When Boone reached Boonesborough,
the object he most loved was not to be found.
His poor wife, wearied with waiting for him, and naturally
concluding that he was lost to her for ever, had returned
to her friends on the Yadkin. The settlers had
begged her to remain, and offered her every kindness;
but her husband was gone: she was heart-sick,
and longed to return to her friends in Carolina.
Disappointed as he was, however, he had no time to
waste in sorrow. The Indians were approaching,
and Boonesborough was well nigh defenceless.
Just before his return, a Major Smith had taken charge
of the post, and been busy in strengthening it, but
much was still to be done. Boone’s energies
were now at work, and in a little time the station
was ready for an attack. A white man now came
into the settlement with news. He had escaped
from the Indians. The party from which Boone
had escaped had postponed their attack for three weeks,
and gone back to strengthen themselves. They felt
that Boone had reached home the alarm was
given, the place fortified and that it was
idle to attack it at this time.
Boone determined at once to improve
the mean season. With nineteen men, he started
off to surprise the Indians at Paint Creek Town, a
small village on the Scioto. When he came within
four miles of the place, he met a party of the savages
on their way to join the large body marching against
Boonesborough. The fight instantly commenced:
one Indian fell dead, several were wounded, and the
rest were forced to retreat; their horses and all
their baggage fell into the hands of Boone. Two
men were now sent to reconnoitre the town. They
found no Indians there; they had all left. After
setting fire to the village, they returned, and Boone
immediately hurried homeward.
He had scarcely entered the station,
and closed the gates, when an army of four hundred
and forty-four Indians, led on by a Frenchman named
Duquesne, appeared before the settlement. They
soon sent in a flag, demanding, in the name of the
King of Great Britain, that the station should instantly
surrender. A council was immediately held in the
fort. With such a force before them, Smith was
in favor of meeting their proposal; Boone opposed
it; the settlers backed him in this opposition; and
he sent back for an answer to the Indians that the
gates should never be opened to them. Presently
another flag of truce was sent in, with a message
that they had a letter for Colonel Boone from Governor
Hamilton, of Detroit. Upon hearing this, it was
thought best that Boone and Smith should go out and
meet them, and hear what they had to say.
Fifty yards from the fort they were
met by three chiefs, who received them very cordially,
and led them to the spot where they were to hold the
parley. Here they were seated upon a panther’s
skin, while the Indians held branches over their heads
to protect them from the sun. The chiefs then
commenced talking in a friendly way, and some of their
warriors now came forward, grounded their arms, and
shook hands with them. Then the letter of General
Hamilton was read; he invited them to surrender and
come at once to Detroit where they should be treated
with all kindness. Smith objected to this proposal,
declaring that it was impossible for them, at this
time, to move their women and children; but the Indians
had an answer ready: they had brought forty horses
with them, they said, expressly to help them in removing.
After a long and friendly talk, the white men returned
to the fort, for the purpose, as they said, of considering
the proposal. They now informed the settlers that
the Indians had no cannon, and advised them never
to think of surrendering. Every man thought the
advice good.
The Indians now sent in another flag,
and asked what treaty the whites were ready to make.
Boone, who had suspected treachery all the time, at
once sent a reply, that if they wished to make a treaty,
the place for making it, must be within sixty yards
of the fort. This displeased them at first, but
at last, they consented. He then stationed some
of his men, with their guns, in one angle of the fort,
with orders to fire if it became necessary, and, with
Smith, started out to meet them. After a long
talk with thirty chiefs, terms were agreed upon, and
the treaty was ready to be signed; the chiefs now
said that it was customary with them, on such occasions,
for the Indians to shake hands with every white man
who signed the treaty, as a token of the warmest friendship.
Boone and Smith agreed to this, and the shaking of
hands commenced; presently, they found themselves
seized in the crowd the Indians were dragging
them off; a fire from the fort now levelled the savages
who grasped them; the rest were in confusion, and,
in the confusion, Boone and Smith escaped and rushed
into the fort. In the struggle Boone was wounded,
though not dangerously. It was a narrow escape
for both of them.
There was no more chance for deception
now; the Indians were disappointed, and the whites
were provoked at their treachery. A brisk firing
now commenced on both sides; Duquesne harangued the
Indians and urged them on, while the whites shouted
from the fort, upbraided them as treacherous cowards,
and defied them. The attack was furious, the firing
was kept up till dark, and many an Indian fell that
day before Boonesborough. The whites, sheltered
by their pickets, made easy havoc among them.
When night came, the exasperated Indians
crawled under the pickets and began to throw burning
materials into the fort, hoping to set all on fire;
but in this they were disappointed there
were ample supplies of water inside, and the fire
was put out as fast as it fell.
The next day the firing was resumed,
and day after day it continued, the Indians failing
to make any impression. They were too far from
the fort the first day’s work had
taught them not to come near. At last they formed
a wiser plan for doing mischief. Boonesborough,
as you will remember, was only sixty yards from the
river, and they determined, by the advice of the Frenchman,
to let the water in and force the settlers out.
In the night, they commenced the work of digging a
trench under ground, from the river. In the morning
Boone looked out upon the river, and perceiving that
it was muddy, instantly guessed the cause. He
immediately set his men to the work of cutting a trench
inside the fort, to cross the subterranean passage
of the Indians. The savages saw what was doing,
for Boone’s men were constantly shovelling dirt
over the pickets, but they persevered earnestly in
their design. At last, however, they were forced
to stop, for the dirt caved in as fast as they dug;
disappointed in this, they now summoned the station
once more to a treaty. But Boone laughed at them.
“Do you suppose,” said he, “we would
pretend to treat with such treacherous wretches?
Fire on, you only waste your powder; the gates shall
never be opened to you while there is a man of us
living.” Taking his advice, they commenced
their firing again; at last, on the ninth day of the
siege, wearied with their fruitless labor, they killed
all the cattle they could find, raised a yell, and
departed. This was a terrible siege for the Indians;
it is said that they lost two hundred men; Boone counted
thirty-seven chief warriors; while the whites, defended
by their pickets, had but two killed and four wounded.
You may judge, too, how industrious the savages had
been, when I tell you that the whites who wanted lead,
commenced gathering their balls after they left, and
succeeded in picking out of the logs, and from the
ground, one hundred and twenty-five pounds.
Boone having thus successfully defended
his settlement, determined now to go in search of
his wife. Accustomed to travelling through the
woods, he soon made his lonely journey to the Yadkin.
They were amazed as he entered the house of Mr. Bryan,
his wife’s father. The appearance of one
risen from the grave could not have surprised them
more than that of Boone the lost man was
among them, and great was their rejoicing. He
now remained here with his family for some time, and
here we will leave him for a little while, to talk
of what happened in Kentucky during his absence.
The Kentuckians, roused by the Indian
hostility and treachery, determined soon after he
left to inflict punishment upon them; against the Shawanese
they were most provoked; it was among them that most
of the plots against the whites were formed, and the
attack, therefore, was to be made upon them.
An army of one hundred and sixty men was soon collected,
and the command was given to a brave man named Colonel
Bowman; they were to march directly against old Chilicothe,
the den of the savages.
In July of this year (1779), they
started and reached the home of the Indians, without
being discovered. At daylight, the fight commenced
and continued till ten o’clock. Bowman’s
men fought bravely, but the Indians had every advantage.
Knowing all the woods about their settlement, while
one party fought openly, the other, concealed behind
the grass and trees, poured in a deadly fire upon
the whites. He was forced at last to retreat
as rapidly as possible to a distance of thirty miles;
but the Indians pursued him here, doing more mischief
than before. The savages fought desperately.
His men were falling around him, and but for Colonel
Harrod, every man of them might have been killed.
Seeing the slaughter that was continually increasing,
he mounted a body of horsemen and made a charge upon
the enemy; this broke their ranks, they were thrown
into confusion, and Bowman, with the remnant of his
men, was enabled to retreat.
This attack only exasperated the Indians.
In the course of the next summer (after doing much
mischief in a smaller way in the meantime), they gathered
together to the number of six hundred, and led on by
Colonel Bird, a British officer, came down upon Riddle’s
and Martin’s stations, at the forks of Licking
river. They had with them six cannons, and managed
their matters so secretly, that the first news of their
approach was given to the settlers by the roar of
their guns. Of course it was of no use to resist;
the pickets could not defend them from cannon-balls;
the settlers were forced to surrender. The savages
rushed into the station and instantly killed one man
and two women with their tomahawks; all the others,
many of whom were sick, were now loaded with baggage
and forced to march off with the Indians. It
was certain death to any one, old or young, male or
female, who became, on the march, too weak and exhausted
to travel farther; they were instantly killed with
the tomahawk.
Flushed with success, the Indians
were now more troublesome than ever; it was impossible
for the whites to remain in the country if matters
were to go on in this way. The inhabitants at
last threw themselves upon the protection of Colonel
Clarke, who commanded a regiment of United States
soldiers at the falls of the Ohio. At the head
of his men and a large number of volunteers, he marched
against Pecaway, one of the principal towns of the
Shawanese; numbers of the savages were killed, and
the town was burnt to ashes. This was a triumph,
but it was a triumph gained by the loss of seventeen
of his men.
In 1780, Boone again returned to Boonesborough
with his family, bringing with him also a younger
brother. The elder brother (who had been in Kentucky
before, as you will remember) now returned also, and
made his home at a spot not far from the place where
the town of Shelbyville now stands. The settlers
were all delighted to see their old friend Daniel
Boone once more among them; they now felt that their
leader was on the ground. Mrs. Boone too felt
happy. Though she was again on “the dark
and bloody ground,” her husband was with
her.
In a little time his services were
again especially needed. The want of salt, their
old trouble was upon them, and they looked to Boone
to procure it. Ever ready, he started off with
his younger brother to the Blue Licks, the place of
his former trouble; here he was destined to meet with
trouble again. They had made as much salt as they
could carry, and were now returning to Boonesborough
with their packs, when they were suddenly overtaken
by a party of savages; the Indians immediately fired,
and Boone’s brother fell dead. Daniel Boone
turned, levelled his rifle at the foremost Indian,
and brought him down; with a loud yell the party now
rushed toward him. He snatched his brother’s
rifle, levelled another, and then ran. The Indians
gave chase, but he managed to keep ahead, and even
found time to reload his rifle. He knew that his
only chance for escape was to distance them, and break
his trail. He passed the brow of a hill, jumped
into a brook below, waded in it for some distance,
and then struck off at right angles from his old course.
Upon looking back he found, to his sorrow, that he
had not succeeded the Indians were still
on his track. Presently, he came to a grape-vine,
and tried his old experiment at breaking the trail.
This was to no purpose, he found the savages still
following him. After travelling some distance
farther, upon looking round he saw the cause of his
trouble; the Indians had a dog with them, and this
dog, scenting his track, kept them for ever on his
course. His rifle was loaded the dog
was far ahead of the party and Boone sent
a rifle ball through him. He now pushed on, doubling
his course from time to time; the Indians lost track
of him, and he reached Boonesborough in safety.
In spite of the continued annoyance
of the Indians, the white settlements had continued
to grow, and there were now so many white men in the
country, that in the fall of this year (1780), Kentucky
was divided into the three counties of Jefferson,
Fayette, and Lincoln. Our friend, Daniel Boone,
was appointed to command the militia in his county,
and William Pope, and Benjamin Logan, two brave men,
were to have the command in theirs.
The winter of this year soon set in,
and it proved a hard one. The settlers, however,
bore it cheerfully, for they were accustomed to hardships.
Hard as it was, too, it proved mild to the next that
followed. The winter of 1781 was long remembered
as “the cold winter” in Kentucky.
To make it harder, the Indians, after doing much mischief
through the summer, had destroyed most of the crops
the preceding fall, and the settlers had small supplies
of food. But the forest was around them; Boone
and Harrod were among them, and these two men found
food enough. Every day they went out in the winter’s
storms every night they came in laden with
deer and buffaloes. The people learned to live
on nothing but meat. Boone and Harrod drove away
all thoughts of starvation. They had, however,
this one comfort: the cold weather kept the Indians
at home. They had no disturbances throughout
the winter from them.
When spring opened, however, the savages
showed themselves more furious, if possible, than
ever. Their plans of mischief were better laid;
they seemed to have been feeding their revenge fat.
Open and secret war was all around the settlers.
It would be idle for me to attempt to give details
of the doings of the savages. Ashton’s,
Hoy’s, M’Afee’s, Kincheloe’s,
and Boone’s station, near Shelbyville, were all
attacked. Men were shot down in the open fields,
or waylaid in every pathway. The early annals
of Kentucky are filled with stories of many a brave
white man at this time. There were Ashton, Holden,
Lyn, Tipton, Chapman, White, Boone, Floyd, Wells,
the M’Afees, M’Gary, Randolph, Reynolds,
and others, some of whom were killed, and all of whom
had their hard struggles. The history of that
spring is only a story of burnings, captures, and
murders, on the part of the savages. It was a
dark period for the white men; even Boone, with all
his vigor and fearlessness, thought it the darkest
period he had known in that region. The savages
seemed bent upon a war of extermination.
Not satisfied with such mischief as
they had already done, in the early part of the summer
the savages held a grand council at Old Chilicothe,
to arrange their plans for further destruction.
There were chiefs there from the Cherokees, Wyandots,
Tawas, Pottawattomies, and most of the tribes bordering
on the lakes. Two notorious white villains whose
names will never be forgotten in Kentucky were
there also, to aid them with their counsels.
These were Girty and M’Kee, infamous men, who
lived among the Indians, and lived only by murdering
their own countrymen. Their plan was soon settled.
Bryant’s station, near Lexington, was known to
be a strong post, and this was to be attacked.
This station had within it forty cabins, and here
it was thought they might make the greatest slaughter.
The warriors were to gather as rapidly as possible
for the enterprise.
In a little time, five hundred of
them rallied at Girty’s cabin, ready for their
departure. The white rascal then made a speech
to them. He told them that “Kentucky was
a beautiful hunting-ground, filled with deer and buffaloes,
for their comfort; the white men had come to drive
them away; the ground was now red with the blood of
the red men that had been slain. But vengeance
they would have now, before the whites were
yet fastened in the country, they would strike a blow,
and drive them off for ever.” Then he talked
of the plan before them. He advised them to descend
the Miami in their canoes, cross the Ohio, ascend
the Licking, and then they might paddle their boats
almost to the station. His speech was answered
by a loud yell from the Indians, and they all started
off for their boats Simon Girty, with his
ruffled shirt and soldier coat, marching at their
head.
On the night of the 15th of August,
they arrived before the station. In the morning,
as the gates were opened, the men were fired at by
the savages, and this was the first news to the whites
of the approach of the enemy. It was fortunate
that they had shown themselves thus early: in
two hours more, most of the men were to have started
off to aid a distant feeble station. As soon
as the whites found they were besieged, they managed
to send off the news to Lexington.
The Indians now, as usual, commenced
their stratagems. The large body concealed themselves
in the grass near the pathway to the spring, while
one hundred went round and attacked the southeast angle
of the station. Their hope was to draw the whites
all to that quarter, while they forced an entrance
on the other side. But the white men understood
this sort of cunning; they had lived among the Indians
too long to be caught by such tricks: instead
of noticing the attack, they went on quietly with the
work of repairing and strengthening their palisades.
But water, one of the necessaries
of life, was soon wanting. The whites, as they
looked at the tall grass and weeds near the spring,
felt that Indians were lurking there. The women
now came forward and insisted upon it that they would
go and bring water. “What if they do shoot
us?” they said; “it is better to lose
a woman than a man at such a time.” With
that, they started out, and, strange to tell, went
back and forth, bringing supplies of water, without
any difficulty. Some of the young men now went
out upon the same purpose. They had scarcely left
the station, when they were fired upon. Fortunately,
the Indians were too far to do any mischief; the men
retreated rapidly within the palisades. The Indians,
finding their stratagem fruitless, now rushed forward,
and commenced a tremendous attack. The whites
received them with a steady fire, and many of them
fell. Enraged the more, they now discharged their
burning arrows into the roofs of the houses; some of
the cabins were burnt, but an east wind was blowing
at the time, and that saved the station.
The enemy now fell back into the grass.
They had found out, in some way, that help was expected
from Lexington, and they were preparing to cut it
off. In a little time, all was still. Presently
sixteen horsemen, followed by thirty-one foot-soldiers,
were seen coming; these were the men from Lexington.
Thinking only of the distress of their friends, they
were hurrying along, when the Indians opened a fire
upon them. The horsemen galloped off in a cloud
of dust, and reached the station in safety. The
soldiers on foot, in their effort to escape, plunged
into the cornfields on either side of the road, only
to meet the enemy. A desperate fight commenced
on both sides: two soldiers were killed; the
rest four of them having dangerous wounds reached
the pickets. The exasperated Indians, disappointed
at the escape of this party, now wreaked their vengeance
by killing all the cattle they could find.
Finding all their efforts to enter
the station idle, Simon Girty now came near enough
to be heard, mounted a stump, and holding in his hand
a flag of truce, began to talk. “Surrender
promptly,” cried Simon; “if you surrender
promptly, no blood shall be shed; but if you will not
surrender, then know that our cannons and reinforcements
are coming. We will batter down your pickets
as we did at Riddle’s and Martin’s; every
man of you shall be slain; two are dead already four
are wounded; every man shall die.” This
language was so insolent, that some of the settlers
cried out, “Shoot the rascal!” No man,
however, lifted his rifle; the flag of truce protected
him. “I am under a flag of truce,”
cried Simon; “do you know who it is that speaks
to you?”
Upon this, a young man named Reynolds
leaped up and cried out, “Know you! know you!
yes, we know you well. Know Simon Girty! yes:
he is the renegado, cowardly villain, who loves to
murder women and children, especially those of his
own people. Know Simon Girty! yes: his father
must have been a panther, and his mother a wolf.
I have a worthless dog that kills lambs: instead
of shooting him, I have named him Simon Girty.
You expect reinforcements and cannon, do you?
Cowardly wretches like you, that make war upon women
and children, would not dare to touch them off, if
you had them. We expect reinforcements, too, and
in numbers to give a short account of the murdering
cowards that follow you. Even if you could batter
down our pickets, I, for one, hold your people in too
much contempt to shoot rifles at them. I would
not waste powder and ball upon you. Should you
even enter our fort, I am ready for you; I have roasted
a number of hickory switches, with which we mean to
whip you and your naked cut-throats out of the country!”
Simon was now furious; cursing and
swearing, he went back to his friends, amid the loud
laughs and jeers of the whites. In a little time,
the firing was renewed; it was all to no purpose:
no white man suffered, and every Indian who came within
gun-shot of the fort was sure to fall. In the
course of the night the whole party sneaked off, and
their tracks indicated that they had started for the
Blue Licks. They left behind them thirty of their
number slain.