having failed as pioneers, were struggling wearily
back toward their deserted eastern homes.
Kentucky’s Growth.
The inrush being so great Kentucky
grew apace. In 1785 the population was estimated
at from twenty to thirty thousand;
and the leading towns, Louisville, Lexington, Harrodsburg,
Booneboro, St. Asaph’s, were thriving little
hamlets, with stores and horse grist-mills, and no
longer mere clusters of stockaded cabins. At
Louisville, for instance, there were already a number
of two-story frame houses, neatly painted, with verandahs
running the full length of each house, and fenced
vegetable gardens alongside; while
at the same time Nashville was a town of logs, with
but two houses that deserved the name, the others being
mere huts. The population
of Louisville amounted to about 300 souls, of whom
116 were fighting men; between it and Lexington the whole
country was well settled; but fear of the Indians
kept settlers back from the Ohio.
The new-comers were mainly Americans
from all the States of the Union; but there were also
a few people from nearly every country in Europe,
and even from Asia. The industrious and the
adventurous, the homestead winners and the land speculators,
the criminal fleeing from justice, and the honest
man seeking a livelihood or a fortune, all alike prized
the wild freedom and absence of restraint so essentially
characteristic of their new life; a life in many ways
very pleasant, but one which on the border of the
Indian country sank into mere savagery.
Kentucky was “a good poor man’s
country” provided the poor man was hardy and vigorous.
The settlers were no longer in danger of starvation,
for they already raised more flour than they could
consume. Neither was there as yet anything approaching
to luxury. But between these two extremes there
was almost every grade of misery and well-being, according
to the varying capacity shown by the different settlers
in grappling with the conditions of their new life.
Among the foreign-born immigrants success depended
in part upon race; a contemporary Kentucky observer
estimated that, of twelve families of each nationality,
nine German, seven Scotch, and four Irish prospered,
while the others failed. The German women worked just as hard as
the men, even in the fields, and both sexes were equally
saving. Naturally such thrifty immigrants did
well materially; but they never took any position
of leadership or influence in the community until they
had assimilated themselves in speech and customs to
their American neighbors. The Scotch were frugal
and industrious; for good or for bad they speedily
became indistinguishable from the native-born.
The greater proportion of failures among the Irish,
brave and vigorous though they were, was due to their
quarrelsomeness, and their fondness for drink and
litigation; besides, remarks this Kentucky critic,
“they soon take to the gun, which is the ruin
of everything.” None of these foreign-born
elements were of any very great importance in the development
of Kentucky; its destiny was shaped and controlled
by its men of native stock.
Character of the Frontier
Population.
In such a population there was of
course much loosening of the bands, social, political,
moral, and religious, which knit a society together.
A great many of the restraints of their old life were
thrown off, and there was much social adjustment and
readjustment before their relations to one another
under the new conditions became definitely settled.
But there came early into the land many men of high
purpose and pure life whose influence upon their fellows,
though quiet, was very great. Moreover, the clergyman
and the school-teacher, the two beings who had done
so much for colonial civilization on the seaboard,
were already becoming important factors in the life
of the frontier communities. Austere Presbyterian
ministers were people of mark in many of the towns.
The Baptist preachers lived and worked exactly as did
their flocks; their dwellings were little cabins with
dirt floors and, instead of bedsteads, skin-covered
pole-bunks; they cleared the ground, split rails,
planted corn, and raised hogs on equal terms with their
parishioners. After Methodism
cut loose from its British connections in 1785, the
time of its great advance began, and the circuit-riders
were speedily eating bear meat and buffalo tongues
on the frontier.
Rough log schools were springing up
everywhere, beside the rough log meeting-houses, the
same building often serving for both purposes.
The school-teacher might be a young surveyor out of
work for the moment, a New Englander fresh from some
academy in the northeast, an Irishman with a smattering
of learning, or perhaps an English immigrant of the
upper class, unfit for and broken down by the work
of a new country. The
boys and girls were taught together, and at recess
played together tag, pawns, and various
kissing games. The rod was used unsparingly, for
the elder boys proved boisterous pupils. A favorite
mutinous frolic was to “bar out” the teacher,
taking possession of the school-house and holding it
against the master with sticks and stones until he
had either forced an entrance or agreed to the terms
of the defenders. Sometimes this barring out
represented a revolt against tyranny; often it was
a conventional, and half-acquiesced-in, method of
showing exuberance of spirit, just before the Christmas
holidays. In most of the schools the teaching
was necessarily of the simplest, for the only books
might be a Testament, a primer, a spelling book, and
a small arithmetic.
Frontier Society.
In such a society, simple, strong,
and rude, both the good features and the bad were
nakedly prominent; and the views of observers in reference
thereto varied accordingly as they were struck by one
set of characteristics or another. One traveller
would paint the frontiersmen as little better than
the Indians against whom they warred, and their life
as wild, squalid, and lawless; while the next would
lay especial and admiring stress on their enterprise,
audacity, and hospitable openhandedness. Though
much alike, different portions of the frontier stock
were beginning to develop along different lines.
The Holston people, both in Virginia and North Carolina,
were by this time comparatively little affected by
immigration from without those States, and were on
the whole homogeneous; but the Virginians and Carolinians
of the seaboard considered them rough, unlettered,
and not of very good character. One travelling
clergyman spoke of them with particular disfavor;
he was probably prejudiced by their indifference to
his preaching, for he mentions with much dissatisfaction
that the congregations he addressed “though
small, behaved extremely bad.” The Kentuckians
showed a mental breadth that was due largely to the
many different sources from which even the predominating
American elements in the population sprang. The
Cumberland people seemed to travellers the wildest
and rudest of all, as was but natural, for these fierce
and stalwart settlers were still in the midst of a
warfare as savage as any ever waged among the cave-dwellers
of the Stone Age.
The opinion of any mere passer-through
a country is always less valuable than that of an
intelligent man who dwells and works among the people,
and who possesses both insight and sympathy. At
this time one of the recently created Kentucky judges,
an educated Virginian, in writing to his friend Madison,
said: “We are as harmonious amongst ourselves
as can be expected of a mixture of people from various
States and of various Sentiments and Manners not yet
assimilated. In point of Morals the bulk of the
inhabitants are far superior to what I expected to
find in any new settled country. We have not
had a single instance of Murder, and but one Criminal
for Felony of any kind has yet been before the Supreme
Court. I wish I could say as much to vindicate
the character of our Land-jobbers. This Business
has been attended with much villainy in other parts.
Here it is reduced to a system, and to take the advantage
of the ignorance or of the poverty of a neighbor is
almost grown into reputation.”
The Gentry.
Of course, when the fever for land
speculation raged so violently, many who had embarked
too eagerly in the purchase of large tracts became
land poor; Clark being among those who found that
though they owned great reaches of fertile wild land
they had no means whatever of getting money. In Kentucky, while much land
was taken up under Treasury warrants, much was also
allotted to the officers of the Continental army;
and the retired officers of the Continental line were
the best of all possible immigrants. A class
of gentlefolks soon sprang up in the land, whose members
were not so separated from other citizens as to be
in any way alien to them, and who yet stood sufficiently
above the mass to be recognized as the natural leaders,
social and political, of their sturdy fellow-freemen.
These men by degrees built themselves comfortable,
roomy houses, and their lives were very pleasant; at
a little later period Clark, having abandoned war
and politics, describes himself as living a retired
life with, as his chief amusements, reading, hunting,
fishing, fowling, and corresponding with a few chosen
friends. Game was still very plentiful: buffalo
and elk abounded north of the Ohio, while bear and
deer, turkey, swans, and geese, not to speak
of ducks and prairie fowl swarmed in the immediate
neighborhood of the settlements.
The Army Officers.
The gentry offered to strangers the
usual open-handed hospitality characteristic of the
frontier, with much more than the average frontier
refinement; a hospitality, moreover, which was never
marred or interfered with by the frontier suspiciousness
of strangers which sometimes made the humbler people
of the border seem churlish to travellers. When
Federal garrisons were established along the Ohio the
officers were largely dependent for their social pleasures
on the gentle-folks of the several rather curious
glimpses of the life of the time. He mentions being
entertained by Clark at “a very elegant dinner,” a number of gentlemen
being present. After dinner the guests adjourned
to the dancing school, “where there were twelve
or fifteen young misses, some of whom had made considerable
improvement in that polite accomplishment, and indeed
were middling neatly dressed considering the distance
from where luxuries are to be bought and the expense
attending the purchase of them here” for
though beef and flour were cheap, all imported goods
sold for at least five times as much as they cost
in Philadelphia or New York. The officers sometimes
gave dances in the forts, the ladies and their escorts
coming in to spend the night; and they attended the
great barbecues to which the people rode from far
and near, many of the men carrying their wives or
sweethearts behind them on the saddle. At such
a barbecue an ox or a sheep, a bear, an elk, or a
deer, was split in two and roasted over the coals;
dinner was eaten under the trees; and there was every
kind of amusement from horse-racing to dancing.
Friction with the Backwoodsmen.
Though the relations of the officers
of the regular troops with the gentry were so pleasant
there was always much friction between them and the
ordinary frontiersmen; a friction which continued to
exist as long as the frontier itself, and which survives
to this day in the wilder parts of the country.
The regular army officer and the frontiersman are
trained in fashions so diametrically opposite that,
though the two men be brothers, they must yet necessarily
in all their thoughts and instincts and ways of looking
at life, be as alien as if they belonged to two different
races of mankind. The borderer, rude, suspicious,
and impatient of discipline, looks with distrust and
with a mixture of sneering envy and of hostility upon
the officer; while the latter, with his rigid training
and his fixed ideals, feels little sympathy for the
other’s good points, and is contemptuously aware
of his numerous failings. The only link between
the two is the scout, the man who, though one of the
frontiersmen, is accustomed to act and fight in company
with the soldiers. In Kentucky, at the close of
the Revolution, this link was generally lacking; and
there was no tie of habitual, even though half-hostile,
intercourse to unite the two parties. In consequence
the ill-will often showed itself by acts of violence.
The backwoods bullies were prone to browbeat and insult
the officers if they found them alone, trying to provoke
them to rough-and-tumble fighting; and in such a combat,
carried on with the revolting brutality necessarily
attendant upon a contest where gouging and biting were
considered legitimate, the officers, who were accustomed
only to use their fists, generally had the worst of
it; so that at last they made a practice of carrying
their side-arms which secured them from
molestation.
Pursuits of the Settlers.
Besides raising more than enough flour
and beef to keep themselves in plenty, the settlers
turned their attention to many other forms of produce.
Indian corn was still the leading crop; but melons,
pumpkins, and the like were grown, and there were
many thriving orchards; while tobacco cultivation
was becoming of much importance. Great droves
of hogs and flocks of sheep flourished in every locality
whence the bears and wolves had been driven; the hogs
running free in the woods with the branded cattle
and horses. Except in the most densely settled
parts much of the beef was still obtained from buffaloes,
and much of the bacon from bears. Venison was
a staple commodity. The fur trade, largely carried
on by French trappers, was still of great importance
in Kentucky and Tennessee. North of the Ohio
it was the attraction which tempted white men into
the wilderness. Its profitable nature was the
chief reason why the British persistently clung to
the posts on the Lakes, and stirred up the Indians
to keep the American settlers out of all lands that
were tributary to the British fur merchants. From
Kentucky and the Cumberland country the peltries were
sometimes sent east by packtrain, and sometimes up
the Ohio in bateaus or canoes.
Boone’s Trading Ventures.
In addition to furs, quantities of
ginseng were often carried to the eastern settlements
at this period when the commerce of the west was in
its first infancy, and was as yet only struggling for
an outlet down the Mississippi. One of those
who went into this trade was Boone. Although
no longer a real leader in Kentucky life he still occupied
quite a prominent position, and served as a Representative
in the Virginia Legislature,
while his fame as a hunter and explorer was now spread
abroad in the United States, and even Europe.
To travellers and new-comers generally, he was always
pointed out as the first discoverer of Kentucky; and
being modest, self-contained and self-reliant he always
impressed them favorably. He spent most of his
time in hunting, trapping, and surveying land warrants
for men of means, being paid, for instance, two shillings
current money per acre for all the good laud he could
enter on a ten-thousand acre Treasury warrant. He also
traded up and down the Ohio River, at various places,
such as Point Pleasant and Limestone; and at times
combined keeping a tavern with keeping a store.
His accounts contain much quaint information.
Evidently his guests drank as generously as they ate;
he charges one four pounds sixteen shillings for two
months’ board and two pounds four shillings
for liquor. He takes the note of another for ninety-three
gallons of cheap corn whiskey. Whiskey cost sixpence
a pint, and rum one shilling; while corn was three
shillings a bushel, and salt twenty-four shillings,
flour, thirty-six shillings a barrel, bacon sixpence
and fresh pork and buffalo beef threepence a pound.
Boone procured for his customers or for himself such
articles as linen, cloth, flannel, corduroy, chintz,
calico, broadcloth, and velvet at prices varying according
to the quality, from three to thirty shillings a yard;
and there was also evidently a ready market for “tea
ware,” knives and forks, scissors, buttons,
nails, and all kinds of hardware. Furs and skins
usually appear on the debit sides of the various accounts,
ranging in value from the skin of a beaver, worth
eighteen shillings, or that of a bear worth ten, to
those of deer, wolves, coons, wildcats, and foxes,
costing two to four shillings apiece. Boone procured
his goods from merchants in Hagerstown and Williamsport,
in Maryland, whither he and his sons guided their
own packtrains, laden with peltries and with kegs of
ginseng, and accompanied by droves of loose horses.
He either followed some well-beaten mountain trail
or opened a new road through the wilderness as seemed
to him best at the moment.
Boone’s creed in matters of
morality and religion was as simple and straightforward
as his own character. Late in life he wrote to
one of his kinsfolk: “All the religion
I have is to love and fear God, believe in Jesus Christ,
do all the good to my neighbors and myself that I can,
and do as little harm as I can help, and trust on God’s
mercy for the rest.” The old pioneer always
kept the respect of red man and white, of friend and
foe, for he acted according to his belief. Yet
there was one evil to which he was no more sensitive
than the other men of his time.
Among his accounts there is an entry
recording his purchase, for another man, of a negro
woman for the sum of ninety pounds. There was already a
strong feeling in the western settlements against
negro slavery, because of its moral evil, and of its
inconsistency with all true standards of humanity
and Christianity, a feeling which continued to exist
and which later led to resolute efforts to forbid or
abolish slave-holding. But the consciences of
the majority were too dull, and, from the standpoint
of the white race, they were too shortsighted to take
action in the right direction. The selfishness
and mental obliquity which imperil the future of a
race for the sake of the lazy pleasure of two or three
generations prevailed; and in consequence the white
people of the middle west, and therefore eventually
of the southwest, clutched the one burden under which
they ever staggered, the one evil which has ever warped
their development, the one danger which has ever seriously
threatened their very existence. Slavery must
of necessity exercise the most baleful influence upon
any slave-holding people, and especially upon those
members of the dominant caste who do not themselves
own slaves. Moreover, the negro, unlike so many
of the inferior races, does not dwindle away in the
presence of the white man. He holds his own;
indeed, under the conditions of American slavery he
increased faster than the white, threatening to supplant
him. He actually has supplanted him in certain
of the West Indian islands, where the sin of the white
in enslaving the black has been visited upon the head
of the wrongdoer by his victim with a dramatically
terrible completeness of revenge. What has occurred
in Hayti is what would eventually have occurred in
our own semi-tropical States if the slave-trade and
slavery had continued to flourish as their shortsighted
advocates wished. Slavery is ethically abhorrent
to all right-minded men; and it is to be condemned
without stint on this ground alone. From the
standpoint of the master caste it is to condemned
even more strongly because it invariably in the end
threatens the very existence of that master caste.
From this point of view the presence of the negro
is the real problem; slavery is merely the worst possible
method of solving the problem. In their earlier
stages the problem and its solution, in America, were
one. There may be differences of opinion as to
how to solve the problem; but there can be none whatever
as to the evil wrought by those who brought about that
problem; and it was only the slave-holders and the
slave-traders who were guilty on this last count.
The worst foes, not only of humanity and civilization,
but especially of the white race in America, were those
white men who brought slaves from Africa, and who fostered
the spread of slavery in the States and territories
of the American Republic.