1UHHB HKIGSiSAL Lu;uli
THE UNIVERSITY
OF ILLINOIS
LIBRARY
Purchased from
Mr. H« A» Rattermann
of Cincinnati in 1915
92jOO"77I
V H54b
IttMOS HSIORICM r!i"VEY
LIBRARY
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
BIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL
MEMOIRS
OF THE EARLY
PIONEER SETTLERS OF OHIO,
WITH NARRATIVES OF
INCIDENTS AND OCCURRENCES IN 1775.
BY S. P. HILDRETH, M. D.
TO WHICH IS ANNEXED
! A JOURNAL OF OCCURRENCES WHICH HAPPENED IN THE CIRCLES OF
THE AUTHOR'S PERSONAL OBSERVATION, IN THE DETACHMENT COM-
MANDED BY COL, BENEDICT ARNOLD, CONSISTING OF TWO
BATTALIONS FROM THE UNITED STATES ARMY, AT
CAMBRIDGE, MASS., IN A. D. 1775 :"
BY COLONEL R. J. MEIGS.
CINCINNATI:
H. W. DERBY & CO., PUBLISHERS.
1852.
Entered according to act of Congress, in the year of our Lord, one
thousand, eight hundred and fifty-two,byH. W. Derby & Co., in the
Clerk'a Office of the District Court for the District of Ohio.
CINCINNATI :
Morgan ($• Overrud, /'- >:'rr*
H 5V b
PREFACE.
This is the second volume of the Early History of Ohio, prepared by
Dr. Hildreth of Marietta, and published under the auspices of the Ohio
Historical Society. It is composed of a series of Biographical Notices of
the early settlers of Washington County, who were also the early settlers
jV of Ohio. Among them are some names celebrated in American history,
whose active life commenced amid the most stirring events of the Revolu-
tion, and whose evening days were finished amid the fresh and forest
scenes of a new and rising State. So various and eventful lives as theirs
have scarcely ever fallen to the lot of man. They were born under a
monarchy, — fought the battle of Independence, — assisted in the baptism
of a great republic, — then moved into a wilderness, — and laid the founda-
tions of a State, — itself almost equaling an empire. These men not only
lived in remarkable times, but were themselves remarkable men. Ener-
getic, industrious, persevering, honest, bold, and free — they were limited
in their achievements only by the limits of possibility. Successful alike
in field and forest, — they have, at length, gone to their rest, — leaving
names which are a part of the fame and the history of their country.
Among the biographies of such men will also be found notices of some
women, whose characters deserve to be perpetuated among the memories
of the State. The public and posterity will owe much to Dr. Hildreth for
having so carefully preserved these memoirs of the early times. The
Historical Society deeply regrets that it has no power to do more than
.•.'■rely introduce this interesting volume to the public.
Edward D. Mansfield,
Presidenl of the Ohio Historical Society.
367153
CONTENTS.
PAGE.
INTRODUCTION 3
RUFUS PUTNAM 13
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE 120
JAMES MITCHELL VARNUM 165
SAMUEL HOLDEN PARSONS 186
BENJAMIN TUPPER 217
EBENEZER SPROAT 230
JONATHAN DEVOL 241
RETURN JONATHAN MEIGS 258
GRIFFIN GREENE 273
PAUL FEARING 291
JOSEPH AND REBECCA GILMAN 302
BENJAMIN IVES AND HANNAH GILMAN 306
MARY LAKE 320
DANIEL STORY 325
JABEZ TRUE 329
WILLIAM DANA 337
NATHANIEL GUSHING 340
JONATHAN HASKELL 345
EBENEZER BATTELLE 349
ISRAEL PUTNAM 354
NATHAN GOODALE 358
viii CONTENTS.
ROBERT BRADFORD 370
AARON WALDO PUTNAM 372
JONATHAN STONE 380
ROBERT OLIVER „ . 391
B \ I FIELD WHITE 396
DEAN TYLER 393
WILLIAM GRAY 399
WILLIAM STACEY 401
THE FIRST SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS COUNTY, OHIO 408
JERVIS CUTLER 414
A HISTORY OF THE FIRST SETmsMENT OF AMESTOWN, IN
ATHENS COUNTY, OHIO 431
BENJAMIN BROWN 428
JOSEPH BARKER 433
HAMILTON KERR 464
ISAAC AND REBECCA WILLIAMS 475
HARMAN AND MARGARET BLENNERHASSETT 491
APPENDIX 529
INTRODUCTION.
"The early history of the first settlements in the now great state
of Ohio, not only ought to be preserved as an important epoch in
the general history of our common country, but also the characters
and public services of those men who were eminent in forming these
settlements, have a claim to go down to posterity amongst the bene-
factors of mankind. The influence of their morals and habits has
had a lasting effect on society, and is now perceptible in the general
character of the communities in which they resided. The facts thus
preserved, will enable the future historian to account for many things
in our history which otherwise might appear obscure. The origin
of an orderly, well regulated society, in any given district, may often
be explained by tracing back its history to the influence exerted
over it by some one or more individuals, who have imparted this
character to it in its commencement : while the example of a few
dissolute men, may have done much in placing a stigma on the name
of a place, that will remain for ages." The settlements of the Ohio
Company, were fortunate in this respect ; all the leading and influ-
ential men were on the side of good order, morality and religion ;
and the impress of their character is seen and felt to this day, in the
well regulated, quiet habits, of a New England community, worthy
the descendants of their Puritan ancestors. While many of the early
colonies in the West, were composed of the ignorant, the vulgar, and
the rude, those of Washington county, like some of the Grecian,
carried with them, the sciences and the arts ; and although placed
on the frontiers, amidst the howling wilderness, and tribes of hostile
savages, exposed to danger and privation, there ran in the veins of
these little bands, some of the best blood of the country. They
enrolled many men of highly cultivated minds and exalted intellect.
There was at one time, in 1789, no less than ten of these, who had
X INTRODUCTION.
received the honors of a college course of education : a larger
number than can now be found in the same district of country, if the
professors in the Marietta College are excluded. The Hon. William
Woodbridge, in his remarks before the Senate of the United States,
on the question of the annexation of Texas, against which the citi-
zens of Marietta, with thousands of others in Ohio, loudly remon-
strated, when presenting that paper, gave the following sketch of
the character of the men who first founded that place :
" It was on the 7th of April, 1788, that this settlement was first
commenced ; it was then that the first stone, the corner stone, of
this great state was laid ; and it was laid by these men, or by their
immediate ancestors. The colony then consisted almost entirely of
a remnant, and a most revered remnant, of your armies of the
Revolution — of officers and soldiers, who, at the close of that seven
years' term of privation, of suffering, and of battles, found them-
selves let loose upon the world with their private fortunes, in gen-
eral ruined, estranged almost from their own early homes, and
with occupations gone ! If they were of any of the learned profes-
sions, and there were many such, their professions were forgotten, and
if their pursuits had been agricultural, commercial, or mechanical,
why they had lost those business habits so difficult to acquire, but
which are yet so indispensable to success ; and such of their pay,
too, as they may have been enabled to preserve, being old conti-
nental certificates, and become almost worthless in their hands, for
all available purposes. In circumstances of so much gloom, the
thought occurred of establishing themselves once more in a body,
in the untrodden West. During many years they had camped to-
gether, and eaten together ; they had fought and bled together ; there
was something pleasing in the plan of continuing still closer, their
social and friendly relations. They had warrants which entitled
them to public lands ; many of them had continental certificates and
other evidences of claim, which would go far to enable them to make
their purchase. An association was formed ; negotiations with the
old Continental Congress and with the Board of War were com-
menced, and during the year 1787, a purchase was effected; and on
the 7th of April, as I have said, 1788, the first and principal detach
INTRODUCTION. ? i
mcnt of that interesting corps of emigrants, landed at the confluence
of the Muskingum with the Ohio river. This was directly athwart
the old Indian war path; for it was down the Muskingum and its
tributary branches, that the Wyandotts, the Shawnees, the Ottawas,
and all the Indians of the north amd northwest, were accustomed to
march, when from time to time, for almost half a century before,
they made those dreadful incursions, into western Virginia and wes-
tern Pennsylvania, which spread desolation, and ruin, and despair,
through all those regions. Being arrived there, they marked out
their embryo city, and in honor of the friend of their country, the
queen of France, called it Marietta. They surrounded it with pali-
sades and abatis ; they erected block-houses and bastions. On an
eminence a little above, and near the Muskingum, they constructed
a more regular and scientific fortification. Thus did the settlement
of that great state commence. Among these colonists were very
many of the most distinguished officers of the Revolution, and of
all grades. Gen. Rufus Putnam, and Gen. Benjamin Tupper, of the
Massachusetts line, were there. Gen. Parsons of the Connecticut,
and Gen. Varnum, of the Rhode Island lines, were there. Old Com-
modore Whipple, of Rhode Island, for whom the honor is claimed
of firing the first hostile gun from on board a ' Congress ' vessel of
war, and who during the whole war, was another ' Paul Jones,'
and as active and daring, found his grave there ; as did a near rela-
tive of Gen. Nathaniel Green. The sons of the 'Wolf catcher,'
Gen. Israel Putnam, and the descendants of Manasseh Cutler, were
there. Col. Cushing and Col. Sproat, Col. Oliver and Col. Sargent,
and multitudes of others, distinguished alike for their bravery, for
their patriotism, and for their skill in war, were there. Some few
there are, some very few, still alive, and whose names I recognize,
who constituted a part of this wonderful band of veteran soldiers.
The rest, one after another, have dropped off. Many of the things I
have adverted to, I personally saw. I was a child then, but I well
recollect the regular morning reveille, and the evening tattoo, that
helped to give character to the establishment. Even on the Sabbath,
the male population were always under arms, and with their chap-
lain, who was willing to share the lot of his comrades, were accus-
Xii INTRODUCTION.
tomed to march in battle array, to their block-house church. And
I take this occasion to remark, that it was not until the memorable
victory of Gen. Wayne, that the war of the Revolution really ended^
and Gen. Harrison was right when he made that assertion."
There is nothing more noble than to feel a deep interest in the
honor of our country, our state, or the community in which we mingle.
The history of these men belongs to the United States ; their breasts
were often the bulwarks, which, in the " time of trial," saved us from
the enslaving power of Great Britain, and we are endeavoring to
preserve their names and their characters from oblivion, by erecting
this historical monument to their memory. For the materials on
which it is founded, the author is indebted to many kind friends,
generally the relatives of the persons, but in an especial manner to
W. R. Putnam, Esq., Hon. Judge Cutler, Col. Joseph Barker, and
William Slocomb : for Com. Whipple, to his grandson, Dr. Corn-
stock, of Boston, John Howland, Esq., of Providence, Rhode Island,
and P. G. Robbins, M. D., of Roxbury, Massachusetts. The
names of many other prominent men are omitted from a lack of the
facts on which to found a written biography ; and the larger number
of those here given were obtained with much laborious search,
amongst old letters, volumes of history, oral tradition, and numer-
ous letters of inquiry written to the relatives of the deceased, in
various and distant parts of the country. A full and well written biog-
raphy of the late Gov. Meigs, who was one of the early settlers of
Marietta, has been published in a posthumous volume of Sketches
of the early Settlers of Ohio, by the late Alexander Campbell, Esq.,
and is not given here.* The present work has many imperfections,
but may be the means of preserving some facts not generally known,
for the use of a future and more able historian.
* That of General It. Putnam in the same volume, is a brief sketch taken from a
newspaper notice at the time of his death ; and that of Paul Fearing, Esq., was
written for Mr. Campbell, by the author of this volume, and is now republished
with some additions.
\
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
»
h/^^i}>
PIONEER SETTLERS OF OHIO,
RUFUS PUTNAM
General Rufus Putnam, the subject of this historical
memoir, was a descendant in the fifth generation from John
Putnam, who emigrated from Buckinghamshire, England,
and settled at Salem, in the province of Massachusetts, in
the year 1G34. He brought over with him three sons, who
were born in England, viz.: Thomas, Nathaniel and John.
The father died quite suddenly, when about eighty years
old. He ate his supper as usual, performed family worship,
and died directly after getting into his bed.
Edward Putnam, the son of Thomas, and grandfather of
Rufus Putnam, in the year 1733, made the following record :
" From those three proceeded twelve males, and from these
twelve forty males, and from the forty eighty -two males j"
so that in 1733, there were eighty-two males by the name
of Putnam, besides the females. All of that name in New
England were the descendants of John.
With respect to their condition in life, he observes, "I
have been young, I now am old ; yet have I not seen the
righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread ; except from
God, who provides for all ; for he hath given to the genera-
tion of my fathers Agur's petition, neither poverty nor riches ;
but hath fed us with food convenient for us, and their children
have been able to help others in their need."
14 RUFUS PUTNAM.
When this was written, he was seventy-nine years old.
He lived after that fourteen years, and died when he was in
his ninety-fourth year. This Edward was the grandson of
John, the patriarch of the Putnams in New England. The
males of this family were for many ages famous for longev-
ity, numbers of them living to be over eighty years old, and
several over ninety. The descendants of this good old man
still inherit the promise and the blessing of the righteous :
all of that name have had, and still continue to have, not
only an abundance of bread for themselves, but also to spare
to the poor and needy.
Elisha Putnam, the father of Gen. Rufus, was the third
son of Edward Putnam, and his wife, Mary Hall, was born
in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1685. Here he continued to
live until manhood, and married Susannah Fuller, the daugh-
ter of Jonathan Fuller, of Danvers. About the year 1725,
when forty years old, he moved, with his wife and family of
three children, to the town of Sutton, Worcester county,
Massachusetts, where he purchased a fine farm, and pursued
the occupation of a tiller of the earth, as all his fathers had
done. After his removal to Sutton, three other sons were
born to him ; of these Rufus was the youngest, and born the
9th of April, 1738.
The Rev. Dr. Hall, in his diary, says, that " Deacon Elisha
Putnam was a very useful man in the civil and ecclesiastical
concerns of the place. He was for several years deacon
of the church, town clerk, town treasurer, and representative
in the General Court, or Colonial Assembly of Massachusetts.
He died in June, 1745, in the joyful hope of the glory of
God."
Maj. Gen. Israel Putnam was also a descendant of
Thomas, the oldest son of John, in the fourth generation,
by Joseph, the third son of Thomas. Joseph had three sons,
William, Daniel and Israel. The latter was born in 1717,
RUFUS PUTNAM. 15
and was the cousin of Elisha Putnam, the father of Gen.
Rufus. At the death of his father, Mr. Putnam was seven
years old. He was now sent to live with his maternal grand-
father in Danvers, and remained in his family until Septem-
ber, 1747. During this period he was sent to school a portion
of the time, and made some progress in reading. In the
course of this year, his mother married Capt. John Sadler,
of Upton, Massachusetts, and he went to live with him, and
remained under his roof until his death, in 1753. His mother
was now again a widow.
In 1752, when fourteen years of age, Rufus made choice
of his brother-in-law, Jonathan Dudley, of Sutton, as his
guardian, and the certificate is signed by the Hon. Joseph
Wilder, judge of probate for Worcester county. During the
time of his residence with his step-father, all opportunities
for instruction were denied him. Capt. Sadler was very
illiterate himself, and thought books and learning of very
little use, and not worth the time bestowed on their acquire-
ment. The world is not destitute of such men to this day ;
they think and act as if they believed that the body was the
only part to be provided for, and that the mind needed no
instruction, or food for its growth, except what is acquired
by natural observation and instinct. But young Putnam
felt that he had another appetite to supply, besides that of
the body; that his mind craved food and instruction, and
would not be appeased without it. Notwithstanding the
ridicule and obstructions thrown in his way by his step-father,
he sought every opportunity for study, and examination of
the books that fell in his way. Having no school books of
his own, and this parsimonious man refusing to buy them,
he soon fell upon a plan to get them himself. Capt.
Sadler kept a kind of public house, at which travelers some-
times called for refreshment. By waiting diligently upon
diem, they sometimes gave him a few pence. These he
16 ItUFUS PUTNAM.
carefully laid by, until he could purchase some powder and
shot : with this ammunition and an old shot gun, he killed
partridges, or pheasants, and sold from time to time until
the proceeds bought him a spelling book and an arithmetic.
With these two invaluable articles, the foundation of all,
even the most profound learning, he soon made considerable
progress in the rudiments of education, without any teacher
but his own patient ingenuity. In the same way he learned
to write, and make figures in a legible manner, progressing
in a short time to the rule of three, guided only by the
directions laid down in the book. How delightful must have
been his sensations when he could put his own thoughts into
tangible sentences on paper, and understand the rules of
calculation, so important in all the concerns of life.
In March, 1754, when nearly sixteen years old, he was
bound as an apprentice to the mill-wright trade, under
Daniel Mathews, of Brookfield. He was a man who had
nearly the same opinion of the inutility of learning, as Mr.
Sadler, and entirely neglected to send his apprentice to
school. He, however, was more favorable in one respect,
as he did not refuse him the use of candles for light, when
pursuing his studies in the long winter evenings. His atten-
tion was chiefly directed to the acquisition of arithmetic,
geography and history ; while orthography, etymology, and
the rules of grammar were neglected. Having no books in
these branches and no one to teach him, his attention was
chiefly directed to that which would be more immediately
useful in the common affairs of life. In penmanship he
had no aid from those nice copperplate engravings, pub-
lished in after years, nor any one to guide him in the art of
neat handwriting, so that those two important branches,
spelling correctly, and writing handsomely, did not receive
that attention they otherwise would have done, and left him
during all his future life to regret his deficiencies in these
RUFUS PUTNAM. 17
respects. Could he have looked into futurity, or had the
least intimation of the public stations of trust and honor
which he was destined by Providence to fill in manhood, he
would doubtless have been better prepared for their arduous
duties. The greatest wonder of all is, that with the discour-
agements and privations which environed him, he had the
fortitude and perseverance to overcome these obstacles, and
acquire so much really useful learning as he did. Ninety-
nine boys in a hundred would never have made the attempt,
but have lived and died in ignorance.
During this portion of his life, from sixteen to nineteen
years, he was busily occupied under Daniel Mathews, in
acquiring the practical art of the mill-wright, and in working
on his farm. It required some knowledge of geometry, to
form perfect circles, divide them into numerous equal por-
tions, and lay out the exact angles necessary in the frame-
work of the mill ; thus gradually enlarging his knowledge
of mathematics, for which he had naturally an ardent attach-
ment, and a mind well fitted to comprehend. During this
time his physical frame grew full as rapidly as his mind, so
that when he was eighteen years old, he possessed the
brawny limbs, the muscular power, and the full stature of a
man sLx feet high. In all athletic exercises, he was renowned
for his great strength and activity ; and thus eminently fitted
for the fatigues and privations of the military life he was
destined so early to enter.
The war between Great Britain and France, in which
the colonies were much more deeply interested than the
mother country, commenced in the year 1754, when he
entered on his apprenticeship. The accounts of the several
battles, the defeat of Gen. Braddock, and the exploits of his
martial relative, Capt. Israel Putnam, no doubt filled his
youthful mind with ardor, and led him while yet only in his
nineteenth year to enlist as a private soldier, in the company
18 RUFUS PUTNAM.
of Capt. Ebcnezer Learned, consisting of one hundred men,
many of whom must have been his acquaintances or asso-
ciates. The term of service was a little short of a year,
commencing the 15th of March, 1757, and ending the 2d
day of February, 1758. By the 30th of April the de-
tachment was ready for marching, and that day left Brook-
field, on their route for Kinderhook, on the Hudson river,
about eighteen miles below Albany, which place they reached
on the 6th of May.
In this and his subsequent campaign, he turned the art of
writing, which he had with so much difficulty acquired, to a
useful purpose, by keeping a regular journal of the events
which took place ; and without this precaution would have
been lost or forgotten. He remarks that Capt. Learned
prayed regularly, night and morning, with his men, and on
the Sabbath read a sermon in addition — a proof of the gen-
eral prevalence of piety amongst the New England people,
and which if more common in this day, would suppress much
of the profanity and wickedness so universal amongst the
soldiery of modern times. On the 18th of May, they left
Kinderhook, and marched the same day to Greenbush,
opposite the town of Albany.
On the 21st of May, the company moved to Seaghticoke,
a Dutch settlement on the banks of the Hoosack river, three
miles from the Hudson. It was deserted by the inhabitants
on account of the Indians, and now lies in the north-wTesterly
corner of Renssellaer county.
On the 9th of June, the detachment joined Col. Fry's
regiment, at Stillwater, a spot subsequently famous for the bat-
tles at Bemis' Heights, which turned the tide of Burgoyne's
success, and finally led to his surrender. On the 11th they
marched to Saratoga, a place still more celebrated in military
history, for the conquest of his army, thirty years after this
time, in which Mr. Putnam acted a conspicuous part.
RUFUS PUTNAM. 19
On the 14th of this month, Fry's regiment, composed of
seventeen companies of provincials, decamped, and on the
following day reached Fort Edward. This celebrated mili-
tary post, so often noticed in the events of the old French
war, was built two years before this time, and was now in
the pride of its strength. It stood on the east or left bank of
the Hudson river, about fifty-two miles above Albany, and
was constructed by a body of colonial troops under Gen.
Lyman, and named after Edward, Duke of York, the eldest
son of King George the Second, of England. It is thus
described in Mr. Putnam's journal : " The river washed one
side of its walls. The form was somewhat irregular ; having
two bastions and two half bastions. The walls were high
and thick, composed of hewed timber — a broad rampart, with
casements, or bomb-proofs — a deep ditch with a draw-bridge —
a covered way, glacis, &c." In an after note, he says, " I
have been particular in this description, because in 1777,
there was by no means so great an appearance of there hav-
ing been a fortification here as we find in the ancient
works at Marietta and other parts of the Ohio country."
It stood at the head of the carrying place, between the Hud-
son and Lake George, and also Wood creek, a tributary of
Lake Champlain. The village of Fort Edward stands near
the site of the old fort, and serves to perpetuate its name.
The tragical fate of Miss McCrea happened in this vicinity
in 1777. White Hall, at the head of the Lake, the port from
which steamboats now run to St. John, in Canada, was, in
the Revolutionary war, called Skenesborough ; and was
named after Maj. Skene, presently noticed by Mr. Putnam
in his journal.
Being determined to see as much as possible of the adven-
tures and hardships of a military life, he joined the corps of
Rangers, as a volunteer, and on the 8th of July, marched on
a scout under Lieut. Collins, with twenty-two men, to
20 RUFUS PUTNAM.
reconnoitre South Bay, the southerly extremity of Lake
Champlain, distant about twenty-five miles from Fort Ed-
ward. On the 9th, having approached, as they thought, near
the bay, the main party was halted, and three men, of whom
Mr. Putnam was one, sent forward to learn its situation.
Supposing it would occupy but a few hours, they left their
blankets and provisions with the men that remained in camp.
It proved to be much further than they had anticipated, and
after fulfilling then orders, it was nearly night when they got
back to the encampment. Much to their vexation and disap-
pointment, they found that the lieutenant and his men, had
left the ground, carrying with them their blankets and pro-
visions. It seems that the leader had taken alarm at their
long absence, supposing them either killed or captured by
the Indians, and had hastily retreated in confusion. The
deserted Rangers fired then guns, to give notice of their
return, but no answering signal was heard. Two nights
were thus spent in the woods, exposed, without their blankets,
to the annoyance of gnats and musquitoes, which swarmed
in vast numbers over this humid region. The dress of the
Rangers was similar to that of the Indians, leaving their
thighs bare, and exposed to their attacks. They reached
Fort Edward on the 11th, having been forty-eight hours
without food, thus realizing a little foretaste of a ranger's
life. Lieut. Collins did not get in until the following
day, and confessed that he heard their signal guns, but
supposed them fired by the Indians. He, however, by vari-
ous excuses, pacified Mr. Putnam and his comrades ; yet he
remarks on the transaction, " It was extremely unsoldier-
like to leave us in the woods in the manner he did. If our
long absence gave cause of alarm, he ought to have with-
drawn but a short distance, placed himself in ambush, and
posted two men under cover to watch for our return, or
give notice of the approach of the enemy."
RUFUS PUTNAM. 21
/
On the 23d of July, about eight o'clock in the morning, a
large party of Indians fired on the Carpenters', or Mechanics'
Guard, within half a mile of the fort, and killed thirteen
men, with one missing. This was the first view he had of
Indian butchery; and says, "It was not very agreeable to
the feelings of a young soldier, and I think there are few
who can look on such scenes with indifference." In the
afternoon, two hundred and fifty men, under Capt. Israel
Putnam, were sent out in pursuit. They followed the trail
until sunset, when the main body was halted, and three
men, of whom Mr. Putnam was one, sent forward a mile or
more, with orders to secrete themselves near the trail until
after dark, watching closely for any scout that might be
sent back, "for," said the captain of the Rangers, "if they
do not embark to-night in their boats, they will send a party
back to see if they are pursued." They went as ordered,
but made no discovery. He remarks, "It was a maxim I
treasured up in my mind, as applicable, especially in the
woods, whether you are pursuing, or are pursued by the
enemy," and was the beginning of his military knowledge.
Capture of Fort William Henry.
The Marquis de Montcalm, who commanded the French
forces in Canada, was a man of intelligence and vast enter-
prise. After one or two ineffectual attempts to surprise the
fort without the trouble of a regular siege, he finally con-
cluded to collect all the troops in his power, and set about
the work by regular approaches. This fort stood near the
head of Lake George, distant fourteen miles from Fort Ed-
ward, and seventy from Albany, and was built by Gen.
Johnson in 1755, who named it after one of the princes of
the reigning family. It was a square work, with four bas-
tions. The walls were made of timber, filled in with earth
22 RUFUS PUTNAM.
with a ditch on the outbade ; and was able, for a time, to re-
sist a cannonade or bombardment. Having arranged his
plan of operations, Montcalm came up the lake with a for-
midable array of boats; and on the 3d of August, 1757,
landed an army of ten thousand men, and a large body of
Indians, with a heavy train of artillery ; and immediately
commenced the siege. Col. Munroe, who commanded the
fort, had arrived only the day before, with his regiment, from
Fort Edward, to reinforce the garrison. He was a brave-
man, and made the best defense in his power; but the
troops under his command were too few in number, to hold
out long against so formidable an attack. Many of his can-
non burst, and the ammunition failed. After a spirited de-
fense of six days, a capitulation was entered into for the
surrender of the fort and troops, on the 9th of August.
"About half a mile east of the fort, separated from it by a
swamp and creek, lay a body of fifteen hundred Provincials,
encamped within a low breastwork of logs. On these Mont-
calm made no serious attack ; and they might at any time
have made their escape, by forcing their way through the
enemy posted in that quarter ; but the next morning after
the surrender, or the 10th of August, as the Provincials were
paraded, to march to Fort Edward, agreeably to capitula-
tion, the Indians attacked them, and a horrid butchery en-
sued. Those who escaped with their lives were stripped
almost naked; many were lost in the woods, whore they
wandered several days without food. One man, in particu-
lar, was out ten days; and there is reason to believe, that
some perished, especially the wounded. The number mur-
dered, and missing, was some hundreds.
"Gen. Webb lay, all the time of the siege, at Fort Ed-
ward, with not less than four thousand men, and for a con-
siderable part of the time with a larger number, by the
coming up of the New York militia. He was informed,
RUFUS PUTNAM. 23
every day of the siege, by an express from Col. Munroe,
of the progress of affairs at the lake, and knew that the
enemy had made an attempt on the fortified camp of the Pro-
vincials. It was the opinion of many officers, that he might.
have relieved the fort, and that he was much to blame for
not attempting it. The general opinion amongst the sol-
diers was, that he was a coward; for he took no care to
bury the men butchered in the manner mentioned, or to seek
for the wounded, should there be any living among the dead.
I was on the ground a short time after, and saw the dead
bodies as much neglected as if they had been wild beasts."
(Man. Jour.) He remarks, that the Provincials lost all
confidence in Gen. Webb, and many of them left the
army, and returned home. He was himself, at one time,
being under great excitement at the dastardly conduct of
Webb, on the point of leaving, but was providentially pre-
vented.
On the 8th of October, the campaign being closed for that
year, the Provincials, who composed the corps of Rangers,
were discharged. He, however, continued to do camp duty
some days longer, and then attached himself to a company
of artisans, who were employed, until the 10th of Novem-
ber, in completing the defenses of Fort Edward. On that
day, the remnant of Col. Frye's regiment, himself, and the
larger portion of his men, having been captured at Fort
William Henry, marched down to the Half-moon, a post
twelve miles above Albany. His providentially joining the
Rangers, no doubt, saved him from participating in this
slaughter and captivity.
On the 18th of November, three hundred and sixty men
of the detachment were drafted into four companies, and
ordered to different posts for winter quarters. This was a
vexatious disappointment, as the Provincials expected to be
24 KUFUS PUTNAM.
discharged at the close of the campaign, although, accord-
ing to their enlistment, they were to serve until the 2d day
of February, 1758.
Capt. Learned's company, to which Mr. Putnam be-
longed, was ordered up to Stillwater, on the east side of
the Hudson; while he and several other mechanics were de-
tained and employed in completing the king's works at the
Half-moon, until the 29th of December.
The 1st of January, 1758, was celebrated by the men in
great festivity, with an earnest looking forward to Candle-
mas, or 2d of February, as the period of their release from
servitude.
From the movements of the commander of the stockaded
garrison, Capt. Skene, afterward major, and proprietor
of Skenesborough, they began to suspect he intended to
retain them in service beyond the time of their enlistment.
The Provincials were quartered in huts by themselves, a
short distance from the post, winch was guarded by a com-
pany of British regulars. Having decided on making a
push for home, as soon as they considered themselves fairly
at liberty, previous arrangements were made for the jour-
ney, by preparing snow shoes for each man, as there was
no possibility of marching through the woods, where the
snow was three or four feet deep, without this ingeniously
contrived Indian apparatus, which had been adopted by the
New Englanders from them. Capt. Learned, who had just
returned from a furlough to Massachusetts, when made ac-
quainted with the design of his men, approved of their plan,
and said he would lead them, unless he could procure their
regular discharge. Mr. Putnam observes on this transac-
tion, that he thought well of the captain at the time, but-
had since learned, that for an officer to desert his post is
unpardo liable.
On the 2d of February, Capt. Skene ordered the Provin-
RUFUS PUTNAM. 25
cials into the fort, and read a letter from Gen. Abercrombie,
directing him to persuade the Massachusetts men under his
command, to tarry a few days, until he could hear from that
government, and know their intentions in regard to them.
To this they replied, that he is a good soldier who serves
his full time, and that the province had no farther concern
with them; neither would they remain any longer. Capt.
Skene threatened them with death if they departed without
a regular discharge, and ordered them back to their bar-
racks. He, however, took no forcible measures to detain
them, nor did he search their huts for the snow-shoes, which
they took the precaution to secrete under the snow. Their
huts were sheltered by a high bank, out of sight of the fort,
which screened their movements- from observation.
Firm to their purpose, about three o'clock in the morning
of the 3d of February, they marched off as silently as pos-
sible, seventy in number, under the command of Capt.
Learned and Lieut. Walker; leaving Lieut. Brown, and a
few invalids, who did not choose to join them. After leav-
ing their barracks, they had a level piece of intervale, bor-
dering the Hudson, about half a mile wide to cross, exposed
to the artillery of the fort, had they been discovered by the
sentinels, which was the reason of their departure in the
night. They did not fear any opposition from the men in
the garrison in the open field, as they outnumbered them.
As to provisions for the march, they had provided as well as
they could, by saving a portion of their daily rations for a
week or two previous, and had hoarded up in this way, two
or three days' allowance. The distance to Hoosack fort, as
it was called, a small stockaded garrison belonging to Mas-
sachusetts, was thirty miles, and was allotted for two days
march. The snow in the woods was deeper than expected,
and made the traveling laborious for the leading men of
the file, while those who followed after had a pretty firm
26 RUFUS PUTNAM.
path. The second day of the march was in a snow storm;
nevertheless, they bore manfully on, directing their course
for Hoosack river, which was to be their guide to the fort;
but during the snow storm they became bewildered, and fall-
ing on a westerly branch, instead of the main stream, it led
them far out of their course, and at night they encamped
without reaching their desired haven. Two turkeys were
killed during the day, which aided their scanty stock of food.
On the third day's march, they decamped very early, confi-
dent of reaching the fort before noon, but mid-day passed
by, and the night arrived without the sight of it. One tur-
key was killed, and the camp formed with heavy hearts;
which was done by kindling fires against a fatten tree, and
lying down on the snow with their blankets, in the open air.
Their provision was now nearly spent, and they were led,
reluctantly, to believe, that they were actually lost in the
woods. Several of the men, from the extreme severity of
the weather, had frozen their feet ; and one had lost a snow
shoe by breaking through the ice.
On the fourth day the march was continued up the stream
until noon, when they concluded to alter their course. This
branch of the Hoosack, it seems, led up into the New
Hampshire grants, afterward Vermont, where the town of
Bennington was subsequently built. The direction of the
march, by the advice of Capt. Learned, was now about
south-east, over a hilly broken region, and the sun went
down as they reached the top of a high mountain, which
appeared to be the water shed, or dividing ridge between
the streams which fell into the Hudson and Connecticut
rivers. The weather was excessively cold, and the snow
five feet deep. On the morning of the fifth day, after a
very uncomfortable night, thirty of the men, Mr. Putnam
being one of them, breakfasted on a small turkey, without
salt or bread. After traveling about five miles they fell on a
RUFUS PUTNAM. 27
small branch, running south-east, down which they followed
until several tributaries had enlarged it, by night, to a con-
siderable river. All this day they had no food but the buds
of the beech trees, and a few bush cranberries. At night
they encamped, weary and faint, but not disheartened.
The sixth day's march was continued along the course of
the river discovered the day before, which none of them
knew the name of, in a broken, hilly region, not very favor-
able to the point of compass they wished to follow. Tne
weather was cold and stormy, while the men were so feeble
and lame from frozen feet, that only a few were able to
lead the trail, and break the path in the snow. By march-
ing on the frozen river, the lame men found a smooth path,
or it is probable some of them would have perished. At
night they encamped by tens in a mess. As it happened they
had with them one dog, and only one. He was large and
fat. At night it was concluded to kill him for supper. This
was done, and his body divided into seven portions, or one
part to every ten men, the entrails falling to the butcher as
his fee ; and as he belonged to Mr. Putnam's mess, they
made their supper on the fat. On the morning of the sev-
enth day, his men breakfasted on one of the feet, and a
hind leg cut off at the gambrel joint, which being pounded
and roasted in the embers, so as to separate the bones of
the foot, made quite a palatable viand to a hungry stomach.
That day the party confined their march to the river, and
about noon came to a spot where some trees had been
recently cut for some shingles. This was the first sign of
inhabitants they had seen, and it revived their drooping
spirits. At sunset one of the men noticed a small stream
putting in on the left bank, which he recognized as Pelham
brook, and that Hawk's fort, on Dcerfield river, was not
more than three miles distant. This latter river is a branch
of the Connecticut.
28 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Their leader now ordered two men to go forward to the
fort, and make provision for the arrival of the party in the
morning, which was a wise measure, and directed the most
active men to make fires for the more feeble and lame ones,
as they came up, which happily they all did by dark. That
night Putnam's mess supped on the thigh bone of the dog,
made into soup, with a small bit of pork and a little ginger,
which made a very palatable dish. With respect to the
flesh of a dog, he observes, "since the experience of that
day, I have believed it to be very good meat, and could eat
it at any time without disgust." This goes to confirm the
experience of Lewis and Clark's men in their journey over
the Rocky mountains, who lived on it for weeks, and pre-
ferred it to any other meat.
On the eighth day's march, which was the 10th of Feb-
ruary, early in the forenoon, they met some men from the
fort, coming to their relief with slices of bread and meat, to
appease their appetites and enable them to reach the post,
where they were received with great kindness. Many of
the men were badly frozen, and nearly exhausted with
hunger. As a proof of the vigor of his frame, Mr. Putnam
carried the pack of a sick man in addition to his own, and
was always one of the leaders in breaking the path ;
although he felt the cravings of hunger, yet never failed in
vigor or activity. One cause of this he attributes to the
use of a little honey, which one of his mess had in a bottle,
about a pound weight. Into this honey bottle, each man
dipped the end of a rod and put to his mouth, and not like
Jonathan into a lunvy comb.
On tin* 15th of February, he arrived at his former home,
very thankful for his preservation amidst so many dangers.
Capt. Learned was much censured for his conduct, and
was not again commissioned during the war.
After passing the remainder of the winter at home, and
RUFUS PUTNAM. 29
forgetting the sufferings of the last campaign, he again
enlisted in the provincial service, for another tour of
duty, in Capt. Joseph Whitcomb's company, and Col. Rug-
gles' regiment. The war, thus far, had been a continued
scene of disasters, and disgrace to the crown; one army
after another had been defeated or captured, and the French
were in a fair way of overrunning the British possessions in
America; and although the number of inhabitants in the
Canadas was not more than one quarter as great as that of
the colonies, yet their military commanders were much
more able and energetic than the British,* and carried con-
quest and victory wherever they turned their arms.
The regiment to which he was attached, rendezvoused at
Northampton, in Massachusetts, and marched for Albany
on the 3d of June. On the 6th, they passed Pantoosac
fort, a small post on the Hoosack river, then within the
boundaries of the province of Massachusetts. This was
the station that Capt. Learned expected to reach on the
second day after his unmilitary and disastrous desertion of
his post at Stillwater, on the 2d of February. On the 8th,
the regiment arrived at Greenbush, opposite to Albany.
"From Northampton street to this place was through a
wilderness, with but one house in the whole distance, except
the little fort above mentioned." This was in the year
1758; since that time vast changes have taken place in this
region, and the railroad, in a few hours, would transport
the whole regiment over the distance which occupied five
days of steady marching.
On the 12th of June, he was detached with about eighty
other artisans from the regiment under Lieut. Pool, and
ordered on to the head of Lake George to erect works, in
advance of the army. On the 5th of July, the troops being,
assembled, embarked in batteaux, amounting to seventeen
thousand men, under the command of Gen. Abercrombie,
30 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Lord Howe, the second in command, Gen. Gage, the third,
and Col. Bradstreet, quarter-master-general. The com-
mander-in-chief was an old man, and entirely unfit for the
post, as was proved by the result of the campaign. The
army had but little respect for his abilities; while on the
contrary, Lord Howe was their idol, and in him they placed
their utmost confidence. He was remarkably easy and
affable in his manners, mixing familiarly with the mechan-
ics and common soldiers, inquiring into their condition and
wants, displaying a real interest in their welfare, very
different from those generally in high authority. This won
the regard of the troops, and they would undergo any sac-
rifice at his bidding. Gen. Gage never acquired much rep-
utation as a commander, and the furious Bradstreet was
hated by all the army. The batteaux moved down the
lake until evening, when the troops landed at Sabbath-
day Point for refreshment, and then rowed all night. On
the Gth they disembarked at the northern extremity of Lake
George, in two divisions, one on each side of the outlet.
On the approach of the division on the right bank, a
detachment of the enemy stationed there, retired without
firing a gun. That division of the army on the left bank,
was under the command of Lord Howe, and on its advance
was met by a skirmishing party of the French, who, very
unfortunately for the British, killed Lord Howe in the early
part of the engagement. His death struck a damp on the
spirits of the whole army, and no doubt had an influence
in causing the defeat which followed. Mr. Putnam was
left in charge of the boats, but soon volunteered his service
in the attack on the works, and joined his regiment, which
was posted with Col. Lyman's, of Connecticut, on the west
of the mills, and was busily employed in erecting a breast-
work. The attack on the fort at Ticonderoga, began at
twelve o'clock, and was continued without intermission for
RUFUS PUTNAM. 31
several hours, without making any impression. At length
the ammunition of the regular troops was exhausted, and
a call was made on the Provincials to forward them a sup-
ply. Mr. Putnam again volunteered in this service. When
they approached the scene of action, they found that the
attacked troops had been effectually repulsed in their
attempt to storm the enemy's lines, but did not consider it
a total defeat, as it finally proved to be. Col. Ruggles'
regiment remained in their breast-work until midnight
unmolested, and then retreated to the shore of the lake,
where they had landed on the 6th. On the morning of the
9th, Ruggles found his regiment in the rear of the army,
which had retreated in the night, leaving them with the
Rangers of the other regiment of Provincials near the
French lines. In the forenoon of that day, all the troops
embarked and returned to the south end of the lake, closing
Gen. Abercrombie's expedition, which commenced with such
high hopes, under a cloud of disgrace, and a loss of fifteen
hundred men, in killed and wounded. Ticonderoga fort
was protected on three of its sides by water, and on the
other for some distance in front extended a morass; the
remainder was fortified with a breast-work, eight feet high,
and planted with artillery. In addition to which the ground
for one hundred yards in front, was covered with abatis.
After reconnoitering the works, the engineer sent on this
important duty, was so stupid as to report to the commander
that they might be carried by musketry. The difficulty of
advancing artillery over the morass and broken ground in
front, led to the adopting of this fatal advice, and the defeat
of the army. The post was defended by about four thou-
sand men, and although their actual assailants amounted
to twelve or fifteen thousand, and the attack lasted for more
than four hours, yet they could make no impression on the
garrison. The loss must have been greater than actually
32 RUFUS PUTNAM.
estimated, as twenty-five hundred stands of arms were
picked up by the French. Mr. Putnam remarks that " when
he subsequently became acquainted with the strength of
the works and the mode of attack, he considered it the
most injudicious and wanton sacrifice of men, that ever
came within his knowledge or reading."
Nothing further of an offensive nature was attempted in
that quarter, by Abcrcrombie, this season. A fort was com-
menced on the ground occupied by the fortified camp of the
Provincials, in 1757, during the siege and capture of Fort
William Henry, which was called Fort George, and stood
half a mile east of that unfortunate garrison. On the 22d
of July, the regiment to which he belonged was ordered to
Fort Edward, and the men employed in repairing the roads
from that post to Albany, until the 29th of October, when
they were discharged.
On the 9th of November, he arrived at Sutton, his native
place, where he passed the winter. On this campaign, in
after life, he has these remarks : " Thus was I carried through
a second campaign, enjoying uninterrupted health, the friend-
ship of my officers, and never charged with a fault. But,
alas ! in my journal, I cannot find any acknowledgment to
my divine Benefactor and Preserver, nor do I recollect that 1
had any serious reflections on the subject." This is in accor-
dance with the natural heart, but when it becomes touched
with the influences of the Holy Spirit, it is ready and wil-
ling to acknowledge its obligations to its rightful Lord and
Benefactor.
On the 2d of April, 1759, he decided on again entering the
military service, and enlisted into Capt. John Fibley's com-
pany, as a substitute for Moses Leland, who had been drafted
into the army, but did not wish to serve. For this enlistment
he received fourteen pounds, thirteen shillings, Massachusetts
currency, or forty-five dollars, fifty cents. The original receipt
RUFTJS PUTNAM. 33
yet remains in the Leland family. He was finally transferred
to Capt. William Page's company, of Ilardwick, in the bat-
talion of Lieut. Col. Ingersol, in Col. Ruggles' regiment ; and
was now advanced to the post of orderly sergeant; marching
with the army by the old route, to the south end of Lake
George.
On the 21st of July, they embarked in batteaux under the
command of Gen. Amherst, " a sagacious, humane and ex-
perienced commander." Mr. Putnam notices his kindness
and attention to the welfare of the common soldiers, as
highly commendable. On the 22d, they landed at the outlet
of the lake, in nearly the same numbers, as of last year,
without meeting with any opposition. The following day
they took possession of the breastworks, where they were so
signally repulsed the year before, with little opposition,
and thinks the loss of so many lives in the previous attack,
attributable to the rashness of Col. Bradstreet. On the
24th, they began to open their trenches for a regular siege
and bombardment of Fort Ticonderoga. This was a regu-
lar, strongly built, stone fort, erected by the French in 1756.
and capable of resisting any common attack. The French
had kept up a regular discharge of artillery, since the 23d,
while their enemies were erecting their works for the batte-
ries. That night, before any serious attack had been made,
the garrison silently evacuated the fort, and embarked on
the lake for Crown Point, a strong post, ten or twelve miles
lower down on the west side of Lake Champlain. About
three o 'clock in the morning of the 27th the fort blew up,
with a tremendous explosion. The French did not make any
resistance at Crown Point, but proceeded on down the lake
to Montreal. The cause of their sudden desertion of these
strong posts, was the news of General Wolf's approach to
Quebec, so that no aid could be sent them from below ; and
rather than be captured they abandoned their positions.
3
34 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Thus terminated the third campaign, in which Mr. Putnam
had been engaged, with the total demolition of the French
power on the lakes George and Champlain, leading to then*
final expulsion from North America. This was a glorious
conquest for the British arms, in which the Provincials
shared largely ; but the greater good to them was the check
it gave to the incursions of the savages, who for more than
a century had invaded their frontier, assisted and encouraged
with supplies of arms and ammunition from the French,
plundering, murdering, and carrying into captivity their
exposed inhabitants, from Maine to Pennsylvania.
As the army was about to leave Ticonderoga in pursuit,
greatly to his disappointment and vexation, he was ordered
by the brigadier-general to remain and superintend the
building of a saw-mill, at the lower falls on the outlet of
Lake George, where it debouches into a bay of Lake Cham-
plain. After the mills were completed, he obtained a pass
to go to Crown Point, where his regiment then lay. When
he arrived there, instead of going into the lines, he was or-
dered by Maj. Skene, the superintendent of the works then
building for the enlargement of the garrison, to labor as a
carpenter on the block-houses, promising him the full wages
for such work. After a few days he was ordered back to
oversee the operations of the saw-mills, and retained until
the 1st of December, some months after the discharge of
his regiment. The engineer of the army, whose name is
not given, when he was finally discharged, would not allow
him the dollar a day as had been promised by Col. Robin-
son, the quartermaster-general, but turned him ofF with
fifteen pence, the pay of a private soldier ; putting, no doubt,
the extra pay justly due him into his own pocket.
On the 1st, in company with Col. Miller, Capt. Tate and
others, eleven in number, he embarked on Lake George, to
go up to the southerly end, in two battcaux. Expecting to
KUFUS PUTNAM. 35
reach Fort George the next day, they took but little pro-
vision. But the wind failing them, they passed the night
four miles north of Sabbath-day Point, a noted head-land.
On the 2d, the wind arose to a perfect storm, with intense
cold, so that they were confined to the shore, and could not
move at all. On the 3d, their provisions were expended.
The wind and cold continued, and their situation was be-
coming alarming ; but in rambling along the shore one of
the men found an old provision bag, with about a dozen
pounds of salted pork, which, with some damaged flour,
brought by Col. Miller to feed two horses he had on board,
made into dumplings, served well for that day. The 4th
day was calm and they again embarked, but one of the boats
being leaky, the ice formed so thick and heavy in it, that it
was abandoned and the whole party entered the single boat.
This additional burthen loaded her down within two or three
inches of the top of her sides, and the least agitation of the
water would have filled her. But, providentially, it remained
calm all day, and they reached the fort at sunset without
any accident. From thence he returned to Brookfield, in
Massachusetts, on the 16th of December.
Disgusted with the treatment he had received in the ser-
vice, in removing him from the duties of an orderly sergeant
and placing him among the artisans, without any extra pay
for his labor, he concluded not to engage any further in the
army. The post of orderly sergeant is well calculated to
improve the soldier in a knowledge of military duty, which
appears to have been his object and aim that he might finally
be promoted. It was a good school to prepare him by these
trials, for the life intended for him by Providence. Beginning
thus in the ranks, when he finally became a commander, he
knew well what to require from the private soldier. Nearly
all the famous marshals of Napoleon rose to this distin-
guished honor from privates, solely by their merit. He seems
36 BUFUS PUTNAM.
early to have acquired the respect and confidence of those
under his command, and several anecdotes are related of
their implicit obedience to his orders.
The winter of 1759 was passed in New Braintrce, working
on a small farm of fifty acres, which he had purchased
from the avails of his wages and bounty.
In March, 1760, orders were issued by the Provincial Gov-
ernment to raise troops for another campaign. At the first
muster of the militia he enrolled himself in the company of
that town, and was by Capt. Page, presented with recruiting
orders from Col. Ruggles. His well known character for
bravery and soldierly conduct, enabled him to recruit very
successfully. While occupied in this service he received a
commission as ensign, in Col. Willard's regiment, Ruggles
having been promoted to a brigadier. On the 2d of June
he left recruiting and set out for the army, taking with him
one of the men as a waiter, and joined his company, which
had marched some time previous, under Capt. Thomas Be-
man, at Ticonderoga, on the 18th. Here he found four com-
panies of Provincials. His own was stationed at the land-
ing on the outlet of Lake George, where they remained to
the end of the campaign, and he was thus deprived of the
honor of partaking in the fatigues of the siege and capture
of the garrison at Isle au Noix, which opened the way for
the junction of the three British armies before Montreal, and
caused its surrender on the 8th of September, thus com-
pleting the conquest of Canada. On the 10th of November
his company was discharged at Ticonderoga, and on the
20th they crossed Lake Champlain, and began their march
through the wilderness, by way of Otter creek, to Number
Four, on the Connecticut river, a place often noticed in the
early history of the country, and distant eighty miles from
the lake ; which place they reached on the 25th. On the 1st
of December he arrived at his home in New Braintree.
KUFUS PUTNAM. 37
In 1761, there being no further call for military service, he
resumed his old employment of building mills and farming,
which he followed for seven or eight years. After which
time, to-the period of the Revolution, he was engaged in prac-
tical surveying for the neighboring landholders in that and the
adjacent towns. This art he acquired under the direction of
Col. Timothy Dwight, of Northampton, the father of Presi-
dent Dwight, of Yale College. The book chiefly, and perhaps
only studied, was Love's Art of Surveying, printed in Lon-
don in 17G8, and now in the family. He was one of the
best writers on that subject. Geometry was acquired from
the same source, to which he also added the study of navi-
gation. His own natural mechanical cast of mind, and
habits of close observation, soon enabled him to practice the
art of surveying with great accuracy and deserved credit.
Mr. Putnam was a practical, matter-of-fact man, in whatever
branch he engaged. Fust a mill-wright, then a soldier, next
a surveyor, and finally an engineer; the principles of all
which he acquired from a very few books, with but little in-
struction, and intent, close study of the subject before him.
When a soldier, he stored his mind with military maxims,
and a strict observance of discipline, which enabled him in
after life to win the approbation of his superiors, and the
love and good will of his equals, as well as of all under his
charge.
In April, 1761, he was married to Miss Elizabeth Ayers.
daughter of William Ayers, Esq., of Brookfielc1, an exten-
sive landholder, and one of the first families in the place.
In November following his wife died in childbed, leaving to
the sorrowing father a little son, which God in his providence
saw fit also to remove the following year. Nevertheless he
bore these privations without murmuring against his Maker,
and was enabled to ascribe righteousness to the Lord.
In January, 1765, he was again married to Miss Persis
38 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Rice, daughter of Zebulon Rice, of Westborough, Massachu-
setts, with whom he lived in great harmony and happiness
more than fifty-five years, and raised a numerous family of
children. After this marriage he settled in the north parish of
Brookfield, on a small farm of fifty acres, where his family
resided during the war, until the year 1780, when he pur-
chased a large farm and capacious dwelling-house in the
town of Rutland. It was one of those confiscated estates
belonging to the Tories, who had deserted their country and
joined in league with the enemy for the subjugation of the
Whigs. However we may now consider the justice of the
policy pursued by our forefathers in those turbulent days,
there is no doubt they considered it strictly honest and right
to devote to the use of the country, the property of those
who had thus unnaturally deserted the land which gave them
birth; and turned their hands, like parricides, against their
own fathers and brothers. Many enormities were then prac-
ticed by the Whigs as well as the Tories, under the excitement
of party feelings, which time, and a more cool consideration
of right and wrong, leads us to condemn.
In the year 1772, Gen. Lyman, one of the Provincial
officers, returned from England, where he had been detained
several years, in soliciting the British government for a
grant of land to the colonial officers and soldiers, who had
served in the late war against France. Soon after this, a
meeting of the adventurers was notified to be held at Hart-
ford, Connecticut, the same year. At this meeting the
general informed them that an order was passed by the
king in council, authorizing the governor of West Florida
to grant lands in that province in tho same proportion and
manner as given to his majesty's regular troops. Soon
after the war was closed, in the year 17G3, three new gov-
ernments, or provinces, were established in their newly
acquired American possessions, called by the names of
RUFUS PUTNAM. 39
Quebec, East Florida and West Florida; and an order was
passed by the king and council, giving to the British troops
engaged in the war, grants of land in these provinces ; and
the governors were ordered to make the donations in the
following proportions, of any unoccupied tracts, viz.: To
a person of the rank of a field officer, five thousand acres;
to a captain, three thousand acres ; to a subaltern or staff
officer, two thousand acres; to a non-commissioned officer,
two hundred acres; and to a private man, fifty acres.
The same was also granted to the officers and men in the
navy ; but nothing was said of any grant to the Provincial
officers and soldiers, many of whom had served during the
whole war, and were as justly entitled to the benefit as the
regular troops. But the crown seems always to have felt a
coldness and want of regard for the interests of the colonists ;
treating them much more like menials and aliens than real
subjects and children of the realm. One reason of this
might have been their great distance from home, and the
consideration of their dissenting and Puritan principles, no
way in accordance with the established religion of the king-
dom. It was with reluctance that the promise was made to
Gen. Lyman, or they would not have been so long in grant-
ing it, and even then he brought no written document to
substantiate the grant; but his word was so far credited that
the meeting resolved to explore the lands, and appointed
a committee for that purpose, of which Mr. Putnam was
one.
On the 10th of December he left home on the mission to
Florida, passing through Brookline, Connecticut, to accom-
pany Col. Israel Putnam, who was another of the exploring
committee. They took shipping at Norwich, and arrived at
New York on the 20th of the month. The 10th of January,
1773, they sailed from the city on board the sloop Missis-
sippi, chartered by the associates of The Military Company
40 RUFUS PUTNAM.
of Adventurers, as the company was styled. The exploring
committee consisted of Col. Israel Putnam, Capt. Enos, Mr.
Thaddeus Lyman and Rufus Putnam, accompanied by Dan-
iel Putnam, a son of the colonel, and a hired man. On the
30th of January they arrived at Cape Nichola Mole, a
port in the north-west part of the island of Hispaniola.
The harbor is an open bay, exposed to the north winds.
The town contained about three hundred houses, situated in
a mountainous portion of the island, with no plantations
near it. He gives no particulars of the voyage, from the
effects of sea sickness. Leaving the port, they sailed to
Montego bay, on the north side of Jamaica; and the 9th
took their departure for the bay of Pensacola, steering a
westerly course. On the 11th Mr. Putnam took an observa-
tion of the latitude, and found it to be 19° 10' north. On
the 12th, at night, they narrowly escaped shipwreck, by run-
ning on to a low sandy island, called the Grand Command-
ers. On the 18th, doubled Cape Antonio, the west end of
Cuba, and steered north-west. From the 21st to the 25th,
the weather was very stormy, and on the latter day extremely
cold for this climate ; and when he returned to New England,
found that this day was called " the cold Tuesday," showing
the extensive range of this great depression of temperature.
On the 28th they had soundings at forty -five fathoms, and
soon after the first land made was their desired port, which
was rather extraordinary after such tempestuous weather.
On the 1st of March they entered the bay of Pensacola, and
anchored at some distance from the town, the water being
very shoal, and landed from their boat. Gov. Chester
and his council treated them very kindly, but no order for
oTantinjr lands to the Provincials had yet arrived. This was
a discouraging circumstance, but the hope that it might yet
arrive, and a proposal being made of granting lands to the
company on terms already within the governor's power,
RTTFUS PUTNAM. 41
induced the committee to decide on proceeding to reconnoi-
ter the country on the Mississippi, and make such surveys
as they thought proper. For this purpose Mr. Putnam was
commissioned by Gov. Chester, as a deputy surveyor of the
province of West Florida, which commission is now in the
possession of his son. The town of Pensacola, he says,
contained about one hundred and fifty houses; and the
country around, when viewed from the top of the state-
house, is covered with a pitch pine forest. The surface of
the earth is a white sand, and a few miles back bears a
scanty supply of scrubby oaks, walnut and sassafras.
On the 18th of March they left the bay of Pensacola, and
steered for the mouth of the Mississippi. As they approached
the father of American rivers, the broad surface of turbid,
clay-colored, fresh water, floating for many leagues on the
top of the salt water, led them to think they were running
on to a sandy beach. However, they soon discovered their
mistake, and continued their course into the clay-colored
water. The surface was fresh for several feet down, but on
sinking the bucket beyond a certain depth it brought up
salt water. On the 20th of March, at five o'clock, P. M.,
the sloop anchored just off the mouth of the river, with the
block-house, on Mud island, bearing north-west. In the
night a gale from the north drove the sloop from her
anchorage, and she did not regain her position under
twenty-four hours. Soon after a Spanish schooner anchored
near them, and sent her boat on board asking for provisions.
They stated that forty days ago, they were lying at anchor
near where the sloop now lay, when a north wind drove
them to sea as far as the bay of Campeche, and they had
not been able to regain their lost ground until now. On
this he remarks, " How different our fortune ! In the passage
from Cape St. Antonio to Pensacola, in crossing the same
bay, we had to conflict with storms and contrary winds for
42 RUFUS PUTNAM.
five day?, lying at the mercy of the currents to carry us we
knew not whither ; yet Providence conducted us directly to
our desired port!" Thus acknowledging the kindness of
that God in whom he trusted all the days of his life.
On the 22d of March they entered the Mississippi river,
and proceeded up about ten miles from the mud bank at
the mouth of the ship channel, called the French Balize.
On the bar they found twelve feet of water. Here they
were wind-bound for several days, and Mr. Putnam occupied
the time in surveying the delta at the mouth, with the several
outlets. As it will be very interesting to compare this survey
with the present condition of the delta, and see the encroach-
ment it has made on the gulf in the period of seventy- three
years, which is doubtless very great, a plan of that survey
is annexed, copied from the one made by Mr. Putnam, and
preserved among his manuscripts relating to that explora-
tion. There is also a plan of the Mississippi, as high up
as they ascended, taken by measurement of each day's
progress, and the meanders of the river. His well known
accuracy in surveys of this kind, would make his old sketches
a valuable acquisition to science, to show the changes that
have taken place in this ever wandering stream.
On the 26th they passed the first plantation, thirty-five
miles from the mouth, on the left bank. On the 28th, passed
the plantation of Mons. de la Loira, about sixty-five miles
above the mouth, which is the largest yet seen, and contained
three hundred and twenty acres, French measure, and sixteen
negro slaves. This man, while under the French govern-
ment, valued his possession at twelve thousand pounds ; but
now, under the Spanish rule, was not worth more than one-
third of that sum. He was seventy-two years old, and said
he was the first man born in Louisiana. He also stated
that the river at that place never rose or fell over eight feet,
and commonly only five or six feet, but that higher up it was
RUFUS PUTNAM. 43
different. Mr. Putnam observed that the French inhabitants
looked as healthy in this settlement as the people of the
northern colonies. On the 30th of March, they passed the
English reach, and came to against a high bank, three
miles below New Orleans, where they found several English
and other vessels, waiting for trade ; not being allowed by
the Spaniards to lie at, or opposite the town. In coming up
he took the courses and estimated the distances, making from
the mud bank at the mouth, eighty-five and three-fourth miles
to the English reach, and from thence fourteen miles to
New Orleans, which, added together, make ninety-nine and
three-fourth miles. Thus far, he says, the river was about
half a mile wide, with a gentle current. With the wind in a
southerly quarter, a vessel could make the passage to Eng-
lish reach in a short time. At this point the river was seven
hundred and fifteen yards wide, and seventy fathoms deep.
On the 8th of April, the captain of the sloop refused to pro-
ceed any further up the river, and the committee embarked
in a small bateau ; making use of oars, and a sail when the
wind was favorable. He still continued, as they proceeded,
every day, to take the courses and distances as before. On
the 11th, they reached the Acadia settlement, seventy-one
miles above New Orleans. It was composed of the inhabit-
ants of Nova Scotia, removed to this place by the English in
1754, on the conquest of that country. They passed one day
with the Acadians, and were treated hospitably. On the
13th, passed an Indian village of twenty warriors. On the
15th, they passed the river Iberville, so called in the treaty
of 1763, at the head of the island of Orleans; and is one
hundred, eighteen and a half miles from the town of New
Orleans. It is a small outlet of the Mississippi, and was dry
at the time of their passage. In high water it fills, and runs
eastward, discharging its waters, with the river Amite, into
the lakes Maurepas and Pontchartrain, forming the island of
44 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Orleans. This outlet was subsequently called Bayou Man-
chac. On the island side of the outlet was a Spanish
garrison, with an officer and ten men. On the English side,
called Manchac, was a small village, with good gardens, but
no soldiers. A mile and a half above, was a village of Ala-
bama Indians, on the left bank. On the 18th they passed
Baton Rouge, fourteen miles above Manchac. On the 19th,
came to the fort and church of Point Coupee, a French set-
tlement, extending about seven leagues on the river, and said
to be as old, or older than New Orleans. On the 20th, passed
a village of the Tonica Indians, of about forty huts. On the
22d passed the outlet of the Opelousas, which flows into the
Gulf of Mexico; at that time it was about forty perches
wide, and by Mr. Putnam's measurement, three hundred, fif-
teen and a half miles from the balize, or mouth of the river,
and ninety-seven and a quarter above the Iberville, or head
of the island of Orleans. The mouth of the Red river was
then three miles above the outlet of Opelousas, and ap-
parently about two hundred yards wide. On the 23d, passed
Loftus' Heights, now Fort Adams. The next day, a few
miles above the mouth of the Homochitto creek, they coasted a
curious bend in the river, of eleven and a half miles, which
at the isthmus or neck was only forty-seven yards across;
and by a water level he ascertained the fall in the river to be
two and a half feet in that distance. Their average progress
against the stream was from twelve to fourteen miles a day.
On the 2Gth, they arrived at Fort Rosalia, at the Natchea,
and half a mile below, he notes, " is the first gravel stones
we have seen on the shores of the river." Fort Rosalia, or
rather its ruins, was seated on the margin of an elevated
plain or bluff, nearly eighty perches from the river, and was
approached by a winding road, not difficult of ascent. It
was a regular heptagon, capable of containing four or five
hundred men, built by the French in 171 4. The English,
ItUFUS PUTNAM. 45
after the peace of 1763, kept a garrison here until about four
years before this visit; since which the barracks and out-
buildings were burnt by the Indians in a drunken frolic.
Here he took the latitude of the place with one of Davis'
quadrants, and made the fort to be in latitude 31 deg. 50 min.
N., and the variation of the needle 5 deg. E. The lands for
several miles adjacent, appeared to be old, worn-out, Indian
planting grounds. The buildings were only one trader's hut,
near the old fort. How vast the changes since that period ! no
appearance of civilized man but one solitary traders hut, where
the large and nourishing town of Natchez now stands. It
had formerly been populated with a numerous tribe of In-
dians, who more nearly approached the Mexicans in civiliza-
tion, at the time of the conquest, than any other tribe in
North America, but they were totally exterminated by the
French about the year 1729. On the 27th, the party visited
a small settlement on Catharine's creek, three miles from the
river, and were informed that on Homochitto creek, about
twenty miles distant, were a number of settlers.
They had now ascended the river by Mr. Putnam's esti-
mate, three hundred and eighty-eight miles, and in all that
distance had seen no spring, or creek water, fit to drink. On
the 28th they left the Natchez, and on the 3d of May, arrived
at the mouth of Bine river, or Stone creek, forty-six and a
half miles above. About eight miles below is the Petit gulf,
where now is the village of Rodney. The river is bounded
for nearly a mile by a solid rock, at an angle of forty-five
degrees, and about three hundred feet high. All the valua-
ble lands on the Mississippi, below Bine river, having been
already located, they here commenced their reconnoissance
of the country on the left bank, or east side of the river, for
a tract of land suitable for farming. They ascended Stony
creek in their boat, seventeen miles to the forks. The lands
on the left side were low and subject to the river floods, and
46 RUFUS PUTNAM.
on the right broken, with soil rather thin and gravelly.
About one hundred rods below the forks, they marked a tree,
for the commencement of the location. On the 5th, they
returned down the creek to the Mississippi. The town of
Gibsonport now stands on this creek, which is known by the
name of Bayou Pierre, and is in the midst of a rich, potton
growing country. The same day they ascended the river to
Grand gulf, to the residence of Thomas James, an Indian
trader. The following day he engaged a Choctaw Indian to
accompany them as a guide, and also to notify the Indians
they might meet in the woods, who they were. Three miles
above Mr. James' station, was the mouth of the La Four-
chetto, or Big Black river. At this point two of the committee,
with the Indian guide, left the boat, and proceeded across the
country to the Walnut hills, while the others in the boat pro-
ceeded on to that place by water. The distance from Big
Black, was estimated to be fifty-five and a half miles, and the
boat reached there on the 8th of May. On the way up passed
several high, handsome bottoms, as well as some that were
flooded in high water. Here they met the party by land,
who reported that their route was over a flat country, with
some cypress swamps, and cane brakes so thick that it was
impossible to explore any distance from the path. On this
camping ground is now located the commercial and thriving
town of Vicksburg, the second for population and business
in the state, and will probably soon be the first. On the
9th, they proceeded on to the mouth of the Yazoo river, the
same two gentlemen going by land as on the 6th, for the pur-
pose of exploring the high grounds on this river, distance
seventeen and a half miles. On the 10th, the boat ascended
the Yazoo river nine miles to a high land, said to have been
formerly a French post, where they met their companions,
who had traversed the woods, at a fine spring, issuing from
under the rocks.
RUFUS PUTNAM. 47
By calculation Mr. Putnam ascertained that they were
now north of the provincial line of West Florida, which
was further confirmed by the angry looks of several Indians,
who had met them there, and disapproved of their visit;
this induced them to return without further examination.
The Yazoo, he says, is about twenty-five perches wide, a
dead stream, abounding in alligators. The Mississippi in
floods, backs high up this river. They descended that day
six miles, and encamped. It was intended by Mr. Lyman
and Col. Israel Putnam, to have gone by the Chickasaw path
from Yazoo, across the country, to Big Black river, but their
Indian guide refused to pilot them. From the 11th to the
13th, they explored the lands on the left bank, or south side
of the Yazoo, and on the latter day Col. Putnam, Mr. Ly-
man and M. Putnam set out by land, to explore more care-
fully the ridge of high land stretching from the old French
post to Walnut Hills. They traveled as near the hills as
possible, on account of the cane brakes, discovered several
small streams issuing from the high grounds, and found the
soil very rich. " In the afternoon they were taken up by a
mighty cane brake. Here Col. Putnam climbed a tree, and
saw high land about one hundred rods distant, which we
were two hours in gaining, on account of the difficulty of
getting through the cane." At this place, Mr. Putnam
mounted a tree, and had a fine prospect of the country.
The lands from the north-east round to the south, appeared
hilly, but not mountainous or very broken. They descended
part way down the hill, and encamped by a fine spring.
This mount of vision must have been in the north-west por-
tion of what is now Warren county, fifteen or twenty miles
north of Vicksburg, in the midst of the present rich cotton
plantations. On the 14th, they came, by a zigzag course,
through the flat lands to their boat, which had descended to
within one mile of the Walnut hills. This region was
48 RUFUS PUTNAM.
much injured by ponds, cypress swamps and overflowings
of the river. The cane was chiefly confined to the uplands.
On the 15th, Mr. Putnam and Lyman ascended to the top
of the hills, where the former climbed two trees, and found
the country still rising toward the north, and toward the
east and south-east, soil rich, and covered with cane on the
highest ridges, which extended over on to Big Black. Some
miles above the mouth, near the foot of the hills, are some
cypress swamps and dead water, but no brooks or running
streams. Having completed the exploration in that quar-
ter, they dropped down the river, landing several times to
examine the bottom lands. They had intended to send a
part of the committee by land, across the bend of the Mis-
sissippi above the mouth of Big Black, but Were told it was
impassable by reason of ponds and swamps. On the 16th of
May they returned down the river to Mr. James' station, who
spoke the Indian language, and through him their guide in-
formed them, that on the Yazoo, he met two of his chiefs,
Chickasaws, who were opposed to the whites exploring any
of the country above the Big Black, and that was the reason
why he had refused to pilot them from the Yazoo to that
river. The following day, Col. Putnam, Mr. Lyman, and
Mr. Putnam commenced a further survey of the lands on
the Big Black, in reference to a location. They found this
stream from six to eight rods wide, and ascended it twenty-
five miles, with the boat, to a rocky rapid, over which the
water falls about a fool, and is a good mill seat. They saw
much line land on and near the creek, with several springs
of water: on the left bank, it was hilly, but rich land.
On the 20th, they returned again to Mr. James', and there
found Capt. George, a Chickasaw chief, waiting to see them.
He showed them his commission from Gov. Chester, in which
lie is called Mingo Oumee, or Snake head. lie informed
thrm. that at a congresn of his people, it had been decided
RUFUS PUTNAM. 49
that no whites should settle on the Yazoo, but that they
might do so on the Big Black, but not higher up the Missis-
sippi. The Chickasaws have their towns on the Yazoo, and
the Choctaws east of them. On the 21st they left the Indian
traders' post, on their return down the river, and on the 24th
of May reached the Natchez, where Mr. Putnam again took
the latitude, and found it as before, to be 31 deg. and 15
min. N., and by an observation at sunsetting, found the
variation of the needle to be 5 deg. and 30 min. E. Here
they were told that the country on the heads of the Homo-
chitto, now in Franklin county, Mississippi, were hilly, much
broken, and badly watered; therefore they did not explore
that region, as formerly intended.
On the 2d of June, arrived at Manchac, being delayed by
explorations of the country at various points on the left
bank of the river. A description of the region examined,
is given by Mr. Putnam with minuteness. The climate in
winter is so temperate, that cattle need no fodder, but live
abroad all the season in the woods, and yet the summer
heat is by no means great. The intervals or bottoms he
describes as very rich, but subject to be overflowed, and in-
terspersed with ponds and cypress swamps, which will be
difficult to drain. That the uplands back of the bottoms,
are rich, but broken, and from several views taken from the
tops of trees, continue so for several miles into the country.
The soil rather thin, but rich, based on clay; the under-
growth cane. The timber hickory, and oaks of various
kinds ; while on the bottoms he found locust, willow, cotton-
wood, copalm?, ash, mulberry, the royal magnolia, or
high laurel, with cypress in abundance. As to the streams
of water, he saw but few small ones, and none suitable for
mills ; and the only mill-seat he saw or heard of, was on the Big
Black. The feathered race consists of some turkeys, plenty
of ducks, and in winter, geese and wood pigeons (columba
4
50 RUFUS PUTNAM.
migratoria.) The wild game were deer and bears chiefly.
Reptiles not abundant, and those he saw, harmless. Fish
of various kinds were plenty in the rivers, the chief of which
were catfish and sheep's-head. Alligators swarmed in the
Mississippi, and were found in all the streams they visited.
On the 3d of June they met the sloop, which brought them
out three leagues below Manchac, and were detained until
the 9th, by Mr. Ladle, the supercargo, in taking in lading.
On the 12th, came to, at four miles above New Orleans,
and remained until the 28th, repairing the vessel. On Thurs-
day, the 1st of July, at 4 P. M., they passed the Balize, and
sailed for Pensacola, but on account of head winds, did not
arrive there until the morning of the 5th.
On the 6th, the committee waited on the governor, who
informed them that he had received letters from England by
way of Jamaica, since their absence, but nothing further re-
lating to a grant of lands to the Provincials. The following
day they presented a petition to Gov. Chester and council,
with a plan of the townships they proposed to locate; but
so many objections were made to it, that the decision of the
matter was laid over to the 9th. In the meantime, the sur-
veyor-general requested Mr. Putnam to make out a new
draft of the proposed townships. On that day the council
presented the committee with their decision as to the lands,
which limited the time of their taking actual possession, to
the 1st of March, 1774. They appealed to the governor for
an extension of the time, but without success. On the 11th,
they left the town of Pensacola, and fell down to Rose island,
from which place, on advice from Mr. Jones, one, of the
council, Col. Putnam and Mr. Lyman went up to town, to
engage Mr. Livingston, the secretary, to make one more
effort in council, for lengthening the time, but the result is
not recorded.
Owing to head winds, they did not sail until the 15th of
RUFUS PUTNAM. 51
July. The latitude as observed that day was 29 deg. 1 1 min.
N. From thence to the 22d, he kept a regular journal of
the progress of the voyage, giving the daily latitude, currents,
&c, with the tact of an old navigator. On that day, he was
so prostrated by sea-sickness, that the observations are
omitted until the 6th of August, when they arrived at New
York. From thence he returned down the sound to Nor-
wich, and from thence by land, to his home in Brookfield,
having been absent over eight months.
As to the result of this exploration, he says, " So favorable
was the report of the committee, as to the quality of the
land, climate, &c, and moderate terms on which the gov-
ernor and council had engaged to grant them, that at a
meeting of the military land company in the fall of 1773,
at Hartford, they resolved to prosecute the settlement; and
during that autumn, winter, and spring following, several
hundred families embarked from Massachusetts, Connecticut,
and other places, for the purpose of settling on the lands
we had explored. But they were sadly disappointed. On
the 6th of October of that year, Gov. Chester received an
order from the king in council, prohibiting him from grant-
ing any more lands, either on family rights, or on purchase,
until the king's pleasure be further signified to him. Thus
the land office was shut before the emigrants arrived, and
indeed I believe before any of them sailed, and never
opened afterward ." The poor Provincials were greatly
disappointed, but were permitted to occupy any vacant land
they could find. The emigrants of 1774 arrived generally
so late in the season, that many of them sickened and died
in this new climate, and the war which soon followed, put
a stop to any further attempts to prosecute the settlement
Thus early had that spirit of roaming and change of place
infected the New Englanders, which appears to be natu-
ral to their Saxon blood, descending from their Puritan
52 RUFUS PUTNAM.
forefathers, who wandered early in the seventeenth century
from their native land to find a new home in North America.
Mr. Putnam received only eighty dollars for all his ex-
penses and loss of time in this trip to the Mississippi.
The annexed plan is an interesting relic of this affair, and
shows the boundaries and forms of the townships located for
the company, which was drawn by Mr. Putnam, and ap-
pended to the report of the committee. In his orders from
Elias Dunford, Esq., the surveyor-general of West Florida,
preserved amongst his papers, minute directions are given as
to his manner of conducting the survey, requiring notices of
important places on the river for landings, wharves, towns,
&c. The townships were in no case to exceed in width one
third of their length, so that their base on the water courses
should not occupy an over proportion of their banks, which
accounts for their unusual shape. They were nineteen in
number, and intended to contain about twenty thousand
acres each, making the whole grant from Gov. Chester
amount to three hundred and eighty thousand acres. The.
cost to the company was no more than the fees claimed by
the officers of the government, amounting to five pounds
sterling, or eighteen dollars, twenty cents, for every thousand
acres.
In the Boston Weekly News-Letter, of December 4th,
1772, there is published a full account of the meeting of the
Company of Military Adventurers, held at Hartford in No-
vember, with the origin of the company, their previous
doings, and the names of all the various committees. In
the preamble to this meeting, it is stated that Gen. Phinehas
Lyman was chosen as their agent to solicit the Court of
Great Britain for a grant of land, in 1763, and that he had
been detained at that court for nine years, to the great
expense of the company in obtaining the grant. This was
;i fair specimen of the manner in which the mother country
RUFUS PUTNAM. 53
dealt with her colonies ; and even then the pretended gift
was a delusion, as they promised Gen. Lyman that the order
to Gov. Chester, authorizing the grant, should be sent out so
as to reach him by the time he arrived at Boston.
Several letters are preserved amongst Gen. Putnam's pa-
pers, from the adventurers who went out to West Florida.
Amongst them one from Capt. Michael Martyn, on the river
Amite, August 17, 1774. He had settled forty-five miles up
that stream. His family had been sick, but he was pleased
with the country. Gen. Lyman, with several other families,
had moved on to the Big Black river, in the surveyed terri-
tory, and one man was about erecting a mill at the little
falls on that stream ; but that the prospect of making money
by shipping lumber to New Orleans was blasted by the
Spaniards forbidding that trade.
In the year 1802, the survivors of that company, about
one hundred in number, re-organized themselves, and peti-
tioned Congress for a confirmation of their old grant, but it
does not appear that anything was done for them ; and thus
ended this famous land adventure, which at the time caused
a good deal of excitement in New England.
The revolutionary storm, which had been gathering for
several years, burst upon the colonies, the second year after
his return from this expedition. Ever active to the service
of his native country, he joined the army in the capacity of
a lieutenant-colonel, in the regiment of Col. David Brewer.
His regiment was stationed at Roxbury, in Gen. Thomas'
division of the army, soon after the affair at Lexington.
In a short time after the battle of Bunker h ill, the general
and field officers of the Roxbury division, met in council on
the best course to pursue, in their present defenseless situa-
tion, exposed at any time to the attack of the enemy without
any better protection than a board fence. It was decided
54 RUFUS PUTNAM.
that lines should be thrown up for the defense of the town.
When this was determined, the difficulty arose where to find
a man capable of directing the works in a military manner.
Engineers were rare amongst a people who had never car-
ried on a war but under the direction of mother Britain, who
filled such posts with her own sons. At length it was men-
tioned to the general by some of Col. Putnam's friends, that
in the late war against Canada, he had seen some service in
this line ; but on being solicited by the commander to under-
take the work, he frankly told him that he had never read a
word on that branch of science, and all his knowledge was
acquired by working under British engineers. The general
would take no denial, and Col. Putnam reluctantly set about
tracing out lines in front of Roxbury, toward Boston, and
various places in the vicinity, especially at Sewel's Point.
It so happened that he was occupied at the latter post, when
Gen. Washington and Gen. Lee, first came over to examine
the situation of the troops, and state of the defenses on that
side of Charles' river. The plan of the works met the entire
approbation of Gen. Washington, and Lee spoke in high
terms of that on Sewel's Point, when compared with those
at Cambridge, which animated and encouraged him to per-
severe in his efforts. All the defenses at Roxbury, Dorches-
ter and Brooklyne, were of his construction, and especially
the fort on Cobble Hill.
In the course of this campaign, at the request of Gen.
Washington, he surveyed and delineated a map of the
courses, distances, and relative situation of the enemy's
works in Boston and Charleston, with the American defenses
in Cambridge, Roxbury, &c, which must have been of great
importance to him in arranging his plans for an attack on
the former place. In December, he accompanied Gen. Lee
to Providence and Newport, Rhode Island, and at the latter
place planned a battery that commanded the harbor ; also,
BTJFUS PUTNAM. 55
a work on an elevation at Howland's ferry, which secured
the communication of the island with the main land. In the
new organization of the army, made in the fall of 1775, he
was appointed a lieutenant-colonel in the twenty-second
regiment, commanded by Col. Samuel Wyllis. He, however,
did not actually join that regiment, but was continued in
the engineer department.
In the winter of 1776, Gen. Washington was deeply en-
gaged in planning an attack on the British army in Boston,
by crossing the troops on the ice, or else to draw them out
from their stronghold, by erecting works on Dorchester neck,
that would not only annoy the town, but destroy their ship-
ping in the harbor. In constructing the latter work, Col.
Putnam, with his usual modesty, and constant reliance on
an overruling Power, in directing the affairs of man, thus
speaks : " As soon as the ice was thought to be sufficiently
strong for the army to pass over, a council of general offi-
cers was convened on the subject. What their particular
opinions were I never knew, but the brigadiers were directed
to consult their field officers, and they to feel the temper of
the captains and subalterns. While this was doing I wa3
invited to dine at head-quarters; and while at dinner, Gen.
Washington invited me to tarry after the company had de-
parted. When we were alone he entered into a free con-
versation on the subject of storming the city of Boston.
That it was much better to draw the enemy out to Dorches-
ter, than to attack him in Boston, no one doubted ; for if we
could maintain ourselves on that neck of land, our command
of the town and harbor would be such as would probably
compel them to leave the place. But the cold weather,
which had made a bridge of ice for our passage into Boston,
had also frozen the earth to a great depth, especially in the
open country, like the hills on Dorchester neck, so that it was
impossible to make a lodgment there in the usual way, (tha*
56 RUFUS PUTNAM.
is, by excavating the earth.) However, the general directed
me to consider the matter, and if I could think of any
way by which it could be done, to make a report to him
immediately."
He then describes the events which he calls providential,
and may evidently be referred to him who created, as well
as rules the destiny of man, but which thoughtless and blind
mortals attribute to the freaks of chance. "I left head-
quarters in company with another gentleman, and on the
way came by those of Gen. Heath. I had no thought of
calling until I came against his door, when I said, let us
call on Gen. Heath, to which the gentleman agreed. I had
no other motive than to pay my respects to the general.
While there I cast my eye on a book which lay on the table,
lettered on the back Muller's Field Engineer. Immediately
I requested the general to lend it to me. He denied me.
I repeated my request. He again refused, saying, he never
lent his books. I then told him that he must recollect, that
he was one, who at Roxbury, in a manner compelled me to
undertake a business on which, at the time, I confessed I
had never read a word, and that he must let me have the
book. After a few more excuses on his part, and pressing
on mine, I obtained the loan of it."
He arrived at his quarters about dark, but was so much
engaged in receiving reports of the progress of the works
until a late hour, that he did not examine Muller until
morning. On looking over the contents of the book, he
came to the word chandelier. This was a new phrase to
him, but on turning to the page where the article was
described, and reading it carefully over, he was soon ready
to report a plan for making a lodgment on Dorchester
heights. In a few minutes after he had decided on the fea-
sibility of the plan, Col. Gridlv, who had planned the
works at Cambridge, and Col. Knox of the artillery, who
RUFUS PUTNAM. 57
had been directed to consult with Col. Putnam on this diffi-
cult subject, entered his room and acquiesced in his plan.
The report was approved by Gen. Washington, and prepa-
rations immediately made to carry it into operation. The
chandeliers were made of stout timbers, ten feet long, into
which were framed posts, five feet high and five feet apart,
placed on the ground in parallel lines, and the open spaces
fitted in with bundles of fascines, strongly picketed together;
thus forming a movable parapet of wood, instead of earth,
as heretofore done. The men were immediately set to work
in the adjacent apple orchard and woodlands, cutting and
bundling up the fascines, and carrying them with the chan-
deliers on to the ground selected for the work on the night
of the 4th of March, and on the morning of the 5th, the
British troops were astonished to see a formidable battery,
erected by their industrious Yankee foes in one night, where
the evening before no appearance of such a defense was to
be seen. The ground was so deeply frozen that the intrench-
ing tools made no more impression on it than on a solid
rock, and their old mode of excavating trenches, and throw-
ing up parapets of earth, was utterly at a nonplus.
The providential visit of Col. Putnam at Gen. Heath's
quarters, was both the remote and immediate cause of the
sudden withdrawal of the British troops from Boston. On
the first sight of this barrier, mounted with artillery and
frowning defiance, Gen. Howe decided on landing troops
and carrying it by storm, and would have probably been
another Bunker hill adventure or something worse. The ice
broke way soon after, and his boats being dispersed by a
gale of wind, when the troops had embarked, he gave up
the design, and sent word to Gen. Washington that he would
leave the town with his army unharmed,' if he would not
molest the shipping while the men and stores were remov-
ing. The evacuation of the place, and the relief of the
58 RUFUS PUTNAM.
inhabitants from British thraldom and abuse, being all that
Washington sought, the terms were complied with, and this
desirable object accomplished without bloodshed.
On the last day of March, 1776, he was ordered by Gen.
Washington to proceed to New York, by way of Providence,
Rhode Island, to aid Gov. Cook with his advice and
assistance, in constructing works for the defense of that
town. While on this tour of duty, he again visited New-
port, and made additional defenses there. On the 6th of
April he had an interview with Washington, at Providence,
who felt a deep interest in his welfare, not only for his suc-
cessful efforts on Dorchester hights, but also for the integ-
rity, uprightness, and straightforward patriotism of the
man ; and not only during the war, but during his whole
life, treated him with marked respect and friendship. He
reached New York about the 20th of April, and was imme-
diately authorized as chief engineer, to lay out and oversee
the works of defense during that campaign at New York,
Long Island, and their dependencies, with Fort Washington,
Fort Lee, Kingsbridge, &c, the larger portion of which
appears in the plan of New York island, attached to Mar-
shall's Life of Washington. This was a service of great
fatigue, as it occupied all his time from daylight in the
morning until night, and sometimes all night.
On the 10th of July, Gen. Washington, in a letter to Con-
gress, notices the services of Col. Putnam : " Gen. Mercer is
now in the Jerseys, for the purpose of receiving and ordering
the militia coming for the flying camp, and I have sent over
our chief engineer to view the ground in the neighborhood
of Amboy, and to lay out some necessary works for the
encampment, and such as may be proper at the different
passes in Bergen Neck and other places."
In August, Congress appointed him engineer, which was
announced by Gen. Washington to him, as follows:
RUFUS PUTNAM. 59
"New York, August 11, 1776.
Sir : I have the pleasure to inform you that Congress have
appointed you an engineer, with the rank of colonel, and
pay of sixty dollars a month. I beg of you to hasten the
sinking of vessels and other obstructions in the river at Fort
Washington, as fast as it is possible. Advise Gen. Putnam
constantly of the kind of vessels you want and other things,
that no delay that can possibly be avoided may happen.
I am sir, your assured friend and servant,
G. Washington.
P. S. — Congress have just sent two French gentlemen
here as engineers. Will either of them be of use at Fort
Washington or Kingsbridge ?"
A vast deal of labor and expense was bestowed by the
Americans early in the war, in placing obstructions in the
North river, such as chains, booms, chevaux-de-frise, sunken
vessels, &c, to prevent the ascent of the enemy's ships of
war to the highlands ; but all of it was useless expenditure,
for with a leading wind their large frigates and seventy-fours
could with ease break through any obstruction of this kind,
and only excited their derision. After a year or two of trial,
this mode of defense was abandoned. Their entire control
of all our harbors and mouths of rivers by their vast fleets,
gave them a great advantage over their foes, in the transport
of troops, munitions of war, &c, from one point to another.
On the 8th of September, 1776, a council of general officers
had determined on holding possession of the city of New
York. On the 12th, by order of Gen. Washington, Col.
Putnam went out with Gen. Mifflin to reconnoiter between
Kingsbridge and Morris ania, and on their return Washington
met them near Harlem bights, where they made their report.
This led to a council of general officers, in which it was decided
to abandon the city, and this measure was based on their
60 RUFUS PUTNAM.
report, being the means of saving the army from total
destruction.
Col. Putnam remarks that his appointment by Congress
as engineer, was wholly unexpected. That his first attempts
in that department arose from pure necessity, in place of a
better man, and that his continuance in that service was
more out of respect to Gen. Washington, than a sense of his
own qualifications. After his arrival at New York he had
greatly improved his knowledge, by the study of writers on
that subject; and his daily practice in that profound art for
more than a year, had now made him a much more skillful
engineer, yet his natural modesty had never led him once to
think of being appointed to the first post in a corps of engi-
neers. His observations on Ihe deficiencies and difficulties
which attended that department, led him, in September, to
draw up a plan for a distinct engineering corps, which was
presented to Gen. Washington, and by him laid before Con-
gress, with the following letter, of November 5 :
" I have taken the liberty to transmit a plan for establish-
ing a corps of engineers, artificers, &c, sketched out by
Col. Putnam, and which is proposed for the consideration of
Congress. How far they may incline to adopt it, or whether
they may choose to proceed on such an extensive scale, they
will be pleased to determine. However, I conceive it a
matter well worthy of their consideration, being convinced
from experience, and from reasons suggested by Col. Put-
nam, who has acted with great diligence and reputation in
the business, that some establishment of the sort is highly
necessary, and will be productive of the most beneficial
consequences."
In his letter which accompanied the project, Col. Putnam
disclaimed all pretensions to being placed at the head of
the corps, but expressed a desire to serve in the line of the
army. In this modest rejection of so distinguished a post,
RUFUS PUTNAM. 61
he was, no doubt, in some measure influenced by the well
known deficiencies of his early education, but his love of
country being greater than the love of self, led him to prefer
the appointment of some better educated man. His judg-
ment and practical skill in this branch, was no doubt equal
or superior to that of any other man in the army, while his
knowledge of surveying and drafting, with his mechanical
turn of mind and sound judgment, rendered him a far better
master of this branch of science than he was willing to
admit.
On the 19th of October the enemy landed their army on
Pells point, and some skirmishing took place between a part
of Glover's brigade and the advance of the British troops,
near East Chester. The following morning Gen. Washing-
ton directed Col. Putnam to reconnoiter their position. For
this purpose he left Kingsbridge, in company with Col. Reid,
the adjutant-general, and a foot-guard of twenty men.
From the nights of East Chester they saw a small body of
the enemy near the church, but could learn nothing from
the inhabitants, as the houses were all deserted. Col. Reid
now left him to attend to other duties, and Col. Putnam
requested him to take back the guard, as he thought he
could better succeed in reconnoitering by himself. He then
disguised his appearance as an officer, and set out for White
Plains, a place he had never visited, nor did he know the
road which led to that place. Directly a highway turned
off to the right, which he followed a short distance, and
came to a house, where a woman informed him that the
road he was now on led to New Rochelle ; that the enemy
were there, and had posted a guard at a house then in sight.
He now turned his course, and proceeded toward W'hite
Plains, approaching within three or four miles of the place,
when he discovered a house a little ahead with men about it.
Before advancing, he carefully examined their appearance
62 RUFUS PUTNAM.
with his spy-glass, and ascertained that they were not
British soldiers. He then advanced and entered the house,
which was a tavern; calling for some oats for his horse, and
sitting quietly down, listened to their conversation. He
soon discovered that they were Whigs, and ascertained the
following valuable facts, viz.: that the main army of the
British were lying near New Rochelle, distant from White
Plains about nine miles, with good roads and an open level
country between, and that at the latter place was a large
quantity of American stores under the guard of about three
hundred militia. That a detachment of the enemy was
posted at Mamaronec, only six miles from the Plains, while
on the other side was the Hudson river, in which lay five or
six of the enemy's armed vessels at a distance of only five
miles, so that the main depot of provisions for the American
army, which Gen. Washington had ordered here as a place
of safety, was inclosed on three sides by his adversaries.
Col. Putnam saw at a glance their hazardous position, and
hastened back with his all important discoveries. The road
from Ward's tavern where he then was, led across the Braux,
and was the most direct route for his return, but it passed
so near the positions occupied by the enemy that it required
great watchfulness to avoid detection. As he approached
the highland west of the little river Braux, he saw it was
already occupied by armed men, but on applying his spy-
glass, ascertained they were American troops, and on his
arrival found it to be Lord Stirling's division, who had taken
a position there since he passed in the morning. He
announced his discoveries to the general, refreshed himself
and horse, and set out for head-quarters, ten miles distant,
by the mouth of Saw-mill river, a road he had never traveled
before, leading through a noted Tory settlement. It was
now dark, but he dare not inquire the way, lest he should be
arrested. An overruling Providence guided his steps, and
RUFUS PUTNAM. 63
he arrived in safety at Gen. Washington's quarters, near
Kingsbridge, about nine o'clock. He found him alone, and
ready to receive his report, with a sketch of the country,
which he hastily made, showing the relative positions of the
different British detachments, and the stores at White Plains.
This, like the clue of the labyrinth, at once led him to see
the difficulties and dangers of his position, and the path by
which he could be extricated. Gen. Washington complained
very feelingly of the gentlemen of New York, from whom
he had never been able to obtain a plan of the country :
that it was by their advice he had ordered the stores to
White Plains, as a place of safety. This was a serious dif-
ficulty under which he labored through the first years of the
war, the lack of correct topographical descriptions of the
country in which he was acting, often leading him into the
toils of the enemy, when he thought he was escaping or out
of danger. Such a man as Putnam was then an invaluable
treasure; who was fearless, but cautious in scanning the
positions of the foe, and could delineate on paper, what he
had seen with his eyes, making his descriptions both intelli-
gent and practical. Washington immediately sent a mes-
senger for Gen. Greene and Gen. George Clinton, since Vice
President of the United States. When the latter entered,
Putnam's sketch and report were laid before him, and the
question asked as to the correctness of the topographical
sketch. He confirmed its accuracy. In a short time he was
charged with a letter to Lord Stirling, and orders to proceed
immediately to his camp, which he reached by the same
route, about two o'clock in the morning. Before daylight
his division was in motion, in full march for White Plains,
where they arrived about nine o'clock on the morning of
the 21st of October, " and thus was the American army saved
by an interposition of Providence, from a probable total
destruction."
G4 RUFUS PUTNAM.
" It may be asked wherein this interposition of Providence
appears ? I answer first, in the stupidity of the British gen-
eralj in that he did not early in the morning of the 20th,
send a detachment, and take possession of the post and
stores at White Plains ; for had he done so, we must then
have fought him on his own terms, and at such disadvan-
tage on our part as must, in all probability, have proved
our overthrow." " Again, when I parted with Col. Reid, on
the 20th, I have ever thought I wras moved to so hazardous
an undertaking by foreign influence. On my route I was
liable to meet with some British or Tory parties, who would
probably have made me a prisoner, as I had no knowledge
of any way of escape across the Braux, but the one by
which I came out ; hence, I was induced to disguise myself,
by taking out my cockade, lopping the sides of my hat, and
securing my sword and pistols under my overcoat; and
then had I been taken under this disguise, the probability
is that I should have been hanged for a spy."
It was as late as the 29th, before the enemy advanced in
front of the American lines at White Plains. About 10
o'clock, A. M., Col. Putnam had arrived on Chatterton
hill, intending to throw up some defenses, just as they
came in sight. As soon as they discovered the Americans,
they opened a severe cannonade, but without much effect.
Gen. McDougal now arrived with his brigade, and seeing
the enemy crossing the Braux below in large bodies- placed
his men in an advantageous position behind the stone walls
and fences to receive them. They were twice repulsed with
great los3 ; but by bringing up fresh detachments, they so
greatly outnumbered the Americans as to turn their right
Hank, and cause them to retreat. Our loss was great, but
it was afterward ascertained that the British loss was much
greater; they receiving the same pay as at Bunker hill.
After the battle of the 29th, Col. Putnam was employed in
• RUFUS PUTNAM. 65
examining the topography of the country in the rear of
White Plains, toward North Castle, Croton river, &c, with
a view to military operations, when, on the 5th of Novem-
ber, he received the following letter from Gen. Washington :
"Head Quarters, White Plains, Nov. 5, 1776.
Sir : You are directed to repair to Wright's mills, and
lay out any work there you conceive to be necessary, in case
it is not already done. From thence you are to proceed to-
ward Croton bridge, and post the two regiments of militia
in the most advantageous manner, so as to obstruct the
enemy's passage to that quarter. You are also to give
what directions you think proper to those regiments, re-
specting the breaking up the roads leading from the North
river eastward. After this you are to go up to Peekskill,
and direct Lasher's detachment to break up the roads there;
you are likewise to lay out what works will be advisable
there, and order them to be set about.
Given under my hand,
Geo. Washington.
To Col. Putnam, engineer."
On the 11th of November, Gen. Washington visited
Peekskill, and Col. Putnam accompanied him to Fort Wash-
ington. On the following day he crossed the North river,
instructing him to ascertain the topography of the country,
with the roads and passes through the Highlands, which re-
port he soon after made. A copy of this report is among
his papers, and gives a minute description of the different
passes ; pointing out such as would need protection, with a
skeleton map, containing valuable information for the de-
fense of the passes in the Highlands of the Hudson, a point
so important in the contest with Great Britain. On the 8th
of December, he addressed a letter to the commander-in-
chief, informing him that he had accepted the command of
a regiment in the Massachusetts line, of the continental
66 RUFUS PUTNAM.
army, with his reasons for so doing, assuring him at the
same time of his attachment and readiness to execute any
service he should be ordered on. The following is an ex-
tract from his answer :
"Bucks County, near Cavell's Ferry, Dec. 17, 1776.
Dear Sir: Your letter of the 8th, from Peekskill, came
duly to hand. Your acceptance of a regiment, to be raised
on continental establishment, by the state of Massachusetts
bay, is quite agreeable to me, and I sincerely wish you suc-
cess in recruiting, and much honor in commanding it.
Your professions of attachment are extremely gratifying
to, dear sir, your most obedient servant,
Geo. Washington."
In a letter to Congress, of December 20th, he thus speaks
of Col. Putnam: "I have also to mention, that for want of
some establishment in the department of engineers, agree-
able to the plan laid before Congress in October last, Col.
Putnam, who was at the head of it, has quitted, and taken a
regiment in the state of Massachusetts. I know of no other
man tolerably well qualified for the conducting of that busi-
ness. None of the French gentlemen whom I have seen
with appointments in that way, appear to know anything
of the matter. There is one in Philadelphia who I am told
is clever, but him I have not seen."
After closing his accounts as engineer, in January, 1777,
he returned to Massachusetts to recruit and fill up his regi-
ment. In this he was quite successful. As early as May,
three companies were filled, and marched from Worcester to
Peekskill ; and in June were ordered up the North river to
Fort Ann. On the 3d of July, Col. Putnam followed with
the rest of the regiment, and joined his brigade, at a point
four miles above Fort Edward. This gave him an opportu-
nity to examine the condition of the old fort, which he had
so often visited and worked on in the former war. He found
RUFUS PUTNAM. 67
that in the last seventeen years, it had greatly decayed, and
was quite untenable as a work of defense ; nevertheless it
was shortly after occupied by the troops of Gen. Burgoyne
for a few days, probably the last time the British flag will
ever float near its walls.
The campaign of 1777, was big with events deeply inter-
esting to the United States. Burgoyne with a large army
had invaded New York from the north, pursuing the old
route so often traversed in former years by the hostile bands
of France and Great Britain. The hordes of savages which
accompanied his army made the resemblance still more
striking. A numerous body of men and shipping, under
Clinton, assailed the same state on the south, by the way
of the North river, intending to unite the invading armies
at Albany, and thus divide the eastern from the middle and
southern states. Ticonderoga, considered the key to the
northern portion of the union, had fallen into the hands of
the enemy ; but the lives and the liberty of the army which
occupied it, were saved from the hands of the conqueror, by
the good sense of Gens. St. Clair and Schuyler, who thought
it useless to defend an untenable post, and thus served as a
nucleus, around which to rally the militia and continentals,
who hastened from all parts to arrest the progress of the
enemy. New England was electrified at the threatened
danger, and poured forth the thousands of her hardy yeo-
manry from her granite hills, to meet the coming storm.
Col. Putnam, with his brave Massachusetts men, again
traversed the grounds he had so often visited in the " old
French war ; " familiar with every part from Fort Edward to
Stillwater, while few if any of his officers or men had seen
this part of the country before. Although he was busily
engaged in all the military operations of September, in the
contests with Burgoyne, his regiment being the earliest on
the ground, yet he has left no record of these events, except
68 RUFUS PUTNAM.
to correct some misstatements made by the historians of that
period, in relation to the storming the works of the German
reserve, on the 7th of October, and a few other matters.
In front of those works was an open field, bounded by a
wood, at the distance of one hundred and twenty yards. In
the skirt of this wood Col. Putnam was posted with the fifth
and sixth regiments of the Massachusetts line, under his
command. Both the right and left of their work was cov-
ered by a thin, open wood, and the rear by a thick wood.
The moment that orders were given to storm, he moved
rapidly across the open field, amidst a murderous fire of
grape and musketry, and entered the works in front, at the
same moment that Learned's brigade, in which Jackson's
regiment was stationed, entered on the left and rear. Col.
Putnam immediately formed his two regiments, and moved
out of the works, which were not inclosed in the rear, and
advanced into the wood, toward the enemy's inclosed re-
doubts, on the right flank of their main encampment. Gen.
Learned, as soon as he had secured and sent off the plun-
der taken in the German camp, withdrew all the other
troops, without notifying Col. Putnam of his design, leaving
him unprotected in the occupancy of the wood. Here he
remained until toward morning, when he was reinforced
with three regiments from the right wing of the army, under
Gen. Glover.
The historian Marshall's account, varies materially from
this. He says, "Jackson's regiment of Massachusetts, led
by Lieut. Col. Brooks, turned the right of the encampment,
and stormed the works." In this account no mention is
made of Brig. Learned, who stormed at the same time with
the other corps of the brigade, as well as Jackson's ; nor of
the two regiments under Col. Putnam, who stormed in front,
under much greater exposure than Jackson. Again, Mar-
shall says, " Brooks maintained the ground he had gained;"
RUFUS PUTNAM. 69
which is entirely contrary to the truth ; for, except the two
regiments commanded by Col. Putnam, the troops which
entered the works were in great disorder, so far as fell un-
der his observation ; nor did he see any of them formed in
order for action, before he moved out with the fifth and sixth
regiments, as above stated.
At page 288, of the 3d volume, is a note from the histo-
rian Gordon, who says that, "On the morning of the 11th
of October, a report was spread in the American camp, and
believed by the officers, that the main body of Burgoyne's
army had marched away in the night for Fort Edward, leav-
ing only a rear-guard in the camp, which was to march as
soon as possible, leaving only their heavy baggage. On
this, it was decided to advance, and attack the camp in half
an hour; and the officers repaired to their respective com-
mands. Gen. Nixon's being the oldest brigade, crossed the
creek first. Unknown to the Americans, Burgoyne had
formed a line behind a parcel of brushwood, to support the
park of artillery, where the attack was to be made. Gen.
Glover was on the point of following Nixon ; just as he en-
tered the water, he saw a British soldier making across,
wThom he called and examined." This soldier was a de-
serter, and communicated the important fact, that the whole
British army was in their encampment. Nixon was imme-
diately stopped, and the intelligence conveyed to Gen. Gates,
who commanded the order for the assault, and called back
the troops, not without sustaining some loss from the British
artillery.
Col. Putnam's account of this affair is as follows : " Nix
on's brigade was put in motion, and marched in close col-
umn to the creek, just as the fog broke away, when the
whole park of British artillery opened upon us, at not more
than five hundred yards distance. Finding we were halted,
I rode forward to the head of the brigade, to inquire why we
70 BUFUS PUTNAM.
stood there in that exposed situation. But Nixon was not
to be found, and Col. Greaton, who commanded the leading
regiment, paid he had no orders. I then advised the cross-
ing the creek, and covering the troops under the bank, which
was done. I then, at the request of Col. Stephens, advanced
with my regiment across the plain, and posted them under
cover of the bank of an old stockade fort, while Stephens
advanced with two field pieces, to annoy the British, who
were attempting to take away some baggage wagons stand-
ing about midway between us and the British battery. We
remained in this situation about an hour, when I had or-
ders to retreat, and found Nixon near the church, and after
some debate, obtained leave to send a party and cut away
the British boats, which lay above the mouth of the creek.
Capt. Morse, Goodale, and Gates, with seventy or eighty
volunteers, started on this service, and effected it without
any loss." This plain statement puts the affair in a differ-
ent position, and shows that but for the promptness and
bravery of Putnam in this unexpected dilemma, the loss of
the Americans must have been much greater. The bold
act of cutting loose Burgoyne's store-boats, in the face of
his army, was of his suggesting, and accomplished chiefly
through the fearless activity of Capt. Goodale, who was
noted for daring exploits.
Kosciusko, the philanthropic and brave Folander, who
volunteered his services in the cause of American freedom,
was placed at the head of the engineering corps in Gates'
army, and often consulted Col. Putnam in planning the
works of defense and offense, so necessary in the operations
of hostile armies. He remained in the northern department
until the surrender of Burgoyne, which took place a few-
days after the last adventure, on the lGth of October; thus
closing the career of this haughty Briton, who fancied he
could march his invinciblcs from Ticondcroga to Albany, in
RUFUS PUTNAM. 71
defiance of all the efforts of "the rebels," the common name
for the Americans, and there unite his triumphant columns
with those of Sir Henry Clinton. This was the most glo-
rious event that had yet attended the arms of the United
States, and infused new life into the desponding portion of
the community. They learned, by actual experience, that
British regulars were not invincible, while their enemies
were taught to respect a foe they had heretofore despised.
After the cessation of hostilities in this quarter, Nixon's
brigade, to which Col. Putnam belonged, went into winter
quarters at Albany.
In January, 1778, he received a message from Gov. Clin-
ton and Gen. Israel Putnam, requesting him to repair to
West Point, and superintend the fortifications proposed to
be erected at this American Gibraltar. He declined the
offer, unless his regiment was allowed to go with him, ex-
cept at the express orders of Gen. Washington. A French
engineer had been sent by Congress, to plan and execute
the works proposed to be erected; but his views were not
approved by Gov. Clinton and the general officers, as suited
to what they deemed necessary, and hence arose the con-
fusion and delay, noticed in Gen. Washington's letter to
Congress, of the 13th of March, 1778.
In February he succeeded Col. Greaton in the command
of the troops in the northern department, who went home on
furlough. It seems that Congress, without consulting the
commander-in-chief, had matured a plan for a winter
campaign into Canada, which was now left in a manner,
defenseless. The chief duty of Col. Putnam was to forward
provisions and military stores to Coos, on the Onion river,
by which route the army of invasion was to pass, as early
as the 20th of February. The sound mind of the Colonel at
once perceived the fallacy and impossibility of the project.
The country was covered with a deep snow, and^the soldiers,
72 RUFUS PUTNAM.
as usual, only half clothed, and entirely unprepared for a
winter campaign. This was always a serious difficulty
during the whole war ; our armies were never decently clad,
and the poverty of the country was seen in their tattered
garments and shoeless feet. When men were required by
Col. Hazelet, the quarter-master-general, to open a road,
he had the firmness to refuse him, on account of the inclem-
ency of the weather, and the destitute condition of his men.
About this time, the 10th or 12th of February, the Marquis
Lafayette, who was to command the army of invasion,
arrived at Albany, with the Baron de Kalb. After a careful
inspection of the troops, he confirmed the views of Col.
Putnam, and the expedition was abandoned; and fortunate
for the country was it that they did so, for this was not a
war of offense, but of defense ; and whenever the Americans
left their own soil, disaster and defeat followed their steps ;
but so long as they confined their operations to justice and
to right, the God of armies and of justice was on their side.
In March following, he was ordered with his regiment
down to West Point, where his valuable services were re-
quired to lay out and superintend the construction of fortifi-
cations at that important place, and Gen. McDougal, who
had been appointed to the command, arrived about the same
time. Of all the foreign engineers who had been sought out
and employed, not one had yet been found, with the sound
judgment and practical skill of this untaught American.
The strong mind and calm considerate reflection of Putnam
took in at once the commanding points of the positions to
be fortified, and his practical skill soon accomplished what
his genius had projected. He found the foreign engineers'
main fort laid out on an extreme point next the river, and
commanded by the adjacent liigh grounds. It was aban-
doned for this purpose, and a simple battery placed there to
annoy the enemy's shipping, should they attempt to turn the
RUFUS PUTNAM. 73
point and force the boom placed a little higher up As a
defense against an attack by land, a chain of forts and
redoubts was laid out on the high ground, bordering the plain,
which forms the point that gives name to the place. The
principal fort was built by Putnam's own regiment, and
named by Gen. McDougal, " Fort Putnam." It stands on
an elevated rocky eminence, which commands both the plain
and point. This rock slopes gradually on to the plain, on
one side, while to the assailants it presents a mural front of
fifty feet perpendicular. It was subsequently strengthened
with additional works and made a very formidable place.
These defenses occupied him. until June, when he joined the
division of the army under Gen. Gates at Peekskill, and on
the 24th of July united with the grand army under Gen.
Washington, at White Plains. By his orders he reconnoi-
tered the country about Fredericksburg, Quaker hill, &c,
making plans and sketches for the use of the commander.
On the 16th of September, the main army was broken
into divisions and posted at different places. The division
to which he was attached under Gen. Gates, marched to
Danbury, Connecticut. While here he was directed by Gen.
McDougal to examine the roads and passes from New Mil-
ford, leading eastward, which service he accomplished, and
made his report to him. Soon after this he received the
following letter from Gen. Washington :
"Head Quarters, Oct. 9th, 1778.
Sir : I have perused your report of this day to Gen. Mc-
Dougal. You will continue your examination of the differ-
ent roads, &c, reconnoiter the most convenient halting
Dlaces on each; allowing the interval of one day's march
from one to the other, and make report of the whole to me,
that I may be enabled to regulate the different routes. The
road toward Litchfield offers, from your account of it, to be
74 RUFUS PUTNAM.
worth attention, and Col. Hall should be directed to proceed
on it accordingly.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
G. Washington.
Col. Putnam."
In answer to this letter he made a lengthy and very par-
ticular report, exhibiting his tact and sound judgment in
such services, for which he was naturally constituted.
Previous to making the final arrangements for winter quar-
ters, he made a tour of reconnoisance with Gen. Greene, in
the vicinity of the Hudson river. Late in December Nixon's
brigade took up their winter station in the Highlands, on the
road from Peekskill to Fishkill. Nixon left the brigade on
furlough, and it was placed under Col. Putnam for the
winter. Early in February the brigade was ordered to leave
their quarters. Col. Putnam's regiment was directed to
march to Croton river, and build a bridge across that
stream, which was completed about the last of March, and
was all extra service, for which no additional pay was given.
At this time he had a furlough to visit his family, where
he had not been since December, 1777. This was an in-
convenience under which the most useful officers labored ;
they could not be spared from the service, while the less
valuable procured leave of absence more readily. The
families of many of the New England officers, high in com-
mand, were in poor circumstances, and required all the in-
dustry and foresight of their calculating wives to keep their
families in comfortable circumstances during their absence.
Mrs. Putnam and the children, the oldest not more than
twelve or fourteen years, lived on a small farm of fifty acres
of rather sterile land ; while so poor and uncertain was the
pay of the soldier, and in 1779, so depreciated in value, that
had it not been for the assiduous application of the needle
RUFUS PUTNAM. 75
by this patriotic woman, her children would sometimes have
been very poorly supplied with food. It was common in
those days, which tried the souls of women as well as of
men, for females in some of the best families, to make gar-
ments gratuitously for the soldiers sent from their vicinity,
while many of them made also for their neighbors less
skilled in the art, for which they received produce or conti-
nental paper in exchange. Mrs. Putnam was one of this
class; and let it be remembered to her honor and praise,
that she labored diligently with her hands, both at the distaff
and needle, like the virtuous woman of old, for the support
of her household, while he who should have been their pro-
vider was absent, devoting his time to the cause of freedom,
and fighting the battles of his country. Many interesting
anecdotes are yet remembered and related by the family, of
the frugality and industry practiced during this cruel war,
for their support.
During his absence, Fort Fayette, on Verplank's Point,
was taken by the British. It was commanded by Capt.
Armstrong, and surrendered to overwhelming numbers.
Toward the last of June, Col. Putnam returned to camp, and
in a few days received the following order from Gen. Heath :
" Highlands, Danforth's House, June 29, 1779.
Sir: lam very desirous, if possible, to obtain the exact
situation of the enemy on Verplank's Point, and of the ves-
sels in the river. As you are well acquainted with the
ground on both sides of the river, I would request that you
would, to-morrow, reconnoiter the enemy with due precau-
tion, and make such remarks as you may think proper.
You will take a part, or the whole of your own light infantry
company as a guard. Your knowledge of the country, and
abilities, render particular instructions unnecessary.
Yours, &c,
Wm. Heath.
Col. Putnam."
76 RUFUS PUTNAM.
To execute this order, he had to march through the moun-
tains about twenty miles, by an unfrequented route, and to
prevent discovery, conceal his men in the woods. This duty
was successfully performed ; but the report is mislaid. Soon
after his return, he received the following note from his ex-
cellency, the commander-in-chief:
" Col. Putnam has permission to take as many men as he
chooses, of his own regiment, or any other, for special ser-
vice, and to pass all guards.
G. Washington.
July 9, 1779."
The "special service" here intended, was to reconnoiter
the posts on Verplank's and Stony Points, previous to the
meditated assault on those places. For this purpose, Col.
Putnam left Constitution island, opposite to West Point, in
the afternoon of the 10th, with fifty men, and landed at
Continental village about sunset. Soon after dark, he pro-
ceeded, by a back road, to a point near the scene of his
intended observations, and concealed his men, as before, in
the woods. In a short time it began to rain, and continued
all the next day, a part of which time they lay in a barn.
On the 12th it was fair, but their ammunition was all wet,
and he retired a little distance, to a deserted house, built a
fire, and dried their powder, which occupied nearly all day,
leaving the party, had they been attacked, entirely de-
fenseless. That evening he approached nearer the works,
concealed his men, and commenced reconnoitering their
condition. With one or two soldiers, who were familiar
with the location, he continued his labor until near morn-
ing, creeping on his hands and knees, to avoid detection by
the sentries, when very near the works. He ascertained the
time of night by the aid of fire-flies, which are abundant
at that season, and whose phosphorescent light enabled him
to distinguish the hours on his watch. By the approach of
RUFUS PUTNAM. 77
early dawn, he had completed his observations, and returned
undiscovered to camp, on the 13th. The following day, a
full and very intelligent report of the service was made to
Gen. Washington; a copy of which is now among his manu-
scripts, and no doubt contributed greatly to the success of
the attack on Stony Point, which immediately followed. In
relation to the statement made by Marshall, that "two brig-
ades under the command of Gen. McDougal, had been or-
dered to approach the enemy on the east side of the river,
&c," — he doubts whether such an order was ever given, for
the reason, that McDougal commanded the post of West
Point, and would not be allowed to leave so important a
station. He further says, that when he waited on Gen.
Washington, to make his report of the reconnoisance on the
14th, he told him that he had relinquished the plan of an
actual attack on Verplank's, simultaneously with that on
Stony Point, but intended only to make a feint ; and for that
purpose had ordered Nixon's brigade to march, that day, to
Continental village. He then instructed Col. Putnam to
take as many men from the brigade as he thought proper,
and make arrangements to be on the ground, ready to fire
on the enemy at Verplank's, the moment he discovered that
Wayne had begun his attack on Stony Point. At the same
time, he told him that no one was aware of the intended
attack, but those who were intrusted with its execution, and
that but one of his own family was in the secret. From
some error in the orders, Nixon's brigade did not march as
expected; but on the evening of the 15th, Col. Putnam left
Continental village, with Lieut. Col. Smith, and a detach-
ment of men, for Verplank's, and made the feigned attack,
by firing on the outer block-house and the guard stationed
at the creek, which alarmed the garrison of Fort Fayette
for their own safety, and prevented their turning their guns
on the Americans in their attack on Stony Point. This was
78 RUFUS PUTNAM.
all that was intended to be done on that night. On the
morning of the 10th, he remained in full view of the enemy
until eight or nine o'clock, and then returned to Continental
village. In the course of that day, Nixon's and Patterson's
brigades arrived at the village, but without field pieces, ar-
tillery men, axes, or tools. About ten o'clock at night, Gen.
Howe arrived, and took the command. He called on Col.
Putnam for information, who told him of the need of artil-
lery, &c., to attack the block-house in advance of the main
works, and that they could not cross the creek without re-
building the bridge, which had been destroyed. On the
17th, two twelve pounders arrived; but before any attack
was made, the approach of a numerous body of the enemy,
for the relief the post, caused the Americans to retreat, and
Fort Fayette remained in the hands of the British. Stony
Point was also abandoned in a short time, and fell into their
possession ; so that no advantage was gained, but the cap-
ture of six hundred prisoners, and the glory of the victory.
It infused fresh spirits into the country, and convinced their
enemies that no danger was too great, or achievement too
difficult for them to overcome.
In a short time after these events, Col. Putnam was ap-
pointed to the command of a regiment of light infantry, in
the brigade of Gen. Wayne, composed of four regiments.
This body of men was the elite of the army, and the officers
selected by the advice of Gen. Wayne, composing as effi-
cient a corps as the world ever saw. He continued in ser-
vice this year, until the army had generally gone into winter
quarters, and did not reach the station in the Highlands,
where bis regiment was cantoned, until January, 1780;
marching through the ice and snow from near Newark, in
New Jersey, being a very tedious and fatiguing journey.
During 1779, he was ordered on extra service, to erect a
battery on the ground of old Fort Montgomery, for the
RUFUS PUTNAM. 79
annoyance of the enemy's ships on the Hudson ; and again,
in December, by order of Gen. Wayne, he reconnoitered the
position of a British fleet at South Amboy, accompanied by
eight dragoons, to learn the time of their sailing. This
was promptly performed amidst the cold and inclemency of
December weather, and returned to camp by the way of
New Brunswick. A number of letters from Gen. Wayne
are on his file.
The latter part of the winter 1780, he had leave of ab-
sence to visit his family, and returned to camp in April. As
early as the 6th of May he was on command with an ad-
vanced detachment on Croton river, watching the movements
of the enemy. This was a fatiguing, hazardous duty, re-
quiring the utmost vigilance in the commanding officer, and
is only intrusted to men of tried courage and cautious
watchfulness. It is considered an honorable post, and the
officer selected by special appointment of the commanding
general. During the early years of the war the Americans
suffered severe losses in their detachments on this service,
not only at Paoli, but at various other places, from the light
dragoons under Tarlton and De Lancy, who acquired great
honor by their surprisals of our advanced posts, although
it was not a little lessened by their cruelty. The constant
watchfulness of Col. Putnam saved him from any disaster
of this kind, as may be seen in his correspondence with
Gen. Howe, which is full, minute, and voluminous, and
sometimes accompanied with plans and drafts, showing the
positions of the different detachments of the enemy. The
following letter will serve as a specimen of his style and
manner in this line :
"Callaburg* July 1, 1780.
Dear General : By an officer returned from scout last
* This was a station on the east of the Hudson, near the Highlands.
80 RUF US PUTNAM.
evening, and other intelligence, I am informed that the
enemy some day this week advanced in force by land from
New York, and are now encamped, having their left on the
North river, one mile above Phillips', and their right on the
road from Stephen Wards to Elberts. By this position their
right and left wings are about five miles distant, and from
the nature and situation of the country, their camps are
detached or separated; their left division being on Phillips'
hill between North river and Saw-Mill river; their center
division on Valentine's hill, between Saw-Mill river and the
Braux ; and their right division between the Braux and
East Chester. A sketch of the country which I sent you.
and what I have said, will give you a correct idea of their
position. It is said, and I believe it to be a fact, that a
number of wagons, with scythes for cutting forage, came
out yesterday. I think if it be true that a French fleet is
really in the way, Mr. Clinton has come out to give his troops
an airing, after their fatigue and other sufferings in a southern
climate ; and at the same time, has a design to secure or
destroy all the forage in his power, which might otherwise
be of advantage to us ; and I should not be surprised if he
attempted a general ravage of the country as far as Salem
or D anbury.
I am, dear general, with respect, your humble servant,
Rufus Putnam.
To Gen. Howe."
During the campaign of 1780, no great battle was fought in
the northern department. The events along the North river
were mostly skirmishes. An invasion of New Jersey was
made in June, by Gen. Knyphauscn, in which he was so
valiantly opposed by the American troops, that he retired
without accomplishing much but the destruction of buildings
and the murder of Mrs. Caldwell, the wife of a clergyman,
which foul deed was done by some of the Tory troops of
RUFUS PUTNAM. 81
Gov. Try on, who was in the expedition. Early in July, Sir
Henry Clinton returned with his army from the conquest of
Charleston, S. C, and made demonstrations of an attack
on West Point, but nothing was accomplished.
In September, the foul treason of Arnold took place, by
which the enemy thought to obtain possession of this im-
portant post, in a more easy way than by hard fighting, but
not half so honorable. A kind Providence, which over-
looked and directed the American affairs, caused this wicked
plan to be discovered in time to prevent its execution ; and
the country was thus saved from threatened ruin. Soon
after this affair, Col. Putnam had leave of absence, and re-
turned to camp early in December. On the 6th of July,
1781, the French army, which had been sent to aid us,
formed a junction with the Americans near Dobb's Ferry,
preparatory to marching for Virginia.
On the 21st of July, Col. Putnam was ordered by Gen.
Heath to take the command of a detachment of three hun-
dred light infantry, Col. Sheldon's legionary corps, with two
companies of the New York levies, and one piece of light
artillery, with which to cover that part of the country. On
this duty he was continued until the last of October, and
thus did not witness the surrender of Cornwallis at York-
town. While here employed, he received the following let-
ter from Gen. Waterbury, of Connecticut:
"Horse Neck, September 13, 1781.
Sir: After my compliments, I would inform you that I
have received orders from his excellency, Gov. Trumbull, to
build some places of security for my troops to winter in,
and, at the same time, to ask the favor of your assistance,
in counseling with me where to build, &c."
This service he performed as requested. In November,
he joined his regiment at West Point, and on the 14th of that
month, received the following order from Gen. McDougal :
82 RUFUS PUTNAM.
"Sir: Gen. McDougal requests you to repair to Stony
and Verplank's Points, and examine minutely into their
state in every respect. The sentry boxes at those advanced
works should be destroyed ; every building within cannon
range of either of those posts, and any cover that would
afford a lodgment for the enemy, must be taken down, and
removed before you leave the ground. You will please to
have the garrisons paraded, and note ever}- person, and the
regiments they belong to, unfit for this service, &c."
This duty was faithfully performed, and was about the
last of his military labors ; as after this period, hostilities, in
a manner, closed between the two nations, in the northern
states. The capture of Lord Cornwallis, and the victories
of Gen. Greene in South Carolina, discouraged Great Brit-
ain from further attempts at the subjugation of the United
States. He was, however, still busily employed, as agent
for his brother officers, in interceding with Congress and the
Legislature of Massachusetts, for a redress of their griev-
ances, which had become very serious. For this duty, his
stern integrity, candor, honesty of purpose, and well known
character for usefulness in the service of the country, emi-
nently fitted him. His first employment of this kind was
in 1778, and on the following occasion :
"At a meeting of the field and other officers of Gen. Nix-
on's brigade, September 9, 1778, Col. Rufus Putnam was
unanimously chosen representative, to meet in a general
convention of the army, to state our grievances to the hon-
orable Continental Congress, and endeavor to obtain redress
of the same.
Per order of the meeting :
Tuos. Nixon, Col., Moderator."
In the winter of 1778-9, the sufferings of the officers and
men had become so intolerable, from the want of pay,
clothing, and provisions, that the patience and patriotism of
RUFUS PUTNAM. 83
even the Massachusetts men, was put to so severe a trial,
that they had well nigh failed under it. Gen. Nixon's brig-
ade, then in winter quarters in the Highlands, had formed
articles of mutiny, by which, on a certain day, they were to
march off in a body. A copy of those articles was some-
how obtained by Col. Putnam, and transmitted to Mr. Davis,
a member of the Legislature, and an influential man in
Boston. Finding his own personal efforts, and those few
who assisted him, unavailing in checking this disgraceful
design, Col. Putnam made a confidential communication to
Gen. McDougal, of their intentions, and requested him to
order the several regiments composing the brigade, to sepa-
rate, and occupy distant and distinct posts, toward New
York. This the general immediately complied with, and
thus put it out of their power to execute the plan they had
formed, or at least not so readily as they could have done,
when all in a body; and thus, by the integrity and faithful-
ness of this honest and upright man, was this sad calamity
averted ; and a foul blot on the fair escutcheon of his native
state prevented.
In the winter of 1780, while on a furlough, the larger por-
tion of his time was spent in Boston, soliciting the General
Court, or Legislature of Massachusetts, for relief in aid of
their troops, and especially for the officers who were prisoners
on Long island. For the latter a small sum was obtained,
for which he received their thanks in a letter of acknowledg-
ment, through Col. Thompson, dated May 1st, 1780. While
for the officers of the line no provision was made. For this
reason, at the close of the year, a committee was appointed
to repair to Boston and lay their claims before the Legisla-
ture, with the following instructions, which are given, in part,
that posterity may judge of the justice of their cause.
After stating a number of their grievances, as to the man-
ner of their pay, clothing, small stores, &c, under three
84
RUFUS PUTNAM.
distinct heads, they say, " You will pointedly represent to the
Legislature, the great inconveniences and losses, accrued and
accruing to great part, nay almost the whole, of both offi-
cers and soldiers, from the notes we received the last year,
not being negotiable in any manner for any kind of property,
on which account many were, for want of almost every kind
of clothing, obliged to sell their notes at a very great dis-
count, from their nominal value when given ; and by this
representation you will endeavor to procure an act that will
make the notes already, and those that shall be given, a
tender for the confiscated estates when sold ; or that will in
some way be equally beneficial to the army and state — make
them of such value that those who wish it may convert them
into current money without loss."
The whole of these instructions fill two or three pages,
and seem to have been signed by all the officers of the Mas-
sachusetts line. It is dated West Point, January 1st, 1781.
The names of the committee were as follows : Brig. Gen.
Glover, Col. Putnam, Lieut. Col.E. Brooks, Col. H. Jackson,
Col. J. Graton, Maj. Samuel Darbey, S. Larned and T.
Edwards.
To fulfill this embassy the committee left West Point early
in January and passed two or thee months in Boston, prose-
cuting their claims. On their arrival, the recent alarm grow-
ing out of the mutiny of the Pennsylvania and Jersey lines
had created such an alarm in the minds of the General As-
sembly, that they listened favorably to the committee and
actually sent on two months' pay in specie to their line of the
army, which was about the result of their efforts. It relieved
their most pressing wants and pacified the distressed soldiers
for a time, and the favorable prospects of a speedy termina-
tion of the war closed any further serious difficulties with
the Massachusetts men.
In February, 1782, the state of New York having applied
KUFUS PUTNAM. 85
to Congress for remuneration for the forage consumed by
the allied army in West Chester county, while encamped
near Dobb's Ferry in 1781, he was appointed by Gen.
Heath and Gov. Clinton one of the commissioners for set-
tling the claim. It was a difficult and troublesome affair,
but was closed in July, and shows the confidence of those
eminent men in his character, for sound judgment and love
of justice. After this, he obtained leave of absence for a
short time, and while on furlough, heard of the intention of
Congress to reduce the army.
Being tired and disgusted with much of the treatment he
had received in regard to promotion in the Massachusetts
line, which had not been made in accordance with common
usage in such matters, especially as to the brigadiers, two of
which were vacant and neither of them filled, viz: Gen.
Learned's in 1777, and Nixon's in 1780, added to which the
desire he felt to be with his family which greatly needed his
presence, he concluded to quit the service, and made an ar-
rangement with Lieut. Col. Brooks, the youngest commander
of a regiment in the line, and would of course be deranged
in the reduction, to remain, and let Col. Putnam retire, a
a mode of exchange heretofore practiced. Under these cir-
cumstances he did not return to the army until the receipt
of the following letter from Gen. Washington, who had been
informed of his intentions by some of his friends.
" Head Quarters, Newburg, Dec. 2, 1782.
Sir : I am informed you have had thoughts of retiring
from service, upon the arrangement which is to take place
on the 1st of January. But as there will be no opening for it,
unless your reasons should be very urgent indeed ; and as
there are some prospects which may perhaps make your
continuing more eligible than was expected, I have thought
proper to mention the circumstances, in expectation they
might have some influence in inducing you to remain in the
86 RUFUS PUTNAM.
army. Col. Shepherd having retired and Brig. Gen. Pat-
terson being appointed to the command of the first brigade,
you will of consequence be the second colonel in the line
and have the command of a brigade, while the troops con-
tinue brigaded as at present. Besides I consider it expedi-
ent you should be acquainted, that the question is yet before
Congress, whether there shall be two brigadiers appointed in
the Massachusetts line. Should you continue you will be a
candidate for this promotion. The secretary at war is of
opinion the promotion will soon take place — whether it will
or not, I am not able to determine, and, therefore, I would not
flatter you too much with expectations, which it is not in my
power to gratify — but if upon a view of these circumstances
and prospects, the state of your affairs will permit you to con-
tinue in the present arrangement, (which must be completed
immediately,) it will be very agreeable to
Sir, your most obedient servant,
G. Washington.
Col. Putnam."
On the receipt of this letter, and one from Gen. Potter,
he repaired immediately to camp ; but being determined not
to remain in a situation approaching disgrace, as some of
his senior officers had done, when Congress neglected to pro-
mote them to actual vacancies, on Ins arrival he wrote a
very interesting letter to Gen. Washington, explaining all
his views and thanking him for the interest he took in his
welfare, but is too lengthy for insertion here. On the 8th
of January following, he wras commissioned as a brigadier-
general in the army of the United States, and then left
without any excuse to leave the service until the declaration
of peace, which happily took place on the 9th of April,
1783.
In June the Massachusetts line was reduced to two regi-
ments of which, Gen. Patterson or the oldest officer took the
RUFUS PUTNAM. 87
command, and the officers and soldiers retired on furlough,
and were finally discharged in November.
During his continuance in the army, he shared largely in
the confidence of Gen. Washington, who continued his
friendship during his political life, appointing him to various
posts of honor and profit, as will appear in the progress of
this biography.
During this year he was consulted by Gen. Washington,
as to the best plan of arranging " a military peace establish-
ment," for the United States. Into this subject he entered
quite largely, drafting a system embracing about thirty
manuscript pages, giving in detail the whole arrangement,
and must have been quite useful to the commander-in-chief,
in forming his final report to Congress. In it is embraced,
besides the regular troops, a plan for twenty-four regiments
of continental militia, selected from the several states, of-
ficered and armed like the standing troops, and ready to be
called into service when needed. Also a plan for a chain
of military posts, or forts for the defense of the frontiers,
in the west, one of which is at the mouth of the Muskingum
and was established in 1785. And, as in case of war with
Great Britain, they would probably have the ascendancy on
the northern lakes, he points out the most eligible routes for
supplying the posts with provisions. It is an elaborate
work and displays the genius of a great and calculating
mind : the original draft of which is now among his manu-
script papers.
In June, 1783, before the final reduction of the army took
place at New Windsor, the officers of the army, to the num-
ber of two hundred and eighty-three belonging chiefly to the
northern states, petitioned Congress for a grant of land in
the western country, and Gen. Putnam, in their behalf, ad-
dressed a letter to Gen. Washington on the subject, request-
ing his influence with Congress in the matter. It explains
88 RUFUS PUTNAM.
the views and expectations of the officers, and the good
results that would accrue to the United States, in a clear
and masterly manner, and being now a rare document is
given in full as justly due to his character and name.
"New Windsor, June 16th, 1783.
Sir : As it is very uncertain how long it may be before the
honorable Congress may take the petition of the officers of
the army, for lands between the Ohio river and Lake Erie,
into consideration, or be in a situation to decide thereon, the
going to Philadelphia to negotiate the business with any of
its members, or committee to whom the petition may be
referred, is a measure, none of the petitioners will think of
undertaking. The part I have taken in promoting the peti-
tion is well known, and, therefore, needs no apology, when 1
inform you, that the signers expect that I will pursue measures
to have it laid before Congress. Under these circumstances
I beg leave to put the petition in your excellency's hands,
and ask with the greatest assurance your patronage of
it. That Congress may not be wholly unacquainted with
the motives of the petitioners, I beg your indulgence while I
make a few observations on the policy and propriety of
granting the prayer of it, and making such arrangements
of garrisons in the western quarter, as shall give effectual
protection to the settlers and encourage emigration to the
new government, which, if they meet your approbation, and
the favor not too great, I must request your excellency will
give them your support, and cause them to be forwarded
with the petition, to the President of Congress, in order that
when the petition is taken up, Congress or their committee,
may be informed on what principles the petition is grounded.
I am, sir, among those who consider the cession of so great
a tract of territory to the United States, in the western
world, as a very happy circumstance, and of great conse-
quence to the American empire. Nor have I the least doubt
RUFUS PUTNAM. 89
but Congress will pay an early attention to securing the
allegiance of the natives, as well as provide for the defense
of the country, in case of a war with Great Britain or Spain.
One great means of securing the allegiance of the natives
I take to be, the furnishing them with such necessaries as
they shall stand in need of, and in exchange receiving their
furs and skins. They have become so accustomed to the
use of fire-arms, that I doubt if they could gain a subsis-
tence without them, at least they will be very sorry to be
reduced to the disagreeable necessity of using the bow and
arrow as the only means for killing their game ; and so
habituated are they to the woolen blanket, &c, &c, that
absolute necessity alone will prevent their making use of
them.
This consideration alone is I think, sufficient to prove
the necessity of establishing such factories as may furnish
an ample supply to these wretched creatures : for unless
they are furnished by the subjects of the United States,
they will undoubtedly seek elsewhere, and like all other
people, form their attachment where they have their com-
merce ; and then in case of war, will always be certain to
aid our enemies. Therefore if there were no advantages
in view but that of attaching them to our interest, I think
good policy will dictate the measure of carrying on a com-
merce with these people ; but when we add to this the con-
sideration of the profit arising from the Indian trade in
general, there cannot, I presume, be a doubt that it is the
interest of the United States to make as early provision for
the encouragement and protection of it as possible. For
these, and many other obvious reasons, Congress will no
doubt find it necessary to establish garrisons at Oswego,
Niagara, Detroit, Michilimackinac, Illinois, and many other
places in the western world.
The Illinois, and all the posts that shall be established
90 RUFUS PUTNAM.
on the Mississippi, may undoubtedly be furnished by way
of the Ohio, with provisions at all times, and with goods
whenever a war shall interrupt the trade with New Or-
leans. But in case of a war with Great Britain, unless a
communication is open between the river Ohio and Lake
Erie, Niagara, Detroit, and all the posts seated on the great
lakes, will inevitably be lost without such communication ;
for a naval superiority on Lake Ontario, or the seizing on
Niagara, will subject the whole country bordering on the
lakes to the will of the enemy. Such a misfortune will put
it out of the power of the United States to furnish the na-
tives, and necessity will again oblige them to take an active
part against us.
Where and how this communication is to be opened,
shall next be considered. If Capt. Hutchins and a number
of other map-makers are not out of their calculations, provis-
ions may be sent from the settlements on the south side of the
Ohio, by the Muskingum or the Scioto, to Detroit, or even
to Niagara, at a less expense than from Albany by the Mo-
hawk, to those places. To secure such communication, (by
the Scioto, all circumstances considered, will be the best,)
let a chain of forts be established : these forts should be
built on the bank of the river, if the ground will admit, and
about twenty miles distant from each other : and on this
plan the Scioto communication will require ten or eleven
stockaded forts, flanked by block-houses; and one company
of men will be a sufficient garrison for each, except the one
at the portage, which will require more attention in the
construction, and a larger number of men to garrison it.
But besides the supplying the garrisons on the great lakes
with provisions, &c, we ought to take into consideration the
protection that such an arrangement will give to the front-
iers of Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York. I say New
York, as we shall undoubtedly extend our settlements and
RUFUS PUTNAM. 91
garrisons from the Hudson to Oswego. This done, and a
garrison posted at Niagara, whoever will inspect the map must
be convinced that all the Indians living on the waters of the
Mohawk, Oswego, Susquehanna, and Alleghany rivers, and
in all the country south of the lakes Ontario and Erie, will
be encircled in such a manner as will effectually secure their
allegiance, and keep them quiet, or oblige them to quit their
country.
Nor will such an arrangement of posts, from the Ohio to
Lake Erie, be any additional expense ; for, unless this gap
is shut, notwithstanding the garrisons on the lakes, and
from Oswego to the Hudson, yet the frontier settlers on the
Ohio, by Fort Pitt to the Susquehanna, and all the country
south of the Mohawk, will be exposed to savage insult, un-
less protected by a chain of garrisons, which will be far
more expensive than the arrangement proposed, and at the
same time the protection given to these states, will be much
less complete ; besides, we should not confine our protec-
tion to the present settlements, but carry the idea of extend-
ing them at least as far as the lakes Ontario and Erie.
These lakes form such a natural barrier, that when con-
nected with the Hudson and Ohio by the garrisons pro-
posed, settlements in every part of the state of New York
and Pennsylvania, may be made with the utmost safety; so
that these states must be deeply interested in the measure, as
well as Virginia, who will, by the same arrangement, have
a great part of its frontier secured, and the rest much
strengthened ; nor is there a state in the Union, but will be
greatly benefited by the measure, considered in any other
point of view; for, without any expense except a small
allowance of purchase-money to the natives, the United
States will have within their protection, seventeen million,
five hundred thousand acres of very fine land, to dispose of
as they may think proper. But I hasten to mention some of
92 RUFUS PUTNAM.
the expectations which the petitioners have, respecting the
conditions on which they hope to obtain the lands. This
was not proper to mention in the body of the petition, es-
pecially as we pray for grants to all members of the army,
who wish to take up lands in that quarter.
The whole tract is supposed to contain about seventeen
million, four hundred and eighteen thousand, two hundred
and forty acres ; and will admit of seven hundred and fifty-
six townships, of six miles square, allowing to each town-
ship, three thousand and forty acres, for the ministry, schools,
waste lands, rivers, ponds, and highways ; then each town-
ship will contain, of settlers' lands, twenty thousand acres,
and in the whole, fifteen million, one hundred and twenty
thousand acres. The land to which the army is entitled,
by the resolves of Congress, referred to in the petition, ac-
cording to my estimate, will amount to two million, one
hundred and six thousand, eight hundred and fifty acres,
which is about the eighth part of the whole. For the survey
of this, the army expect to be at no expense ; nor do they
expect to be under any obligation to settle these lands, or
do any duty to secure their title in them ; but in order to
induce the army to become actual settlers in the new gov-
ernment, the petitioners hope Congress will make a further
grant of lands on condition of settlement; and have no
doubt but that honorable body will be as liberal to all those
who are not provided for, by their own states, as New York
has been to the officers and soldiers that belong to that
state ; which, if they do, it will require about eight million
of acres to complete the army, and about seven million
acres will remain for sale. The petitioners, at least some
of them, are much opposed to the monopoly of lands, and
wish to guard against large patents being granted to in-
dividuals, as, in their opinion, such a mode is very injuri-
ous to a country, and greatly retards its settlement ; and
RUFUS PUTNAM. 93
whenever such patents are tenanted, it throws too much
power into the hands of a few. For these and many other
obvious reasons, the petitioners hope no grant will be made
but by townships of six miles square, or six by twelve, or
six by eighteen miles, to be subdivided by the proprietors to
six miles square, that being the standard on which they wish
all calculations to be made ; and that officers and soldiers,
as well as those who petition for charters on purchase, may
form their associations on one uniform principle, as to num-
ber of persons or rights to be contained in a township, with
the exception only, that when the grant is made for reward
of services already done, or on condition of settlement, if
the officers petition, with the soldiers, for a particular town-
ship, the soldiers shall have one right only, to a captain's
three, and so in proportion with commissioned officers of
every grade.
These, sir, are the principles which gave rise to the pe-
tition under consideration ; the petitioners, at least some of
them, think that sound policy dictates the measure, and that
Congress ought to lose no time in establishing some such
chain of posts as has been hinted at, and in procuring the
tract of country petitioned for, of the natives ; for, the mo-
ment this is done, and agreeable terms offered to the set-
tlers, many of the petitioners are determined, not only to
become adventurers, but actually to remove themselves to
this country ; and there is not the least doubt, but other val-
uable citizens will follow their example ; and the probability
is, that the country between Lake Erie and the Ohio will be
filed with inhabitants, and the faithful subjects of the United
States so established on the waters of the Ohio and the
lakes, as to banish forever the idea of Our western territory
falling under the dominion of any European power; the
frontiers of the old states will be effectually secured from
94 RUFUS PUTNAM.
savage alarms, and the new will have little to fear from
their insults.
I have the honor to be, sir, with every sentiment,
your excellency's most obedient and very
humble servant,
Rufus Putnam.
Gen. Washington."
From the suggestions in this communication of Gen. Put-
nam, originated the system of laying out and surveying the
public lands in townships of six miles square, continued in
all the surveys of United States lands to this day. The
townships of six miles square, and subdivided among the
proprietors, about the average size of the New England
farms, as well as the provision made for the support of
schools and the ministry, could only have originated with a
Puritan mind; although the latter was confined to the Ohio
Company's and Symm's purchase, and not adopted by
Congress.
Gen. Washington, in a letter addressed to the President of
Congress, advocated the measure strongly, as advantageous
to the United States as well as to the petitioners. Nothing,
however, was done by them in the matter as to making any
additional grant for United States securities, further than
that of September, 1776, and this movement was finally the
origin of the Ohio Company.
After his discharge from the army in 1783, he joined his
family in Rutland, Mass., where they then lived, and re-
sumed the occupations of farming and surveying.
In April, 1784, he addressed the following letter to Gen.
Washington, on the subject of the projected settlement to be
made by the officers and soldiers of the army in the Ohio
country, which subject seems to have entered deeply into
his heart, and occupied a prominent place in his attention ;
KTJFUS PUTNAM. 95
he may therefore well be called the projector and father of
the settlements northwest of the Ohio river.
" Rutland, April 5th, 1784.
Dear Sir : Being unavoidably prevented from attending
the general meeting of the Cincinnati at Philadelphia, as I
had intended, where I once more expected the opportunity in
person of paying my respects to your excellency, I cannot
deny myself the honor of addressing you by letter, to ac-
knowledge with gratitude the ten thousand obligations I feel
myself under to your goodness, and most sincerely to con-
gratulate you on your return to domestic happiness ; to
inquire after your health, and wish the best of Heaven's
blessings may attend you and your dear lad)'.
The settlement of the Ohio country, sir, engrosses many
of my thoughts; and much of my time, since I left the
camp, has been employed in informing myself and others,
with respect to the nature, situation, and circumstances of
that country, and the practicability of removing ourselves
there ; and if I am to form an opinion on what I have seen
and heard on the subject, there are thousands in this quarter
who will emigrate to that country, as soon as the honorable
Congress make provisions for granting lands there, and
locations and settlements can be made with safety, unless
such provision is too long delayed ; I mean till necessity
turn their views another way, which is the case with some
already, and must soon be the case with many more. You
are sensible of the necessity, as well as the possibility of both
officers and soldiers fixing themselves in business some-
where, as soon as possible, as many of them are unable to
lie long on their oars, waiting the decision of Congress, on our
petition ; and, therefore, must unavoidably settle themselves
in some other quarter ; which, when done, the idea of re-
moving to the Ohio country will probably be at an end, with
respect to most of them; besides, the commonwealth of
9G RUFUS PUTNAM.
Massachusetts have come to a resolution to sell their eastern
country for public securities; and should their plan be
formed, and propositions be made public before we hear any-
thing from Congress respecting our petition, and the terms
on which the lands petitioned for are to be obtained, it will
undoubtedly be much against us, by greatly lessening the
number of Ohio associates.
Another reason why we wish to know, as soon as possi-
ble, what the intentions of Congress are respecting our pe-
tition, is the effect such knowledge will probably have, on
the credit of the certificates we have received on settlement
of accounts : those securities are now selling at no more
than three shillings and six pence, or four shillings on the
pound; which, in all probability, might double, if no more,
the moment it was known that government would receive
them for lands in the Ohio country. From these circum-
stances, and many others which might be mentioned, we are
growing quite impatient; and the general inquiry now is,
when are we going to the Ohio? Among others, Brig. Gen.
Tupper, Lieut. Col. Oliver, and Maj. Ashley, have agreed
to accompany me to that country, the moment the way is
open for such an undertaking. I should have hinted these
things to some member of Congress, but the delegates from
.Massachusetts, although exceeding worthy men, and, in
general, would wish to promote the Ohio scheme, yet, if it
should militate against the particular interest of this state,
by draining her of inhabitants, especially when she is form-
ing the plan of selling the eastern country, I thought they
would not be very warm advocates in our favor; and I dare
not trust myself with any of the New York delegates, with
whom I was acquainted, because that government are wisely
inviting the eastern people to settle in that state; and as to
the delegates of other states, I have no acquaintance with
any of them.
RUFUS PUTNAM. 97
These circumstances must apologize for my troubling
you on this subject, and requesting the favor of a line, to
inform us in this quarter, what the prospects are with re-
spect to our petition, and what measures have, or are likely
to be taken, with respect to settling the Ohio country.
I shall take it as a very particular favor, sir, if you will
be kind enough to recommend me to some character in Con-
gress, acquainted with, and attached to the Ohio cause, with
whom I may presume to open a correspondence.
I am, sir, with the highest respect,
your humble servant,
Rufus Putnam.
Gen. Washington."
In June, he received the following reply from Gen. Wash-
ington :
"Mount Vernon, June 2d, 1784.
Dear Sir: I could not answer your favor of the 5th of
April, from Philadelphia, because Gen. Knox, having mis-
laid, only presented the letter to me in the moment of my
departure from that place. The sentiments of esteem and
friendship which breathe in it, are exceedingly pleasing
and flattering to me, and you may rest assured they are
reciprocal.
I wish it was in my power to give you a more favorable
account of the officers' petition for lands on the Ohio, and
its waters, than I am about to do. After this matter, and
information respecting the establishment for peace, were
my inquiries, as I went through Annapolis, solely directed;
but I could not learn that anything decisive had been done
in either.
On the latter, I hear Congress are differing about their
powers ; but as they have accepted of the cession from Vir-
ginia, and have resolved to lay off ten new states, bounded
by latitudes and longitudes, it should be supposed that they
08 BUFUS PUTNAM.
would determine something respecting the former, before
they adjourn; and yet I very much question it, as the latter
is to happen on the 3d, that is to-morrow. As the Congress
who are to meet in November next, by the adjournment will
be composed from an entire new choice of delegates in each
state, it is not in my power, at this time, to direct you to a
proper correspondent in that body. I wish I could ; for per-
suaded I am, that to some such cause as you have assigned,
may be ascribed the delay the petition has encountered ; for
surely, if justice and gratitude to the army, and general policy
of the Union were to govern in this case, there would not
be the smallest interruption in granting its request. I really
feel for those gentlemen, who, by these unaccountable de-
lays, (by any other means than those you have suggested,)
are held in such an awkward and disagreeable state of sus-
pense ; and wish my endeavors could remove the obstacles.
At Princeton, before Congress left that place, I exerted
every power I was master of, and dwelt upon the argument
you have used, to show the propriety of a speedy decision.
Every member with whom I conversed, acquiesced in the
reasonableness of the petition. All yielded, or seemed to
yield to the policy of it, but plead the want of cession of the
land, to act upon; this is made and accepted ; and yet mat-
ters, as far as they have come to my knowledge, remain in
statu quo/'
After speaking of his own lands on the Ohio and Ken-
awha, he closes with,
" I am, dear sir, with very sincere esteem and regard, your
most obedient servant,
G. Washington."
The project of an immediate establishment in the wilder-
ness, northwest of the river Ohio, having failed, he, on the
2d of August of this year, left his home once more, to sur-
vey a tract of land for the state of Massachusetts, bordering
RUFUS PUTNAM. 99
on the bay of Passamaquoddy, and returned from that ser-
vice in November.
In the course of this year, the Leicester academy, one of
the earliest and most respectable in the state, was incorpo
rated, and Gen. Putnam became one of its principal friends
and benefactors; giving, for its support, one hundred pounds,
or three hundred and thirty-three dollars, and thirty-three
cents, a liberal sum for one in his circumstances. He was
appointed one of the trustees, in company with the Hon.
Moses Gill, Hon. Levi Lincoln, Joseph Allen, Seth Wash-
burn, Samuel Baker, and several respectable clergymen of
the vicinity ; thus showing his regard for such institutions as
would benefit his country.
In 1785, the Legislature being well satisfied with his la-
bor, and the correct, intelligent report, made to them, of his
doings in the preceding year, appointed him on the committee
for the sale of their eastern lands, and also superintendent
of the surveys to be made this year. In June, while he was
in Boston making preparations for the voyage, he received
notice of his appointment, by Congress, as one of the sur-
veyors of then lands, northwest of the river Ohio, recently
ordered to be surveyed for sale, being seven ranges of town-
ships, immediately west of the Pennsylvania line. As he
could not honorably relinquish his engagement with Massa-
chusetts, and also wished to accept the office, he wrote to
the secretary an affirmative answer, and at the same time,
a letter to the Massachusetts delegation, requesting them to
get Congress to appoint Gen. Tupper temporarily, in his
place, until his present contract was fulfilled. This object
was accomplished, and Gen. Tupper proceeded on to Pitts-
burg, for this purpose, in 1785. On the 14th of June, he
sailed, with his company of surveyors, from Beverly, and
arrived at Blue Hill on the 20th. This season was occupied
100 RUFUS PUTNAM.
in surveying the coast, islands, and towns westward of Pen-
obscot bay, and laid the foundation for a correct chart of
that stormy sea-board. He returned late in December, and
spent the winter in protracting the results of his labors, for
the use of the state.
In January, 1785, a treaty was made with the Indians
claiming the lands now in Ohio, at Fort Mcintosh, but with
conditions so repugnant to the Delawares and Shawnoes, who
considered themselves as cheated and deceived by the com-
missioners on the part of the United States, that they threat-
ened with death any who attempted to execute the surveys,
and were so manifestly hostile, that it was deemed impru-
dent to make the attempt, and the work was abandoned for
that year.
When Gen. Tupper returned in the winter, he made a
very favorable report of the fertility and beauty of the
country, and as there was no expectation of Congress doing
anything more favorable for the officers and soldiers of the
late army than wsa contained in their ordinance of the 20th
of May, 1785, Gen. Putnam concluded to join with Gen.
Tupper in proposing an association for the purchase of lands
in the western country. Accordingly on the 10th of Jan-
uary, 1786, after nearly a whole night spent in conferring on
this momentous subject, they issued a public notice ad-
dressed to the officers and soldiers, as well as other good
dozens disposed to become adventurers in the Ohio country,
to meet at Boston, by delegates chosen in the several coun-
ties, on the 1st day of March, for the purpose of forming an
association by the name of " The Ohio Company." From
that night's conference of these two men, who had long
been close and firm friends, on the 9th of January, 1786,
proceeded the first germ of the present great state of Ohio.
A full detail of the formation and progress of the company,
RTJFUS PUTNAM. 101
will be found in " The History of the first Settlement of Wash-
ington county, and the Transactions of the Ohio Company,"
a work which precedes the volume of Biographies.
In March, 1786, the United States surveyors were ordered
to proceed west ; and as Gen. Tupper had been at very se-
rious expense in the last year's journey, without any profit,
Gen. Putnam kindly continued him as his substitute, while
he occupied the summer in closing the business of the Mas-
sachusetts lands. In addition to this, he was appointed by
the state a commissioner, in conjunction with Gen. Lincoln,
and Judge Paine, of Wiscasset, to treat with the Penobscot
Indians, which was accomplished in August and Septem-
ber of that year. During the severe weather of January,
1787, he joined Gen. Lincoln at Worcester, as a volunteer
aid to suppress the Shay insurrection, and continued to as-
sist him with his advice and personal presence during this
trying period, until the final dispersion of the insurgents at
Petersham, in February. In April he was appointed a jus-
tice of the peace by Gov. Bowdoin, and in May chosen by
the town of Rutland, a member in the General Assembly,
and attended the spring and autumn sessions of that year.
In November, 1789, the directors of the Ohio Company
appointed him superintendent of all their affairs relating to
the settlement of their lands northwest of the river Ohio.
The first division of their pioneers left Danvers, in Massa-
chusetts, under the direction of Maj. Haffield White, on the
1st day of December. The second assembled at Hartford,
Conn., on the 1st of January, 1788, and wTere led by
Col. Sproat; Gen. Putnam being obliged to go by the way
of the city of New York, on the business of the company.
On the 24th of that month he joined the division at Swatarra
creek, Pa., which they crossed with much difficulty, on ac-
count of the ice. On that night there fell a deep snow,
which blocked up the roads, and with their utmost exertions
102 RUFUS PUTNAM.
they could get their wagons no further than Cooper's tav-
ern, now Strawsbtirg, at the foot of the Tuscarawas moun-
tain, on the 29th of January. Here they ascertained that
no one had crossed the mountains since the last fall of
snow, which, with that on the ground before, made about
three feet. They therefore abandoned their wagons, built
four stout sledges, to which they harnessed their horses in
single file, preceded by the men on foot, who broke a track
for the teams, and thus, after two weeks of incessant labor,
they overcame the mountain ranges, and the numerous dif-
ficulties of the way, reaching Simrel's ferry on the Yough-
iogheny on the 14th of February, where they found the party
under Maj. White, who arrived the 23d of January.
By the 1st of April, having completed then boats and
taken in their stores of provisions, they embarked on the
western waters for the mouth of the Muskingum, which
place they reached on the 7th of April, and landed at the
upper point, where they pitched their camp among the trees.
The next day Col. Sproat and John Mathews commenced
the survey of the eight acre lots, and in a few days after the
city lots and streets, of the town of Marietta. On his way
out, Gen. Putnam procured copies of the several treaties
heretofore made with the western Indians, from which he
became impressed, that they would not long remain at peace,
when they saw the whites taking actual possession of the
country north of the Ohio river, which had for many years
been considered the boundary line between their lands and
those of the United States. For this reason he directly com-
menced the erection of a strong garrison on the margin of
the plain, near the Muskingum river, for the protection of
themselves and the emigrants soon expected to follow.
This fort was called " Campus Martius," and is fully de-
scribed in the preceding history. The pioneers that year
planted about one hundred and thirty acres of corn, on the
EUFUS PUTNAM. 103
plain back of the garrison, after girdling the trees, and de-
positing the seed, in the loose earth with a hoe, there being
no under brush in the forests at this period. The season
was propitious, and the yield about thirty bushels to the
acre. He notes, " We had no frost until winter ; I had Eng-
lish beans blossomed in December." Previous to taking
possession of their lands, the directors and agents of the
company had no correct knowledge of the face of the coun-
try, or the quality of the soil, on the Muskingum, at and
near its confluence with the Ohio, where they had determined
on locating their capital, to cover, including commons, four
thousand acres ; and contiguous to this, to lay off one thou-
sand lots of eight acres each, for the convenience of the
proprietors.
In June, Gen. Parsons and Gen. Varnum, two of the di-
rectors, with a sufficient number of the agents, arrived, to
form a meeting, on the 2d day of July. On examining the
location of the eight acre lots, they were much disappointed
to find that no one of them had drawn a lot so near the
town as to make it prudent to cultivate them. To remedy
this evil, they voted to divide three thousand acres of the
land reserved for city commons, into three acre lots ; but
this unwise division did not mend the difficulty : they were
still as little accommodated as before. The project of laying
out eight acre lots had been opposed from the first by Gen.
Putnam and a few others, who advocated the plan of laying
off small farms of sixty-four acres of the best lands, to each
share bordering on the Ohio or Muskingum ; of which the
first actual settlers might take their choice ; but they were
overruled and the eight acre lots having been drawn, it was
too late to adopt the other plan.
In July, Gov. St. Clair arrived, and a code of laws for the
government of the territory promulgated. In September
the Court of Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions held their
104 RUFUS PUTNAM.
first session. Of the latter Gen. Putnam was the presiding
officer, and gave the charge to the grand jury, in a very ap-
propriate and impressive manner. It was an august and
ever-to-be-commemorated occasion — the first opening of
the halls of civil justice in a region destined to be filled with
millions of happy human beings. Much to the credit of the
moral and peaceful habits of the first settlers of Ohio, no
suit of a civil or criminal kind was entered on the docket of
the session.
In the course of the year 1788, in addition to the first
forty-eight who landed on the 7th of April, there arrived
eighty-four men, with several women and children, embra-
cing fifteen families, making at its close nearly two hundred
souls ; and let it be remembered that at the beginning of
the year 1789, there was not a single white family within
the present bounds of Ohio, but those in this settlement.
Col. Harmer and many of his officers were proprietors in
the Ohio Company. Judge Symmes passed down the Ohio
during the summer, to his purchase, with a few families, but
they spent the winter in Kentucky. The directors and agents
early saw the necessity of providing some way to furnish
actual settlers not proprietors, with lands, for the prosperity
of the settlement. Emigrants were constantly passing down
the Ohio river for Kentucky, many of whom were desirous
of settling in the Ohio Company's purchase, if they could
get lands. For this reason they resolved to donate one
hundred acres from each share of land, to any actual settler
who would take possession thereof; and a committee uas
appointed to reconnoiter the purchase, and select suitable
spots for the settlements.
In 1789, the additions to the colony were one hundred
and fifty-two men, and fifty-seven families, and settlements
were commenced at Belpre, Waterford and Wolf creek
mills. In this year Gen. Putnam was appointed, by the
RUFUS PUTNAM. 105
governor, judge of probate, for the county of Washington.
The insignia on his seal of office was a balance; an emblem
of the exact justice that ever balanced his own mind.
In 1790, he was commissioned as a judge of the United
States Court, filling the place on the bench made vacant by
the death of Gen. Parsons. In November of this year, he
removed his family to Marietta, consisting of his wife, six
daughters, two sons, and two grandchildren. During the
autumn the French emigrants, nearly four hundred in num-
ber, arrived, and he was at a good deal of expense, on ac-
count of Mr. Duer, of New York, in erecting houses and
supplying them with provisions, which was never repaid.
On the 2d of January, 1791, the Indians made their first
hostile movements on the settlements of the company, sack-
ing and destroying the station at Big Bottom, killing four-
teen persons, and carrying five others into captivity. The
troops had been withdrawn from Fort Harmer, in the unfor-
tunate expedition into the country of the Shawnoes, who
were greatly exasperated, instead of humbled thereby; and
now with the other tribes who sided with them, threatened the
destruction of the new establishments on the Ohio and Mus-
kingum. By the return of the muster rolls of the militia at
the time, it appears that the whole force amounted to two
hundred and fifty men, to which may be added thirty-seven
old men and civil officers, all that could be mustered for the
defense of the three settlements. In this trying emergency, the
wisdom and experience of Gen. Putnam were found to be
of the utmost value. He, with the other old officers of the
Revolution, devised the plan of erecting strong garrisons at
Belpre and Waterford, while those at Marietta were strength-
ened with additional works ; to all which the Ohio Company
lent their ready assistance, and during the four years of the
war expended above eleven thousand dollars of their money
in provisions, pay, clothing, &c, for the militia, which was
106 ItUFUS PUTNAM.
•
never repaid by the United States, although rightly and
justly due them. The plan of appointing a company of
rangers to scour the woods in the vicinity of the stations,
was the suggestion of Gen. Putnam, who had seen the wis-
dom of the system in the old French war, and was one of
the principal causes of so little loss by the colonists. The
principal events of the war are detailed in the History of
Washington county, and will not be recapitulated here.
In May, 1792, while in Philadelphia, on business for the
Ohio Company, he was appointed by the senate a brigadier-
general in the army of the United States, at the suggestion
of his old and firm friend, Gen. Washington. This appoint-
ment he accepted with great reluctance, as appears by his
letter to the secretary of Avar.
In a few days after, he received his instructions from the
secretary ; one of the first duties of which was " to attempt
to be present at the general council of the hostile Indians,
about to be assembled on the Miami river of Lake Erie, in
order to convince them of the humane disposition of the
United States; and thereby to make a truce or peace with
them." He arrived at Pittsburg on his way home, the 2d
of June, and on the 5th sent a speech to the hostile tribes,
by two Munsee Indians who had been taken prisoners, and
whom he released for that purpose.
The purport of the speech was to notify them of the ob-
ject of his mission, and " to request them to open a path to
Fort Jefferson, where he expected to arrive in about twenty
days ; and that they should send some of their young men,
with Capt. Hendricks, to conduct him with a few friends to
the place they should name for their meeting."
From unexpected delays, he, however, did not arrive at
Fort Washington, or Cincinnati, until the 2d of July, where
he learned that on the very day he had sent word to the In-
dians he should be at Fort Jefferson, a body of one hundred
EUFUS PUTNAM. 10?
Indians, dressed in white shirts, and their leader with a scar-
let coat, attacked a party of whites who were making hay
in a meadow near the fort, and killed and carried into cap-
tivity sixteen men. From the extraordinary dress of these
Indians, there is reason to suppose they were sent out, or at
least furnished with their clothing, by the British agent at
their post on the Miami, for the express purpose of decoying
and taking off Gen. Putnam, which was further strengthened
soon after by the murder of Col. Hardy and Col. Trueman,
who had been sent out with flags of truce, and were to have
accompanied him, but the Providential delays of the journey
prevented his being killed or captured with them. From
these events and other circumstances, he became satisfied
that the grand counsel were determined on war, and there-
fore it was useless to make any further efforts to induce
them to treat of peace at present.
By a letter from Maj. Hamtramick, at Post Vincent, he
was led to believe that the Wabash, and more western tribes,
would listen to his proposals of peace. He, therefore, on
the 24th, sent a speech to all the western tribes, inviting
them to meet him in council, at Post Vincent, on the 20th
of September; assuring them that he should bring their
friends and relatives with him, now prisoners at Fort Wash-
ington. On the 16th of August, he left that post, in his
twelve-oared barge, under the escort of Capt. Peters, with
two Kentucky boats, the Indian prisoners, sixty in number,
with goods, provisions, &c, intending to ascend the Wabash
in pirogues. He reached the mouth of that stream in about
eighteen days, being retarded by the low stage of the water.
Here he met a guard of fifty-one men, and four pirogues,
with each a French voyageur, to conduct him to Post Vin-
cent, sent on by Maj. Hamtramick, the commander of the
post, where they arrived on the 13th of September. At
108 RUFUS PUTNAM.
the time he left the falls of Ohio, a large drove of cattle
was sent across the country, under an escort from Fort Steu-
ben, which stood at the head of the falls, intended to supply
food for the Indians at the treaty, who were expected to
number seven or eight hundred. The commandant at Vin-
cennes had sent the commissioner's speech, of the 24th of
July, to all the tribes on the Wabash, of which, he received
notice, by letter of the 31st of August; and the prospect of
a full attendance at the treaty was very flattering. A reg-
ular correspondence was kept up with Gen. Wayne and
Gen. Wilkerson, some of which letters are very interesting,
detailing the progress of events on the frontiers. One from
Wilkerson, of the last of September, gives an account of a
reconnoisance, just made by him, to the outposts on the
Miami and heads of the Wabash, across the battle ground
of Gen. St. Clair, where he found two brass field pieces, left
on the field by the Indians.
The treaty was opened on the 25th of September, and
concluded on the 27th ; and was strictly a treaty of peace
and amity, between eight of the Wabash tribes and the
United States. It was signed by thirty- one of their kings,
chiefs, and warriors. It contained seven articles; the pur-
port of which was, that these tribes were taken into the pro-
tection of the United States, who warranted to them, the
peaceable possession of their lands, and promised never to
take them from them, without their consent and a just equiv-
alent paid therefor. Perpetual peace was to be maintained
between the contracting parties. All the white prisoners
and negroes in their possession, were to be delivered up at
Fort Knox, or Vinccnnes, as soon as possible; and they
promised to cease from stealing negroes and horses from
the whites. It was witnessed by the officers of the post,
and the interpreters William Wells, Rene Codine, and the
RUFUS PUTNAM. 109
Rev. John Hacken welder, who accompanied Gen. Putnam
in his journey from Marietta, and was well known to many
of the tribes.
In the journal of the proceedings, several of the speeches
of the chiefs are given ; some of which are quite sensible,
but none of them equal to those made at the treaty of
Greenville, in 1795, by the Shawanoes, Pottawatamies, and
Wyandots. Turke, a Wyandot, said, " I now tell you, that
no one in particular can justly claim this ground; it be-
longs in common to us all ; no earthly being has an exclu-
sive right to it. The Great Spirit above is the true and
only owner of this soil; and He has given us all an equal
right to it." He also said, "We will offer our acknowledg-
ments to the Great Spirit ; for, it is Him alone who has
brought us together, and caused us to agree in the good
works which have been done," referring to the treaty. The
New Corn, a Pottawatamie chief, and an old man, spoke
at this treaty, and at the close, said, "My friends, I am old>
but I shall never die. I shall always live in my children,
and children's children." A beautiful sentiment, and worthy
the best days of Socrates. These few brief specimens of
their speeches are given to show that they are not destitute
of native genius, brilliant thoughts, and just sentiments.
The treaty accomplished by Gen. Putnam was of essen-
tial benefit to the country ; as it neutralized, and detached a
large body of warriors from the hostile tribes, who lived near
to the borders of Kentucky, and thus lessened the strength
of our enemies. There were in attendance at the treaty,
six hundred and eighty-six men, women and children ; two
hundred and forty-seven of which were warriors. After its
close, a large quantity of clothing and ornaments was dis-
tributed amongst them, which served to confirm their good
intentions. On the 16th of September, nine days before the
110 RUFUS PUTNAM.
opening of the treaty, he issued a proclamation, reminding
the inhabitants of Post Vincennes of the law prohibiting the
sale of spirituous liquors to the Indians ; and forbid any one-,
whether licensed or unlicensed, from selling any during the
continuance of the treaty. This was a wise precaution; as
when under the influence of its insane effects, no good could
have been accomplished with the Indians. On the 8th of
October, the inhabitants of the town made a written address
to Gen. Putnam, through Maj. Vanderburgh, in which they
congratulate and thank him, for the happy manner in which
he had accomplished the treaty of peace, with a part of the
hostile tribes, and the benefits which would result to the in-
habitants of that territory, from it. Amongst other tilings,
they say, " Your happy success in this arduous enterprise
affords another proof, how much you merit the honors which
government has conferred upon you, and will remain a me-
mento of the justice of Congress, and of your integrity, to
the latest times." It was signed by Paul and Pierre Gamelin,
and the principal French and English inhabitants of the
place, and remains a memorial of their gratitude. To this,
he returned a polite answer; and among other things, says,
" It must give a man of sensibility, peculiar pleasure, to find
that his manner of treating the Indians meets the approba-
tion of a people so long acquainted with their customs and
manners;" and closes with wishing them happiness and
prosperity, "under a wise administration and the blessings
of peace."
Amidst all this complication of business, he was suffering
with severe illness, an attack of intermittent fever of the
tertian type, on the 25th of September, the first day of the
treaty. This continued to harass him until the Gth of Oc-
tober. On the 29th of September, ten of the Indian chiefs,
whom he had invited to visit their father, the President of
RUFUS PUTNAM. Ill
the United States, left Post Vincent, under charge of Lieut.
Prior and Mr. Hackenwelder, who accompanied them as far
as Marietta.
On the 10th of October, Gen. Putnam left the post, by
water, being yet weak and feeble. From sickness and va-
rious delays, he did not reach his home until the 18th of
December. On the way up, he encamped one night in com-
pany with some hunters, who had a full supply of bear and
other wild meat. This was cooked in their camp-kettle,
hunter fashion. Of this, he ate very freely, contrary to the
advice of his physician, who had forbidden animal food ; and
ascribed his recovery to that night's repast, as from that
hour, his health was rapidly restored, and ague subdued.
As soon as he was able to travel on horseback, he set out
for Philadelphia, to make his report to the secretary of Avar,
Henry Knox. Soon after this, he resigned his commission
of brigadier-general, he being unfit for actual service, and
not wishing to retain an office, the duties of which he could
not fulfill with benefit to the government. On the 15th of
February, the secretary of war addressed to him the following :
"War Department, Feb. 15th, 1793.
Sir : Your letter of yesterday has been submitted to the
President of the United States — while he accepts your resig-
nation, he regrets that your ill health compels you to leave
the army, as he had anticipated much good to the troops,
from your experience as an officer. He has commanded me
to tender you his thanks, for the zeal and judgment mani-
fested in your negotiation with the Wabash Indians, and
your further endeavors toward a general pacification.
I am, sir, with great esteem, your obedient servant,
H. Knox,
Secretary of War.
Brig. Gen. Rufus Putnam."
In May, 1793, he was appointed by the directors of the
112 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Ohio Company, superintendent of the surveys of one hun-
dred thousand acres of land, donated by Congress to actual
settlers,in the purchase, in lots of one hundred acres to each
man, on the 21st of April, 1792. For the encouragement
of settlers, the surveys were actually begun and carried on
in certain allotments, on and near the Muskingum, in the
midst of the war, and it was so ordered that no accident
befell the surveyors from the Indians, although constantly
liable to their attacks.
In 1794, a more safe and effectual mode of conducting the
intelligence between the army assembling on the frontiers
and the seat of government, than that by express through
Kentucky and Carolina, or the chance and uncertain one by
travelers up and down the river, had to be devised. Col.
Pickering, the post master general, proposed that of send-
ing the mails by water, in packet boats, which was submitted
to Gen. Putnam, for his advice. He soon arranged a plan
that was adopted, of light boats, manned with five men each,
to run from Wheeling to Limestone, with regular relays, and
stations of exchange, one of which was Marietta. This
system was put under the superintendence of Gen. Putnam,
and found on experience to be very useful, safe, and expedi-
tious. A full account of which is given in the History of
Washington county.
In 1795, he was appointed by Mr. Walcott, secretary of
the treasury, to arrange the distribution and survey of the
twenty-four thousand acres of land given by Congress to
the French settlers at Gallipolis which tract is known by the
name of the " French Grant." The President also, through
Mr. Walcott, confided to him the superintendence of the lay-
ing out a national road, located by Ebenezer Zane, from
Wheeling in Va., to Limestone in Ky.
In October, 179G,he was commissioned by the President
Gen. Washington, surveyor-general of the United States
RUFUS PUTNAM. 113
lands — a post of great responsibility ; requiring a thorough
knowledge of the principles of surveying, and the higher
branches of mathematics, astronomy, &c, to be able to de-
tect any errors that might arise in the returns, of the field
notes, plats, &c, of the subordinate surveyors. It also re-
quired great industry and constant vigilance, in attending to
the duties of the office, which embraced large tracts of coun-
try in the Northwest Territory, now first ordered to be sur-
veyed. The lands granted to the officers of the army for
military services were surveyed under his direction, and
platted by himself. In this map the width of the streams is
given, as well as their direction. The tract contains one
hundred and seventy-four townships or sections, of five miles
square, in twenty ranges. The lands given to the Moravian
Indians, at Shoenbrun, Gnadenhutten and Salem, lie in this
tract. This office he continued to hold, with great credit to
himself, and entire satisfaction of the government, until
September, 1803, when Mr. Mansfield was appointed to
his place, by Mr. Jefferson.
Mr. Jefferson, in his reply to a remonstrance of the New
Haven merchants, for some of his removals in that place,
says, " How are vacancies to be obtained ? Those by death
are few : by resignation none. Can any other mode than
removal be proposed? I shall proceed with deliberation,
that it may be thrown as much as possible on delinquency,
oppression, intolerance, and anti-revolutionary adherence
to our enemies." And yet he was well known to have turned
out some of the firmest Whigs of the revolution. Gen. Put-
nam consoled himself under this mortifying act, by saying,
" I am happy in having my name enrolled with many others
who have suffered the like political death, for adherence to
those correct principles and measures, in the pursuance of
which our country rose from a state of weakness, disgrace,
and poverty, to strength, honor, and credit."
8
114 RUFUS PUTNAM.
In 1798, he devised a plan for erecting a building, by a
company of proprietors, for the purposes of education, to be
called the "Muskingum Academy," which is believed to have
been the first in the state, for branches of learning higher
than those taught in common schools. The stock amounted
to one thousand dollars, of which he was one of the princi
pal owners. A building was put up in front of the large
commons on the Muskingum, which continued to be occu-
pied for the purposes of education for more than twenty
years. It also served for a place of public worship until
the year 1808, for the first Congregational society, who were
the principal owners.
In 1801, he was appointed by the Territorial Legislature,
one of the trustees of the Ohio University, established at
Athens, and spent a great deal of time in bringing the lands
for its support into available use ; and in forming rules and
regulations for the government of the college. It was a
subject in which he felt the deepest interest, and had been
one of the principal movers of the plan, appropriating two
full townships of land for its support, in the purchase made
by the Ohio Company from Congress in 1789. This land,
be it remembered, icas not a gift of the United States, but
a part of the contract made in the bargain by the agents
of the company with the Board of the Treasury. The en-
dowment of this institution, and seeing it put in actual oper-
ation, were subjects which lay near his heart, and which he
lived to see fulfilled, and a number of young men, now
among the most eminent in the state, there educated and
receive literary degrees.
In 1802, he was elected by the citizens of Washington
county, then embracing a large territory, a member of the
convention to form a constitution for the state of Ohio. It
was an arduous and difficult labor, in which many conflict-
ing views were to be harmonized, but was finally completed
RUFUS PUTNAM. 115
in the best manner the period and times would allow. A
history of the parties, and the secret springs put in motion
during the formation of this important document, which was
to shape the destiny of future millions, for weal or woe,
would now be a narrative of peculiar interest, and may be
expected from the pen of one the few remaining living mem-
bers of that convention, in an article for the Historical Soci-
ety of Ohio.
In January, 1806, the Rev. Samuel Priuce Robbins was
settled as pastor over the church and congregation of which
he was a member. In 1807, he drafted the plan of a large
frame building for a church, which was executed under his
superintendence, the funds being raised by the more wealthy
members of the society and his own liberal subscription,
amounting to fifteen hundred dollars. It was finished and
occupied in 1808, and yet remains a monument of his devo-
tion and zeal to the cause of religion. Thirty of the pews
were reserved by him, and in his will, the annual rents de-
voted to the support of the pastor, and a Sunday school ;
equally divided between them. In his latter years, when he
had retired from the active pursuits of life, his mind was
much occupied in devising plans for the promotion of the
gospel. In 1812, he was deeply engaged with several others
in forming a Bible Society, the first that was organized
west of the mountains, and subscribed very liberally for its
support. It has continued to flourish until this day, and has
been the means of spreading that blessed book amongst
thousands of the destitute in this, and the adjacent counties.
A correspondence, by letters, was kept up with his old as-
sociates of the Revolutionary war, and in one of the letters
from Gov. Strong of Massachusetts, in 1812, he writes, "By
your letter, I am convinced that your sentiments with regard
to the present war, are similar to my own. Your old ac-
quaintances, Gen. Brooks, (afterward Gov. of Massachusetts,)
116 RUFUS PUTNAM.
and Gen. Cobb, are of the council. I read to them
your letter, and they expressed in the warmest terms their
friendship and respect for you." Such manifestations of the
regard and friendship of Ins early associates, served to ani-
mate and warm his heart, as old age approached, and
console him for the great political changes winch were con-
tinually going on.
In his religious character, he was equally faithful and ener-
getic, as in his military and civil. In the year 1816, a gen-
tleman removed to Marietta from Massachusetts, who had
been engaged as a teacher in Sunday schools, and well
acquainted with conducting those seminaries of good prin-
ciples, in which that state was ever foremost. At that period
it was a new thing in the west, and none were in operation
in the valley of the Ohio. Gen. Putnam was quite anxious
to have one established in Marietta, and made many in-
quiries of the teacher as to the manner of conducting them.
After one of these interviews, he sent for him one day, and
related to him a dream he had the night before. He thought
he was standing by a window in a large public building, and
saw a procession of children neatly clad, approaching with
music. He asked a bystander the meaning of the show
who answered, " These are the children of the Sabbath
school." After this relation he remarked to the teacher that
he thought he should live to see the dream fulfilled. The
following spring, a Sabbath school was commenced in the
Muskingum Academy, and continued through the summer.
The next year, or in 1818, three schools were opened in dif-
ferent parts of the town. In the autumn, when the time for
closing them arrived, they then being laid aside in the winter,
the three schools were assembled at the academy, and a
procession formed, which marched from that building on to
the bank of the Muskingum, and thence to the Congrega-
tional church. As the teacher, before mentioned, entered
RUFUS PUTNAM. 117
the house, Gen. Putnam was standing at the window from
which he had viewed the approach of the procession, and
as the tears flowed from his eyes, exclaimed " Here is the
fulfillment of my dream !"
In the spring of 1820, a revival of religion commenced
in Marietta, and frequent evening meetings were held for
prayer, but being very old and infirm, he was unable to at-
tend them. A friend remarked to him that he supposed it
was a source of regret to him, that he could not meet with
them at this interesting period. " I do meet with you," was
his prompt reply; meaning by this, as was afterward ascer-
tained, that he spent the whole time of the meeting in his
closet, engaged in secret prayer.
About the year 1821, a company of missionaries from
New England, arrived at Marietta, on their way to the Osage
Indians. Two young ladies, who stayed with Mr. William
Slocomb, expressed a strong desire of seeing Gen. Putnam,
and he accompanied them to his house. After many inqui-
ries as to the prospects of the mission, and expressing his
ardent desire for its success, he abruptly asked them if they
had any fresh meat on board their boat? Finding they had
none, he turned to Mr. Slocomb and said, " I now see
through the whole mystery ; I have an ox that has been fat-
ting for more than a year, and for several months past have
tried to sell him, but could not. I now understand the rea-
son: the Lord has designed him for this mission family. I
will have him killed and dressed by eight o'clock in the
morning, and do you have barrels and salt ready at the
boat, for packing what cannot be used fresh." All was done
as he directed.
For some time before his death, being unable to attend
public worship, a duty he had never failed to perform, in all
weather, while able to walk that distance, it was his weekly
practice to rehearse in his own mind, the articles of the
118 RUFUS PUTNAM.
Assembly's* Shorter Catechism, lest from not hearing the
preached word, he might lose sight of the great principles
and doctrines of the Christian religion ; a practice well worthy
the attention of modern professors. Many other examples
might be given of his devotion to the cause of religion, but
these will suffice to show his habitual feelings on this mo-
mentous subject.
He lost his excellent and faithful wife in the year 1820;
but his last years were made comfortable, and happy by the
unremitting and affectionate attention of his pious maiden
daughter, Elizabeth.
His final departure was like that of the righteous; and his
last end full of hope and heavenly consolation. Although
he was for many years the master of a lodge of Masons, to
which he became attached during the war, yet he enjoined
it upon his son, as one of his last orders, that his burial
should be conducted without any of the forms and ceremo-
nies common at the funerals of those the world calls great,
but in the most simple manner ever practiced on these oc-
casions ; choosing rather to be buried as a humble follower
of Christ, than with the showy forms of military or Masonic
pageantry. He died in May, 1824, in the eighty-seventh
year of his age.
In person, Gen. Putnam was tall, nearly six feet; stout,
and commanding : features strongly marked, with a calm,
resolute expression of countenance, indicating firmness and
decision, so peculiar to the men who figured in the American
revolution: eyes grey, and one of them disfigured by an
injury in childhood, which gave it an outward, oblique cast,
leaving the expression of his face strongly impressed on the
mind of the beholder. His manner was abrupt, prompt,
and decisive ; a trait peculiar to the Putnam family, but,
withal, kind and conciliating. In conversation, he was
very interesting; possessing a rich fund of anecdote, and
RUFUS PUTNAM. 119
valuable facts in the history of men and things with which he
had been familiar; delivered in a straightforward, impress-
ive manner, very instructive and pleasant to the hearer.
The impress of his character is strongly marked on the
population of Marietta, in their buildings, institutions, and
manners; so true it is, that new settlements, like children,
continue to bear through life, more or less, the impressions
and habits of their early childhood.
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
Abraham Whipple was a descendant of John Whipple, one
of the original proprietors of the Providence plantations,
and associate of Roger Williams, who is considered the
founder of the colony. He was born in Providence, Rhode
Island, in the year 1733.
His early education was very imperfect ; but possessing
a naturally strong mind, and great resolution of purpose,
he acquired in the course of the sea-faring life which he fol-
lowed at an early period, sufficient knowledge of naviga-
tion, and the keeping accounts, to conduct the command of
vessels in the West India trade, with credit to himself and
profit to his employers. The intercourse of the colonists
was restricted by Mother Britain to that of her own posses-
sions, with an exception in favor of the Dutch port of Surinam
on the main, and the Danish island of St. Croix. This busi-
ness he followed for many years previous to the war of the
Revolution, and several letters from Nicholas Brown, one of
the earliest merchants of Providence, and in whose employ
he sailed, are on file amongst his papers, containing instruc-
tions for the conduct of the voyage. Toward the close of
the old French war, after the king of Spain had taken up
arms against England, he was employed as the commander
of a privateer called the Game Cock.* During the cruise
* The following notice of an early cruise of Com. Whipple, was procured for me
by my friend Dr. P. G. Robbins, of Roxbury, from an old file of the Boston Post-
boy and Advertiser, of February 4th, 1760, now in the Historical Society roonio, at
Boston.
" Last Tuesday returned to Providence, after a successful cruise, Capt. Abraham
Whipple, of the Game Cock privateer; who sailed from this place on the 19th of
July last, having taken in said cruise, twenty-three French prizes, many of which
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 121
he captured a valuable Spanish ship, by running alongside,
and carried her by boarding without much resistance.
It was during this period of his early life that the follow-
ing event took place, while in the southerly portion of the
Gulf of Mexico, on his return from a West India voyage,
in a large armed ship or letter of marque, the larger portion
of whose guns, however, were of wrood, technically called
" quakers." In a severe gale, he wras obliged to throw over-
board a part of his armament, especially a number of his
metal guns, leaving him in quite a defenseless condition.
Soon after this event a French privateer appeared in chase.
She was full of men, as he ascertained by his telescope, and
far outnumbered him in guns ; although but for the late
disaster, as his ship was much the largest, and pretty well
manned, he might have made a stout defense, but under pres-
ent circumstances his only chance for escape wras by flight.
Capt. "Whipple, after sailing as close to the wind as possible,
and trying the speed of the enemy on that course, found
him constantly gaining on him, and that his hope of safety
must rest on a ruse de guerre, in which he was always ready.
He directed his sailors to set up a number of handspikes,
with hats and caps on them, looking at a distance like men
at their stations ready for action, which, in addition to his ac-
tual crew, appeared quite formidable. Being to the windward
of the enemy, he directed the man at the wheel to put the ship
about, and bear down directly upon Mm, showing his broad-
side of quaker guns and deck full of men to great advan-
tage. The privateer was taken all aback ; and thinking the
former attempt at flight only a stratagem to entice her within
reach of her shot, instantly put about, and with all haste
were valuable. Capt. W. on his passage home on the 26th of January, spoke with
Capt. Robert Brown, in a sloop from Monte Christo, bound to New York, in lat. 39
deg. 30 min., and long. 72 deg. 40 min. in great distress for want of water and pro-
visions, which he generously supplied him."
122 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
escaped from her cunning antagonist. Capt. Whipple kept,
on the chase until the privateer had run nearly out of sight,
when, with a shrug of the shoulder, and a hearty laugh at
the success of his stratagem, he ordered the steersman to
up helm, and bear away on the proper course for his des-
tined port.
His ready and prompt mind wa3 never at a loss for expe-
dients in all such emergencies, and generally succeeded in
turning them to his own advantage, as will be seen in his
after life. This exploit gained him a good deal of credit
with his townsmen, and was doubtless the reason of his
being selected a few years after to command the company
of volunteers who captured and burnt the British schooner
Gaspe, the tender of a ship of war, stationed in Narragan-
sett bay, to enforce the maritime laws. These restrictions
had become very odious and unpopular to the inhabitants
of Newport and Providence : the Gaspe especially, com-
manded by Lieut. Buddington, of the navy, with a crew of
twenty-seven men, had become the terror of all the shipping
entering these ports ; not only by overhauling their cargoes,
and confiscating the goods, but by pressing the men into
the British service. At this time, the commerce of Newport
and Providence together, exceeded that of New York, whose
retail traders often visited the former town, to purchase dry
goods and other merchandise of the importers, as the smaller
cities now visit New York. Newport, next to Boston, owned
a larger number of vessels than any other port on the coast.
The attempts of the king and parliament of Great Britian
to enforce the old navigation act, with the stamp act, duties
on tea, and quartering large bodies of troops on the colo-
nists, to tame them into obedience, only served to rouse
their jealousy, and excite their disgust. While the inhabit-
ants were filled with fears of coming evils, and the public
mind roused up to resistance, an event took place in the
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 123
waters of Rhode Island, which may be considered as the
"overt act" to the Revolution which soon followed.
On the 17th of June, 1772, a Providence packet, that plied
between New York and Rhode Island, named the Hannah,
and commanded by Capt. Linzee, hove in sight of the man-
of-war, in her passage up the bay. She was ordered to bring
to, for examination; but Linzee refused to comply; and
being favored with a fresh southerly breeze, that was fast
carrying him out of gunshot of the ship, the tender was sig-
naled to follow. In pursuing the chase, the Gaspe was led
on to a shoal, which puts out from Nan quit point, but which
the lighter draught of the Hannah enabled her to pass in
safety. The tender here stuck fast; and as the tide fell, she
careened partly on to her side. The packet reached Provi-
dence before dark, and soon spread the news of the chase,
and the helpless condition of the hated Gaspe. A muster
of the sailors and sea-faring people soon followed; who,
after choosing Capt. Whipple for their leader, embarked, to
the number of sixty, in eight row-boats. The men were
without arms, excepting one musket, which was shipped
without Whipple's consent, as he intended no harm to the
crew, unless opposed by force, but only to board the vessel,
land the crew, and then set her on fire. They, however, put
into each boat a large quantity of pebble stones, intending
them as articles of offense, if necessary. As they approached
the schooner, about two o'clock in the morning, they were
hailed by the sentinel, and asked, "Who commands them
boats ? " Whipple instantly answered, " The sheriff of the
county of Kent;" and, " I come to arrest Capt. Buddington."
The captain was by this time on deck, and warned the boats
not to approach ; which they not heeding, he fired his pistol
at them ; at this moment, a boy who had possession of the
musket, discharged it, and wounded the captain in the thigh ;
a volley of pebbles followed the discharge, and WThipple, at
124 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
the head of his men, boarded the schooner, driving the crew
below. After securing them, they were taken on shore, and
the Gaspe burnt. The party returned in triumph to Provi-
dence, and knowing that their conduct amounted to treason
against the king, no one said anything about it; and, al-
though the secret was confided to not less than sixty per-
sons, so deep was the hatred and indignation of the people,
that no one disclosed it, or let any hint drop that could be
used as proof against their companions. This bold step
naturally excited great indignation in the British officers,
and all possible means were taken to discover the offenders.
Wanton, the colonial governor of Rhode Island, issued his
proclamation, offering a reward of one hundred pounds ster-
ling, for the discovery of any of those concerned. Soon
after, the Icing's proclamation appeared, offering one thou-
sand pounds for the man who called himself the high sheriff,
and five hundred pounds for any other of the party ; with
the promise of a pardon should the informer have been one
of the party. But notwithstanding these tempting offers, so
general was the dislike of the community to their oppress-
ors, and their patriotism so true, that "no evidence was ever
obtained, sufficient to arraign a single individual ; although
a commission of inquiry, under the great seal of England,
sat in Newport from January to June, during the year 1773."
Cooper's Naval History. Capt. Whipple, however, soon
after sailed on a trading voyage to the West Indies, and did
not return until 1774, when the event was in a manner
forgotten.
In the meantime, aggressions and restrictions were heaped
on the colonists, until they became insupportable, and reac-
tion began to take place. After the Boston Port Bill was
passed, by which the commerce of that flourishing town was
entirely destroyed, as an offset for the destruction of the
tea chests of the East India Company, resistance became
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 125
more open, especially subsequent to the passage of the act
prohibiting the exportation of military stores from England
to the colonies. Fully aware of the approaching contest,
and the destitute condition of the inhabitants of the materi-
als for resistance, they began, in many places, to seize upon
the military stores of the crown. Every garrison, fort, and
magazine, being in possession of the king's officers, and
many of the inhabitants destitute of arms, and still more so
of ammunition, it was absolutely necessary to resort to vio-
lence for the purpose of arming themselves. At Portsmouth,
N. H., a quantity of powder was taken from the castle in
the harbor, and the citizens of Providence seized on twenty-
six guns at Fort Island, and carried them up to their town.
It was to destroy a magazine of provisions and other stores,
collected by the inhabitants for the coming contest, at Con-
cord, Mass., that the British made their celebrated inroad on
the 19th of April, 1775; and the war fairly opened by the
slaughter of the militia at Lexington. From this point, the
spirit of resistance flew, like an electric shock, from heart to
heart, until it pervaded the land.
The little colony of Rhode Island, ever foremost in the
cause of liberty, within one year and one month after the
blood shed at Lexington, renounced their allegiance to the
king of Great Britain, by a solemn act of their Legislature ;
thus preceding, by two months, the declaration of indepen-
dence by the Congress of the assembled colonies. This
simple, but resolute document ought to be preserved in let-
ters of gold. It is styled, "An Act of May, 1776, renouncing
allegiance to the king of Great Britain ; " and thus proceeds :
" Whereas in all states existing by compact, protection and
allegiance are reciprocal ; the latter being only due in con-
sequence of the former : and whereas George the Third, king
of Great Britain, forgetting his dignity, regardless of the
compact most solemnly entered into, ratified and confirmed
12G ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
to the inhabitants of this colony, by his illustrious ances-
tors, and till of late, fully recognised by him; and entirely
departing from the duties and character of a good king, in-
stead of protecting, is endeavoring to destroy the good peo-
ple of this colony, and of all the united colonies, by sending
fleets and armies to America, to confiscate our property,
and spread fire, sword, and desolation throughout our coun-
try, in order to compel us to submit to the most debasing
and detestable tyranny ; whereby we are obliged by neces-
sity, and it becomes our highest duty, to use every means
with which God and nature have furnished us, in support
of our invaluable rights and privileges, to oppose the power
winch is exerted for our destruction." They then go on to
repeal a certain act of allegiance to the king, then in force,
and to enact a law, whereby, in all commissions of a civil
or military nature, the name of the king shall be omitted,
and that of the governor and company of the English col-
ony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, substituted
in its place; and in all oaths of office, the officers shall
swear to be faithful and true to the colony.
Moved by the same feelings which produced this declara-
tion in 1776, the Legislature, in June, 1775, two days before
the battle of Bunker hill, purchased and armed two sloops,
one of twelve, and the other of eight guns, appointing
Capt. Whipple to the command of the larger, and Capt.
Grimes to the smaller, who was to act under the orders of
Whipple. The larger vessel was named the Providence.
The object of this armament was to clear the bay of the
British tenders to the frigate Rose, under the command of
Sir James Wallace, who blockaded the mouths of the har-
bors and rivers, preventing the getting to sea of numerous
vessnls, and the entry of such as were coming into port.
On the 15th of June, Whipple sailed, with his command,
down the bay of Narraganset, and attacked two of the
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 127
enemy's tenders, which he disabled, and forced to retire under
the guns of the frigate, and took one other a prize ; while
by the light draught of his own vessels he could keep out
of the reach of the man-of-war. By this bold act the bay
was cleared of these nuisances, and a large number of
homeward-bound vessels entered the port.
Much has been said and written, as to whom was due the
credit of firing the first gun on the sea, at the British, in the
opening of the Revolutionary war. After the above state-
ment, which comes from the pen of Capt. Whipple himself,
in a petition to Congress in the year 1786, little doubt need
be felt as to the propriety of assigning to him that honor.
It is true that an unauthorized attack was made on the British
schooner Margaretta, by the Machias people in May, which
for its spirit and bravery deserves great credit, but was a
mere private transaction ; while Whipple fired the first gun
under any* legal or colonial authority. This daring deed
was performed at a time, when no other man in the colony
would undertake the hazardous employment, lest he might
be destined to the halter by Capt. Wallace, who threatened
to apply it to all who should be taken in arms against his
majesty. The people were not yet ready for open resist-
ance to the king, but expected that parliament would finally
relent from their rigorous measures, and love and friendship
be again restored between their revered parent and her un-
dutiful children.
Since the prospect of an open rupture daily increased, the
old affair of the Gaspe was no longer kept in the dark, but
the name of the leader in that daring exploit, came to the
ears of Capt. Wallace, who sent him the following plain, if
not very polite note :
" You, Abraham Whipple, on the 1 7th of June, 1772, burned
his majesty's vessel, the Gaspe, and I will hang you at the
yard-arm. James Wallace."
128 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
To which the captain returned this laconic and Spartan
answer :
" To Sir James Wallace :
Sir : Always catch a man before you hang him.
Abraham Whipple."
Notwithstanding these threats, he continued to cruise in
the Narraganset bay until the 12th of September; during
which period he fought several actions with vessels of supe-
rior fdrce, beating them off, and protecting the commerce
of the state. These spirited combats infused new courage
into the inhabitants of the neighboring colonies, as well as
his own, and demonstrated that the British were not invinci-
ble on the water. Maritime events like these, with those con-
ducted by Capt. Manly, led Congress to the consideration of
defending themselves and the country on the ocean, as well
as on the land; and in October, 1775, a marine committee
was appointed to superintend the naval affairs.
About the 20th of September, he was ordered by the gov-
ernor of Rhode Island, to proceed, with the sloop Providence,
to the island of Bermuda, and seize upon the powder in the
magazine of that place; this article being greatly needed
by the country, which depended altogether on foreign sup-
plies, not yet having learned to manufacture for themselves.
This order was obeyed with due diligence and bravery, but
was unsuccessful, from the circumstance of the powder
having been removed before his arrival. While on this ser-
vice, he narrowly escaped capture by two of the enemy's
ships of war, which were on that station. lie, however, by
his daring and nautical skill, escaped; and arrived at Rhode
Island on the 9th of December, and resumed his former
employment of cruising in the bay, until the 10th of that
month.
While absent on the voyage to Bermuda, Congress di-
rected the marine committee to purchase two swift sailing
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 129
vessels; the one of ten, and the other of twelve guns. Un-
der this order the Providence was purchased. Still later in
the month, the marine committee were directed to purchase
two additional ships, one of thirty-six guns, and the other
of twenty. In pursuance of this order, the Alfred and Co-
lumbus were bought at Philadelphia, both of them merchant
ships. To these were added two brigs, the Cabot, and the
Andrea Doria, making a naval force of six vessels, belong-
ing to the United States ; of which the little Providence was
the only one that had been in active service.
At this period of the contest, no regular war ships had
been built, and the government had to select such vessels
as the mercantile service afforded, until ships of war could
be constructed. In the month of December, 1775, Congress
directed thirteen warlike vessels to be built, and the marine
committee increased to thirteen, or one for each state. In
1776, two navy boards, consisting of three persons each, one
for the eastern district, and one for the middle district, were
established, subordinate to the marine committee ; by which
arrangement a large portion of the executive business was
accomplished. Several letters from these boards will be re-
ferred to in the course of this biography.
On the 19th of December, Capt. Whipple received orders
from the marine committee, to proceed with the Providence
sloop, now under their direction, to Philadelphia. On his
way out, he captured one of the enemy's vessels, and sent
her into Providence.
On the 22d of the month, by a resolution of Congress,
Dudley Saltonstall was appointed captain of the Alfred frig-
ate, Abraham Whipple of the Columbus, Nicholas Biddle
of the Andrea Doria, and John B. Hopkins of the Cabot.
Haysted Hacker, lieutenant of the Providence, was promoted
to her command. The celebrated John Paul Jones was
first lieutenant of the Alfred, and Jonathan Pitcher, of the
9
130 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
Columbus : Esek Hopkins, an old man, commander-in-chief,
as they chose to style the leader of their squadron. During
the winter, the young flotilla, while fitting for a cruise, was
frozen up in the Delaware river. Com. Hopkins, however, got
to sea on the 17th of February, 177G, with seven armed ves-
sels under his command, the largest of which was the Alfred
of twenty-four guns instead of thirty-six, and bore away
southerly, in quest of a small squadron under Lord Dun-
more ; but not falling in with him, concluded to make a- de-
scent on the island of New Providence, for the purpose of cap-
turing military stores. This service was performed under the
conduct of Capt. Nichols, the senior officer of the marines, at
the head of three hundred men, whose landing from the boats
of the squadron was covered in gallant style, by Capt. Hacker,
of the Providence, and the sloop Wasp. The attack was en-
tirely successful, and possession was taken of the fortifications
and the town. The main object of the attempt, a magazine
of gunpowder, was in part secreted by the governor; but they
brought away four hundred and fifty tons of cannon and
other military stores, with the governor and some others as
prisoners. Having accomplished this victory, they sailed
on the 17th of March, for the United States. At one o'clock
in the morning of the 6th of April, the squadron fell in with
the Glasgow, British man-of-war of twenty guns, off the
easterly end of Long Island. The little Cabot of fourteen
guns, Capt. Hopkins, being the nearest to the enemy, ranged
manfully along side, discharging her broadsides with great
spirit, but was soon obliged to haul off from the superior
fire of the Clasgow. The Alfred now came up to the rescue,
but after a short running fight, had her wheel ropes cut
away, and became unmanageable. The Providence, by this
time, had passed under her stern, and fired a number of
broadsides with great effect. Capt. Whipple, in the Colum-
bus, could not get into action for want of wind, which was
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 131
light and baffling, sufficiently near to afford much aid, or
the Glasgow would have been captured. The darkness of
night still continued, when seeing the approach of another
antagonist, she spread all sail in flight, with the Columbus
in pursuit, but was soon signaled by the commodore to give
up the chase ; as they were approaching so near the harbor
of Newport, where lay a large fleet, that the report of the
cannonade would call them out to the rescue, and thus per-
haps the whole American force might fall into their hands;
as they were so deeply laden with the captured military
stores, as to make them all dull sailers. On his way back,
Capt. Whipple fell, in with, and made prize of the bomb
ship of the British fleet, which had long been a terror to the
people of Newport. -The fleet arrived safely into the harbor
of New London ; but were soon after removed to Provi-
dence by the commodore, the British having left the bay of
Narraganset.
The escape of the Glasgow from so superior a force,
caused no small sensation, with a good deal of censure from
the public. As Whipple commanded the second largest
ship, and was not actually engaged with the enemy, he was
accused of cowardice. This aroused the spirit of the vet-
eran, and he demanded a court-martial to inquire into his
conduct. It was held in Providence; and after a full exam-
ination he was honorably acquitted; it appearing in evi-
dence, that his vessel, from the lightness of the wind and
her leeward position, could not be brought into contact with
the Glasgow, until after her flight, when he pursued her with
all the speed in his power, until called off by Com. Hopkins.
After the close of the trial, he was ordered to take com-
mand of the Columbus again ; while Com. Hopkins, on the
16th of October, was formally censured by a vote of Con-
gress, and on the 26th of March, 1777, dismissed from the
service, for disobeying their orders. Capt. Hacker, of the
132 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
Providence, was removed from her 'command, and the vessel
given to John Paul Jones,* who, in the course of the summer,
captured no less than sixteen sail of the enemy's ships. In
the fall of that year, he was transferred to the Alfred, and
sailed, in company with the Providence, on a cruise to the
eastward, along the coast. Here they fell in with and cap-
tured a number of prizes ; amongst them a transport for Bur-
goyne's army, with ten thousand suits of soldiers' uniforms.
The Providence was now commanded by Capt. Rathbone :
and in 1778, again visited New Providence, unaccompanied
by any other vessel, and took possession of the place and
six ships lying in the harbor, one of which was a privateer
of sixteen guns. On his landing, he was joined by about
thirty American prisoners, making with his own crew, eighty
men. He kept possession two days, and brought away
many valuable stores and four of the prizes. In 1779, the
little Providence was restored to her former master, Capt.
Hacker, who took the enemy's ship Delinquent, of equal
force, after a severe action. In July, with other vessels, she
was ordered to convey a body of militia, under Gen. Lowell,
to the Penobscot river, where the British had formed a mili-
tary station. The expedition proved disastrous; and the
Providence, with the other ships, was lost, by the superior
naval force of the enemy, the 15th of August. Capt.
Hacker, to keep her from the hands of the enemy, after
landing the crew, ordered her to be blown up. Thus per-
ished in a blaze of light, the favorite vessel, and first love
of Capt. Whipple. She had been one of the most success-
ful cruisers that floated on the ocean, and made more prizes
than any other vessel in the service; hurling defiance at
Great Britain, in many a well fought action, from June,
1775. to August, 1779. Her name was perpetuated in the
* The history of the last years of the Providcucc sloop, is taken from Cooper'*
Naval History.
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 133
navy, by the frigate Providence. In October, 1776, Capt.
Whipple was recommended by the marine committee, to the
command of the frigate Providence, of twenty-eight guns,
then building in Rhode Island, which was confirmed by
Congress.
In November of the same year, Congress " Resolved that
a bounty of twenty dollars be paid to the commanders, of-
ficers and men of such continental ships, or vessels of war,
as shall make prize of any British ship, or vessel of war ;
for every cannon mounted on board each prize at the time
of capture ; and eight dollars per head for every man then
on board, and belonging to such prize." This was a wise
and salutary provision, for the encouragement of our sailors ;
but as it relates to Capt. Whipple, he says he never received
any compensation for guns and munitions of war captured
by himself.
At the same time they passed the following order, regu-
lating the comparative rank of officers in the navy with the
land service; viz. "An admiral as a general; vice-admi-
ral, as a lieutenant-general; rear-admiral, as a major
general; commodore, as a brigadier-general; the captain
of a ship of forty guns and upward, as a colonel; from ten
to twenty guns, as a major; a lieutenant in the navy, as a
captain." This arrangement was not only for etiquette in
their intercourse, but was also intended to apply in ex-
changes of prisoners. The pay of the officers and men in
the American navy, " under the free and independent states
of America," was established as follows . " The captain of a
ship of twenty guns and upward, received sixty dollars a
month ; that of a ship often to twenty guns, forty-eight dol-
lars a month; a lieutenant of the larger vessel, thirty dol-
lars a month — the smaller, twenty-four dollars; a surgeon
twenty-five dollars, and the surgeon's mate, fifteen dollars,
and so on in the descending scale to the common seamen
131 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
whose pay was eight dollars a month." When we look
back on those times of trial and adversity, we admire the
prudence and economy, which pervaded every branch of
the government : when we consider the poor apology for
money in which they were paid, the officers might be said
"to serve for nothing and find themselves." But if we re-
flect on the deep poverty of the country, and that all the
expenses were paid by a direct tax on the people, we arrive
at the secret of this seeming parsimony. It was the prudent
expenditure of the public money which enabled Congress to
carry on the war at all; and as it was, they were often
bankrupt and on the verge of ruin. In these days when the
public expenses are raised by a tariff on commerce, and
money is plenty, the pay of naval officers is very different ;
some of the older captains get three hundred and seventy-
five dollars a month, and the younger captains of frigates,
three hundred dollars — being just five times as much as
they received in the Revolutionary war.
On the 10th of August, 177G, he received orders from the
navy board to sail on a cruise to the eastward with the Co-
lumbus frigate, for the purpose of intercepting the home-
ward-bound Jamaica fleet. In his passage out of the bay
from Newport, he had to "run the gauntlet" through a num-
ber of British ships of war, which he fortunately escaped.
Off the coast of Newfoundland he fell in with the object of
his search, and took five large ships laden with sugar. Two
of his prizes reached ports, while the other three were re-
taken, as was the fate of more than half of all the Ameri-
can prizes, which they attempted to run into their own ports,
the coast being closely guarded by the enemy's ships.
In October, Capt. Whipple returned, with the Columbus,
to Providence, at which place Congress had directed two
frigates to be built; the Warren, of thirty-two guns, and the
Providence, of twenty-eight guns. On the 10th of that
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 135
month, he was recommended by the marine committee, and
appointed, by Congress, to the command of the Providence,
and directed to superintend the fitting out of both frigates.
While occupied in this employment, with his own ship
nearly ready for sea, so rapidly had the work been prose-
cuted, on the 7th of December, the enemy's fleet took pos-
session of the harbor of Newport, where the Providence had
been lying, and landed a large army. To preserve his ship
from capture, Capt. Whipple run her up the river to Provi-
dence harbor, where several other vessels had retreated, pro-
tected by the batteries and the army of Gen. Spencer, then
assembled on the adjacent main, to guard the country from
the inroads of the British troops. In this mortifying durance
the new frigates were confined during the whole of the year
1777. During this period, several plans were arranged for
getting to sea, as appears by the letters of the eastern navy
board, composed of James Warren and John Deshon, of
September 11th and October 28th. In March preceding,
there was a plan for burning some of the British vessels by
means of fire-ships, in which Capt. Whipple was engaged;
as by letter of Esek Hopkins, who was in command at Prov-
idence, as late as the 9th of that month. From some cause,
it was not successful, although Congress offered large boun-
ties to effect it. In October, under the order of Gov. Cook,
he dismantled and saved the guns and stores of the ene-
my's frigate Syren, which run on shore at Point Judith, 11. 1.,
and had been abandoned. While at this employment, he
fell over the side of the frigate, amongst the guns and other
matters, receiving a serious injury, which caused a lame-
ness all his life. On the 20th of March, 1778, orders ar-
rived, to fit the Providence for sea with all dispatch, being
assigned to carry important dispatches from Congress to
our ministers in France. Capt. Whipple made up his crew
from the men of the Warren, in addition to his own ship,
13G ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
selecting such as were known to be of tried courage, as the
passage out to sea was blockaded by a numerous fleet,
as well as the outlets of each of the three passages from
Providence river, as the long, deep, narrow inlet was called,
which connects Narraganset bay with the harbor of the
town. They were guarded by frigates and a sixty-fcur gun
ship, expressly stationed to watch these channels, for the
American ships. All movements of any importance, about
to be made by either of the belligerent parties, were certain
to be known to the other within a short time after their con-
coction, by means of spies, and secret intercourse constantly
kept up by men employed for this purpose. The order for
the sailing of the Providence was soon known to the British
naval commander at Newport, and every preparation made
for her capture. Capt. Whipple was perfectly familiar with
all the channels, head lands, shoals, and windings of the
outlets from his earliest youth ; so that no man could be
better fitted to conduct this hazardous enterprize. His well
known character for courage and love of daring exploits,
gave additional hope to his prospect of success. It could
only be attempted in the night, and that night must be a
dark and stormy one, adding still moie to the grandeur of
the exploit. After every preparation was made for sea, he
had to wait until the 30th of April, for one of those gloomy,
windy nights, attended with sleet and rain, so common on
the New England coast, at this season of the year. At
length, on the last day of the month, such a night set in,
with rain and wind from the northeast, cheerless and dispir-
iting on all ordinary occasions, but now more prized than the
brightest starlight, and entirely favorable to his wishes. In
making his choice of the three outlets, he selected the west-
erly one, which passes down between the island of Conanicut
and the Narraganset shore, which was guarded by the frigate
Lark, rated as a thirty-six, but actually mounting forty guns.
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 137
This vessel was moored in the channel against the island,
with her stern up stream, and springs on her cables, ready to
get under way at a moment's notice. Some distance below
her, and nearer the outlet, was moored in the same manner,
the Renown, a ship of sixty-four guns; while, in the bay
beyond, lay ten or twelve ships and sloops of war, ready to
fire upon the Providence, should she by possibility escape
the two ships above. The middle passage led through the
harbor of Newport, occupied by the ships of the line, and
the easterly one was crooked, and not passable in the night.
William Jones, subsequently the governor of Rhode Island,
was captain of marines under Whipple. He was a very
gentlemanly, noble-looking, and brave man. To him was
consigned the charge of the dispatches. As the gallant
little frigate, under close reefed topsails, so stiff was the
breeze, approached the Lark, every light on deck was ex-
tinguished, and the utmost silence maintained by the crew,
who were stationed at their guns with lighted matches, while
the lanterns in the rigging of the enemy served to show ex-
actly her position. Instead of sailing wide of his enemy,
and avoiding a conflict, he run within half pistol shot, and
delivered his broadside, firing his bow guns when against
the stern of the ship, determined that she should feel her
enemy, if she could not see her. At the same moment
Capt. Jones, with his musketry, poured in a destructive
fire on her quarter and main deck, killing and wounding a
number of the crew. So sudden and unexpected was the
attack, that before the Lark could make any return of the
broadside, the Providence was out of sight, having by this
well directed fire dismounted several of her guns, and killed
some of the men. The report of Whipple's cannon awa-
kened the sleeping crew of the sixty-four, who, hurrying to
their quarters, filled the rigging with lights, 'ready for the
coming conflict. As the gallant ship came rushing on the
138 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
wings of the wind, enveloped in the mist and darkness of
the Btorm, Whipple, as he neared the Renown, to put his
enemy well on their guard, bellowed forth with his speaking
trumpet in a voice louder than the winds, as if addressing
the man at the helm, "Pass her on the Narraganset side:"
at the same time, as he stood close to the steersman, he bid
him lufF ship and pass her on the larboard or Conanicut
side of the vessel ; thus throwing his antagonist entirely off
his guard, on the point he really meant to steer. The order
was promptly obeyed, and while the crew were mustered on
the Narraganset side of the sixty-four, ready for a discharge
of their heavy guns, his starboard broadside was fired into
her as he rapidly passed, with great effect ; several shot
passing through the cabin, and one directly under the cap-
tain's head, as he lay in his berth, knocking his pillow out of
place. Another shot unshipped the rudder, and before the
Renown was ready to discharge her larboard guns, the Prov-
idence was out of reach and out of sight. This very vessel
was the leading, or admiral's ship, at the capture of Charles-
ton, and the officers related the effects of his lire in a fa-
miliar conversation with Capt. Whipple, after the surrender
of the place, and he was their prisoner. These two broad-
sides aroused the crews of the fleet in the bay below, and
put them on the look out for the rebel frigate, and the Prov-
idence received more or less of the fire from eleven different
ships of war, before she reached the open sea. Like the
king-bird surrounded by a flock of vultures, she glided
swiftly among her enemies, veering now to the larboard,
and now to the starboard, as fresh ships opposed her waj*;
returning their lire with occasional shots, but anxious mainly
to escape too close a contact with any of her foes ; the ob-
ject being to run, and not to fight.
The da)- following this perilous night, when he had gained
the open ocean, and thought all present danger past, he
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 139
narrowly escaped capture by a seventy-four gun ship, which
came directly across his course, but by superior management
in sailing, luckily escaped. The damages to the rigging of
the Providence, although considerable, were soon repaired,
and the little frigate, with a flowing sheet, sped on her way
to the port of Nantz, where she arrived in twenty-six days,
being on the 26th of May, 1778.
On the voyage out, Capt. Whipple captured a British
brig, laden with one hundred and twenty-five pipes of wine,
nine tons of cork and various other articles, which arrived
safe in port, near the same time.
The names of the officers who so nobly aided in sailing,
and fighting the Providence, through that host of enemies,
and may well be ranked among the most remarkable feats
of bravery and daring, as well as nautical skill that took
place during the war of the Revolution, were as follows :
Thomas Simpson, first lieutenant, and soon after promoted
to the command of the Boston frigate of twenty-four guns.
Silas Devol, second lieutenant. He was the brother of Capt.
Jonathan Devol, and the personification of bravery. In a
year or two after, he was taken at sea, and perished miser-
ably in the old Jersey prison ship, that den of wholesale
murder to the Americans. Jonathan Pitcher, third lieuten-
ant, George Goodwin, sailing master, William Jones, cap-
tain of marines, and Seth Chapin, first lieutenant.
On the third day of their voyage out, the lieutenants
and other officers presented a petition to Capt. Whipple,
asking him to allow them to draw money for the purpose
of purchasing proper uniform dresses, as without them they
could not maintain the dignity of their stations, and as they
say, " That all may appear alike, as brothers united in one
cause." From this circumstance it would seem, that no
regular uniform for the navy had yet been established by
Congress.
140 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
The appearance of the Providence in the harbor of
Nantz, excited a great deal of curiosity, as few if any
American frigates had visited that port. On landing, Capt.
Jones was charged with the dispatches to the American
ministers at the court of Versailles, and proceeded on his
way to Paris. Dr. Franklin introduced him to the king and
the principal courtiers, who received him with great polite-
ness. His noble personal appearance, gentlemanly man-
ner^, and rich, showy uniform, made him appear to great
advantage and highly creditable to the American nation.
Owing to unforeseen delays and the cautious policy of the
French court, it was as late as August before a cargo was
provided and the return dispatches of the American minis-
ters ready for Congress. Strange as it may appear, the
Providence frigate, was loaded with clothing, arms and
ammunition, like a merchantman. Capt. Whipple, although
as brave as Caesar, was not too proud to engage in any honest
service, which would be useful to Ins country. He had
spent years in the merchant line and felt not that repug-
nance to turning his ship into a transport, so often expressed
by the haughty Britons. The cargo was of immense value
and more safe in a frigate than a common ship. On the
13th of July, he received notice from the American commis-
sioners, B. Franklin, Arthur Lee, and John Adams, that they
had ordered Capt. Tucker, of the Boston frigate, to join him
on his return voyage. On the lGth, he received the follow-
ing letter and order.
"Passy, July 16th, 1778.
Caft. Whipfle:
Sir : We have ordered Lieut. Simpson, to whom the com-
mand of the Ranger devolves, by the destination of Capt.
Jones, (John Paul,) to another service, to join you and obey
your orders respecting his future cruises and voyage to
America. We wish you to use all possible dispatch in
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 141
getting to sea, with the Boston, Providence, and Ranger.
You are to use your utmost endeavors to take, burn, sink,
and destroy all privateers of Jersey and Guernsey, and all
other British cruisers within the command of your force, as
you may have opportunity.
We are, sir, your most humble servants,
B. Franklin,
Arthur Lee,
John Adams.
P. S. You are to leave all the prisoners in such place
and in the custody of such persons as Mr. Shwinghauser
shall advise."
Mr. Shwinghauser was the naval agent for the United
States, making purchases, &c; a number of his letters are
on file among Com. Whipple's manuscripts. From the time
of the date of this letter, giving him the command of three
public armed ships, he may fairly take the rank of commo-
dore; although he was, in fact, entitled to that distinction
while cruising in the Narraganset bay, in June, 1775, with
the two armed sloops under his orders. On the 26th of Au-
gust, having loaded the Providence with arms, ammunition,
clothing, and copper, on account of the United States, and
taken on board a number of passengers, ordered by the
commissioners, he sailed for America, touching at the har-
bor of Brest, where he was joined by the Boston and Ranger.
On their voyage out they took six prizes, but how many got
into port, is not ascertained.
While on the banks of Newfoundland, in a dense fog, so
common to that misty part of the ocean, he had a very nar-
row escape from capture. The Providence being the lead-
ing ship, for the purpose of notifying her consorts of her
position, every five or ten minutes, a few blows were struck
on the ship's bell. A British seventy-four gun ship, hearing
the signal, bore up in the direction of the sound, and before
142 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
the crew of the Providence had any notice of her approach,
she was close along side. The first appearance of the frig-
ate, with hor ports all closed, and lying deep in the water,
was that of a large merchant ship. On hailing the stranger,
the captain, in the usual style of British naval officers, or-
dered the " d d rebel to strike his colors, drop under his
stern, and send the boat aboard." It so happened, that his
colors were not up at the time. Cant. Whipple at once saw
his danger, and knew that nothing but a bold maneuver
could save him. He, therefore, answered the hail, as if in-
tending no opposition, " Aye, aye, sir." With a readiness
of thought which none but a master mind can call to his
aid, in emergencies which admit of no delay, his plan was
instantly formed, and sending some men aloft, to busy
themselves with the sails, and prepare for striking the col-
ors, as if about to comply with the order, he, at the same
time, passed the word below to make all ready for a broad-
side, as he passed under the stern of the seventy-four. As
he was rather slow in complying with the order to strike, it
was repeated by the Briton in a still more commanding
tone, threatening to fire into him. Whipple answered,
rather peevishly, that " he could not haul down his colors,
until he had run them up," at the same time swearing at
the sailor for his bungling manner of performing the duty,
having ordered him, when they were up, not to haul them
down again, on pain of death. By the time the stars and
stripes were fluttering in the breeze, the gunners were at
their posts, the frigate had fallen off under the stern of the
enemy, when, with a stamp of his foot on the quarter deck,
the ports flew open, and a fall broadside was fired into her
cabin, the tompions of the guns going in with the shot, there
being no time to remove them. When relating the incident
in after life, the commodore used to say, he "heard a terri-
ble smashing among the crockery ware in the cabin." The
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 143
Briton suspecting no resistance, and being entirely unpre-
pared for such an event, was utterly astonished, provoked,
and confounded ; but before he could make any preparation
to avenge this " Yankee trick," the Providence was envel-
oped in the fog, and out of sight on another tack. Whipple
took good care not to tinkle his bell again, for some time,
while his consorts being warned of their danger, by his
broadside, escaped discovery, and all reached the harbor of
Boston in safety. This, however, was accomplished in al-
most a miraculous manner, having to pass through a squad-
ron of the enemy's ships, which were blockading that port.
The cargo thus saved by the presence of mind, and bold
stratagem of Com. Whipple, was of immense advantage to
the country; furnishing the army with several thousand
stands of arms, ammunition, and clothing ; articles of more
value to the United States, at that time, than a ship-load of
gold.
Soon after his arrival, which was the 13th of October,
Capt. Jones went on to Congress with the dispatches, which
were highly gratifying to that body. In November he re-
ceived the following congratulatory letter from his excel-
lency, Gen. Washington :
"Head Quarters, Fredericksburg, Nov. 25th, 1778.
Sra : Maj. Nicholas handed me your favor of the 12th
inst. I am greatly pleased with the gallant circumstance
of your passage through the blockaded harbor, and much
obliged to you for the detail of your voyage. It was agree-
able to hear of your safe arrival with the valuable articles
of your invoice. With my best wishes for your future suc-
cess, I am, sir, your most humble servant,
Geo. WASurNGTox.
To Capt. Abraham Whipple, Esq., commander of the
continental frigate Providence, at Boston."
144 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
During this year the influence of the American commis-
sioners at the court of France was so great, especially with
the queen, who had taken so deep an interest in the welfare
of the young republic, and especially in Dr. Franklin, whom,
on all occasions, she treated with as much respect as she
could her own father, that the king finally came out openly
on the side of the United States, sending a fleet of men of
war to the American coast, which entered the harbor of
Newport, and forced the enemy from Narraganset bay.
Before their departure they sunk several of their ships, to
keep them from the hands of the French. Among them
was Whipple's old antagonist, the Lark. Near the close of
the war some of these frigates were raised by the ingenuity
of Griffin Greene, Esq.
The winter following this never-to-be-forgotten cruise,
was passed in refitting his vessel for sea, and in visiting his
family. On the 9th of March, 1779, he received orders from
James Warren and William Vernon, the navy board in the
eastern department, to cruise with the Providence in Boston
bay, for the protection of the navigation, and in quest of
the enemy's cruisers, which were now numerous on the
coast. On the 4th of April he returned to port, and re-
mained until the 23d of June, when he again proceeded on
a cruise with the Ranger and Queen of France under his
command. On this occasion the following letter was ad-
dressed to him, giving the outlines of the cruise, and the
general orders to be observed while at sea :
"Navy Board, Eastern Department,
Boston, June 12th, 1779.
To Abraham WmrrLE, Esq., commander of the ship
Providence :
Your ship being ready for the sea, you are to proceed
with the ships Queen of France and Ranger, if the last be
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 145
ready, on a cruise against the enemy. You being the su-
perior officer, will, of course, command the whole : and ours
will be, that they obey yours accordingly. You are to pro-
ceed with these ships immediately, to the southerly parts of
the banks of Newfoundland, and there to cruise ; and to the
southward of said bank's, as the most likely cruising ground
to effect the double purpose of intercepting the enemy's
outward-bound transports for New York, &c, and the home-
ward-bound West India ships. You will keep that ground
steadily, so long as is consistent with your security : taking
care to alter your station, when you have reason to suppose,
from your long continuance on that ground, or other circum-
stances, that the enemy may have gained intelligence of
you ; in which case you will proceed to such places as you
and the commanders of the other ships shall judge most
likely to answer the purposes of the cruise: taking care,
also, at proper times, to be on the banks, so that any
ships we may hereafter send to join you, may be able to
find you. During your cruise you are to take, burn, sink,
or destroy as many of the enemy's ships as may fall
in your way, directing to the continental agent of any
port, such prizes as you may think proper to send in.
You are to take proper care of your ship and her stores,
and to cause proper returns of the expenditures of all pro-
visions and stores, to be made on your return. You will
observe the greatest frugality and strict discipline on board,
taking care at the same time to use your officers and men
well, and your prisoners with humanity. You are to con-
tinue your cruise as long as your provisions and other cir-
cumstances will admit, and then return into this, or some
other convenient port of the United States, leaving you
at liberty, nevertheless, if on consulting the other com-
manders, it shall be judged practicable to intercept the
homeward-bound ships from Hudson's bay, to proceed for
10
14G ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
that purpose toward the end of your cruise ; and if you
meet with little success and your ships should remain well
manned, you may, when your provisions are near expended,
proceed and cruise in the West Indies during the winter:
Mr. Stephen Ceronia at Cape Francois, or Mr. William
Bingham at Martinico, continental agent, will supply you
with the necessaries. On your way out you are to see this
coast clear of the enemy's cruisers, and particularly range
down the eastern shore, and if the Ranger do not sail with
you, rendezvous at for a few days, where she will
join you. You are to return lists of your men and stores
on board, and at the end of the cruise cause proper returns
to be made of the expenditure. We wish you a successful
cruise.
And are your servants, &c,
J. Warren,
Wm. Vernon."
In pursuance of the above orders he proceeded on to the
eastern coast, to look for the enemy's cruisers, and spend-
ing nearly four weeks in cruising on and off the coast of
Newfoundland, lie, on the 24th of July, fell in with the
homeward-bound Jamaica fleet, of nearly one hundred and
fifty sail, convoyod by a seventy-four gun ship and some
smaller vessels. He continued with them for two days,
under British colors, pretending to be ships from Halifax,
joining the convoy. From the first prize captured by board-
ing in the night, he got possession of the signals of the
commodore, and made use of them to keep up the decep-
tion. Some of the prizes were taken possession of by
inviting the captain of the Jamaica ship on board the Hali-
fax vessels, and while he was below, sending his boat with
their own well manned to secure the balance of the crew,
and man the ship with his own men, which was accom-
plished without making so much noise as to attract the
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 147
notice of the convoy. During the night each captured ship
slackened sail and altered her course so much as to be out of
sight of the fleet in the morning. At night the seventy-
four carried a light at her mizzen-top, as a guide to the course
to be pursued by the fleet. Whipple, taking advantage of
this, hoisted one at his own mizzen, and thus decoyed seve-
ral ships so far out of their course as to be beyond the reach
of aid in the morning, and then took possession of them.
This could easily be done amongst one hundred and fifty
sail, without their number being missed from the fleet. By
these devices he managed to gain possession of ten large
Jamaica ships, which were as many as he could man with
American crews. Had he attempted their capture in an
open manner, by daylight, he might have lost some of his
own squadron, and taken less prizes, as he was unable to
contend with the seventy-four gun ship with all his force.
The merchant ships also carried a number of guns, and
could have afforded considerable aid in beating him off. His
object ever was, like a sensible man, to annoy the enemy as
much as he could, with the least possible loss to himself, and
gain by ingenuity what he could not do by open force.
Eight of his prizes were brought safely into Boston harbor,
while two were recaptured. They had on board six thou-
sand hogsheads of sugar, besides ginger, pimento, and cotton,
being valued at more than a million of dollars. The eight
prizes were armed with an average of fourteen guns each,
or one hundred and thirteen in the whole. Could these
prizes have been sold at their real value, Com. Whipple's
share would have been one-twentieth of this sum; the
rules adopted by Congress in the distribution of prize money,
allowing this portion to the commander of a squadron, and
two-twentieths to the captains of single ships, of those cap-
tured by them when on a cruise. Yet, from the impoverished
condition of the country, and the scarcity of money, it is
148 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
not probable he actually realized more than a moiety of the
amount. He, however, received sufficient to greatly improve
his present condition, which was actually that of a poor
man. With the avails of this cruise he bought a handsome
house and lot in Providence, and a fine farm in the neigh-
boring town of Cranston.
On the 20th of November, he received the following order
from the navy board :
" Navy Board, Eastern Department,
Boston, November 20, 1779.
To Abraham Whipple, Esq., commander of the ship
Providence :
Your ship being now ready for the sea, you are, as com-
manding officer, to take under your command the ships Bos-
ton, Queen of France, and Ranger; and with them you are
to embrace the first fair wind, and without any kind of de-
lay, proceed to sea ; and when the fleet under your com-
mand are five leagues to the southward of the light-house,
you are to open the orders inclosed, and follow the direc-
tions therein given. If by any misfortune to you, the com-
mand of the Providence should devolve on Capt. Hacker,
now acting as first lieutenant, he will, as the eldest captain,
take command of the fleet, and is to obey the orders given
you. We wish you success, and are your servants, &c,
Wm. Vernon,
J. Warren."
What those sealed orders were, does not appear on rec-
ord ; but doubtless were for him to proceed with all expedi-
tion, to Charleston, S. C, and place himself and fleet under
the command of Gen. Lincoln, who was charged with the
defense of that place. On the 23d of that month, he sailed,
with the ships under his command, and when united with
those at Charleston, formed the largest American squadron,
under the command of one officer, ever assembled during
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 149
the war. The voyage out was rough and tempestuous, and
his ships received considerable damage; nevertheless, he
reached the destined port on the 19th of December. On
the 20th of January, being weary of inactivity, he applied
to Gen. Lincoln for liberty to make a cruise of observation,
and ascertain the position of the enemy's fleet, which had
been looked for, a considerable time, on its way from New
York, with the army of Gen. Clinton, to invest Charleston.
On the second or third day out, he fell in with the British
fleet, and took four of their transports, laden with troops,
provisions, &c, but was himself chased back into port, by
four ships of war ; and in a short time after, the enemy
commenced their preparations for a regular siege of the city.
This was his last feat on the ocean ; the brilliant sunshine
of success, which had so long brightened his course, now set
in clouds and gloomy disaster. Neptune, the ruler of the
sea, had befriended him all his life, and when he forsook his
service, and entered into battle on the solid land, his good
fortune departed, and his beloved ships perished, or fell into
the hands of the enemy. Amidst all his exposures and hair-
breadth escapes in his numerous sea-fights, he was never
wounded ; but, like Washington, bore a charmed life, not to
be destroyed by his enemies.
The defense of Charleston was the first attempt of the
Americans to maintain a town against a besieging army;
and its disastrous termination taught them, when too late,
that their unwalled, open cities, were poorly calculated for
defense. The winter of 1780 proved to be one of great
severity, even at the south, and the cold nearly as great as
that common to the middle states. The sailors in Com.
Whipple's fleet had been shipped for a six months' cruise
in a southern latitude ; and not knowing their final destina-
tion, were entirely unprovided with clothing for the severe
winter which followed. There was no clothing for them in
150 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
the vessels, and no other resource to relieve their wants but
from his own funds. The generosity of their commander
toward sailors was unbounded; and to alleviate their suffer-
ings, he advanced several thousand dollars from his own
funds, to cover their shivering bodies in garments suited to
the season. These supplies were delivered to the pursers
of the several ships under his command, and the amounts
deducted from their wages, as is customary in such cases ;
and yet, from the subsequent loss of the fleet, and perhaps,
also, the books of the pursers, he had not, in 1786, received
a single dollar for this noble and generous expenditure in
the cause of his country, nor did he ever obtain a tithe of
the amount justly due him.
During the siege an almost daily correspondence was
carried on with Gen. Lincoln, who constantly consulted him
in the disposition of the ships for the defense of the city,
and the annoyance of the enemy. A large number of
these letters are on the files of his naval manuscripts, pre-
served with much care; but as they relate to no very inter-
esting or particular events, they will not be quoted, but the
history of the siege given, as related by Dr. Ramsey. From
the beginning to the end of this disastrous affair, Com.
Whipple, with his officers and men, exerted themselves with
untiring assiduity and the greatest gallantry, in defending
the place, as well after the destruction of their ships as before.
The batteries erected from the ship's guns on the banks of
the Cooper river, and manned by their crews, were very an-
noying to the besiegers, and prolonged the investment until
the expenditure of their provisions threatened them with
starvation, and did full as much toward their final surrender
as the guns of the enemy.
" The British fleet, with their troops on board, six thou-
sand in number, under the command of Sir Henry Clinton,
sailed from New York on the 20th of December, 1779.
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 151
Their outward course was boisterous and disastrous, losing
nearly all their cavalry horses, and it was as late as the 11th
of February, 1780, before they landed at the distance of
thirty miles from Charleston. On the 29th of March, Clin-
ton passed over Ashley river, and commenced erecting bat-
teries for the siege of the town. Gen. Lincoln constructed
lines of defense across Charleston neck, from Cooper to
Ashley river. On the 12th of April the British batteries
were opened. Their fleet under Admiral Arbuthnot, of eight
ships, one a sixty-four, crossed the bar on the 20th of March,
and anchored in 'five fathom hole;' while the fleet under
Com. Whipple, composed of smaller vessels, being unable
to prevent their crossing the bar at the mouth of the harbor,
retreated up to Charleston, where his ships were disarmed,
and the crews and guns of all the fleet but one, were put
on shore to reinforce the batteries." Although sailors are
the bravest of men, whether fighting on the land or the
water; yet when on shore they are deprived of their favor-
ite element, and lose that esprit de corps so peculiar to
them on ship board. The commodore felt the want of sea
room, and the fresh breezes of the ocean, by which to ma-
neuver hk ships, and to point his guns. When he reluct-
antly abandoned his vessels and stepped on to terra firma,
he was like an eagle with his wings clipped, unable to soar
aloft, or pounce upon his prey; nevertheless, his men be-
haved bravely, and did all they could for the defense of the
town. " The fire of the British was much superior to that
of the Americans ; the former having twenty-one mortars
and royals, and the latter only two ; while their battering
cannon were much larger and more numerous, with three
times as many men. During the siege Sir Henry Clinton
received a reinforcement of three thousand men, making in
all nine thousand land forces to oppose, while Gen. Lincoln
had less than three thousand. By the 6th of May the
152 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
provisions of the besieged were nearly exhausted, and the
inhabitants of the town became clamorous with the Ameri-
can commander for a surrender of the place, as they could
sustain the siege no longer. On the 11th of May the town
was surrendered, and the brave defenders became prisoners
of war to a man who proved to be a very ungenerous
enemy, and treated his captives with all the rigor so preva-
lent at that period, when the Americans were considered as
rebels, and not as common enemies, and, therefore, not en-
titled to the usages of the laws of nations." On the final
results of the siege, he remarks, " I faithfully exerted myself
to promote the interest and honor of my country ; and al-
though the town was surrendered, American honor was
triumphant."
After the capitulation, he made an arrangement with Ad-
miral Arbuthnot, into whose charge the seamen luckily fell
instead of Sir H. Clinton, for their parole; agreeing that the
seamen and marines should be exchanged, when an opportu-
nity offered. But none such occurred, as the British govern-
ment decided on keeping in prison all the American seamen
which fell into their hands, until the close of the war. Their
depredations had been so severe on their commerce, that
they considered this the only effectual mode of restraining
them. While their seamen amounted to eighty- five thou-
sand, the Americans could at no time muster, probably, more
than five thousand. The loss of so large a number of the
continental ships, at the fall of Charleston, nearly ruined the
American navy, and put a stop to any further effective oper-
ations by sea. The presence of the French fleet on our coasts,
supplied in some degree the loss of our own, and caused
Congress to think there was not so much need of a navy as
in the early years of the war, when they had to contend single-
handed with the most powerful marine in the world. Ad-
miral Arbuthnot was doubtless acquainted with the name
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 153
and character of Com. Whipple, and felt more respect for a
brave man in misfortune than many of the enemy's com-
manders in the land service, who were generally notorious
for their cruelty and ungenerous conduct to their American
prisoners. Some delay must have taken place in carrying
out the capitulation, as he did not reach Chester in Pennsyl-
vania, the place of destination for the seamen, until the last
of June. Disease prevailed extensively amongst his men, as
is almost universally the case in besieged towns, especially
the small-pox, which continued to be the scourge of the
American troops, from the beginning to the end of the war.
At Chester, no regular hospitals were provided for the sick,
and with his characteristic generosity, Com. Whipple, hired
a suitable house for their accommodation at his own ex-
pense, furnishing them with all needed supplies for their
comfort, whereby he says, "Many useful lives were pre-
served to their country." At this place he remained two
years and seven months, a prisoner, the most dreary of his
life, until at the close of the war, he was exchanged for Capt.
Gayton, of the Romulus, a forty-four gun frigate. During
all this period, he was deprived of the means of earning a
subsistence; and himself and family were to be supported
out of his former stores, so that at the declaration of peace,
he was left in a destitute condition, at the age of fifty years,
a period when the energies and ambition of most men begin
to fail.
In 178G, he petitioned Congress for a redress of his griev-
ances ; and that they would do him justice, by repaying the
amount they justly owed him. At the close of the petition,
after stating his services in the cause of liberty, (a paper
which has afforded dates for all the interesting events of Ms
life,) he says, " Thus having exhausted the means of support-
ing myself and family, I was reduced to the sad necessity
of mortgaging my little farm, the remnant I had left, to
154 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
obtain money for a temporary support. This farm is now
gone ; and having been sued out of possession, I am turned
into the world at an advanced age, feeble and valetudinary,
with my wife and children, destitute of a house, or a home
that I can call my own, or have the means of hiring. This
calamity has arisen from two causes ; viz. : First, from my
disbursing large sums in France and Charleston. In the
former, I expended for the service of the United States, to
the amount of three hundred and sixty French guineas ; a
large part of that sum was appropriated to the pay of a
company of marines; the other part for sea stores to ac-
commodate a number of gendeman passengers, sent on
board by the commissioners, to take passage for America,
for which I have never been recompensed. And secondly,
my having served the United States from the 15th of June,
1775, to December, 1782, without receiving a farthing of
wages, or subsistence from them, since December, 1776.
My advances in France and Charleston amount, in the
whole, to nearly seven thousand dollars in specie, exclusive
of interest. The repayment of this, or a part of it, might
be the happy means of regaining the farm I have been
obliged to give up, and snatch my family from misery and
ruin."
This sum with the interest would, in 1786, amount to at
lea^t ten thousand dollars ; add to this, six years' pay and
subsistence, at one thousand dollars a year, and there was
sixteen thousand dollars due him for time and money, ex-
pended in the service of the United States. On the 10th of
October, 1786, the commissioner of accounts in the marine
department, to whom was referred the petition, reported in
its favor, when Congress directed him to refund the momy
advanced in France, but say nothing about the disburse-
ments at Charleston. What the sum allowed to him was,
is not stated, but in an application which he made in 1811,
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 155
for a pension, he says he was paid in " final settlements, or
United States securities, which, owing to his indigent cir-
cumstances at that time, he was obliged to sell for two shil-
lings and sixpence in the pound, or a discount of more than
eighty per cent. He had but two choices; either to do this,
or to let his family suffer for the necessaries of life." Thus,
the government, instead of paying him in specie, or money
equivalent to that which he had advanced for them, paid
him in their worthless paper, which, purporting to be val-
uable for its face, was little better to him than so many
rags. Owing to the low credit of the country, it fell into the
hands of greedy speculators, who finally realized, and put
into their own pockets, the very money due to Com. Whipple.
But he, generous man, was not the only one who suffered
from his country's poverty ; hundreds of others, both of the
army and navy, who had spent years in the service of the
republic, received nothing in return but these '■'■final certifi-
cates" the mere shadow of a reality. Soon after his ex-
change, he received permission from Robert Morris, one of
the board of admiralty, to leave the service of the United
States . It is as follows :
"Marine Office, Philadelphia, April 23d, 1782.
Leave of absence is hereby granted to Capt. Abraham
Whipple, of the American navy, to go into private service,
until called upon.
Robert Morris."
He now resided, like Cincinnatus, on his little farm in
Cranston, and guided a plow instead of a ship. After the
peace was fully established in 1784, the merchants of Provi-
dence resumed their foreign navigation; and one of the first
ships sent to Great Britain, was built and owned by John
Brown, of Providence. She was called the " General Wash-
ington," and a fine figure of his noble person graced her
bows. The command of this vessel was given to Com.
15G ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
Whipple, and he had the honor of first unfurling the Amer-
ican flag on the river Thames. Her fine model and attract-
ive name excited the notice of the cockneys, and hundreds
of persons daily visited her, as a rare sight from the new
republic. This notice was not a little flattering to the pride
of the commodore, who fully sustained the dignity of his
country, and answered their numerous questions with pro-
priety and kindness.
After his return from this voyage, he continued to live on
his farm, and during the stormy period of the paper-money
war in Rhode Island, was elected a representative to the
Legislature from the town of Cranston, in 1786. The ad-
vocates of the paper-money system were then in power, and
chose Othniel Gorton, a clumsy old man, for speaker. Mr.
John Howland, who narrates the following anecdote, says,
" It was the habit of Gorton to keep a large quid of tobacco
in one side of his mouth, which pressed out one of his cheeks.
The most of the debaters were on the opposite side of the
hall from that on which the commodore sat, and the speaker's
face was generally turned that way. Once in the course of
the debate, Whipple had cogitated a speech, which he waited
for a chance to deliver. At last, out of patience, he rose
and called, ' Mr. Speaker !' The speaker, whose face was
the other way, did not hear him. He then raised his voice
to its utmost limit, 'Mr. Speaker!' The speaker started,
and turning to the commodore said, ' I hear you, sir,' rather
audibly. Whipple then began as follows : ' I wish, Mr.
Speaker, you would shift your quid of tobacco from your
starboard to your larboard jaw, that it might give your head
a cant this way, so that you could sometimes hear some-
thing from this side of the house.' He then commenced his
speech, which was not a long one, and when through, sat
down." This anecdote is in character with the man, who
often spoke in nautical phrases, and sometimes in language
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 157
rough as the ocean's winds, amidst whose waves he had been
cradled.
On the formation of the OhioCompany, he emigrated with
his wife and son to Marietta, in company with the family of
Col. Sproat, who had married his daughter Catharine. He
was now fifty-five years old, when he left the land of his fore-
fathers, to seek a new home in the valley of the Ohio. The
fertility of the new world had been so much lauded by its
advocates, that it conveyed to the mind the idea of a second
Paradise. The first settlers, however, found that the " briers
and thorns" of the curse were there, if not in reality, yet
under the semblance of the tomahawk and knife of the In-
dian. The first six years of his residence here, were passed
in constant danger from the savage foe, although, from his
age, he was not exposed so much to their attacks as younger
men. He, however, once had a little taste of the feeling
which attends the too near approach of the hostile Indian.
Col. Sproat, with whom he constantly resided, during the
war, had built a log-house about midway between the gar-
rison at the Point and Campus Martius, and cleared a piece
of ground for a garden. On this land Com. Whipple had a
fine patch of melons, which somebody stole and carried
away for several nights. Supposing the boys of the garri-
son were the depredators, he one moonlight night concluded
to watch for the rogues, by standing sentry in the log-house,
a few yards only from the melons. With his old musket well
charged, he took his stand by one of the loop-holes in the
logs. About midnight three Indians stepped over the fence
and commenced searching for ripe melons. Not expecting
depredators of this kind, he looked quietly on, in silence.
He could have easily killed one or more of them, with his
well loaded musket; but he felt no enmity toward them;
they had never injured him nor any of his kindred ; but on
the contrary, himself and countrymen were intruding on
158 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
them, and taking the land of their fathers and themselves
from them. And as to the melons they were not worth the
life of a man, even of a savage. He resolved thus with
himself. " If they do not attack me, I will not attack them."
Had they been his old oppressors, the redcoats, and in
time of war, as it then was with the Indians, his conduct
would have been very different. He did not refrain from
any fear of the result, for the report of Ms shot would have
brought instant aid from the garrison, not one hundred rods
distant, and the Indians would have fled without any attempt
on the house, as they would at once conclude it contained
more than one man. When they had selected such melons
as suited them, they retired; and the commodore rested
quietly the remainder of the night. At sunrise he returned
to the garrison, but did not watch the melons again.
After the peace in 179G, he moved with his wife on to a
small farm of twelve acres, on the bank of the Muskingum
river, two miles from its mouth. He was now in his sixty-
third year, and had no other means of support than the
produce of this land, cultivated with his own hands. On
this scanty plantation he continued to live and to labor for
fifteen years, raising barely sufficient of the most common
necessaries of life to support him and his aged partner in a
very frugal manner, but lacking the most of its comforts,
especially comfortable clothing, which was scarce and dear
in the new settlements. He thus manfully struggled on,
without murmuring or complaining, respected and honored
by his acquaintance for his perseverance and industry.
At length in 1811, when he was seventy-eight years old
and the powers of nature has so far failed that he could no
longer follow the plow, or delve the earth, he applied to
Congress, urged thereto by his friends, for a pension. They
granted him half-pay of a captain in the navy, or thirty-
dollars a month. This relieved him from any further anxiety
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 159
as to a support in the last days of his life, and rendered the
remaining years easy and free from care.
Once during this agricultural period, he was allowed to
visit the sea, snuff its saline breezes, and again be lulled to
sleep in his cot by the dash of the ocean's waves, strangely
calling to mind the scenes of his early manhood.
In the year 1800, some of the enterprising men of Marietta,
formed a company for building a small vessel, and actually
built, rigged, and loaded with produce, a brig of one hundred
and four tons, named the St. Clair, in honor of the governor
of the northwest territory. Her cargo was made up of pork
and flour, and she cleared from Marietta in May, 1801, that
town having been made a port of clearance. She crossed
the falls of the Ohio in safety, and early in July was at New
Orleans, then in the occupancy of the Spaniards, where the
brig lay some days anchored in the stream, from the extrav-
agance of the port charges, while she took on board some
stores for the voyage. In July he sailed for the town of
Havana, with a crew composed chiefly of landsmen. His
first mate was a good seaman, but entirely ignorant of navi-
gation, not being able to take an observation, or ascertain
the. latitude, so that if any accident had happened to Com.
Whipple, no one on board could navigate the vessel.
The second mate was Bennet Cook, a young, active man, and
a good sailor, but ignorant of navigation. The St. Clair,
however, reached her destined port in safety. Provisions of
all kinds were scarce and dear, affording a fine market for
her load. The flour sold for forty dollars a barrel, but was
subject to a duty of twenty dollars. This port has always
been noted for its high duties, which served to enrich the
government, but to impoverish the people. With the pro-
ceeds of the cargo, he bought a load of sugar. It was late
in August before the brig left the port of Havana on her
voyage to Philadelphia, where she was consigned and finally
160 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
sold. In the meantime the yellow fever broke out in the
place and attacked several of the crew, some of them several
days after leaving the island. Fortunately for Com. Whip-
ple, he found his son John, who had been several years on
the sea, and a finished sailor, at this port, and engaged him
for the voyage as his mate. His health remained firm, and
with his aid the brig reached Philadelphia, in distress, from
sickness and death amongst the crew. The voyage was a
productive one to the owners, and encouraged the inhabitants
of Marietta to continue the business. Com. Whipple re-
turned to his home by land, but did not navigate any more
vessels to the sea. The St. Clair was the first rigged vessel
ever built on the Ohio river, and he had the honor of con-
ducting her to the ocean. In after life he used to claim the
distinction of firing the first gun at the British in the Revo-
lutionary war on the ocean, and the navigating the first
vessel built on the Ohio river, to the sea. On the latter oc-
casion Capt. Jonathan Dcvol, who possessed all the imagina-
tion of a poet, if he lacked the harmony of measure, wrote
the following lines.
The scene is laid at the mouth of the Mississippi, and as
Com. Whipple entered the ocean with the St. Clair, Nep-
tune and his Tritons are supposed to welcome him with
military honors.
" The Triton crieth,
' Who comcth now from shore 'i '
Neptune replieth,
' 'Tis the old commodore.'
Long has it been since I saw him before,
In the year seventy-five from Columbia he came,
The pride of the Briton on ocean to tame :
And often, too, with his gallant crew,
Hath he crossed the belt of ocean blue.
On the Gallic coast,
I have seen him tost,
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 161
While his thundering cannon lulled my waves,
And roused my nymphs from their coral caves ;
When he fought for freedom with all hio braves,
Iu the war of the Revolution.
But now he comes from the western woods,
Descending slow with gentle floods,
The pioneer of a mighty train,
Which commerce brings to my domain.
Up, sons of the wave,
Greet the noble and brave !
Present your arms unto him.
His gray hair shows,
Life nears its close :
Let's pay the honors due him.
Sea-maids attend with lute and lyre,
And bring your conchs, my Triton sons ;
In chorus blow to the aged sire,
. A welcome to my dominions. "
For several years after this period, ship-building was car-
ried on with great spirit at Marietta; but Com. Whipple,
having opened the way to the ocean, left the future guid-
ance of the navigation to younger men. Not less than
twenty ships, brigs and schooners, from one hundred and fifty
to four hnndred and fifty tons burthen, were built up to the
year 1808, besides some of Mr. Jefferson's gun-boats. Two
or three of their number were lost in attempting to pass the
rapids at Louisville, when the water was too low, but at a
proper stage no difficulty was experienced. Several of them
took in cotton from the plantations on the Mississippi, for
Liverpool, in addition to their other lading, as the cotton
bales were so loosely packed at that time, that a ship could
not be fully loaded with that article. Owing to its bulky
nature, ten cents a pound was charged for the freight.
As has been observed, in 1811, Com. Whipple received
from Congress the half-pay of a captain in the service, or
11
162 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
thirty dollars a month; which enabled him to cease from
laboring with his own hands for the support of himself and
wife, which he had been obliged to do for the last twenty-
three years.
In early life he married Miss Sarah Hopkins, the sister of
Gov. Hopkins, of Rhode Island, a woman every way worthy
of him, and with whom he lived to enjoy the smiles, or to
bear the frowns, of fortune, for more than fifty years. The
fruits of this marriage were two daughters and one son. The
oldest daughter was married to Col. Ebenezer Sproat, and
the younger to Dr. Comstock, of Smithfield, R. I., where she
resided after her father's removal to Ohio. John, his only
son, continued to follow the sea, after leaving Marietta, and
never married, so that the family name perished at the death
of its illustrious founder. Several descendants of the female
branches are living in the states of Michigan, Rhode Island
and Massachusetts, under the names of Sibley, Comstock,
and Fisher.
In person Com. Whipple was rather short, thickset and
stout, with great muscular strength in the days of his man-
hood : eyes dark grey, with manly, strongly marked fea-
tures, indicating firmness and intrepidity. He was fond of
daring exploits, and the more hazardous they were, with so
much the greater alacrity he entered into them. For stern,
rigid discipline, no man in the American navy exceeded him ;
and yet from numerous letters on his files addressed to him
by his subordinates, he appears to have been loved and
highly respected by those under his command. It was often
noticed by the sailors, that in fair, pleasant weather, with a
smooth sea, he was irritable and surly; but as soon as a
severe gale or storm arose, and there was actual danger, his
countenance brightened, while the most cheerful, animated
air, took possession of the man, diffusing life and courage
ABRAHAM WHIPPLE. 163
into all around him, so that no crew could be cowardly with
such a leader. When in the greatest danger, he was the
most at his ease. His benevolence and kind feelings for
those under his charge were often put to severe trials, and
always shone with brilliant luster. Thousands of dollars
were expended by him ro relieve their wants, which were
never repaid by the government, and for which he suffered
years of privation and labor, at a period of his life when
want bears most heavily on the mind of man. It is pre-
sumed that no other one amongst the military or naval com-
manders of the Revolution, expended as much for the men
under their care, with the exception of that extraordinary
and good man, the Marquis Lafayette. His success on
the ocean was not exceeded by that of any other in the
navy; and, although exposed to the greatest dangers and
hazards, was never captured or wounded by his enemies,
while at sea ; but when he stepped on to dry land, his good
fortune forsook him, and at the surrender of Charleston, he
became a captive for more than two years. His exploits
and character will long be remembered by the inhabitants
of Rhode Island and Marietta ; while his name and portrait
ought to occupy a distinguished place, instead of being
passed by in silence, in The American Portrait Gallery,
amongst the celebrated men of the Revolution.
He died after a short illness, on the 29th of May, in the
year 1819, aged eighty-five years, at a small farm, three
miles from Marietta, where he had resided for several years,
near his widowed daughter, Mrs. Catharine Sproat, whose
soothing cares and tender assiduities smoothed her parent's
progress to the grave. His wife, Mrs. Sarah Whipple, died
in October, 1818, preceding him but a few months, aged sev-
enty-nine years. They lie buried side by side, in the beau-
tiful mound square at Marietta, and his tombstone bears the
1G4 ABRAHAM WHIPPLE.
following inscription, written by the lion. Paul Fearing, his
warm friend and admirer :
SACRED
TO THE MEMORY OF
(Hommoirorc Slbraljam llUjipplc,
WHOSE NAME, SKILL, AND COURAGE,
WILL EVER REMAIN THE PRDDE AND BOAST OF HIS COUNTRY.
IN THE LATE REVOLUTION, HE WAS THE
FIRST ON THE SEAS TO HURL DEFIANCE AT PROUD BRITAIN \
GALLANTLY LEADING THE WAY TO ARREST FROM
THE MISTRESS OF THE OCEAN, HER SCEPTER,
AND THERE TO WAVE THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER.
HE ALSO CONDUCTED TO SEA,
THE FIRST SQUARE-RIGGED VESSEL EVER BUILT ON THE OHIO,
OPENLNG TO COMMERCE
RESOURCES BEYOND CALCULATION.
HON. JAMES MITCHELL VARNUM*
" Two brothers of the name of Varnum, emigrated from
Wales to Boston, just prior to the year 1G60, and from
thence to Ipswich, where one died without issue. Samuel,
the survivor, purchased a large tract of land of the Indians,
in the town of Dracut, county of Middlesex, Mass., and
settled on it in 1664. He had issue — five sons : John,
Thomas, and Joseph, and two who were shot in a boat while
crossing the Merrimack with their father. The descendants
of John and Thomas reside in Dracut and elsewhere. Jo-
seph was colonel of the militia, and wounded in the Indian
war of 1676. He erected a garrison house, which is still
standing as the family mansion, in a good state of preser-
vation. Joseph Varnum left two sons, Joseph and Samuel,
who inherited a large estate from their father. Joseph had
issue, and several families have descended from him. Sam-
uel had four sons : Samuel, James Mitchell, Joseph Bradley,
and Daniel Varnum. Samuel died in Maine, about twenty
years since ; Joseph B. in 1821 ; and Daniel in 1822, on the
patrimonial estate, which has remained in the family since
the first purchase from the natives. Most of the brothers
held prominent official stations in Massachusetts. Joseph
B. was elected a member of Congress from his native district
in 1795, and successively re-elected till 1811, and then
elected senator one term, making his whole service in Con-
gress twenty-two years. From 1807 to 1811, comprising
* The following sketch is chiefly extracted from a full and well written biogra-
phy of Gen. Varnum, by Wilkins Updike, Esq., of Kingston, R. I., and published
in the Memoirs of the Bar of Rhode Island, in 1S42.
10G J. M. VARNUM.
two Congressional terms, lie was elected speaker of the
House of Representatives.
The subject of this memoir, James Mitchell Varnum, was
born in Dracut, the residence of his ancestors, in 1749. He
entered Rhode Island College, now Brown University, then
established in Warren, and was in the first class that grad-
uated from that institution, in 1769, at the age of twenty.
He received the first honors of his class, and in a forensic
discussion, vindicated the rights of the colonists in their re-
sistance to British taxation, with signal ability. He kept a
classical school for a short period after he graduated, and
always spoke highly of its benefit to a student, to plant
deeply in the mind those elements acquired in the college
hall ; and his whole life demonstrated that he had profited
by it. He was deeply attached to mathematical science,
and delighted in its pursuits. His whole life was an evi-
dence that he was naturally a mathematician. His habits
were those of intense study and boisterous relaxation. He
was fond of exhibiting his skill in gymnastics, and ever
ready to exercise in that ancient art with any one who
would engage with him, noble or ignoble. Strong and ac-
tive in frame, and ardently attached to such exercises, he
gave his inclination for such sports, the fullest range, to a
late period of his life.
Soon after his college course he entered the office of Oli-
ver Arnold, in Providence, then attorney -general of the col-
ony. William Channing, Thomas Arnold, John S. Dexter
and himself, were students together, at the time of Mr. Ar-
nold's death, in 1770; and in the succeeding year, Varnum
was admitted to the bar. He settled at East Greenwich,
where his talents acquired for him an extensive practice ;
and he traveled the circuits of the state, reaping the honors
and the rewards of his profession.
Mr. Varnum had a great taste for military life, and early
J. M. VARNUM. 167
joined the Kentish Guards, and was appointed commander
of that company in 1774; a company which, from their ac-
quirements in military tactics, became the nursery of so
many distinguished officers during the Revolutionary war :
Gen. Greene, Gen. Varnum, Col. Greene, Col. Crary, Maj.
Whitemarsh, and others, making thirty -two in all, who en-
tered the Revolutionary army as commissioned officers
from this company alone. The prominent part Mr. Varnum
had taken in the colonial controversy, inspired an ambition
to enter the military service of his country. The venerable
John Howland, president of the Historical Society of this
state, in a communication, states, that " When the news of
the Lexington battle reached East Greenwich, Varnum's
company mustered, and marched to Providence, on their
way to the scene of action. I recollect seeing them on their
arrival ; Nathaniel Greene, of Coventry, afterward the gen-
eral, was a private, with a musket on his shoulder; and
Christopher Greene, afterward Col. Greene, who defended
Red Bank, was also there, a private in the same company.
They marched beyond Pawtucket, and hearing that the
enemy had retired to Boston, they returned. The next week,
the General Assembly convened, and resolved to raise three
regiments of infantry and a company of artillery. Mr. Na-
thaniel Greene, then a member of the House of Representa-
tives, was appointed brigadier-general, and Varnum, colonel
of the regiment to be raised in the counties of Kent and
King's; Daniel Hitchcock to be colonel of the regiment to be
raised in Providence, and Church to be colonel of the regi-
ment to be raised in the counties of Newport and Bristol.
Varnum took rank over Hitchcock and Church, from having
commanded in the Kentish Guards, with the rank of colonel.
The time for which these troops were called out, expired
December 31st, 1775. The state raised two regiments for
the year 1776. Varnum commanded the first, and Hitch-
168 J. M. VARNUM.
cock the second. The officers of these troops afterward re
ceived commissions from the president of Congress, when
Washington was appointed commander-in-chief. They were
then styled continental troops. In January, 1776, the state
raised a regiment called state troops, to be stationed in New-
port. They remained there until the disastrous battle on
Long island. This regiment, commanded by Col. Lippitt,
was taken into the continental service, and ordered to join
Gen. Washington at New York; they arrived at Harlem
after the evacuation of the city. This regiment composed
part of the brigade commanded by Gen. John Nixon, which
consisted of five regiments, commanded by Cols. Nixon and
Little, of Massachusetts ; Varnum, Hitchcock, and Lippitt,
of Rhode Island. Toward the close of the year, Gen. Nixon
was dispatched, by the commander-in-chief, on furlough, to
Massachusetts, to urge the raising of new recruits for the
army, to supply the place of those whose term of service
would expire on the 31st of December; as without rein-
forcements, Gen. Washington would be left without an army
at the commencement of the succeeding year. Gen. Var-
num then succeeded to the command of the brigade. But
the necessity of the case, and the perilous situation of the
country, induced Gen. Washington soon after to send Gen.
Varnum to the Assembly of Rhode Island, for the same pur-
pose ; selecting, for this all-important mission, those officers,
for their known influence with their respective legislatures.
The command of this brigade of five regiments then de-
volved on Col. Hitchcock, as the senior officer. He com-
manded it at a period the most important in our Revolution-
ary history, and led his brigade with courage and ability, in
the memorable battles of Trenton and Princeton ; and for his
signal gallantry, received the special thanks of Gen. Wash-
ington, in front of the college at Princeton, and which he
J. M. VAKNUM. 1C9
was requested to present to the brigade he had so ably
commanded."
In February, 1777, Col. Varnum was promoted by Con-
gress to the rank of brigadier-general. The appointment
was announced to him by Gen. Washington, by letter, under
date of March 3d, of that year, which contains ample evi-
dence that his military bearing had met the full approbation
of the commander-in-chief. The General Assembly of this
state in their December session, 1776, having appointed Gen.
Varnum, commander of the state forces, at their March ses-
sion, 1777, entered the following honorable testimonial of ap-
probation on their journal : " Whereas, the appointment and
commission of Brig. Gen. James M. Varnum, in the service of
this state, has been suspended by his being appointed by the
honorable continental Congress, to the same rank in the
continental army : this assembly do, therefore, in grateful re-
membrance of his services, vote and resolve, that he is dis-
missed from his said appointment, and that he be paid to
the time his pay commenced in the continental service."
"Under the latter appointment," continues Mr.. Howland,
"Gen. Varnum commanded all that body of troops on the
Jersey side of the Delaware, when the British and Hessians
took possession of Philadelphia. Gen. Washington's purpose
was to prevent the passage of the enemy's shipping up the
river, and for this purpose a strong fort was erected on Red
Bank, and a regiment of Marylanders on Mud island. Col.
Christopher Greene commanded the two Rhode Island regi-
ments : Lieut. Col. Samuel Smith, on Mud island, and Var-
num the whole line of the coast of New Jersey.. In October
the enemy made a determined attack; but the battery and
fort were so valiantly defended, that the invaders were de-
feated and compelled to withdraw, and temporarily abandon
the enterprise. The gallant defense of Fort Mifflin, or Mud
170 J. M. VARNUM.
island, and the defeat of the Hessians at Fort Mercer, on
Red Bank, drew from Congress, then sitting at Yorktown,
a resolution of thanks, and votes of elegant swords to Col.
Greene, Lieut. Col. Smith, and Com. Hazlewood, for their
intrepid defense of these two forts." " But the British, re-
solved on the capture of these posts, so important in their
position, renewed the attack in November. They brought
up their shipping, the Somerset, of sixty-four guns, and a
number of floating batteries, to break up the chevaux de
frise, which extended across the river, and our forts opened
their lire to prevent it. Col. Smith was wounded on the
11th of November, and the command devolved on Lieut.
Col. Russell, of the Connecticut line, who, exhausted by
fatigue, and destitute of health, requested to be recalled.
The moment was critical. The commander-in-chief, Gen.
Washington, had no idea of defending the place through the
campaign, but wished to retard the operations of the enemy,
until the main army should be reinforced by the Massachu-
setts brigade, marching from the conquest of Saratoga, when
he would be in sufficient force to cover the country, or to
meet the enemy's whole force in the field. Upon the 12th,
he signified his wish to Gen. Varnum, to defend the island
as long as possible, without sacrificing the garrison. Gen.
Varnum, considering the imminent danger of the post, im-
mediately convened the field officers of Red Bank fort,
with a request that one of them would volunteer, as Gen.
Washington desired the island to be defended as long as
possible, and take command of it in lieu of Smith, who had
left. At this momentous crisis, Maj. Simon Thayer imme-
diately offered himself, to the inexpressible satisfaction of
Gen. Varnum. In the defense, to an officer knowing all
the circumstances, nothing presented itself but death, or an
improbable escape, without the possibility of contending on
even terms. But Maj. Thayer gallantly defended it day and
J. M. VARNUM. 171
night from the 12th, to twelve o'clock at night on the lGtli
of November, when the breastworks were beaten down, and
no cover left for his men, when the general ordered him to
abandon it. By those unacquainted with the transaction,
all the glory has been ascribed to Col. Smith. If heroic
valor was to be rewarded, who should have had the sword?
When the swords which were wrought in France, arrived,
and were to be presented, Gen. Varnum published a letter,
dated at East Greenwich, August 3d, 1786, narrating all the
circumstances attending the heroic defense of Mud island
by Maj. Thayer. It is written in a natural, straightforward
st}le, and in justice to the memory of this intrepid soldier
of Rhode Island, and of his country, ought to be preserved
in some durable form. Gen. Varnum continued in active
service during the year 1778, and commanded a brigade in
Sullivan's expedition on Rhode Island.
In 1779 he resigned his commission in the army, there
being at that time more general officers in the service than
were needful, in proportion to the men, and his talents being
more congenial with political life than the duties of the
camp ; although he was respected and esteemed as a good
and gallant officer. The legislature of this state, in consid-
eration of his national services, and effectually to secure
them in defense of the state, in May, 1779, elected him ma-
jor-general of the militia, to which office he was unani-
mously re-elected during the remainder of his life. In April,
1780, the people of the state, in grateful recollection of his
eminent services in the cause of public liberty, and desirous
to throw into the national councils, those distinguished tal-
ents which could be spared from the field, elected him their
delegate to the confederated Congress of that year. As
that body sat with closed doors, his voice could not be heard
by the public, but his name appears oftener in the published
journals, than many others of that body." Mr. Howland
172 J. M. VARNUM.
continues to observe, " The old Congress under the confed-
eration, had no power to raise money to carry on the war,
either by taxes or imposts, and the states had enough to do,
to furnish their own treasuries. Congress, on the 3d of
February, 1781, requested the several states to grant them
power to levy an impost of five per cent., ad valorem, on
all imported goods ; and all prizes and prize goods, to be
appropriated to the discharge of principal and interest of
debts contracted, or to be contracted, on the faith of the
United States, for the support of the war. This was thought
necessary to the salvation of the country, and to maintain
our independence. The granting of this power to Congress,
to raise a revenue, was a new question, and divided the pol-
iticians in its discussion. To place the case, in its urgent
necessity, before the respective legislatures of the states,
several of the best speakers in Congress requested, or
thought proper to return home, and persuade the people to
grant the power. Rufus King advocated it in Massachusetts ;
Dayton left his seat to advocate the cause in New Jersey;
and Varnum came to Rhode Island for the same purpose.
The states which had little or no maritime commerce, readily
granted the power. This question brought a new man into
the field in Rhode Island. David Howell, knowing the im-
porters would generally oppose the power, and that the
people at large would unwillingly be deprived of a rich
source of state revenue, at a crisis so distressing, came out
in the Providence Gazette, and in all public places, with
violent declamation against the five per cent., as it was
called. He argued, if you once grant them five, they will
soon take ten, then twenty, &c. Gen. Varnum vindicated
the grant, in the same paper, over the signature of ' Citizen;'
Howell, over that of 'Farmer,' knowing the majority of
every state were farmers. At length the question came be-
fore the General Assembly; Varnum' s speech occupied the
J. M. VARNUM. 173
forenoon, and, in strength of argument and eloquence, had not
been equalled since the settlement of the state. Howell occu-
pied the afternoon ; the question was then taken, and decided
in the negative. It was afterward ascertained, that a ma-
jority had predetermined and agreed not to grant the power.
Eleven of the states granted the five per cent. New York,
headed by George Clinton, never decided one way or the
other; and Rhode Island refused. So Congress was defeated
in the necessary source of revenue ; all the states not con-
curring in the measure.
After the war, Gen. Varnum recommenced the practice
of law at East Greenwich, with increased reputation, and
was promptly engaged in all the important causes in the
state. At that period great and important cases arose,
growing out of the new position in which the state and na-
tion were placed. The great case of Trevett vs. Weeden,
was one which stirred the community to its very foundations.
Upon its issue was involved the destiny of thousands. Pub-
lic feeling and anxiety were intense upon its result. The
period succeeding the Revolution was the most eventful in
our history. The crisis arose, and the experiment was on
trial, whether the people were capable of self-government;
and upon its issue depended the fate of the nation. The
country was exhausted by a protracted contest ; and disap-
pointed in the expectation of sufficient national resources,
to meet the embarrassments produced by it ; insubordination
and misrule showed themselves everywhere. The army
returned unpaid and discontented, with certificates upon a
bankrupt treasury, instead of money, amidst a state popula-
tion as impoverished as themselves. The state itself was
insolvent, and wholly unable to pay the bills of credit
against it. The stock of the farmer was selling at the auc-
tion posts, for the payment of taxes. The old Congress
was as embarrassed as the states for pecuniary means to
174 J. M. VAKNUM.
discharge their engagements. They made requisitions in con-
formity to the powers delegated to them under the confeder-
ation : owing to inability the states rejected them. The bills
which Congress had negotiated in Holland for the payment
of the army, were unpaid at maturity, and returned pro-
tested : the damages alone amounting to the startling sum
of six hundred and thirty-six thousand dollars. At this act
of sovereign dishonor and disgrace of the new republic, our
ambassadors, Franklin, Jay, and Adams, were in despair.
Prompted by exorbitant profit, the merchants shipped to
Europe, all the remaining specie that could be obtained to
supply the country with fabrics, which the war had ex-
hausted. Massachusetts alone exported three millions of
specie from the commencement of peace, to July, 1785 ; and
we can only judge, by estimation, of the vast amount ex-
ported from other seaports for the same purposes : so that
in a short period, all the gold brought by the French, and
the silver imported from the Spanish West Indies, was
drained from the country. The avaricious course pursued
by the merchants compelled the borrower to pay twenty per
cent, per annum, and some four per cent, per month. Such
was the posture of affairs at this momentous crisis. The
confederation was powerless. The veteran soldiers, who
had exposed themselves to tempests and battles through the
whole contest, and whom peace had dismissed with laurels,
returned to their families, penniless and clamorous. Neces-
sity and distress showed themselves by insurrections and
commotions in every quarter. If Shays had possessed cour-
age equal to his address and ability, he might have marched
in triumph through the nation, gathering to his standard,
spirits enough to have insured him victory ; such was the
perilous condition of the republic. The state threw itself
upon its reserved rights ; and the demagogues, who could
best live and flourish in turbulent political waters, seizing
J. M. VAIiNUM. 175
upon the agitated occasion, roused the distressed of every
class into a phrenzy, and made them believe, that Midas-like,
they could touch paper, and convert it to gold. The paper-
money party- obtained an overwhelming majority, and ex-
pressly instructed their representatives for the purpose ; and
in May, 1786, emitted the enormous sum of one hundred
thousand pounds in paper bills. It was further enacted, that
said bills ' should be a good and lawful tender for the com-
plete payment and final discharge of all fines, forfeitures,
judgments, and executions, that had become due and re-
covered, of every land and nature whatsoever.' There was
no time fixed when said bills were to be redeemed, nor was
their ultimate payment charged upon any fund, nor was it
designated how they were to be paid. They were to be
loaned for fourteen years upon mortgage, pro rata, to all
the people, at four per cent, interest for the first seven years,
and to be repaid in the next seven years, in seven equal instal-
ments, without interest, and then they were 'to be consumed
by fire /' thus intending to annihilate the merchants, their
fancied opponents, at a blow. These bills fell into imme-
diate discredit, and those who had property chose rather to
retain, than exchange it. They further enacted, that if any
one refused to take it in place of specie, he should be fined
one hundred pounds, and stand disfranchised. Every citi-
zen was also to swear that he would use his endeavors to
give it currency equal to gold and silver, and sell their prop-
erty" at the same prices for one, as the other Trials under
the law could be had at a called court, and the culprit was
denied the privilege of a jury. These curious movements
of the public mind go to prove that 'the Inquisition' may
exist in a republic, in civil affairs, as well as in a Roman
Catholic country, in matters of religion.
The paper-money system gave rise to a celebrated law-
suit, in which Gen. Varnum was engaged, and where he
17G J. M. V A 11 NUM.
displayed his eloquence and law knowledge in a masterly
manner. John Trevett, of Newport, bought meat of John
Weeden, a butcher, in the market, and tendered to him bills
of the emission of May preceding, in payment, which Wee-
den refused. From thence arose this trial, before a special
court, in September, 178G. If the complaint was sustained
by the judgment of the court, all the commerce and busi-
ness of the state would be destroyed, and all previous obli-
gations canceled by this irredeemable trash. The whole
population were deeply interested, and gathered, in vast
numbers, at the court-house. Here Gen. Varnum displayed
his vast powers, as an orator, in a manner never developed
before, and came fully up to Patrick Henry's famous tobacco
case, in exciting the applause and approbation of the
people. 'The court adjudged the amended acts of the
legislature, unconstitutional, and so void.' The fearless in-
dependence of the bench overthrew the tyrrany of the dem-
agogues, and the state was saved. But it was eulogium
enough on Varnum, that the power of these speeches
wrought such a triumphant victory over public opinion, that
the dominant party, to save themselves from political pros-
tration, were compelled to repeal their arbitrary and uncon-
stitutional acts, within sixty days from the time of their
passage. Gen. Varnum was not cold and phlegmatic in his
eloquence; his temperament was naturally ardent; and
when excited or roused by the circumstances or events of
his cause, was vehement. None can impart warmth or zeal,
that have none of their own ; and to impress an assembly
with the truth or sanctity of our cause, we must ourselves
be convinced that it is true.
In 178G, Gen. Varnum was again elected a representative
to the old Congress, and was an efficient member. At the
same session, the distinguished William Samuel Johnson
was also a representative from Connecticut; an intimacy
J.M.VARNUM. 177
was contracted between them, which continued during their
lives. This circumstance is mentioned to show why Dr.
Johnson spoke of Gen. Varnum, in the case of Smith, of
Connecticut, against John Brown, of Providence, in such
favorable terms. It was a prize cause, of magnitude, and
from the parties concerned, and the eminence of the counsel
engaged, it excited unusual interest. It was tried before
Judge Foster, judge of the State Admiralty Court at Kings-
town. Jesse Root, afterward chief justice of the Supreme
Court of Connecticut, and compiler of Root's reports, opened
the case in behalf of Smith, and William Channing, attor-
ney-general of Rhode Island, and Gen. Varnum conducted
the defense in behalf of Brown, and the distinguished jurist
and Christian, Dr. Johnson, of Stratford, closed for the claim-
ant. From the splendor of the talents of counsel, unusual
attention was attracted to the scene. The neat, concise, and
clear openings by Root and Channing, the brilliant language
and thundering eloquence of Varnum, and the calm, placid,
unostentatious and classical oratory of Johnson, furnished
a legal and intellectual banquet, such as was never seen
before, and probably never since, in Rhode Island. To sus-
tain himself against such power, was victory enough ; but
Varnum did more ; he not only sustained the high expecta-
tions of his friends, and the reputation of the Rhode Island
bar, but drove his adversaries finally to a nonsuit. Dr.
Johnson, whose heart was too magnanimous for envy, be-
side paying to Gen. Varnum, merited compliments in the
close, stated, at a party in the evening, 'That he knew Gen.
Varnum in Congress, and that he was a man of uncommon
talents, and of the most brilliant eloquence.' We feel as-
sured that he was justly entitled to this eulogium, or Dr.
Johnson would not have given it. The following is a de-
scription of the person and dress of Gen. Varnum at the
bar : It was the fashion of that day to be very well, or
178 J. M. VARNUM.
rather elegantly dressed. ' Gen. Varnum appeared with a
brick-colored coat, trimmed with gold lace; buckskin small
clothes, with gold lace bands; silk stockings, and boots; a
high, delicate, and white forehead; eyes prominent, and of
a dark hue ; his complexion rather florid ; somewhat corpu-
lent; well proportioned, and finely formed for strength and
agility; large eyebrows; nose straight, and rather broad;
teeth perfectly white ; a profuse head of hair, short on the
forehead, turned up some, and deeply powdered and
clubbed. When he took off his cocked hat, he would lightly
brush up his hair forward, and with a fascinating smile
lighting up his countenance, take his seat in court.' This
was the last great effort of Gen. Varnum in Rhode Island.
At what precise time this trial took place, cannot now be
ascertained, as no record of that court can be found. That
it was after the confederated Congress of 1787, is presuma-
ble; becauss he spoke of their intimacy while in Congress
together; and Dr. Johnson and Gen. Varnum were not both
members of the same Congress before that period.
Gen. Varnum was a warm and unwavering advocate for
a federal constitution ; he knew the inefficiency of the con-
federation, and also the selfish considerations that governed
the states. If an instrument cementing the Union, was not
speedily adopted, he ' felt that future efforts would be una-
vailing.' The legal profession, with Gen. Varnum at their
head, the mercantile, and the sound portion of the agricul-
tural interests, urged the Legislature of Rhode Island, at
their June session, 1787, in the strongest terms, to send del-
egates to the federal convention, assembled at Philadelphia.
But the advocates of the paper-money system, and the rev-
enue accruing to the state from imposts, Rhode Island being
then the second or third importing state, defeated the meas-
ure. The minority in the Legislature, and those friendly to
the feueral constitution, addressed the convention on the
J. M. VARNUM. 179
subject, and inclosed it to Gen. Varnum, to be delivered to
that body."
Early in the year 1787, the Ohio Land Company was or-
ganized in Boston ; it was originated by the disbanded offi-
cers of the late army, many of whom were stockholders,
while the larger portion was made up from the citizens at
large. The ordinance of Congress, establishing the North-
west Territory, was passed the 13th of July, 1787; in August
of that year, Gen. Varnum was appointed one of the direc-
tors of the Ohio Company. In September, Gen. Arthur
St. Clair was appointed governor of the new territory, and,
in October following, Gen. Varnum, Samuel H. Parsons,
and John Cleves Symmes, judges of the Supreme Court.
He left his home in Rhode Island in the spring of 1788, on
his route to the Northwest Territory, by the way of Balti-
more, and arrived at Marietta early in June. Gen. Parsons
was there on the 26th of May; Gov. St. Clair arrived on
the 9th of July, at Fort Harmer, under the escort of Maj.
Doughty, who went up with the garrison barge and a party
of soldiers to meet him at Fort Mcintosh. On the 4th of
July, the American independence was celebrated at Ma-
rietta, by the citizens, and the officers of Fort Harmer, in a
long bowery built near the upper point at the mouth of the
Muskingum. Gen. Varnum was invited to deliver an ora-
tion, which was done with his usual eloquence. "The ora-
tion is short, but contains many beauties both in sentiment
and language." "It was published at Newport in the same
year, by order of the directors and agents of the Ohio Land
Company, to which is annexed the speech of Gov. St. Clair,
and proceedings of the inhabitants." A copy of the
speeches is attached to the appendix of this volume.
His health was poor when he arrived at Marietta, having
for some time been threatened with a lung complaint. The
long journey and change of climate, no doubt led him to
180 J. M. VARNUM.
expect would effect a favorable change in his disease ; but his
health gradually declined after his arrival, so that by the set-
ting in of cold weather, he was quite feeble, and evidently in
a deep consumption. During the summer and autumn he was
able to attend to the duties of a director in the meetings of
that board, and no doubt his fine taste for the beautiful
was exerted in promoting the resolution for the preservation
of those ancient remains erected on the present site of Ma-
rietta, as memorials of that departed race of men who once
inhabited the valley of the Ohio. He also had made prepara-
tion for opening a farm ; and a clearing of several acres,
made by him, a mile or two east of the town, was, for many
years, known by the name of Varnum's clearing, and now oc-
cupies the center of one of the finest farms in this vicinity.
He assisted Gov. St. Clair and Gen. Parsons in forming a
code of laws for the government of the Northwest Territory,
twenty-six of which were promulgated during his life ; the
last of them being signed on the 21st of December. About
this time he addressed the following letter to his wife. It is
written with that entire truth, honesty, and deep sensibility,
which all more or less feel at the approach of death; but
which few have the ability to express in such fervent and
beautiful language. It was published in 1791, in the Amer-
ican Magazine, as a fine specimen of elegant composition ;
but is now copied from his life, as a memorial of the heart
and soul of Gen. Varnum.
''My dearest and most estimable friend: I now address
you from my sick chamber, and perhaps it will be the last
letter that you will receive from me. My lungs are so
far affected that it is impossible for me to recover, but by
exchange of air and a warm climate. I expect to leave
this place on Sunday or Monday next for the falls of Ohio.
If I feel myself mend by the tour, I shall go no farther; but if
not, and my strength should continue, I expect to proceed to
J. M. VARNUM. 181
New Orleans, and from thence, by the West Indies, to Rhode
Island. My physicians, most of them, think the chances of
recovery in my favor; however, I am neither elevated nor de-
pressed by the force of opinion, but shall meet my fate with
humility and fortitude. I cannot, however, but indulge the
hope that I shall again embrace my lovely friend in this
world; and that we may glide smoothly down the tide of
time for a few years, and enjoy together the more substan-
tial happiness and satisfaction, as we have already the de-
sirable pleasures of life. It is now almost nineteen years,
since Heaven connected us by the tenderest and the most
sacred of ties ; and it is the same length of time that our
friendship hath been increased by every rational and en-
dearing motive ; it is now stronger than death, and I am
firmly persuaded will follow us into an existence of never-
ending felicity. But my lovely friend, the gloomy moment
will arrive when we must part; and should it arrive during
our present separation, my last and only reluctant thoughts
will be employed about my dearest Martha. Life, my dear-
est friend, is but a bubble ; it soon bursts, and is remitted
to eternity. When we look back to the earliest recollections
of our youthful hours, it seems but the last period of our
rest, and we appear to emerge from a night of slumbers, to
look forward to real existence. When we look forward,
time appears as indeterminate as eternity, and we have no
idea of its termination, but by the period of our dissolution.
What particular relation it bears to a future state, our gen-
eral notions of religion cannot point out ; we feel something
constantly active within us, that is evidently beyond the
reach of mortality ; but whether it is a part of ourselves, or
an emanation from the pure Source of existence, or re-ab-
sorbed when death shall have finished his work, human wis-
dom cannot determine. Whether the demolition of the
body introduces only a change in the manner of our being,
182 J. M. VARNUM.
or leaves it to progress infinitely, alternately elevated and
depressed, according to the propriety of our conduct, or
whether we return to the common mass of unthinking mat-
ter, philosophy hesitates to decide. I know, therefore, but
one source from whence can be derived complete consola-
tion in a dying hour, and that is the divine system contained
In the gospel of Jesus Christ. There, life and immortality
are brought to light; there, we are taught our existence is to
be eternal, and, secure in an interest in the atoning merits
of a bleeding Savior, that we shall be inconceivably happy.
A firm and unshaken faith in this doctrine, must raise us
above the doubts and fears that hang upon every other sys-
tem, and enable us to view with a calm serenity, the ap-
proach of the king of terrors, and to behold him as a kind
and indulgent friend, speeding his shafts only to carry us,
the sooner, to our everlasting home. But should there be a
more extensive religion beyond the vail, and without the
reach of mortal observation, the Christian religion is by no
means skaken thereby, as it is not opposed to any principle
that admits of the perfect benevolence of the Deity. My
only doubt is, whether the punishment threatened in the
New Testament, is annexed to a state of unbelief, which
may be removed hereafter, and so a restoration take place;
or whether the state of the mind at death, irretrievably fixes
its doom forever. I hope and pray that the divine Spirit
will give me such assurances of an acceptance with God,
through the merits and sufferings of his Son, as to brighten
tlit1 way to immediate happiness. Dry up your tears, my
charming mourner, nor sutler this letter to give too much
inquietude. Consider the facts at present as in theory; but
the sentiments such as will apply whenever the change shall
come. I know that humanity must and will be indulged in
its keenest griefs, but there is no advantage in too deeply
anticipating our inevitable sorrows. If I did not persuade
J.M.VARNUM. 183
myself that you would conduct with becoming prudence
and fortitude, upon this occasion, my own unhappiness
would be greatly increased, and perhaps my disorder too ;
but I have so much confidence in your discretion, as to un-
bosom my inmost soul. You must not expect to hear from
me again, until the coming spring, as the river will soon be
shut up with ice, and there will be no communication from
below ; and if in a situation for the purpose, I will return as
soon as practicable. Give my sincerest love to all those you
hold dear; I hope to see them again, and love them more
than ever. Adieu, my dearest friend; and while I fervently
devote, in one undivided prayer, our immortal souls to the
care, forgiveness, mercy, and all-prevailing grace of Heaven
in time, and through eternity, I must bid you a long, long,
long farewell. James M. Varnum."
His fast declining health, and the rapid approach of win-
ter, prevented his making the attempt to remove to a warmer
climate. It was fortunate he did not, as he would have died
amongst strangers, with no one on whom he could lean in
his last moments ; while in Marietta he was surrounded
with warm and devoted friends who did all in their power
to alleviate his sufferings and make his final passage as
easy as mortality will allow. He died on the 10th of Janu-
ary, 1789, the day after the signing of the treaty with the
Indians at Fort Harmer, which accounts for the attendance
of the chiefs at his burial, and in less than eight months
after his arrival. The funeral took place on the 13th, and
was attended with all the ceremony and respect due to so
distinguished a person. On this occasion Dr. Drowne from
Rhode Island, delivered a funeral oration, a copy of which
is attached to the appendix.*
* The following order of procession is copied from the original manuscript, in the
handwriting of Winthrop Sargeant, secretary of the territory, and found among the
papers of Griffin Greene, in 1846.
184 J. M. VARNUM.
"Early in life Gen. Varnum married Martha, the eldest
daughter of Cromwell Childe, of Warren, in Rhode Island,
a family of veiy considerable distinction. Mrs. Varnum
was an amiable, virtuous, and high minded lady, and one
of the most cheerful, sociable, and best of wives. She sur-
vived her husband forty-eight years, and died at Bristol,
without issue, October 10th, 1837, at the advanced age of
eighty-eight years.
The career of Gen. Varnum was active, but brief. He
graduated at twenty; was admitted to the bar at twenty-two ;
entered the army at twenty-seven ; resigned his commission
at thirty-one; was member of Congress the same year; re-
sumed practice at thirty-three, and continued four years,
ORDER OF PROCESSION.
The Military.
Marshals. Marshals.
Mr. Wheaton, bearing the sword and Mr. Lord, bearing the civil commission
military commission of the deceased on on a mourning cushion.
a mourning cushion. Mr. Fearing, bearing the insignia of
Mr. Mayo, with the diploma and order masonry on a mourning cushion,
of Cincinnati on a mourning cushion.
Pall-holders.
Griffin Green, Esq.,
Judge Tupper,
The Secretary.
Pall-holders.
Judge Crary,
Judge Putnam.
Jud";e Parsons.
Private Mourners.
Charles Greene and Richard Greene.
Frederick Crary and Philip Greene.
Doctor Scott and Doctor Farley.
Deacon Story and Doctor Drowne.
Private citizens, two and two.
Indian chiefs, two and two.
The militia officers.
Officers of the garrison at Fort Harmer.
The civil officers.
The Cincinnati.
The Masons.
Messrs. Clark and Leech, Mr. Stratton and Mr. Balch, were requested to super-
intend the order of the procession. In returning from the grave the order was the
same, preceded by the military under Capt. Zeigler.
J. M. VARNUM. 185
was elected to Congress again at thirty-seven; emigrated
to the west at thirty-nine, and died at the early age of
forty. From what researches have been made, it conscien-
tiously can be stated that he was a man of boundless zeal,
of warm feelings, of great honesty, of singular disinterest-
edness; and, as to talents, of prodigal imagination, a dex-
trous reasoner, and a splendid orator. He was a man made
on a gigantic scale ; his very defects were masculine and
powerful, ' and, we shall not soon look upon his like
again.' "
SAMUEL IIOLDEN PARSONS.
BY HIS GRANDSON, S. II. PARSONS, ESQ., OF HARTFORD, CONN.
Maj. Gen. Samuel IIolden Parsons was born at Lyme,
in the county of New London, and state of Connecti-
cut, May 14th, 1737, and was the third son of the Rev.
Jonathan Parsons, a distinguished clergyman, who removed
from Lyme to Newburyport, Mass., in 1746. His mother
was the sister of Gov. Matthew Griswold, of Lyme, lineally
descended from Henry Wolcot, of Windsor, the ancestor of
all of that eminent name in Connecticut.
He graduated at Harvard College, in 1756; and after
completing his professional studies in the office of his uncle,
Gov. Matthew Griswold, he was admitted to the bar of New
London county, in February, 1759, and settled at Lyme in
the practice of law. [Note A.] In September, 1761, he
married the daughter of Richard Mather, of Lyme, a
lineal descendant of the Rev. Richard Mather, who was
born in Lawton, Lancaster county, England, 1596, and set-
tled as the first clergyman of Dorchester, Mass., Aug. 23,
1636, where he died, April 22d, 1669. In 1762, at the age
of twenty-five, he was elected a member of the General
Assembly of the colony of Connecticut, and was succes-
sively re-elected until his removal to New London in 1774.
During this period he received repeated proofs of public
confidence in various appointments of honor and trust.
In May, 1768, he was appointed by the General Assembly,
auditor, " to settle and adjust the colony accounts with the
treasurer and all others who have received any of the moneys
that belong to the colony." In 1769, the same appointment
S. H. PARSONS. 187
was continued, with " further powers to renew, and better
secure the moneys and estate due on mortgages, bonds, or
other securities, belonging to this colony, which are in dan-
ger of being lost."
In October, 1773, under an act of the general court, " con-
cerning the western lands, so-called, lying westward of Del-
aware river, within the boundaries of this colony," he was
appointed and associated with the Hon. Matthew Gris-
wold, Eliphalet Dyer, Roger Sherman, Wm. Samuel John-
son, Silas Dean, Wm. Williams, and Jedediah Strong, Esqrs.,
a committee with full power to assist his honor, Gov. Trum-
bull, in stating and taking " proper steps to pursue the claim
of the colony of Connecticut to said western lands ; and any
three of said committee were authorized and directed to
proceed to Philadelphia to wait on his honor, Gov. Penn, in
the subject, and to treat with Gov. Penn and the agent or
agents of the proprietaries of Pennsylvania, respecting an
amicable agreement between the colony and the aforesaid
proprietaries concerning the boundaries of this colony
and the province of Pennsylvania, to agree upon and as-
certain the boundaries between this colony, and the claim
of said proprietaries, and such agreement to lay before
the General Assembly for confirmation : but if said pro-
prietaries shall prefer joining in an application to his
majesty for commissioners to settle said line, then the
said committee are directed to join in behalf of the colony
in such application. The committee were likewise empow-
ered to treat with said Gov. Penn with respect to the peace
of the inhabitants who are settled upon said lands, and to
agree upon such measures as shall tend to preserve good
order, and to prevent mutual violence and contention while
the boundaries between this colony and the said province
shall remain undisturbed." In January, 1774, the same
committee were " appointed and empowered to assist his
188 S. H. PARSONS.
honor, Gov. Trumbull, in collecting and preparing all ex-
hibits and documents necessary to pursue and prosecute the
claim and title of the colony to the lands lying within the
boundaries of the grant and charter of the colony west of
the Delaware river, at the court of Great Britain, and to
make a proper statement of said cause, to be transmitted to
Great Britain for that purpose ; and to report to the General
Assembly, from time to time, of their proceedings thereon."
Mr. Parsons was an active member of this committee, and
contributed materially by his abilities and unwearied dili-
gence in promoting the important object of the appointment.
In May, 1773, he was appointed by the House of Repre-
sentatives of the Connecticut colony, one of the " Standing
Committee of Correspondence and Inquiry, to obtain all such
intelligence, and to take up and maintain a correspondence
with our sister colonies respecting the important considera-
tions mentioned and expressed in certain resolutions of the
patriotic House of Burgesses of Virginia in March last.
[Note B.] Mr. Parsons was an energetic member of this
committee, and entered zealously into the cause of the col-
onies. He had previously corresponded on these subjects
with the prominent leaders of the sister colony of Massa-
chusetts. Among the number was the eminent patriot,
Samuel Adams, who, says his biographer, (American Quar-
terly Register, February, 1841, p. 2,) originated the sugges-
tion of assembling the first Congress, which subsequently
met at New York — an act which led, at a later period, to
the continental Congress, to the confederation, and that
great chain of events connected with the war of independ-
ence. "The writer of the preceding paragraph was not
probably aware that among the manuscripts of Samuel
Adams, (in the possession of Hon. Mr. Bancroft.) an orig-
inal letter exists, written March 3d, 1773, by Samuel Holden
Parsons to Mr. Adams, originating the suggestion above
S. H. PARSONS. 189
stated, the honor of which has been heretofore attributed to
Mr. Adams-a letter so full of fervent patriotism it may not
be amiss to insert entire, as follows:
"Sir: When the spirit of patriotism seems expiring in
America in general, it must afford a very sensible pleasure
to the friends of American liberty to see the noble efforts
of our Boston friends in the support of the rights of America,
as well as their unshaken resolution in opposing any, the
least invasion of their charter privileges. I was called to
my father's on a very melancholy occasion, and designed to
have seen you before my return, but some unforeseen diffi-
culties prevented. I therefore take the liberty to propose to
your consideration whether it would not be advisable in the
present critical situation of the colonies, to revive an insti-
tution which had formerly a very salutary effect — I mean
an annual meeting of commissioners from the colonies to consult
on their general welfare. You may recollect this took place
about the year 1636, and was continued to 1684, between
the united colonies of New England. Although they had
no decisive authority of themselves, yet here everything was
concerted which will be easily suggested to your mind. If we
were to take our connection with Great Britain into consid-
eration, it would render the measure convenient, as at pres-
ent our state of independence on one another is attended
with very manifest inconvenience. I have time only to sug-
gest the thought to you, who I know can improve more on the
subject than is in my power, had I time. The idea of in-
alienable allegiance to any prince or state, is an idea to me
inadmissible; and I cannot see but that our ancestors, when
they first landed in America, were as independent of the
crown or king of Great Britain, as if they never had been
his subjects; and the only rightful authority derived to him
over this people, was by explicit covenant contained in the
190 S. H. PARSONS.
first charters. These are but broken hints of sentiments
I wish I was at liberty more fully to explain.
I am, sir, in haste, with esteem,
your most obedient servant,
Sam. H. Parsons.
To Mr. Samuel Adams, in Boston.
Forwarded by Mr. Howe."
In November, 1773, he was appointed "king's attorney
for New London county," and in May, 1774, was also ap-
pointed by the General Assembly, " agent for the governor
and company of the colony, to receive, sue for, and recover, all
such debts or demands as were due to the governor and
company of the colony, on bonds, notes of hand, or mort-
gages, deeds, from persons residing in the county of New
London ; as also to sue for and recover the possession of all
such lands within said county of New London, that belonged
to said governor and company and detained from them, with
full power to appear before any court or courts of judicature,
and represent said governor and company for the purpose
aforesaid. All these duties were faithfully and satisfactorily
performed. The limits of this brief sketch will just permit
a detailed view of his arduous labors as a member of the
committee of correspondence.
The following letter, addressed to the committee of Bos-
ton, on the 17th of May, 1774, (original among the manu-
scripts of Samuel Adams,) evinces an eagle-eyed vigilance,
and a fixed, determined spirit of resistance to oppression,
and a bold, daring patriotism, peculiar to the times that
tried men's souls.
' Hartford, May 17, 1774.
Gentlemen : This moment a post from New York arrived
here, on his road to Boston, with intelligence of the spirit
and firmness with which the inhabitants of that city concur
S. H. PARSONS. 191
with the friends of America, in support of the cause of our
country : we cannot suffer him to pass, without informing
you, who immediately feel the effects of ministerial despot-
ism, that the American cause, the state of the town of Bos-
ton in particular, and the effect and operation of the late
detestable act of an abandoned venal Parliament, were this
day brought before our House of Assembly for considera-
tion ; and, on discussing the matter, there is no reason to
doubt a hearty, spirited concurrence of our Assembly in
every proper measure for redress of our wrongs. A com-
mittee is appointed to report proper measures to be pursued,
and make drafts for the declaration of our rights, &c, which
will probably be reported and passed this week; a copy of
which will be transmitted as soon as possible. We consider
the cause the common cause of all the colonies, and doubt
not the concurrence of all to defend and support you. Let
us play the man for the cause of our country, and trust the
event to Him who orders all events for the best good of his
people. We should not have written you at this time, and
when no more of our committee are present, but that your
distressed condition requires the aid of every friend for your
relief. We cannot be warranted in having this made pub-
lic, as from our committee, there not being a quorum present,
but you are at liberty to use it, as from us personally, if it
can, in the least, tend to strengthen the hands and encour-
age the hearts of those in distress.
We are, gentlemen, (the post waiting,) your friends and
countrymen, the Committee of Correspondence at Hartford.
Samuel H. Parsons.
Nathaniel Walis, Jr.
To the Committee of Correspondence, at Boston."
[Superscribed to Samuel Adams, Boston.]
By a resolution of the House of Representatives of the
colony of Connecticut, passed June 3d, 1774, the Committee
192 S. II. PARSONS.
of Correspondence were empowered, on application to them
made, or from time to time, as might be found necessary, to
appoint a suitable number to attend a congress, or conven-
tion of commissioners, or committee of the several colonies,
in Boston, America, to consult and advise on proper mea-
sures for advancing the best good of the colonies ; and such
conferences, from time to time, to report to the House of
Representatives. [NoteC] In pursuance of the above reso-
lution, the Committee of Correspondence met on the 13th of
July, 1774, at New London, and nominated the Hon. Eli-
phalet Dyer, the Hon. Wm, Samuel Johnson, Erastus Wol-
cot, Silas Dean, and Richard Law, Esqs., either three of
whom were authorized and empowered, in behalf of the
colony, to attend the General Congress of the colonies, pro-
posed to be held at Philadelphia, the first day of September.
Three of the above-named gentlemen, viz. : Messrs. John-
son, Wolcot, and Law, by reason of previous engagements
and the state of their health, declined the nomination. The
committee met at Hartford, the ensuing month of August,
[Note D,] and nominated, in their place, the Hon. Roger
Sherman and Joseph Trumbull. The first-named gentle-
man, with the Hon. Eliphalet Dyer, and Silas Dean, Esq.,
represented the colony of Connecticut in the first Congress,
assembled at Carpenter's Hall, Philadelphia, September 5th,
1775.
The passing of the above resolution was immediately
communicated, by the Committee of Correspondence, to the
committee at Boston and the House of Representatives of
Massachusetts; they, therefore, on the 17th of June, adopted
a similar resolution, upon the motion of Samuel Adams.
[Note E.] To the colony of Connecticut, therefore, belongs
the honor, (heretofore claimed by Massachusetts,) of first
suggesting, and first acting upon the important subject of the
first National Congress of the American colonies. The first
S. H. PARSONS. 193
suggestion having been made by Mr. Parsons, in his letter to
-Mr. Samuel Adams, March, 1773, and the first action taken
by the Connecticut Legislature, June 3d, 1774, of which
Legislature Mr. Parsons was a prominent member.
Believing that the possession of Ticonderoga and Crown
Point, and the consequent command of lakes George and
Champlain, were objects of essential importance in the ap-
proaching conflict, Mr. Parsons, with a few Connecticut
gentlemen, formed the bold design of seizing the fortress
by surprise. Accordingly, soon after the battle of Lexing-
ton, they borrowed on their individual credit the requisite
funds from the colonial treasurer to enable them to carry on
the enterprise. As success depended upon secrecy and dis-
patch, and it would be difficult to march any number of men
through the country without discovering their plans, they de-
termined to proceed with a small body of volunteers, whom
they dispatched immediately on the 27th of April, under
Edward Mott, of Preston, a captain in Col. Parsons' regi-
ment. He proceeded to Bennington, where he met Col.
Ethan Allen, a native of Connecticut, who readily entered
into their views, and agreed to conduct the enterprise. After
having assembled at Castleton about two hundred and sev-
enty men, Col. Allen assumed the command, and success-
fully completed the whole plan; capturing the forts, and
making prisoners of the garrison without the loss of a single
man . This was the first blow • — the first offensive blow struck
by the colonies. At Concord and Lexington the Americans
acted on the defensive, but this was the first act in which our
countrymen were the assailants— the first attack planned
and successfully executed — an enterprise highly important
in its glorious results, and tending to inspire the Americans
with additional confidence in themselves. It wa3 planned
by Connecticut, executed under her instructions, and paid
for and maintained by her men and treasury. [Note F.]
194 S. H. PARSONS.
In 1770 Mr. Parsons was appointed major of the four-
teenth regiment of militia; and on the 26th of April, 1775,
was commissioned by the colony of Connecticut as colonel
of the sixth regiment, raised " for the special defense and
safety of the colony," and soon after marched to and con-
tinued at Roxbury, until the British evacuated Boston, when
he was ordered to New York. He was actively engaged at
the battle of Long Island, August, 1776. In describing this
battle, the historian Botta says, " Lord Percy came up with
his corps, and the entire columns descended by the village
of Bedford from the hights into the plain which lay between
the hills and the camp of the Americans. During this time,
Gen. Grant, in order to amuse the enemy and direct his at-
tention from the events which took place upon the route of
Flatland, endeavored to disquiet him upon his right: accord-
ingly as if he intended to force the defile which led to it, put
himself in motion at midnight, and attacked the militia of
New York and of Pennsylvania who guarded it. They at
first gave way, but Gen. Parsons being arrived, and having
occupied an eminence, he renewed the combat and maintained his
position until Brig. Gen. Lord Sterling came to his assistance
with fifteen hundred men. The action became extremely
animated, and fortune favored neither the one side nor the
other. The Hessians, on their part, had attacked the center
at break of day, and the Americans commanded by Gen.
Sullivan, valiantly sustained their efforts. At the same time,
the English ships, after having made several movements,
opened a very brisk cannonade against a battery established
in the little island of Red Hook, upon the right flank of the
Americans, who combated against Gen. Grant. This, also,
was a diversion, the object of which was to prevent them
from attending to what passed in the center and on the left.
The Americans defended themselves with extreme gallantry,
ignorant that so much valor was exerted in vain, since victory
S. H. PARSONS. 195
was already in the hands of the enemy," &c. In Mrs.
Williams' life of Olney, she says, "The militia of New
York and Pennsylvania were attacked by Percy, and about
giving way, when Parsons arrived to their relief, and re-
newed the combat, maintaining his position against fearful
odds until Sterling came to his relief." President Stiles, in
his diary, says " It was said that Grant, (British colonel,) was
slain by our Gen. Parsons."
In August, 1776, he was appointed by Congress briga-
dier-general, and was with the army at Harlem bights,
Kingsbridge, and in the battle of White Plains. He was sub-
sequently stationed at Peekskill with a portion of the army
to protect the important posts upon the North river, and
from thence was frequently detached on various expeditions.
In 1777, about the middle of May, returning to Peekskill
from Connecticut with a body of recruits, and learning while
passing through New Haven that the enemy had collected
a large quantity of forage and provisions at Sagg harbor,
for the supply of their army at New York, Gen. Parsons
determined to seize the same, and with that view dispatched
Lieut. Col. Meigs with about one hundred and sixty men, who
completely effected the object of the expedition, and also
burnt one of the enemy's armed vessels, took ninety pris-
oners, and re-crossed the sound without the loss of a single
man. This was the most important operation of the cam-
paign of 1777, and proves, by its successful results, great
wisdom and judgment in its design, and consummate skill
and valor in its execution. It was specially noticed by
Congress and by Washington in a very complimentary
manner, and is particularly described by Marshall, in his
life of Washington, vol. iii, p. 96, as well as in the follow-
ing letter from Gen. Parsons to Gov. Trumbull, dated New
Haven, May 30th, 1777 :
190 S. II. PARSONS.
" I sincerely congratulate your honor on the success of
our arms at Long Island. Col. Meigs left Sachem's Head
on Tuesday, at one o'clock, P. M., with a detachment of one
hundred and sixty men, officers included, and landed within
three miles of Sagg harbor, about one at night; and having
made the proper arrangements for attacking the enemy in
five different places, proceeded in the greatest order and
silence within twenty rods of the enemy, when they rushed
on with fixed bayonets upon the different barracks, guards
and quarters, while Capt. Troop, with a party under his
command, at the same time took possession of the wharves,
and vessels lying there. The alarm soon became general,
and an incessant fire of grape and round shot was kept up
from an armed schooner of twelve guns, which lay within
one hundred and fifty yards of the wharves, for an hour;
notwithstanding which, the party burnt all the vessels at the
wharf, killed and captured all the men who belonged to
them, destroyed about one hundred tons of hay, large quan-
tities of grain, ten hogsheads of rum, and other West India
goods, and secured all the soldiers who were stationed there.
The prisoners are about ninety, among whom are Mr. Chew
and Mr. Bell. I have the satisfaction of being informed
that the officers and men, without exception, behaved with
the greatest order and bravery, and not a man on our side
either killed or wounded. Eleven vessels, great and small,
were destroyed in the above affair, and the prisoners taken
were about one-third seamen ; the others, generally Ameri-
can recruits, are sent to Hartford." See letter to Gen.
Washington, May 25, 1777. [Note C]
In June, 1777, we find him in New Jersey, reinforcing the
army of Gen. Washington, encamped at Middlebrook, an-
ticipating an attack from Gen. Howe, who, it was supposed,
had designs on Philadelphia. The following letter, written
S. H. PARSONS. 197
June 22, 1777, by Gen. Parsons, to his wife, describing the
locality of a marching army watching the movements of his
enemy, may not be uninteresting :
" I have no way to tell you where I am, but by describing
the place which has no name. Our camp is about two miles
advanced in front of the mountain where the army is posted,
on the road to Quibbletovvn, about one and a half miles
north of that town, about two and a half miles northwest
of Samptown, about three miles west of Brovvsetown, and
about ten miles northwest of Spanktown, about eight miles
northeast from Brunswick, six miles from Middlebrook,
about one mile from the stream called Bonn's brook, east-
ward, but further distant from the village of that name. If
you can find me by this description,, I shall rejoice to hear
from you. I expect to remove from this place very soon.
Our neighborhood with the enemy gives us frequent skir-
mishes, though nothing very material has occurred since the
rascals retreated in so scandalous a manner from Somerset
court-house to Brunswick. Their grand encampment seems
now to be extended from Brunswick to Amboy. We are
induced to believe they are embarking for some other place,
and this state will soon be clear of them ; however, this is
at present not certain. I think their retreat must have an
exceeding good effect in every point of view. If they advance
to Millstone or Somerset to try the credit they may give
their friends, and see what number will join them, they must
be greatly mortified to find almost every man who had re-
ceived his majesty's protection and most gracious pardon in
arms against them. Not the militia -only of this state, but
almost every man in it able to bear arms, have voluntarily
flown to arms on this occasion. If they designed to pene-
trate the country to Philadelphia, they are convinced it is
impracticable. If they designed to turn the flank of our
army, and draw us from our strong grounds, they are
disappointed.
198 S. H. PARSONS.
The effect this maneuver will have on their army and our
forces, and on the minds of the disaffected in the country,
will probably be of great advantage to us. Our army is
now respectable, but not such as that we incline to attack
them in their strongholds at present; especially as delay is
considered as fatal to them, if we prevent their penetrating
the country. The general is very well, and in good spirits;
and our affairs have a more promising aspect, than since
the war began. Where their next movement will be, is yet
uncertain ; perhaps, if I live, I may see you sooner than I
expected, when I left home. About one thousand of my
brigade have joined us; more are expected every hour.
Col. Butler and Maj. Sill are at M orris town ; I expect they
will soon have orders to join their brigades. Every neces-
sary of life is exceedingly dear; salt is from ten to twenty dol-
lars per bushel, and other things very extravagant. I am in
very comfortable circumstances myself, though not very well.
Since writing the above, the enemy have evacuated
Brunswick, with great precipitation and evident signs of
fear, and are fled to Amboy. They left Brunswick at ten
o'clock, and Gen. Gaines took possession by the time they
were out. They left a considerable quantity of flour and
other things, but I have not seen the return yet. We pur-
sued them, and attacked their rear andjlank, to Amboy, where
they are going on board their ships. This state is once more
delivered from those pests of society ; who will next be in-
fested with them, is uncertain, but we are in high spirits,
and ready to march to any part of the country. I expect
orders to march, very soon, perhaps to the North ?*ivcr again,
where I shall write you.
I am, my dear, with love to children,
your affectionate husband,
Samuel II. Parsons."
After the retreat of Gen. Howe from New JeTsey, the
brigades of Parsons and Yarnum were detached from
S. H. PARSONS. 199
Middlebrook to Peekskill ; and those continental troops at
Peekskill, which had been ordered by Gen. Washington to
join him in New Jersey, and had proceeded as far as Pomp-
ton plains, now returned to their former station, with direc-
tions to hold themselves in readiness to move on the shortest
notice. (Marshall, Vol. iii, p. 119.) It was conjectured that
the British Gens. Burgoyne and Howe would endeavor to
efFect a junction of their two armies at Albany. Orders
were therefore given to Gen. Putnam, who commanded at
Peekskill, to prepare for such an event, by concentrating
at that post the militia of the country, and to guard against
any sudden attempt from New York. The importance of
defending the Highlands, and the necessity of large rein-
forcements, was strongly urged by Gen. Parsons, in a letter
to Gen. Washington, July 30, 1777. [Note H.] The result
shows the wisdom and foresight which prompted the sug-
gestion. Large requisitions were made on the militia of the
adjoining states, but before efFectual measures were con-
summated, Gen. Clinton, with a large force, advanced up
the North river, captured Forts Montgomery and Clinton,
and proceeding above the Highlands, compelled Gen. Put-
nam to evacuate the post at Peekskill, and Forts Inde-
pendence and Constitution, and return to Fishkill. In the
meantime, he visited Connecticut, to urge upon his country-
men the importance of prompt and energetic action. The
appeal was not in vain. Always ready in the horn* of trial,
that patriotic state had not forgotten that on the day suc-
ceeding the battle of Long Island, eighty- four companies of
her volunteers had marched to the relief of Boston : that she
had struck the most offensive and effectual blow for liberty,
and had sent one thousand of her brave sons to maintain
the conquest of Ticonderoga and Crown Point, planned by
her wisdom, and achieved by her valor : that more than four-
teen thousand of her brave and hardy yeomanry composed
200 S. H. PARSONS.
the army of Washington at New York, in 177G; yet she
was ready, ever ready, with her accustomed energy and
undaunted spirit, to shed her best blood in defense of the
rights of a bleeding country. A general levy was made,
and two thousand men obeyed the call, marched to meet
the enemy, and again planted the standard of liberty upon
the summit of the Highlands. (P. 30.)
Among the several military expeditions during the year
1777, allusion is made by Gen. Parsons in a letter to Gen.
Washington, dated December 29, 1777, to a descent on Long
Island for the purpose of destroying the timber and boards
prepared at the east end of the island, for barracks in New
York — to decoy the fleet at Southhold from Rhode Island,
loaded with wood, attack a regiment stationed about eight
miles eastward of Jamaica, and remove or destroy whatever
public stores should be found on the island at Shetocket.
With this view Col. Meigs was to have landed at Hempstead
harbor, to attack the regiment near Jamaica — Col. Webb
near Huntington to sustain Meigs, and afford such aid to
the division eastward as should be wanted, and destroy
whatever was collected in that part of the county of Suffolk
for the use of the enemy. The easternmost division under
Gen. Parsons landed at a place called Hockaback, about
forty miles from the east end of the island. The fleet, (ex-
cept the Swan and Harlem sloops of war and four other
vessels,) had sailed: one sloop had taken in her cargo of
timber and boards; the other three had taken none, but
being light, hauled into the bay under cover of the armed
vessels.
The loaded sloop was captured, and all the timber and
boards prepared for New York; also a large quantity of
wood cut for another fleet expected from New York. The
boats commanded by Capt. Ascough, of the ship Swan,
were attacked within twenty yards of the shore ; two of the
S. H. PARSONS. 201
officers, with their commander, badly wounded, as well as
several soldiers, and eight killed. The enemy's ships kept
a constant fire, but without execution. The eastern division
under Gen. Parsons, after accomplishing their designs, re-
turned to the main again, with about twenty prisoners.
Col. Meigs, who was to have crossed from Sawpits, through
the roughness of the water, was unable to pass over in his
boats. The other two divisions under Col. Webb, sailed
from Norwalk the evening of the 9th instant, with fair pros-
pects, but unfortunately the next morning, just before light,
the sloop in which Col. Webb embarked, fell in with the
British frigate Falcon, on her passage from New York to
Newport, was forced on shore near a spot called the Old
Man's, and captured.
This expedition was well planned, and would have been
fully and most successfully accomplished, but for the adverse
elements which prevented the embarkation of Col. Meigs,
and the unfortunate capture of Col. Webb by the frigate
Falcon, circumstances which could not have been anticipated
nor avoided.
In November, 1777, Gen. Parsons learning that the enemy
were practicing a system of warfare inconsistent with the
common principles of humanity, by burning the dwellings
and imprisoning the persons of peaceful and unoffending
citizens, with many outrageous acts, addressed to Gov. Tryon
a letter remonstrating against such savage barbarity. It is
written with energy, and that fervent patriotism peculiar to
the author, containing sentiments bold, dignified, and un-
answerable, while the reply of Gov. Tryon evinces a mind
puerile, ignoble, base and cowardly.
"Maroneck, Nov. 21st, 1777.
Sir : Adding to the natural horrors of war the most wan-
ton destruction of property, is an act of cruelty unknown to
civilized nations, and unaccustomed in war until the servants
202 S. II. PARSONS.
of the king of Great Britain have convinced the impartial
world, that no act of inhumanity, no stretch of despotism,
are too great to exercise toward those they term rebels.
Had any apparent advantage been derived from burning
the houses in Phillips' manor last Monday, there would have
been some reason to justify the measure ; but when no benefit
whatever can be proposed by burning those buildings and
stripping the women and children of apparel necessary to
cover them from the severity of a cold night, and when
captivating and leading in triumph to your lines, in the most
ignominious manner, the heads of those families, I know
not what justifiable cause to assign for those acts of cruelty,
nor can I conceive a necessity for your further orders to de-
stroy Tarrytown. You cannot be insensible it is every day
in my power to destroy the houses and buildings of Col.
Phillips and those belonging to the family of Delancey, each
as near your lines as those buildings were to my guards;
and notwithstanding your utmost vigilance, you cannot pre-
vent the destruction of every house this side of Kingsbridge.
It is not fear — it is not a want of opportunity has preserved
those buildings; but a sense of the injustice and savageness
of such a line of conduct, has hitherto saved them; and
nothing but necessity will induce me to copy the examples
of this sort, frequently set by your troops. It is not my in-
clination, sir, to war in this manner, against the inhabitants
within your lines, who suppose themselves within your king's
protection. But necessity will oblige me to retaliate in kind
upon your friends, to procure the exercise of that justice
which humanity used to dictate, unless your explicit disa-
vowal of the conduct of your two captains Emmerick and
Barns, shall convince me that those houses were burned
without your knowledge, and against your orders.
I am, sir, your humble servant,
Gov. Try on. Samuel H. Parsons."
S. H. PARSONS. 203
The following is Gov. Tryon's reply to the foregoing:
"Kingsbridge, November 23, 1777.
Sir : Could I possibly conceive myself accountable to a
revolted subject of the king of Great Britain, I might an-
swer your letter, received by the flag of truce yesterday, re-
specting the conduct of the party under Capt. Emmerick's
command, upon the taking of Peter and Cornelius Van
Tassell. I have, however, candor enough to assure you, as
much as I abhor every principle of inhumanity or ungener-
ous conduct, I should, were I in more authority, burn every
committee-man's house within my reach, as I deem those
agents the wicked instruments of the continued calamities
of this country ; and in order the sooner to purge this col-
ony of them, I am willing to give twenty-five silver dollars
for every active committee-man who shall be delivered up
to the king's troops. I guess, before the end of the next
campaign, they will be torn in pieces by their own country-
men, whom they have forcibly dragged, in opposition to
their principles and duty, (after fining them to the extent of
their property) to take up arms against their lawful sov-
ereign, and compelled them to exchange their happy con-
stitution for paper-rags, anarchy, and distress. The ruins
from the conflagration of New York, by the emissaries of
your party last year, remain a memorial of their tender re-
gard for their fellow-beings, exposed to the severity of a
cold night. This is the first correspondence I have held
with the king's enemies, on my part, in America; and as I
am immediately under the command of Sir Henry Clinton,
your future letters, dictated with decency, would be more
properly directed to his excellency.
I am, sir, your most obedient servant,
William Tryon, major-general.
To Gen. Parsons."
204 S. H. PARSONS.
Gen. Parsons to the Hon. Mr. Laurens, President of
Congress :
" Sir : On the 18th ult., Gen. Tryon sent about one hundred
men, under the command of Capt. Emmerick, to burn some
houses within about four miles of my guards, which, under
cover of a dark night, he effected, with circumstances of
most savage barbarity, stripping the clothing from the
women and children, and turning them, almost naked, into
the street, in a most severe night : the men were made pris-
oners, and led, with halters around their necks, with no
other clothes than their shirts and breeches, in triumph to
the enemy's lines. This conduct induced me to write to
Gen. Tryon upon the subject; a copy of my letter and his
answer I have herewith sent you. As the practice of deso-
lating villages, burning houses, and every species of unne-
cessary distress to the inhabitants, ought to be avoided, I
would not wish to retaliate in any instance, but where, in
its consequences, the enemy may be injured, or one of our
people saved by it. I am aware, if, in any instance, this
shall be done, I shall subject myself to censure, unless it is
in consequence of some general orders of Congress, by
which I may be warranted. As these instances may be fre-
quently repeated by the enemy, I wish to know in what, or
whether in any instance, Congress will direct a retaliation.
I am, sir, your obedient humble servant,
Samuel H. Parsons."
Gen. Parsons answer to Gen. Tryon's letter of 23d of
November, 1777 :
"Fisiikill, January 1st, 1778.
Sir: Since I received yours of the 23d of November, I
have till now been employed in matters of importance, which
have not left me at liberty to acknowledge the receipt of
your letter before, and lest you should think me wanting in
S. H. PARSONS. 205
respect due to your character, I beg your acceptance of
this letter, which closes our epistolary correspondence. It
will ever be my design 'to dictate with decency' any letters
I may send, however remote it may be from my intention
to copy the examples of the persons my duty compels me
to correspond with. As propriety and decency ought to be
observed in every transaction, even with the most infamous
characters, I never wish so nearly to assimilate myself to
them, as to be found destitute of that respect which is due
to my fellow-beings in every station in life. I should not
have entertained a thought that you had been deficient in
the duty you owe your king in every part of the globe, or
that you did not inherit the spirit of his ministry, which has
precipitated the present crisis, even if you had omitted to
assure me this had been the first correspondence you had
held with the king's enemies in America. The conflagra-
tion of New York you are pleased to charge to Ameri-
can troops, under the decent name of a party. This de-
serves no other answer than to assure you it has not the
least foundation in truth, and that we are assured it gains
no credit with officers whose rank and candor gives oppor-
tunity to know and believe the truth. This, like many
other occurrences, is charged to the account of those who
were never believed guilty, to excite to rage, and direct the
resentment of the ignorant and misruled against very im-
proper objects. Perhaps I might with equal propriety and
more truth suggest this unhappy event was brought about
by your own party, from the same motives which induced
them in August, 1776, to mangle the dead bodies of some
of the foreign troops, in a most shocking and inhuman
manner, and place them in the most conspicuous parts of
the road through which their brethren were to pass.
A justifiable resistance against unwarrantable invasions
of the natural and social rights of mankind, if unsuccessful
20G S. H. PARSONS.
according to the fashion of the world, will be termed rebel-
lion, but if successful, will be deemed a noble struggle for
the defense of everything valuable in life. Whether I am
considered as a revolted subject of the king of Great Brit-
ain, or in any other light by his subjects, is very immaterial,
and gives me little concern. Future ages, I hope, will do
justice to my intentions, and the present to the humanity
of my conduct. Few men are of talents so very inconsid-
erable as to be unalterably excluded from every degree of
fame. A Nero and Caligula have perpetuated their memo-
ries. Perhaps 'twenty silver dollars' may be motives with
those you employ to do great honor to your Machiavelian
maxims, especially that which advises never to commit crimes
to the halves, and leave lasting monuments of your princi-
ples and conduct, which will hand your memory down to
the latest posterity in indelible characters. We act on a
different scale, and hold ourselves indispensably bound never
to commit crimes, but to execute whatever is necessary for
our welfare, uninfluenced by sordid, mercenary motives. In
the field of conjecture I shall not attempt to follow you. You
may have a better talent of 'guessing' than I can boast of.
This satisfaction at least you may enjoy, that if }rou find
yourself mistaken in one conjecture, you have an undoubted
right to guess again. I shall content myself to wait until
the event verifies your prediction, or shows you are mis-
taken, assuring you I shall never pursue your measures for
restoring peace, whether ' my authority is greater or less,"1 fur-
ther than necessity shall compel me to retort the injuries
the peaceable inhabitants of this country may receive from
the hand of violence and oppression.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
Samuel H. Parsons.
Gov. Tryon."
During the winter of 1777, Gen. Parsons, suffering under
S. H. PARSONS. 207
feeble health, and a constitution broken down in the service
of his country, expressed to the commander-in-chief a desire
to retire temporarily from the active duties of the army, but
in consequence of the urgent solicitation of Gen. Washing-
ton, he relinquished the desire, as may appear by the fol-
lowing letter, dated
"Highlands, on Hudson river, February 18th, 1778.
Dear General : I had the honor of receiving yours of the
10th of January about eight days since, at this place, where I
have returned to take charge of my brigade. In the present
state of the army, I shall continue in my command, lest a
different conduct may prove injurious to the cause of my
country, at this critical conjuncture of affairs. However
my inclination may induce me to retire to the enjoyment of
domestic happiness, I cannot think myself warranted to in-
dulge ray wishes at a time when so many officers under my
command are desirous of leaving the toils of war for the
pleasures of private life."
About this time Gen. Putnam went to Connecticut and
left West Point, and all the troops stationed at the High-
lands, under the command of Gen. Parsons, with the addi-
tional duty of constructing military works at West Point, which
had been delayed in consequence of misapprehension in
regard to the several resolves of Congress upon the subject.
It seems that on the 5th of November, 1777, Congress ap-
pointed Gen. Gates to command in the Highlands, connect-
ing that post with the northern department, and empowered
him to make obstructions in and fortifications on the banks
of the Hudson river, but as he was made President of the
Board of War, he never entered upon these duties. Again,
on the 18th of February, Gov. Clinton was requested to
take the superintendence of the works, but the multiplicity of
his civil employments made it necessary for him to decline
208 S. II. PARSONS.
the undertaking. Meantime, Gen. Putnam went to Con-
necticut, and left the post in charge of Gen. Parsons,
who entered promptly upon the discharge of his arduous and
perplexing duty.
In a letter of 18th of February, to Gen. Washington, he
remarks, "Almost every obstacle within the circle of pos-
sibility has happened, to retard the progress of the obstruc-
tions in and fortifications on the banks of Hudson river.
Preparations for completing them are now in a state which
will afford a good prospect of completing them in April, and
unless some difficulties yet unforeseen should prevent, I
think we cannot fail, by the forepart of that month, to have
them in a good degree of forwardness. Nothing on my
part shall be wanting to put them in a state of forwardness
to answer the reasonable expectations of the country, as
early as possible."
Again, in a letter to Gen. Washington, dated 7th of
March, 1778, explaining the perplexities arising under the
resolves of Congress of the 5th of November, and 18th of
February, in regard to Gen. Gates and Gov. Clinton, whose
powers were deemed strictly personal, he remarks, " I shall
exert myself to have the works in a state of defense as
early as possible, by the due exercise of such directions as
your excellency shall please to give me. Col. Radiere, find-
ing it impossible to complete the fort and other defenses
intended at this post, in such manner as to effectually with-
stand the attempts of the enemy to pass up the river early
in the spring, and not choosing to hazard his reputation on
works erected on a different scale, calculated for a short du-
ration only, has desired leave to wait on your excellency
and Congress, which I have granted him. In justice to Col.
Radiere, I ought to say he appears to be a gentleman of
science and knowledge in his profession, and disposed to
S. H. PARSONS. 209
render us every service lie is able to do. I shall expedite the
building of such works as are most necessary for immediate
defense."
Again, in another letter, dated
"Camp West Point, March 16th, 1778.
On the 14th inst. I had the honor of receiving your letter
of the 7th of March, and also one of the 8th, containing a
copy of the 5th of March. I shall pay particular attention
to forwarding the work of the boats designed for transport-
ing over, as well as to those which are to be employed for
defense on Hudson river. I have ordered all the boats and
other crafts on the river to be collected in different places,
and put in the best possible state immediately. When I
was last at Poughkeepsie the gun-boats were in such a
state as to give hopes of their being fit for use within a few
weeks ; and as Gov. Clinton has been kind enough to take
upon himself the direction of them, I think we may
hope to see them completed soon. I will send to Albany,
and know the state of the boats there, and as the river will
be soon clear of ice, I will order down such boats and other
crafts as can be had there, fit for transportation over the river.
If the chain is complete, we shall be ready to stretch it over the
river next week. A sufficient number of chevaux de frise to
fill those parts left open last year, are ready to sink as soon
as the weather and the state of the river will admit it to be
done. 1 hope to have two sides and one bastion of the fort in
some state of defense in about a fortnight. The other sides
need very little to secure them. There is a prospect of
having five or six cannon mounted in one of our batteries
this week. I think the works are going on as fast as could be
expected from our small number of men, total want of mate-
rials provided, and of money to purchase them. We have
borrowed, and begged, and hired money to this time. I have
several times advanced my last shilling toward purchasing
14
210 S. H. PARSONS.
materials, &c. ; and I believe this has been the case with
almost every officer here. As we still live, I hope we
shall accomplish the works in the river in season, if the en-
emy move with their accustomed caution and tardiness;
when I hope Congress will repay what has been advanced,
and cannot think us blamable if we have been compelled
to save the public credit, and forward the business intrusted
to our care."
From the above correspondence it appears that the forti-
fications at West Point, and upon the Highlands, were built
under the superintendence of Gen. Parsons, where he was
stationed the principal part of the years 1778 and 1779, but
was frequently detached upon expeditions to protect the
sea-coast of his native state, near Horseneck, Greenwich,
New Haven and New London. Time and space, however,
will not permit a full statement of his services. It appears
also from his numerous opinions, recorded and preserved
among the manuscripts of Gen. Washington, that he was
frequently consulted in questions of great moment, and in
critical times of public danger.
On the 23d of June, 1779, Gen. Washington removed his
head-quarters in consequence of the enemy having taken
possession of Verplank's Point and Stony Point, from
Smith's Clove to New Windsor, where he might be contigu-
ous to the forts, and better situated to attend to different
parts of the army on both sides of the Hudson river. The
main body of the army was left at Smith's Clove, under the
command of Gen. Putnam. The object now in view was
to guard against an attack upon West Point. Gen. Mc-
Dougall was transferred to the command of West Point.
Three brigades were stationed on the east side of the river;
Nixon's at Constitution island, Parsons'1 opposite West Point,
with instructions to assist in constructing the works, [Note K,]
and Huntington on the principal road leading to Fishkill.
S. H. PAKSONS. 211
These three brigades were put under the command of Gen.
Heath, who had been recently ordered to repair from Boston
to he ad -quarters.
In July, 1779, Gen. Washington, understanding that Gen.
Tryon had invaded Connecticut with twenty-six hundred
British troops, immediately directed Gen. Parsons, (then
stationed near the Highlands,) to hasten to the scene of
action, with a view of giving confidence to his countrymen,
and guiding their efforts. [Note L.] Placing himself at the
head of one hundred and fifty continental troops who were
supported by the militia under Gen. Erastus Wolcott, he at-
tacked the British in the morning of the 12th, so soon as they
had landed at Norwalk ; and, although too weak to prevent
the destruction of that fort, he harassed and annoyed the
enemy throughout the day in such a manner that they re-
embarked and returned to Huntington bay for fresh supplies
of artillery and reinforcements of men; and soon after
abandoned the undertaking of penetrating the Connecticut
territory, returned to New York. [Note M.] Before in-
vading Connecticut, Gen. Tryon addressed to Gens. Putnam
and Parsons the following letter :
"New York, June 18th, 1779.
Sir: By one of his majesty's ships of war, which arrived
here last night from Georgia, we have intelligence that the
British forces were in possession of Fort Johnstone, near
Charlestown, the first of June. Surely it is time for rational
Americans to wish for a reunion with the parent state, and
to adopt such measures as will most speedily effect it.
I am your very humble, obedient servant,
Wm. Tryon, major-general.
To Gen. Putnam, or, in his absence, to Gen. Parsons."
The following is Gen. Parson's reply :
"Camp, Highlands, September 7th, 1779.
Sir: I should have paid an earlier attention to your
212 S. II. PARSONS.
polite letter of the 18th of June, had I not entertained some
hope of a personal interview with you, in your descents
upon the defenseless towns of Connecticut, to execute your
master's vengeance upon rebellious women and formidable
hosts of boys and girls, who were induced, by insidious pro-
clamations, to remain in those hapless places, and who, if
they had been suffered to continue in the enjoyment of that
peace their age and sex entitled them to expect from civil-
ized nations, you undoubtedly supposed would prove the
scourge of Britain's veteran troops, and pluck from you
those laurels with which that fiery expedition so plentifully
crowned you. But your sudden departure from Norwalk,
and the particular attention you paid to your personal safety,
when at that place, and the prudent resolution you took, to
suffer the town of Stamford to escape the conflagration to
which you had devoted Fairfield and Norwalk, prevented
my wishes on that head. This will, I hope, sufficiently apol-
ogize for my delay in answering your last letter. By letters
from France, we have intelligence that his Catholic majesty
declared war against Great Britain in June last; that the
combined fleets of France and Spain, amounting to more
than sixty sail of the line, having formed a junction with
twenty-five thousand land forces, are now meditating a
blow on the British dominions in Europe; and that the
grand fleet of old England find it very inconvenient to ven-
ture far from their harbors. In the West Indies, Admiral
Byron, having greatly suffered in a naval engagement, cs-
caped, with his ships in a very shattered condition, to St.
Christopher's, and covered his fleet under the batteries on
the shores, and has suffered himself to be insulted in the
road of that island by the French admiral; and Count de
Estaing, after reducing the islands of St. Vincent and Gren-
ada to the obedience of France, defeating and disabling the
British fleet: has sailed for Hispaniola, where it is expected
S. H. PARSONS. 213
he will be joined by the Spanish fleet in those seas, and at-
tack Jamaica.
The storming your strong works at Stony Point, and cap-
turing the garrison, by our brave troops ; the brilliant suc-
cesses of Gen. Sullivan against your faithful friends and
allies, the savages; the surprise of Paulus Hook, by Maj.
Lee; the flight of Gen. Provost from Carolina; and your
shamefully shutting yourselves up in New York and the
neighboring islands, are so fully within your knowledge, as
scarcely to need repetition.
Surely it is time for Britons to rouse from their delusive
dreams of conquest, and pursue such systems of future con-
duct as will save their tottering empire from total destruction.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
Samuel H. Parsons.
To Maj. Gen. Try on."
On the 29th of October, 1780, he was appointed, by Gen.
Washington, one of the board of general officers at West
Point, for the trial of Maj. Gen. Andre, of the British army,
as a spy.
In the same month he received from Congress, a com-
mission as major-general, and succeeded Gen. Putnam in
the command of the Connecticut line of the continental
army.
The defenseless inhabitants between Greenwich and New
York, having been much annoyed, and suffered great losses
by the frequent incursions of Col. Delancey's corps at Mor-
risiana, Gen. Parsons determined to destroy the enemy's
barracks, which could not be rebuilt during the winter; and
thus afford some protection to the inhabitants in that vicinity.
For this purpose, he advanced, with rapid marches, to West
Chester and Morrisiana, with a few continentals, attacked
the British troops, and effectually accomplished his object.
Gen. Washington, in a letter addressed to the President
214 S. II. PARSONS.
of Congress, January 31st, 1781, thus alludes to this expe-
dition : " Inclosed are two reports of Maj. Gen. Parsons and
Lieut. Col. Hull, respecting our enterprise againt Delancey's
corps at West Chester ; in which, with a small loss on our
side, the barracks of the corps, and a large quantity of for-
age were destroyed, fifty-two prisoners and a considerable
number of horses and cattle brought off, and a bridge across
Harlem river, under one of the enemy's redoubts, burnt.
Gen. Parsons' arrangements were judicious; and the con-
duct of the officers and men employed on the occasion, is
entitled to the highest praise. The position of the corps, two
or three miles within some of the enemy's redoubts, required
address and courage in the execution of the enterprise."
Congress passed a resolution directing Gen. Washington
to present to Gen. Parsons and the officers under his com-
mand, the thanks of Congress for his judicious arrangements,
and for the courage displayed by the officers and men.
In the year 1781, he was appointed by the governor and
council of Connecticut to command the state troops and
coast guards, raised for the protection of the state, and to
dispose them in such manner as he should judge expedient
to protect the inhabitants from the incursions of the enemy
on the sea-coast.
At the close of the war he resumed the practice of law
in Middletown, whither his family had been removed during
the Revolution, and frequently represented that town in the
Legislature.
In the prosecution of measures for the formation of Mid-
dlesex county, he was more engaged and more influential
than any other man. He was an active and influential
member of the state convention which assembled at Hart-
ford, January, 1781, and adopted the constitution of the
United States. He was a member and for some time presi-
dent of the society of Cincinnati, in Connecticut.
S. H. PARSONS. 215
In the latter part of the year 1785, he was appointed by
Congress, a commissioner, in connection with Gens. Richard
Butler, of Pittsburg, and George Rogers Clarke, of Ken-
tucky, to treat with the Shaivanoe Indians, near the falls of
Ohio, for extinguishing the aboriginal title to certain lands
within the Northwestern Territory. This treaty was held on
the northwestern bank of the Ohio, near the mouth of the
Great Miami, January 31st, 1786, and the Indians then ceded
to the United States a large and valuable tract upon which
the flourishing city of Cincinnati now stands.
Under the ordinance of Congress of 1787, he was ap-
pointed judge in and over the territory of the United States
northwest of the river Ohio. The commission is dated Oc-
tober 23d, 1787, and signed by Arthur St. Clair, president,
and Charles Thomson, secretary of Congress. In 1789 he
was nominated by Gen. Washington, by and with the consent
of the senate, chief judge in and over the same territory,
then embracing the present states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois
and Michigan, which office he held until his death. His
associates were Gen. James Varnum, of Rhode Island, and
the Hon. John Cleves Symmes, of New Jersey. In 1789
he was appointed by the state of Connecticut a commis-
sioner with Gov. Oliver Wolcott, of Litchfield, and Hon.
James Davenport, of Stamford, to hold a treaty with the
Wyandots and other tribes of Indians, for extinguishing
their claim, (the aboriginal title to the lands called the Con-
necticut Western Reserve,) and in the fall of 1789 he visited
that country with a view to preliminary arrangements for
holding a treaty with them. While returning to his resi-
dence at Marietta, he was drowned in descending the rapids
of the Big Beaver river, the 17th of November, 1789, aged
fifty-two years.
Among the manuscripts of Gen. Parsons in the possession
of his grandson, Samuel H. Parsons, of Hartford, are a
216 S. H. PARSONS.
journal of observations and occurrences when he first vis-
ited the western country ; a communication to the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences in October, 1786, describing
the western mounds, manners and customs of the aborigines ;
original address to the Shawanoes tribes ; besides a volumin-
ous correspondence before, during, and after the Revolu-
tionary war, with the distinguished men of that period.
GEN. BENJAMIN TUPPER*
Gen. Benjamin Tupper was born at Staughton, Mass., in
that part now called Sharon, in 1738, but the precise time
is unknown to his descendants in this state. He was the
youngest of eight children of his parents, seven sons and
one daughter. His brothers' names were Mayhew, Levi,
Seth, Simeon, Reuben and Judah. His sister, Joanna, was
married to Benjamin Estie, of Staughton. His brothers
emigrated to different parts of the country. Mayhew went
to New York, Simeon lived in Vermont, and with two of
his sons, served in the Revolutionary army. Reuben died
at Sharon, Judah came to Marietta with Gen. Tupper, where
he died in 1793. Gen. Tupper's father died when he was
quite young, and he was apprenticed to a tanner in Dor-
chester by the name of Witherton, with whom he lived until
he was sixteen years of age. After leaving Dorchester, he
worked on the farm of Joshua Howard, of Easton, with
whom he continued to reside the most of his time until he
was married.
At the commencement of the French war, he engaged as
a private soldier in the army, and was connected with it the
most of the time for two or three years, though absent from
it during the winter, except in the winter of 175G-7, when
he acted as clerk of a company in the eastern army. Whether
he was in any engagement during that war, is not known.
He kept a district school in Easton two or three winters
during the war or soon after.
* The sketch of the life of Gen. Benjamin Tupp°r was written by his grandson,
Anselm Tupper Nye, of Marietta.
218 BENJAMIN TUPPER.
He was married at Easton, November 18th, 1762, to Hul-
dah White, who resided in the same town, and with whom
he had long been acquainted. She was a woman of no
ordinary talents, and was eminently fitted for the trials and
difficulties through which they were called to pass in the
latter period of their lives. She died at Springfield, now
Putnam, Ohio, on the 21st of February, 1812. She was
well known to many of the now oldest inhabitants of Ma-
rietta, having survived her husband more than twenty years.
They resided at Easton for a short time after their mar-
riage, when they removed to Chesterfield, in Hampshire
county, Mass., which continued to be the residence of his
family until they removed to Marietta.
At the commencement of our Revolutionary war, Gen.
Tupper was a lieutenant of the militia, in Chesterfield. His
first military duty during that war was in stopping the Su-
preme Court acting under the authority of the crown, at
Springfield. Under the command of Maj. Halley, of North-
ampton, a body of men prevented the sitting of the court,
thus manifesting the determination of the people of that
state to resist the authority of the British government.
In 1775 he held the rank of major of a regiment of six
months men, serving near Boston. While there he collected
a number of boats and men for an expedition to Castle
island, in Boston harbor. They passed with muffled oars
close to the British fleet, then in the harbor, to the castle,
burnt the light-house, brought off considerable property in
light articles, and returned safe to the main land without
any loss of men, or perhaps with the loss of one man. The
enemy repaired the light-house, and Maj. Tupper in another
expedition with boats, burnt it the second time. After his
return from one of these expeditions, he wrote the following
letter to Gen. WTard:
BENJAMIN TUPPER. 219
"Chelsea, Wednesday, 10 o'clock, P. M.
Sir : By Lieut. Shepherd you will receive two horses and
eleven head of cattle taken from the Governor's island.
I obeyed my orders in burning the boat. If it should seem
that I went too much beyond in burning the house, hope
your honor will suspend hard thoughts until I am so happy
as to see you. I was not so lucky as to find any of liberty ;
was so unhappy as to leave a number of horses on the
island, which I humbly conceive I can give a sufficient rea-
son for. My party is all well, in good spirits : the wind very
high : shall return to camp as soon as possible : must
humbly beg the favor of the sorrel horse, if you judge in
your known candor that I deserve him. As the cattle too
were not taken in the enemy's camp, I conceive they will
belong to the party.
I am, with the highest esteem, your honor's most obedient,
humble servant, Benj. Tupper.
To the Hon. Gen. Ward."
In Washington's Letters, vol. ii, page 20, the following
account of one of these expeditions will be found :
"August 4th, 1775.
The other happened at the light-house. A number of
workmen having been sent down to repair it, with a guard
of twenty-two marines and a subaltern, Maj. Tupper, last
Monday morning, about two o'clock, landed there with about
three hundred men, attacked them, killed the officer and four
privates; but being detained by the tide on his return, he
was attacked by several boats ; but he happily got through,
with the loss of one man killed, and another wounded. The
remainder of the ministerial troops (three of whom are
badly wounded) he brought ofF prisoners, with ten Tories, all
of whom are on their way to Springfield jail. The rifle-
men, in these skirmishes, lost one man, who (we hear) is a
prisoner in Boston jail."
220 BENJAMIN TUPPER.
In the following winter, an incident occurred, which serves
to illustrate the character of Gen. Tupper, for cool, delib-
erate courage, which he possessed in an eminent degree.
Three men in a boat had been out fishing; while out, the
wind shifted, and blew the ice toward the shore, where they
must land. The men attempted to return, but found their
way completely blocked up with floating ice. Their situa-
tion was one of great danger. All their efforts to get their
boat through the ice were unavailing; nor were they able
to turn back. The wind blew severely cold, and they were
in a situation in which they must soon have perished, in
view of thousands of spectators, full of consternation, but
making no effort to relieve these perishing men. Maj. Tup-
per learning their condition, instantly contrived a plan for
their relief. Procuring three pair of rackets, or snow shoes,
he repaired immediately to the shore, putting one pair on
his own feet, and with a pair under each arm, made his way
for the boat, over the floating ice. Fixing a pair of rackets
to the feet of two of the men, and encouraging the other
that he should be relieved in his turn, he succeeded in bring-
ing them all to shore.
In 1776, Gen., then Col., Tupper, commanded a regiment
of six months men. With the other troops, they repaired
to New York before the battle on Long Island. Tupper's
and Nixon's regiments from Massachusetts, and Sage's from
Connecticut, were placed on Governor's island in the har-
bor. The next morning after the battle, the Roebuck man-
of-war was ordered up to summon the garrison on Governors
island, to surrender. An officer, with a flag of truce from
the ship, landed from a boat, and held up his flag. An of-
ficer from the fort, Maj. Coburn, was dispatched to answer,
that " the fort would not be surrendered at any rate."
When these officers met, they found themselves to be old
acquaintances, having served together during the French
BENJAMIN TDPPER. 221
war. After shaking hands heartily, and some little conver-
sation, the British officer made known his errand; Coburn
told him the fort would not be surrendered, and they parted.
The ship soon opened her fire upon the American fort, which
was returned by the fort, but to little purpose ; their work
was not capable of being defended against the fire of the
ship ; hence all were in alarm. During the previous night,
the American troops on Long Island had been taken off with
boats, with all their baggage, light artillery, and entrench-
ing tools. Under the superintendence of Col. Rufus Put-
nam, acting then as chief engineer of the army, or of Gen.
Israel Putnam, boats were sent to Governor's island, and
Tupper's and Nixon's regiments were brought to the city of
New York, but Sage's regiment was left behind. While the
troops were thus landing in the city, the officer in command
hoisted his flag to surrender ; upon which the firing ceased.
The boats were hurried from the city back to the island,
and brought off Sage's regiment, with the loss of one killed,
and one wounded.
The next military event in which Gen. Tupper is known
to have been engaged, was in August, 1776, when he was
sent in command of a number of gun-boats, or galleys, up
the North river. Near Fort Washington an engagement
took place between these boats and several ships of war
belonging to the enemy. Gen. Washington makes honor-
able mention of this engagement, in his letter dated August
5th, 177G, as follows :
" The inclosed copy of a letter from Col. Tupper, who had
the general command of the galleys, will inform Congress
of the engagement between them and the ships of war up
the North river, on Saturday evening, and of the damage
we sustained. What injury was done to the ships 1 cannot
ascertain. It is said they were hulled several times by our
shot. All accounts agree that our officers and men, during
222 BENJAMIN TUPPER.
the whole of the affair, behaved with great spirit and bra-
very. The damage done to the galleys shows, beyond ques-
tion, that they had a warm time of it." See Washington's
letter, vol. ii, p. 170. In this engagement his eldest son,
then thirteen years of age, was with him.
In the campaign of 1777, Col. Tupper served with his
regiment in the northern army under Gen. Gates. What
part he took in the battle of Bemis' hights is not known;
but he is mentioned by Wilkinson, in his memoir, as attend-
ing a council with Gen. Larned, Col. Wilkinson, Col. Brooks,
and others, the day after that battle, in regard to a retreat
of the left wing of the American army, which had been pre-
cipitated on the enemy when they held a strong position
across the Fishkill. The left wing, according to the sugges-
tion of Wilkinson, fell back half a mile, which position was
held until the surrender of Burgoyne.
In 1778, Col. Tupper served under Gen. Washington, and
was in the battle of Monmouth, June 28th, on which occa-
sion he had his horse killed under him.
In 1780, he had charge of the work of preparing and
stretching a chain across the Hudson at West Point. The
work was completed in April, and placed in the river under
his direction.
In May, 1781, Col. Tupper returned to his family on fur-
lough. While at home he took an important part in dis-
persing a mob arising out of the arrest and trial of one
Samuel Eli, for high treason, at Northampton.
During the campaign of 1781, the Indian and Tory refu-
gees threatened the northern frontier of New York, on the
Mohawk and Lake George. A regiment from Massachu-
setts was sent up into that quarter. In September or Octo-
ber an action took place between these troops and some
Tories and Indians, in which the major of the regiment was
killed. After the action, Gen. Stark, who commanded on
BENJAMIN TUPPER. 223
the northern frontier, sent out a scout to Lake George. The
officers reported that they had discovered the camp of a
large force, by their fire. Stark immediately sent off
an express to head-quarters for a reinforcement, and Col.
Tupper's regiment, with Col. Kinston's, of New York, went
up. While they were waiting for the enemy, the news
from the main army reached them that Cornwallis had sur-
rendered at Yorktown. With this event the war was in effect
closed. Col. Tupper's regiment, however, remained at the
north. About the close of the war he was promoted to the
rank of brigadier- general by brevet. After the close of the
war he returned to his family at Chesterfield, and soon after
was elected by his town as their representative in the Legis-
lature of Massachusetts.
During the darkest period of the Revolutionary war, Gen.
Washington had turned the attention of officers and soldiers
to the valley of the Ohio, as a place of refuge to which
they might retire, should the British army be successful
against them. The result of that war rendered such a re-
treat unnecessary ; notwithstanding, many of the officers
and soldiers of the army looked to the west as a retiring
place for themselves and their families, after a war of eight
years. Among the most prominent of this class was Gen.
Tupper. Indeed, in the foresight of Gen. Rufus Putnam
and himself, the enterprise of the settlement at Marietta
had its origin.
The ordinance of 1785 provided for a survey of a portion
of the lands northwest of the river Ohio. In the summer
of that year the first regiment of United States troops, or
one battalion of them, had taken post at the mouth of the
Muskingum, under the command of Maj. Doughty, and
erected a fort, which received the name of Fort Harmer.
In that year Gen. Rufus Putnam had been appointed to
command the survey of a portion of the lands in Ohio, but
224 BENJAMIN T UPPER.
being otherwise engaged, Gen. Tupper was appointed in his
place. In the summer of that year he came as far west as
Pittsburg. The condition of the Indian tribes prevented the
execution of that work until the treaty made by Gen. Par-
sons, and others, on the Miami, in January, 1786. Gen.
Tupper returned to Massachusetts in the winter of 1785-6,
but left again for the west in June, 1786, with his eldest son,
Maj. Anselm Tupper. That season the survey of the seven
ranges was completed, under his direction. During that
season he visited Maj. Doughty, at Fort Harmer.
On Gen. Tupper's return from his first visit to the west,
he visited his friend, Gen. Rufus Putnam, then residing at
Rutland. In the language of another, "A night of friendly
offices and conference between them, gave at the dawn a
development to the cherished hope and purpose of Gen.
Tupper. They united in a publication which appeared in
the public papers of New England, on the 25th of January,
1786, headed « Information,' dated January 10th, 1786, signed
Rufus Putnam, Benjamin Tupper."
As the result of this conference and address, the Ohio
Company was formed. Dr. M. Cutter, in connection with
Winthrop Sargent, was appointed to negotiate a contract
with Congress for land. At the third meeting of the com-
pany at Boston, August 29th, 1787, Dr. Cutter reported that
the contract had been completed.
The spirit of disorganization which had manifested itself
in Massachusetts in 1781, was not entirely eradicated; on
the contrary, it made its appearance in a more formidable
and extensive manner in 1786-7, in what is termed Shays'
insurrection. The only officers of the Revolutionary army
engaged in this affair were Shays, who had been a captain
in Gen. Putnam's regiment, Capt. Wiley, and Ensign Day.
Each of them had a party, and their aggregate force
amounted to about two thousand men. When Gen. Tupper
BENJAMIN TUPPER. 225
returned from the west, after completing the survey of
the seven ranges, this insurrection had assumed a formida-
ble aspect. Immediately on his return he took an active
part in putting it down. The duty of calling out the militia
to suppress this rebellion, devolved on Gen. Shepard, who
acted under the orders of the governor. Gen. Tupper of-
fered his services to him, and acted in the capacity of volun-
tary aid. By his advice, and through his influence, the plan
of calling out the militia by drafts or in mass was abandoned,
and that of calling for volunteers adopted. This was a
measure of the first importance, as it served to distinguish
between the friends of the government and those who were
secretly infected with the spirit of rebellion. Under this
plan, out of a company in Chesterfield, fifteen to eighteen
offered their services. In the northern part of Hampshire
county, an entire regiment was organized for this service,
to meet at Chesterfield. Gen. Tupper had been appointed
a justice of the peace about two years previous. His ef-
forts, in connection with an address to the people, which he
had made a short time before, combined with the presence
of the volunteers, had made a favorable impression on
many persons of good standing. While the regiment raised
in the northern part of the county were being assembled at
Chesterfield, Gen. Tupper, as magistrate, administered the
oath of allegiance, as prescribed by the laws of the state,
to many of the people. This was also a measure which
served to distinguish the friends of law from the mob.
The immediate object of Shays and his party was to get
possession of the arms and public stores at Springfield. At
that point, therefore, the troops raised by the state were con-
centrated. Gen. Tupper, after his arrival at Springfield,
acting under the orders of Gen. Shepard, took charge of the
organization of the different companies as they arrived.
He ordered the different fragments of companies into regular
15
226 BENJAMIN TUPPER.
order, and officered them out of the best officers on the
ground. He also organized a small troop of horse, under
Capt. Buffington ; and selected all who were in any man-
ner acquainted with artillery duty, adding others to them,
and had them all regularly trained every day. The men
were all armed from the arsenal, the arms being there in
good order, and all things were put in the best possible or-
der for defense. Shays was not, however, in any hurry to
make an attack, as he wished to increase his force. Gen.
Shepard's orders from the governor, were simply to defend
the stores; however, he made no effort to disturb any of
Shays' men. The consequence was that Shays' different
parties collected around Gen, Shepard's camp, and cut off
his supplies from the country. In the meantime, Gen. Lin-
coln had collected a body of men at Bristol, to aid Gen.
Shepard. Two weeks elapsed before any movement was
made by Gen. Lincoln. An express was sent to him, to in-
form him of the situation of Gen. Shepard. When the
express reached Gen. Lincoln, only a part of his troops
were ready to march, but he immediately pushed on one
division, by forced marches; but before they reached Spring-
field, Shays had made his attack, and been defeated. By
some means Capt. Buffington had intercepted a letter from
Shays to some of his subordinates, directing the manner of
attack. On obtaining this letter, Gen. Tupper took imme-
diate measures to fortify the camp by log forts, commenced
like block-houses, at each point of attack, and three brush
forts as outworks. This was done with great promptness
and dispatch. In the meantime, the troops were supplied
with provisions by the people of Springfield.
Shays finally advanced to attack Gen. Shepard. He was
repeatedly warned not to approach any nearer; but he
treated all these messages not only with neglect, but con-
tempt. Cannon were first fired over his column, but this
BENJAMIN TUPPER. 22?
was disregarded. At last, a field-piece was brought to bear
upon Shays' advance, and the first shot killed four of his
men. This was a more effectual hint. They immediately
recoiled, broke their ranks, and fled. They were rallied by
Shays, at Pelham, where he remained for awhile. In con-
sequence of the interception of the letter from Shays to
some of his officers, which fell into the hands of Capt. Buf-
fington, Wiley and Day, of Shays' party, were not engaged
in the affair at Springfield. Gen. Lincoln arrived from Bris-
tol on the second day after the defeat of Shays, and took
immediate measures to dislodge Day from West Springfield,
and Wiley from Chickopee bridge ; but before the movement
could be made, they had fallen back, and joined Shays at
Pelham. Some of their men were taken prisoners at West
Springfield. Such of them as would take the oath of alle-
giance, were sent home, and the rest detained as prisoners.
Shays retreated to Petersham, where his adherents were
finally dispersed by Gen. Lincoln. Before this, however,
Gen. Putnam made an ineffectual attempt to withdraw
Shays from his party, but failed to accomplish his object.
Shays himself appeared disposed to listen to the advice of
Gen. Putnam, but he informed the general that his friends
would not suffer him to leave them.
Within a day or two after the defeat of Shays at Spring-
field, Gen. Tupper was discharged, and returned at North-
ampton, where he was visited by many of his old friends.
Known also as having visited the Ohio country, many per-
sons called upon him to inquire about the lands, rivers, &c,
of the valley of the Ohio. In the spring he went to Worcester
to see Gen. Putnam, and concert measures to set forward the
proposed emigration to Ohio. Dr. Cutler having completed
the contract for lands, the first thing to be done was to raise
the money necessary for their object. Many formidable dif-
ficulties which attended the organization of the company
228 BENJAMIN TUPPER.
were overcome, and Gen. Tupper began his own arrange-
ments for moving to the Ohio in the summer of 1787. At
that period wagon-makers were not common, even in New
England. One, however, was obtained, and two wagons
were built, one for the family, the other for their baggage
With his own family, including that of Ichabod Nye, his son-
in-law, that of Col. Nathaniel Cushing, and Maj. Goodale,
they made their way to the Ohio river, which they reached
at Wellsburg, then Buffalo, where they were joined by the
family of Maj. Coburn and his son-in-law, Andrew Webster.
These families formed, in fact, the first settlers of Ohio, and
arrived at Marietta on the 9th of August, 1788. The men
who came on with Gen. Putnam, had none of them families
with them, and had been previously discharged.
After his arrival at Marietta, Gen. Tupper was actively
engaged in promoting the plans and interests of the Ohio
company, being intimately associated with Gen. Putnam in
the management of its affairs.
On the 9th of September, 1788, the first civil court in the
Northwestern Territory was held at Col. Battelle's, in
Campus Martins. This was the Court of Quarter Sessions.
Rnfus Putnam and Benjamin Tupper were justices of the
quorum, assisted by justices of the bar.
Judge Putnam gave the charge to the grand jury. After
one or two sessions Judge Tupper presided, until his death,
in June, 1792.
At an early period in his life, Gen. Tupper made a pub-
lic profession of the Christian religion, by uniting with the
Congregational church at Easton. After his arrival at Ma-
rietta, he did not forget his obligation. His efforts were
directed to preserve to his family and associates the ben-
efits of public and social worship of God. Before the
arrival of the Rev. Daniel Story, the first minister, meet-
ings for social worship were held on the Sabbath. The
BENJAMIN TUPPER. 229
usual place of worship was the same room in which the
first court was held, near the west corner of the stockade.
Gen. Tupper had seven children, three sons and four
daughters. His sons were Anselm, Edward White, and Ben-
jamin Tupper.
Maj. Anselm Tupper died at Marietta on the 25th of De-
cember, 1808. Col. Benjamin Tupper died at Putnam, in
February, 1815. Gen. Edward W. Tupper died at Gallipolis,
in 1823. His daughter, Miss Roso?na, who married Gov.
Winthrop Sargeant, died at Marietta, in 1790. Sophia, who
married Nathaniel Willys, Esq., now of Conn., then of Mass.,
died in October, 1789. Minerva married Col. Ichabod Nye,
and died at Marietta in April, 183G. The other daughter
died young, before the family emigrated to Ohio. The
only representative of the family bearing the family name,
is Edward W. Tupper, of Putnam, son of Benjamin Tup-
per, jun.
COL. EBENEZER SPROAT.
Col. Ebenezer Sproat was born in Middleborough, Mass.,
in the year 1752. He was the son of Col. Ebenezer Sproat,
a respectable yeoman, who owned one of the finest farms
in that vicinity, with a large, commodious dwelling-house,
which, for many years before, and during the Revolutionary
war, was occupied as a tavern. Like his son, he was an
uncommonly tall and portly man. He was a colonel in the
militia ; and the venerable John Howland, from whom many
of these facts were derived, says, that when the British took
possession of Newport and a part of Rhode Island, he per-
formed a torn- of duty with his regiment in Providence. A
brother of Ebenezer was a lawyer, and settled in Taunton.
His early education must have been the best the schools
afforded at that day, as hewaa familiar with the principles
and practice of surveying. During his boyhood and youth,
he assisted his father in cultivating the farm; and when the
war of Independence commenced, it found him in the prime
of manhood, with a frame invigorated by the toils of agri-
culture, and fitted, by labor, to undergo all the perils and
hardships of a soldier's life. He entered the service as cap-
tain of a company, and soon rose to the post of major, in
the tenth regiment of the Massachusetts line, commanded
by Col. Shepherd. In 1778, Glover's brigade of four regi-
ments was stationed at Providence, at which time he was a
lieutenant-colonel, and said to be the tallest man in the brig-
ade, being six feet and four inches high, with limbs formed
in nature's most perfect model. In the duties of his station,
he excelled as much as in size, being the most complete
EBENEZER SPEOAT. 231
disciplinarian in the brigade. His social habits, pleas-
ant, agreeable manners, and cheerful disposition, rendered
him a general favorite with the officers, as well as with the
private soldiers, who always followed with alacrity, wher-
ever he led. Of the dangers and perils of the war, he
partook largely, being engaged in the battles of Trenton,
Princeton, Monmouth, and many others. His superior tact
and excellence in discipline attracted the notice of Gen.
Steuben, who appointed him inspector of the brigade, which
office he filled with great credit to himself, and the entire
satisfaction of the baron.
Near the close of the war, he was engaged in the follow-
ing affair, which is thus related by Dr. Thatcher, in his jour-
nal of military events : " In the mutiny which broke out in
January, 1781, in the New Jersey line, stationed at Pomp-
ton, in New Jersey, a detachment of five hundred men was
ordered out to suppress it. In this detachment Col. Sproat
was second in command, and Maj. Oliver one of the field-
officers. The distance from the main encampment was
thirty or forty miles, and the snow two feet deep ; it took
nearly four days to accomplish the march. When they
came in sight of the insurgents, Gen. Robert Howe, the
commander, ordered his men to load their arms; and as
some of the officers distrusted the faithfulness of their own
men, so prevalent was disaffection in the army, that, before
making the attack, he harangued the troops on the heinous-
ness of the crime of mutiny, and the absolute necessity of
military subordination; that the mutineers must be brought
to an unconditional submission. The men entered fully into
the patriotic spirit of their officers, and marching with the
greatest alacrity, surrounded the huts so as to admit of no
escape. Gen. Howe ordered his aid-de-camp to command
the mutineers to parade in front of their huts, unarmed, in
five minutes. Observing them to hesitate, a second message
232 EBENEZER SPROAT.
was sent, when they instantly obeyed, and paraded in a line,
unarmed, two or three hundred in number. The general
then ordered three of the ringleaders to be selected for con-
dign punishment. These unfortunate men were tried on
the spot, Col. Sproat being president of the court-martial,
standing on the snow, and they were sentenced to be shot
immediately. Twelve of the most active mutineers were
selected for their executioners. This was a most painful
task, and some of them, when ordered to load their guns,
shed tears. Two of them suffered death on the spot; the
third one was pardoned, as being less guilty, on the repre-
sentation of their officers. Never were men more com-
pletely humbled and penitent. Tears of sorrow and of joy
streamed from their eyes, and each one seemed to congrat-
ulate himself that his forfeited life had been spared. The
general then addressed the men in a very pathetic and im-
pressive manner : showing the enormity of their crime, and
the inevitable ruin to the cause of the country, to which it
would lead. They remained true and faithful soldiers to
the end of the war."
This was a sorrowful and heart-rending duty to Col.
Sproat: with his tender feelings and love for all engaged
in the cause of freedom, the effect must have been great.
The time made it still more impressive : the depth of winter,
the white snow, an emblem of innocence, crimsoned with
the blood of his fellow-soldiers, shed by their own comrades,
and not in battle, rendered the sight one not to be forgotten
while life should last. But order and military subordination
demanded this sacrifice to duty, and he could not retreat.
These men had served their country faithfully, probably for
three or four years ; had suffered hunger, and cold, and
nakedness ; had sometimes been without any food, and for
weeks lived on a half or a third of a ration of the poorest
kind of meat. Their wages were often withheld, and when
EBENEZER SPROAT. 233
paid at all, were in a depreciated government paper, thirty
dollars of which, at this time, were worth only one in specie,
and there was little prospect of its being any better. Some
of them had families at home suffering like themselves.
That men should become desperate under such circumstances
is human nature ; the greatest wonder was that the whole
army had not revolted and turned their arms against Con-
gress until they had redressed their grievances.
It is greatly to the credit of New England that no revolts
or mutinies took place amongst her troops. The strict prin-
ciples of obedience impressed in early childhood on her sons
by their Puritan fathers, gave them a Spartan cast of char-
acter, while the intelligence imparted to their minds by their
common schools, gave the whole population a decided su-
periority of intellect over the common soldiers of the mid-
dle and southern states. Nearly every man was a patriot,
and they suffered little or nothing compared with, these
states, from the effects of Tory principles, which, were pro-
ductive of more real suffering to the inhabitants, where they
prevailed, than all the ravages of the British armies. Well
might Washington exclaim, on those trying occasions, " God
bless the New England troops ! " A mighty debt of grati-
tude is still owing to the memory of these patriotic men,
who stood firm under all these trials, and accomplished the
work of independence in spite of foes without and foes
within. Their contests with poverty and want were five
times more severe than all their battles with the enemy.
Having served through the war with credit to himself and
the regiment to which he belonged, and witnessed the ac-
knowledgment of the freedom of his country by the British,
and the reception of the United States as an independent
sovereignty amongst the nations of the earth, he retired
satisfied, to the pursuits of private life. As a proof of his
attachment to the common soldiers, and all who were or had
234 EBENEZER SPROAT.
been engaged in fighting the enemies of hig country, the
following anecdote is related.
Col. Sproat was, all his life, fond of keen repartee, and a
good joke, whenever an opportunity to exercise it occurred.
At an early period of the war, while he was a captain, he
was at home on a short furlough. His father, as has been
before noticed, kept a house of entertainment, more espe-
cially for eating than drinking. "While there, three private
soldiers, on their way home from the army, called for a cold
luncheon. His mother set on the table some bread and
cheese, with the remains of the family dinner, which Eben-
ezer thought rather scanty fare for hungry men, and espe-
cially as the bones were already pretty bare. He felt a
little vexed, that the defenders of the country were not
more bountifully supplied. After satisfying their appetites,
they inquired of him, how much was to pay ? He replied
he did not know, but would ask his mother; so, going to
the kitchen door, where she was busy with her domestic con-
cerns, he inquired, " Mother, how much is it worth to pick
those bones?" She replied, "About a shilling, I suppose."
He returned to the room, and taking from the drawer in the
bar, three shillings, with a smiling face, handed each man
one, wishing them a good day and pleasant journey home.
The soldiers departed, much gratified with their kind usage.
Soon after they had gone, his mother came in, and asked
Ebenezer what he had done with the money for their din-
ners? In apparent amazement, he exclaimed, "Money! did
I not ask you what it was worth to pick those bones ; and
you replied, a shilling? I thought it little enough for such
a job, and handed them the money from the till, and they
are gone." It was such a good joke, and so characteristic
of her favorite son, that she bore it without complaining.
After the close of the war, he lived, for some time, in
Providence, employing himself occasionally at surveying.
EBENEZER SPROAT. 235
Here he became acquainted with Miss Catharine Whipple,
the daughter of Com. Abraham Whipple, and was united
with her in marriage. Her father presented her, as a mar-
riage portion, his own dwelling-house and lot, in Westmin-
ster street, Providence, and retired to his farm in Cranston,
a few miles distant.
Soon after this marriage, he entered into merchandise;
purchasing a large store of goods from Nightingale and
Clark, a noted importing house of that day. Being entirely
unacquainted with mercantile affairs, fond of company and
generous living, with the liberal habits of a soldier, in the
full vigor of life, it is not to be wondered at, if he did not
excel in trade, as he had done in military matters. Nothing
can be more unlike than the two callings ; and out of hun-
dreds who tried it, scarcely one succeeded. He had no taste
for his new business, and in a short time he failed ; swal-
lowing up his wife's patrimony, as well as his own resources.
About this time, 1786, Congress ordered the first surveys
of their lands, west of the Ohio river, to be executed. Seven
ranges of townships, beginning on the Ohio, at the western
boundary line of Pennsylvania, were directed to be pre-
pared for market. Col. Sproat was appointed the surveyor
for the state of Rhode Island, and commenced operations
in the fall of that year. The hostility of the Indians pre-
vented the completion of the work, and his range was not
finished until the following season.
In 1789, the Ohio Company was formed, and he was ap-
pointed one of the surveyors of their new purchases, for
which his hardy frame and great resolution eminently fitted
him. In the autumn of 1789, they resolved to send on a
company of boat-builders and artificers to the head waters
of the Ohio at Simrel's ferry, for the purpose of preparing
boats for the transportation of the provision and men, to
commence the colony in the spring. Col. Sproat led one of
23G EBENEZER SPROAT.
these detachments. On their way out the following incident
occurred, to lighten the tediousness of the way : The party
arrived at the house of a thrifty German farmer, near the
foot of the mountains, on Saturday night. He received
them with the greatest hospitality, supplying all their wants
with cheerfulness, and when Monday morning arrived, wished
them a favorable journey ; and so pleased was he with his
wayfaring acquaintance, that he refused any pay. Col.
Sproat not only returned him his sincere thanks, but felt
grateful for his kindness. The hospitable German had a
beautiful little dog, to which he was much attached and
greatly valued. One of the laboring hands, named Danton,
had the baseness to put him into the wagon, unknown to
any one. When they stopped again for the night, a mes-
senger placed in the hands of the colonel the following note
from his German friend: "Meeshter Col. Sproat, I dinks
I use you well ; den for what you steal my little tog?" The
colonel was much mortified and greatly enraged when the
dog was found, but met with an opportunity of sending him
back the following morning, with a polite, explanatory note,
to his master. Danton never outgrew the infamy of this
nefarious act, but had it often cast at him in his future life.
The detachment, after great fatigue, reached their desti-
nation, and spent the remainder of the winter in building a
large boat called the May-flower, in remembrance of the
vessel that transported their forefathers to a new home, as
this was to convey the pilgrims of the west to their home in
the wilderness. The party arrived at the mouth of the
Muskingum on the 7th of April, 1788. Col. Sproat imme-
diately commenced his labors as surveyor for the company,
and continued them until the breaking out of the war in
January, 1791, when all further operations in the woods were
suspended. Many of the savages visited the new settlement
to see the Bostonians, as they were called, and to exchange
EBENEZER SPEOAT. 237
their meat, skins, and peltry, for goods with the traders at
Marietta and Fort Harmer. The tall, commanding person
of Col. Sproat, soon attracted their attention, and they gave
him the name of Hetuck, or Big Buckeye. From this,
no doubt, originated the name of Buckeye, now applied to
the natives of Ohio, as the phrase was familiar to all the
early settlers of Marietta.
On the arrival of Gov. St. Clair and the organization of
the county of Washington, he commissioned him as sheriff,
which post he held for fourteen years, or until the formation
of the state government, when a change in the political
measures of the administration threw him out of office. He
was also, at the same time, commissioned as colonel of the
militia. In the fall of 1790, just before the commencement
of the attack on the settlements, he was authorized by Gen.
Knox, secretary of war, to enlist a company of soldiers for
the defense of the colony, appoint rangers, and superintend
the military affairs of the United States in Washington
county, with the pay of a major, which post he filled with
fidelity, to the satisfaction of the settlers and the government.
His experience in military matters, was of great advantage
to the inhabitants, while his bold, undaunted manner, in-
spired them with courage in times of greatest danger.
His family arrived here, with Com. Whipple, in 1789. It
consisted of his wife and one daughter. After the close of
the war she married Solomon Sibley, Esq., of Detroit, who
commenced the practice of law in Marietta.
As sheriff of the county, he opened the first court ever
held in the territory, now Ohio, marching with his drawn
sword and wand of office, at the head of the judges, gov-
ernor, secretary, &c, preceded by a military escort, from
the Point to the northwest block-house of Campus Mar-
tius, on the 2d day of September, 1788. It was an august
spectacle, conducted with great dignity and decorum, making
238 EBENEZER SPItOAT.
a deep impression on the red men of the forest, many of
whom witnessed the ceremonies, and at this time bestowed
on him the Indian name, by which they ever after desig-
nated him.
During the whole period of the war he performed his du-
ties as superintendent of the military posts at Belpre,
Waterford, and Marietta, and paymaster to the rangers
and colonial troops. These certificates of dues for services
rendered the Ohio Company — for they too kept up a mili-
tary band at their own expense — as well as the United
States, served in place of money, and formed nearly all the
currency afloat during the five years of the war. They
were generally for small sums, and taken in payment for
goods at the stores, who received their cash for them in
Philadelphia, and also passed as a tender between the in-
habitants. Had it not been for these assignats, the suf-
ferings of the settlers would have been much greater. It is
said by Col. Convers, who resided at Waterford, that he did
not believe that settlement, in 1792, could have raised ten
dollars in specie amongst them. They had little or nothing
to sell, and experienced the greatest difficulty in producing
the common necessaries of life. The Ohio Company ex-
pended more than eleven thousand dollars of their funds in
defending the settlements, which was never repaid them by
the United States, as it in justice ought to have been.
In disposition and temperament, Col. Sproat was cheer-
ful and animated; exceedingly fond of company and jovial
entertainments ; much attached to horses and dogs ; always
riding in hLs long journeys over the country, then embra-
cing half the state of Ohio, some of the finest horses the
country afforded, and generally accompanied by two or three
large dogs, who, next to horses, shared largely in his favors.
In executing the sterner requisitions of the law among the
poorer classes of society, he has been often known to furnish
EBENEZER SPROAT. 239
the money himself for the payment of the debt, rather
than distress an indigent family. His heart, although full
of merriment and playfulness, overflowed with kindness.
He had no enemies but those of a political kind. In per-
sonal appearance, he was remarkable for his tall, majestic
figure, and exact proportions; towering like a Saul, a full
head above the hight of other men.
The office of sheriff was filled with great dignity and
propriety, commanding by his noble presence and military
bearing the strictest silence and decorum from the audience,
while the court were sitting; and when on duty, wearing his
sword as an emblem of justice, as well as of execution in
fulfilling the requirements of law. This badge of office was
very appropriate, and was kept up in several of the states
for many years after the war, but, like many other good and
wholesome usages, has given way under the prevalence of
ultra democratic principles.
He wyas a Federalist of the old school, warmly attached
to his country and to the precepts taught by his venerated
commander, Gen. Washington, in the times which tried
men's souls.
For several years of the latter part of his life he devoted
his leisure time to cultivating the earth, for which he ever
retained a strong predilection, formed in early youth. He
was fond of the rougher kinds of labor, such as driving a
team of young oxen, and in ascending a hill with a load
beyond the strength of his team, delighted in applying his
shoulder to the wheel, and helping them out of the difficulty.
Gardening was another favorite pursuit. The bank of Ma-
rietta now occupies one corner of his garden, which covered
nearly an acre. It was laid out in squares and spacious
walks, very tastefully, embracing ornamental shrubs, and
all the varieties of fruits cultivated in the middle states.
An ancient pear tree is still standing, planted by his hand.
240 EBENEZER SPROAT.
The garden was kept in nice order by an old black woman
named Suke, who outlived him many years, but always
spoke of her kind, old Master Sproiit, in terms of exalted
admiration.
The duelling house is now owned by Capt. Daniel Green,
and is a specimen of New England architecture very cred-
itable to the period in which it was built, nearly fifty
years ago.
He died suddenly, in the full vigor of health, in February,
1805, having his oft-repeated wish of a sudden exit fully
answered. His memory is held in grateful remembrance
by all who knew him.
CAPT. JONATHAN DEVOL.
From the earliest ages, and even from the first invention
of letters, it has been one of the most pleasing duties of the
historian to record the lives and actions of distinguished
and useful men. In this way a kind of immortality is given
to their names, and they live again amidst the descend-
ants of future generations ; their good deeds stimulating
others to imitate their virtuous and praiseworthy examples.
Abounding, as the first colony of the Ohio Company set-
tlers did, with excellent men, in numbers and qualifications
far exceeding those of any other settlement in the valley of
the Ohio, yet few of them were more deserving than the
subject of the following memoir.
Jonathan Devol was born at Tiverton, in the colony of
Rhode Island, in the year 1756. His ancestors were of
French descent. His father settled in Rhode Island, and
was a dealer in West India produce. The mother belonged
to the sect called Quakers, who in that day composed a
large portion of the inhabitants ; the mild sway of Roger
Williams encouraging perfect freedom of conscience, and
good-will to all mankind. The family was quite numerous,
he being the youngest of seven sons.
Schools of learning, before the Revolutionary war, were
of rare occurrence, and his whole education was embraced
in one year's schooling. It fortunately happened that his
father possessed a small library of choice books, from the
perusal of which he reaped valuable instruction, and ac-
quired a taste for reading that never forsook him in after
life. When quite young he learned the trade of a ship
16
242 JONATHAN DEVOL.
carpenter, and in manhood became quite noted for his skill
in constructing boats of beautiful model and rapid sailing.
One of his boats took a purse of fifty guineas, in a
race between some gentlemen amateurs of Newport and
Providence, where this manly sport was brought to great
perfection.
When the war for independence broke out between Great
Britain and the colonies, he took the side of his country,
and before he was twenty years old, received a commission
as ensign. In October, 1775, on the first call for troops for
the interior defense of the colony, he marched with a part
of a company of men, and joined the regiment to which he
belonged, on the hights back of the town of Newport. In
December following, he was appointed to the same rank, in
a regiment enlisted for a year. In June, 177G, he was com-
missioned as a lieutenant in the continental service. In
December following, he wras promoted to the adjutancy of
the first regiment in a brigade raised to repel the British,
who had invaded Rhode Island.
In July, 1777, he resigned that post, in consequence of
being superseded in the promotion of the adjutant of the
second regiment, to the vacancy of brigade-major, to his
wrong, and retired to private life, as any spirited man would
have done, in a similar case. This disregard to the military
rates of promotion, in the early years of the war, was a
source of heart-burnings and of serious injury to the cause,
until corrected by more just views of this important spring
in the service.
In September of the same year, he acted as a volunteer
in the badly conducted expedition of Gen. Spencer, against
the British in Rhode Island. After the evacuation of the
island, in January, 1780, he retired to Tiverton, and was
appointed to a captaincy in the militia. While occupied in
the busy scenes of that eventful period, he was often selected
JONATHAN DEVOL. 243
to conduct hazardous expeditions above his rank, and for
several services of this kind, received the thanks of the com-
manding general of the troops on this station. Amongst
other dangerous exploits, was the following, of cutting out
a British brig from under the stern of a twenty gun ship, in
the outer harbor of Newport.
On the evening of the 11th of April, 1776, there arrived
in the roadstead of Newport, a sloop-of-war of twenty guns,
a transport-ship of eighteen guns, with a brig and sloop as
tenders ; the latter were moored directly under their sterns.
A plan was soon arranged for making an attack on them
with the row galleys then in port. To effect this, it was ne-
cessary to procure a party of volunteers from the brigade,
then quartered in the town of Newport. Lieut. Devol was
at that time sick in bed, with an attack of the mumps ; and
nothing but the certain failure of the measure, from the
want of his assistance, could have induced him to leave his
room. In a short time he procured twenty volunteers to
accompany him in the hazardous attempt. They embarked
on board the galley of Capt. Grimes, the commodore of the
station, about eleven o'clock, in a dark, rainy night. She
was worked with oars, and carried one long eighteen-
pounder. The captain attempted to lay the galley along-
side the brig, intending to carry her by boarding ; but the
force of the tide, and the imperfection of the human vision
in the darkness of the night, caused the galley to fall upon
her quarter. Lieut. Devol, at the head of his boarders, who
stood ready to spring up the side of the enemy, as soon as
the vessels came in contact, now mounted over her quarter,
followed by only five of his men, the others being prevented
by the falling off of the galley, before they could get on
board. While in the act of climbing over the quarter, the
sentinel on deck hailed, and fired his musket down among
the assailants ; the ball passed very near the head of Mr.
244 JONATHAN DEVOL.
Devol, who instantly returned the salute with one of hia
pistols. Followed by his five brave men, he was soon on
the deck of the brig, and, cutlass in hand, drove the midship-
man who had command, with ten men, below, and instantly
fastened the hatches down upon them. The next act was
to cut loose the cable and get their prize under way. In
performing this service, they had a tedious time; for the
axe and the carpenter were both left in the galley, with the
residue of the boarders. In this dilemma, recourse was had
to a cutlass, and by repeated and strenuous hacks in the
dark, they, at length, after thirty minutes, divided the four-
teen inch cable by which she was moored, and the tide soon
put her in motion. In the meantime, the twenty gun ship
had got under way, and came down on her larboard side, to
the rescue of the tender. The galley had now recovered
her lost ground by the aid of her sweeps, and came up on
the starboard side, just as the cable gave way, so that as
the prize swung round she fell foul of the galley. The
ship all this time kept firing into her, both with cannon and
musketry, but from the darkness and confusion of the night,
did but little damage, except to her rigging and spars, with
the loss of one man mortally wounded. As soon as the gal-
ley was free, she opened her fire on the ship with her long
gun. The enemy soon gave up the pursuit, and the brig,
with her crew, was brought in and moored at the wharf in
Newport.
This was as brave and gallant an exploit as was enacted
during the war. Had the whole twenty men succeeded in
boarding the brig, it would have been a bold achievement,
considering how near she lay to the twenty gun ship. But
when the number is reduced to five, to oppose ten men on
their own deck, it deserves all our praise. And then to
Btand for twenty or thirty minutes, hacking at the cable with
such an inefficient tool, exposed to the constant fire of the
JONATHAN DEVOL. 245
enemy, required the utmost coolness and intrepidity. The
effects of this night's exposure to the rain and cold, confined
Mr. Devol to his bed for a long time, and laid the founda-
tion of a disease from which he severely suffered for the last
twenty years of his life.
On the 1st of May, 1777, a party of British and Hessians
were seen from the American look-out, at Battery hill, on
the main land, about a mile and a half from their lines on
the island, in search of deserters that had come off the night
before. Lieut. Devol, with twenty men, was ordered over
across the inlet, near Howland's ferry, to attack them.
He landed his party undiscovered. Two men were left in
charge of the boats, and one sent to an adjacent eminence
to give notice of any other body of their foes that might be
in sight. With seventeen men he charged at full speed on
the enemy. They immediately fled, and their commander,
a lieutenant in the twenty-second regiment, fell a prisoner
into their hands. The party under his orders consisted of
twenty-five men, as confessed by himself. They were hotly
pursued as near to the lines as was prudent. Soon after
the British took possession of Newport, a number of the
disaffected inhabitants of Rhode Island, called Tories, joined
them. These renegades from their country's cause, felt a
greater inveteracy to the "Whigs than the British themselves,
and sought every opportunity to distress and destroy them.
One dark night they fitted out a marauding party from New-
port, in a swift sail-boat, manned with ten or twelve men,
who were well acquainted with the adjacent country along
the shores and inlets of the bay which embosom the island.
In this expedition they attacked and plundered the house of
Job Amy, an old but very respectable citizen, robbing him
of a part of his furniture, and considerable valuable plate,
taking the old man also with them, hoping to extort money
from him by way of ransom. His son Job, an active young
246 JONATHAN DEVOL.
man, was so fortunate as to escape by jumping out of a
chamber window, and half-dressed as he was, hastened with
all speed to Howland's ferry, where Mr. Devol then lived,
knowing that he commanded a party of men and one of the
swiftest boats, for the purpose of rescuing the inhabitants
and harassing the enemy. The distance he had to run was
about ten miles, which he performed in an incredibly short
lime, along the sandy beach of the shores. He reached the
ferry about midnight, across which he had to swim, and awak-
ening Mr. Devol, related the disasters of the night. He di-
rected him to go and arouse the boat's crew, while he
procured a keg of water and some provisions. In a few
minutes all were ready, and Job entered with them as a vol-
unteer in the cruise. Knowing the course which the robber
boat must pursue in her return to Newport, they concluded
that if they could reach Sckonet Point, a noted headland,
which she must pass, they could overtake them before they
arrived within reach of the protection of the British shipping,
and recover the plunder, as well as make prisoners of the
crew, and release their own friends whom they had forced
away with them. By great exertion in rowing and the ut-
most skill in sailing, they hove in sight of the point just as
the day dawned, and made out the robber boat a short mile
distant. Bill Crowson, the commander of the Tory crew, a
violent villain and robber, espied his pursuers at the same
time; expecting that he might, possibly, be intercepted from
the escape of Job Amy; and yet the distance was so great
that he did not believe he could travel that far in so short a
space of time as to bring Devol down upon him by day-
light. One of Crowson's prisoners, an active, bold man, as
soon as he saw the pursuing boat jumped upon the thwarts,
and swinging his hat, shouted with all his might, saying he
knew it was Devol's boat, one of the swiftest in all those
waters, and they should surely be retaken. Bill d d
JONATHAN DEVOL. 247
him for an impudent rebel, and with a terrible oath, swore
if he did not seat himself quietly in the boat, as the motion
disturbed her sailing, he would shoot him on the spot. He
boldly answered that he dare not do it, for his friends would
shortly be up with him and revenge his death. His predic-
tion was soon verified. Devol's crew, by great exertions
with their oars, as well as the nicely adjusted sails under his
own care, soon ran along side, and on being ordered to sur-
render in a tone that meant to be obeyed, they gave up with-
out firing a shot, although manned by a more numerous
crew. Knowing their cause to be a dastardly one, they
could not defend it with the courage of men who have right
and justice on their side. After the surrender, the young
man who had been ill-treated and abused by Crowson,
sprang at him with a sword which he snatched from the hand
of one of the men, and would have put him to death but
for the interference of Mr. Devol, who could not suffer a
prisoner to be injured, however mean and villainous he
might be. The boat returned in triumph with her prize,
although the British fleet lay at anchor within gunshot of
the spot. Crowson was such a notorious rascal, that the in-
habitants of Tiverton were with difficulty restrained from
hanging him up without trial. He was, however, sent off
under a guard to Taunton jail, and confined as a British
prisoner. Job Amy, the young man who gave the alarm,
never recovered from the exertions of that night, but died of
a consumption before the end of a year.
In 1776, Capt. Devol married Miss Nancy Barker, the
daughter of Capt. Isaac Barker, for many years a noted
ship-master of Newport. Her father was lost at sea some
years before the war, and she, with her widowed mother and
several sisters, now resided on a farm, near the center of the
island, on the road from Howland's ferry to Newport. When
the British troops took possession of the place, many of the
248 JONATHAN DEVOL.
inhabitants were suffered to remain quietly in their houses.
Mrs. Barker was one of this number, and three or four of
the officers were quartered the winter following at her house.
They, however, treated her and the young ladies very po-
litely and paid her honorably for their board. The fiery
and patriotic spirit of the young lieutenant could not brook
the thought of his betrothed remaining in the society of the
enemies of his country, lest their fascinating manners and
rich dresses should lessen her devotion to the Whig cause.
He accordingly, after giving her timely notice, planned an
expedition on to the island with a party of men, and one
dark wintry night, at the imminent hazard of his life from
the sentries, brought off his intended wife in safety. Shortly
after this event, they were married at the house of an elder
sister, near Fairhaven. This union proved to be a very
happy one, though checkered with many vicissitudes. She
was the mother of thirteen children, and shared with him
the dangers and privations of settling a new country in the
wilderness, amidst the horrors of an Indian war.
After the close of the Revolution, and he had witnessed
the triumph of his country over her enemies, he settled down
in quiet at Howland's ferry. Here he carried on the boat-
building, and kept a small store of groceries.
When the Ohio Company was formed in 1789, he became
one of the associates. In the autumn of that year, he joined
the little band of pioneers who preceded the actual settlers
with their families, and spent the winter on the Youghiogheny
river, at Simrel's ferry. Here he was employed by Gen.
Putnam to superintend the building of a large boat for the
transport of the advance guard of the Ohio Company and
their provisions to the mouth of the Muskingum. She was
named by the adventurers, the May-flower. This is said to
have been the first decked boat that ever floated on the Ohio.
She was built with stout timbers and knees like a galley,
JONATHAN DEVOL. 249
with the bottom raking fore and aft, and decked over with
planks. The deck was sufficiently high for a man to walk
upright under the beams, and the sides so thick as to resist
a rifle bullet. The steersman and rowers were thus safely
sheltered from the attack of enemies on the banks. She
was forty-five feet in length and twelve in breadth. Subse-
quently, gangboards were added on the outside, so that she
could be pushed against the current with poles, like a keel-
boat; and was used in transporting a number of the colonial
families from Buffalo, above Wheeling, to Marietta, in the
summer of 1788. It was at first supposed she could be
worked up stream with sail, but the variable nature and un-
certainty of the winds on the Ohio river, frustrated their
arrangement.
After the pioneer corps had established themselves at the
mouth of the Muskingum, he was actively engaged in the
erection of the stockaded garrison, called Campus Martius.
This imposing structure answered the double purpose of a
fort and for dwelling-houses. Within these walls the col-
onists were safe from the attack of Indians. The block-
houses, as well as the dwellings which formed the curtains
between, were built of planks four inches thick, and eighteen
or twenty inches wide, sawed by hand from the huge poplar
trees which grew near the ground occupied by the garrison.
These were dovetailed together at the corners, and with the
smooth surface left by the whip-saw, gave to the exterior a
finished and beautiful aspect. The fort, as it may well be
called, was a square of one hundred and eighty feet on each
side, as figured in the preceding volume. The settlers were
allowed to build a part of the dwelling-houses in the cur-
tains for themselves, after the plan laid down by Gen Put-
nam. Capt. Devol built one on his own account, forty feet
long by eighteen wide, and two stories high, furnished with
250 JONATHAN DEVOL.
neat brick chimneys, a kiln being made and burned the first
season.
Mrs. Devol, with five children, came on and joined him
in December, as narrated in the Pioneer, vol. ii. The fol-
lowing winter his house sheltered seventy persons, young
and old, so few were the finished dwellings. The summer
of 1789 was spent in completing the works at Campus Mar-
tius, and in the winter he was employed with two others in
exploring the lands of the company for suitable spots for
mills, and to commence farming settlements. In February,
1790, he moved his family to Belpre, and settled on a small
farm, in company with other associates, united together for
mutual assistance and protection, as the western tribes,
notwithstanding the treaty with Gov. St. Clair, appeared
to be hostile, and on the eve of a rupture. During the first
six months of the year the settlers suffered very much from
a want of food, as more fully noticed in the history of
Belpre.
Early in January, 1791, the Indian war broke out, and
the inhabitants were compelled to leave their improvements
and go into garrison. The news of the massacre at Big
Bottom reached Belpre the day after that event, at a time
when nearly all the men, especially the heads of families,
were at Marietta, attending the Court of Quarter Sessions.
Most wretched was the night following this news, to the
women and children, as they watched with trembling hearts
in the slender log-cabins in which they dwelt, the approach
of the Indians, expecting every hour to hear their terrific
yells. Mrs. Devol directed her children to lie down with
their clothes on, ready to rush into the woods at the first
alarm. The court was soon adjourned, and Capt. Devol,
with the others, returned with all speed to their homes, ex-
pecting to see their houses in flames, and their wives and
JONATHAN DEVOL. 251
children slaughtered or taken captives by the savages. A
council of the leading men was promptly called, and it was
decided to build a strong garrison three miles below the Lit-
tle Kenawha, against the center of the island, since known
as the island of Blennerhasset. This garrison contained
thirteen large block-houses, ranged in two lines, about six
rods apart, near the bank of the Ohio, and was very appro-
priately called Farmers' Castle. The whole was inclosed
with stout palisades, and made a formidable defense against
the attack of Indians. It was forty rods long by eight rods
wide. Two large gates were placed at the east and west
ends, while two smaller ones led down to the river. This
work was chiefly planned and built under the direction of
Capt. Devol, aided by the council of several old and expe-
rienced officers of the settlement, in an incredibly short
space of time, and sheltered thirty or forty families, be-
sides single men, during the war. When we consider the
labor of cutting and hauling such a multitude of trees, to
afford pickets fifteen feet long, with all the timber for eleven
large block-houses, two stories high and twenty feet square,
we are struck with admiration at the resolution and enter-
prise of this handful of pioneers, about twenty-five or thirty
in number. A considerable portion of this timber was
dragged on to the ground by men (as they had but few ox
teams, and no horses,) on sledges, the snow fortunately
being a foot or more deep. All this was accomplished in
about six weeks' time, and was acting over again the labors
of the Pilgrim Fathers at Plymouth rock. While at this
work they had the protection of the two block-houses built
on this ground the year before by Col. Battelle and Griffin
Greene, and was the probable cause of their selecting this
spot for their main garrison.
During the first two years of the settlement, their meal
was all ground on hand-mills, with great labor and fatigue.
252 JONATHAN DEVOL.
Soon after they were settled in the new castle, the active
mind of Mr. Devol suggested a remedy for this inconven-
ience. Some time previous, in conversation with Mr.
Greene, he learned that he had seen floating mills in Hol-
land. He directly proposed a project for a grist-mill, to be
built on boats, and anchored in the Ohio, at some ripple,
within sight of the castle, where it would be safe from their
savage foes. A few of the intelligent men joined, and a
company was formed for executing the work, and in the
course of the year 1791, a mill was completed and put in
operation, which ground the meal used by the inhabitants
during the war. It was built on two boats: one a large
pirogue, formed out of an immense hollow sycamore tree :
the other a large flatboat, made of planks fifty feet long and
ten wide. This sustained the mill-stones, gearing, hopper,
&c, while the other boat supported the outer end of the
water-wheel shaft. The boats were connected by stout
timbers, to keep them steady against the wind and current
of the river, planked over so as to make a floor between the
bow and stern of each. The open space was ten feet
square, in which the water-wheel worked, and was similar
in structure to those of a steamboat. The main boat was
secured by a chain cable attached to a rock anchor; the
other by a grape vine. The mill was stationed about thirty
yards from the shore of the island, nearly half a mile above
the castle, as seen in the annexed plate. In a favorable
state of the river, she could grind forty bushels in twenty-
four hours. A small frame house stood in the main boat,
and protected the machinery and grain, as well as the
miller, from the rain. During winter it was taken nearer
the shore, under some point for protection against the ice.
Floating trees sometimes broke it loose from the moorings,
but as there was usually some one on board, timely notice
was given, and the inmates of the castle turned out and
JONATHAN DEVOL. 253
towed it back again. Finally, near the close of the war, it
broke loose in the night, and floated down the Ohio seventy
miles, when the chain cable got entangled in a rock, and
brought it up. The distance was too great for towing back
again, and it was sold to the French settlers at Gallipolis.
This mill not only did the grinding for Belpre, but many
canoe loads of grain were brought from Point Pleasant,
Graham's Station, and Belville.
During the period of the war the small-pox and scarlet
fever both visited the inhabitants. By the latter disease he
lost his oldest son, a lad of fourteen years, and two other
children. It was of a malignant type, carrying off from
fifteen to twenty children, beside several with the small-pox.
About this time he executed the work of a complicated
piece of machinery, for Esq. Greene, who thought he had
discovered the true principle of perpetual motion. The dis-
criminating mind of Capt. Devol saw, at once, the fallacy
of the principle, and so expressed himself to the inventor ;
nevertheless, he was willing to assist him in the experiment.
It proved a failure, like all other attempts of the kind.
The inhabitants feeling the want of saccharine matter in
their food, being cut off from their former supplies from the
sugar maple, by the watchfulness of their savage foes, he
constructed a mill, with wooden rollers worked with oxen,
for grinding and pressing out the juice of the stalks of In-
dian corn, in the manner latefy proposed by the secretary
of the patent office. Many gallons of syrup were in this
way made, that supplied the place of a better article not
within their reach. The rich juice of the pumpkin was sub-
jected to the same process, and afforded good sweetening
for many uses.
In 1792, he built a twelve-oared barge, of about twenty-
five tons burthen, for Gen. Putnam, of the wood of the red
cedar. The materials were collected on the Little Kenawha,
254 JONATHAN DEVOL.
a few miles aoove the mouth, at the hazard of his life, in the
midst of the Indian war. For beauty of model and work-
manship, she was said to excel any boat ever seen on the
Ohio.
After Wayne's treaty in 1795, he moved his family to Ma-
rietta, and cultivated the lands of Paul Fearing, Esq., who
boarded in his family. Here he remained until 1797, when
he purchased lands at Wiseman's bottom, five miles above,
on the Muskingum river. At this place there was a ripple,
or slight fall, which he thought a suitable site for a mill; his
mind always running on some mechanical operation, that
would be useful to the destitute colonists. In 1798 he built
a floating mill at his new home, which for many years did
nearly all the grinding for the inhabitants on the Ohio and
Muskingum rivers for fifty miles above and below the mill ;
the travel being in canoes and larger boats. In 1803 he
built a larger mill, which ground a hundred bushels in twen-
ty-four hours, and made fine flour. In 1801 he built a ship
of four hundred tons, for B. I. Gilman, a merchant of Ma-
rietta. The timbers of this vessel were wholly made from
the wood of the black walnut, which grew with great luxu-
riance in the rich bottoms of the Muskingum, after which
stream the ship was named. In 1802 he built two brigs of
two hundred tons each; one called the Eliza Green, the
other, Ohio. In 1804 the schooner Nonpareil was built,
and her voyage down the river is described in the Pioneer,
vol. i. In 1807 he built a large frame flouring mill on the
spot where the floating mill was moored. The water-wheel
was forty feet in diameter, the largest ever seen in that day
west of the mountains. During all these busy operations
he was improving his farm, planting fruit trees, and making
his home comfortable and pleasant. In 1809 he purchased
and put in operation machinery for carding sheep's wool,
which article had now become so abundant as to need some-
JONATHAN DEVOL. 255
thing more than hand cards for its domestic manufacture ;
some farmers owning flocks of several hundred sheep. Still
further to aid in the domestic manufactures, he, in 1808,
erected works for dressing cloth and fulling, both of which
operations are believed to have been the first ever carried
on in this part of Ohio, if not in the state. The machinery
for cloth-dressing was procured at McConnelsville, on the
Youghiogheny river ; these articles were not then manufac-
tured in Ohio.
Amidst the latter period of these operations, when about
fifty years of age, he began the study of the French lan-
guage ; and solely by the aid of Boyer's dictionary, he in a
short time learned to read, and translate as he read, with
ease and fluency, any book in that tongue, especially works
of history. When master of this subject, he commenced,
in 1811 or 1812, the study of astronomy, and became quite
familiar with this sublime branch of science. He had al-
ways a relish for the mathematics, and entered readily into
the elements of this deeply interesting study. With the aid
of a celestial globe, he constructed a plan of the path and
course of the great comet of 1812, and sent it to Josiah
Meigs, Esq., then at the head of the United States land of-
fice, for his examination. It excited his admiration at the
genius and skill of Capt. Devol, in a branch of science so
little understood by a great portion of mankind. His knowl-
edge of geography was complete, and superior to that of
any other man known to the writer of this memoir. For
this he was partly indebted to his extensive reading, which
was always accompanied by a map of the region treated of
in the book or newspaper before him. Many years before
steam had come into general use as a moving power, he
directed a letter to the secretary of the navy, on the advan-
tages to be derived from steamships of war. Nevertheless,
he was a man of peace ; and often at the celebration of the
250 JONATHAN DEVOL.
Fourth of July was accustomed to say that the reading of
certain portions of the Declaration of Independence ought
to be omitted on that day, as it served to keep up the old
ill-will and hatred, which, as the nations are at peace, ought
to be forgotten.
His house was open to all his friends and acquaintances ;
while the hospitality of himself and good wife were prover-
bial. So affable and kind were the manners of this worthy
couple, that all visitors were made to feel how very welcome
they were, and that their company was a favor bestowed on
them, instead of a trouble.
For many years preceding his death, he suffered greatly
from a disease of the hip joint, the origin of which he traced
to the night of his hazardous enterprise in the harbor of
Newport.
His powers of conversation on nearly all subjects, were
unbounded, as well as his magazine of ideas and facts ; of
course, when he visited Marietta, as he often did on business
matters, he was frequently delayed until long after bedtime,
in conversations at the firesides of his friends; nevertheless,
he could seldom be persuaded to tarry all night, but climb-
ing, with much effort, into his little one-horse wagon, would
jog cheerfully along, solitary and alone, the distance of
five miles, all the while, if the night was clear, delighting
his imagination with studying out the names, and classing
the constellations of the heavenly hosts.
He had six brothers, several of whom settled in Ohio
An early example of his kindness may be seen in his treat-
ment of the children of his brother Silas. This brother was
a trader, and lived in Boston at the beginning of the war
of Independence. He joined the infant navy of the coun-
try, and acted as captain of marines, under Abraham Whip-
ple, during the first year of the war. He was at length
taken prisoner, and died in the murderous British prison
JONATHAN DEVOL. 257
ships at New York, with thousands of his countrymen. His
wife and three children were left destitute at Boston. Capt.
Devol, although then poor, and supporting his own family
with his labor, brought the three children to his house, and
fed and clothed them as his own, till the daughter was mar-
ried, and the two sons old enough to take care of themselves.
He used sometimes to try his skill in poetry, a small sam-
ple of which is given in the life of Com. Whipple. The
ideas and imagination of the poet were not wanting, but he
lacked one necessary qualification, harmony of verse.
In person Capt. Devol was of a medium size and hight,
muscular, and well-proportioned; quick and rapid in his
motions like the movements of his mind; a well formed
head; light complexion ; reddish-colored hair; blue, transpa-
rent eyes, sparkling with good humor and intelligence ; a
well-proportioned nose, of a Roman cast; broad, positive
chin, indicative of decision and firmness. In his youthful
days, in the full, showy dress of the period of the Revolu-
tion, he was said to have been, by one who knew him well,
the most perfect figure of a man to be seen amongst a
thousand.
Mrs. Devol died in 1823, during the great epidemic fever
which pervaded all the valley of the Ohio.
He died in 1824, aged sixty-eight years, greatly lamented
by all who knew him.
17
COL. RETURN JONATHAN MEIGS.
Tins excellent man was one of the choice spirits brought
out by the stirring times of the American Revolution, a sea-
son which tried men's souls and purified their patriotism in
the furnace of affliction. Some of the best blood of the
Puritans warmed his heart, and inspired him at an early
day to resist the oppressions of the mother country, and to
preserve for himself and his posterity the civil and religious
liberty purchased at so dear a rate by his forefathers, who
had left their country and homes across the Atlantic to en-
joy these rights in the wilderness of North America.
The subject of this sketch was born at Middletown, Conn.,
in December, 1740. His early education was such as the
public schools of that day afforded. He was a neat penman ;
specimens of his writing are seen in the early records of the
Court of Common Pleas of Washington county, Ohio, of
which he was prothonotary. His knowledge of mathematics
must have been considerable, as he was one of the surveyors
of the Ohio Company. The larger portion of the active
and prominent men at the period of the Revolution, were
bred to farming, or some useful mechanical occupation,
which gave them healthy, muscular frames, and vigorous,
thinking minds. Col. Meigs was bred to that of a hatter;
and the old shop may now be seen in a plan of the ancient
town, attached to Barber's History of Connecticut.
At the breaking out of the war, he was thirty-five years
old, a period in the life of man, when his physical and mental
powers are fully developed. For one or two years preceding,
the people of Middletown had noticed the gathering storm,
R. J. MEIGS. 259
and like others of their New England brethren, prepared
themselves for its coming by forming volunteer military
companies, and rolls of minute men, who had for many
months been trained in martial exercises. One of these
was organized in this town, well armed and uniformed,
which made choice of Mr. Meigs for their captain. At the
first news of the blood shed at Lexington, he marched his
company of light infantry to Cambridge, and offered hi3
services for the defense of the country. Soon after this he
was appointed a major by the state of Connecticut. En-
couraged by the successes of Allen and Arnold, in their attacks
on the British Canadian posts, and believing they had many
friends amongst the French inhabitants, who had never be-
come fully reconciled to the sovereignty of the English since
their conquest by Gen. Wolfe, it was thought advisable by
Gen. Washington and a committee of Congress, who visited
the camp at Cambridge, to send a body of troops into Can-
ada by the way of the Kennebec and Chaudiere rivers, to
act in concert with the army of Gen. Montgomery, already
in the vicinity of Montreal. Benedict Arnold, born in Nor-
wich, Conn., in the same year with Col. Meigs, a bold, active
man, was selected to lead the expedition, and commissioned
by the commander-in-chief, as a colonel. About eleven
hundred men were detached from the main army, composed
of ten companies of infantry from the New England states,
and three companies of riflemen from Pennsylvania and
Virginia, under Capt. Daniel Morgan. The field officers of
the infantry were Lieut. Col. Christopher Green, of Rhode
Island, Lieut. Col. Enos, and Majs. Bigelow and Meigs.
The troops left the camp near Cambridge, on the 11th of
September, 1775, in high spirits, looking forward to a glori-
ous result with hope and confidence, and arrived at New-
buryport, where they were to embark the following day. , On
the 18th they entered on board ten transports, and sailed
2G0 R. J. MEIGS.
that evening with a fair wind for the mouth of the Kenne-
bec, which place they reached the next day, without any
accident, or meeting any of the enemy's ships. The vessel
proceeded up the river to Coburn's ship-yard, opposite the
present town of Gardiner, where the troops embarked with
their baggage in two hundred bateaux, already prepared
by carpenters, sent on from Cambridge, and proceeded up
the river to Fort Western, opposite to the present town of
Augusta. Before leaving this place, Arnold dispatched a
party of eight men, with two guides, under Lieut. Steel, an in-
telligent, faithful man, in birch-bark canoes, to mark out
the carrying places and water-courses, to be pursued by the
army. This was an arduous duty, but promptly executed,
and the route marked out over to the head-waters of the
Chaudiere, by the 8th of October, or in seventeen days, as
appears from the journal of Judge Henry, of Pennsylvania,
who was one of the exploring party. The main army did
not reach this point in their march, until the 30th, a differ-
ence of twenty-two days. Although every exertion was
made, their progress was slow, not averaging more than
ten or twelve miles a day. The constant recurrence of rip-
ples, falls, and carrying places, across which it required the
aid of all the men to carry their heavy bateaux, barrels of
pork and flour, with their own arms and baggage. One of
these carrying places across a bend, from the Kennebec to
the Dead river, a westerly tributary, up which the most
direct course led, was fifteen miles, with two or three small
ponds, which aided a little. Some of the carrying places
were so boggy and deep, that causeways of logs had to be
made ; while others were rocky and full of bushes and fallen
trees, in these Herculean labors the officers were as deeply
engaged as the men ; as where they led, the soldiers would
follow. It was the most arduous and laborious enterprise
performed during the war, where the men suffered not only
R. J. MEIGS. 261
from cold and fatigue for nearly forty days, but for the last
ten days from actual starvation. As they approached the
heads of Dead river, the elevation of the country rendered
the nights cold even in summer, and by the 20th of October,
so cold as to cover the calm, shallow water, with a thin coat
of ice. In proof of the elevation of this region, by referring
to a map, it will be seen that the Connecticut, the Andros-
coggin, the Kennebec, and the Chaudiere rivers all take
their rise in this vicinity
Near the head of the Dead river lived the remnants of an
ancient tribe of Indians. The leading warrior was named
Natanis. For some reason Col. Arnold concluded they were
hostile to the Americans, and directed Lieut. Steel to cap-
ture or kill him. He visited his cabin, a neat, small struc-
ture near the bank of the river, but he had received notice
of the intention, and fled. A few miles above his hut, a
large westerly branch puts in, which the exploring party
were about to ascend as the right course to pursue, when
one of the men noticed a stake driven into the water's edge,
on top of which was a piece of folded birch bark, secured
in a split; on examining this, it proved to be a map of the
route over to Chaudiere, rudely marked on the bark, no doubt
left there by Natanis for the benefit of the Americans, as he
subsequently proved himself to be friendly, and several of
the St. Francis Indians joined Arnold's troops.
The progress of the troops and their laborious march, is
fully described in the letters of their leader to Gen. Wash-
ington and others, as published in the American archives,
extracts from which follow. Fort Western was supposed to
be only one hundred and eighty miles from Quebec, but sub-
sequently proved to be over three hundred. At this place,
for the greater convenience of marching, the troops were
separated into five divisions, with the distance of one day's
262 R. J. MEIGS.
travel between each. The first division was composed of
three companies of riflemen, under Capt. Morgan, and was
in advance ; second division, three companies of infantry,
under Col. Christopher Green; third division, of four com-
panies, under Maj. Meigs; fourth division, of two compa-
nies, under Maj. Bigelow; fifth, of three companies, under
Col. Enos, formed the rear-guard. Norridgewock falls are
fifty miles above Fort Western : a little below these falls,
was once the seat of a Catholic mission to the Indians, un-
der Father Ralle, so basely murdered in the old French war
by a party of colonists
The river being so full of rapids and falls, together with
the leakage, and throwing the water over the sides of the
boats, caused great damage, and loss of provisions. Near
the heads of the Dead river were many small ponds,
abounding in salmon trout. The men caught large quanti-
ties for food. They were so abundant that one person
could take with a hook eight or ten dozen in an hour. In
size, they averaged about half a pound, while in some of
the ponds they were much larger. This region has within
a few years past become a noted resort for sportsmen in
trout-fishing.
On the table lands, between the Kennebec and Chaudiere,
there was considerable flat land, very wet and miry, the
men sinking six or eight inches deep at every step. Dead
river is described by Arnold as a fine, deep stream, with a
current hardly perceptible, between the falls and ripples.
Two or three log-huts were built on the way for the accom-
modation of the sick men, ten or twelve in number. Al-
though they were constantly wet, and the labors of the
march excessive, yet very few of them fell sick. No doubt
the excitement and novelty of their pursuits in this wild,
desolate region, gave a stimulus to their minds, which
R. J. MEIGS. 263
rendered them in a manner insensible to bodily ailment.
The moose-deer were quite plenty here, and numbers were
killed by Morgan's riflemen.
The weather, to the middle of October, was very fine,
which aided the army in its progress very much. On this
river a few Indians were found at then' fall hunt, and one
of them, named Evans, was sent by the commander with a
letter to his friends in Quebec, notifying them of his ap-
proach, of which the enemy had yet no suspicion. This
Indian betrayed his trust, delivering the letter to a British
officer. By the 20th of the month heavy rains set in, and
raised the river so high as greatly to impede their progress.
On the 24th they were thirty miles from Chaudiere, with a
stock of provisions only sufficient for fifteen days. From
this point he sent back all the sick and feeble men. About
this period a party of twenty men were sent forward to clear
the four mile portage from the head of Dead river over to
Chaudiere, and make it easier to pass by the army. It lies
across a mountain or high hill. Over this elevation Mor-
gan's men carried all their bateaux ; while the other troops
took only one for each company, for the transport of their
baggage. Provisions they had none, or only five pounds of
flour to each man, which was baked into cakes in the ashes
of their camp-fires.
The distance to Quebec from this portage, was one hun-
dred miles. The Chaudiere, or Boiling Cauldron, as named
by the French, was too rapid and full of falls for naviga-
tion, and nearly all the boats were stove and sunk in the
first day's voyage, to the great peril of the men and loss of
baggage. The first night passed on the Chaudiere, being
the 31st of October, there fell four inches of snow, so that
the men in their bivouac were covered with it, when they
awoke in the morning. (Henry.) From this time food
became more and more scarce. Previous to this, the rear
204 R. J. MEIGS.
division had advanced fifty miles up Dead river, where Enos
overtook Col. Green's men, entirely out of provisions. Ar-
nold had gone forth to seek an interview with the French
inhabitants, and get them to furnish supplies for his men.
Under these disheartening circumstances, it was concluded
by the officers that Col. Enos' men should deliver all their
provisions but rations for three days, to Col. Green's di-
vision, and return back to the settlements, as they must
certainly starve if all went forward. Those who returned suf-
fered much from want of food; but those who went on, far
more. Several died on the way, from starvation and fatigue,
while others barely preserved life, by eating leather, bones,
bark of trees, and soup made of the flesh of their dogs.
Had not the commander gone on in advance, and purchased
provisions of the French, who were very friendly, and got
them to carry them up the river to meet the troops, many
more would have died.
In a letter to Gen. Schuyler, dated 8th of November, at
St. Marie, two and a half leagues, from Point Levi, he says,
"I was not then apprised, or indeed apprehensive of one-
half the difficulties we had to encounter — of which I cannot
at present give you a particular detail — can only say, we
have hauled our bateaux up over falls, up rapid streams, over
carrying places, and marched through morasses, thick woods,
and over mountains, about three hundred and twenty miles;
many of which we had to pass several times to bring over
our baggage. These difficulties the soldiers have, with the
greatest fortitude, surmounted; and about two-thirds of the
detachment are happily arrived here, and within two days'
march, most of them in good health and high spirits. The
other part, with Col. Enos, returned from Dead river, con-
trary to my expectation, he having orders to send back only
the sick, and those that could not be furnished with provi-
sions. The Chaudicre was amazingly rapid and rocky for
B. J. MEIGS. 265
about twenty miles, where we had the misfortune to stave
three of our bateaux and lose their provisions, &c, but
happily no lives. I then divided the little stock left, and
proceeded on with the two remaining boats and six men,
and very fortunately reached the French inhabitants the
30th of October, at night, who received us in the most hos-
pitable manner, and sent off early the next morning a sup-
ply of fresh provisions, flour, &c, to the detachment." This
timely aid, which saved many lives and encouraged the men
to proceed, reached them on the 3d of November.
In all these privations and hardships, Maj. Meigs bore a
conspicuous part, suffering equally with his men. Several
females, wives of the soldiers, bore the fatigues of this dreary
march, wading through bogs and ponds of water coated with
ice. (Henry.) Aaron Burr was a volunteer in this heroic,
but calamitous expedition. On the 14th of November, in a
letter to Gen. Montgomery, he says he crossed the St. Law-
rence with about five hundred and fifty men, between the
hours of nine at night and four in the morning, without being
discovered until they were nearly all over. This was effected
in twenty birch-bark canoes, although the river was guarded
by two vessels of war. About one hundred and twenty-five
more men subsequently crossed, increasing his little army
to six hundred and seventy-five. Nearly three hundred had
returned with Col. Enos, leaving one hundred and twenty-
five as the number lost and left on the way by sickness and
death, as the troops at Fort Western amounted to eleven
hundred men.
With this small force of resolute soldiers, he immediately
invested the walls of Quebec, hoping by cutting off the sup-
plies to force them to capitulate. One of the officers from
his camp wrote as follows: "The difficulties that our de-
tachment underwent in the woods are beyond description.
For forty days I waded in the water, more or less; my feet
260 R. J. MEIGS.
constantly wet, except nights ; the most of the time freezing
weather. We were at an allowance of half a pint of flour
a man for a fortnight, and half that time no meat; passing
through morasses, cedar swamps and drowned lands, wading
creeks and rivers at the same time. The number that we
lost was small, not exceeding three or four, and these with
hunger."
The result of the attack on the city is well known. Maj.
Meigs, with his battalion, was attached to that portion of the
army which penetrated within the town, where, with Morgan,
Dearborn, and others, he was taken prisoner. " The pris-
oners within the city were kindly treated by Gov. Carlton.
He sent out Maj. Meigs for their clothes and baggage, al-
lowed them to be supplied with money and other conven-
iencies by their friends; and after they were released, they
bore a unanimous testimony to the humanity and good usage
of the British commander." (Spark's Life of Arnold.)
During the long and dreary winter which followed their
captivity, Mr. Meigs did all he could to alleviate the suffer-
ings of the men, which arose more from the lack of warm
clothing than of food. To relieve their necessities, he, with
Col. Christopher Green, advanced money to the amount of
two hundred dollars. This was justly chargeable to the
American Congress, but was not repaid until three years
after the cessation of hostilities, or nearly ten from the time
of advancement, when we find on their journals the follow-
ing resolution :
"September 28th, 1785; on the memorial of R. J. Meigs
and Job Green, son and heir of Christopher Green, deceased.
Resolved, That the Board of Treasury take order for
paying to R. J. Meigs, late a colonel in the service of the
United States, and to the legal representative of Christopher
Green, deceased, late a colonel in said service, the sum of
two hundred dollars, the same having been expended for
K. J. MEIGS. 267
the use and comfort of the unfortunate prisoners in Quebec,
in the year 177G."
In the course of this year he was duly exchanged, and re-
turned home; soon after which he received from Congress
the commission of colonel, and was authorized to raise a
regiment of choice men, which was afterward known in
Connecticut as the Leather Cap Regiment. " Col. Meigs,
having enlisted a part of his regiment, marched to New
Haven, to carry into execution a plan projected for the sur-
prisal of a party of the enemy at Sagg harbor, on Long
Island, where a large amount of stores and forage had been
collected for the army in New York."
The following account of this transaction is from Mar-
shall's Life of Washington : " Gen. Parsons intrusted the
execution of this plan to Col. Meigs, a very gallant officer,
who had accompanied Arnold in his memorable march to
Quebec, and had been taken prisoner in the unsuccessful
attempt made on that place by Montgomery. He embarked
with about two hundred and thirty men, on board thirteen
whale-boats, and proceeded along the coast to Guilford,
from whence he was to cross the sound. Here he was de-
tained some time by high winds and a rough sea; but on
the 23d of May, about one o'clock in the afternoon, he re-
embarked one hundred and seventy of his detachment, and
proceeded, under convoy of two armed sloops, across the
sound to the north division of the island, near Southold.
The east end of Long Island is deeply intersected by a bay,
on the north side of which had been a small foraging party,
against which the expedition was in part directed ; but they
had marched to New York two days before. Here, how-
ever, information was received that the stores had not been
removed from Sagg harbor, which lies in the northern divis-
ion of the island, and that a small guard still remained there
for their defense. The boats were immediately conveyed
268 R. J. MEIGS.
across the land, a distance of about fifteen miles, into the
bay, where the troops re-embarked, and crossing the bay,
landed within four miles of Sagg harbor, at two o'clock in
the morning; which place they completely surprised, and
carried with fixed bayonets. At the same time, a division
of the detachment secured the armed schooner and the ves-
sels, with the forage which had been collected for the supply
of the army at New York. These brigs and sloops, twelve
in number, were set on fire and entirely consumed. Six of
the enemy were killed, and ninety taken prisoners. A very
few escaped under cover of the night. Col. Meigs returned
to Guilford with his prisoners, having thus completely ef-
fected the object of the expedition, without the loss of a
single man, and having moved with such uncommon celerity
as to have transported his men by land and water ninety
miles in twenty-five hours.
Shortly after this brilliant affair, Congress passed the fol-
lowing resolution :
"July 25th, 1777 — Resolved, That Congress have a just
sense of the merit of Lieut. Col. Meigs, and the officers
and men under his command, who distinguished their pru-
dence, activity, enterprise, and valor, in the late expedition
to Long Island, and that an elegant sword be provided by
the commissary-general of military stores, and presented to
Lieut. Col. Meigs." (Jour. Congress.)
Col. Meigs continued to sustain an active part in all the
privations and sufferings of the American army, during the
period of 1778 and 1779; and in the latter year was en-
gaged in one of the most brilliant events in the course of
the war — the capture of Stony Point. In this heroic adven-
ture, Col. Meigs acted a conspicuous part, his regiment be-
ing attached to the right column of the attacking forces.
The following description of the locality, and events con-
nected therewith, is from Marshall's Life of Washington :
R. J. MEIGS. 269
" Some miles below West Point, about the termination of
the Highlands, is King's ferry, where the great road between
the middle and eastern states crosses the North river. The
ferry is completely commanded by the two opposite points
of land ; the one on the west side, which is a rough elevated
piece of ground, is denominated Stony Point; and the
other on the east side, which is a flat neck of land, project-
ing far into the water, is called Verplank's Point. The
command of this ferry was important to either army : to
the British, as it gave them the control of an extensive dis-
trict of country in which to forage, and also the advantage
of a strong post, which communicated with New York by
water : to the Americans it was important, as it afforded
a ready and safe intercourse with the stations on both sides
of the river, and the loss of it would oblige them to seek a
longer and higher route, through a rough and broken coun-
try. The last of May, Sir Henry Clinton, strengthened by
a large body of British troops from Virginia, under Gen.
Vaughan, embarked his army from New York, on the river,
and on the 31st landed a numerous division on the east side
of the Hudson, eight miles below Verplank's Point, while
the remainder landed on the west side, three miles below
Stony Point. The works at this place being unfinished,
were abandoned. The British, under Gen. Patterson, im-
mediately took possession, and erecting a battery of heavy
cannon and mortars, were ready next morning to open a
fire on Fort Fayette at Verplank's Point. The river between
the two points is about one thousand yards in width. The
troops landed below, invested it by land, and some galleys
stationed above, prevented the escape of the American gar-
rison by water. Capt. Armstrong being unable to defend
himself against this superior force, surrendered the post.
They immediately proceeded to fortify their acquisitions,
and especially Stony Point, in the strongest manner. When
270 R. J. MEIGS.
fully completed, Sir H. Clinton left strong garrisons in each,
and returned to New York. The importance of these posts
to the Americans, induced Gen. Washington to attempt
their recovery. He also wished to achieve some important
action to stimulate the courage of the army, and arouse the
dormant energies of the country, sinking under a long
course of disaster, from the depredations of the British in
Connecticut. After carefully reconnoitering these posts, and
getting all the information possible, he was satisfied they
could only be taken by surprise. His first plan was to at-
tack both posts simultaneously ; but as such operations are
very difficult of attainment, he decided to turn all his atten-
tion to the attack of Stony Point. As the capture of this,
from its elevated position, would give it command over the
fort at Verplank's Point. To Gen. Wayne, the commander
of the American light infantry, was intrusted the conduct
of the enterprise. Twelve o'clock on the night of the 15th
of July, was chosen for the assault. Stony Point is a com-
manding hill, projecting far into the Hudson, which washes
three-fourths of its base; the remaining fourth is, in a great
measure, covered by a deep marsh, over which there is only
one crossing place ; but at its junction with the river is a
sandy beach passable at low-tide. On the summit of this
hill was erected the fort, furnished with an abundance of
heavy ordinance. Several breast-works and strong batteries
were advanced in front of the principal works; and about
half way down the hill were two rows of abatis. The bat-
teries commanded the beach and the crossing place of the
marsh, and could rake and enfilade any column approaching
the fort from either of those points. Several vessels of war
were also stationed in the river, so as to command the
ground at the foot of the hill. The fort was garrisoned by
six hundred men, under Lieut. Col. Johnson. At noon of
the day preceding the night of attack, the light infantry
K. J. MEIGS. 271
commenced their march from Sandy beach, distant fourteen
miles from Stony Point, and passing over an exceeding
rugged and mountainous country, arrived about eight o'clock
P. M., at Steel's spring, one and a half miles from the fort,
where the dispositions for the assault were made. It was
intended to attack the works on the right and left flanks at
the same instant. The regiments of Febiger and Meigs,
with Maj. Hull's detachment, formed the right column;
and Butler's regiment, with the companies under Maj. Mur-
free, formed the left; one hundred and fifty volunteers led
by Lieut. Col. Fleary and Maj. Posey, constituted the van
of the right; and one hundred under Maj. Stewart, composed
the van of the left. At half past eleven, the two columns
moved on to the charge, the van of each with unloaded
muskets and fixed bayonets. They were each preceded by a
forlorn hope of twenty men, commanded by Lieuts. Gibbons
and Knox, wThose duty it was to remove the abatis and other
obstructions, to open a passage for the columns which fol-
lowed close in the rear. Proper measures having been taken
to prevent notice of their approach, the Americans reached
the marsh undiscovered. Here some unexpected difficulties
arose, and the assault did not commence until twenty minutes
after twelve. Both columns then rushed forward under a
tremendous fire of musketry and grape shot; surmounting
every obstacle, they entered the works at the point of the
bayonet, without discharging a single piece, and obtained
complete possession of the fort. The humanity of the con-
querors was not less conspicuous, nor less honorable, than
their bravery ; not a single individual suffered after resist-
ance ceased. All the troops displayed the greatest courage,
and all distinguished themselves whose situation enabled
them to do so. Out of the forlorn hope, led by Lieut. Gib-
bons, seventeen were killed or wounded. The loss of the
Americans was not in proportion to the apparent danger,
272 R. J. MEIGS.
and amounted to only about one hundred in killed and
wounded. That of the British was one hundred and thirty-
one, of whom sixty-three were killed. It was intended to make
an attack on Verplank's as soon as Gen. Wayne got posses-
sion of Stony Point, but from some mistake that plan failed.
Gen. Washington examined the position of Stony Point,
and thought it not advisable to maintain it, as it would re-
quire at least fifteen hundred men to garrison it, more than
he could spare from the army without weakening his means
of defense in the Highlands. It was, therefore, reluctantly
abandoned. Sir H. Clinton directly took it in possession
and fortified it stronger than before.
The success of this enterprise infused new courage into
the country, and revived the drooping spirits of the Ameri-
can people. It was a proof that the bravery and enterprise
of their soldiers was fully equal to that of their enemies, a
fact which the British always stoutly denied, but were now
obliged to confess. Col. Meigs shared largely in the honors
and dangers of the assault, mounting the breast-work at
the head of his men, and with his hand clasped in theirs,
assisted many to gain the top of this formidable obstruction,
who, with fixed bayonets, leaped down into the fort amidst
their enemies. Every man engaged in it, through life, was
noticed by his countrymen as one of the heroes of Stony
Point.
From this period to the close of the war, he continued to
serve his country with fidelity, and at the close shared in
the honors and blessings of civil liberty, so dearly bought
with the blood and toil of his countrymen. After the war
he still lived at Middletown.
On the formation of the Ohio Company, in which many
soldiers of the Revolution engaged, he was appointed one
of their surveyors, and in the spring of the year 1788 he
landed at Marietta, and entered on the duties of his office.
R. J. MEIGS. 273
" A government for the Northwestern Territory had been
prepared by an ordinance of Congress, in 1787. Gov. St.
Clair and the judges of the territory had not arrived.
The emigrants were without civil laws or civil authority.
Col. Meigs drew up a concise system of regulations, which
were considered by the emigrants as the rule of conduct
and preservation, until the proper authorities should arrive.
To give these regulations publicity, a large oak, standing
near the confluence of the rivers, was selected, from which
the bark was cut off, of sufficient space to attach the sheet
on which the regulations were written ; and they were ben-
eficially adhered to until the civil authorities arrived in July.
This venerable oak was to the emigrants more useful, and
as frequently consulted, as the oracle of ancient Delphos,
by its votaries."* Soon after the arrival of Gov. St. Clair,
he was appointed a justice of the peace, and one of the
judges of the Court of Quarter Sessions. He was also
commissioned as the clerk of this court, and prothonotary
of the Court of Common Pleas. The first session of the
latter was held on Tuesday, the 2d of September, 1788.
This being the earliest court ever assembled in the North-
western Territory, it was honored with all the ceremony due
to so important an occasion. A procession was formed at
the Point, composed of the inhabitants, with the United
States officers from Fort Harmer, who escorted the judges
of the Court of Common Pleas, with the governor and su-
preme judges of the territory, to the hall in the northwest
block-house of Campus Martius, distant about half a mile.
The procession was headed by the sheriff, Col. E. Sproat, a
man six feet and four inches high, and large in proportion,
with a drawn sword in his right hand, and wand of office in
the left ; the whole making quite an imposing appearance,
* Obituary notice of Col. Meigs, bv his son, the postmaster-general.
18
274 11. J. MEIGS.
and exciting the admiration of the friendly savages, a num-
ber of whom were loitering about the new city. When all
were assembled within the hall, the services of the day were
opened with prayer by the Rev. Manasseh Cutler, one of
the directors of the Ohio Company. The court was then
organized by reading the commissions of the judges, the
clerk and the sherilf, after which the latter opened it for
business, by proclamation. The duties of clerk were exe-
cuted by Col. Meigs, with accuracy and fidelity, for a num-
ber of years.
In 1789, he was engaged a part of the summer in survey-
ing the meanders of the Ohio river, from the Muskingum
down to the mouth of the Big Sandy, which was supposed
to be near the line of the western boundary of the purchase.
While on this trip by wrater, in a large flatboat, then in use
for traveling up as well as down stream, the Indians made
an attack on John Matthews, who was surveying the west-
ern range of townships, and killed seven men of his com-
pany. He fled to Col. Meigs, who received him on board,
and crossed over the Ohio river. A little below Twelve
Pole creek he erected a small block-house, for the security
of his men, until another party of surveyors, under Mr.
Backus, could come in. This they did in a day or two; and
having completed his survey of the river, they all returned
to Marietta. During the period of the Indian war, the la-
bors of the surveyors were suspended: and for several years
he suffered all the privations and dangers of that distressing
time.
During the treaty with the Indians at Greenville, in 1795.
Col. Meigs was appointed a commissary of the clothing de-
partment; issuing the goods furnished to the Indians as well
as the troops. Here he exercised his benevolent feelings in
behalf of the whites who were prisoners with the Indians,
to see that all were delivered up, as stipulated in one of the
R. J. MEIGS. 275
articles. Amongst those who were known to have been
captured, was Joseph Kelly, a lad taken from Belville, Va.,
in 1791, and whose widowed mother now lived in Marietta,
her husband being killed at the same time. In the autumn
of 1795, the Indians had brought in and given up all their
prisoners ; yet no account could be had of young Kelly, and
it was quite uncertain whether he was dead or alive, as no
news had ever been received of him since his captivity.
But as the Indians seldom or never put boys to death, after
they were prisoners, it was probable he was yet living, and
kept back by some family who had become greatly attached
to him. Although nearly all hope had ceased of his recov-
ery, yet Mr. Meigs continued to inquire of every new In-
dian face he saw at the store. At length two Indians said
they knew of two white boys on the heads of the Auglaise
river, who were kept back by their owners. Hoping that
one of these boys might be the widow's son, he immediately
applied to Gen. Wayne for a messenger to be sent for them.
One of these Indians, as a guide, and a white man were
sent out. Joseph had been adopted into the family of an
old warrior, named Mishalena, who had lost five sons in
the wars with the whites, and had now no child left but a
daughter ; and yet he adopted this boy, the son of his mor-
tal enemies, as his own, and ever treated him as such.
What a lesson for the professors of Christianity ! Mr. Kelly
says that the old warrior was one of the most kind and be-
nevolent men that he ever met with in his life, as well as
of a noble and commanding appearance. He was now too
old for war, but in great favor with the tribe, as one of their
most able counselors. His adopted mother's name was
Patepsa. She never accepted him with the hearty good-
will and affection of Mishalena, but always gave him
plenty to eat, when she had it. Joseph was only six years
old when adopted, but was now eleven. He parted with his
270 li. J. MEIGS.
Indian parents and the boys of the tribe, with nearly as
much regret as he had formerly done with his white ones,
lie had lived with them so long, in the wild freedom of the
forest, that he had forgotten his native language, and almost
his former name ; for his Indian parents had given him a
new one, Lalaque, but for brevity, spoken Lala. They
accompanied him to Greenville, parting with him very re-
luctantly, and poor Mishalena was now left in his old age,
like a deadened forest tree, around whose roots no green
shoot appears. As a parting gift he presented his son with
a beautiful bow and arrows, made with his own hands. The
boy who accompanied him was named Bill, from Kentucky,
whose family were all killed at the time of his capture. He
had forgotten the family name, but had been adopted by a
widow woman, who had no children. She loved him with
all the tenderness of a natural mother, and parted with him
in deep sorrow. On the arrival of the two boys at the fort,
Col. Meigs sent for the tailor, and had them fitted out with
new warm woolen dresses, after the fashion of the whites,
and the blanket and leggins of the Indians laid aside. A
short time before, he had written to Mrs. Meigs, that no dis-
covery could yet be made of the widow's son, and that he
greatly feared he was dead; cautioning her not to let the
afflicted woman know the worst of his fears. Joseph's mo-
ther had described his hair, eyes, and looks, so accurately,
that at the first glimpse of the two boys, he picked him out.
The Indian interpreter soon confirmed his opinion, by talk-
ing with him in the Shawanoe dialect. On being ques-
tioned, he remembered the names of his brothers and sisters,
and that his own name was Joseph Kelly. This satisfied
him that he was the lost son of the sorrowing widow, who,
for the whole period of his absence, had never omitted him
in her daily prayers, or sat down to the table with her other
children, without mentioning his name. So anxious was
R. J. MEIGS. 277
this good and kind-hearted man to restore him to the be-
reaved mother, that he started, in February, across the
swamps and pathless forests for Marietta. A young, active
Shawanoe Indian, named Thorn, guided the party, which
consisted of six soldiers and six or eight horses, through the
wilderness, without deviation, and struck the Muskingum
river at Big Rock, a noted Indian landmark, twenty-four
miles above Marietta.
While on their journey, an incident occurred which places
in a strong light the acuteness of their observation and tact
in tracing their way through the woods. During a cloudy
and snowy day, the party got bewildered in a thick beech
swamp. Col. Meigs took out his pocket compass, and after
examination, said the course lay east. Indian Thorn pointed
to the southeast. The colonel still insisting on the authority
of the compass, and the known general direction of the
route, the Indian became vexed, and shouldering his rifle,
muttered in broken English, "D — n compass," and pursued
his own course. In a few minutes travel, Thorn's judgment
proved to be right, and the colonel and the compass wrong.
The party reached Marietta early in March, and the fer-
vent, oft-repeated prayer of the widow for the restoration
of her lost son, was at length answered, to the great joy
and thankfulness of Col. Meigs, by whose unwearied exer-
tions and perseverance it had been accomplished, as well as
to the delight of the mother.
In 1798, he, with Col. Robert Oliver, was elected by the
people of Washington county, to represent them in the ter-
ritorial Legislature, then assembled for the first time. In
this body were several able and talented men. Col. Meigs
was not excelled by any of them for sound sense or integrity,
and performed his duties with credit to himself and to the
people who had elected him.
In 1801, he was appointed by President Jefferson, Indian
27 S It. J. MK I GS.
agent amongst the Cherokees, where he resided until the
time of his death, in January, 1823. The inhabitants of
Marietta parted with him very reluctantly, holding his per-
son and virtues in the highest estimation. His upright,
manly conduct, dignified manners and kind heart, had en-
listed all in his favor. " During a long life of activity and
usefulness, no man ever sustained a character more irre-
proachable than Col. Meigs, lie was a pattern of excellence
as a patriot, a philanthropist, and a Christian. In all the
vicissitudes of fortune, the duties of religion were strictly
observed, and its precepts strikingly exemplified. In the
discharge of his duties among the Cherokees, he acquired
their highest confidence. They loved and revered him as a
father, denominating him, for his integrity and uprightness,
the White Path."
The family of Col. Meigs was not numerous. By his first
wife he had two son3, Return Jonathan and John. The
former was one of the governors of Ohio. Timothy was
the son of a second wife, and accompanied his father to
Georgia.
In person Mr. Meigs was thin and spare, of a medium
hight, with a highly intelligent countenance ; nose Grecian,
with a lofty, bold forehead ; eyes keen and black, sparkling
with benevolence, but striking with awe the boldest heart,
when bent in anger on the guilty or undeserving; active
and graceful in all his motions, even in old age practicing
the athletic sports of the young Indians with the buoyancy
of youth. He died suddenly, at the age of eighty-three,
full of the Christian's hope, surrounded by the sorrowing
Cherokees, who mourned his death with deep and heart-felt
grief.
LIBRARY
»»'vEfisl0//oHf£,aiNo,s
v,lM'
tfrrffa-
GRIFFIN GREENE, ESQ.
The little state of Rhode Island, so fruitful in eminent
and brave men, was the birth-place of Mr. Greene, being
born on the 20th of February, 1749, in the town of Warwick.
His ancestors were from England, and settled in Rhode
Island at an early day. Education, at that period, was a
minor concern, and he received no other than such as was
afforded by the common or public schools. At an early
age he was bred to the smith and anchor-making business ;
few men of that day being able to live without the aid of
some handicraft or agricultural pursuit. It was the age of
honest industry. Of his youth and childhood, little has
been preserved.
At a suitable time of life, he married Miss Sarah Greene,
of the same town, but of a family not connected by blood
with his own. There were many of this name in the state,
who were all wealthy in lands, and ranked high amongst the
first citizens of the colony, one of them holding the office of
governor. His wife was a sister of Col. Christopher Greene,
who commanded the noted black regiment, which was one
of the most efficient and brave in the service. The commis-
sioned officers were white men, and the privates negroes. By
this marriage he had four children, who lived to manhood,
viz.: Richard, Philip, Griffin, and Susan. The descendants
of Richard are several of them living in Ohio : the others
left no issue.
Previous to the commencement of hostilities between the
colonists and the mother country, Jacob Greene, a cousin,
and himself erected a forge for the manufacture of iron.
Before the discovery of steam-power, a stream of water was
280 GRIFFIN GllEENE.
necessary to work the machinery, and for this purpose a
spot was selected on the Pawtuxet, distant about five miles
from the head of Greenwich bay, the nearest point where
pigs could be landed from vessels. In addition to the ex-
pense of wagoning them over a rough road to the forge, they
had to be transported from the North river, and when man-
ufactured into bar iron, returned to the village for sale. It
was carried on during the war, and furnished cannon balls
and wrought iron for the use of the country, at a period
when such articles were scarce in the colony. The site of
the old works is now occupied by cotton factories.
At the breaking out of hostilities, he acted with his coun-
trymen in throwing off the yoke of Great Britain, for which
praiseworthy deed he was cast out of the synagogue of the
Quakers, to which sect he belonged, at the same time with
his cousin, Gen. Nathaniel Greene, and never returned to
them again. During the war he became acquainted with
many leading men of that day, with whom intercourse was
kept up in after life. In 1775 he commenced his military
career, by serving as commissary to the Rhode Island troops,
although, in the previous year, he had been trained to mili-
tary exercises, as a volunteer in the company to which
Christopher and Nathaniel belonged, with many of the most
active and prominent young men in the colony. In 1777
he was paymaster to the regiment commanded by Christo-
pher Greene, and during the attack on the fort at Red bank,
was exposed to the shot of the enemy, in taking a supply
of powder to his countrymen. This act he performed with
great intrepidity, although not in the line of his duty.
In 1778, his cousin, Gen. Nathaniel Greene, with whom
he had been brought up and lived in the closest inti-
macy, working with him at the same forge in the manufac-
ture of anchors, and also engaged with him in various
mercantile pursuits connected with the iron business, was
GRIFFIN GREENE. 281
appointed, by Gen. Washington, qaai'termaster-general of
the army. lie found the affairs of that department in the
greatest disorder, and needing- several deputies, his cousin
Griffin Greene was selected as one of them. Under their
efficient control, in a few months that branch of the public
service, so important to the welfare of an army, was placed
in complete order, greatl}" to the relief and satisfaction of
the commander-in-chief. He was employed in this business
until near the time of Gen. Greene's appointment to the
command of the southern army. Connected with his pur-
chases of provisions, he also entered into that of merchan-
dise : many goods being needed for the use of the troops,
large quantities were bought from Clark and Nightingale, a
celebrated firm of that day.
During the whole period of the war, a correspondence
was kept up between him and the general : a number of
the letters having been preserved among the family papers,
extracts will be given, as interesting specimens of the thoughts
of the master minds of that trying era. In them are many
sensible remarks on men and measures, especially that trou-
blesome one of the currency, which, iii 1779, had fallen to
its lowest ebb, and had well nigh destroyed the country. In
April of that year, one specie dollar was worth twenty dol-
lars of the paper-money of Congress. This depreciation
of the currency, with the heart-burnings of the soldiery and
people thereon, was one of the main reliances of the king
and his counselors, for the subjugation of the colonies.
Money and credit are the sinews of war, and of both these
Congress was destitute. Had it not been for the timely aid
of France, it is more than probable that the independence
of America would not, at that time, have been achieved.
The policy of Congress in their finances, is thus com-
mented on, in one of his letters, dated at camp, May 18th,
1779: "The Congress should appoint a Board for this
282 G 11 1 ¥ F L N GREENE.
purpose ; but they arc very fond of reserving all their powers
within their own body. It has been clear to me, for a long
time, that the business of that House is too complex and
multifarious to be digested into method and order. They
arc always in a hurry, and never bring anything to perfec-
tion, until its advantages are lost. I mean not to arraign
their intentions, but I am sure their policy is bad. Two things
arc essential to the interests of these states ; one is that the
proceedings of Congress be more generally known ; and the
other is that their authority be more generally acknowledged
by the states."
In a short time after this, a board of treasury was estab-
lished, and by the aid of that eminent financier, and most
excellent man, Robert Morris, their monetary affairs were
placed in a more propitious train. In the January preceding.
Gen. Greene was in Philadelphia, and thus writes to Griffin:
"The luxuries and extravagance of this city exceed any-
thing you ever saw. There has been nothing going on here,
but entertainments, assemblies, and balls. His excellency,
Gen. Washington, has been here about a month, and the
citizens have exerted themselves to make him as happy as
possible. But I can truly say I feel serious amidst festivity,
and gloomy amongst the most joyous. The extravagance
of the times is very unfriendly to a republican government,
and greatly enervates the national strength." How just
and true, this sentiment; and not less true now, than then.
The thoughts of Gen. Washington and this excellent man
were too much occupied with their country's cares, to enter,
with satisfaction, into the amusements of the careless and
the gay.
In April of this year, the French minister visited the
American army in their camp at Middlebrook, and was re-
ceived with great respect. He is represented as one of the
most polite men of the age, and says, " The alliance with
GRIFFIN GREENE. 283
France is a most happy affair, and alleviates a thousand of
our distresses."
In September, 1779, Mr. Greene engaged as a partner in
a company for fitting out two brigantines as privateers, the
coast at that time being pretty clear of British ships of war.
The}' were called the Black and the Rattle Snake ; but be-
fore the one had time to erect its head, and the other to shake
its rattles, in defiance of the British lion, they were driven
on shore at Sandy hook, in April, 1780, by the enemy's
cruisers, and lost. This was the fate of many American
privateers, and in the ultimate, it is probable, as much was
lost as won, by the colonists, in this nefarious business. It
is certain that the loss of these vessels was seriously felt.
In the spring of 1780, he writes: "Our public affairs are
under great embarrassments. The treasury is entirely with-
out money, and the public offices without credit. Our stock
of provisions is next to nothing, and the troops frequently
upon half allowance for a third part of the time, and many
times entirely without. In a word, we are on the high road
to starvation, when there is plenty of everything in the
country, and only wrant ways and means to draw it out.
Our prospects at the south are in a disagreeable train, and
I set down the certain loss of Charleston, unless some very
providential intervention occurs, which we have no reason
to expect in favor of a people not remarkable for religion
or piety." This prognostic proved correct, as the place sur-
rendered a short time after. " Upon the whole, our situation
in political life is not very eligible, neither will it be soon,
unless there is more energy, consistency, and good policy
pursued by our civil rulers. We want men of liberality,
sound judgment, and attention to business, to conduct our
public affairs. Happy is that nation, which has wise and
honest men to manage national matters."
In July, the Marquis de Lafayette visited Rhode Island.
284 Git IF FIN GREENE.
The general wrote to his cousin Griffin and brother Jacob, to
pay him every attention due to his rank and merit. "I hope
the inhabitants of the state will exert themselves a little to
convince the French officers that we give them a most cordial
reception. But such is the state of human nature and the
caprices of mankind, that it is ten to one if ever we part
with the same good-will toward each other, that we came
together."
Although the treason of Arnold has been written by a hun-
dred hands, here is a fresh account of it, not before published.
"Camp Tappan, September 29th, 1780.
Treason, treason! of the blackest kind, has been most
providentially discovered. Gen. Arnold, who commanded at
West Point, was in contract with the British adjutant-gen-
eral for delivering into the enemy's hands, all the forts and
fortifications of that place. The plan was laid, the condi-
tions settled, and the time fixed for the execution. Happily
for the cause of America, the whole was discovered before
the thing was ripe for execution. The adjutant-general had
been up to King's ferry to see Gen. Arnold, and on his re-
turn to New York, near the White plains, was taken up by
three militia-men, who carried him prisoner to Maj. Jame-
son, of Sheldon's light-horse; and on his being searched,
plans of the works, the strength of the garrison, and a hun-
dred other observations necessary to be known in order to
favor an attack, were all made out in Arnold's own hand-
writing. They were immediately sent to Gen. Washington,
who was then on his return from Hartford. But unfortu-
nately, Jameson, from a false delicacy, reported to Gen.
Arnold, that he had taken prisoner one Anderson, which
gave him time to just make his escape before Gen. Wash-
ington got to the Point. The adjutant-general and one Mr.
Joseph Smith, arc now both prisoners in this camp, and
doubtless will be hung to-morrow. We have only to lament
GRIFFIN GREENE. 285
that Arnold is not to grace the gallows with them. It ap-
pears, from an inquiry into Arnold's conduct, that he is the
most accomplished villain in the world: nothing can exceed
his meanness. I am called upon to attend a court-martial,
and, therefore, cannot go further into this dark and wicked
business. The militia lads that took him, (Mr. Andre,) de-
serve immortal honor, and will be most liberally rewarded."
Treason ! treason ! The sound of this most odious word
and hateful act of Arnold, as it pealed through the nation,
turned pale the cheeks of every true friend to his country.
It was more dangerous to the cause of freedom than the
loss of several battles. Washington knew not whom to
trust in this alarming crisis, ignorant as he was of the ex-
tent of the conspiracy. But a few days reassured him, and
with such men as Greene, Putnam, and a host of others to
rally around him, in whose patriotism he could safely trust,
his confidence was restored, and the affairs of the army
resumed their regular train.
In a letter of October 20th, 1780, on occasion of some
losses in Mr. Greene's mercantile business, he says, "We
have one consolation, that good men are not always for-
tune's greatest favorites. If we are not rich, we will be
honest; and if we are not respected for our wealth, we will
be for our industry. Your judgment is good in business ;
your industry and attention unquestionable. Nothing is
wanting but the smiles of fortune : without this all our en-
deavors are in vain:" another name for a superintending
providence that rules the affairs of men, and not the blind
goddess of the Romans. "I am appointed to the command
of the southern army, and am now just setting forward on
the journey. It is a most difficult command, and hitherto
has proved a disgraceful one to all who have gone that
way. I wish it may not be my lot. One thing I shall avoid
28G GRIFFIN GREENE.
if possible : that is, giving the public just grounds for
censuring me. If I am unfortunate, that I cannot help*"
The result proved how justly he estimated the difficulties of
that weighty affair, and how nobly he conducted the south-
ern campaigns, for his own and his country's glory.
In July, 1781, from the High hills of Santee, he writes,
"Thus far I am safe and in good health, though I have had
several very narrow escapes. If I can get off with whole
bones and a decent reputation, it is more than I expect.
New England should rejoice that she has really felt nothing
of the war. It rages here like a fire at large, and destroys
everything before it. Such destruction and waste, such mis-
ery and distress as this country affords, have not been seen
in America. The burning of a town, or the plunder of a
few farms, are nothing to the cruelties practiced here. But
enough of this disagreeable subject."
In one of his last letters, dated at Charleston, in May, 1783,
he writes, "I beg leave to congratulate you upon the happy
issue of the war. It affords me the highest satisfaction to
find my judgment and opinions confirmed by experience.
The Revolution has been important and successful, although
not very promising in the beginning. It has more than
once been in doubt, but I always trusted for success in the
general prejudices of human nature. It would have aggra-
vated my own misfortunes, to have led my friends into ruin
and disgrace, in the same manner as it now affords me
pleasure in having contributed to their happy deliverance."
At the close, he says, "Remember me affectionately to all at
Potowamut:" the place where he worked at anchor-making
before the war. " Don't forget my old friend, Master Max-
well, and ask him what he thinks of 'the mighty power of
Britain now?' "
The handwriting of Gen. Greene was strong, nervous, and
GRIFFIN GREENE. 287
bold; greatly resembling that of Gen. Washington, whom he
more nearly imitated in vigor of mind and excellence, of
character, than any other of his generals.
During the time of the war, while the British ileet was
lying in the harbor of Newport, they were obliged to put
suddenly to sea, on account of the French fleet, threatening
to blockade them. Some transport ships and a small frig-
ate called the Flora, were sunk, to keep them from the
enemy. They lay in rather shoal water, a,nd at low ebb
tides a part of their hulls was above the surface. In 1780,
before the close of the war, the fertile mind of Mr. Griffin
Greene devised a plan for raising them from their oozy bed,
in which his cousin Jacob assisted him. By the aid of a
diving-bell, a man went down and closed up the holes by
which they were scuttled. A powerful forcing pump, dis-
charging twenty-five hundred hogsheads an hour, worked
by horses in a flatboat alongside, enabled him so effectually
to heave the water from their holds, that with the assistance
of lighters, they rose to the surface, and once more floated
on the ocean. After the close of the war, the commerce of
the new republic being at a low ebb, and no demand for
ships, he took the Flora to France for sale. This transac-
tion detained him about two years, in which time he visited
Holland and the adjacent countries.
Soon after his return, the project for settling a New Eng-
land colony on the banks of the Ohio, was matured by some
of the officers of the Revolution, amongst whom were many
of his acquaintance, especially Gen. Varnum, a leading man
in carrying out the enterprise. After closing his partner-
ship concerns, and selling out to his cousin Jacob, he joined
the company, and invested a part of his money in their
lands. In 1788 he moved his family to Marietta, loading
three large wagons with his household goods, and all kinds
of mechanical and agricultural implements. Amongst other
388 Gil 11 FIN GEEENE
items, was a large library of valuable books; knowing that
the mind needed food, as well as the body, even when sur-
rounded by a wilderness. The first anchors made on the
Ohio river, for the brig St. Clair, in the year 1800, were
made under bis direction. Soon after his arrival at Mari-
etta, Gov. St. Clair commissioned him as a justice of the
peace, and one of the judges of the Court of Quarter Ses-
sions. In 1789 he was appointed, by the agents of the Ohio
Company, a director, in the place of Gen. Varnum deceased,
which post he continued to occupy until the close of their
affairs. In 1790 he joined the colony at Belpre, and was
a leading man in that settlement, solemnizing marriages,
and settling civil disputes amongst the pioneers.
In January, 1791, the Indian war commenced, by the de-
struction of the settlement at Big Bottom, the news of which
arrived while he was at Marietta, attending court, It was
directly adjourned, and each man hurried home as fast as
he could, expecting to meet the enemy on the way, and find
their cabins and families destroyed. But fortunately the In-
dians retreated without further mischief. In the erection
of Farmers' castle, he took an active part, and lived there
with his family five years during the war. For the whole
of this period, he regularly attended the sitting of the courts,
making his journeys up and down by water, in a canoe, ex-
posed to the rifles of the Indians.
His active mind could not be idle while confined to the
castle, but was busily occupied in studying out useful and
curious machinery. He assisted Capt. Devol in planning
the model of a floating mill, from the recollection of one
he had seen in Holland; probably moved by the tidal cur-
rents, lie also spent more than a year in planning a self-
moving machine, for perpetual motion, thinking it might be
applied to the propulsion of boats on the Ohio river. When
built, it moved with the accuracy and steadiness of a nice
GRIFFIN GREENE. 289
time-piece, but after running a few hours, would finally come
to a stand-still, in spite of the efforts of its inventor, being
bound by the laws of gravitation, which it had not power
to resist. It was reluctantly abandoned, and the curious
wheels and levers with which it was made, were in being a
few years since, lying in the garret of the old Mansion house
in Marietta, amidst the dust and rubbish of by-gone days.
In 1794, when salt was worth six or eight dollars a bushel,
he projected an expedition into the Indian country, near the
Scioto river, for the discovery of the salt springs, said to be
worked by the savages, near the present town of Jackson.
At the hazard of his own life and all those with him, ten or
twelve in number, he succeeded in finding the saline water,
and boiled some of it down on the spot, in their camp kettle,
making about a table spoonful of salt. While here he
narrowly escaped death from the rifle of an Indian, who
discovered them unseen by the party, and after the peace
related the circumstance of his raising his rifle twice to fire
at a tall man who had a tin cup strung to his girdle on the
loins, and who was known to be Mr. Greene. As he might
miss his object, being a long shot, and be killed himself, he
desisted and hurried back to the Indian village, below the
present town of Chillicothe, for aid. A party of twenty
warriors turned out in pursuit, and came on to the bank of
the Ohio, at Leading creek, a few minutes after the whites?
had left it with their boat, and were in the middle of the
river. They were seen by the men in the boat, who felt
how narrowly and providentially they had escaped.
The right of this discovery was sold to a merchant in
Philadelphia for fifteen hundred dollars, and divided with his
partners.
In 1795, after the perpetual motion had become an ac-
knowledged failure, he turned his attention to the feasibility
of applying steam to the moving of boats on the western
19
290 GRIFFIN GREENE.
waters, and invented an engine so perfect in its model as to
attract the confidence of Mr. Elijah Backus, a man of dis-
cernment, and owner of the island opposite to Farmers'
castle, and since known as Blennerhasset's. He became
jointly concerned in the project, and about the year 1796,
they visited Philadelphia and employed an ingenious me-
chanic to build a steam engine. In this enterprise they ex-
pended about a thousand dollars. The man proved to be
unskillful or unfaithful, and the work was dropped without
being finally put to the test.
In January, 1802, he was appointed postmaster at Ma-
rietta, where he had previously moved his family, in place
of David Putnam, Esq., removed by G. Granger. This
office he held until his death. In July, 1802, he was ap-
pointed collector for the district of Marietta, under the
revenue laws of the United States, by Thomas Jefferson.
He was also inspector for the port of Marietta, ships being
built and cleared from that place. After his decease, his
son Philip held the post-office to the period of his death, in
1806, when it was given to Griffin Greene, jun.
He died in June, 1804, aged fifty -five years, after a linger-
ing illness which he bore with patience and fortitude, fully
persuaded of a happy immortality.
Mr. Greene was a man of intelligent aspect, quick appre-
ticnsion, and a ready, vigorous application of his mind to
any subject before him. In person he was tall, of genteel
and accomplished manners, having seen and associated
with much refined company and men of talents. His dress
was that of the fashionable days of the. Revolution, and
very becoming to one of his stature. As a man of genius
and intellect, he ranked with the first of the Ohio Company's
settlers, abounding as it did with able men.
HON. PAUL FEARING.
Mr. Fearing was born in Wareham, county of Plymouth,
Mass., the 28th of February, 1762, and was the son of Noah
and Mary Fearing. His parents were industrious, hon-
est people, with no pretensions to distinction above the
class of common farmers, who formed the glory and the
strength of the country, before and at the time of the strug-
gle for independence. He had one brother older than him-
self, and one sister younger. Lucy married Mr. Wyllis, an
eminent attorney of Massachusetts.
Of his early childhood but little is known ; but as the boy
is said to be the father of the man, he was doubtless an up-
right, open-hearted youth. The minister of the parish pre-
pared him for college, as was common in that day, which
he must have entered before the close of the war, as he
graduated in 1785, at a time when the resources of the
country were at the lowest ebb. From some reverses in the
fortune of his father, about the period of his graduation, he
was unable to assist his son in the payment of the customary
fee on that occasion, and young Fearing was in danger of
missing the honors of the university, for the want of a small
sum of money. At this unpleasant crisis, Joseph Barrel, a
gentleman of Boston, heard accidentally of the circum-
stance, and kindly proffered the loan of the requisite sum,
which was gratefully accepted. Having decided on law,
for a profession, he commenced the study in May, 1786, in
the office of Esq. Swift, of Windham, Conn., where he re-
mained nearly two years, and was admitted as an attor-
ney in the courts of law of that state, on the 19th of Sep-
tember, 1787, by Richard Law, judge of the supreme court.
292 PAUL FEA1UNG.
]n July he was enabled to refund the money to Mr. Bar-
rel, and notes in a brief journal of passing events, "I shall
feel under obligation to Mr. Barrel, and am to pay the in-
terest by forgiving fees to some poor client." This act still
further elucidates the benevolent heart of his friend, and
proves that he felt good-will toward all mankind.
During this year the Ohio Company was matured, for es-
tablishing a colony in the Northwest Territory, and was a
general topic of conversation in New England. The glow-
ing descriptions of the country and climate in the valley of
the Ohio, caught the fancy of many young men, as well as
older persons, and he decided on visiting that distant region.
On the 1st of May, 1788, he bid adieu to his friends, and
embarked at Boston in a vessel, by the way of Baltimore, for
Muskingum, where he arrived on the 16th of that month.
Here he put his trunk into a wagon, and commenced the
journey across the mountains on foot. When he reached
the little village of Fannetsburgh, at the foot of the first
ranges, he was inoculated with the small-pox, having been
exposed to the disease in Baltimore. The eruption came
out while he was on the journey, but it does not appear that
he laid by, on account of it, although detained two or three
days by the breaking down of the wagon. He reached
Pittsburg the 10th of June, and embarked the same day,
in a boat for Marietta, where he arrived on the 16th. On
the 4th of July, he says, Gen. Varnum delivered an ora-
tion, and a public dinner was given in honor of the day.
At this feast was served up a famous fish, called the Pike,
that weighed a hundred pounds. The dinner was spread
under a long bowery at the mouth of the Muskingum.
Many patriotic toasts were given, and guns fired from Fort
Harmer. About twenty families came on from New Eng-
land, in the course of the summer and autumn. In May
and June, Judges Parsons and Varnum, with Col. Sargent,
PAUL FEARING. 293
secretary of the territory, arrived, and on the 9th, Gov. St.
Clair. The 15th of that month he delivered his inaugural
address, in presence of the judges, officers of the fort, and
the assembled citizens of the territory. It was responded
to, on the part of the people, by Gen. Rufus Putnam. On
the 20th of July he listened to the first sermon ever preached
in the English tongue northwest of the Ohio, by the Rev.
Mr. Breck from Massachusetts. The Moravian missionaries
had preached in the Delaware tongue, at Shoenbrun and
their mission stations on the Tuscarawas river, as early as
twenty years before this time. On the 2d of September,
1788, the first Court of Common Pleas was held in the north-
west block-house of Campus Martius, when he was admitted
as an attorney, and on the 9th of that month, received the
following certificate from two of the United States judges :
"The undersigned, judges of the territory of the United
States, northwest of the river Ohio, make known that they
have admitted Paul Fearing, Esq., an attorney at law of
said court, and have given unto him permission to appear
before, and practice in, any and all the Courts of Record,
and others that are or shall be erected in the said territory.
Samuel H. Parsons,
James M. Varnum.
Marietta, September 9th, 1788."
On the 9th of this month the Court of Quarter Sessions
sat for the first time, and he was appointed attorney, or
counsel, in behalf of the United States, for the county of
Washington, which was the first organized in the territory.
But little law business was done this year, the attention of
the settlers, as well as that of Mr. Fearing, being given to
the clearing of lands, and making preparations for a per-
manent home in the wilderness.
In December the Indians of several tribes came in to
Fort Harmer, to make a treaty of amity with the United
294 . PAUL FEARING.
States, under the superintendence of Gov. St. Clair, who is
styled commissioner plenipotentiary. It was a slow affair,
the Indians being much divided as to the policy of the
measure, some declining to treat at all, unless the Ohio
river was made the boundary between their possessions and
the whites ; although, at former treaties, they had ceded to
the United States a large portion of the present state of Ohio.
They saw with feelings of anger and regret, the gradual
encroachments of the whites on their country, and that in a
few years they would be driven beyond the Mississippi.
They finally made a treaty, agreed to by a portion, only, of
the tribes, and these did not adhere to it long. In the fol-
lowing year their country on the Miami was invaded by
Gen. Harmer, and the war actually commenced by the
Americans. It was a disastrous campaign, and terminated
in favor of the Indians.
The last of January, 1789, Mr. Fearing set out on a jour-
ney to New England, in company with several persons,
amongst whom was Gen. Parsons. They went up the Ohio
in a boat, but when about half way to Wheeling, the float-
ing ice became so troublesome that they left the river and
went up by land. The travel over the mountains was ac-
complished on horseback, in twenty-six days, from Wheeling
to Middleborough, in Massachusetts, when at this time it can
be done in three or four days, so great are the improvements
in travel. He returned in August, by way of Alexandria,
and being a fine pedestrian, again crossed the mountains on
foot. He reached Red Stone, a famous port for boats, on
the Monongahela, on the 14th of that month, and from the
low stage of water, had to wait until the 2Gth of November,
for a rise in theTiver, whereas it was usually navigable as
early as September. There was no road through the wil-
derness, nor any inhabitants, the larger portion of the way.
While waiting here in daily expectation of rain, Com
PAUL FEARING. 295
Whipple came on with his family and that of his son-in-
law, Col. Sproat. With them he embarked in a small boat,
and reached Marietta in four days, on the 30th of the
month.
The following year was passed in attending to his law
business, which began to increase some, as the emigration
this season was very great, being the year before the war
began on the Ohio Company settlements. In November he
was appointed a deputy contractor for supplying the troops
at Fort Harmer with fresh meat, at the low rate of thirteen
dollars and thirty-three cents a month, and rations. Labor
of all kinds was at a depressed state, a common hand on a
farm getting only four dollars," and a private soldier three
dollars. Money was very scarce. This post he held until
the close of the war, and the avails of it aided much in his
support, at a time when all were suffering under the pres-
sure of want.
From his first arrival in the country he kept a journal of
the weather, freshets in the Ohio, &c, which are valuable
in comparing our present seasons with those of the first
settlement of the country. From his notes it is ascertained
that the weather, previous to the assault on the block-house
at Big Bottom, was very cold, and the Muskingum was
crossed on the ice from the 22d of December to the 11th of
January, which gave the Indians every facility for making
the attack. In the course of the summer of 1791, Gen. St.
Clair invaded the Indian country, and was defeated on the
4th of November, the news of which did not reach Marietta
until the 4th of December, when it was brought by Maj.
Denny, on his way with dispatches to Philadelphia, so dif-
ficult and slow was the intercourse between the settlements
in the wilderness. There were no mails until 1794, when
packet-boats were established from Wheeling to Cincinnati.
296 PAUL FEARING.
The Indians had full command of all the country between
the lakes and the river, and no dispatch could be sent
that way.
Mr. Fearing's first attempt as an advocate before the
Court of Quarter Sessions, was rather discouraging to his
hopes as an orator. He rose with great diffidence, being nat-
urally modest, and was only able to say, " May it please your
honors — may it please your honors" — another long pause,
when he said, " I have forgotten what I intended to speak,"
and took his seat. This embarrassment vanished in his
next trial, and he was able to deliver himself with fluency
and fine effect. His frank, manly civility, and sound dis-
criminating mind, soon made him a favorite with the peo-
ple, as well as the courts, and he had at his command much
of the law business of the county. The Hon. R. J. Meigs
was his first competitor at the bar, and for the favor of the
public. Many well contested battles were fought, and
many knotty cases unraveled by these early combatants for
fame. Mr. Meigs was the most prompt and witty, with a
ready flow of language, and Mr. Fearing the most indus-
trious and patient in investigation, so that, in final results,
they were very well matched. They were the only attorneys
until 1791.
The following is a list of the lawyers who practiced at
the courts of Washington county, with the time of their ad-
mission, until the close of the territorial government, taken
from the records of the courts : Paul Fearing, September,
1788; R. J. Meigs, 1789; Dudley Odlin, March, 1791 ; Mat-
thew Backus, June, 1793; William Littel, June, 1797; Sol-
omon Sibley, September, 1797; David Putnam, autumn,
1798; Edwin Putnam, 1799; Wyllis Silliman, June, 1801;
Philemon Beecher, March, 1802; Lewis Cass, March, 1803;
William Woodbridge, 1804; Charles Hammond, 1804. The
PAUL FEARING. 297
names of several of these early attorneys are identified
with the history of the country, holding public posts of the
first importance.
The Courts of Quarter Session and Common Pleas were
held each four times in a year. The United States Court
also held four sessions in a year, but at wide and distant
places, viz. : at Detroit, the first Tuesday in May ; at Port
Vincent, the second Tuesday in June ; at Cincinnati, the first
Tuesday in October ; and at Marietta, the second Tuesday
in November. Mr. Fearing attended regularly in this court
at Marietta, and sometimes at Cincinnati, but the distance
was so great, and the mode of travel so slow, that it was a
tedious labor.
In 1792, he was admitted an advocate in the Court of
Probate. The following is the form of the oath, preserved
amongst his papers, in his own handwriting : " I swear that
I will do no falsehood, nor consent to the doing of any, in
the courts of justice; and if I know of any intention to
commit any, I will give knowledge thereof to the justices of
said courts, or some of them, that it may be prevented.
I will not willingly or wittingly, promote or sue any false,
groundless, or unlawful suit, nor give aid or consent to the
same, and I will conduct myself in the office of an attorney
within the said courts, according to the best of my knowl-
edge and discretion, and with all good fidelity, as well to
the courts as my clients. So help me, God.
Paul Fearing.
Washington county, ss."
" Sworn to in the General Court of Quarter Session, March
12th, 1793, before
Joseph Gilman, commissioner."
The spirit and letter of the above oath were always kept
in good faith while he was an attorney, as well as in all his
298 PAUL FEABING
transactions of private life. Honest)', candor, and fair
dealing, were cardinal virtues which he never violated.
When the troops left Fort Ilarmer, Maj. Doughty, an in-
timate friend, made him a present of his dwelling-house, a
well finished log building, standing in the southwest angle
of the fort. To this was also added the contents of his garden,
planted with fruit trees; amongst them was a fine peach,
still cultivated in Marietta, and called to this day, the
Doughty peach. During the war, Mr. Fearing and his father
occupied this house, which afforded a safe retreat from the
attacks of Indians, who frequently appeared on the hill
back of the garrison, where they had a view of the cleared
fields in the bottoms, arid watch for any one who might be
out at work, a distance from the walls. Several were shot
at, and one or two killed, within a quarter of a mile. Peace
was established in August, 1795.
Late in November of this year, Mr. Fearing had a narrow
escape from drowning. He was coming up from the settle-
ment at Belpre in a canoe, which was the usual mode of
travel for many years. Although a pretty skillful canoeman,
yet, having with him in the boat his future wife and her sister,
his attention was taken up with them, or from some other
cause, in passing by a fallen tree-top which projected several
rods into the river, the canoe upset, and threw them all into
the water. None of them could swim but his boy, Tousant
Shoeman, then about fourteen years old, who soon reached
the land. In their attempts to hold on to the canoe, it would
roll from their grasp. Miss Betsy Rouse, the sister of his
intended wife, an active, courageous girl, exerted herself so
effectually, that she soon reached the shore, after having
been at the bottom once or twice. Cynthia being clad with
a large camlet cloak, was more buoyant, and kept upon
the surface, sometimes clinging to the canoe, and at others
PAUL FEARING. 299
floating near it. After struggling along in this way for sev-
eral rods, Mr. Fearing encouraging her with his voice, and
retaining fully his presence of mind, although unable to as-
sist her in any other way, they both reached so near the
shore as to be able to get hold of the willow bushes, and
were helped to the dry land by the boy, nearly famished
with the cold, and exhausted with their struggles, as there
was considerable ice in the river at the time. Fortunately,
a large flatboat, laden with goods, came in sight, and at
their request landed and took them on board. By wrapping
them in warm blankets, and giving them hot drinks, they
were soon restored to comfort. The boat landed them at
Farmers' castle ; and their next attempt to reach Marietta
proved more fortunate, taking with them an experienced
canoeman. When we consider the rare occurrence of flat-
boats, and especially one at this particular juncture, with
everything on board necessary to the comfort of the ship-
wrecked company, and that there was no house between
Belpre and Marietta, where they could receive aid, and the
fact of their being enabled to escape from the watery ele-
ment under such hopeless circumstances, the whole affair
may be viewed as one of those plain and manifest interpo-
sitions of Providence, in overruling and guiding the destinies
of man, while a sojourner in this ever-changing world.
On the 28th of this month Mr. Fearing was married to
Miss Cynthia Rouse, at his own house at Marietta. The
ordinance was performed by the Hon. Joseph Gilman, one
of the judges of the territory. The fruits of this marriage
were a daughter and two sons.
In the year 1797 he received the appointment of judge
of probate, for Washington county, under the seal and com-
mission of Winthrop Sargent, then acting as governor of
the territory. After the close of the war the country filled
up rapidly, and in 1799 the first legislature held its session
300 PAUL FEARING.
in Cincinnati. In 1800 the second session was held, and in
this he was a member. During this period he was chosen
a delegate, to represent the territory in Congress, which post
he filled for 1801 and 1802, with credit to himself and the
entire satisfaction of the people. About this time, the two
great political parties of Federalist and Republican were
organized all over the United States, and even in this remote
wilderness the voice of political strife was loud and boister-
ous. He was attached to the Federal party, which at this
time was the most numerous.
After his return to private life he resumed the practice of
the law, with increased reputation. His manly, open coun-
tenance, with his well known character for uprightness and
honesty, gave his pleadings great and deserved weight with
a jury ; and he was often spoken of and named in a famil-
iar manner, by the country people, as "honest Paul," a
phrase which gave more weight and popularity to his opin-
ions, than any high sounding title.
On his farm, a little below the mouth of the Muskingum,
he erected a neat dwelling-house, and planted an extensive
orchard of the choicest fruits, of which he was an intelligent
and successful cultivator. The garden was arranged with
neatness and taste, and ornamented with shrubbery, flowers,
&c, showing a relish for the beautiful as well as the useful.
He was one of the first in Ohio who paid attention to the
raising of merino sheep. His flocks embraced several
hundreds of these valuable animals, propagated from a few
individuals, bought at enormous prices, a single buck com-
manding from six to eight hundred dollars, and a ewe from
two to three hundred, and sometimes much more. He en-
gaged in the sheep culture as early as 1808, and during the
yeaning season, passed many weary and sleepless nights
during the cold winter weather, in watching and protecting
the young lambs from the effects of frost, so fatal to them
PAUL FEARING. 301
if long exposed to its chilling influence. By his knowl-
edge of their maladies, and discretion in feeding and
studying their habits, he became one of the most success-
ful growers of merinos, an animal difficult to rear, and re-
quiring a different management from that applied to the
common sheep of the country. His practical knowledge,
acquired by actual experiment, was freely imparted to
others, and was of great use to the farmers of this county.
The growth of this valuable animal was for many years
extensively conducted in this part of the state, and was profit-
able so long as the government, by protecting duties, en-
couraged the woolen factories to work up the wool of the
country, thereby not only making the nation independent,
but the people rich.
In 1810, he was appointed an associate judge of the Court
of Common Pleas. The commission is signed by Samuel
Huntington, then governor of Ohio. In this office he served
seven years, with much credit as a sound jurist and impartial
judge. At the expiration of that period, the leaders in po-
litical affairs placed the office in other hands, more congenial
to their views. In 1814, he received the appointment of
master commissioner in chancery.
From the first entering of the lands of the Ohio Company
for taxation by the state, he acted very extensively as an
agent for the shareholders in the eastern states, paying
their taxes, examining and preparing their lands for sale.
In this way, a large portion of his time, not devoted to the
care of his farm, was occupied.
In his disposition, Mr. Fearing was remarkably cheerful
and pleasant, much attached to children, and never happier
than when in their company. He had great sympathy for
the poor and the oppressed, and was ever ready to stretch
forth his hand, and open his purse for their relief.
He died the 21st of August, 1822, after a few days illness,
302 JOSEPH GILMAN.
a victim to the fatal epidemic fever, which ravaged the
country for two or three years, in the sixtieth year of his
life. His wife died the same day, a few hours after, in the
forty sixth year of her age.
HON. JOSEPH GILMAN AND MRS.
REBECCA GILMAN.
Joseph Gilman was born in Exeter, New Hampshire, A.
D., 1736, and was the third generation of the descend-
ants of John Gilman, who emigrated from Norfolk, Eng-
land, in 1G37. He married Rebecca Ives, granddaughter of
the Hon. Robert Hale, of Beverly, Massachusetts, one of
the provincial council, and an intimate friend of Gov
Hutchinson.
When the struggle for liberty commenced, he took an
early and decided part on the side of the colonists. His
high standing for integrity, and honorable, upright character,
soon attracted the notice and favor of the Whigs, and he
was appointed chairman of the Committee of Safety for
New Hampshire, a post which none but the most able and
influential men were selected to fill. This station brought
him into immediate intercourse with a number of the lead-
ing men in the adjacent states, especially Massachusetts.
In the early periods of the Revolution, these committees of
safety were the most important public bodies in the courr-
try, transacting much of the business afterward done by
the legislatures, in collecting and purchasing arms, ammuni-
tions, and clothing for the state troops. Mr. Gilman, as
JOSEPH GILMAN. 303
chairman of this committee, made large advances from his
own private purse, at a very pressing period, for the pur-
chase of blankets for the New Hampshire line, which was
repaid in continental paper, and became a dead loss, en-
tirely ruining his family estate. In proof of the intense
feeling and ardor infused into the minds of the leading men
of the period, and the deep interest they took in the welfare
of the country, it is stated that at the period of the disas-
trous events which followed the retreat of the American
army from New Jersey, when it seemed as if the cause of
liberty was hopeless, Samuel Adams had occasion to visit
Mr. Gilman at Exeter, for consultation on the best course to
pursue, and to devise ways and means to raise supplies for
the starving and naked soldiers. It so happened that Mr.
Gilman was abroad, and Mr. Adams was received by his
wife. After a few minutes conversation, observing the ab-
stracted manner and downcast looks of her guest, she ceased
any further attempt to engage his attention, and applied
herself quietly to her needle, an occupation then followed
by females of the first families. Mr. Adams continued to
walk rapidly up and down the room, too uneasy to sit qui-
etly in a chair. After a few moments her attention was
called to her visitor, by a deep sigh, amounting nearer to a
groan. Casting her eyes on hi& face, the tears were rolling
down his cheeks, and wringing his hands in agony, he ut-
tered with a broken voice the deep thoughts within him,
" O, my God, must we give it up!" How intense must have
been the feeling of that great mind, when the physical man
thus bowed beneath its sway. Happily for us, the friends
of freedom were not long permitted to live in darkness, but
the brilliant events which soon followed at Princeton and
Trenton, revived their desponding spirits, and covered
Washington and his few brave followers with a mantle of
glory.
304 JOSEPH GIL MAN.
When the Ohio Company was formed, Mr. Gilman be-
came an associate, and moved his family, consisting of a
wife and one son, B. Ives Gilman, to Marietta, in 1789.
The country was then a wilderness, and those who entered
it had to partake of the hardships, privations, and dangers
which attend the forming of a new settlement several hun-
dred miles beyond the borders of civilization. The journey
was performed in safety, and the family settled down in their
new home, established on the lower Point, near Fort Har-
mer, determined to be contented, and do their best for the
good of the country.
In 1790 Mr. Gilman was commissioned judge of probate,
in place of Gen. Putnam, resigned. He also received com-
missions from Gov. St. Clair, as judge of the Court of Quar-
ter Sessions, and also of the Court of Common Pleas, which
posts he continued to fill during the territorial period. In
1796 he was appointed by Congress one of the United
States judges for the Northwest Territory, and attended the
sittings of this court at Post Vincent, Detroit, Cincinnati,
and Marietta. The journeys to these remote points were
made through the wilderness on horseback, attended with
pack-horses to carry the baggage, in company with the
other judges and lawyers, so that the ride through the woods,
although tiresome and tedious, was not without many things
to make it interesting. The trip to and from Cincinnati
was usually made in a canoe or large pirogue, and occu-
pied eight or ten days. They slept at night under a hut on
the shore, and cooked their food in the woods, there being
few cabins at convenient points, for a number of years after
the war.
He was a man whom every body respected and esteemed,
for his candor, honesty, good sense, and social qualities. As
a jurist his reputation stood deservedly high. He was a
careful student of the laws of nature, as well as those of
REBECCA GILMA.N. . 305
his country, and kept a meteorological journal, which for that
day was rather rare. He died in 1806, aged seventy years.
Mrs. Gilman was Rebecca Ives, the daughter of Benjamin
Ives and Elizabeth Hale. Her education was far superior
to that of most females of her time, being chiefly acquired
under the direction of her grandfather, the Hon. Robert
Hale. By him her literary taste was highly cultivated, and
a habit acquired for books and useful reading, that attended
her late in life. She was familiar with the best British clas-
sics of the days of Queens Ann and Elizabeth; could read
French authors with facility and ease, and her acuteness
was such in polite literature, that when any disputed point
arose amongst the learned visitors and circles at her fire-
side, she was often appealed to as umpire, and her decisions
were usually decisive of the question, and seldom appealed
from. This was often done by men of classical education,
few of whom, in matters of history, pure English literature,
poetry, or belles-lettres, excelled her in general knowledge,
or critical acumen. Her early and youthful associates were
generally men of superior minds and talents; amongst
whom a favorite one was Timothy Pickering, a resident of
an adjacent town, and a frequent visitor in the family.
These acquirements gave a tone and cast to her conversa-
tion, very fascinating and engaging to such cultivated minds
as came within the sphere of her imiuence, and her society
was much sought, and highly valued by all her acquaint-
ances. In person she was tall and commanding, with the
most graceful and dignified manners : her countenance
open, prepossessing, and intelligent. Children were much
attached to her, as she was fond of giving them useful in-
struction and advice, in such a pleasant and agreeable man-
ner, as to win their attention, and impress it deeply on the!
minds. One of the early citizens of Marietta, whose pa-
rents lived the next door to her in 1796, says, that he
20
30G ■ B. I. GILMAN.
received, when a boy, more valuable advice from her, than he
ever did from his own mother, and she was a woman of no
ordinary capacity. In her domestic concerns she was a pat-
tern to all good housewives, for industry, frugality, order,
and promptness of execution; practices rather rare in lit-
erary females. Her dress wa.s always neat, but plain; indi-
cating good taste, and purity of principle. After the death
of her husband, she lived in her own house at Marietta, sur-
rounded by her grandchildren, until 1812, when she moved
with her son to Philadelphia, and died in the year 1820, full
of peace, and joyful expectation of a blessed immortality.
BENJAMIN IVES GILMAN AND
MRS. HANNAH GILMAN.
Mr. Gilman was born in Exeter, New Hampshire, in the
year 1765. His early education was strictly attended to,
and he had the advantages of the academy established in
that place by Mr. Phillips. As his father was engaged in
mercantile pursuits, he was brought up to the same employ-
ment. When a small boy, he received the instruction and
advice of a very intelligent and highly educated mother,
who, having but one son on whom to bestow her care, his
moral and intellectual culture were highly finished, and his
whole after life showed the training of this early period.
Richly was she rewarded for her labor of love, for no son
ever more venerated and respected a mother than did Mr.
Gilman. That "the boy is the father of the man," is an old,
but very true axiom; and nothing is more certain than that
the impressions, whether for good or evil, made on the mind
B. I. GILMAN. 307
of youth, retain their hold during the remainder of life.
Blessed is that son who has an educated, moral, and relig-
ious mother: his happiness for time and eternity depends
very much on the instruction received while he is more im-
mediately under her care.
In 1789 he moved with his parents to Marietta. In 1790
he returned to New England, and married Hannah Robbins,
the second daughter of the Rev. Chandler Robbins, D. D.,
pastor of the first church in Plymouth, Mass., the cere-
mony being performed by her father. Soon after, in com-
pany with his young bride, they returned across the moun-
tains on horseback. At that early period, it was a se-
rious and laborious journey, occupying from twenty-five to
thirty days. The roads were very poor over the Alleghe-
nies, and the accommodations for travelers scanty and
coarse. From Red Stone, or Pittsburg, the passage was
usually by water, in a flat, or Kentucky boat.
About the year 1792 he commenced the sale of merchan-
dise, in a store at Fort Harmer. From small beginnings
his business was gradually enlarged to the most extensive
in Marietta.
During the war Mr. Gilman several times narrowly escaped
the rifle and tomahawk of the Indians. About eighty rods
from the fort, he had commenced a new clearing for agricul-
tural purposes. One day, in the spring of the year 1794, he
was out in this lot at work with a hired man named Robert
Warth. Robert had just cut off a log for rail timber, and was
still standing on it, with the axe resting at his feet, when he
spoke to Mr. Gilman, who was thirty or forty yards distant,
but more out of sight, inquiring further about the work.
Before he had time to answer, the sharp crack of a rifle
caused him to turn quickly in the direction of the shot, when
he saw poor Robert falling dead from the log, and two In-
dians in the act of jumping over a brush fence, close by,
308 B. I. G1LMAN.
where they had lain concealed. Being unarmed, he in-
stantly ran for the fort, with one of the Indians in close
chase, while the other was occupied in taking the scalp of
Robert. An intervening fence gave his pursuer some hope
of overtaking him, but he cleared it at a single leap. The
Indian now stopped and fired at his flying foe, but happily
missed his mark. The field was so near the block-house
where he resided, that his wife and mother both heard the
shots and the yell of the savages. Knowing the exposure
of Mr. Gilman, they hastened to the window of the house
to ascertain his situation, and as he came running up,
eagerly inquired who was killed. The young wife of the
backwoodsman was standing by the side of Mrs. Gilman,
as he answered, " Robert," and thus suddenly heard the fall
of her husband. The Indians were instantly pursued and
fired at by the rangers, as they ascended the side of the hill
which overlooks the alluvions on which the fort stood, but
they escaped, although it was thought one of them was
wounded.
In traversing the woods for strayed cattle, and in looking
at the quality and boundaries of adjacent lands which he
wished to purchase, he had many narrow escapes, but would
never send a man where he was afraid to venture himself. In
walking and running, few men could excel him ; and unless
fired at from a hidden enemy, he did not fear a surprise, -as
he could escape by his own activity.
After the close of the war he dealt largely in peltries,
especially bear skins, having small trading stations on the
Big Sandy and Guyandot rivers, where this animal abounded,
and the chief employment of the inhabitants was hunting
them for their skins, and the digging of ginseng, a plant
which grew in wonderful abundance and great luxuriance
on the rich hill-sides of this broken country. Both of these
articles, from 1798 to 1808, were in great demand for
B. I. GILMAN. 309
exportation, and many large fortunes realized by persons
who dealt in them.
Mr. Gilman was appointed clerk of the Court of Common
Pleas of Washington county in the year 1796, and continued
in office until the territory became a state. In 1802, he was
one of the delegates at the convention for forming a consti-
tution, and was a very active and useful man in completing
that instrument.
In 1801, he commenced the business of ship-building, em-
ploying Capt. Devol for the master-builder, and subsequently
James Whitney. This was continued from that year to 1808,
when the embargo put a stop to all mercantile operations,
and ruined a number of the merchants of Marietta, who
had embarked in this business. The ships when built were
exchanged for merchandise in the Atlantic cities, and were
the most profitable returns they could make; and, although
the country was thinly peopled, yet the vessels were always
loaded with flour, pork, and other produce, in their down-
ward voyage, thus yielding a double profit on the investment.
But the wisdom of Mr. Jefferson put a stop to all the en-
terprising efforts of these western men, and overwhelmed
several of them with ruin, especially such as had ships on
hand, unsold in 1808. One man who had a ship in New
Orleans at the time of the embargo, sunk over ten thousand
dollars on her and the cargo. No town in the United States
suffered so much as this, according to its capital, by this un-
wise measure. Mr. Gilman escaped any serious loss, but
all his plans were deranged, and the place where from four
to six vessels were built in a year, giving employment to a
large number of men, and increasing rapidly in population,
was entirely paralyzed. Three extensive rope-walks, work-
ing up large quantities of hemp raised in the country, and
furnishing rigging for the ships, were put out of employ, and
in a few years fell into ruins. The business of the town did
310 HANNAH GILMAN.
not revive for many years; and in 1813, Mr. Gilman moved
his family to Philadelphia and entered into merchandise, as
a wholesale dealer. For this business his clear, calculating
mind, enlarged views and industrious habits, eminently fitted
him, and for a number of years it was prosecuted with great
success. His business operations often called him to visit
the valley of Ohio, for which he always felt a warm regard;
two of his sons having settled at Alton, 111., and when on a
visit to that place in 1833, he was attacked with a fever, and
died at the age of sixty-eight years.
In person, Mr. Gilman was rather above the medium size,
very erect, graceful and quick in his motions, with the man-
ners and address of the most polished gentleman; eyes
black, brilliant and expressive; nose slightly aquiline; fore-
head broad and high ; face full and without a fault. The
impression made on a stranger, who saw him for the first
time, would be, that he was in the presence of a man of
more than ordinary capacity and intellect. His powers of
conversation were great and varied, and no one left his
company without adding something to his stock of useful
information.
Mrs. Hannah Gilman was the second daughter of the Rev.
Chandler Robbins, D. D., for many years the pastor of the
first church in Plymouth, Mass. She was brought up with
great care and tenderness by her venerable father, and re-
ceived as good an education as was customary to bestow on
females of the first families in that day. She was a girl
of great sprightliness and vivacity; always cheerful, and
abounding in kindness to her associates, as well as to her
own family. A joyful, kind spirit animated her frame
through the whole course of her life.
In February, 1790. she was married to B. 1. Gilman, a
man every way worthy the hand and the heart of so excel-
lent a woman. Nothing marred the joy of this festive
HANNAH GILM AN. 311
occasion, but the circumstance of her being removed to so
great a distance from her parents ; the location of her future
home being on the banks of the Ohio, far toward the setting
sun. The New Englanders at this time were an untraveled
people; they had not then learnt to roam into all parts of
the earth, but a journey of a hundred miles was a great
event in the life of that primitive people, and seldom under-
taken by the pious, without the public prayers of the church
for its success. How formidable then must have seemed
to the old people, this journey of eight hundred miles; so
far, that the expectation of seeing her again in this world,
was almost hopeless, and the final adieu was affecting and
solemn.
The ancestors of the Robbins family were amongst the
first settlers of Massachusetts ; their blood unmixed, and
strictly Puritan.
On their arrival at Marietta, she found many intelligent
and kind friends, to greet her with a warm and hearty wel-
come, while the society of her husband's mother, in whose
family they lived, was itself sufficient to make her home
very pleasant, and the loneliness of the wilderness forgot-
ten. From her she received all that love and tenderness
she could have expected from her own mother, and which
the affection of the female heart only knows how to bestow
on a beloved daughter. Before many years, the cares of a
growing family in some measure divided her regards be-
tween her own household and that of her dear father and
mother at Plymouth, so that the separation was more easily
borne than at first. A frequent intercourse by letters also
solaced her uneasy mind, so that she had often occasion to
bless the happy inventor of this divine mode of an inter-
change of thoughts, so wonderful in itself, and which struck
with admiration, the savage and untaught mind of Pow-
hattan, when he first saw the effects of these mysterious
312 HANNAH GILMAN.
marks in a letter, sent by Capt. Smith to Jamestown, while
a prisoner in his dominions.
Many of her early letters to her brother, the Rev. Samuel
Prince Robbins, while he was a boy, and when in college,
also after his settlement as a pastor over the first Congrega-
tional church in Marietta, have been preserved by his family.
Some extracts from these will be given, to show her talents
as a writer, and the amiable and pious feelings which per-
vaded her heart, and made her worthy of the parentage of
so excellent and noble a stock. The first is written in an
easy, playful style, suitable to the subject, when her first
child was about six months old, to her brother, then aged
ten or twelve years, and dated Marietta, 16th of September,
1791. It was in answer to one he had sent to his sister,
with a specimen of his drawing:
" I received the picture you sent me, and was much aston-
ished to see how much you had improved in drawing. Did
you do it all yourself? I can hardly believe it. I suppose
by the time I visit Plymouth with your little niece, you will
be able to take her picture. If so, and it is a likeness, it will
be the prettiest picture you ever saw."
To her parents she wrote regularly once a month, when
there was an opportunity of sending a letter, which, until
1794, was only by private conveyance. In 1798 her brother
Samuel graduated at Cambridge University. Her younger
brother, Peter Gilman Robbins, was then a freshman.
In writing to Samuel, she speaks of the rapid passage of
time in reference to Peter, who, she did not think, could be
old enough to enter college, as she had been absent only
seven years, and he was then a very small boy. " How fast
time flies. The further you advance in life, the faster time
will appear to fly. How important it is, that we improve it
to the best purpose." In the same letter she sends a mes-
sage to Peter, who was rather disposed to be a little wild;
HANNAH GILMAN. 313
u charging him to refrain from going to the theater, as it
would be injurious to his morals." At that period it was a
fashionable amusement, and practiced by nearly all classes
of society. Her nice sense of propriety saw its hidden evils,
and her voice was raised against it.
After her brother had completed his college course, he
studied divinity, under the care of the Rev. M. Hyde, of
Stockbridge, in Connecticut. In the spring of 1805, at the
urgent request of Mrs. Gilman. he visited Marietta, with an
ulterior expectation that he might be settled in the ministry
there, over the first Congregational church in this place.
The Rev. Daniel Story, who had been their pastor for a
number of years, from feebleness, and other infirmities, had
resigned his charge, and they were now without a teacher.
When he arrived, the society was so small, and the prospect
of an adequate support so doubtful, that after preaching a
few times he returned to Norfolk, Conn., where he was itin-
erating. At that day there was no home missionary society,
to aid feeble and newly formed churches, but they had to
struggle into existence in the best manner they could.
In August, 1S05, she wrote to him a very feeling letter,
urging it upon him as a duty to return. "For my own part,
I feel as if I could not receive a negative answer from you.
It was so long since I had been favored with such preaching
as I once lived under, that when you were here I got roused
up in some manner; but now we are all asleep, and myself
among the rest. However, I desire not to trust too much in
an arm of flesh : a sovereign God, who orders all events, will
provide." After mentioning the names of several of his
acquaintances who had called to inquire after him, amongst
whom were Gen. Putnam and Dr. True, she says, "I hope,
my dear brother, you will write as often as possible, and
0 that you may be directed to the path of duty." This
314 HANNAH GILMAN.
prayer was soon answered, for the trustees of the society
directly after sent him a call to be their pastor, to which he
returned a consenting answer, and the following January he
was ordained over the first Congregational church and so-
ciety of Marietta. Under his faithful and apostolic min-
istry it was soon enlarged, embracing many from the
adjacent towns of Belpre and Adams, where he preached
about one-third of the time. In 1807, chiefly through the
efforts of Gen. Rufus Putnam, aided by the liberality of
several other citizens, especially Mr. Gilman, a large and
handsome church was erected, at a cost of about seven
thousand dollars: avast effort for so small a society ; and
it yet remains a monument to their praise. This was
the first house erected specially for public worship; the
Muskingum academy having been occupied for this purpose
since the year 1799. No man was ever more diligent and
faithful in his Master's service than Mr. Robbins, and his
sister now felt an addition to her happiness of a spiritual
nature, not before experienced. Earthly comforts had been
showered upon her in rich abundance. A most excellent
husband, children "like olive plants sprung up around her
table," with all the wealth she could desire, made her rich
in this world's goods ; but the longings of the immortal
spirit could only be satisfied with the bread of everlasting
life. During a revival in 1811, she united herself with the
church, under her brother's care, and while she remained in
Marietta, was one of its chief ornaments and supports. In
1890, her soul was tried with one of the sorest afflictions
that can befall poor humanity, in the loss of her first-born
child, the wife of Mr. D. Woodbridge. This bereavement
was sustained with Christian resignation, and by it her spir-
itual graces were greatly quickened and refined. The sym-
pathy and prayers of her dear brother were now doubly
HANNAH OILMAN. 315
consoling, and from him she learned that uncomplaining
submission to the divine will, so hard to be practiced by the
natural heart.
In 1813, Mr. Gilman moved his family to Philadelphia,
where he could enlarge the sphere of his mercantile opera-
tions, more in accordance with his capacious mind, so highly
fitted for extensive and wide-spread operations. Neverthe-
less, he quitted the scenes of his early manhood with regret;
the spot where his life had been often endangered, and the
place where the foundations of his early wealth were laid.
It was still more trying to his wife, who now bid adieu to
the home where she had lived twenty-three years, amidst
many dear and excellent female friends ; but, above all, to
that brother beloved, whom she cherished with an ardor only
known to those who, to a naturally warm temperament, feel
the impulses of the Christian's love, in addition to that of
the natural heart. This is the love which abideth and en-
dureth when life itself vanishes away. The first letter after
her arrival, is dated October 20th, 1813, and addressed to
Mr. Robbins and his wife, who was a granddaughter of Gen.
Putnam, and explains the references to persons in Marietta.
"We arrived here the 25th of September, all well. The
dear children were never so hearty. O, what shall I render
to the Lord for all his goodness ? The city was so healthy,
we thought it best to come immediately in. But O, what
noise — what confusion. That evening they had received
the intelligence of the victory gained on the lakes : the whole
city was illuminated, and every mark of joy and mirth.
I was ready to say, ' God is not in this place.' But surely
he is, for the heaven, and heaven of heavens, cannot con-
tain him; and I think I can say from sweet experience, since
my arrival, ' I have found Him whom my soul loveth,' and
I have seen his stately goings in the sanctuary." After de-
scribing the public institutions of the the city, Bible society,
316 HANNAH GILMAN.
Sunday school for the poor children, &c, she says, "So you
see there must be some good people here, but I have not
been introduced to many as yet. I have not found your
good grandmother, your aunt Betsy, your mother, and many
others with whom I used to hold sweet converse. I feel at
times exceedingly at a loss what to do about joining the
church; I am much attached to our customs at Marietta,
and feel unwilling to be dismissed from them. But there is
no Congregational church here, and I feel alone : what
shall I do?" It would seem that her brother advised her to
unite with Mr. Skinner's church, which she did, and sat for
many years under his teaching with great profit to her soul.
In November following she writes, " I have received yours
of October 20th, which was a cordial to me." Speaking of
a dear Christian uncle who wras on his death-bed, she says,
"O, that it were possible I could see him; he could teach me
how to live, and show me how to die. O, that my last end
may be like his. Surely never were religious privileges so
great as those which I now enjoy."
From this time to 1820, a regular correspondence was
kept up with her brother Samuel. Her letters are filled
writh the reflections of a Christian and pious heart, and the
most affectionate expressions for her brother Samuel and his
family. In May, 1820, after a visit from one of her Marietta
acquaintances, she writes: "Mr. Cram tells me that you
have taken a few scholars. Does it not interfere with your
studies? It appears to me that clergymen in general, ought
to devote more of their time to the cause of Christ : else
how can they expect that their preaching will be blessed to
the souls committed to their charge?" He, good man,
would have been very happy to have given all his time to
the work of the gospel ; but the smallness of his salary, a
mere pittance, and the increasing wants of a growing fam-
ily, compelled him to this extra labor, for their support.
HANNAH GIL MAN. 217
But his time was short, and in about three years after that
period he received a summons from his divine Master, to
enter into the joy of his Lord.
From 1820 to 1823 the correspondence is continued, and
would fill a small volume. They contain evidences of a
constant growth in grace, increasing love for her family and
all around her, and anxiety for their salvation. During this
time many interesting events took place, such as the mar-
riage of a beloved daughter, the arrival of her sons to man-
hood, and entry into business, in wide and distant parts of
the country. "We are all scattered, my dear brother; but,
O, if we can all, through grace in the dear Redeemer, meet
at last in heaven, what a mercy ! When I think of the sep-
aration between yourself, Isaac, and myself, it is a comfort
to me that we do meet at a throne of grace."
The epidemic fever which prevailed .along the waters of
the Ohio in 1822, again visited that region in 1823, with
fatal severity. By this visitation Mrs. Gilman lost one of
her sons, and also her dearly beloved and venerated brother
Samuel, who died in August. Her letter to his widow is
full of ardent piety and heavenly consolation, and breathes
a depth of affection for the departed, and calm resignation
to the divine will, which only the Christian can feel. Its pe-
rusal cannot fail to soften the heart of the most obdurate un-
believer, and soothe the sorrows of the desponding mourner.
It is dated at Cincinnati, November 3d, 1823, where she then
was, to attend on her husband in a dangerous illness.
"With a heart filled with anguish, my dear sister, do I
now address you. My tears had not ceased to flow for the
best of sons, when I was called in Providence to weep
afresh for the dearest and best of brothers. And is my be-
loved brother Samuel gone forever? Shall I never more
hear his pleasant voice? Never more hear him pray? Never
more see him break the bread, bless the cup, and give us all
318 HANNAH GILMAN.
to drink? 0, no! he has gone forever from our view, and
the places which knew him shall know him no more, forever.
The loss to mc is great; but to you my beloved sister, and
the dear fatherless children, is irreparable. Permit me then
to tell you, how much we all sympathize with you, on this
sorrowful occasion. But for your comfort, remember, that
although the affliction is great, your heavenly Father is able
to support you, and has said, He would never leave you,
nor ever forsake you. He has promised to be the widows'
God, and a father to the fatherless. Be grateful to Heaven,
that you were blest with his society, comforted with his ad-
vice, and consoled by his prayers so many years. You have
now, my dear sister, a double part to act, that of a father
and mother, to the children committed to your care. For
their sakes, sink not under this deep affliction. Spread all
your wants and trials before your heavenly Father, who will
never lay upon you more than you can bear, and will work
all things for good to those who put their trust in him. The
Lord will not forsake hi3 dear children, and though He cause
grief, yet will He have compassion according to the multi-
tude of his mercies; for whom the Lord loveth, He chas-
teneth. ' The mountains shall depart, and the hills be
removed, but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither
shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord
of hosts.' Take these precious words of your God, my dear
sister, to yourself. They belong to you. Live upon them;
and may our blessed Redeemer comfort you with the conso-
lations of his Holy Spirit. I am extremely anxious to hear
the particulars of my dear brother's sickness and death. I
want to know every word that passed from his lips. What
were his views in the near approach of the king of terrors?
Was his mind clear, or did he sink down under the weight
of his disease, without feeling his situation and sufferings?"
In February following, she writes, " I received your
HANNAH GILMAN. 319
communication, my dear sister, and thank you kindly for it.
But O, my dear Patty, it was not half so particular as I
wished. I wanted you to write just as if you were talking
with me. I feel very anxious about you, but desire to com-
mend you to that merciful Being, who is husband of the
widow, and father of the orphan. Look daily to Him, my
dear, for comfort under this severe and trying affliction. I
wish you would begin a letter to me soon ; and if you re-
collect anything of my brother which you have not told me,
add it to the letter from time to time, until you have filled it.
Kiss the dear children for their aunt, and tell them never to
forget the advice, the prayers, and dying words of their loving
father. From your ever affectionate sister, H. Gilman."
Mrs. Robbins was herself sick at the time of her husband's
death, and, therefore, could not be so particular in her ac-
count of his last moments as Mrs. G. desired.
The foregoing extracts are sufficient to show the relig-
ious and social character of this excellent woman.
Before her own death, which took place at New York, in
1836, she was called to mourn the loss of her dear husband
and several of her children ; but that God whom she had so
faithfully served and trusted in all her life, did not leave her
in these trying moments, but was with her and supported
her, according to Ins promise. Like gold tried in a furnace,
her Christian graces were purified, and shone brighter and
brighter under ever}r new affliction ; and she has gone to in-
herit that crown prepared for all those who love and obey
him.
In person, Mrs. Gilman was of a medium hight, with a
handsome, well-formed frame; her manners graceful and
very attractive, combined with a dignity that always com-
manded respect; face full and round; features of the
exactest proportions, with a naturally sweet expression;
hair black; eyes dark, and full of intelligence. When
320 MAKY LAKE.
engaged in animated conversation, her face ana eyes were
radiant with meaning, giving an interest to her expressions
very striking and pleasing to the beholder. Her voice was
full of harmony, while her powers of conversation were un-
rivaled ; having a volubility and flow of language which
few could equal, whether male or female. Her love and
care for her husband and children were unbounded, and no
sacrifice of personal comfort too great for their happiness.
Her memory is still dear to many who knew her in Mari-
etta, and the history of her life and Christian character, are
the rightful heritage of that place.
MRS. MARY LAKE.
Amongst the early pioneers of Marietta, were many excel-
lent women. The times of the Revolution tried the temper
and spirit of females, as well as the men, and they, by their
example and encouragement in the common cause, often
accomplished much good for the country. Some showed
their patriotic spirit by manufacturing garments for the half-
naked soldiers, while others nursed the sick and wounded,
soothing the last moments of the dying by their merciful
ministrations. The names of deserving females should be
preserved with as much care and veneration as those of the
men who fought their country's battles. The scripture bio-
graphical sketches of Sarah, Deborah, Miriam, Susannah,
and many others, may be ranked amongst the most inter-
esting of that species of writing.
Mrs. Mary Lake was a native of Bristol, England. Her
MARY LAKE. 321
father was a silk-weaver, and her maiden name Mary Bird.
She was born in 1742, and about the year 1762 married
Archibald Lake, a sea-faring man, and moved to St. Johns,
in Newfoundland. Here he followed fishing on the Grand
Bank, which, at that day, was a profitable calling, as the
.strict observance of lent in Catholic Europe caused a great
demand for fish. When that place came into the possession
of the French, he moved his family to New York, and
worked in the ship-yards.
At the period of the American Revolution, he was living
in the city, and embraced the cause of liberty. After the
disasters of Long Island, when Gen. Washington evacuated
the city, the family followed the army into their canton-
ments up the North river. The general hospitals being es-
tablished, first at Fishkill, and then at New Windsor, she
was employed as matron, to superintend the nursing of the
sick, and see that they were provided with suitable nourish-
ment, beds, &c, and the apartments kept clean. Here,
under the direction of the surgeons, she became familiar
with all the details of treating the diseased, in fevers, small-
pox, and various other ailments, acquiring a tact and confi-
dence that remained with her the rest of her life, and was
of great use to the poor and destitute sick on the frontiers.
The more poverty-stricken was the sick family, the greater
was her obligation to wait upon them.
Her meek, quiet spirit was once a little tried by a man in
the garrison at Marietta, whose wife had sickened and died,
notwithstanding her unremitting care of her. The family
had just moved into the country, and was excessively poor,
needing all the common necessaries of life to be supplied
to them during her sickness, by her neighbors. In examin-
ing an old family chest for articles to lay out the dead in a
decent manner, Mrs. Lake discovered a large stocking leg,
filled with silver dollars, several hundred in number. On
21 •
322 MARY LAKE.
questioning the man why he feigned such extreme poverty,
with all this money in his possession? he replied, quite un-
concerned, " O, that is to buy land with."
Her husband was appointed a deputy-commissary to the
hospital, and ranged the adjacent country, providing vege-
tables, and other necessaries suitable for the sick. It is well
known that Gen. Washington often visited the hospitals to
examine the condition of the sick and wounded soldiers, en-
courage those who were in despair by his voice and kind looks,
and inquire into their wants, which were always supplied,
so far as he had the power to direct. In these benevolent
visits, Mrs. Lake more than once received his personal thanks
in their behalf, for her tender, vigilant, and unremitting care
of the sick ; an evidence that she richly merited praise ; for
Washington flattered no one with undeserved commendation.
After the peace, when the hospital was broken up, and
army disbanded, the family returned to New York, and her
husband resumed his former occupation.
She became pious when quite young, and united with Dr.
Rogers' church, one of the oldest in the city, of the Presby-
terian order, and at the close of the war it contained but
two churches of this denomination. Her early piety and
religious feelings were no doubt the secret impulses which
supported and urged her on in this work of charity and
mercy ; for her pay while thus employed was no better than
that of all the others engaged in their country's cause — de-
preciated, worthless, continental paper. But love for her
divine Master, and charity for the sick and distressed, con-
strained her, and she felt it a duty to do all in her power for
their relief.
After the war, ship-building was a poor business, and
hearing accidentally from Gen. Putnam, of the new colony
forming at Marietta, in the rich country of the Ohio, they
became attracted by the glowing descriptions published, of
MARY LAKE. 323
its advantages and future prospects. Having little to expect
where they were, hope pointed them to plenteous and happy
days in the west. In 1789, he moved his family, consisting
of eight children, to Marietta. Three of the sons, James,
Thomas, and Andrew, were young men and able to assist
in their support. The spring after their arrival, the small-
pox broke out amongst the inhabitants, who were chiefly
living in Campus Martius, in such close quarters that it was
very difficult to prevent its spreading by contagion. The
larger number of the settlers had never gone through with
the disease, and were to be inoculated. This was done by
the physician, and Mrs. Lake's skill as a nurse was now in
full requisition, and was unsparingly applied. Her experi-
ence was of great use, even to the surgeons, who were all
young men, and had seen but little of this disease except in
books, in directing the regimen and treatment during its
course. Her services on this trying occasion, when several
who took it by contagion died, were often spoken of by the
inhabitants in after years, as well as at the time, with grati-
tude. The kind, benevolent heart and Christian feeling of
Mrs. Lake, led her constantly to endeavor to do good to the
souls, as well as the bodies, of her fellow-creatures.
Probably one of the first Sunday schools in America was
taught by her in 1791, and continued for several years during
the Indian war, at Campus Martius, in Marietta. Having
brought up a family herself, and knowing the advantages of
early religious instruction, she took compassion on the
younger children of the garrison, who were spending their
Sabbath afternoons in frivolous amusements, and established
a school in the single and only room occupied by the family.
After the regular religious exercises of the day by Mr. Story
were closed, which consisted of only one service, or half the
day, she regularly assembled as many of the children as she
could persuade to attend, and taught them the Westminster
324 MARY LAKE.
catechism, and lessons from the Bible, for an hour or more.
The school usually contained about twenty. She was very
kind and affectionate toward them, so that they were fond of
assembling and listening to her instructions. Her explana-
tions of scripture were so simple and child-like that the
smallest of the little ones could understand them, and ren-
dered very pleasant by her mild manner of speaking. The
accommodations for the children were very rude and simple,
consisting only of a few low stools and benches, such an
article as a chair being a rarity in the garrison. One of the
scholars, then a little boy of four years old, says that one
day, being scant of seat, he was placed, by the kind old
lady, on the top of a bag of meal that stood leaning against
the side of the room. The seed thus charitably sown in
faith and hope, was not scattered in vain, as several of
her scholars are now prominent members of the church.
This school was kept in the lower room of the northeast
block-house.
Soon after the peace of 1795, she moved with the family
on to a farm, eight miles up the Muskingum.
She died in 1802, aged sixty years.
Her children were all pious, and two of her sons, now
very aged men, are reckoned amongst the elders of Israel,
adorning that religion instilled into their youthful minds by
their pious mother.
REV. DANIEL STORY.
Soon after the organization of the Ohio Company at Bos-
ton, in the }rear 1787, it seems that the enlightened men who
directed its concerns, began to think of making arrangements
for the support of the gospel, and the instruction of youth
in their new colony, about to be established in the western
wilderness. Having been and brought up in a land where
more attention was paid to the religious, moral, and literary
instruction of the people, than at any other spot on the
globe, being the country of the Puritans, and themselves
the descendants of the Plymouth colonists, they naturally
turned their attention to its vast importance to the settle-
ment just budding into existence under their care. Accord-
ingly a resolution was passed, at a meeting of the directors
and agents, on the 7th of March, 1788, at Providence, R. I.,
for the support of the gospel, and an instructor of youth ;
in consequence of which, the Rev. Manasseh Cutler, one of
the directors, in the course of that year engaged the Rev.
Daniel Story, then preaching at Worcester, Mass., to go to
the west as a chaplain to the settlement at Marietta.
Mr. Story was born in Boston, in 1755, and graduated at
the Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N. H. He was an
uncle of the late Judge Story, of Cambridge, Mass.
After a tedious and laborious journey over the Allegheny
mountains, he arrived at Marietta, in the spring of 1789, and
commenced his ministerial labors. The settlements were
just beginning, and situated at various points, a consider-
able distance from each other. Nevertheless, he visited them
in rotation, in conformity with the arrangement of the di-
rectors, by which he was to preach about one-third of the
326 DANIEL STORY.
time at the settlements of Waterford and Belpre. His first
visit to Waterford was in the summer of that year, and as
there was no house large enough to contain all the people,
he preached under the shadow of a wide-spreading tree,
near the mills of Wolf creek, a temple not reared by the
hands of man.
During the Indian war, from 1791 to 1705, he preached
the larger portion of the time in the northwest block-house
of Campus Martius, in Marietta. The upper story in that
building was fitted up with benches and a rude, simple desk,
so as to accommodate an audience of a hundred and fifty
or two hundred persons. It was also used for a school,
which was first taught by Maj. Anselm Tupper.
During this period, a committee appointed by the direct-
ors, to report on the religious and literary instruction of the
youth, resolved that one hundred and eighty dollars be paid
from the funds of the company, to aid the new settlements
in paying a teacher, with the condition that Marietta sup-
port him for one year, Belpre seven months, and Waterford
three months. If they complied with this arrangement, that
sum was to be divided amongst them in proportion to the
time. Near the same period, twenty dollars were appropri-
ated to pay Col. Battelle for his services on the Sabbath,
already performed at Belpre. These testimonials sufficiently
prove the interest the directors of the company felt for the
spiritual welfare, as well as the temporal comfort of the
colonists.
Mr. Story also preached occasionally at a large room in
the upper story of a frame-house in the garrison at the
Point, being at the junction of the Muskingum with the
Ohio on the left bank ; Fort Harmer being on the right bank.
At periods when the Indians were quiet, he visited and
preached at the settlements of Belpre and Waterford, fif-
teen and twenty miles from Marietta. These pastoral visits
DANIEL STORY. 327
were made by water, in a log canoe, propelled by the stout
arms and willing hearts of the pioneers. There were no
roads at that day, by which he could travel by land, and be-
side there was less danger in this mode, than by the obscure
paths of the hunters.
In the year 1796 he united and established a Congrega-
tional church, composed of members residing in Marietta,
Belpre, Waterford, and Vienna in Virginia. In 1797 he vis-
ited his native state, and remained there until he received
a call to the pastoral charge of the church he had collected
in the wilderness. He was ordained on the 15th of August,
1797, in Danvers, Mass., there being no clergyman to per-
form that office on the west side of the mountains, to the
care of the church in Marietta and vicinity. It was com-
posed of thirty-two members, nine of whom were officers
of the Revolution. The ordination sermon was preached
by Rev. Manasseh Cutler, and printed at the time, a few
copies of which are yet extant. This relation continued be-
tween Mr. Story and the church until the 15th of March,
1804, when he was dismissed at his own request, his health
being too much impaired for the performances of a pastor
any longer. He died the 30th of December following.
After the Marietta Academy was built in 1797, public wor-
ship was held in that edifice, it being constructed and so
finished as to answer for that purpose.
Mr. Story was in the ministry for some time before he
came to Marietta, and when selected by Dr. Cutler, the
choice was much approved by those who knew him. In
coming to Marietta, then a wilderness, he sacrificed his in-
terest and his comfort ; but knowing the necessities of the
people, he was willing to part with many things for their
good and the cause of his divine Master. What little wealth
he possessed was invested in new lands before coming out,
with an expectation of a reasonable support from the Ohio
328 DANIEL STORY.
Company, until the rents of the lands set apart for the sup-
port of the gospel should be available; but this was pre-
vented by the Indian war, and no money was raised from
that source until the year 1800. The inhabitants were gen-
erally much impoverished from the same cause, and most
probably his receipts for preaching from 1789 to 1797, could
not have paid for his board and clothing. He was obliged
to draw upon his former earnings, by the sale of some of
his lands. However, the hospitality of one or two kind
Christian friends, who gave him a welcome seat at their ta-
bles during a part of this period, relieved him from some of
his difficulties. At his death, the proceeds from the sale
of his remaining lands were insufficient to discharge the
debts incurred while laboring in the new settlements; so
that, like a faithful servant, he spent not only his life, but
all his substance in the service of the cause to which he was
devoted.
In person he was rather tall and slender; quick and active
in his movements ; manners easy, with a pleasant address ;
cheerful and animated in conversation; and always a wel-
come guest in the families he visited. After the war he fre-
quently went out to the new settlers, and sometimes spent
a week at their houses, in the most familiar and pleasant
intercourse. His sermons wrere practical; logically and me-
thodically written after the manner of that day ; and were
said, in matter and manner, to be fully equal to those of the
best preachers in New England. In prayer he was greatly
gifted, both in diversity of subject, propriety and fervency,
as well as in beauty of language. He was never married,
but lived a single life after the manner and advice of St.
Paul. Placed as he was, in the midst of a people trembling
for their lives, and filled with anxiety for the support of their
families, in the midst of the careless habits and dissolute
manners of the soldiery, it is not to be expected that much
JABEZ TRUE. 329
could be done, by a humble minister of the gospel, in ad-
vancing the spiritual condition of the people; nevertheless,
he did what he could for the support of the cause in which
he was engaged, and his name is still held in grateful re-
membrance, by the few living remnants of the first settlers
of Marietta
DR. JABEZ TRUE
Dr. Jabez True was born in Hampstead, N. H., in the
year 1760. His father was the Rev. Henry True, a native
of Salisbury, Mass., and was for many years the pastor of
a church in the former place. When a boy he was a student
at the old Dammer Academy, and completed his education
at Cambridge University. In 1752, he was settled in the
ministry after the Puritan order. In the French war he
served as the chaplain of a brigade of the colonial troops
at Ticonderoga and Fort Edward. He was a fine scholar,
of sound judgment and exemplary piety, "making Revela-
tion his guide, and Reason its companion," as is inscribed
on his tombstone.
It was the custom of that day, before many high schools
or academies were founded, for the clergymen of New Eng-
land to fit young men for college. Mr. True had a class of
this kind before the war of the Revolution, in which was his
son Jabez. He read a competent share of the classics to pre-
pare him for the study of medicine, which, in due time, he
pursued under the instruction of Dr. Flagg, of Hampstead,
330 JABEZ TRUE.
an eccentric man, but eminent in his profession, and highly
esteemed by his friends. He completed his studies some-
time after the commencement of hostilities between the
colonies and the mother country, when feeling the spirit of
resistance strong upon him, he engaged in the war as a
surgeon on board a privateer- ship from Newbury port, a
small seaport in the northeast corner of Massachusetts, dis-
tant about twelve miles from his home, and sailed for Europe.
After a short cruise and limited number of captures, the pri-
vateer was wrecked on the coast of Holland, thus abruptly
terminating his hopes of a fortune.
After about two years spent amongst the Hollanders, who
were friends of the young republic, at the close of the war
he returned to America in a merchant-ship. He now gave
his attention to the practice of medicine, and commenced
business in Gilmanton, N. H., where he remained two years.
The Ohio Company was formed in 1787, and feeling a
strong desire to visit the enchanting region along the shores
of the Ohio, so admirably described by the writers and
travelers of that day, he purchased a share of their lands,
and concluded to leave the home of his forefathers, and
come out to Marietta in company with a family from New-
buryport. The emigrants arrived at the mouth of the Mus-
kingum early in the summer of 1788. The settlement at
that time had but few persons in it; the country was covered
with a thick forest, and tbere was more employment for
able-bodied men in clearing lands and building log-cabins,
than for physicians.
In the following year several young men from Boston,
who had become enamored with the country from the glow-
ing descriptions of its fertility and beauty, came out to the
city of Marietta. They built a long, low log-cabin, in which
they kept bachelors' hall, on the corner where the Bank of
Marietta now stands, and commenced clearing some land.
JABEZ TRUE. 331
It was a new business to those who had been brought up in
a city, and when the novelty of the change had subsided,
they began to think of the comfortable homes they had left,
and to sigh for a return. The breaking out of the Indian
war, put a stop to any further progress of the settlement for
the present, and leaving all their improvements, returned to
Boston. Not so with Dr. True ; he had come out with the
intention of spending his life in the west, and nothing but
imperious necessity could turn him from his purpose. His
steady habits and good character gained for him the favor
of the influential men, and in the beginning of the war he
was appointed a surgeon's-mate to the Ohio Company's
troops, at a salary of twenty-two dollars a month, which
was a welcome and timely aid in this season of privation.
During this distressing, and often perplexing period, he
was many times exposed to the attack of the Indians, as he
passed up and down the Ohio in his visits to Belpre, and
still lower on the river, to minister to the sick and wounded
in the garrisons. During the continuance of the small-pox,
and then again in the sickness of the scarlet fever, numer-
ous trips were made in a canoe, accompanied, generally, by
two men. The most hazardous of these, was one made to
Flinn's station, or Belville, as it was afterward called, thirty
miles below Marietta, the second year of the war, to visit
Mrs. Sherwood, who was attacked by the Indians and severely
wounded, at the same time her husband was taken prisoner.
Late in the spring of the year 1792, Stephen Sherwood,
an inmate of the garrison, went out very early one morn-
ing to feed his hogs, in a pen a few rods above the station
on the bank of the river. His wife, a fearless, bold woman,
who had always lived on the frontiers, about fifty years old,
went out at the same time to milk a cow, standing in the
path near the corner of the upper block-house, about twenty
yards from the gate. After throwing the corn into the pen,
332 JABEZ TRUE.
he stepped into the thicket by the side of the road to cut a
stick for an ox-goad, intending to plow that day amongst
the young corn. While engaged in this employment, eight
or ten Indians, who were lying in the bushes, sprang upon
him and overpowered him, making him a prisoner. Two of
them remained with him, while the others hurried down to
the garrison, and seeing the old lady milking the cow, two
of them seized upon her, intending to make a prisoner of
her also; but she resisted their efforts so stoutly, and
screamed so loud to the men in the garrison for help, that
they abandoned that plan. One of them knocked her down
with a blow of his tomahawk, while the other proceeded to
take off her scalp. In the meantime, Peter Anderson and
Joel Dewey had just risen from their beds, and were putting
their rifles in order for a hunt. Anderson's gun was lying
across his knees, with the lock in his hand, having just fin-
ished oiling it, when, hearing the screams of Mrs. Sherwood,
and readily guessing the cause, he clapped on the lock
without fastening the screws, and sprang up the stairway to
a port-hole in the block-house. As he was about to fire at
the Indians, the lock dropped on to the floor, greatly to his
vexation. At this instant, Joel Dewey, whose rifle was in
better order, sprang to his side, and taking aim at the In-
dian who was in the act of scalping his victim, shot him
through the elbow of the very arm that wielded the scalping-
knife, before he could complete the operation. Fearing the
effects of other shots, the two Indians retreated. Before
they had time to rally and repeat the attempt, Anderson
and Dewey ran out, and seizing the old lady by the shoul-
ders and feet, brought her into the block-house, amidst a
volley of rifle shots from the other Indians. It was a foggy
morning, and they both escaped injury, although the bullets
were left sticking in the logs on each side of the doorway.
Mrs. Sherwood remained for a long time without sense, or
JABEZ TRUE. 333
signs of life, from the stunning efFects of the blow, which
gashed her head in the most shocking manner, while the
settling of the effused blood about her eyes, gave her a
deadly aspect. After a considerable period, signs of re-
turning sensibility appeared, and Joshua Dewey, the brother
of Joel, offered his services to go to Marietta for surgical
aid. It may seem to us to have been a dangerous offer, but
the old borderers knew there was far less danger immedi-
ately after an attack of the Indians than at any other time,
as they always left immediately, the vicinity of their depre-
dations, for fear of a pursuit or an attack on themselves.
This journey was performed in a light canoe, with no
companion but his trusty rifle, which he pushed to Marietta,
a distance of thirty miles, the same day before nightfall, and
returned by midnight with Dr. True, whose benevolent feel-
ings and kind heart were ever ready to the calls of the dis-
tressed. By his judicious treatment, she was finally restored
to health, and lived many years with her husband, who
effected his escape from captivity in a short time.
In after life he was celebrated for his sympathy for the
sick, having himself suffered much from disease. So tender
was he to the prejudices of his patients, that he seldom pre-
scribed without first consulting their opinion as to the medi-
cine to be taken, and if they had any particular objection
to the article which he thought proper, it was changed to
suit their taste, unless it was really necessary in managing
the disease, that the objectionable remedy should be taken.
His attitude by the bedside of the sick was peculiar and
striking. Leaning a little forward in the chair, with his
long slender legs crossed over each other, his compassionate
but single eye intently fixed on the patient, having lost the
use of the other from a long and painful disease of the
optic nerve, with one hand on the pulse and the other dili-
gently employed in switching about a long cue, for he kept
334 JABEZ TRUE.
up the good old fashion of wearing the hair carefully dressed
with a black ribbon. It was a habit he had insensibly fallen
into when his mind was engaged on any subject of deep
thought, and no doubt aided in fixing his attention. The
result of his calm, deliberate judgment, was generally very
correct, and his treatment of disease remarkably successful,
which was, doubtless, in part, owing to its simplicity. It is a
lamentable fact that many die from the effects of too many
and often improper remedies, as well as from disease itself.
After the close of the war, he built a small dwelling-house
and office at the Point, and turned his attention, when not
occupied with his profession, to the clearing and cultivation
of a small farm, about a mile above the town. He still re-
mained a bachelor, boarding for several years in the family
of Mr. Moulton, with whom he emigrated to Ohio. He
subsequently boarded with Mrs. Mills, the widow of Capt.
William Mills, a very amiable and excellent woman, whom
he finally married in the autumn of 1806.
In the year 1799, he became united to the Congregational
church in Marietta, the earliest religious society in Ohio.
Of this church he was for many years a deacon, fulfilling
the duties of that sacred office with great fidelity and
propriety.
His charity for the poor, and especially the sick poor, was
unbounded, and only limited by his scanty means, often be-
stowing on them, in addition to his own services, the larger
portion of the avails of his attendance on richer patients.
It was many years after the close of the war before bridges
were built and roads opened between the settlements, and
during this period he was the principal physician in Marietta
and for the country round. His rides often extended to
twenty or thirty miles by bridle paths or old Indian trails,
marked out by blazes on the trees. The people were many
of them poor and just beginning life in a new country — had
JABEZ TRUE. 335
but little to spare for the services of the physician. With
him, however, it made no difference whether the patient was
poor or rich; he was always ready, when his health per-
mitted, to attend to the calls, and to divide his last dollar
with those who were in want. A practical proof of his
equanimity of temper, generosity and forgiving disposition,
even to those who had done him an injury, was related by
the transgressor himself.
The doctor was a lover of fine fruit, and had cultivated,
with much care, some of the choicest varieties of apples
and pears, in a small garden near his house. Amongst them
was a tree of the richest kind of summer sweeting apples,
to which the neighboring boys paid daily visits whenever
the doctor was out of the way. James Glover, a partially
blind, near-sighted man, well known to the inhabitants of
Marietta, many years since, for his natural, ready, and keen
wit, but then a stout boy of fourteen or fifteen years of age,
hearing the other lads speak of the fine apples in the doc-
tor's garden, concluded he would also try them; so, one
night, a little after bedtime, he mounted the tree, and began
filling his bosom and pockets with the fruit : making a rust-
ling among the branches, the doctor happened to hear him,
and coming out into the garden, peering up into the trees,
he espied James, and hailed him. James was obliged to an-
swer, and give his name. "Ah James is that you; why you
are on the wrong tree; that one is the summer sweeting.
Come down, come down, my lad." This was indeed the
fact, but in his hurry he had not yet made the discovery of
his mistake. James came down very slowly, expecting rough
treatment, and the kind language of the doctor only a ruse
to get him within his reach. But he was very pleasantly
disappointed. Instead of using harsh words, or beating the
aggressor, as most men would have done, he took a long
pole and beat off as many apples as he could carry, and
330 JABEZ TRUE.
dismissed him with the request, that when he wanted any
more, to call on him, and he would assist him in getting
them. James, however, never visited the tree again, and
did all in his power to persuade the other boys to do so.
As the country became more thickly settled, the roads better,
and the people more wealthy, other physicians came in, and
divided with him the medical business, which he bore with-
out murmuring or complaining, willing to see all prosperous
and happy, even at his expense. For several of the last
years of his life, he held the office of county treasurer,
which afforded him a small remuneration without much toil,
and enabled him to further extend his charities to benevo-
lent societies, and other objects for the support of religion
and morals, which came into use about thirty years ago,
and of which he was a zealous promoter. Samuel J. Mills,
the projector of foreign missions, and other benevolent so-
cieties, spent two weeks at his house in 1812, when was
formed the Washington County Bible Society, being the first
in the valley of the Ohio. His house wras the home of all
traveling preachers of the Congregational or Presbyterian
order, who visited the town, or were engaged in promoting
the spread of the gospel. He was the Gaius of Marietta;
although, for its population, it numbered many men who
were zealous and liberal in all good works.
In his domestic relations the doctor was very happy. His
wife was a cheerful, humble, and sincere Christian, with a
lively, benevolent temperament, ever ready to promote the
happiness and comfort of her companion, and to aid him in
all deeds of charity. By this union he had no issue ; but
the children of his wife were treated with all the love and
kindness he could have bestowed on his own. In person
Dr. True was tall, with simple, but not ungraceful manners ;
his eyes grey and small, with full, projecting brows, nose
large and aquiline; forehead rather low; face mild, and
WILLIAM DANA. 337
expressive of the benevolence of the mind and heart within.
He was a man of whom no enemy could say hard things,
and whom every one loved and respected.
He died, after a short illness, of the prevailing epidemic
fever of 1823.
The memory of this good man is still cherished by the
descendants of the pioneers, for his universal charity, sim-
plicity of manners, and sincere, unaffected piety.
WILLIAM DANA.
The progenitor of the Danas was a French Huguenot,
who fled from the Catholic persecutions to England, at the
period of the edict of Nantz. Near the middle of the sev-
enteenth century, Richard Dana, the son of William Dana,
who was the sheriff of Middlesex, under Queen Elizabeth,
came to Boston, and settled in that vicinity. He was the.
great grandfather of Capt. William Dana, the subject of
this brief biography. From this man sprang all of that
name in New England. He was born at Little Cambridge,
now Brighton, Mass., in the year 1745. He had three older
brothers, Jonathan, Samuel, and Benjamin, and two younger,
Josiah and Ezra, with three sisters. The latter settled in
Amherst, N. H., where he held the first rank in society. His
son Samuel was a lawyer, and a member of Congress from
that state, in the year 1813, and held many public stations
in the Democratic ranks.
Capt. Dana married Miss Mary Bancroft, the daughter of
Esq. Bancroft, of Peperil, Mass. She had but one brother,
22
338 WILLIAM DANA.
who was a stanch patriot, and entered the service of his
country at the battle of Bunker hill, where he discharged
his musket sixteen times ; and when the ammunition was
all expended, came off with the retreating troops. That
summer he died with the small-pox. After Capt. Dana's
marriage, he resided in Charleston ; but just before the bat-
tle of Lexington, sold his house and lot, and moved his
family to the vicinity of Worcester, where he was living, on
the Mount Farm, at the commencement of hostilities. This
is quite a noted place, and now owned by the Roman Cath-
olic College. Here he was chosen captain of a company
of artillery, and was stationed with his men a mile or two
out of Charleston, at the time of the battle of Bunker hill. An
express from Gen. Putnam, near its close, arrived, with orders
to hasten on to the hill and reinforce the flagging provincials.
He started at full speed, but met his countrymen on Charles-
ton neck, on their retreat. He continued in the service for
two or three years, attached to the command of Gen. Knox,
who was at the head of the artillery corps. Having a
tempting offer, about the year 1778, he sold his possession
for continental money, in which he had the fullest confi-
dence. Before he could again invest it, the paper per-
ished on his hands, leaving him, like many others of that
day, in poverty. Having no means of supporting his young
and growing family but his pay in the service, which would
not even support himself, he reluctantly resigned his com-
mission, and moved his family to Amherst, N. H. Here he
rented a small farm, which required all his efforts, with the
aid of his extra work as a carpenter, to supply his family with
food; provisions being both scarce and dear. A portion
of the time of his living here, from 1779 to 1788, he was
employed as a deputy-sheriff.
In the spring of the latter year he decided on removing
his rapidly increasing family to the banks of the Ohio,
WILLIAM DANA. 339
where the soil was more fertile, and the climate less severe
than that of New Hampshire. Hither several of his mil-
itary associates had already gone. Leaving his wife and
family at Amherst until he could visit Ohio, he, after a
wearisome journey, arrived with his two oldest sons at Ma-
rietta the last of June, and built a log-cabin on the corner
of market-square, where the post-office building now stands.
As it was too late in the season to plant a crop of corn, he
cleared off a small piece of ground on the land occupied
by the female seminary, for a brick-yard, and made and
burnt a small kiln that summer, which were the first bricks
made in the territory. These were in demand for chimneys,
and aided him in supplying his present wants.
In 1789, he moved out his family and joined the Belpre
associates, and drew a lot of land in that wide, beautiful
bottom on the Ohio river, just above the head of Blenner-
hassett's island. The first labor was chiefly devoted to
clearing the land of the immense growth of forest trees
which covered it, shutting out the rays of the sun, and in-
closing it with fence. This left but little time for the erection
of a comfortable cabin, and the winter was passed in a hut
built like a large corn-crib, and so small that all the family
could not be accommodated at night, and two of the oldest
boys slept in a large covered road- wagon. The next year,
or in 1790, he built a more comfortable house. That was
the year of the famine, in which Capt. Dana's family suf-
fered largely with the other settlers. During the Indian
war, they lived in Farmers' castle. In a few years after its
close, his land was cleared, a convenient frame-house built,
orchards of fruit trees in bearing, and smiling plenty crowned
his table, around which he could assemble eight sons and
three daughters.
In person Capt. Dana was tall, and in his manhood sus-
tained the post and bearing of a soldier. In disposition
340 NATHANIEL CUSHING.
cheerful and social, and never happier than when surrounded
by his old associates at the festive board.
He died in the year 1809, and has left a numerous train
of descendants, who rank in vigor of mind, intelligence,
civil and moral usefulness, with the first families in the
community.
NATHANIEL CUSHING-
Col. Nathaniel Cushing was a branch of the illustrious
Cushing family of Boston, wdiich is classed with the first
citizens of the cradle of liberty.
He was born in Pembrook, Mass., on the 8th of April,
1753. But little has been preserved of his early life, by his
relatives, except that he received a good common school
education. At a suitable age he served an apprenticeship
to the trade of a house-carpenter, a common occurrence
among the New England yeomanry, who often added to the
calling of a farmer that of some useful trade or handicraft,
giving them vigorous health and strength of limbs, fitting
them to wield effectively the implements of war, as well as
the toota used in their daily occupations.
He married Miss Elizabeth Heath, in November, 1775,
the year the struggle for independence commenced. The
fruits of this union were twelve children, six sons and six
daughters, several of whom are now living in Ohio, amongst
the most respectable and wealthy of her citizens. Mrs.
Cushing was an accomplished, well educated lady, of refined
manners, and accustomed to the best society of that day.
NATHANIEL CUSHING. 341
At the commencement of the war he was living in or
near Boston, and offered his services in defense of the
country. In July, 1775, while the Americans were investing
the town under Gen. Washington, he was commissioned by
Congress as a lieutenant in Capt. Trescott's company and
Col. Brewer's regiment. In January, 1776, he was commis-
sioned as first lieutenant in the same company, but in the
sixth regiment of Massachusetts infantry, under Col. Whit-
comb. In 1777 he was promoted to a captain, and in this
capacity served the remainder of the war, being at its close
made a major by brevet. He was engaged in many battles
and skirmishes, and noted as one of the most brave and
successful of the partizan officers. By his kindness to those
under his command, and watchful care for the best interests
of his men, he became a great favorite with the soldiers.
As a disciplinarian he was very strict, and the men often
remarked that they could always depend on his word ; and
whether it was to reward them for their good conduct, or to
punish them for their faults, it was sure to be accomplished.
In 1780 Capt. Cushing was attached to Col. Rufus Put-
nam's regiment of light infantry, while the main army was
stationed on the North river, and the enemy held possession
of New York. At this time there was a large district of
country between the contending armies, called the neutral
ground, that was nearly deserted by the inhabitants, and
ravaged by both parties, especially by the Tories, who, from
this and the adjacent country, supplied the British in New
York with forage and fresh provisions. The Americans, to
watch the incursions of the enemy, and keep the Tories from
robbing the peacable inhabitants near the lines, kept strong
outposts, or detachments of soldiers, on the borders between
Kingsbridge and the White Plains. It was a dangerous po-
sition for the troops; and none but the most active and
vigilant of the partisan officers were ordered on this service.
342 NATHANIEL GUSHING.
They were not only liable to sudden and night attacks, from
the bands of Tories who were born and brought up here,
and familiar with every road and by-path, but also exposed
to a corps of light-horse, under the noted partisan officer,
Col. Simcoe, who had cut ofF and destroyed several ad-
vanced parties of American troops. To avoid the latter
casualty, the order of the commanding general was, that
they should not advance beyond a certain line into the neu-
tral ground, but keep within their own defenses, lest they
should be surprised by the light-horse, and cut to pieces.
Amongst others ordered on this hazardous service, was
Capt. Cushing, with a detachment of men in addition to his
own company. Soon after arriving and taking up his po-
sition, information was brought by some of the Whig inhab-
itants, that there was a considerable body of Tories posted
at no great distance from him, on the road to New York.
The opportunity thus offered, of distinguishing himself and
the detachment under his orders, was too great to be re-
sisted ; beside, if successful, would be doing a service to the
cause, and wipe awray some of the disgrace attached to the
defeat of other officers who had preceded him in this service.
With the main body of his men, he early that night com-
menced a rapid march across the country, by an unfre-
quented road, and about midnight surprised and captured
the whole party. Col. Simcoe, with his mounted rangers,
was posted in that vicinity, and received early notice of the
event, by some friend of the British, and acting with his
usual promptness, immediately commenced a pursuit, with
the expectation of cutting to pieces the detachment, and
releasing the prisoners. Capt. Cushing, with all haste, posted
off the captive Tories in advance, under a small guard ;
charging the officer to rush on toward the lines as rapidly
as possible, while he followed more leisurely in the rear,
with the main body of his troops. Expecting a pursuit from
NATHANIEL CUSHING. 313
Simcoe, he marched in three ranks, and arranged the order of
defense if they were attacked by the cavalry ; a kind of troops
much more dreaded by the infantry than those of their own
class. When about half way back, the clattering hoofs of
the rangers' horses were heard in hot pursuit. As they ap-
proached, he halted his detachment in the middle of the
road, ready to receive the charge. It fortunately happened
that he found, in the house with the captured Tories, a num-
ber of long spears or lances, sufficient to arm the rear rank.
When called to a halt, and face the enemy, it brought the
spearmen in front. Standing in close array, shoulder to
shoulder, with one end resting on the ground, they received
their enraged enemies on their points, while the other two
ranks poured upon them a deadly fire, leaving many of the
horses without riders. This unexpected result threw them
into disorder, and their leader directed a retreat. Cushing
now renewed his march in the same order. Simcoe, enraged
and chagrined at the failure of his charge, again ordered a
fresh and more furious onset, but was received by his brave
antagonist in the same cool and resolute manner, and met
with a still more decided repulse, losing a number of his
best men and horses. Not yet satisfied to let his enemies
escape, he made a third unsuccessful attempt, and gave up
the pursuit, leaving Capt. Cushing to retire at his leisure.
He reached his post unmolested, with all the prisoners, and
the loss of only a few men wounded, but none killed. The
following day he was relieved by a fresh detachment,
and marched into camp with the trophies of this brave
adventure.
The morning after his return, in the orders of the day, by
the commander-in-chief, notice was taken of this affair, and
any similar attempt by the troops on the lines forbidden,
thereby apparently censuring the conduct of Capt. Cushing.
This was rather a damper to the feelings of a brave officer,
344 NATHANIEL CUSHING.
who was peculiarly sensitive, and sustained a nice sense of
military honor. Soon after the promulgation of the order,
and he had retired to his tent, brooding over the event of
the morning, and half inclined to be both angry and morti-
fied at the nice distinctions of the commander, an aid of
Gen. Washington entered with a polite invitation to dine
with him. He readily complied with the request, and at the
table was placed in the post of honor, at Washington's
right hand. A large number of officers were present, in
whose hearing he highly complimented Capt. Cushing for
the gallant manner in which he conducted the assault on
the Tories, and the bravery and skill with which he defeated
the charges of Simcoe; and that there were few, indeed,
who could have conducted the retreat with the coolness and
success he had done ; but, at the same time, added that for
the strict and orderly discipline of the army, it was neces-
sary to discountenance every act that contravened the or-
ders of the commander-in-chief. This satisfied all his
mortified feelings, and increased his love and respect for his
revered general.
After the close of the war he lived in Boston, from
whence, on the formation of the Ohio Company, he re-
moved with his family to Marietta, in the summer of 1788.
Soon after his arrival, in August, he was commissioned by
Gov. St. Clair as a captain in the first regiment of territo-
rial militia, and in 1797, by the same, as colonel of the
regiment. When the Belpre colony was formed, in 1789,
he joined the association, and was one of the most active,
brave, and intelligent men, in arranging and conducting the
military and civil affairs of that settlement. After the cap-
ture of Capt. Goodale by the Indians, he was chosen to
command the garrison of Farmers' castle. At the close of
the war he settled on his farm, and pursued agriculture
for the support of his family, and was a very successful
JONATHAN HASKELL. 345
cultivator. He paid great attention to the education of his
children, who now rank with the most worthy and useful
citizens of Ohio.
Thomas H. Cushing was a younger brother, and faith-
fully served his country, not only in the war of 1770, but
also in that of 1812. In 1815 he was collector of the United
States revenue in the port of New London, Conn., which
office he held until his death, in 1822. He is spoken of as
a very excellent man.
In person, Col. Cushing was rather short, but very mus-
cular and stout-limbed ; eyes black, and of the keenest lus-
ter, piercing and intelligent ; face well formed, with an ex-
pression of firmness and dignity seldom seen; manners
gentlemanly and refined; very courteous and affable in
his intercourse with mankind, whether poor or rich. He
was highly esteemed by Mr. Blennerhasset, and both him
and Mrs. Cushing treated with marked attention.
They died in August, in the year 1814; but their names
will be long cherished by the descendants of the early
settlers, as amongst the most worthy of that heroic band.
MAJ. JONATHAN HASKELL.
Maj. Jonathan Haskell was born in Rochester, Mass.,
the 19th of March, 1775. Like the larger portion of the
New Englanders of that day, he was brought up on a farm,
and received only a common school education, which fitted
him for conducting the usual concerns of life to which he
might be called.
346 JONATHAN HASKELL.
At the commencement of the war of Independence, when
he was twenty years old, he was engaged in agriculture.
How early he entered the army is not known. In 1779 he
was aid-de-camp to Gen. Patterson, of the Massachusetts
line, and was commissioned as a lieutenant. lie continued
to serve until the close of the war, either as an aid, or in
the line of the army.
When the Ohio Company was formed, he became an as-
sociate, and moved out there in company with Capt. Devol's
family, in the autumn of 1788. In 1789 he united with the
Belpre settlement, and commenced clearing his farm. On
the breaking out of the Indian war, in January, 1791, he re-
ceived the appointment of captain in the regular service,
and went to Rochester, Mass., where he recruited a com-
pany, and returned to Marietta in December; where he was
stationed for the defense of that, and the adjacent settle-
ments ; as the troops had been withdrawn from Fort Har-
mer in the fall of 1790. After the defeat of Gen. St. Clair,
he remained at Marietta until March, 1793, when he was
commissioned as a captain in the second sub-legion under
Gen. Wayne, and joined the army on the frontiers that sum-
mer. He was stationed at Fort St. Clair, where he remained
until June, 1794, when he was appointed to the command
of the fourth sub-legion, ranking as a major, although his
commission was not filled until August, 1795. In a letter
to Griffin Greene, Esq., whose relative he married, he gives
a sketch of the campaign which defeated the combined
forces of the Indians and closed the war.
" Head Quarters, Miami of the Lake, August 29th, 1794.
Sir: The 28th of July the army moved forward, consisting
of about eighteen hundred regulars and fifteen hundred
militia, from the state of Kentucky, passing by the way
of St. Clair's battle-ground, now Fort Recovery. We then
turned more to the eastward, and struck the St. Mary's in
JONATHAN HASKELL. 347
twenty miles, where we erected a small fort, and left a sub
altern's command. We then crossed the St. Mary's, and in
four or five days' marching found the Auglaize river, and
continued on down that stream to its junction with the Mi-
ami of the lake; distant one hundred miles from Greenville,
by the route we pursued. At this place we built a garrison,
and left a major to command it. The army then marched
down the river forty-seven miles from the new garrison, and
on the 20th inst., at nine o'clock in the morning, came up
with the Indians, who had posted themselves in a position
chosen as most favorable for defense. The troops charged
upon them with the bayonet, and drove them two miles,
through a thicket of woods, fallen timber, and underbrush,
when the cavalry fell upon and entirely routed them. Our
line extended two and a half miles, and yet it was with dif-
ficulty we outflanked them. One of the prisoners, a white
man, says the number of the Indians engaged was about
twelve hundred, aided by two hundred and fifty white men
from Detroit. Our loss in the action was two officers killed,
and four wounded, with about thirty privates killed, and
eighty wounded. The Indians suffered much ; about forty
or fifty of their dead fell into our hands. The prisoner was
asked why they did not fight better? He said that we would
give them no time to load their pieces, but kept them con-
stantly on the run. Two miles in advance of the battle-
ground, is a British garrison, established last spring, which
we marched round within pistol shot, and demanded a sur-
render; but they refused to give it up. Our artillery being
too light, and the fort too strong to carry by storm, it was
not attacked; but we burnt their out-houses, destroyed all
their gardens, cornfields, and grass, within musket shot of
the place, and all below for eight or nine miles, without any
opposition. On the 27th we arrived at this place, where we
have a fort, and shall halt a few days to rest. We have
348 JONATHAN HASKELL.
marched through the Indian settlements and villages for
about sixty miles, destroyed several thousand acres of corn,
beans, and all kinds of vegetables, burned their houses, with
furniture, tools, &c. A detachment has gone into Fort Re-
covery for a supply of provisions for the troops, and when
it returns, we shall march up the Miami sixty miles, to where
the St. Mary's unites with the St. Joseph's, and destroy all
the corn in that country."
This letter describes, in plain terms, the ruin and devasta-
tion that marked the course of the American army. It
might have been considered a wise policy to devote to de-
struction the dwellings, cornfields, gardens, and in fact every
species of property that belonged to the hostile savages, but
it was also a most cruel policy. The British troops, in their
inroads amongst the rebel settlements of the Revolutionary
war, never conducted more barbarously. The Indian vil-
lages on the Miami and the Auglaize, were snugly and
comfortably built — were furnished with many convenient
articles of house-keeping and clothing. They had large
fields of corn and beans, with gardens of melons, squashes,
and various other vegetables. Mr. Joseph Kelly, of Ma-
rietta, then a boy of twelve years old, and for several years
a prisoner with the Indians, who treated him kindly, and was
adopted into a family as one of their own children, was
living at this time with them at the junction of the St. Mary's
and Auglaize, the spot where Maj. Haskell says the army
would next go, to complete their work of destruction. Mr.
Kelly was there when an Indian runner announced that the
American troops had arrived in the vicinity of the village.
His friends had not expected them so soon, and with the ut-
most haste and consternation, the old men, with the women
and children, the warriors being absent, hurried aboard their
canoes, taking nothing with them but a few kettles and
blankets, not having time to collect any provisions from
EBENEZER BATTELLE. 349
their fields and gardens. The sun was only an hour or two
high when they departed, in as deep sorrow at the loss of
their country and homes, as the Trojans of old when they
evacuated their favorite city. Before the next day at noon,
their nice village was burnt to the ground ; their cornfields
of several hundred acres, just beginning to ripen, were cut
down and trampled under foot by the horses and oxen of
the invaders, while their melons and squashes were pulled
up by the roots. The following winter, the poor Indians de-
prived of their stock of corn and beans, which were grown
every year and laid up for their winter food as regularly as
among the white people, suffered the extreme of want.
Game was scarce in the country they retreated to on the
west of the Miami, and what few deer and fish they could
collect, barely served to keep them alive. It was a cruel
policy; but probably subdued their Spartan courage more
than two or three defeats, as for many years thereafter, until
the days of Tecumseh, they remained at peace.
After the close of the war, Maj. Haskell returned to his
farm at Belpre, where he died in December, 1814. He was
considered a brave man and a good officer. Several of his
descendants are living in Washington county.
COL. EBENEZER BATTELLE.
Col. Ebenezer Battelle was a descendant of the Puritan
race, and the only son of Ebenezer Battelle, Esq., of Dedham,
Mass. His father was one of the industrious, honest yeo-
manry of the good old bay state, who duly appreciated the
350 EBENEZEK. BATTELLE.
value of learning, more farmers' sons being liberally edu-
cated in that state than in any other of the Union. At a
suitable age he pursued a full college course at Cambridge,
and graduated in the year 1775. He was intended for the
ministry, as were a large share of the educated men before
the Revolution; but the war breaking out in the last year
of his course, his attention was diverted from the study of
divinity to that of a martial nature. He held the commis-
sion of a colonel under the governor of Massachusetts, in
the militia, during or at the close of the war.
In 1781, he commenced business in Boston, as the active
partner in a bookstore, in company with Isaiah Thomas, of
Worcester, a man who delighted in being useful, and assisted
many young men in their commencement of life. He re-
mained in this occupation six years ; and during the time,
married Miss Anna Darant, the daughter of Cornelius Dar-
ant, Esq., a rich merchant of that place. She was a woman
of superior intellect, beautiful person, and great excellence
of character, the impress of which descended to her children.
This bookstore was the second one ever opened in Boston,
the first being kept by Mr. Guile, to which was added a cir-
culating library to aid in keeping up the establishment.
While here he was elected to the command of the Ancient
and Honorable Artillery Company, a noted band of military
men, composed of officers of good standing and character.
On the formation of the Ohio Company, he became an
associate, and was appointed one of their agents. On the-
sixth of April, 1788, the day before the pioneers landed at
Marietta, he left Boston in company with Col. John May
and others, by water, for the mouth of the Muskingum, by
way of Baltimore. After a six weeks' tour in crossing the
mountains, by almost impassable roads, with their heavy-
loaded wagon, they reached the place of destination the last
of May. During the following summer he was employed
EBENEZER BATTELLE. 351
in erecting a dwelling-house, in the front curtain of Campus
Martius, for the reception of his family. The first Court of
Quarter Sessions, held the 9th of September, was opened
in his house, as appears by the old records of that court.
In October, 1788, he recrossed the mountains to meet his
family at Baltimore, and guide them over the Alleghenies.
He found them under the care of Mr. Daniel Mayo, a young
gentleman who had recently graduated at Cambridge, and
became a resident of Newport, Ky., after the close of the
Indian war. Their journey, at this late season of the year,
was very trying to Mrs. Battelle, who had all her life been
nurtured in the comforts of a city. At Simrel's ferry, a noted
place of embarkation for emigrants, they met with several
other New England families, amongst them, Isaac Pierce,
Charles Green, and Capt. Zebulon King, who, the next
spring, was killed by the Indians. The last of November,
eight families embarked in one boat, and that not a large
one, and arrived at Marietta in December. Here they met
with a hearty welcome from the five or six females and heads
of families who had come on in August preceding. The
winter was passed very pleasantly in Campus Martius, in
the company of such men as Gens. Varnum, Parsons, and
Putnam, with Gov. St. Clair and the officers of Fort Harmer.
The Indians were yet all friendly, and an abundance of wild
game, with a good stock of provisions from Pittsburg, ren-
dered this as delightful a season as any that occurred for
many years thereafter.
That winter an association was formed for the settlement
at Belpre, composed almost entirely of the old officers of
the continental line. Col. Battelle united himself with
these enterprising and intelligent men, and in the spring of
1789 proceeded to clear his land and erect a stout block-
house for the reception of his family. On the 1st day of
May, one of the associates, Capt. King, from Rhode Island,
352 EBENEZEIt BATTELLE.
was killed by the Indians, while peaceably at work on his
new land. The following day Col. Battelle, with two of his
sons and Griffin Greene, Esq., embarked at Marietta in a
large canoe, with farming tools, provisions, &c. On their
way down they were hailed by some one from the shore,
and informed of this sad event. They landed and held a
consultation on what was best to be done. Some were for
returning; but they finally decided on proceeding. The
block-houses of the two emigrants were near each other,
and nearly opposite to the middle of Backus' island, on the
spot afterward occupied by Farmers' castle. After landing,
the other settlers came and joined them for mutual defense,
and through the night kept up a military guard, in the old
Revolutionary style, the sentinel calling out every fifteen
minutes, " All's well," not thinking this would give the skulk-
ing Indians notice where to find them. No enemy, how-
ever, molested them during the night, and their fears of
attack gradually subsided. They were not again disturbed
until the winter of 1791.
Early in April, before any families had moved on to the
ground, a party of officers from Fort Harmer, with their
wives, and a few ladies from Marietta, made a visit to the
new settlement, in the officer's barge, a fine, large boat,
rowed with twelve oars. These were the first white females
who ever set foot on the soil of Belpre. On their return.
Col. Battelle, with several others, accompanied them by
water in a canoe, and another party by land. While on
the voyage, a large bear was discovered swimming across
the river. The landsmen fired at him with their muskets
and rifles, but without effect. The canoe then ranged along-
side, when Col. Battelle seized him by the tail, and when
the bear attempted to bite his hand, he raised his hind parts,
throwing his head under water, and thus escaped his teeth.
One of his companions soon killed him with an axe. He
EBENEZER BATTELLE. 353
weighed over three hundred pounds, and afforded several
fine dinners to his captors. In 1790, owing to early frosts
and late planting the year previous, the inhabitants were
left without bread-stuff, corn being their chief dependence.
Their sufferings were very great, until the crop of 1790 was
gathered, which proved to be plentiful, and after ^hat time
they did not suffer again for food. During the Indian war
his family was sheltered in Farmers' castle, and all escaped
injury, though often in danger. Several of the inmates
were killed.
In the plan of Farmers' castle, his block-house occupied
the northeast corner. In their lower room of this building,
regularly on the Sabbath, divine worship was kept up by
the inhabitants. His son Ebenezer, a lad of fourteen years,
was drummer to the garrison, and at the hour of service
marched with his drum the whole length of the castle, sum-
moning the people to worship. Col. Battelle officiated as
chaplain, sometimes delivering his own discourses, and, at
others, reading the sermons of a standard divine ; so that
the Sabbath was honored and generally respected by the
inhabitants.
He died at the residence of his son, in Newport, Washing-
ton county, Ohio, in the year 1815.
He left three sons and one daughter, Cornelius, Ebenezer,
and Thomas. Cornelius and Thomas, at the close of the
war, went to the West Indies, where a rich uncle put them
into lucrative business. Thomas married the daughter of
Gov. Livingston, of New York, and Cornelius the daughter
of a rich planter. Louisa remained single, and lived in
Boston with her mother's relatives. Ebenezer settled on a
farm in Newport, and has a numerous family of children,
noted for their intelligence and respectability.
23
COL. ISRAEL PUTNAM.
Col. Israel Putnam was the eldest son of Gen. Israel Put-
nam, of Pomfret, Conn., but was born in the town of Salem,
Mass., in 1739. He had three brothers, Daniel, David and
Schuyler, whose native place was Pomfret. His early days
were passed on the farm, and he was bred to the noble art
of agriculture, an art without which all other arts are useless.
This gave him a vigorous, healthy frame, and fitted him for
the turmoils of the camp or the labors of the field.
His education was similar to that of the sons of the sur-
rounding yeomanry, equal to all the common concerns of
life. As a proof that Gen. Putnam highly valued learning
and the cultivation of the mind, he collected a large library
of the most useful books; embracing history, belles-lettres,
travels, &c, for the benefit of himself and children, called
the Putnam family library. After his death they were
divided amongst the hens, and quite a number of them
found their way to Ohio, being brought out by his son and
grandchildren.
About the year 1764, he married Miss Sarah Waldo, of
an ancient and honorable family in Pomfret, and a woman
of excellent qualities, with whom he passed a long and happy
life.
On the 20th of April, 1775, when the news of the battle
of Lexington arrived, flying on the wings of the wind, his
father, Col. Putnam, was plowing in the field with four oxen.
He left them standing in their yokes, and hastening to the
stable, mounted one of his fleetest horses, without even
changing his dress, and started for the scene of action. The
distance was one hundred miles, which he accomplished by
ISRAEL PUTNAM. 355
a relay of horses, in twenty-four hours. Shortly after his
departure, his son Israel raised a company of volunteers, of
which he was the captain, and marched to Cambridge, where
he remained under his father's orders until the arrival of
Gen. Washington. Soon after this time, Col. Putnam was
commissioned by Congress as a major-general, and on the
22d of July, Capt. Putnam and Lieut. Samuel Webb were
appointed his aids. He accompanied his father to New
York, where he took command of that division of the army,
and to the posts on the Hudson river. Having but little
taste for military life, to which calling neither his address nor
personal appearance fitted him, being diffident and awkward
in his manners, but naturally fearless and brave like all his
name, after spending about three years in the army, he con-
cluded to quit the service and devote his attention to the
farm, for which he was eminently fitted, both by inclina-
tion and practice. While absent from his home, his wife
took charge of the family of six children. She was a woman
of great spirit, and as firm a patriot as the general himself,
hating, with all her soul and strength, the British oppressors
of her country, who were technically called Redcoats, and
loving with equal ardor the American soldiers, supplying
them with food and clothing to the extent of her abilities.
In the winter of 1779, when the patriot troops suffered so
much from the want of warm garments, she had spun and
wove in her own house, a number of blankets made of the
finest wool in the flock, and sent on for their relief. Numer-
ous pairs of stockings were also manufactured by her own
hands, and contributed in the same way. No one at this
day knows or can appreciate the value of the labors of
American females in achieving our freedom. They wrought
and suffered in silence, bearing many privations in common
with their husbands and sons in the days which tried the
patriotism of the colonists. She was a woman of elevated
356 ISRAEL PUTNAM.
mind and great personal courage, worthy of the family to
which she was allied. In the absence of her husband, when
the vultures and hawks attacked the poultry, she could load
and lire his light fowling-piece at them, without dodging at
the Hash.
While at Harlem hights, Col. Putnam purchased two fine
bulls, to improve his stock of cattle ; one was black, and a
full-blooded English animal ; the other, an American, of a
mottled color. From these, crossed with his best native
cows, was raised a very superior stock, celebrated for size,
and their excellent qualities for the dairy. Oxen of this
breed were brought out to Ohio in the year 1788, and cows
in 1795, which were as famous for milk as the noted Dur-
hams of this day. During the period of the Revolution,
amidst all their other cares, intelligent American farmers
found time to attend to the improvement of their farming
operations, as well as to the calls of military duties.
When the Ohio Company was formed, he became an as-
sociate; and with two of his sons crossed the mountains,
bringing a wagon load of farming utensils ; but left his wife
and other children in Pomfret, until a farm was provided
for their comfort in the wilderness. His team was composed
of two yokes of oxen, sprung from this famous stock. The
adventure in crossing the North river, related in the biogra-
phy of his son Waldo, took place on this journey; and his
life was saved by one of these fine oxen. At the formation
of the settlement in Belpre, in the spring of 1789, he joined
that community, locating his farm in the broad, beautiful
bottom on the Ohio river, opposite to the mouth of the Lit-
tle Kenawha. Here he remained, clearing and fencing the
land, until the fall of 1790, when he returned to Connecticut
for his family. The Indian war broke out in January fol-
lowing, and he did not return until after the peace of 1795.
His wealth, although not great, yet gave him facilities for
ISRAEL PUTNAM. 357
improving his lands and erecting buildings, rather superior
to most of the other associates, who were generally in very
moderate circumstances. He was a practical and intelli-
gent agriculturist, who, by his example and precepts, was
the means of giving a correct tone to the progress of farm-
ing in Belpre, thus conferring a direct benefit on the country.
In all public improvements on the roads and bridges, so use-
ful in new settlements, he was a leading and influential
man ; also, in the support of schools and the gospel ; read-
ing on the Sabbath, in their social meetings, when they had
no preacher, the prayers of the Episcopal church, and a ser-
mon from the work of some pious divine ; thus doing all in
his power for the good of his fellow men.
He was the father of a numerous family ; five sons and
three daughters, viz. : Israel, Aaron Waldo, David, William
Pitt, and George Washington. These all settled in Ohio,
and three of them as farmers. William Pitt Putnam was a
physician, and came to Marietta in 1792, in the midst of the
war, and practiced medicine. David Putnam also settled in
Marietta, in 1798, as a lawyer, and is now the only survivor.
The daughters married as follows : Sarah to Samuel Thor-
nily, Mary to Daniel Mayo, and Elizabeth to Joel Craig; the
two latter settled in Newport, Ky., opposite to Cincinnati,
where their descendants now live.
Col. Putnam was a man of sound, vigorous mind, and re-
markable for his plain, common sense ; abrupt and homely
in his manners and address, but perfectly honest and up-
right in his intercourse with mankind. He was a strict
utilitarian ; esteeming the useful much more highly than the
ornamental. In his life he practiced all the Christian vir-
tues, and died in the full hope of a blessed immortality.
MAJ. NATllAN GOODALE
Maj. Nathan Goodale was born in Brookfield, Mass., about
the year 1743. His father died when he was quite young,
and his mother married a Mr. Ware, of Rutland, where he
was removed to his new home, and passed his early years,
to the time of manhood, on a farm, and in learning the trade
of a bricklayer; thus laying the foundation for that vigorous,
muscular frame, which enabled him to undergo the fatigues
and exposures of a military life, at a time when the army
afforded few facilities for the comfort of the soldier. No
other set of men could have borne up under the trials of
want, famine, and a lack of all the common necessaries of
life, for several years in succession, as did the American
soldiers, but such as had been inured like the Spartans, in
childhood, to bear suffering with patience. His education
was rather above that of the common schools of that day,
for we find him, at an early period of the war, employed by
Gen. Putnam as an assistant engineer.
At a suitable age he married Elizabeth Phelps, of Rut-
land, on the 11th of September, 1765. About the year 1770
he moved his family to Brookfield, where he purchased a
farm two miles from the center of the town. His three old-
est children were born in Rutland, as we learn from the
town records.
From this time to the rupture with the mother country, in
l??f>, he continued to labor on his farm, and to work at his
trade of bricklaying; but as nearly all the houses of that
clay were made of wood, his mechanical work was chiefly
confined to chimneys. For some time previous to the first
hostilities, he had, with thousands of his countrymen, been
NATHAN GOODALE. 359
preparing for the day of strife, which every thinking man
foresaw must soon arrive, by practicing military exercises,
and collecting arms and ammunition. Many of these vol-
unteer companies were aptly called, by the New England-
ers, who are never at a loss for a phrase to express exactly
their meaning, <( Minute men." They were, indeed, minute
men, and when the first notice of alarm echoed from hill to
hill, all over the country, at the bloodshed at Lexington,
they were ready, at a moment's warning, to pour their thou-
sands on thousands into the vicinity of Boston, the strong-
hold of the British, which nothing but the lack of battering
cannon and ammunition hindered them immediately from
storming. Mr. Goodale here first saw the actual movements
of military life, and immediately entered into the service of
his country, as a lieutenant. It being uncertain how long
he might remain in the army, the homestead of his early
manhood was sold, and his family resided, during the war,
in rented premises. With what spirit and enterprise he en-
tered into the service, and how well Ins activity and talents
were adapted to the trying exigencies of a partisan officer,
the most difficult of all military duties, will be best shown
by a letter from Gen. Rufus Putnam to Gen. Washington.
near the close of the war :
"Massachusetts Huts, June 9th, 1783.
Sir : I do myself the honor to inclose a letter I received a
few days since from Capt. Goodale, of the fifth Massachu-
setts regiment. I confess I feel a conviction of neglect of
duty in respect to this gentleman ; that I have not, till this
moment, taken any measures to bring his services to public
view, has been owing to the confidence I had, that Gen.
Gates would have done it, as the most extraordinary of them
were performed under his own orders, and as he gave re-
peated assurances that they should not be forgotten . I am
360 NATHAN GOODALE.
sorry that Gen. Gates is now out of camp, for were he not,
I should appeal to him on the subject, but as I am sure so
worthy a character, and such important services, ought not
to be buried in oblivion, or pass unrewarded, I beg your
excellency's patience a few moments, while I give a short
detail of them. Capt. Goodale was among the first who
embarked in the common cause in 1775. He served that
year as a lieutenant in the same regiment with me. I had
long before known him to be a man of spirit, and his probity
and attention to service soon gained him the character of a
worthy officer. In 1776, he entered again as a lieutenant,
but served with me the most of the year as an assistant
engineer, and the public are much indebted to him for the
dispatch and propriety with which several of the works about
New York were executed. In the dark month of November,
1776, Mr. Goodale entered the service as a captain in the
regiment under my command, and was in the field early the
next spring ; but, although he always discovered a thirst for
enterprise, yet fortune never gave his genius fair play till
August, 1777. It is well known into what a panic the
country, and even the northern army, were thrown on the
taking of Ticonderoga. "When Gen. Gates took command
in that quarter, our army lay at Van Shaick's island ; and
Mr. Burgoyne, with his black wings and painted legions, lay
at Saratoga. The woods were so infested with savages, that
for sometime none of the scouts who were sent out for the
purpose of obtaining prisoners or intelligence of the enemy's
situation, succeeded in cither. Gen. Gates being vexed at
continual disappointments, desired an officer to procure him
a man that would undertake, at all hazards, to perform this
service. Capt. Goodale being spoken to, voluntarily under-
took the business under the following orders from Gen.
Gates. 'Sir: You are to choose out a sergeant and six
NATHAN GOODALE. 361
privates, and proceed with them to the enemy's camp, unless
you lose your life or are captured, and not return until you
obtain a full knowledge of their situation.'
Capt. Goodale, in his report of this scout, says it was not
performed without great fatigue, as the party was much
harassed by the Indians, which occasioned their being in the
woods three days without provisions. However, he suc-
ceeded beyond expectation; first throwing himself between
then- out-guards and their camp, where he concealed his
party until he examined their situation very fully, and then
brought off six prisoners, which he took within their guards,
and returned to Gen. Gates without any loss. This success
induced Gen. Gates to continue him on that kind of service.
A full detail of all the art and address which he discovered
during the remainder of that campaign, would make my
letter quite too long. It may be enough to observe that
before the capture of the British army, one hundred and
twenty-one prisoners fell into his hands. But as Capt.
Goodale is no less brave and determined in the open field,
where opposed to regular troops, than he is artful as a
partizan of the woods, I beg your patience while I recite
one instance of this kind. A day or two after Mr. Burgoyne
retreated to Saratoga, in a foggy morning, Nixon's brigade
was ordered to cross the creek which separated the two
armies. Capt. Goodale, with forty volunteers, went over
before the advance guard. He soon fell in with a British
guard of about the same number. The ground was an
open plain, but the fog prevented their discovering each
other till they were within a few yards, when both parties
made ready nearly at the same time. Capt. Goodale, in
this position reserving his fire, advanced immediately upon
the enemy, who waited with a design to draw it from him;
but he had the address to intimidate them in such a manner,
by threatening immediate death to any one that should fire,
362 NATHAN GOODALE.
that not more than two or three obeyed the order of their
own officer, when he gave the word. The event was. that
the officer and thirty-four of the guard were made prisoners.
These, sir, are the services which Capt. Goodale and his
friends conceive have merited more attention than has been
paid to them; and, at least, merit a majority as much as
Maj. Summers' unsuccessful command of a boat a few
months on Lake Champlain. But if the tables are reversed,
and the ill luck of a brave man should be the only recom-
mendation to promotion, Capt. Goodale, I believe, has as
great pretensions as most men, for he is the unfortunate
officer who commanded about forty white men, and being
joined by about the same number of Indians, fought more
than one thousand of the enemy below Valentine's hill in
1778, until near two-thirds were killed, himself and most of
the rest made prisoners. But I mention this not so much
to show his bravery, for he takes no merit from that action,
but always lamented the necessity he was under from the
orders he received, to do what he did. In writing to me on
the subject, he says : 'At this time a number of brave men
were sacrificed to bad orders; but, as they were not my
orders, I hope the candid will not censure me.' Having
stated these facts, I beg leave to request your excellency
will lay them before Congress, &c. He goes on to say,
Gen. Washington forwarded my letter to the secretary of
war; but as about this time Congress came to a resolution
to raise the rank of all officers one grade who had not been
promoted since their entrance into service, the 1st of January,
1777, Maj. Goodale received promotion with the rest, and
thus never had that justice done him which he so highly
merited."
Thus far Gen. Putnam testifies to the valuable services
of this brave and noble-minded man. Had Gen. Gates, as
in duty bound, given notice to Congress of the heroic exploits
NATHAN GOODALE. 363
of Capt. Goodale, in collecting information of the move-
ments of Burgoyne, so essential to the welfare of the Ameri-
can army, he would no doubt have received the promotion
so justly his due. But Gates was a selfish, proud man, who
cared little for the interest of others, provided his own per-
sonal wishes were accomplished.
From another hand a more detailed account is given of
the action at Valentine's hill. It seems that the commander
of the troops to which he was attached, had ordered him to
keep possession of a certain pass, important to the Ameri-
cans, at all hazards, without any discretionary power as to
contingencies. His command consisted, as above-stated, of
about forty light-infantry and a number of Indians, who
stood the attack of a large body of the enemy and a com-
pany of cavalry, until there were only seventeen men left
alive out of the forty. Near the close of the combat, the
officer who led the charge rushed upon him with his sword.
Capt. Goodale, with a loaded musket which he had probably
picked up from one of his fallen men, shot the Briton dead
from his horse as he approached. In a moment, another
of the enemy, seeing the fall of his leader, sprung at him in
desperation, with full purpose to revenge his death. The
musket being discharged, the only resource was to parry the
descending blow, aimed at his head, in the best manner he
could, with the empty piece. It fell obliquely, being turned
a little from its course by the musket, and instead of splitting
the skull of its intended victim, glanced on the bone, peeling
up a portion of the scalp several inches in length. The
stunning effects of the blow felled him to the earth, but di-
rectly recovering, he rose to his feet. In the meantime, the
cavalry man, who had leaned forward in the saddle further
than prudent to give a certain death-stroke, lost his balance,
when the heavy sword glanced from the skull and fell to the
earth. The bayonet of Capt. Goodale instantly pinned him
364 NATHAN GOODALE.
to the ground, and left him dead by the side of his leader.
Thus two of the enemy fell by his hand in a space of time
less than a minute. Seeing all prospect of further resistance
useless, he retreated with the balance of his men to an open
woodland, near the scene of action, and secreted himself
under a pile of brush. An Indian had hidden under another
heap, where they might have remained in safety until dark
and then escaped ; but the savage having an opportunity to
shoot one of the enemy who approached their hiding-place,
he could not resist the chance of adding another scalp to
his trophies, and shot him. The report of the shot revealed
their hiding-place, and being discovered, were made pris-
oners. How long he remained in durance does not appear
from the imperfect memorials left of his military life. It is
probable he was shut up in the old Jersey prison-ship at
New York, as his children have a tradition that he was
poisoned, from the fact of a long sickness he suffered after
his return home. But it is more probable that the poison
was that of human malaria, received in that pest-house of
British cruelty, which killed more Americans than all those
who fell in battle during the whole war, being estimated at
twelve or fourteen thousand. It is one of the foulest stains
on the English nation, that ever disgraced their character.
During the war he received one other wound in the leg,
from a musket or grape shot. Could all his adventures be
collected they would make one of the most interesting of
biographies; but time, and a fire which destroyed his papers
at Belpre some years after his death, have put this matter
to rest, and these scanty gleanings are all that are left of
his military life.
At the close of the war he entered into mercantile busi-
ness, in company with Col. Cushing, a brother officer. Xot
succeeding in this to his expectations, he sold out, and
bought a farm on Coit's hill, in the north part of the town
NATHAN GOODALE. 365
of Brookfield. In the pursuits of agriculture he was as
much at home as in military matters, having a natural taste
for cultivation, and engaged in this primitive employment
with his characteristic ardor and perseverance, at a time
when improvements of all kinds were at a low ebb; the
country during the war having retrograded, amidst the trials
of that eventful period. Mr. Goodale was remarkable for
his industry, and thorough, neat manner in which he con-
ducted all the operations of the farm. The forecast and
wisdom of the man may be seen before setting out on his
journey to Ohio, in the course he pursued in preparing for
it. Knowing that a superior breed of neat cattle is all-im-
portant to the farmer, and more especially to one beginning
in a new country, instead of taking a team of oxen, or
horses, as all other men did, to haul their wagons, he, after
deciding on joining the new colony, selected three of the
best cows and one of the finest bulls to be found in that vi-
cinity, and trained them to work together in a team. With
this novel working power, he drew on the wagon, with a
part of his family and household goods, to Marietta, per-
forming the journey with as much ease, and in as short a
time, as the best of oxen. He had also the profit of their
milk for the use of the family along the road. The stock
from this breed of cattle has been spread through the
county, and is held in high estimation at this day, for their
perfect forms, gentle dispositions, and great abundance of
rich milk; constituting them, on all accounts, the best dairy
stock ever introduced to the country. They are known as
the " Goodale breed," still retaining many of their original
characteristics.
Maj. Goodale arrived at the mouth of the Muskingum on
the 2d of July, 1788, in company with several other families
from Massachusetts, descending the Ohio, from Wheeling,
in a flatboat. In August he was appointed, by Gov. St.
366 NATHAN GOODALE.
Clair, who soon organized the militia, captain of a company
of light-infantry, selected from amongst the most active men
of the colony. This company held regular musters, until
the commencement of the war, when each man was con-
fined to the defense of his own garrison, in the settlement
where he lived. His experience in military affairs rendered
him a very able and efficient officer, familiar with all the
details of actual service.
In April, 1789, he moved his family to Belpre, being a
leading associate of the colony. During the short period
he was permitted to live in that place, he was considered to
be one of the most industrious, persevering, and thoroughly
educated farmers in the county; clearing his land in the
most rapid manner, fencing and cultivating it in the best
style. In the famine of 1790 his family suffered, with the rest
of their neighbors, for wholesome bread-stuff. When the war
broke out in 1791, he was one of the most active and reso-
lute men in planning and erecting the fortified village called
Farmers' castle, in which they all resided during the first
two years of the war. In making the arrangements for the
defense and military government of the garrison, he was the
leading man; and the command was, by unanimous con-
sent, given to him, as the most experienced in warlike mat-
ters. In the winter of 1793 the place had become too strait
for the numerous families congregated within its walls, and
it was decided to erect two additional stockades ; one a mile
and a half below, on Maj. Goodale's farm, and one on Capt.
Stone's land, just below the mouth of the Little Kenawha,
called the "Upper settlement."
He had been but a week in his new garrison, when the
colony met with the most serious loss it had yet sustained
from their Indian enemies, in the captivity and death of
Maj. Goodale. On the first day of March, 1793, he was at
work in a clearing on his farm, distant about forty or fifty
NATHAN GOODALE. 367
rods from the garrison, hauling rail timber with a yoke of
oxen. It lay back of the first bottom, on the edge of the
plain, in open view of the station. An Irishman, named
lohn Magee, was at work, grubbing or digging out the roots
of the bushes and small trees, on the slope of the plain, as
it descends on to the bottom, but out of sight of Maj. Good-
ale. The Indians made so little noise in their assault, that
John did not hear them. The first notice of this disaster,
was the view of the oxen seen from the garrison, standing
quietly in the field, with no one near them. After an hour
or more they were observed to be still in the same place,
when suspicion arose that some disaster had happened to
Mr. Goodale. John was still busy at his work, unconscious
of any alarm, when one of the men sent up from the gar-
rison, passed him to inquire what was the matter. In the
edge of the woods there was a thin layer of snow, on which
the messenger discovered several moccasin tracks. It was
now apparent that Indians had been there, and taken him
prisoner, as no blood was seen on the ground. A small
party followed the trail some distance, but soon lost it. The
following day a larger body of men, with some of the rang-
ers, were sent in pursuit, but returned without making any
discovery. The Ohio river at this time, with many of the
smaller streams, was at nearly full banks, and less dan-
ger was apprehended on that account; it was also rather
early in the season for Indians to approach the settlements.
The uncertainty of his condition left room for the imagina-
tion to fancy every thing horrible in his fate ; more terrible
to bear, than the actual knowledge of his death.
Great was the distress of Mrs. Goodale and the children,
overwhelmed with this unexpected calamity. His loss threw
a deep gloom over the whole community, as no man was
so highly valued amongst them, neither was there any one
whose council and influence were equally prized by the
368 NATHAN GOODALE.
settlement. He was, in fact, the life and soul of this isolated
community, and left a vacancy that none of his companions
could fill. One of the early colonists thus speaks of him:
" His memory was for many years fresh and green in the
hearts of his cotemporary pioneers, now all passed away, and
is still cherished with respect and affection by their descend-
ants." (Judge Barker's notes.) So greatly depressed were
the inhabitants at his loss, that they awoke with new feel-
ings in regard to their dangerous position on the outer verge
of civilization. While he was living amongst them a cer-
tain degree of safety was felt, that vanished at his loss.
On the 14th of March they forwarded a petition to Gen.
Washington, whom they regarded with parental veneration,
a copy of which has been preserved, setting forth their ex-
posed situation and losses by the Indians. It is stated that
six of their number have been killed, besides the recent loss
of Maj. Goodale ; that one-third of their cattle, and produce
of their lands, had been destroyed by the Indians, and they
were fearful of a total breaking up of the settlement, unless
the government afforded them a larger number of men for
protection, their usual United States guard being only a
corporal and four privates, detailed from the post at Mari-
etta. The number of the settlers at the three stations were
fifty-two men, and one hundred and forty-nine women and
children.
At the treaty of Greenville, in 1795, when the captives
were given up by the Indians, some intelligence was ob-
tained of nearly all the persons taken prisoners from this
part of the territory, but none of the fate of Maj. Goodale.
A deep mystery seemed to hang over his destiny, never to
be revealed. At length, about the year 1799, Col. Forrest
Meeker, since a citizen of Delaware county, Ohio, and well
acquainted with the family of Maj. Goodale, and the cir-
cumstances of this event, when at Detroit, fell in company
NATHAN GOODALE. 369
with three Indians, who related to him the particulars of
their taking a man prisoner at Belpre, in the spring of 1793.
Their description of his person left no doubt on the mind of
Col. Meeker, of its being Maj. Goodale. They stated that
a party of eight Indians were watching the settlement for
mischief; and as they lay concealed on the side of the hill
back of the plain, they heard a man driving, or talking to
his oxen, as they expressed it. After carefully examining
his movements, they saw him leave his work and go down
to the garrison, in the middle of the day. Knowing that he
would return soon, they secreted themselves in the edge of
the woods, and while he was occupied with his work, sprang
out and seized upon him, before he was aware of their
presence, or could make any defense, threatening him with
death if he made a noise or resisted. After securing him
with thongs, they commenced a hasty retreat, intending to
take him to Detroit and get a large ransom for him. Some-
where on the Miami, or at Sandusky, he fell sick and could
not travel, and that he finally died of this sickness. A Mrs.
Whitaker, the wife of an Indian trader at Lower Sandusky,
has since related the same fact. She says the Indians left
him at her house, where he died of a disease like the pleu-
risy, without having received any very ill usage from his
captors, other than the means necessary to prevent his
escape. This is probably a correct account of his fate ;
and although his death was a melancholy one, amongst
strangers, in captivity, and far away from the sympathy and
care of his friends, yet it is a relief to know that he did not
perish at the stake, nor by the tomahawk of the savages.
24
MAJ. ROBERT BRADFORD.
Maj. Robert Bradford was born in old Plymouth, Mass.,
in the year 1750. He was a lineal descendant of Gov.
Bradford, of about the fifth remove. His wife was Kezia
Little, the daughter of Capt. Nathaniel Little, of Kingston,
Plymouth county.
He entered early, and with all his heart, into the service
of his country during the Revolutionary war, and for the
larger portion of that period commanded a company of
light-infantry. His military life commenced at the battle
of Bunker hill, and ended with the capture of Cornwallis at
Yorktown, being actually engaged in nearly all the pitched
battles fought in the eastern and middle states. With many-
others of the American officers, he received the gift of an
elegant sword, from the Marquis Lafayette, as a mark of
his esteem, which yet remains in the hands of his only sur-
viving son, O. L. Bradford, of Wood county, Va. He also
has in his possession, as family relics, some of the old fur-
niture that came over in the May-flower. Amongst them
was a pair of hand-irons, one only now being preserved;
the other was destroyed accidentally a few years since.
Being of an ardent temperament, and ambitious to excel in
military exercises, and to do his whole duty, Lafayette one
day witnessed the exactness of the evolutions of his com-
pany, and spoke in the warmest terms of their merits.
When he was in Marietta, in the year 1820, he inquired
particularly after Maj. Bradford; and when told that he was
dead, he expressed his regret with much feeling. The lapse
of more than forty years had consigned the larger portion
EOBERT BRADFORD. 371
of his old comrades to their graves, and his inquiries after
his Revolutionary associates, were often answered with that
short and melancholy phrase, "He is dead!"
At the close of the war he received an honorable dis-
charge, and the brevet rank of major. With others of his
brother officers, he suffered great loss by the depreciation
of the United States securities, and the worthlessness of the
paper currency, in which his long and arduous services were
paid. But the main object of his taking up arms was se-
cured, the liberty of his country, which he lived to enjoy
for many years.
When the Ohio Company was formed, he became an as-
sociate, and moved his family to Marietta, in the year 1788.
In 1789 he joined the band of old officers who settled Bel-
pre, where he suffered the privations of famine, and the
dangers of the rifle and scalping-knife of the Indians,
having several narrow escapes from these wily sons of the
forest. During the prevalence of the putrid sore throat in
1792, he suffered a greater loss of children than any other
family. Out of four or five, all died but one, with that
disease.
In 1794, during the Indian war, he went out into the Indian
country, about eighty miles from the settlements, in com-
pany with Griffin Greene, and others, to discover the site
of the Scioto Salt Springs, of which vague rumors had
been heard from the reports of white prisoners. After sev-
eral days' search, they were found by following the Indian
and buffalo paths which led to them, and by long use had
been worn to a depth of more than a foot, for several miles
in extent. Another indication was the remains of the fires,
where the squaws had recently boiled the brine collected
from a cavity in the rock, cut with their tomahawks, in the
bed of the creek, and now full of saline water. On their
return, they narrowly escaped pursuit from a large party of
372 A. W. PUTNAM.
Indians, who came in sight on the bank of the river, a few
minutes after their boat had left the shore. Mr. Bradford
and the inmates of Farmers' castle never expected to see
them again amongst the living.
He died in the year 1823, during the period of the great
epidemic fever, which removed a number of the old soldiers,
aged seventy-two years.
Maj. Bradford was a man of a warm heart, cheerful, lively
temperament, and sound judgment. He ranked with the
most worthy cultivators of the soil in the settlement. In
person he was rather tall, erect, and active ; strongly marked
and bold features, indicative of courage and resolution;
with the bearing of a soldier. He was a man whose virtues
and name are worthy of preservation, amongst the defend-
ers of an infant colony, and the pioneers of the valley of
the Ohio.
AARON WALDO PUTNAM.
Aaron Waldo Putnam, the second son of Col. Israel Put-
nam, was born in Pomfret, Conn., the 18th of April, A. D.
1767.
During his boyhood and youth he assisted his father in
cultivating the farm ; the larger portion of that name being
tillers of the earth. In the summer of 1788, when he was
twenty-one years old, he accompanied his father on his long
and tedious journey to Marietta, where the Ohio Company
had just commenced a settlement. Col. Putnam did not,
at this time, move his family, taking only a few household
A. W. PUTNAM. 373
goods, with agricultural implements and mechanical tools,
the heavy load being transported by a team of two yoke of
oxen, this patient but steady animal being well suited to the
difficult passes of the mountains, and when at the journey's
end less likely to be stolen by the Indians than horses.
In crossing the North river, at Fishkill, a serious accident
happened, which served to display the coolness and pres-
ence of mind of the Putnam race, in cases of unexpected
danger. The oxen were crossed in a flatboat, separate from
the w^agon, under the care of young Waldo. The river is
here a mile wide, or more. A sudden gale of wind raised
such a sea, that the boat filled and began to sink. In this
extremity, seeing that the oxen must leave the boat, he un-
yoked them, that they might swim more freely, putting the
iron pins of the bows carefully into his pocket. Being un-
able to swim himself, he selected one of the most active of
the oxen, and seizing him by the tail with one hand, and
brandishing the whip with the other, he directed him, with
his voice and an occasional touch of the lash, to the west-
ern shore, distant full half a mile. The wind and the tide
carried them down about a hundred rods below the landing,
where they reached the solid earth in safety, after a voyage
of more than a mile. The other oxen having no incum-
brance, made the land higher up. Finally all were collected
without any loss of yokes, pins, or team.
The rest of the journey to the Ohio was accomplished
without further accident, but with immense labor and fatigue
in crossing the mountain ranges, by roads which, in these
days, would be called impassable; but the persevering, bold
men of that day, overcame all difficulties but absolute im-
possibilities. The following winter was passed in Campus
Martius, and in making preparations to begin the settle-
ment in Belpre, where they moved the following spring.
Waldo Putnam's land fell to him in the Middle settlement,
374 A. W. PUTNAM.
where he immediately commenced clearing and putting up
a small log-cabin. In the fall of 1790, his father, Col. Put-
nam, returned to Pomfret for his family. That winter the
war began, and he did not return until after the peace.
In 1791, the settlers had to leave their houses and go into
garrison, which they all united in building for their common
defense. In this Mr. Putnam passed the time during the
five years that followed, boarding in the family of Judge
Loring, and performing the duties of a soldier in the defense
of the castle, every able-bodied man and boy of sixteen
years being enrolled. During this period he became ac-
quainted with Miss Bathsheba Loring and was united to her
in marriage amidst the dangers and perils of the savages
who constantly watched the garrison for prey. In the spring
of the year 1791, for the better security of their cattle from
the Indians, the settlers ferried a part of them across the
Ohio into Virginia, above the head of the island, where they
roamed in safety.
On one of these occasions Mr. Putnam was in a flatboat
with his negro boy Kitt, who had been brought up in the
family, and two other men. The cattle became alarmed,
and running to one end of the flat, sunk it. They directly
swam to the shore without his having an opportunity to
seize one by the tail, as on North river, leaving him and the
others, as the boat party rose to the surface, standing up to
their breasts in the water. A small canoe was sent out to
their rescue that carried but two persons. The black boy
became much alarmed, as the water was up to his chin, and
was eager to* go first to the shore, but to this the two whites
objected. Between the effects of the cold water and fear,
Kitt's teeth chattered at a great rate, and he must have
perished but for the Btern rebukes and encouragement of Mr.
Putnam, who bid him rise on to his toes, if the water came
too near his mouth, and that he must not disgrace the family
A. W. PUTNAM. 375
name by any symptoms of fear, although in the greatest
extremity. At the third trip, Kitt, almost exhausted, was
helped into the canoe with great difficult}- by Mr. Putnam,
who, now that the others had left him, felt quite safe, as the
boat became more buoyant. He was finally relieved, after
floating two or three miles, without any harm but the chilling
effects of the cold water; and thus, by his calm, collected
manner, were all saved, while in similar circumstances,
many timid men have been drowned.
Mr. Putnam's improvement lay about half a mile below
the garrison. Here the stacks of grain and fodder for the
cattle were deposited, and every day during the winter
months he had to visit the yard to feed them, and to milk
the cows. In these trips, one or more men usually went with
him for the same object, and for greater safety.
On one of these occasions, he had just sat down to milk
when Nathaniel Little, who was with him and on the look-
out, caught sight of an Indian in the edge of the clearing,
in the attitude of firing at him. He instantly cried out
" Indians ! " At the alarming sound, Mr. Putnam sprang to
one side as the gun cracked, and the ball struck the ground
a few feet from him, passing across the spot where he sat.
They instantly fled to the garrison and escaped, though
hotly pursued by two or three other Indians.
At the second narrow escape, the year after, he was on
the top of the stack, throwing down hay for the cattle. A
small dog that they had with them began to growl and show
signs of alarm. At this juncture, in the still calmness of a
frosty morning, he heard the well-known click of a gun
lock. Turning his head in the direction of the sound, he
saw, at the distance of forty or fifty yards, an Indian behind
the fence, in the act of re-cocking his gun, it having missed
fire. He instantly sprang to the ground and ran. The In-
dian now fired, but missed his mark. With a tremendous
376 A. W. PUTNAM.
yell, he gave chase, in which two others joined from the
edge of the woods, trying to cut them off at a ravine they
had to pass on a log. The fleetness of the whites disap-
pointed their hopes, and the log was crossed before their
pursuers reached it. A sally was made from the garrison
on the report of the Indian's rifle, and a gun fired at them
by a spirited little fellow named Bull ; on which they re-
treated back to the fodder-yard, and out of sheer spite at
their defeat, shot down a fine large yoke of oxen belonging
to Capt. Benjamin Miles, from Brookfield, Mass. These
cattle were the pride of the settlement, being eight feet in
girt, and of proportionate hight, vieing with the best breeds
of modern days.
Thus were the settlers in constant danger, and their lives
in jeopardy, from a skulking, invisible foe, every time they
left the walls of the garrison to follow the labors of the
farm. In cultivating their crops, for the first years of the
war, they worked in common, on each man's land, in parties
of thirty or forty men, well armed ; and in the autumn di-
vided the crop amongst the laborers, in proportion to the
days' work done, of which a regular account was kept by a
stated clerk. Generally, before the laborers left the garri-
son, the rangers made a circuit in the woods adjacent to the
field, or scene of their labor that day. With this precau-
tion, it was seldom that Indians came very near the set-
tlement, without leaving some signs of their approach,
discoverable by the rangers.
In the spring of the year 1793, after the green feed had
become good in the forests, the oxen and cows of Mr. Put-
nam one night failed to come home as they usually did.
The following morning he took his gun and sallied out into
the woods in search of the absent animals. Expecting to
find them in the adjacent hills, he did not ask the aid of any
one to accompany him. After a little examination he
A . "W . PUTNAM. 377
discovered their trail, and followed it that day to Fort Har-
mer, distant fifteen miles from Farmers' castle. Here he
ascertained that they had been seen the evening before, and
passed the night. In the morning he again discovered their
trail up the Muskingum, and followed it all that day, alone
in the woods, not choosing to ask any one to risk his life
with him in this dangerous enterprise. That evening he
reached Tyler's block-house, at Waterford, twenty miles
from Marietta, where, to his joy, he found the strayed ani-
mals. Here he passed the second night, very uneasy at the
alarm and distress his young wife and friends would feel at
his long absence. In the morning he took the precaution
of removing the clapper from the bell of the leading ox,
whose noisy tinkle might give notice of his approach to some
watchful Indian, and commenced his return to the castle,
across the country between the waters of Wolf creek and
Little Hocking, by an obscure trail frequented by the ran-
gers, and reached home, eighteen or twenty miles, just
before dark. His long absence, three days and two nights,
had caused him to be given up as a prisoner, or killed by
the savages, his well known, daring character rendering the
latter the most probable, and all the agonies of reality were
suffered by his young and lovely wife, now the mother of
one child, who, in the last sleepless night, had time to give
full scope to her imagination, and picture all the cruelties
practiced by the savages on their foes. His return was so
unlooked for and unexpected, that he was like one risen
again from the dead, and all sorrow was turned into joy at
his providential preservation.
After numerous difficulties and dangers, borne for five years
by the stern pioneers of Farmers' castle, with the greatest
fortitude and equanimity, peace was at length established;
and in 1796 Mr. Putnam was permitted to resume the clear-
ing and cultivating his farm, unmolested; a privilege which
378 A. W. PUTNAM.
none in these days can understand, or fairly appreciate. In
a few years he had a large plantation under fence, and di-
vided into fields, several acres of orchard, composed of the
best varieties of the fruits of the New England and Middle
states, sent out in 1795, by his brother Israel, who selected
them with great care, and packed them with bees-wax, so
that few, if any of the scions failed to grow. A young man
named Waldo, and a relative, brought them over the moun-
tains on horseback, in a large pair of saddle-bags. Fruit trees
in the virgin soil of the Ohio bottoms, grew with astonishing
rapidity, and in six or eight years were loaded with apples.
The peach often produced the second year from the pit, bear-
ing fruit of a size and quality not now seen in Ohio. The
depredations of the peach insect, were unknown for more
than twenty years, and the tree nourished and grew, undis-
turbed by the yellows or any other enemy. Before temper-
ance societies were known, large orchards of fifteen or
twenty acres, were devoted to the manufacture of peach
brandy, which bore a liberal price on the borders of the Mis-
sissippi, and was an article of export. As early as 1802,
or 1803, the log cabins of several of the farmers at Belpre,
were abandoned, and large, commodious houses of wood or
brick, built in their place. Mr. Putnam was one of the first
to make improvements of this kind; and his capacious,
white house, surrounded by orchards, on the margin of the
plain, or second bottom, became a conspicuous and beauti-
ful object to travelers on the "Belle riviere," who saw little
else but the wilderness and the log huts of the new settlers,
from Pittsburg to Cincinnati. Belpre, at this period, was
like an oasis in the desert, the only spot where the eye could
rest with delight. A thriving dairy was added to his other
operations, composed of the cows raised from his father's
famous Harlem breed, and celebrated for their rich milk.
A numerous family of boys and girls grew up around him,
A. W. PUTNAM. 379
and every thing prospered under his wise and thrifty admin-
istration. After Mr. Blennerhasset settled on the island, he
became one of his most intimate and useful Mends, giving
him much valuable information in the management of his
new and untried farming operations. The genteel, easy
manners, and beautiful person of Mrs. Putnam early at-
tracted the attention of Madam Blennerhassett, and she
became one of her most intimate associates, visiting each
other with the familiarity of sisters. When this unfortunate
woman, after the flight of her husband, in December, 180G,
left the island in the midst of winter, he was the last to visit
her in the boat, and furnished her with many necessaries, to
make her voyage comfortable, denied her by the military
posse from Wood county, who had taken forcible possession
of her house.
Mr. Putnam and his wife both died in the fatal epidemic
of 1822, aged forty -five years, in the midst of his usefulness.
In person he "was of a medium size, with dark, expressive
eyes, and a countenance beaming with intelligence and kind
feelings. For public stations he had little inclination, the
highest post being a major in the militia. His delight was
centered in his domestic relations, and in his farm. The
elder son, William Pitt, born in Farmers' castle, possesses
the homestead. His children, six of whom are now living,
are settled at various points in the valley of the Mississippi,
and rank with the most reputable of its citizens.
CAPT. JONATHAN STONE.
Capt. Jonathan Stone was born in New Braintree, Mass.,
in the year 1751. He was the son of a soldier, Francis
Stone, who lost his life in the service of the king during
the period of the colonial vassalage, while serving as a pri-
vate soldier in the army of Gen. Wolfe, at the conquest of
Quebec. Large numbers of the provincials sacrificed their
lives for the good of their country during the period of the old
French Avar, and especially at the seige of Havana in 1762.
His father was killed when he was eight years old. After
the death of his parent, his mother married a Mr. Pearson,
by whom she had several children. Francis, the elder
brother, inherited the patrimonial estate, and pursued the
occupations of farming and tanning leather, which had been
followed by his father before him.
The education of Jonathan extended only to reading,
writing, and arithmetic, for which latter study he had prob-
ably a decided relish, as in after life he became an accom-
plished land surveyor. At a suitable age he was bound as an
apprentice to his brother Francis. Connections of this kind
between near relatives, are seldom fortunate or happy, and
are much more likely to be agreeable with a stranger. Dr.
Franklin has given us a sample of this kind, with its un-
pleasant results, in his apprenticeship to an elder brother.
There seems to be a disposition on one side to act the tyrant,
and on the other to render obedience with reluctance, as if
the tender tie of relationship was severed when forced by
the indenture of apprenticeship to perform certain duties,
whether willing or not. In this they conflicted so roughly
ivith each other, that before the expiration of the term of
JONATHAN STONE. 381
service, Jonathan left his brother, and entered on board a
whale-ship at Newport, R. I., and was absent two years.
What adventures he experienced in this voyage, are un-
known; but, doubtless he learnt one salutary thing, that he
must obey his new master, both in foul and fair weather ;
and that he could not leave the ship so easily as he did the
house of Ms brother Francis.
Soon after his return, hostilities commenced between the
colonies and Great Britain, and he entered the service of his
country as a volunteer, being an orderly-sergeant in Col.
Learned's regiment. By his letters of the 29th of May,
1775, he was then at Roxbury with the army, besieging the
town of Boston, then the head-quarters of the king's troops
in America. He seems to have possessed the true spirit of
patriotism, for he says that himself and each one of the
company to which he belonged, "Are animated with the
glorious cause in which they are engaged, hoping to deliver
the country from vassalage and slavery, tyranny and oppres-
sion, that those blood-thirsty hirelings may not again be
allowed to imbnfe their filthy hands in the innocent blood of
our neighbors," referring, no doubt, to the Lexington murders
of the 19th of April, which had filled the whole country
with the spirit of resistance and revenge. In August of this
year he was sick with a fever, and he observes that the
"camp distemper," as the dysentery was called, prevailed
amongst the troops, and extended into the country towns,
as was thought by contagion from the sick soldiers.
As a testimony of his bravery and good conduct during
the year 1775, he was appointed a lieutenant, for on the
11th of March, 1776, in writing to a female correspondent,
he directs her to put Lieut, after his name, in Col. Learned's
regiment. He also says, " We have had a great deal of
cannonading lately. Last Saturday night I was on Dor-
chester hights, and of our party, one surgeon and three
382 JONATHAN STONE.
soldiers were killed by one shot. They are now firing from
Boston, and not less than thirty or forty cannon have been
discharged since I have been writing this letter;" and it was
but a brief one. It was at this time that the celebrated
fascine battery was erected by Col. Putnam, on the night?,
that soon after forced the British to evacuate the town, as
the American guns commanded the inner harbor, and en-
dangered the shipping. In all these stirring scenes. Lieut.
Stone took an active part, but the particular incidents are
not noticed in his letters, and none of his old comrades are
living to narrate them.
In the course of the year 1776 he was married to Susan-
nah Mathews, of New Braintree, a young lady to whom he
had for several years been attached. She was a daughter
of Daniel Mathews, and her mother a sister of Gen. Rufus
Putnam. She possessed an agreeable person, good, sound
sense, plain, country manners, and industrious habits, being
the child of a farmer. She displayed great energy of char-
acter, and after her husband's death, in 1801, conducted the
affairs of a large dairy farm with judgment and profit.
On the 1st of January, 1777, Lieut. Stone was commis-
sioned as paymaster in Col. Putnam's regiment. In Au-
gust of that year he was with the army at Saratoga, and
in September at Stillwater, quartering with Capt. Goodale,
some of whose partisan exploits are noticed in his letters to
his wife. He remained with the troops, partaking in all the
dangers of the numerous engagements with the enemy,
until the surrender of Burgoyne. In 1778 he was stationed
at West Point, attached to Col. Putnam's regiment. In 1779
he received a lieutenant's commission in the fifteenth regi-
ment, and in 1781 that of captain, in which post he served
to the close of the war. Several of these commissions are
signed by John Hancock, in that strong, bold hand so
conspicuous among the signatures of the Declaration of
JONATHAN STONE. 383
Independence. The seals attached are remarkable for hav-
ing a huge rattlesnake figured over the cap of liberty, as if
threatening his enemies with death, and to defend it against
all opposers ; the other emblems are implements of war.
Under the new constitution, of 1788, the United States se-
lected the eagle to represent their dignity and sovereignty
to the nations of the earth ; and if less terrific, is a much
more beautiful and noble emblem of the grandeur and mag-
nanimity of the republic.
After the close of the war he returned to the peaceful oc-
cupations of agriculture, and purchased a farm, with the
remains of his seven years' hard service in the cause of lib-
erty, in the town of Brookfield, Mass., then the home of Gen.
Putnam, with whom he had been intimate during this long
period. Having become familiar with the science of field-
surveying, he was employed by Gen. Putnam, in 1786 and
1787, to assist him in surveying the lands of the state of
Massachusetts, on the eastern shore of the District of Maine,
then a part of her territory.
It was during the winter after the first year of this survey,
or that of 1786, that he found, on his return, the adjacent
counties deeply involved in an insurrection against their
own government, commonly known as " Shays' insurrection."
It was one of the strangest anomolies in nature, that a peo-
ple who had just escaped from the thraldom of a tyrannical
monarch, and had established a government of their own
choosing, should so turn against it, and like the shark, or the
alligator, devour their own progeny. So wide-spread and
universal was this spirit of disaffection, that nearly one-third
of the inhabitants of the counties of Hampshire, Berkshire,
and Worcester, were engaged in it, beside many in all other
portions of the state. The saying of our Savior in regard
to the reception of the gospel amongst mankind, in the di-
vision of families, households, and neighborhoods, was here
364 JONATHAN STONE.
exemplified, in relation to their political sentiments, the father
being opposed to the son, and the brother against his brother.
In the family of Capt. Stone, his brother Francis was a
Shays man, and his wife's father was on the same side;
while he enlisted, with all his powers of body and soul,
in aid of the government, in opposition to the principles
of the insurgents. In support of the laws and good order,
were found nearly all the officers of the Revolutionary army,
and most of the well-informed and substantial citizens.
The cause of this unnatural outbreak seems to have
arisen from the general oppression felt from the immense
load of public and private debt, contracted during the war.
The debt of the state amounted to more than five million
dollars, and their portion of the national debt, to nearly as
much more. During the war stay laws had been enacted
to prevent the regular collection of debts, by which the
amount had greatly accumulated. Paper-money, their hope
and stay during the war, had run down to a mere nominal
value, and state bonds had depreciated to a few shillings on
the pound. What specie the French troops had left in the
country, was gathered up by the merchants, and sent to
Europe, to purchase merchandise, of which the states were
woefully destitute at the close of the war. The country was
so much exhausted by their long struggle, that they had no
produce to send abroad to buy either goods or specie. Their
fisheries and whaleries, which, before the war, had brought
millions into the provinces, were ruined by that event, and
had not yet revived.
In this wide-spread distress, a general clamor arose against
the merchants, and against the courts ; but more especially
against the lawyers who executed the decrees of the courts.
in collecting the debts due to the more wealthy portion of the
people. Private contracts, as early as 1782, had been made
to give place to the payment of public taxes, from an idea
JONATHAN STONE. 385
that the scarcity of specie did not admit of the payment of
both. The former, therefore, were made payable in other
property than money, by an act called " the Tender act."
By this, executions issued for individual demands, might be
satisfied by neat cattle and other personal property, on an
appraisement by impartial men. This only suspended the
payment of debts ; as many would not collect under it, but
waited for its expiration, in a year from its origin. It was
the first signal for hostilities between creditors and debtors,
the rich and the poor, the few and the many.
With such high-wrought notions of freedom, in a people
just escaped from the fetters of the mother country, it was
a difficult matter for their rulers to make laws that satisfied
them. They, therefore, commenced holding conventions of
the disaffected, in which they censured the conduct of their
public officers. They voted the senate and the judicial
courts to be grievances, and called for a revision of the
constitution, which they had so lately formed, and was con-
sidered one of the best in the Union. Advantage was taken
of these commotions to clamor against lawyers, and in their
public addresses to say, that this class ought to be abolished,
and none of them returned as representatives in the General
Court for 1786. So far was this principle, carried, that in
the House of that year a bill was passed, "to admit all per-
sons of a moral character into the practice of the law, be-
fore the judicial courts;" also to fix their fees, and oblige
them to take an oath, previous to their pleading, not to re-
ceive more than the lawful fees, of their clients. When the
bill came to the Senate, they laid it over, for examination, to
the next Assembly. As this body had continued to act with
wisdom and dignity, opposed to the wild, Jacobin princi-
ples of the disaffected people, they, at a convention of dele-
gates from fifty towns in the county of Hampshire, held at
Hatfield, on the 22d of August, published a statement of
25
386 JONATHAN STONE.
their grievances in twenty articles ; the first of which was
"the existence of the Senate," as if this body was one cause
of their troubles ; fifth, " the existence of the Courts of Com-
mon Pleas and General Sessions of the Peace;" so that
every man might do what was right in his own eyes. In the
eighteenth they voted that then representatives be instructed
to use their influence in the next General Court, to emit
paper-money, subject to a depreciation, making it a tender
in all payments, equal to silver and gold, to be issued in
order to call in the state securities; thinking, no doubt,
that an abundance of paper-money would relieve all their
embarrassments. The state of Rhode Island was then try-
ing this experiment, and its results only added to their trou-
bles instead of relieving them.
The last of August, a body of more than a thousand of
these misguided people, led on by designing demagogues,
assembled at Northampton, took possession of the court-
house, and prevented the sitting of the court. The same
thing was attempted at Worcester, and the courts adjourned
without doing any business. Amidst these scenes of com-
motion and misrule, the inhabitants of Boston and several
of the adjacent counties remained firm and true to their
government, constitution, and laws; supporting their excel-
lent governor, Mr. Bowdoin, in all necessary measures for
the public weal, and advancing money from their private
resources, when the time came for calling out an armed
force in aid of the laws.
A similar effort was made to put down the court at
Springfield, by a body of men under Daniel Shays, but it
was prevented by an assembly of six hundred well armed
citizens, from the most respectable and influential inhabit-
ants of the county of Hampshire, who took possession of
the court-house, and protected the judges in their official
duties, so that, although this was the stronghold of the
JONATHAN STONE. 387
insurrection, there was yet patriotism enough amongst them
to save from utter ruin the forms of civil society.
The General Court met at Boston in October, and finding
that the opposition to the courts of law, and the necessary
restraints of government were increasing, rather than di-
minishing, they authorized the governor to call out the
militia for their protection. Accordingly, four thousand four
hundred men were assembled and put under the command
of Gen. Benjamin Lincoln, who marched to Worcester and
protected the sitting of the court. Gen. Shepherd also col-
lected nine hundred of the militia at Springfield, where was
the arsenal of the state, and principal deposit of arms. On
the 25th of January, Shays, with eleven hundred men, well
armed, attempted to drive Gen. Shepherd from the town,
but was defeated without any serious attack, by discharging
one round of artillery amongst the insurgents, by which
three men were killed and one badly wounded. Well know-
ing the badness of their cause, the main body broke and
fled. They were pursued by the state troops a short dis-
tance, without overtaking them, and took up their quarters
in the town of Hadley, from the inclemency of the weather,
being in the midst of a severe winter. A company of
men from Brookfield, amongst which was Capt. Stone, vol-
unteered in putting down this rebellion, in which was en-
gaged his brother Francis Stone, and some of the connections
of his wife. " The morning after the arrival of the army
at Hadley, information was received that a small number
of Gen. Shepherd's men had been captured at Southamp-
ton, and that the enemy's party still continued there. The
Brookfield volunteers, consisting of fifty men, commanded
by Col. Baldwin, were sent in sleighs with one hundred
horse, under Col. Crafts, to pursue them. They were soon
found to consist of eighty men with ten sleighs, and at
twelve o'clock the same night, were overtaken at Middlefield.
388 JONATHAN STONE.
They had quartered themselves in separate places, and
about one-half of them, with one Luddington, their cap-
tain, being lodged in a house together, were first sur-
rounded. It was a singular circumstance, that among the
government's volunteers happened to be Gen. Tupper, who
had lately commanded a continental regiment, in which
Luddington had served as corporal. The general, ignorant
of the character of his enemy, summoned the party to sur-
render. How astonished was the corporal at receiving the
summons in a voice to which he had never dared to refuse
obedience ! A momentary explanation took place, which
but hightened the general's commands. Resistance was no
longer made, the doors were opened, and a surrender was
agreed upon. By this time the rest of the party had paraded
under arms, at the distance of two hundred yards, where
they were met by a number of men prepared for their re-
ception. Both sides were on the point of firing, but upon
an artful representation of the strength of the government's
troops, the insurgents laid down their arms, and fifty-nine
prisoners, with nine sleigh loads of provisions, fell into the
hands of the conquerors, who returned to the army on the
day following."*
The insurgents under Shays having taken a strong posi-
tion on the hills of Pelham, were summoned by Gen. Lincoln
to lay down their arms, and subscribe the oath of allegiance
to the state, or he should be obliged to attack them and ap-
prehend their leaders, thus occasioning much bloodshed.
To this they replied that they were willing to disband, but
could not until they heard from the General Court on the
matter, to which body they had sent a messenger with a
petition.
* Miuot's History of the Rebellion.
JONATHAN STONE. 389
" On the next day three of the insurgent leaders came to
head-quarters with the following letter :
' The Honorable Gen. Lincoln : Sir : As the officers of the
people, now convened in defense of their rights and privi-
leges, have sent a petition to the General Court, for the sole
purpose of accommodating our present unhappy affairs, we
justly expect that hostilities may cease on both sides until
we have a return from our Legislature. Your honor will,
therefore, be pleased to give us an answer.
Per order of the committee for reconciliation.
Francis Stone, chairman,
Daniel Shays, captain,
Adam Wheeler.
Pelham, January 31st, 1787.'"*
To this communication, Lincoln returned a decided nega-
tive. The Legislature met on the 3d of February, and de-
clared the commonwealth in a state of rebellion, approved
the governor's doings, and proceeded in earnest to put down
the insurrection. The insurgents did not wait for the return
of their messenger from Boston, but on the 3d of February,
left the hills and marched to Pelham, where provisions were
more plenty. They were pursued by Lincoln, through a
tremendous snow-storm and excessive cold, to Petersham, a
distance of thirty miles without halting, a march unequaled
in the American annals. About one hundred and fifty were
taken prisoners, and the rest dispersed over the country,
some to their own homes, but the leaders and the most vio-
lent of their followers, fled from the state into New York
and Vermont.
In both these states they found many abettors, and during
the following spring, occasionally made inroads into the
* Minot's History of the Rebellion.
390 JONATHAN STONE.
commonwealth for plunder and the capture of persons par-
ticularly obnoxious to them. It was late in the year before
order was entirely restored in the disaffected portions of the
state. The leniency of the government finally pardoned
nearly or quite all who were concerned in the rebellion, and
thus ended one of the most dangerous and singular insur-
rections that ever happened amongst a free people.
On the formation of the Ohio Company, Capt. Stone sold
his farm in Brookfield, and invested the proceeds in two
shares of the Ohio Company lands, being about two thou-
sand acres. To this he was doubtless the more readily in-
duced from the ill conduct of several of his near connections
in the late insurrection, and that he might still be favored
with the society of such men as Gen. Putnam, Tupper and
Goodale, with whom he had been so long and so intimately
associated. In the fall of 1788, he visited Marietta and
made preparations for the reception of his family. On the
4th of July, 1789, he left Brookfield with a wagon drawn by
four oxen, containing his household goods and three chil-
dren. Two cows were driven on ahead, while his wife
traveled the whole distance on horseback to Simrel's ferry,
the western rendezvous for emigrants to Marietta. At Buf-
falo, or Charleston, he bartered one yoke of the oxen for
provisions to support his family until he could raise a crop
himself. He reached Belpre the 10th of December, and
put up a log-cabin on his lot, drawn the winter before,
making the floors and doors from the planks of the boat in
which he descended the river. His farm lay in the wide
bottom, opposite and a little below the mouth of the Little
Kenawha, and is now in the possession of his son, Col. John
Stone. In the Indian war he moved his family into Farmers'
castle, and was one of the most active and efficient de-
fenders of that garrison. In the spring of 1793, he, with
several others, erected a palisade and several block-houses
ROBERT OLIVER. 391
on his own farm, and remained there until the peace of 1795.
In 1792, he was appointed treasurer of the county of Wash-
ington, by Winthrop Sargent, then acting as governor of the
Northwest Territory. After the peace he was employed by
the Ohio Company, with Jeflery Mathewson, to complete
the surveys of their lands, which was done in a masterly
manner.
He died after a short illness, on the 25th of March, 1801,
aged fifty years.
Capt. Stone was a man with a well-formed, agreeable
person, gentlemanly manners and social habits. By his
cotemporaries he was highly esteemed, and his early death
greatly lamented. A number of his children and grand-
children are living in Ohio, holding respectable stations in
society.
COL. ROBERT OLIVER.
Col. Robert Oliver was born in the vicinity of Boston, in
the year 1738. His parents were emigrants from the north
of Ireland. When he was quite young they moved to the town
of Barre, Worcester county, Mass., and purchased a farm.
His early years were devoted to agriculture, which gave him
a hardy , vigorous frame, fitted to meet and sustain the faligues
of the camp. His education was good for that period, em-
bracing reading, writing, and arithmetic, which, added to his
naturally strong mind, prepared him for transacting any
ordinary public business, as well as his own private affairs,
in a creditable manner.
392 ROBERT OLIVER.
About the y^ar 1775, he married Miss Molly Walker, by
whom he had a large family of children.
At the commencement of the Revolution, he entered the
service as a lieutenant, marching with a company of minute
men to Cambridge, where he was advanced to a captaincy
by the provincial government, in the third Massachusetts
regiment. In 1777, he was commissioned as a major, and
in 1779, promoted to a lieutenant-colonel of the tenth regi-
ment, and at the close of the war a colonel by brevet. In
the campaign which humbled Gen. Burgoyne, he was en-
gaged in all the principal battles, and especially in storming
the German lines on the 7th of October, under Col. Rufus
Putnam, to whose regiment he was attached. He was cele-
brated as a disciplinarian, and for a time acted as adjutant-
general of the northern division of the army. Baron Steuben
highly applauded his superior tact in the discipline and
evolutions of the troops.
At the close of the war, having served through the whole
period, he returned to his family and purchased a farm in
the town of Conway, Mass. Nearly eight years of the most
valuable period of his life were spent in the service of his
country, for which he received payment in final settlement
securities, which, in the market, were worth about ten cents
on the dollar.
In the fall and winter of 1786-7, true to the cause of
liberty and the country he had assisted in gaining its inde-
pendence, he volunteered in suppressing the insurrection in
Massachusetts, under Shays and others, which came nigh
overturning the government, then barely established, in tu-
mult and ruin.
The Ohio Company was soon after formed, and he invested
the remains of his property in two shares of their land, and
moved his family to Marietta in the summer of 1788, where
he was united with many of his old friends and companions
ROBERT OLIVER. 393
in arms. In 1789, in company with Maj. Haffield White
and Capt. John Dodge, both Massachusetts men, he erected
a saw and grist-mill on Wolf creek, in Waterford, about a
mile from its mouth. These were the first mills ever built
in the present state of Ohio. The situation is very pictur-
esque and beautiful, with solid limestone banks, overhanging
cedar trees, and other evergreens. There is a considerable
rapid, or falls, at this spot, making a suitable site for a mill.
The drawing which accompanies this memoir, is a good rep-
resentation of the mills and scenery, with the log-cabins of
the three proprietors as built in 1789.
In 1790, after the death of Gen. Parsons, he was elected
a director of the Ohio Company, and was a veiy active and
efficient member of that important board. In forming the
settlements at Wolf creek and Waterford, he was one of the
principal leaders, giving energy and zeal to these frontier
establishments, and by his military knowledge, directing the
best models for their works of defense against the attacks
of the hostile tribes. So formidable and strong was the
post at Waterford, that the Indians did not venture a serious
attack upon it, but only killed their cattle and such of the
inhabitants as they found outside of its walls. After the
destruction of the Big Bottom settlement, in January, 1791,
and the war was fairly commenced, he removed his family
to Marietta, where his services were constantly needed as a
director of the company; who, for the first year or two of
the war, provided the means, and were at all the expense
of defending the country, so that their continual watchful-
ness was as much required as that of the civil government
of a province in the time of actual war or invasion. Some
estimate may be formed of their duties, when it is stated
that they expended upwards of eleven thousand dollars
of the company funds in providing for and protecting the
colonists.
394 ROBERT OLIVER.
In the formation of the first territorial Legislature in
1798, he was elected a representative from Washington
county. Out of the assembled representatives, the gover-
nor selected five men who were to act as a legislative
council, performing the duties of a Senate. Col. Oliver
was one of this number, and in company with Jacob Burnet,
James Findlay, II. Vanderburg, and David Vance, was
commissioned by John Adams, then president of the United
States, on the 4th day of March, 1799. In 1800 he was
elected president of the council, and continued in that post
until the formation of the state government in 1803. When
the standing and character of the men who constituted the
council is considered, it was no ordinary honor to be elected
as their presiding officer.
Col. Oliver possessed a clear, discriminating mind, and
was truly dignified in his manners ; had a perfect command
of his passions, and was very amiable in his intercourse
with his associates. He had a good fund of anecdote,
which he related in a very interesting manner.
After the close of the Indian war, he returned to his farm
at the mills, where he resided until his death. He was ap-
pointed by Gov. St. Clair lieutenant-colonel of the first
regiment of territorial militia, and colonel of the second
regiment, in 1795. He also appointed him one of the
judges of the Court of Common Pleas in the same year,
and made a very efficient magistrate. He was a man of
great activity and usefulness, both as a civil and military
officer. Soon after the territory became a state, the men
whose eyes had grown dim, and their heads gray in their
country's service, were " laid upon the shelf," if they differed
in political opinion from the ruling powers. Col. Oliver was
a disciple of Washington, and followed his political pre-
cepts; therefore he received no more favors from the govern-
ment. The inhabitants of his township, however, thought
ROBERT OLIVER. 395
him still a worthy man, and elected him a justice of the
peace, and kept him in office as long as he lived.
In person, he was about five feet ten inches high, stoutly
built, and commanding appearance; face full, mild, and
bland, with a pleasant expression when in conversation
with his friends, but severe and terrible to the vicious and
undeserving. His head was finely formed, but early be-
came bald. Once, at Chillicothe, in a convivial party, one
of the company, an influential and noted man of that day,
being rather full of wine, laid his hand familiarly and some-
what roughly on the bald head of the colonel. With one
of his stern looks he thus addressed him : " General, you
must not lay your hand on my bald pate, which has many
times stood where you would not dare to show your face."
In early life he became a professor of religion, and
although his calling exposed him to the dissolute habits of
an army, and was not calculated to promote his growth in
grace, yet he was always a consistent follower of the Lord
Jesus Christ, and at the formation of the first Congregational
church in Marietta, in 1796, he was a member, and re-
mained an ornament to the profession of a Christian.
He died in May, 1810, aged seventy-two years.
The impress of his character still remains on the early
settlement he formed, and it is hoped will long remain for
their best good.
MAJ. HAFFIELD WHITE.
Maj. Haffield White was a native of Danvers, Mass.
At the commencement of the war, on the 19th of April,
1775, by the attack of the British troops on the militia, at
Lexington, and the destruction of the stores at Concord, he-
was an officer in a company of minute men. The news of
that attack was spread through the country with great rap-
idity ; and men who in the morning were thirty miles from
the scene of action, were on the ground before night, in time
to harass the jaded and retreating Britons, from their first
inroad into the possessions of the Massachusetts yeomanry.
The result of that day taught them to be cautious in ven-
turing far beyond the cover of the guns of their navy, into
the land of these modern Spartans. The alarm reached
Danvers in time for Lieut. Wbite, with the company of
minute men, to reach the flanks of the flying enemy, and,
from behind the stone walls, throw several destructive fires
into the ranks of the British. His own men suffered con-
siderably; losing eight killed out of the company. Soon
after this affair he was commissioned as a captain, and
raised a company of men, which was among the most effi-
cient and active in the service, especially at the crossing of
the Delaware, and battle of Trenton, in December, 1761 ;
many of them being sailors, and very useful in manning the
boats to cross the army. He was with Gen. St. Clair in the
retreat from Ticonderoga; and under Col. Francis fought
manfully at the battle of Hubbardstown ; thereby checking
the pursuit of the British troops, and enabling the Ameri-
cans to reach Stillwater, and form the nucleus of that army
which soon after conquered Burgoyne, and turned the tide
HAFFIELD WHITE. 397
of conquest against our foes. He was engaged in many of
the battles that preceded this overthrow, and thus shared in
the glories and triumphs of Saratoga, on the 13th of Octo-
tober, 1777. At the time of the retreat from Ticonderoga,
he was paymaster of the regiment, and in that disastrous
affair lost a large sum of money, which was not allowed
by the United States. When Col. Pickering took charge of
the commissary department of the army, being acquainted
with the integrity and activity of Capt. White, living in the
same town, he was selected for one of his assistants, and
remained in that branch of the service until the close of the
war, when he was made a major.
At the formation of the Ohio Company, he became one of
the proprietors, and was appointed, by the directors, com-
missary and conductor of their first detachment of pioneers,
which left Danvers in December, 1787. On their arrival at
Marietta, he was continued as their steward for the first
year; after which that office was no longer needed. His
son Felatiah was one of the forty-eight who landed from
the May-flower at Marietta, on the 7th of April. In 1789 he
engaged with Col. Oliver and Capt. Dodge, in erecting mills
on Wolf creek. When the war with the Indians commenced,
he left the mills, as they were much exposed to hostile at-
tacks, and came to Marietta, where he remained until after
the peace of 1795. He then resumed his possessions, a
farm, near the mills, and lived with his son until his death.
In person Maj. White was below the medium size, but
thickset and robust ; very active, and brisk in his motions ;
prompt to execute any business on hand in the most expe-
ditious manner; complexion florid, and sanguine tempera-
ment. He was a brave soldier, and a very useful and
industrious citizen.
DEAN TYLER.
Dean Tyler, Esa., was a native of Haverhill, Mass., and
liberally educated at one of the New England colleges.
He possessed a brilliant mind, an agreeable person, and
refined manners.
In early life he formed an attachment to a young lady,
who returned it with equal affection. But the wayward
course of lovers sometimes crosses all their purposes; a
misunderstanding occurred, which induced Tyler to embark
for Europe, to flee from that which had really become
necessary to his happiness. He took passage in a letter
of marque for Bourdeaux. On the voyage out and back,
he met with some fighting, some storms, and had sev-
eral narrow escapes. These incidents probably helped to
cure him of his jealousy, or whatever it was that caused
him to go on this adventure. He returned with a full de-
termination to confess his fault, and unite himself with her
whom he had so abruptly parted from. But it was too late ;
he had broken the heart of his loved one, and the first news
he heard on landing, was, that she was dead — had died of a
broken heart. The shock entirely overcame him; he was
attacked with a violent illness, followed with delirium, and
narrowly escaped that death he would willingly have suf-
fered, could it atone for his error. His recovery was slow
and tedious ; and it was a long time before he could attend
to any business.
As soon as he was able to travel, he joined the Ohio Com-
pany adventurers, then in the opening of their enterprise to
occupy the great west, and redeem it from the wilderness.
He attached himself, in 1789, to the settlement of Waterford,
and, with them, drew a donation lot of one hundred acres.
WILLIAM GRAY. 399
He was a brave and active pioneer; exposing himself to
danger on every occasion, and doing all he could for the
benefit of the inhabitants. During the winter months, he
taught school ; and on the Sabbath officiated as chaplain,
reading the sermons of some able divine, and conducting
the public devotions, which were regularly kept up during
the period of the war, as well as subsequently.
As a man, he was much respected by the pioneers, and
the garrison built for their protection, was called Fort Tyler.
He never married, but continued a bachelor to the end of
his days. His habits were rather studious and sedentary;
except when danger threatened the inhabitants from an In-
dian attack, when he was alert and active. In his latter
years he became rather intemperate, probably hoping to
drown his melancholy reflections in the inebriating bowl.
His name is still fondly cherished by the descendants of his
pioneer companions.
CAPT. WILLIAM GRAY.
Capt. William Gray was born in Lynn, Mass., on the 26th
of March, 1 70 1.
Being of a warm, active temperament, and the struggle
for independence occupying the thoughts and conversa-
tion of all around him, he became early inspired with the
determination of doing all in his power to aid the cause of
his country, and entered the service of the United States, as
a private soldier, at the age of seventeen years, or in the
year 1778, and served to the close of the war. At the
100 WILLIAM GRAY.
attack on Stony Point, he had been promoted, for his good
conduct, to a lieutenant, and was among the first who scaled
the walls of that fortress.
At the close of the war he returned to his home, and
married Miss Mary Diamond, of Salem. His uncle, the
rich merchant, William Gray, for whom he was named, lived
at that time in Salem, and from a humble situation in life,
being bred a shoemaker, rose to be one of the richest mer-
chants in Boston. He treated his nephew with great kind-
ness ; and for many years, even after he moved to Ohio,
annually sent him a sum of money, sufficient to aid very
materially in the support of his family. Soon after his mar-
riage he resided in Danvers, where his two oldest children
were born.
In the autumn of 1787 he joined the Ohio Company, and
had the charge of one of the wagons that transported the
first band of pioneers on to the waters of the Ohio. On this
wagon was written, in large letters, "For Ohio" His family
was left in Danvers, and did not come out until 1790, in
company with Maj. Ezra Putnam, from the same place.
He joined the settlement at Waterford, and when the war
of 1791 broke out, was chosen commander of the garrisou
erected for its defense, called Fort Tyler. By his good con-
duct and prudence, this fortress was preserved unharmed,
although several times in great jeopardy. The situation
was a very exposed one, on the extreme frontier. On the
head waters of the Muskingum, which washed its founda-
tions, were seated numerous tribes and villages of the hos
tile Indians, who, at almost any season of the year, could
embark their whole force in canoes, and in forty-eight hours
land at the garrison. Their approach might have thus
been made in the most secret manner, without even the
knowledge of the rangers, who constantly scoured the coun-
try, watching for signs of the Indians. But an overruling
WILLIAM STAGEY. 401
Providence diverted their attention to other quarters, and they
passed the four years of war with but little loss of life, but
much of property. Soon after the peace, and men could
till the earth in safety, he bought a farm near the present
town of Beverly, and lived there, highly respected, until the
time of his death, in July, 1812.
He was the father of ten children, nearly all of whom
married, and their descendants are living in this county.
COL. WILLIAM STAGEY.
Col. Stacey was a native of Massachusetts, and a propri-
etor in the Ohio Company. He came early to the North-
west Territory, and settled in Washington county.
In the forepart of his life he lived on the sea- coast, proba-
bly Salem, and was engaged in sea-faring business. Find-
ing himself surrounded by a rapidly increasing family, he
removed to New Salem, in the county of Hampshire, Mass.,
and entered on the life of a farmer. He v/as much re-
spected by his fellow townsmen, and was promoted in the
military service. In Barber's Historical Sketches of Mas-
sachusetts, is the following notice of Col. Stacey, copied
from the Barre Gazette.
" The news of the battle of Lexington flew through New
England like wild-fire. The swift horseman with his red
flag proclaimed it in every village, and made the stirring call
upon the patriots to move forward in defense of the rights
so ruthlessly invaded, and now sealed with the martyrs'
blood. Putnam, it will be recollected, left his plow in the
26
402 WILLIAM STAGEY.
furrow, and led his gallant band to Cambridge. Such
instances of promptness and devotion were not rare. We
love the following instance of the display of fervid patri-
otism, from an eye witness, one of those valued relics of
the band of '76, whom now a grateful nation delights to
honor.
When the intelligence reached New Salem, in this state,
the people were hastily assembled on the village green by
the notes of alarm. Every man came with his gun and
other preparations for a short march. The militia of the
town were then divided into two companies, one of which was
commanded by a Capt. G . This company was paraded
before much consultation had been held on the proper steps
to be taken in the emergency, and while determination was
expressed on almost every countenance, the men stood
silently leaning on their muskets, awaiting the movement
of the spirit in the officers. The captain was supposed to
be tinctured with Toryism, and his present indecision and
backwardness were ample proofs, if not of his attachment
to royalty, at least of his unfitness to lead a patriot band.
Some murmurs began to be heard, when the first lieuten-
ant, William Stacey, stepped out of the line, took off his
hat, and addressed them. He was of stout heart, but of
few words. Pulling his commission from his pocket, he
said, ' Fellow soldiers, I don't know exactly how it is with
the rest of you, but for one, I will no longer serve a king
that murders my own countrymen ; ' and tearing the paper
in a hundred pieces, he trod them under his feet. Sober as
were the people by habit and natural disposition, they could
not refrain from a loud huzza, as he stepped back into the
ranks. Capt. G still faltered, and made a feeble en-
deavor to restore order, but they heeded him as little as
the wind. The company was summarily disbanded, and a
re- organization took place on the spot. The gallant Stacey
WILLIAM STACEY. 403
was unanimously chosen captain, and with a prouder com-
mission than was ever borne on parchment, he led a small
but resolute band to Cambridge. He continued in service
during the war, reaching, before its close, the rank of lieu-
tenant-colonel, under the command of Putnam."
In 1778, Capt. Stacey had risen by his merits to the rank
of a lieutenant-colonel, not in Col. Putnam's regiment, but
in Col. Ichabod Alden's, of the Massachusetts line.
The first of July, that year, the Indians and Tories sacked
and destroyed the settlement of Wyoming, on the Susque-
hanna river. They now threatened, and had partly de-
populated, the settlement of Cherry valley, which lies on
the head waters of the eastern branch of that stream, fifty-
two miles northwest of Albany, in the present county of
Otsego, but then Tryon county, N. Y. It was a beautiful val-
ley, noted for its fertility and picturesque scenery, being first
settled as early as 1739, but greatly harassed by the Tories,
who formed nearly half of the inhabitants of that county,
and were friends to the crown, to which they were partly
induced from the popularity and high standing of Sir Guy
Johnson, who lived in the northern part of the county, and
probably from respect to the governor of the state while
under the king, for whom it was named Late in the sum-
mer of 1778, Col. Alden's regiment was ordered up to
Cherry valley, for the protection of the inhabitants. A
stockaded garrison had been previously built around their
little church, and the regiment of about two hundred men
took possession of it. Being rather straitened for quarters,
several of the officers lodged at the houses of the adjacent
inhabitants. Alden and Stacey, with a small guard of sol-
diers, quartered in the house of a Mr. Wells, not more than
a quarter of a mile from the garrison. On the 6th of No-
vember, Col. Alden received a letter from Fort Schuyler, now
in Oneida county, distant about forty miles northwest, near
404 WILLIAM STAGEY.
the head of the Mohawk, saying that an Oneida Indian,
whose tribe was friendly to the United States, had told them
that the Indians and Tories, under a son of Col. Butler,
were assembling on the Tioga river, a northerly branch of
the Susquehanna, which passes through the country of the
Seneca Indians, for the purpose of attacking the fort and
settlement of Cherry valley. Butler had been a prisoner
with the Americans, and confined in Albany jail, a short
time before, but had escaped, and was now seeking revenge.
Being notified of this intended attack, he sent out scouting
parties to watch their approach, although he did not actually
apprehend any danger, even after this timely warning. The
inhabitants, better aware of their peril, made application
to the commander to be admitted within the fort, but as it
was only large enough for his own men, he declined, saying
it would be time enough when they were certain of the ap-
proach of the enemy. Being unacquainted with Indian
warfare, he did not take shelter within the fort himself.
The scout, which was sent down that branch of the river
which waters the valley, having kindled a fire, were surprised
in their camp and taken prisoners, so that they could not
give the alarm of the advance of the Indians as he had
expected. From these prisoners, Butler and Brant learned
the condition of the settlement and the houses where the
officers slept, being themselves familiar and acquainted in
the valley before the war.
Early on the morning of the 11th of November, an army
of five hundred Indians and two hundred Tories entered the
settlement undiscovered, and began the attack on the scat-
tered dwellings near the fort. Before they reached Wells',
the house where he quartered, a man on horseback gave
notice of their approach. He was still persuaded there was
only a small body of Indians, but on their coming in sight
he directly ran for the fort, closely pursued by an Indian,
WILLIAM STACEY. 405
who after calling on him to surrender, which he refused,
snapping his pistol at him, he threw his tomahawk, striking
him on the head and felling him to the ground. The Indian
then scalped him, " and thus he was the first to suffer from
his criminal neglect."* Before Col. Stacey could leave the
house, it was surrounded by the Indians, and he was taken
prisoner with a few of the guard, while all the women and
children were killed. It was a damp, rainy morning, and
the powder of the out-door guards was wet, so that their
arms were useless, which was one reason of there being so
little resistance. After a feeble attack on the fort, they de-
parted with their scalps and prisoners, killing about forty of
the inhabitants. Joseph Brant, who commanded the Indians,
saved the lives of a number of families, making them pris-
oners, while Butler and the Tories under his command,
spared very few that fell into their hands.
The Indians, in their return to their own country on the
Genesee river, passed down the Cherry valley branch of the
Susquehanna to its junction with the Tioga fork, and up
that stream over to the Seneca lake, and onward to an In-
dian town that stood near the present beautiful village of
Geneva, distant more than two hundred miles, by the route
they traveled, from Cherry valley. Here the revengeful
savages who had taken Col. Stacey prisoner, after holding
a council, decided on burning him at the stake. It has for
ages been the practice of the Indians in their attacks, to
take some prisoners for this purpose, that the young Indians
and squaws may share in their revenge on their enemies.
Being devoted to this dreadful death, he was tied to the
stake, the fire kindled, and he thought his last hour was
come. Seeing the noble-minded Brant in the throng, and
having probably heard that he was a Freemason, he made
* Annals of Tryon county.
400 WILLIAM STAGEY.
the well known sign of the fraternity, which was instantly
recognized by the quick eye of the Indian. His influence
was almost unlimited amongst the northern tribes of New
York, and he persuaded them to release their victim, thus
adding one more to the number of lives saved by his
humanity.
Soon after this he was adopted into an Indian family. At
the time of the invasion of the country of the Senecas in
1779, by Gen. Sullivan, when their villages, orchards, and
crops of corn, were totally destroyed, many of them retreated
to Fort Niagara, then in the hands of the British. Amongst
others, Col. Stacey was taken there by the family to which
he was attached. While here, Mr. Campbell, the author of
the history of Tryon county, from whom some of these
events are copied, says, "Lieut. Col. Stacey, who had been
taken prisoner at Cherry valley, was also at the fort. Molly
Brant, the sister of Joseph, and former mistress of Sir Wil-
liam Johnson, had, from some cause, a deadly hostility to
him. She resorted to the Indian method of dreaming. She
told Col. Butler that she dreamed she had the Yankee's head,
and that she and the Indians were kicking it about the fort.
Col. Butler ordered a small keg of rum to be painted and
given to her. This, for a short time, appeased her, but she
dreamed a second time that she had the Yankee's head, with
his hat on, and she and the Indians kicked it about the fort
for a foot ball. Col. Butler ordered another keg of rum to
be given to her, and then told her, decidedly, that Col. Stacey
should not be given up to the Indians. Apart from this
circumstance, I know nothing disreputable to Molly Brant.
On the contrary, she appears to have had just views of her
duties. She was careful of the education of her children,
and some of them were respectably married.
Col. Stacey remained a prisoner over four years, and was
then exchanged. He returned to his home in New Salem,
WILLIAM ST ACE Y. 407
and in 1789 moved with his family, consisting of his wife,
five sons, and a son-in-law, with their families, to the Ohio,
and settled in Marietta. Two of his sons, John and Phile-
mon, joined the settlement in Big Bottom, formed in the fall
of 1790. The 2d of January, following, the block-house
was taken by surprise, and fourteen of the inmates were
killed ; amongst the slain was his son John, while Philemon,
a lad of sixteen years, was taken prisoner, and died in cap-
tivity. Col. Stacey feeling anxious for the safety of the new
settlement, and the welfare of his sons, -visited the post the
day before the attack ; and although the Indians pretended
to be friendly, well knowing their wiles from former expe-
rience, gave the young men strict orders to keep a regular
guard, and strongly bar the door of the house at sunset,
and not open it again until sunrise, even although it was
the depth of winter. They neglected his advice, and per-
ished. During the war he lived in a small block-house,
at the Point in Marietta, on the bank of the Ohio, and is
figured in the drawing of that place, in the preceding vol-
ume. He had the charge of overseeing the construction of
these works in January, 1791. His remaining sons and son-
in-law settled in this county, and left a numerous posterity,
who still reside here. His youngest son, Gideon, settled in
New Orleans, and established a ferry across Lake Pontchar-
train, and was there lost.
After the death of his first wife, Col. Stacey married Mrs.
Sheffield, a widow lady from Rhode Island, and owned four
shares of land in the Ohio Company. She was the mother of
the wife of Maj. Zeigler, Mr. Charles Green, and Isaac Pierce,
Esq., a woman of highly cultivated mind, lady-like manners,
and agreeable person.
He died in Marietta, in the year 1804, and was a man
greatly esteemed for his many excellent qualities.
THE FIRST SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS COUNTY,
WITH BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF SOME
OF THE EARLY SETTLERS.
BY EPHRAIM CUTTER, ESQ.
The Indian war, which was brought to a close by the
treaty of Greenville, in August, 1795, had caused an almost
entire stop to the wave of population, which, by the settle-
ment of Marietta and Cincinnati, had begun to swell and
move. It was not until 1797 and 1798, that the symptoms
of what has astonished the whole civilized world, began
again to appear in the west. In those years, that kind of
boats to which the pioneers gave the cognomen of broad-
horns, were seen continually floating down the Ohio. Many
of these contained the families of persons of strong, adven-
turous minds, and hardy frames, but generally of little or
no property. They of course sought for opportunities to
locate themselves on lands that they could obtain on easy
terms.
In the early part of 1797, Marietta was crowded with
this kind of population, seeking for some place to make a
home. It is well known that in the purchase of the Ohio
Company's lands, they made it a condition that two town-
ships of land should be conveyed which were to be forever
for the use and benefit of a university. These lands were
in the trust of the directors of the Ohio Company, and were
thus to remain until they should resign that trust to the
future Legislature. Gen. Putnam, who was the superin-
tendent of the surveys of the land of the Ohio Company,
had these two townships surveyed into sections in 1796.
SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS CO 13 N T Y . 409
The trustees were convinced that it would be good policy to
early make these lands productive, and thus provide a fund
to commence an institution, which they foresaw would soon
be much needed, and if established, promised most import-
ant results. They believed that the public interest would be
served by encouraging substantial men to occupy these
lands, make improvements, and wait until a more perma-
nent title could be made to them by an act of Legislature,
which, it was expected, would soon (as was the case,) be
acquired as the second step provided for by the ordinance
of 1789, providing for the government of the territory north-
west of the river Ohio.
These lands, with a large surrounding region, were one
of the most favorite portions of the hunting ground which
the Indians had surrendered in their several treaties ; and
the treaty of 1795 seemed to close the last fond hope of
ever after enjoying them. Yet the hunters living about
Sandusky, and on the different branches of the Muskingum,
continued not only to visit there, but until the winter before
the last war with Great Britain commenced, they were in
large parties during the hunting season, coursing through
that extensive range of country, comprising the lands watered
by the Raccoon, Monday, Sunday, and the heads of Federal
creek. It was here they formerly found the buffalo, the
elk, and the bear. The buffalo and elk were not extermi-
nated until the year 1800. The bear continued in consid-
erable abundance until their last great hunt in the winter
of 1810-11. That winter was a favorable season for them
to effect the object they seemed to have in view, which was
to destroy the game, the weather being cold, with several
falls of snow. The carcasses of many deer were found in
the woods bordering the settlements in Washington and
Athens counties, which appeared to be wantonly destroyed
by the savages. A young buffalo, believed to be the last
410 SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS COUNTY.
seen in this part of the country, was taken a few miles west
of Athens, on a branch of liaccoon, in the spring of 1799,
brought to the settlement, and reared by a domestic cow.
The summer after it was two years old, it was taken by its
owner over the mountains, and for a considerable time ex-
hibited from place to place. At first it was easily managed,
but at length became ungovernable, and gored its owner,
who died of the wounds, and the animal was then killed.
Gen. Putnam probably would not, at this time, have en-
couraged the commencement of this settlement, had he not
foreseen that these larfds would soon be occupied, and that
it was important, in order to establish a peacable and re-
spectable settlement, to select, from the emigrants already
at Marietta, men possessing firmness of character, courage,
and sound discretion. He accordingly gave every facility
in his power, relating to the surveys, &c, to Capt. Silas
Bingham, Judge Alvin Bingham, John Wilkins, Esq., Capt.
John Chandler, John Harris, Robert Lindsey, Jonathan Wat-
kins, Moses Hewit, Isaac Barker, William Harper, Barak.
Edmond and William Dorr, and Dr. Eliphaz Perkins. Some
of these individuals, with their families, and some others,
made their way up the Hockhocking, in pirogues, early in .
the spring of 1797 ; and were the first in felling the inter-
minable forest, and to erect dwellings. Immediately after
the settlement commenced, as was anticipated, large num-
bers came to take possession of these lands, many of whom
seemed disposed to practice the principle that, might makes
right ; this soon occasioned a state of things which required
much courage and prudence to counteract. Alvin Bingham
was commissioned a magistrate, and Silas was appointed a
deputy-sheriff. The cases of taking forcible possession of
the land and improvements had commenced, and it required
no common share of prudence and firmness to keep the
peace, and give an effectual check to these outrages. Add
SETTLEMENT OP ATHENS COUNTY. 411
to these, a Canadian Frenchman, by the name of Menour,
who had resided with the Indians, was in the habit of steal-
ing horses from the savages, and bringing them into the set-
tlement, on the college lands, where he had men ready to
take them and convey them away to some settled region,
and dispose of them. The Indians found no difficulty in
tracing their horses to this point, but could follow them no
further. They, of course with great justice, made their
complaints. Menour had collected around him quite a num-
ber who were well armed, and showed a determination to
defend him. Judge Bingham issued a warrant for his ap-
prehension, and intrusted it with Silas, who made an
attempt to perform his duty, but found quite a party of des-
perate characters in arms to protect him. He very adroitly
retired; giving out the idea, that he should not venture to
arrest him, unless he could obtain assistance from Marietta.
Menour's house was a strong building for those times ; the
only access to the chamber was a small opening in the ga-
ble-end. Menour and his wife, who used it for a lodging
room, ascended a ladder, then drew it up after them, and
closed the aperture. The lower part of the house was, at
this time, occupied by a large party of desperate men, horse-
thieves, and outlaws, who slept on their rifles, and were
ready at any moment to do their leader's bidding. In the
meantime, Bingham, with the utmost secrecy and dispatch,
collected the well-disposed citizens of Athens and Ames,
and proceeded that night to make the arrest. The night
was very dark, and they approached and surrounded the
house, without being discovered by its inmates. E. Cutler
burst open the door, and the citizens rushed in upon the des-
peradoes, and secured them before they were fairly awake.
Robert Lindsey and Edmond Dorr broke into the opening
that formed the entrance to the chamber, and captured Me-
nour; who was taken to Marietta, where he was convicted
412 SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS COUNTY.
of the offense, on the testimony of the Indians, and pun-
ished ; he, however, afterward went to Sandusky, and it was
said, was there killed by an Indian.
Judge Bingham was not lax in punishing breaches of the
peace. Some cases of forcible entry and detainer took place,
which required a jury and two magistrates to decide them;
and at this time there were but two in this portion of the
country, Judges Bingham and Cutler. These cases some-
times showed a threatening aspect; a certain number of
disorderly persons were always ready to attend such courts.
At one of these trials the leaders of this class came forward,
and threatened violence; the magistrates ordered them to
leave the room ; they retired ; but expressed an intention to
put a stop to such courts. The magistrates issued warrants,
and ordered the sheriff to apprehend them immediately, and
take them to Marietta. He was not slow in arresting them.
It is not easy to conceive of men more frightened ; the idea
of being taken to Marietta, to be tried by a court that had
established its character for firmness and strict justice, filled
them with terror. Silas Bingham, (who, to great shrewdness
and dispatch in business, united an unconquerable love of
fun,) did nothing to allay their fears, but told them the bet-
ter way would be to come into court, and, on their knees,
ask forgiveness, and promise amendment. The prominent
man of the offending party replied, that " it was too bad to
be compelled to kneel down, and ask forgiveness of two
Buckeye justices;" but he would submit rather than be
taken to Marietta. This anecdote was often repeated by
the facetious Col. Sproat and Bingham, and might have
aided in fixing the cognomen on the state.
The Binghams were natives of Litchfield county, Conn.,
and although quite young, they were volunteers at the cap-
ture of Ticonderoga, by Ethan Allen, in 1775. Silas was
with the army which invaded Canada, and both served most
SETTLEMENT OF ATHENS COUNTY. 413
of the time during the Revolutionary war. Judge Bingham
was a substantia], clear-headed man, sober and dignified in
his manners, stern and uncompromising in his sense of right.
Silas was full of anecdote and humor, social and kind in his
feelings, a man of excellent sense, and a terror to evil doers.
The promptness with which these men acted in enforcing
the laws and in protecting the rights of the weak, had the
effect to rid the settlement of a large portion of this disor-
derly population; and Athens, many years ago, established
its character as an orderly and respectable community, em-
bracing as much intelligence and refinement, as any other
town of equal size. For this happy result, it was in no
small degree indebted to Dr. Eliphaz Perkins. Few men
were better calculated to introduce a mild and refined state
of manners and feelings. He was a native of Norwich,
Conn., born in 1753, graduated at an eastern college, and
removed to Athens in 1800, the time when a disposition to
trample on the laws prevailed. The services of a physician
were greatly needed in the settlement, and his arrival was
hailed with joy. By his attention to the sick, skill in his
profession, and by his urbanity and kindness, he at once be-
came popular. The influence thus acquired, he exerted in
the most salutary and unostentatious manner, while he
frowned upon every breach of law and decorum. His own
deportment was a bright and living example of purity and
benevolence. He was truly a patron of learning. He did
much to establish and sustain common schools in that region.
He contributed liberally to the Ohio University, was early
appointed a trustee, and for many years was treasurer of
the institution. He died, much lamented, on the 29th of
April, 1828, in the lively exercise of that Christian faith of
which he had been many years a professor. His descend-
ants are numerous and highly respectable ; seven of them
have graduated at the Ohio University.
414 JERVIS CUTLER.
Soon after the settlement of Athens and Ames, the ven-
erable Elder Quinn, then a young man, found his way
through the wilderness, with little more than blazed trees to
guide his steps, induring like a true soldier of the cross, ex-
treme toil and privation. He may be regarded as the
founder of the Methodist church in that county.
MAJ. JERVIS CUTLER.
" Maj. Jervis Cutler was the son of the Rev. Manassch
Cutler, who for fifty-two years was pastor of the Congre-
gational church in Hamilton, Mass. He was also the ne-
gotiator with Congress in the year 1787, for the purchase
of a million and a half of acres for the Ohio Company, by
means of which the settlement of the now great state of
Ohio was effected. From the year 1800 to 1804, Dr. Cutler
was a representative in Congress from the Lynn district in
Massachusetts.
Maj. Cutler was born at Edgarton, on Martha's Vineyard,
in the year 1768. Being educated for the mercantile busi-
ness, he was placed, at the age of sixteen years, under the
care of Capt. David Pearce, of Gloucester, who sent him
on a voyage to Havre de Grace, in France. If the father
deserves the credit of paving the way for the settlement of
this then savage wilderness, the son is entitled to be con-
sidered a pioneer of the settlement itself. In the year
1788, when only nineteen years old, he joined the little
band of forty-eight, who emigrated from New England,
under Gen. Ru.fus Putnam, and pitched their tents at
'
LIBRARY
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
JERVJS CUTLER. 415
Marietta, in the center of the Indian country. He has been
often heard to say that he was the first to leap on shore at
the mouth of the Muskingum, on the seventh of April, and
actually cut the first tree to make a clearing for a habita-
tion in the new settlement. Of that little band of hardy
pioneers, not more than one or two are now living." * The
following summer he taught a school about four miles from
Simrel's ferry, on the Youghiogheny river, and was there
when his father made his visit to Marietta in August, 1788.
In 1789 he returned to Marietta, and aided in forming the
settlement of Waterford, being one of the first associates,
but did not long remain there.
In the autumn of that year he joined a party of the Ohio
Company land surveyors, not as a regular hand, but out of
curiosity to see the country, who were running the east and
west township lines of the fourteenth and fifteenth ranges,
between the Big Hockhocking and Raccoon creek. It con-
sisted of twelve men, of whom Daniel Mayo, of Boston,
was one, and Benoni Hurlburt, afterward killed by the Indi-
ans, was the hunter. The following interesting sketch of
his being lost in the woods, was taken from his own lips,
about three years before his death, and is a specimen of the
exposures to which the early settlers were all liable.
Having quite a relish for hunting, and expert with the
rifle, he one day went out with Hurlburt in quest of provis-
ions for the party, whose supply was nearty exhausted. He
ascended one side of a large creek, and his companion the
other, which would give them a chance for mutual assist-
ance in killing the game, as it crossed from bank to bank.
Mr. Cutler, not being accustomed to the woods, presently
left the main stream, and followed up a large branch. He
soon discovered his mistake, and retraced his steps, but
* American Almanac, 1845.
416 JERVIS CUTLER.
could find no signs of his trail. Just at night he met a fine
bear, which he shot at and wounded. A small dog, now
his only companion, gave it chase, but as the bear declined
taking a tree, as they usually do, he soon gave up the pur-
suit. Finding that he was actually lost, he fired his gun
several times, in hopes the party would hear it and answer
his signal of distress. Night now rapidly approaching, he
prepared to encamp, and selected a dead, dry beech-tree,
the top of which was broken off about twenty feet from the
ground, against which he kindled the fire. He laid down
on some leaves before it, and being excessively tired,
dropped into a sound sleep. The flame soon ran to the top
of the dry beech, and a large flake of the burning wood,
aided by the current of air, dropped on to the breast of his
hunting-shirt, burning his skin severely. With some effort
he succeeded in extinguishing his burning garment, and
slept at intervals during the night. He rose at daylight,
directing his course eastwardly, with the hope of striking
the Hockhocking, which he knew lay in that direction. All
that day he traveled diligently, with the little dog by his side,
without discovering the object of his search. That night he
encamped near a small stream of water, but without fire, as
he dreaded a repetition of the last night's accident; besides,
he had nothing to cook for supper, and the weather was not
cold. The night was passed quietly, with the little dog coiled
up at his feet. The third morning he started early, and saw
many signs of buffaloes, but no animals; and traveled all
day without seeing any game. Toward evening the little
dog, which seemed aware of his master's necessities as well
as his own, ranged either to the right or left of the course,
in search of game; and toward night, barked vehemently
at something he had discovered. Mr. Cutler hastened up
to the spot in expectation of at least seeing a fat bear, but
only found a little, poor, starved opossum. Thinking this
JERVIS CUTLER. 417
better than no meat, he killed and dressed it, roasting it by
his camp fire. A part of it was offered to the dog, but he
declined partaking such poor fare, and his master consumed
the whole of it. It was now three days since he left his
companions, and this was his only meal. On the fourth
morning, after a sound night's sleep by his fire, he felt quite
refreshed, and pushed manfully onward, as he thought on an
easterly course, but doubtless making many deviations from
a right line. Soon after getting under way, his faithful
companion started up a flock of turkeys, the sight of which
greatly animated his spirits. His gun was soon leveled and
discharged at one of the largest, not more than thirty feet
distant. In the agitation and eagerness of the moment, he
missed his mark, and the bird flew unharmed away, much
to the chagrin of the little dog, which looked quite astonished
and mortified at his master. His first impression was that
his gun had been bent or injured, and would not shoot with
any accuracy. Despair now succeeded to his recent joy, as
he thought he must inevitably starve before he could escape
from the woods. After shedding a few tears over his hopeless
condition, and resting awhile on a log, he carefully wiped
out his rifle and loaded it with great nicety. In the mean-
time the turkeys had all disappeared but a solitary one,
perched on the top of a high tree. He now rested his gun
against the side of a tree, and taking deliberate aim, he
fired once more, and to his great joy the turkey came
tumbling to the ground. A fire was soon kindled, the
feathers pulled, and the bird roasted on the coals. A
hearty meal was then made, of which the little dog now
readily partook. This food was the sweetest he had ever
tasted, and put fresh courage into the wanderers. The
remains of the turkey were stowed away in the bosom of
his hunting- shirt, and he pursued his solitary way more
cheerfully. Soon after, in passing up a ridge, a fine deer
27
418 JERVIS CUTLER.
came round the point of the hill, which he shot. From the
skin of the animal he formed a kind of sack, which he slung
to his shoulders, with strips of leatherwood hark, filled with
the choicest pieces of the meat. lie now traveled on quite
cheerily, in which the little dog also participated, knowing
he had food for several days, or until he could reach the
settlements. That night he camped by the side of a little
run, made a cheerful fire, roasted his venison, and ate his
supper with a fine relish. After sleeping soundly, he awoke
with renovated strength and spirits. This was now the fifth
day of his wandering, and luckily, a little before noon, he
came on to the Hockhocking, at a place which he at once
recognized as being about a mile and a half below the
point from which the surveying party had started out on
their work. He felt so much animated at the successful
termination of this adventure, that instead of going down
stream to the cabin of John Levins, seven miles below, he
determined to go up to the line of the surveyors, and follow
that until he found them. It was easily distinguished by
the blazes, or marks on the trees, and before night reached
the camp they had left two weeks before, and found a little
fire still smoking in a ury sugar tree, which retains fire
longer than any other wood. Feeling weary and low spir-
ited, he proceeded no further that night, but slept on the
old camping ground. In the morning, knowing where he
was, and freed from the harassing feelings known only to
those who have been lost in the woods, he started with
fresh vigor on the trace. His little companion seemed to
understand their more hopeful condition, and capered along
ahead, barking heartily for joy. He now killed as much
game as he needed, without leaving the trail, and on the
eighth day of his solitary ramble, came up with the sur-
veyors. There was great joy in the party at meeting their
lost companion, but as they supposed he had gone back to
JERVIS CUTLER. 419
the settlement, not being a regular hand, they were not so
much alarmed at his long absence.
Soon after this adventure he returned to New England,
and resided for some time with his brother Ephraim, at Kil-
lingly, Conn., where he married Miss Philadelphia Cargill,
the daughter of Benjamin Cargill, who owned, at that time,
valuable mills on the Quinebog river, the site of the present
Wilkinson factories and village in Pomfret. His roving pro-
pensities led him to spend some months in Carolina and
Virginia ; but his brother having removed to Ohio, he came
again to Marietta, in the year 1802, with the intention of
establishing a tin manufactory ; but meeting with little en-
couragement at that early day, he went to Chillicothe, and
finally established himself at Bainbridge, on Paint creek,
and engaged in the fur trade.
In the years 1806 and 1807 there was great excitement
respecting Louisiana, and Aaron Burr's expedition ; the mi-
litia were organized, and he was elected a major in Col.
McArthur's regiment. His fine personal appearance, and
some experience in military affairs in Connecticut, enabled
him to fill the post with great credit. When additional troops
were raised for the purpose of taking possession of New Or-
leans, he received the appointment of captain, and soon
enlisted a full company of men. He was stationed at New-
port, Ky., and for some time had the command of the post at
that place. In the spring of 1809 he was ordered, with his
company, to New Orleans. A French gentleman, engaged
in the fur trade on the Missouri, and toward the Rocky
mountains, was taken on board his boat, as they descended
the Mississippi, as a passenger. Being able to speak the
French language fluently, he obtained from him much val-
uable information, which he carefully noted down, respect-
ing these regions. In 1812 he published a work, being a
a topographical description of that country, including much
420 JEllVIS CUTLER.
of Ohio, with an account of the Indian tribes residing therein.
His two subaltern officers, Jessup and Cutler, have since
attained the rank of general officers in the army of the
United States. At New Orleans he had a severe attack of
yellow fever, which reduced his strength and health so much,
that he left the army, and returned to New England, where
he remained until 1818, when he removed his family to
Warren, near Marietta. Here he lost Ms wife, in 1822.
Two years after he married Mrs. Eliza Chandler, of Evans-
ville, Indiana, and soon after moved to Nashville, Tenn.,
where he was engaged in engraving copper-plates for bank
notes, for the banks of that state, and for Alabama. He
possessed great taste for the fine arts ; sketched remarkably
well, and made some very creditable attempts at sculpture.
With much versatility of talent, he lacked that singleness
of purpose, and perseverance in one pursuit, necessary to
success. He possessed a well cultivated mind, and was an
acute observer of men and things.
He died at Evansville, the 25th of June, 1844, aged sev-
enty-six years.
A HISTORY OF THE FIRST SETTLEMENT OF
AMESTOWN, IN ATHENS COUNTY, OHIO,
WITH SKETCHES OF THE EARLY
INHABITANTS.
BY EPHRAIM CUTLER.
In the summer of 1797, Ephraim Cutler, the proprietor of
several shares in the Ohio Company's purchase, ascertain-
ing that a considerable amount of his lands were situated
on the waters of Federal creek, in the sixth township of the
thirteenth range, accompanied by Lieut. George Ewing, ex-
plored a way through the wilderness, and cut out a pack-
horse path, twenty miles in length, from Waterford to Federal
creek. They returned, and accompanied by Capt. Benjamin
Brown, made a second and more thorough exploration.
They found the lands exceedingly fertile, with rich limestone
hills and valleys, and chestnut ridges ; which afforded a plen-
tiful supply of food for animals of every description, and
promised an abundant reward to the labors of the farmer.
The Indians had not yet quite exterminated the buffalo and
elk ; the bear, deer, wolf, and panther abounded, while the
wild turkeys were innumerable. Mr. Cutler proposed to fur-
nish them with land, if they would unite with him in form-
ing a settlement. They accordingly made their selection ;
and about the 1st of March, 1798, Lieut. Ewing removed his
family, and in April, 1799, Cutler and Brown went over to
build their cabins, and make preparation for the accommo-
dation of their families. On their way back to Waterford,
they found Wolf creek impassable, from recent heavy rains.
422 AMESTOWN.
They cut a large bitter-nut hickory tree, that stood on the
bank, peeled thirty feet of bark from the trunk, sewed up
the ends with leathenvood, and launched it upon the stream;
when themselves, with two young men, who accompanied
them, embarked in this frail vessel. They had proceeded
bnt a short distance down stream, when they discovered a
large bear on the bank of the creek, which was shot, and
taken on board. This Indian canoe, with its passengers
and freight, performed the voyage of fifteen miles, to Water-
ford, in safety. The goods and furniture of the two families
were put on board pirogues, and sent down the Muskingum
and Ohio rivers, to the mouth of the Big Hockhocking and
up that stream to Federal creek, a distance of eighty miles ;
while the women and children were taken on horseback,
through the wilderness, and over the rough hills, to their
woodland abodes. The creeks were much swollen, and dif-
ficult to pass. One large stream was crossed on a raft of
drift-wood, at great peril. They reached the place of des-
tination on the 6th of May. About the year 1800, Deacon
Joshua Wyatt and family, with Sylvanus Ames and his ac-
complished and intelligent wife, joined them, making a very
pleasant addition to the little colony. Other settlers also
came, but the increase was small until 1804.
After the arrival of Deacon Wyatt, public worship on the
Sabbath was established, by reading a sermon, and prayer.
The settlers very early entered into an agreement, not to use
ardent spirits on any public occasion, such as raisings, 4th
of July, &».; which was strictly adhered to for several years.
Schools of an elevated character were soon established.
Two gentlemen, graduates of Harvard University, Moses
Everett, son of the lie v. Moses Everett, of Dorchester, Mass.,
and Charles Cutler, taught successively for several years.
During a number of years, the youth enjoyed no other means
of acquiring knowledge. But one newspaper was taken,
AMESTOWN. 423
the United States Gazette, and that, except by accident, did
not arrive much oftener than once in three months.
In the autumn of 1804, the settlers of Dover, Sunday
creek, and Ames were convened in public meeting, to devise
means to improve the roads. At this meeting the intellec-
tual wants of the settlement became a subject of remark.
In their isolated position, the means of acquiring informa-
tion were extremely limited. It was suggested that a library
would supply the deficiency. But the difficulty of obtaining
money, to make the purchase of the books, presented an
insuperable obstacle. Josiah True, Esq., of Dover, proposed
that they should collect furs, and send on to Boston, to ef-
fect the object. This project was acceded to by acclamation.
The young men of the colony had become expert hunters.
Surrounded by a vast wilderness, with a boundless ocean
of woods and prairies, inhabited by savages, who still re-
garded it as their favorite hunting grounds, their fatherland ,
amidst dangers and privations, unknown in more cultivated
regions, a hardy and adventurous character was early devel-
oped. John Jacob Astor employed agents in this country,
to purchase furs, especially bear skins. At the commence-
ment of winter, the bear seeks a hollow tree, or a cavern
amongst the rocks, for his winter's sleep. The entrance of
those cavities in which this animal takes refuge, is generally
small. These were often entered by the hunters, and the
bear dispatched, by shooting, or stabbing with the knife.
In one instance the bear being wounded, determined to sur-
render his fortress, and retreat. The young man who had
entered the narrow aperture, had no other resource than to
lie flat upon his face, and let the animal squeeze his passage
over him. At the outlet of the den, another hunter stood
with his rifle, and shot him through the head ; young Brown
soon crawled out, covered with blood from the wounded
424 AMESTOWN.
bear, saying, that " Bruin had given him a harder squeeze
than he ever had before."
In order to obtain the proposed library, the settlers,
during the ensuing winter, procured a sufficient quantity
of raccoon and other skins to make the desired purchase.
Samuel Brown, Esq., who was returning to New England
that spring in a wagon, took charge of the skins. He was
furnished with letters to the Rev. Thaddeus M. Harris, and
the Rev. Dr. Cutler, who accompanied Mr. Brown to Boston,
and selected a valuable collection of books. It is worthy
of note, that this was the first public library in Ohio, and per-
haps the first west of the mountains, and certainly was the
first incorporated in the state. It has since been divided,
after accumulating several hundred volumes, and part taken
to Dover. Both branches are still in a flourishing condition.
About sixty youth have been reared under these influences,
and gone forth to the world with fully developed physical
powers, uncorrupted morals, and well cultivated minds ; but
as most of them are now in active life, it would appear in-
vidious to mention them. It may perhaps be proper to say
that ten of them have graduated at the Ohio University.
Many others have received more or less instruction at that
institution. Two have been professors in colleges, three
ministers of the gospel, and five lawyers, of established
reputation. All of them occupy respectable, and many of
them responsible stations in society.
The Hon. Ambrose Rice, son of Mr. Jason Rice, of Ames,
attended the institution at Athens in its earlier stages. He
manifested great aptness in mathematical science, solving
the most difficult problems, almost by intuition. He settled
in the northwest part of this state, where he occupied sta-
tions of trust and profit. His reputation as a man of pro-
bity and talent was high. He died leaving a large fortune.
A M E S T 0 W N . 425
The first physician in Ames was Dr. Ezra Walker, a na-
tive of Killingly, Conn. He still lives, at an advanced age.
Mrs. Cutler was a woman of uncommon fortitude and
great excellence of character. Though in feeble health,
and reared amidst the quiet and peaceful scenes of a New
England village, she never shrunk from the dangers and
hardships of frontier life. In the early days of the settle-
ment the Indians were in the habit of encamping within a
mile of her house. Her husband was obliged to be absent
four times in a year, to attend the courts at Marietta. On
one of these occasions several Indians came to her house.
Two hired men, or striplings, being alarmed, caught up
their guns and ran over to Capt. Brown's, leaving her
and the children unprotected. One of the Indians ap-
proached Mrs. Cutler with threatening gestures, brandishing
his tomahawk, and pointed to a decanter of brandy upon the
cupboard. She knew if they tasted the liquor her life was
in danger. With the spirit of a veteran, she seized the fire-
shovel and ordered him to set down the bottle and leave the
house. The Indian told her, "She was brave squaw; he
would give her some meat." They left the house and re-
turned to their camp. She was much relieved by the speedy
arrival of Capt. Brown, who came immediately on hearing
of the unwelcome visit of the Indians. This incident is
mentioned to show the trials and dangers to which the fe-
males of this settlement were exposed. She was a member
of the Congregational church in Marietta, and an exemplary
Christian. She died of consumption, in 1809.
Mrs. Wyatt was an intelligent, pious woman. Her maiden
name was Shaw. She died some years after Mrs. Cutler.
Mrs. Ames was the daughter of a New England clergy-
man. She still lives, honored and cherished by her numerous
and respectable family.
It may be proper to give some sketch of the lives of Lieut.
426 AMESTOWN.
Ewing and Capt. Brown, men whose history belongs to that
of their country. It was the efforts of such men, under
the blessing of God on their labors and daring, that brought
our country into existence as a distinct nation of the earth.
They have already been mentioned as the individuals who
first commenced the settlement at Ames, a movement which,
considering the attendant difficulties and perils, required no
little courage and perseverance. It seemed like plucking
an inheritance from the mouth of the lion, situated as it
was, in the heart of the Indian hunting grounds, much valued
and often visited by them in large parties until 1812: lit-
erally a frontier settlement, isolated and unsupported.
Lieut. George Ewing was a native of Salem county, N. J.,
and though but a youth at the commencement of the Revo-
lutionary war, when his native state was invaded, and the
sound of battle heard, he took his stand to defend it to the
last. He was soon noticed for his bravery and good con-
duct, and received the commission of a first lieutenant in
the Jersey line of the army, a proud mark of distinction
thus to be placed in that noted corps, the Jersey Blues. He
continued in the army until the return of peace, when it
was disbanded. He soon, with his wife and young family,
left New Jersey for the west, and resided a few years near
Wheeling, Va. In 1793, with other families of that vicinity,
he removed to Waterford, the frontier settlement on the
Muskingum, in the midst of the Indian war. They were
entitled to lands on the tract donated by Congress to those
who, at that period, ventured their lives to defend the
frontiers from the savage foe, and made a selection about
four miles above Fort Frye, at the mouth of Olive Green
creek, on the bank of the Muskingum river. They prepared
a stockade garrison, to which they removed, and commenced
improving their lands. The Indians watched them closely,
and one of their number was killed by them, but with
AMESTOWN. 427
prudence and vigilance they maintained their post without
further loss.
As a member of the new settlement of Ames,* Mr. Ewing
was ever ready to promote schools, the library, and every
measure calculated for the general good. He was fond of
reading; was intelligent; possessed a fund of sterling sense,
combined with lively wit and good humor. He sometimes
indulged in a natural propensity for poetic and sarcastic
descriptions : often served on juries at the freehold courts,
held to settle the conflicting claims on the college lands at
Athens. There were one or two individuals sometimes em-
ployed as advocates, demagogues, who frequently made sad
havoc with the king's English. He could not help versifying
some of these bombastic speeches, which he did in a mas-
terly manner, but always in a vein of good humor. He
finally removed to Indiana, and died about the year 1830.
He was the father of the Hon. Thomas Ewing, well known
for his talents and 1he public stations he has held.
*The name of the township was suggested by Gen. R. Putnam, in honor of
Fisher Ames, of Massachusetts. It is now one of the richest fanning townships
in the Ohio Company's purchase.
CAPT. BENJAMIN BROWN.*
Capt. Benjamin Brown was born in Leicester, Worces-
ter county, Mass., on the 17th of October, 1745. He was
the son of Capt. John Brown, who served with distinction
among the colonial troops in the French war, and before
and subsequently to the Revolution, for twenty years, rep-
resented the town of Leicester in the General Court of
the state. His grandfather, William Brown, while a youth,
came from England to America, and was the first settler in
the town of Hatfield, on the Connecticut, at the mouth of
Deerfield river, and was often engaged in the Indian wars
of that early period. The maiden name of his mother was
Elizabeth Jones, a near relative of John Coffin Jones, a man
somewhat distinguished during and after the Revolution.
His father's family was large, numbering nineteen children :
five by a former wife.
At the age of twenty-seven, he married Jane Thomas,
who survived him, and died at Athens, in 1840, aged eighty-
six years. Soon after his marriage he settled on a farm in
the town of Rowe, then in the northwest corner of Hamp-
shire county, but now in Franklin, Mass.
In February, 1775, he connected himself with a regiment
of minute men, as they wTere then called, commanded by
Col. Barnard, filling the post of quaster-master. This regi-
ment, under the command of Lieut. Col. Williams, of
Northfield, at the first sound of war at Lexington, marched
to Cambridge, on the 21st of April. Here he received a
* The sketch of Capt. Brown was furnished by his grandsons, G. Brown and
Ephraim Cutler, Esqs.
BENJAMIN BROWN. 429
lieutenant's commission in Capt. Maxwell's company, of
Col. Prescott's regiment and Massachusetts line, in which
he continued until December, 1776. In June, 1775, he was
engaged with a party of Americans in a very hazardous
service, removing the stock from Noddle's island, in Boston
bay, to prevent their falling into the possession of the
British, and also in burning the enemy's packet, Diana,
ashore on Maiden beach.
He took an active part in the battle of Bunker hill, on the
17th of June, where his commander, Col. Prescott, highly
distinguished himself by his judicious conduct and bravery.
In this battle his oldest brother, John Brown, who died in
Adams, Washington county, Ohio, in 1821, aged eighty-
seven years, was dangerously wounded in two places, by
musket shots, one of which ranged the whole length of his
foot, shattering the bones in a dreadful manner. He was
borne from the field on the shoulders of his brother Pearly
to a place of safety, showing the rare spectacle of three
brothers engaged in this first of American battles.
After the evacuation of Boston, in March, 1776, he marched
with his regiment to New York, and was present in several
engagements during the retreat from Long Island. At the
battle of White Plains, where he took an active part, his
brother Pearly was killed; and his brother William died in
the hospital at New York. On the 1st of January, 1777,
he received a captain's commission in the eighth regiment
of the Massachusetts line, of which Michael Jackson was
colonel, and John Brooks, afterward governor of Massachu-
setts, lieutenant- colonel, and William Hall, subsequently
governor of Michigan, major. He remained in this regi-
ment until the close of the year 1779. In December, 1776,
he assisted at the capture of Hackensack, by Gen. Parsons.
In the summer of 1777, his regiment was ordered to Albany
to check the progress of the enemy under Gen. Burgoyne.
430 BENJAMIN BROWN.
About the middle of August, Col. Jackson, with his regi-
ment, was detached with a body of troops under Genl
Arnold, to raise the siege of Fort Schuyler, and to check the
advance of St. Leger's men down the Mohawk toward Al-
bany, of which there was great apprehension, after the
defeat of Gen. Herkimer at Oriskany, on the 7th of August.
On his arrival at the German flats, he received information
that at the stone house of Maj. Tenbreck, near where he
was encamped, Maj. Walter Butler, a notorious Tory leader,
had hoisted the British flag, and that the house and build-
ings contained a large amount of military stores and pro-
visions. Tenbreck held unlimited sway over the Tory
inhabitants of that region, and all the disaffected were
flocking to him for arms and provisions. It was known to
be a place of great strength, and in addition to the other
difficulties, it was said that Maj. Butler had with him a de-
tachment of British troops, besides his Tory allies. But as
it was of great importance to get possession of these two
men, it was decided to make an immediate attack, before
they were aware of the approach of their enemies. The
colonel selected Capt. Brown, with a chosen corps, to pro-
ceed in advance a little before the break of day. rfe
marched with the utmost caution, until they came near the
house, when, halting his men, he silently approached the
sentinel, who, on his duty, advanced a few rods from the
door, and then turning, marched back toward the house.
Brown was a man of great strength and activity, and as he
turned round he sprang upon him, securing his arms, and
ordered his men to surround the house. He then with sev-
eral of his trusty lads, tore some heavy rails from the
fence, and using them as battering-rams, stove in the stout
door and entered the building. He there met the two ma-
jors, who surrendered the post without resistance, and when
the regiment came up they had nothing to do but take
BENJAMIN BROWN. 431
possession, and thus, by this happy device, much bloodshed
was prevented, and the troops proceeded without delay to the
relief of Fort Schuyler, then in the most imminent danger
from the army of Indians and Tories that surrounded the
brave Gansevort and his gallant companions. On the ap-
proach of Arnold, the siege was raised, and the garrison
saved.
Soon after this event, his regiment returned to the vicinity
of Saratoga, and was engaged in nearly all the battles
which preceded the surrender of the army under Gen. Bur-
goyne. At the storming of the German redoubts, on the
7th of October, Capt. Brown was eminently distinguished.
The events of this day sealed the fate of the British troops.
The eighth regiment, under Col. Jackson, led the attacking
column. Brown, being the senior captain, commanded the
front division; on approaching the redoubt, he found an
abatis in front of the works, formed of fallen tree-tops.
Being a man of uncommon muscular strength, as was also
his armor-bearer, or covering-sergeant, they together almost
instantly cleared a sufficient opening for his men, and were
the first to enter the redoubt. In doing this they received
the full fire of the Germans, which killed his brave sergeant,
his lieutenant, and several privates; but he, with the re-
mainder, and a free use of the bayonet, soon drove the enemy
from the works, and closed this important day in triumph.
Col. Breyman, the commander of the Germans, was killed
in this redoubt, and from concurrent circumstances, and his
own confession, it is quite certain that he lost his life in a
personal contest with Capt. Brown, as he entered the works.
After the surrender of Burgoyne, he was not present in
any important battles, but was with the army until his resig-
nation. The station of aid-de-camp to Baron Steuben, was
offered to him a short time before the battle of Camden;
but he declined the honor, from a sense of his deficient
432 BENJAMIN BROWN.
education to fill the post with credit, being that of all the
New England farmers of that period.
During his absence in the army, his family, in common
with many others, suffered severe privations, incident to the
condition of the country.
At the time of his resignation, in 1779, the continental
currency had so greatly depreciated, that his month's pay
would not purchase a bushel of wheat for his family, and
he was thus forced to leave the service, and return home, to
provide for their wants, by his personal efforts. About the
year 1789, he removed from Rome, to Hartford, Washington
county, N. Y., then a new settlement, where he remained
until September, 1796; when, with several families, he left
there, to seek a new home in the territory northwest of the
Ohio river; the fertility and beauty of the country ha ing
spread, by the voice of fame, through the middle and east-
ern states. He reached Marietta in the spring of 1797, and
in 1799 moved, with Judge Cutler, to Ames township, and
assisted in the first settlement of that place. In 1817, his
health being much impaired, he went to live with his son,
Gen. John Brown, in Athens. In 1818 he applied for, and
received a pension.
He was a professor of religion, and died, much lamented,
in October, 1821, aged seventy-six years.
The descendants of John and Benjamin Brown have
multiplied in the west to hundreds. Some of them have
occupied highly respectable public offices, with ability.
Among the number is our late worthy member of Congress,
P. B. Johnson, M. D., whose mother was the daughter of
John Brown. Those two old pioneers may well be com-
pared to the oaks of our forest, which nothing but the terri-
ble tornado that levels all before it, can overthrow.
The following is a copy of the certificate of Gov. Brooks,
given to Capt. Brown on applying for a pension :
JOSEPH BARKER. 433
"Medford, Mass., August 24th, 1818.
This is to certify that Benjamin Brown was a captain in
the late eighth Massachusetts regiment, commanded by Col.
Michael Jackson — that he (Brown) ranked as such from
January 1st, 1777 — that he was with me in the capture of
Majs. Tenbreck and Butler, near German flats — in raising
the seige of Fort Stanwix, and in the several battles which
immediately preceded the capture of Gen. Burgoyne and
his army, all in the year 1777, and that he always acted as
a spirited and brave officer. The time of Capt. Brown's
resigning is not within my knowledge, but he continued in
service until after the 11th of September, 1778, at which
time I left the eighth, being promoted to the command of the
seventh regiment. I have no doubt of his having continued
in service until the time he has mentioned in his declaration.
J. Brooks, late lieutenant-colonel
Eighth Massachusetts regiment."
COL. JOSEPH BARKER.
Col. Joseph Barker was a native of New Market, Rock-
ingham county, N. H., and was born on the 9th day of Sep-
tember, A. D. 1765. His father was Ephraim Barker. The
maiden name of his mother was Mary Manning, of Ipswich,
Essex county, Mass. At the age of six years, he lost his
mother, who left six children. A few years after her death,
Joseph was sent to Exeter Academy, one of the earliest clas-
sical seminaries in New England, and ranking with the best
in reputation, for sound scholarship and correct discipline.
28
434 JOSEPH BARKER,
He remained in the academy for a considerable time, and
laid the foundation of a good English education, which, in
after-life, by reading, a clear, discriminating mind, and close
observation of mankind, enabled him to appear in the sev-
eral posts he occupied, of a public nature, with honor to
himself, and the credit of his patrons.
His father having married again, in the year 1774, moved
his family to Amherst, N. H., where he followed the occupa-
tion of a house-carpenter, to which he was bred; few of
the New England men of that day being without some in-
dustrial pursuit. His oldest son, Jeremiah, was educated
as a physician, and settled in Portland, Me., where he be-
came one of the most eminent practitioners of his time;
furnishing numerous articles on the diseases of that region,
for the Medical Repository, from its first establishment
by Drs. Mitchell and Miller, of New York city. This work
was continued for many years, and was not only the first
medical periodical published in America, but is said to have
been the first in the world; opening the way to the vast
amount of medical literature which is now sent forth to the
public.
Joseph was continued at Exeter until sometime during
the war, probably until he was about fourteen or fifteen
years old, when he returned to his father, and commenced
the acquirement of the art of a house-joiner and carpenter,
under the guidance of his parent. He was a youth of great
spirit, courage, and activity ; and many stories are related,
of his pugilistic feats and wrestling, not only with the boys
of his own age, hut with those much his superiors in years
and size. His father lived near the court-house and jail,
and Joseph became a great favorite of the sheriff of the
county, who was fond of such sports as were common during
the period of the Revolution, and encouraged him in the prac-
tice. These athletic exercises invigorated and strengthened
JOSEPH BARKER. 435
his muscular frame, and gave him that manly bearing and
contempt of danger, which characterized his after-life. When
a boy he possessed a rare fund of wit and humor, with a
taste for the ludicrous, which was very amusing to his com-
panions. One of his boyish feats was related, a few years
since, by an old man of Amherst, to Mr. G. Dana, his bro-
ther-in-law, while there on a visit.
In the spring of the year, it was common for the nice
housekeepers in New England, to have their rooms and door-
yards fresh whitewashed annually. Joseph had been set
at this work, and when he had about completed the job, an
old red mare, that belonged to a crabbed, ill-natured neigh-
bor, came up to the gate, as she had been in the habit of
doing for some time, giving him considerable trouble in dri-
ving her away. The conceit immediately came into his
head, that it would be a good joke to metamorphose the old
mare, by giving her a coat of the whitewash. She was ac-
cordingly tied up to the fence, and the operation commenced,
of giving her a white masquerading dress over her red one.
When finished, she was turned loose, and went directly home.
The owner, seeing a strange horse at the stable door, threw
stones at her, and drove her away, not once suspecting that
this white horse could be his. The next morning, finding
the strange animal still about his premises, he set his dog
on her, in great anger, following her with many curses and
brickbats, determined to break up her unwelcome visits.
Several curious disquisitions were held, by the old man and
his wife, on the pertinacity of the animal, while the mare
was in the greatest wonder at the strange conduct of her
master. One or two of the neighbors, who were in the se-
cret, as the man was no favorite among them, enjoyed the
joke exceedingly, especially when he began to make in-
quiries after his own horse, which had somehow strangely
disappeared. It was not until after two or three days, when
43C JOSEPH BARKER.
the coat of white was rubbed off in patches, showing the
natural red, that he could be convinced of her identity, and
that he had been harassing and starving his own beast
during all that time. This piece of fun was long remem-
bered in the village, and gave Joseph no little eclat in the
estimation of the real lovers of a little harmless mischief.
After working a year or two with his father, he went to
live with a relative of his mother in New Ipswich, where he
perfected his knowledge of the carpenter's business, becom-
ing a skillful architect. He followed his occupation for
several years. In 1788 he worked as a journeyman car-
penter in the erection of a meeting-house in New Boston,
where he remained until 1789.
In the latter year he married Miss Elizabeth Dana, the
eldest daughter of Capt. William Dana, of Amherst, with
whom he had long been acquainted. His father-in-law
having visited the Ohio country in 1788, and determined on
moving his family there, Mr. Barker concluded to join his
fortune to theirs, and embark with them in the enterprise
of seeking a home in the far west. They left Amherst in
September, 1789. The mode of travel was in wagons
drawn by oxen. One favorite cow was brought with them,
which furnished milk for the children on the way ; and on
their arrival at Belpre, their future home was named Old
Amherst, in remembrance of their former place of residence.
The fatigues of a journey of seven hundred miles, and
across the mountains, at that day, cannot be estimated by
those born amongst the facilities of steamboats and rail-
roads. Such were the difficulties in passing these lofty
ranges, that sometimes the wagons were actually taken in
pieces, and the separate parts carried by hand over the im-
passable barrier of rocks and ledges. On the route one of
their oxen became lame, and had to be exchanged for a
sound one, and as is usually the case in such events, they
JOSEPH BARKER. 437
were sadly cheated, the new ox being nearly valueless for
the draught. But the resolution of Capt. Dana and Mr.
Barker was equal to any emergency, and surmounted every
obstacle. The rugged mountains were finally passed, and
in November the party arrived at Simrel's ferry, the grand
embarking port of the New England .emigrants in their de-
scent of the Ohio river. As was usual at this early period,
they were detained several days for a boat to be made ready
for their use. No facilities of passenger boats of any kind
were then known on the western waters, but every traveler
furnished his own conveyance, or united with others, his
companions, in procuring one. While waiting at this place,
Isaac Barker, with his family, from Rhode Island, arrived,
and they all lived under the hospitable roof of Thomas
Stanley, a citizen of Connecticut then living at that place,
and who subsequently became a respectable and valuable
citizen of Marietta, and after the Indian war in 1797, erected
mills on Duck creek, in the present township of Fearing.
As soon as the boat was prepared, the three families em-
barked in their unwieldy craft, built after the fashion of a
large oblong box, covered half its length with a roof to
shelter the people and their goods from the weather, while
the open space contained their teams and wagons. The
water on the Youghiogheny and Monongahela, as it usually
is at this season of the year, was low, and every mile or two
the boat grounded on the sand-bars and rocks, requiring
the voyagers to leap over the side into the cold water, and
pry her off into the current, rendering the passage both slow
and painful. When they reached Pittsburg, a favorable
rise in the river accelerated their progress and rendered the
rest of the voyage more comfortable. On their arrival at
Marietta, where they proposed to pass the winter, they
found the few houses then built so crowded with inhabitants,
438 JOSEPH BARKER.
that they concluded to pass on to Belpre, a settlement just
commenced, where Capt. Dana's land was located.
The appearance of Marietta at that time, is thus described
by one of the party now living. " On ascending the bank
of the river to look at the town we had been nearly three
months toiling to see, a very cheerless prospect was pre-
sented to our view. A few log-huts were scattered here and
there, raised only a few feet above the tall stumps of the
sturdy trees that had been cut away to make room for them.
Narrow foot-paths meandered through the mud and water
from cabin to cabin; while an occasional log across the
water-courses afforded the pedestrian a passage without
wetting his feet".
The people were very kind and hospitable to the new
comers, to the extent of their ability ; but after waiting a
day or two, Capt. Dana proceeded on with his boat to his
future home, where he arrived late in November. Much to
his disappointment, he found that the log-house he had
built the spring preceding, by accident was burned up, and
the family had to remain in the boat until another was
erected.
Mr. Barker, who depended on the proceeds of his mechan-
ical labor for the support of his family, concluded to stay
for the present in Marietta, where carpenters were in de-
mand, and immediately began putting up a cabin on the
corner of the square where the postoffice building now
stands. Early in January, 1790, the small-pox was intro-
duced amongst the inhabitants by a moving family, and
it was thought prudent for Mrs. Barker to go to Belpre
and live in her father's family, until the danger was passed.
Mr. Barker not having had the disease, was inoculated
about the middle of January, as were a large portion of the
inhabitants of Marietta. For pest-houses, several small
JOSEPH BARKER. 439
log buildings were put up on the border of the plain. On
the 30th of that month he wrote to his wife. " I am living in
a little, clean log-cabin that is six feet wide, seven feet long,
and four and a half high. We make out to sit up, but can-
not stand straight. We lodge very well." This shows the
narrow accommodations to which some of the inhabitants
had to submit. Those in Campus Martius had larger
rooms, but were also very much crowded. He passed
through the disease favorably, but was not allowed to visit
his wife at Belpre, on account of the danger to the inhabit-
ants, until the forepart of March.
On the 28th of February, Mrs. Barker gave birth to a
son, the present honorable Joseph Barker, of Newport. He
was the first child born in that township, and has several
times represented Washington county in the state Legislature.
Some time in the spring of the year 1790, he moved his
wife and little son to Marietta, where he remained until the
autumn of 1793.
The Indian war began in January, 1791, yet, notwith-
standing the danger, he lived in his own house during a
part of the time, retiring to the stockade at the Point
when the rangers reported signs of Indians in the vicinity,
and returning to his own domicil when the danger was at a
distance. Soon after the war broke out, he was appointed
an orderly-sergeant, in the pay of the United States by Col.
Sproat, who was the military agent, with the rank of a lieu-
tenant-colonel.
The condition of the Ohio Company's settlements at the
time of his arrival, and for a year or two after, cannot be
better described than in his own words.
In November, 1789, at the time of my arrival, ninety
families had landed, and associations embracing two hun-
dred and fifty settlers had been formed, and improvements
had commenced in several of them. By May, 1790, there
440 JOSEPH BARKER.
were very few lots in Belpre and Newbury without a settler.
On a return of all the men enrolled for militia duty in the
county, made to the secretary of war in March, 1791, their
number amounted to one hundred and ninety-five. But
after that I think the number increased, and the one hundred
thousand acres granted by Congress for donation purposes,
induced many to remain, and many more to come in, to
avail themselves of the terms of the donation.
In January, 1790, a new arrangement was made in the
militia, a company of artillery was formed, commanded by
Capt. William Mills, of Marietta, Lieut. George Ingersol, of
Belpre, and the late Gen. Joseph Buck, orderly- serge ant.
The infantry company was commanded by Maj. Nathan
Goodale, of Belpre, and Anselm Tupper, of Marietta, lieu-
tenant. Early in the spring, some alterations were made,
by which I was transferred from the artillery, and made or-
derly-sergeant of the company of infantry, and it became
my duty to keep a roll of every person amenable to military
service; to attend at the place of public worship, with my
roll; call every man's name, examine his arms and ammu-
nition, and see that he was equipped according to law. I
had also to note down and report all delinquencies. The
territorial militia law made it the duty of the troops, to as-
semble on Sunday morning, at ten o'clock, for inspection ;
those who attended public worship, and there were few who
did not, after the inspection, marched from the parade ground
to the room where service was held, preceded by the clergy-
man and Col. Sproat, the commandant at the Point garrison,
with his Revolutionary sword drawn, and the drum and fife,
and by Gen. Putnam and Gen. Tupper, at Campus Martins.
The citizens generally fell into the ranks, and the procession
moved, in military array, to wait on divine service ; the fife
and drum supplying the place of the church-going bell, in
the eastern states. In case of an alarm on the Sabbath,
JOSEPH BARKER. 441
that portion of the congregation who were armed, rushed
out of the meeting, to face the danger, or pursue the Indians,
which several times happened. After the war commenced,
the troops under pay, were the special guard for the garris-
ons, in the daytime, but were not connected with the citizens
in their military duties. The latter were held in prepara-
tion, to be called on for scouts and pursuing parties ; while
the guard was not allowed to leave the garrison, or the sen-
tinel his post, but they were both inspected at the same
hour by their respective officers, to see if they were prepared
for action at all times. Before the arrival of the Rev. Daniel
Story, who was the stated pastor, Thomas Lord, Esq., of
Connecticut, who had been educated at Yale college, and
studied theology preparatoiy to the ministry, officiated as
clergyman for the settlement. Previous to the commence-
ment of hostilities by this weekly inspection on the Sabbath,
when the most of the people were at home, but absent on
other days, the commandant was informed what proportion
of them were armed and equipped to defend the settlement;
emigrants frequently arrived without arms, so that the num-
ber of guns fell short of the number of men, and the de-
ficiency could not be made up in the settlement, and those
persons only who were known to have arms, were proceeded
against as delinquents. A short time previous to hostilities,
Col. Sproat had been authorized by the secretary of war to
enlist a company of men into the service of the United
States, out of the settlers, to be employed in guarding and
defending the settlements, and also to superintend and dis-
tribute them at the posts which most needed their aid. He
was directed to appoint a commissary to furnish provisions to
these troops, and employed Paul Fearing, Esq., Col. Sproat
being commander-in-chief, his aid was solicited in procuring
arms for the citizens, wrho were deficient. He immediately
wrote to the commanding officer at Fort Pitt, who sent down
442 JOSEPH BARKER.
about thirty old muskets which had been laid aside as unfit
for use ; they were put into the hands of the blacksmiths,
who repaired them as well as they could, and distributed
where most needed. Powder and lead were furnished, and
cartridges made to suit each caliber, and deposited in the
block-houses ready to be distributed in case of an attack.
In June, 1792, Col. Sproat received two boxes, containing
twenty-five stands each of United States muskets with bayo-
nets fresh from the factory. These were distributed to ihe
soldiers and citizens on their signing a receipt to return
them when called for, to Col. Sproat. The arms were never
called for, and are still in the county. The inhabitants were
now thought to be well armed ; many rifles were procured and
brought into the country. The northern men, previous to their
coming here, were unacquainted with the rifle and the woods,
but by practicing on the example of those who had been edu-
cated among the Indians and the forests, they soon became
good hunters and expert woodsmen. Those who were well
armed and good marksmen, were commonly selected as
sentries for the working parties in the fields, and were
always ready to start on any discovery of the enemy, or
pursue an Indian trail. Thus, by being familiar with dan-
ger, and inured to the hazard of a rencounter with their en-
emies, they gained that confidence in themselves which
promised, in case of meeting an Indian, the odds in their
own favor. Several followed hunting continually: others
were out with the rangers, or small parties, so that it was
difficult for an Indian to make a track within five miles of
a garrison without being detected. Thus a large portion of
the inhabitants became fearless of danger from the Indians,
and preferred some employment or enterprise abroad, to
being confined in the garrisons, which is evident from the
fact that nearly all the one hundred thousand acres of do-
nation land had been taken up, surveyed and deeded away,
JOSEPH BARKER. 443
with improvements made on many of the lots, previous to
Wayne's treaty. Where the lots bordered on large streams,
many had made considerable improvements during the war,
and others were ready to do so on the news of peace. All
the lots settled along the Ohio river below the Muskingum,
belonged to the Ohio Company's purchase, It is an axiom
with military men that rangers are the eyes of an army. It
proved true with respect to our settlements. The measure
of employing rangers was adopted previous to the com-
mencement of hostilities, and they were stationed at Mari-
etta and Waterford three months before the massacre at
Big Bottom ; and as the safety of the lives and property of
the inhabitants depended much on the vigilance and honesty
of these men, none were selected but such as possessed
these qualities. Their pay, under the Ohio Company, was
one dollar a day ; but under the United States, it was eighty-
four cents, or twenty-five dollars a month.
After naming and describing the persons of a number of
the rangers, he says, "Two men, Benjamin Patterson and
John Shepherd, from the state of New York, were employed
as rangers three of the first years of the war, and then
moved down the river. At the time of the controversy be-
tween Pennsylvania and Connecticut relative to their con-
flicting land claims on the Susquehanna river, the state of
Pennsylvania appointed Timothy Pickering, of Salem, Mass.,
the honest old Federalist, to go upon the ground and meet
others to adjust the difference. While there, this same Ben-
jamin Patterson was one of two or three men who took Picker-
ing from his bed at night, and conveyed him three miles into
the woods, and bound him fast to a white-oak sapling and
left him there to starve to death ; but after two or three days
Patterson returned, and went and unbound him, setting him
at liberty, for which outrage he fled from Wyoming to the
state of New York, and from thence to Marietta. It was
444 JOSEPH BARKER.
not uncommon for such characters to call at our settlement,
but finding neither plunder nor speculation, and their char-
acters soon pursuing them, they floated down the river.
To the plan early adopted of employing rangers, may be
attributed the general safety and success of the settlement
of Washington county. It was first proposed by Gen. Put-
nam, and afterward adopted by Congress. The Indians
finding themselves so closely watched by men who were
their compeers in their own arts of warfare, as well as more
vigilant and untiring soldiers, became indifferent to enter-
prises where they were likely to meet with more loss than
profit. The hope of reward is the great spring of human
action. Men who are not paid, nor fed nor clothed, may
make good partizans for a short emergency, but never make
good soldiers. Their patriotism soon cools. The hope of
plunder is the main stimulus with the Indians. Therefore
they crossed the Ohio river below and above — passing by
us, went a hundred miles beyond, on to the waters of the
Monongahela, where there was more plunder and less watch-
fulness. Revenge is sweet, but must not be bought too dear.
Parties of fifty or a hundred, who came on to attack us, sel-
dom remained about the settlements more than a week;
and larger bodies of a thousand or more, such as attacked
Gen. St. Clair and Fort Recovery, could not keep together
more than four or five days, as they had no means to pro-
vide food for the soldier or his family, when fighting the bat-
tles of his tribe. It is estimated, that in the seven years
previous to the war of 1791, the Indians, along the fron-
tiers south of the Ohio river, killed and took prisoners, fif-
teen hundred persons, stole two thousand horses, and other
property to the amount of fifty thousand dollars. This was
the declared object of the party who killed Mr. Carpenter
and the family of Armstrong.
The first physician who came to settle in Marietta, was
JOSEPH BARKER. 445
Dr. Jabez Farley, a son of Gen. Farley, of Old Ipswich,
Mass. He had been educated for a physician, and studied
medicine with old Dr. Holyoke, walking with him, as his
friends said, three years in the streets of Salem. He was a
modest, amiable, young man; always ready to obey the calls
of humanity, and had the good-will and confidence of all
who knew him. But as there were but few people, and those
young and healthy, (except the disease of an empty purse,)
his practice was very limited. As he was not fitted for any
other business, in the autumn of 1790, his medicine being
exhausted, he returned to Ipswich, and did not come out
again.
In the first settlement of the country, intermittent fever,
or fever and ague, was the prevailing disease, among all
classes, along the water-courses. It commenced about the
1st of August, and continued at intervals, until sugar-making
in February or March. Maple sugar was a valuable article
of diet, in families who had little or no salt meat, as this
focd was scarce and dear. Sugar was a substitute for many
things, and where they could get it, as most people could,
who took the pains of making it, was used freely, and some-
times exhausted their store, before the sickly season, in Au-
gust, arrived; when they were almost certain to be sick;
while those who had more substantial and solid food, es-
caped. Remitting or bilious fevers were not so common,
until long after the war. Industry and temperance were
preventives of most disorders, and a remedy for many more.
Gen. Putnam used to relate an anecdote of his own expe-
rience in the fever and ague. After concluding a treaty of
peace with the Wabash and Illinois Indians, in September,
1792, he was attacked with the fever and ague, and suffered
severely with this disorder, on his voyage up, performed in
a superb, twelve-oared barge, rowed by United States sol-
diers. He had a surgeon on board, who prescribed for him;
446 JOSEPH BARKER.
but debarred him from the use of stimulating food and drink.
His disease continued unabated, under this course, until he
reached this side of Gallipolis, when the boat landed at night-
fall, at a camp of hunters on the bank of the Ohio. They
had a profusion of bear meat, venison, and turkey. They
feasted themselves, and made every person welcome; but
the general was interdicted the savory contents of the camp-
kettle, by his surgeon, the very fumes of which were quite a
feast to a hungry stomach. He lay down on his blanket,
before the camp-fire, and tried to sleep, but the thoughts of
the rich contents of the camp-kettle, only a few feet from
him, prevented. As soon as all around him were lost in
slumber, he crept up to the side of the kettle, and feasted
his craving appetite on the well-seasoned bear meat and
venison, as long as he dared to indulge it. He had not a
single return of the ague after this night; showing that all
he needed, was more stimulating food than he had been al-
lowed to use for several weeks preceding.
As the Indians came into the treaty at Fort Harmer in
the fall of 1788, they employed themselves in hunting and
destroying the game, for which they had no use, (as they
were supplied with rations from the garrison,) except for
the skins of the deer. So great was their industry and per-
severance, that in the fall and winter they brought in deer
and turkeys, piling them up on the bank of the Muskingum,
at the Point, like a stack of hay, until the inhabitants were
obliged to assemble and throw them into the river, to abate
the nuisance. They left the carcasses about the woods,
which brought in the wolves and panthers, but destroyed
all the deer. A man by the name of Bagley, who was a
fiddler, and lived at Wolf creek mills, on his way to Mari-
etta one cold, snow-stormy day in March, was attacked by
a gang of wolves, who drove him up a tree, where he had
to sit and play the fiddle for them all night, until they left
JOSEPH BARKER. 447
him in the morning. When the Indians were asked why
they destroyed and wasted the game in such a manner, they
answered they meant to destroy and starve out every white
man north of the Ohio. They frequently alluded to the
prospect of repossessing their lands, and recovering their
good hunting grounds. One old Indian, when he drew his
blanket at the treaty, threw it over his shoulders, saying he
had got his cornfield on his back, but he would have it to
walk on next year. It was said there were four hundred
Indians, men, women, and children; and so thoroughly did
they destroy the game within ten miles of Marietta, that
scarcely a deer could be seen ; where, before, a good hunter
could kill from fifteen to twenty in a day. I have heard Ham-
ilton Kerr say, that the hills between Duck creek and Little
Muskingum, were the best hunting ground he had ever seen ;
that he could easily kill fifteen deer in a day, and frequently
in a morning. The Indians, by burning the woods every
year, kept down the undergrowth, and made good pasture
for the game and good hunting for themselves. The famine
of 1790 was much aggravated by this destruction of the
wild animals.
Early in March, 1791, Capt. Joseph Rogers, one of the
rangers, was killed by the Indians. He was a native of
Pennsylvania, and about fifty years old; a gentlemanly,
brave, humane soldier, and had been an officer in Col.
Morgan's rifle corps at the capture of Burgoyne. Having
served honorably through the Revolution, he, with many an
old soldier, marched toward the setting sun, on the forma-
tion of the Ohio Company, in the hope of finding a new
home in the west. He was in company with Edward Hen-
derson, another of the rangers, on their return from a tour
of duty, and was shot by a party of four Indians, on the
side of a hill a mile north of Campus Martius. Henderson
448 JOSEPH BARKER.
had several balls shot through his clothes, but made his
escape after being chased several miles, and reached the
garrison at the Point about twelve o'clock at night, where
he was recognized by the sentinel on duty, and admitted at
the gate on Ohio street. The commander was roused,
the cannon fired, and answered at Campus Martius and
Fort Harmer. The alarm ran through the garrison that
Rogers was killed, and Henderson chased into the post by
a large body of Indians, who were now at the gate making
an attack. All was consternation in the darkness of night,
but every one hastened to his alarm post. Some incidents
occurred which marked the propensities of different individ-
uals. The first person for admittance into the central block-
house was Col. Sproat, with a box of papers. Then came
some young men with their arms. Then a woman with her
bed and children. Next old Mr. William Moulton, from
Newburyport, aged seventy, with his leather apron full of
old goldsmith tools and tobacco. Close at his heels came
his daughter Anna, with the China teapot, cups and saucers :
Lydia brought the great Bible; but when all were in, their
mother was missing. Where was mother? She must be
killed ! No, says Lydia, mother said she would not leave
the house looking so; she would put things a little more to
rights, and then she would come. Directly mother came,
bringing the looking-glass, knives and forks, &c.
Messengers were soon exchanged with Campus Martius,
and no appearance of hostilities was discovered. All re-
turned to their homes in the morning, and peace was re-
stored to the little anxious community. A strong party of
men went out that forenoon, brought in the dead body of
Rogers, and buried him in second street, near the brink of
the plain."
Mr. Barker, as orderly-sergeant, had charge of the block-
JOSEPH BARKER. 449
house at the Point, where the inhabitants assembled at the
alarm of Indians, and was an eye-witness of the scene
described.
During the continuance of the war, he was exposed to
many dangers and trials, which he met with the fortitude of
a brave man, and was ready at all times to lead or to follow
wherever duty called him. Soon after the massacre at Big
Bottom, he was on the ground with a party of volunteers
from Marietta, and assisted in burying the burnt and mu-
tilated bodies of his countrymen. Also in the autumn of
1791, when Capt. Carpenter and four others were killed by
the Indians seven miles above Marietta, in Virginia, he was
early at the spot, and assisted in committing to the earth
their mangled bodies, which was a dangerous service, as the
savages might still be lurking in the vicinity of the place,
watching for their approach.
In August, 1793, the small-pox again visited Marietta,
and to avoid the infection in his family, he moved to Stone's
garrison, in the upper settlement of Belpre, built in the
spring of that year. But this enemy of the human race,
more subtle than the savage, could not be eluded, and Mrs.
Barker took the disease in the natural way. It proved to
be of the malignant, confluent kind, and she barely escaped
with her life, bearing about her person the marks of its vio-
lence the rest of her days. All the inhabitants of Belpre
who had not previously had the small-pox, were now inocu-
lated, turning their garrisons into so many hospitals. Be-
tween the Indians without their walls, and disease and want
within, they suffered extremely.
In the spring of 1794, a family by the name of Armstrong,
on the Virginia shore of the Ohio, in sight of Stone's garri-
son, was attacked by the Indians, four killed and three taken
prisoners. On this occasion he was one of the volunteers
who, on the first alarm, turned out from the garrison to
29
450 JOSEPH BARKER.
pursue the Indians, bury the dead, and give succor to such of
the family as escaped by not being in the house at the time.
These melancholy scenes were common during the war,
and tried the courage and the hearts of the bravest of the
settlers.
In the winter of 1793-4, he taught a school in the garri-
son. This post was about one hundred yards in length by
fifty yards in breadth, and contained five block-houses, and
six log dwelling-houses, with a school-house. The whole
were inclosed with stout palisades. The inmates consisted
of twelve families, and being generally prolific in children,
averaging from three or four to eight or ten in a family, they
could furnish a school of forty between the ages of four
years and twenty years. The heads of families in this
garrison were Capt. Jonathan Stone, Capt. William Dana,
Capt. Elias Gates, Col. Silas Bent, Stephen Guthrie, Israel
Stone, Simeon Wright, Isaac Barker, Joseph Barker, Wan-
ton Cosey, Benjamin Patterson, and Stephen Smith. The
school was an interesting one, and he spent the winter very
pleasantly in teaching the young idea how to shoot.
In February, 1795, the inhabitants of this little garrison
were doomed to lose one of their own number by the Indians.
Jonas Davis, an intelligent young man from New England,
and at the time living in Mr. Barker's family, incautiously
left the station one morning alone, and went about three
miles up the bank of the Ohio, for the purpose of getting
the boards and nails from a small boat he had discovered
wrecked in the ice on the shore, as he came down from Ma-
rietta the day before. Not returning that night, fears were
felt for his safety. The following morning all the inhabit-
ants of the garrison fit to bear arms, excepting Capt. Dana
and Col. Bent, who were rather infirm, were mustered to go
out in search of Davis. After cautiously reconnoitcring then-
way, he was found killed and scalped near the mouth of
JOSEPH BARKER. 451
Crooked creek, stripped of all his clothing but a shirt. Pre-
parations were soon made, for bringing the dead body to
the garrison, by lashing it with hickory withes to a pole.
In the meantime, one of the party, unused to such scenes,
became much alarmed at the sight of the dead and mangled
body, together with the surmises of Patterson, the ranger,
that the Indians were still lurking in the vicinity, watching
their motions, suffered his fears to get the better of his rea-
son, and started, full speed, for home. So much alarmed
was the man, that he fancied an Indian in every bush, and
thought he could see their dusky forms stalking from tree to
tree, ready to intercept him. In the meantime, the inmates
of the garrison were waiting, in anxious suspense, the return
of the party, and to hear the result of their search. At
length the person in the watch-tower gave notice of the ap-
proach of a messenger, at his utmost speed. A general rush
of the women and children, was made to the gate, to learn
the tidings. The man, out of breath, and pale with affright,
had hardly strength enough to relate that he had been chased
by the Indians, who filled the woods, and barely escaped with
his life, and he had no doubt the whole party were either
killed or taken prisoners. The gates were immediately
closed and barred, while every preparation in their power,
was made for defense, by the two old veterans, Dana and
Bent, who had both seen service in the American Revo-
lution. Grief, anguish, and confusion, for a short time per-
vaded this wretched group of mothers, wives, and children,
at the false intelligence of the fate of their dearest friends.
On more closely questioning the alarmed fugitive, as to the
particulars of the fight with the Indians, from his incoherent
account, they were led to hope the matter was not so disas-
trous as represented, and quiet began to be restored, while
they waited, in great anxiety, the return of the party.
It was a slow and laborious task, to bring the dead body
452 JOSEPH BARKER.
on their shoulders, and not regarding the flight of the run-
away as of any importance, or that he might cause need-
less alarm to their friends at home, they returned cautiously
along, keeping a good look-out for their wily foes, if any
were near. They, at length, to the great relief of the in-
mates of the garrison, made their appearance with the dead
body ; and as it was naked, they halted a few rods from the
gate, and called for a blanket to cover it. The article re-
quired, was carried out to them by Mr. Barker's little son,
Joseph, then only four years old, who, to this day, remem-
bers that distressing scene, with the anguish and alarm of
the occasion, with all the vividness of a recent event. This
was the last trial they had with the savages, as in August
following, the peace of Greenville was completed with the
western tribes.
From the time of his first coming to Marietta, Mr. Bar-
ker's intention was, to become the owner of a farm, but had
thus far been prevented by the hostilities of the Indians.
The donation lands of one hundred acres, had previously
been distributed to actual settlers, and his lot fell in Wise-
man's bottom, seven miles above Marietta ; to this he subse-
quently added three other lots, making a fertile and valuable
farm, of four hundred acres, the seat of his future home.
In April, 1795, he left the garrison, in a canoe, with two
of his wife's brothers, William and Edmond Bancroft Dana,
to assist him in making the first openirg on his wilderness
farm, taking with him — , in addition to his cooking utensils,
farming tools, and provisions — fifty young apple, and twelve
cherry trees ; it being one of the first acts of the thrifty
New Englanders, to provide their families with fruit, as well
as bread. The name of Wiseman's bottom originated from
a backwoodsman, who, while Virginia claimed the right to
all the lands northwest of the Ohio river, had made an entry
at this spot, of four hundred acres, called a settlement right.
JOSEPH BARKER. 453
It was upon this little improvement, that Mr. Barker began
his first clearing. There was yet considerable danger from
the Indians, as peace was not yet concluded, and a man was
killed by them about ten miles distant, on Wolf creek, in a
short time after. Nevertheless, the adventurers proceeded
up the Muskingum and commenced their labor. About the
time of their arrival a block-house had been built at Rain-
bow creek, on the opposite side of the river, by Gen. Put-
nam, where he proposed to erect a mill, distant about a
mile. In this building, during the time of their stay, the
party took shelter every night, returning to their work in
the morning with a gun on each one's shoulder, and an axe
in the hand. While at their work chopping down the trees,
one of the party was constantly kept on the lookout for
danger. In addition to their own watchfulness, they had
the aid of a faithful old dog, called Pedro, who accompanied
them from New Hampshire, and had been with them during
the war in Belpre. He would instinctively post himself on
some elevation, such as a big log, or the stump of a tree,
on the watch for the approach of an enemy, ready to give
the alarm on the least sign of its appearance, whether from
wild beast or savage.
They were thus occupied for three weeks, and made the
first permanent improvement in the Wiseman's bottom set-
tlement, a tract embracing two or three thousand acres, and
which subsequently became one of the most beautiful, well
cultivated tracts, and intellectual community on the Mus-
kingum river. During this time they had cleared about two
acres of ground in the rich bottom, which was thickly cov-
ered with immense trees of black-walnut and sugar-ma-
ple, the labor of removing and burning which no one can
tell, but him who has actually tried it. Holes were dug in
the fresh virgin soil, and apple trees planted out amidst the
gigantic sons of the forest, whose loftv heads were made to
454 JOSEPH BARKER.
bow at the presence of civilized man. The cherry trees
were not yet set, as they intended to remain a day or two
longer; but old Pedro notified them one afternoon that
danger was near. With the hair erect on his back, he would
rush into the thick woods on the side of the clearing, threat-
ening instant attack on some unseen enemy, but which his
acute olfactories enabled him to detect; then returning to
his master, seemed to say, " It is time to be off." This was
repeated at intervals for several hours, until near night,
when the party thought it would be more prudent to go. In
the meantime, as the apple-trees were not all set, when the
dog began his warning, two of the party stood on the watch
with their guns ready, while the third one finished the work
by setting the remaining trees near the bank of the river,
further from the edge of the woods, and from the concealed
danger, whatever it might be. They now stepped on board
the canoe with their faithful watch-dog, just at evening, and
by the aid of a rapid current and the vigorous application
of their paddles, they reached Stone's garrison, a distance
of nineteen miles, before ten o'clock that night.
In May, Mr. Barker returned to his farm and cleared an
additional piece of woodland, making in all about three
acres, which was planted in corn. He visited the little field
two or three times during the summer, to dress the corn and
witness its progress. Once he came alone, and staid three
nights, lodging as before in the block-house. These early
fields were planted without plowing. The seed-corn being
committed to the rich, loose, vegetable soil, grew with as-
tonishing vigor ; and where it received plenty of sunshine,
yielded fine crops. His little field produced about one hun-
dred and twenty-five bushels, which very fortunately escaped
the ravages of the squirrels and raccoons, there being an
abundant supply of food for them that year in the forest.
The final articles of peace were signed in August, 1795.
JOSEPH BARKER. 455
As soon as the intelligence reached the garrisons on the
Ohio and Muskingum, their inmates prepared to leave their
rude fortresses, where they had suffered much from the three
greatest scourges of the human race, war, famine, and
pestilence.
In December following, Mr. Barker, with his wife and
three children, left the garrison and landed at his new home
on the 18th of the month. The first thing that attracted
the notice of little Joseph on their going ashore at the new
farm, now the old homestead, was the fresh cut stumps of
the small willow trees that lined the water's edge, the work
of the half-reasoning beaver. These sagacious animals had
a lodge behind an island about a mile below, and another
a short distance above, at the mouth of Rainbow creek.
They were the last families of the race seen in this part of
the country, and were in a year or two after caught by that
venerable old trapper, Isaac Williams. The new dwelling-
house of the Barkers was a log-cabin sixteen feet square.
One side of this was occupied by a corn-crib four or five feet
in width, made of poles, containing the crop of the little
clearing. On entering the future home of the family, in a
cold December night, it may be safely said that no future
visitors of the dwelling of Mr. Barker, ever met so cold a
reception as they themselves did, on that long-remembered
evening. The nearest neighbor was at Marietta, seven
miles below; the next at Waterford, fifteen miles above.
The fortitude and perseverance requisite to meet the hard-
ships and privations of a settlement in the wilderness, were
found centered in this family. Mrs. Barker possessed pa-
tience, resolution, industry, and good sense; all needed, in
no small degree, in trials of this kind. During that winter
the clearing was considerably enlarged, and two hundred
peach-trees were added to the orchard in the spring. Mills
for grinding Avere scarce and remote; and the hand-mill at
45C JOSEPH BARKER.
the block-house across the river, was their only dependence
for meal; but with a good crib of corn, and this resource,
famine was kept at a respectful distance.
In the following year, or 1796, the families of Capt. J.
Devol, John Russel, and Israel Putnam, moved into Wise-
man's bottom, and lessened by their vicinity the sense of
loneliness, as they were all social and well informed per-
sons. During the year, he put up a convenient hewed log-
house, with a brick chimney, a degree of refinement to which
but few new settlers arrive short of several years.
In January, a serious accident befell him, which was sensi-
bly felt for a long time. The little cabin which they had
recently left, accidently took fire, and was destroyed. It
was occupied as a work-shop, store-house, &c, and contained
a large stock of carpenter's tools, while in the loft was stored
away the crop of well rotted flax, ready for dressing, and
on which, before the introduction of cotton, the inhabitants
depended for their domestic cloth, and was a very important
article in every family. On one side of the building was
the pen containing the fat hogs, and were saved from the
flames with difficulty. In their fright they fled across the
river on the ice, into the woods, and were not found until
they were much lessened in value. All his bread-stuff for
the ensuing year was destroyed, as well as his tools brought
from New England. The intrinsic value of the articles was
not great, but to him was a serious affair, as it took away
his whole stay of bread and meat, with his main dependence
for clothing, and was a more afflicting loss than the burning
of a whole block of buildings, filled with goods, would be to
a rich Wall-street merchant.
To repair this disaster, Mr. Barker set to work at his trade,
like a sensible, resolute man, and followed the business of
a house-carpenter for several years in Marietta, erecting
dwelling-houses for the Hon. Paul Fearing, William Skinner,
JOSEPH BARKER. 457
Rev. Daniel Story, and many others, with the Muskingum
academy. In 1799 and 1800, he built the splendid mansion
of Mr. Blennerhassett, on the island since called by his
name.
About this time, ship-building commenced at Marietta and
on the Muskingum river, where many a tall oak which had
flourished for ages on its banks, two thousand miles from
the ocean, was destined to toss upon its waves, and to visit
far distant lands. In this new business, Mr. Barker took an
active part, and in 1802, built two vessels at his farm. One
was the Brig Dominic, for Messrs. Blennerhassett and
Woodbridge, and named for Mr. B's. oldest son. The other
was a schooner for E. W. Tupper, called the Indiana. In
1803, he built a brig called the Louisa, for the same man.
During the autumn of 1806, he was employed by Mr.
Blennerhassett to build fifteen large batteaux, to be used in
the famous Burr expedition. After having been so exten-
sively employed, by the former gentleman, as an architect,
and to his entire satisfaction, it was very natural for him to
select Mr. Barker for this purpose, of constructing boats so
necessary to the enterprise. They were calculated for the
ascent of water-courses, and were doubtless intended to
transport troops and munitions of war up Red river, to
Natchitoches, from which point a short land journey would
reach New Mexico, then a province of old Spain. To revo-
lutionize the Mexicans, was, beyond controversy, the object
of that ardent, bold, and restless man, Aaron Burr. The
result is well known to history.
As early as 1799, Mr. Barker was commissioned, by Gov.
St. Clair, as a justice of the peace, for Washington county,
at that time embracing a large portion of the southern ter-
ritory of Ohio. He also received a captain's commission
from the same source, and was advanced, from time to time,
through the various grades of promotion, to that of colonel
458 JOSEPH BARKER.
of the regiment. These were offices of distinction and honor
in those days, when every citizen deemed it his duty to ap-
pear on parade, armed and equipped according to law. It
was during this period in our history, that the present sen-
ator, in Congress, from Michigan, Hon. Lewis Cass was or-
derly-sergeant in Capt. Burlingame's company of militia at
Marietta.
In the year 1800 the House of Representatives in the ter-
ritorial Legislature, issued an address to the citizens, re-
questing them to assemble in county conventions, and
instruct their representatives on the question of forming a
state government. It was a subject on which there was
great division of sentiment. At a meeting of the citizens
of Adams township, Col. Barker was chairman of a com-
mittee to report on this measure, at a subsequent assembly.
He wrote a very full and able report in opposition to the
question, which received the approbation of the committee.
On the 17th of June, 1801, the delegates met at Marietta,
as follows: for Marietta, Paul Fearing, and Elijah Backus;
Belpre, Isaac Pearce, and Silas Bent; Waterford, Robert
Oliver, and Gilbert Devol; Adams, Joseph Barker; New-
port, Philip Witten, and Samuel Williamson ; Middletown,
(or Athens,) Alvin Bingham; Gallipolis, Robert SafFord.
Gilbert Devol was chairman, and Joseph Barker, clerk. Col.
Barker presented his views in a well written argument, in
opposition to the policy of entering into a state government;
especially setting forth the injurious effects, of the measure,
to the settlers in the Ohio Company's purchase. They had
been struggling with the hardships of first opening the wil-
derness, since the year 1788; and for a large part of the
time, pressed by the merciless savage to the extremes of
want, danger, and even death. The population was sparse,
and generally poor. The expenses of government would be
heavy in proportion to the inhabitants, while the advantages
JOSEPH BARKER. 459
of a state government, over the territorial, would be few,
perhaps none, in their present situation. The taxes to sup-
port it, would fall on the actual settlers and landholders,
as the Ohio Company lands would all be brought on the
tax list, while Congress lands, daily becoming more valuable
by the improvements of the settlers, were to be free from
taxation. These, with various other reasons, were used in
support of the position taken, and were so satisfactoiy to
the convention, that the report was unanimously adopted,
and the following resolution passed :
" Resolved, That in our opinion, it would be highly impol-
itic, and very injurious to the inhabitants of this territory,
to enter into a state government, at this time. Therefore,
we, in behalf of our constituents, do request that you would
use your best endeavors to prevent, and steadily oppose
the adoption of any measures that may be taken for the
purpose."
This, with the usual preamble, was signed by the chair-
man, and sent to their representatives.
In the Legislature as well as among the people, there was
a great division on this important question. Those who
were fond of office and expected promotion, with a share
of the loaves and fishes of the new dynasty, were the leaders
in favor of the measure, and clamorous for its adoption,
while the sober, judicious, and thinking men, were opposed
to it. The advocates of the proposition, however, succeeded
in rallying sufficient force in the Legislature, to carry the
measure, and the eastern portion of the territory became
the state of Ohio. So anxious were the ambitious men of
the territory for the change, that they relinquished the right
of taxing the lands owned by Congress until five years after
they had been sold and in the possession of the purchaser ;
when, in equity, they should have been liable to taxation as
soon as they were in his occupancy. The apprehensions
460 JOSEPH BARKER.
of the evil results to the Ohio Company settlers, were soon
realized, as the taxes for the support of the new government
fell very heavily on them, and were very oppressive on the
inhabitants of this district, as well as Symmes' purchase
and the Connecticut reserve. This inequality remained
until the year 1825, when the ad valorem system took place,
and removed this long continued injustice.
Although an unaspiring man, yet Col. Barker was called
by his fellow citizens to hold many stations of trust and
honor during his life. In 1818, he was elected a representa-
tive for Washington county, in the state Legislature. He
served for a number of years as a county commissioner, and
planned the model for the new court-house, built in 1822,
which is considered both a convenient and beautiful edifice.
He was often called on to deliver Fourth of July orations
and agricultural addresses, in all which he acquitted himself
with much credit. He possessed a good share of poetic
genius, as well as imagination, and wrote a number of
pieces quite well adapted to the occasion. One of these,
for the Fourth of July, 1815, abounds in humor, and is well
worth preserving as coming from the backwoods. It appears
much better when sung than in simply reading.
THE BIRTHDAY OF UNCLE SAM.
TUNE OF GOOD QUEEN BESS.
Will you hear me, my friends, if I jingle in rhyme S
On the day Uncle Sam was first out of his prime, sir,
If I sing of the times, and the deeds he has done,
How he dress'd, how he fought, how the battle was won, sir?
Hail to the memory of old Uncle Sam,
Merry be the birthday of old Uncle Sam I
The family was young, and the farm rather new ;
They had their odd notions like us, not a few, sir,
JOSEPH BARKER. ;461
Had full faith in. witches, gave conjurors devotion,
And to the oldest boy they gave a double portion, sir.
Proud be the birthday of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Our grandsires wore buckles on their shoes for to please ;
Their jackets and their breeches both came to their knees, sir,
With a wig on the head and a cue tail so trim,
Nine inches on a hat was a fashionable brim, sir.
These were the boyish days of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Our grandmothers, too, were the patterns of good taste,
Three-quarters of a yard was the length of a waist, sir ;
A cushion on the head, and a cork on the heel,
With a hoop in the gown quite as broad as a wheel, sir.
Such were the minor days of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
They were tenants at will of the famous Johny Bull,
Who demanded high rents and collected them in full, sir;
He tax'd them direct for each article they wore,
While his army and his stamp act vex'd them very sore, sir.
These were the sorry days of old Uncle Sam,
Merry be the birthday of old Uncle Sam.
"He'd a right to tax the colonies," so Johnny Bull declared,
" In any case whatever." Uncle Sammy thought it hard, sir,
But when he tried to make them pay a tax on their tea,
'Twas steep' d in Boston harbor, for the fishes in the sea, sir.
These were the spunky days of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Then Johnny Bull was wrath, and to give his passion vent,
He fell on Uncle Sam, and at fisticuffs they went, sir,
The squabble lasted long, and it proved very sore,
Tor Johnny Bull was pelted both behind and before, sir.
These were the fighting days of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Every farmer owned a short gun, and if he had good luck,
Could bring down a redcoat as easy as a buck, sir.
462 JOSEPH BARKER.
And when they fell in with Burgoyne and his men,
They took them as easy as turkeys in a pen, sir.
Proud be the birthday of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Every boat was a ship, every ship was a fleet ;
Every boy was a sailor, every fisherman a mate, sir ;
And then if the British but peep'd from their holes,
They hook'd them as easy as cod from the shoals, sir.
Proud be the memory of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
Uncle Sam now obtained some allies and a fleet,
Some bayonets and men, with some rations to eat, sir ;
Then in taking Cornwallis, so light was the job,
That they shelled him as farmers do corn from the cob, sir.
These were the proud days of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
At length, Johnny Bull thought 'twas best to make a peace ;
Eor in fighting for the feathers, he had lost all the geese, sir.
Then each made a promise they would do no more harm,
So he left Uncle Sam and his boys with the farm, sir.
Proud be the birthday of old Uncle Sam,
Long live the memory of old Uncle Sam.
In the year 1830, Col. Barker was elected an associate
judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and at the expiration
of the term in 1837, was again re-elected, which post he
held until his declining health led him to resign in 1842.
The duties of this office were discharged with great dignity
and propriety, while his intimate knowledge of the princi-
ples of law enabled him to give correct and satisfactory
decisions when his opinion was required.
His acquaintance through the state of Ohio was extensive,
and his friends numerous. In hospitality, he was unsur-
passed; fond of social intercourse, gifted with a ready flow
of language, and a mind well stored with historical facts,
his conversation was both instructive and interesting. This
JOSEPH BARKER. 463
rendered his society very pleasing to both young and old.
From the time of his settlement on the Muskingum, in 1795,
to the period of his death, in 1843, nearly half a century,
his house was open to receive the weary and destitute emi-
grant, the transient traveler, or the familiar friend; ever
delighting in the opportunity of rendering a kindness to his
fellow-man.
He was the father of ten children, four sons and six
daughters, who, all but one, were living at his death, and
most of them have large families of children, making nu-
merous descendants to bear onward the family name.
Mrs. Barker died in 1835.
Nearly all those with whom he had " stood shoulder to
shoulder" during the Indian war, and the trials incident to
a new country, had been called away before him, and he
felt that he was somewhat alone in the world, but he still
retained the vigor of mind incident to younger days.
He died in September, 1843, aged seventy-eight years.
In person, Col. Barker was tall and commanding, with a
stout, muscular frame ; finely formed features, of rather a
Roman cast, indicating manly firmness and intellectual
vigor. His manners were easy, naturally graceful and gen-
tlemanly, with the appearance and bearing of a man of
superior mind and talents; born to lead in the councils,
and to command the respect of the community in which
he dwelt.
HAMILTON KERR.
This bold, active, and enterprising borderer, was one of
the spies, or rangers, employed for the defense of the Ohio
Company settlements during the Indian war. He was a
finished backwoodsman, an adept in all the wiles and craft
of the hunter, as well as in the arts of partizan warfare.
He possessed the coolness and caution of old Isaac Wil-
liams, with the bravery and activity of Lewis Wetzel, having
been trained under the instruction and example of both
these noted pioneers.
Matthew Kerr, the father of Hamilton, was of Scotch de-
scent, from one of the northern counties of Ireland. He
immigrated to America, before the Revolutionary war, and
lived in Philadelphia, where his son Hamilton was born.
Soon after the close of the war, he moved his family west
of the mountains, and settled on Chartier creek, below Pitts-
burg. After staying here a short time, he removed to Wheel-
ing, and lived in the vicinity of the Wetzels for several
years. In 1787 he transferred his residence to the island,
just above the mouth of the Muskingum, and Hamilton,
then in the prime of manhood, engaged as a hunter for the
garrison of Fort Harmer, supplying them with wild meat.
While living on Wheeling creek, he was often the compan-
ion of Lewis Wetzel, the most famous hunter, and killer of In-
dians, in all that region ; having killed, it is said, thirty-seven
in the course of his life. His athletic frame, and bold bear-
ing when a boy, won for him the good-will of Lewis, and he
promised to give him the first opportunity that occurred, of
firing at an Indian, provided he felt certain that he could
" draw a sight" at one, without trembling. The well-grown
lad, then in his eighteenth year, answered, fearlessly, that.
HAMILTON KERR. 465
he would. It was not long before Lewis, in one of his hunt-
ing trips, fell on the trail of a party, and traced up their
camp. He directly hastened back for his young friend,
whom he found ready and willing for the attack. They crept
silently up to within a sure distance of their camp fire, and
at the dawn of day, each selecting his man from a party of
five or six, who were sitting in a circle round the fire, having
just risen from sleep, fired at the same time. Hamilton's
victim was sitting on a log, eating a roasted goose egg, and
fell dead, into the ashes ; while Wetzel's man was mortally
wounded, but fled, and secreted himself in a tree-top. They
immediately rushed out from their covert, and with loud
yells, calling out, " Come on, boys, come on ; why don't you
head 'em;" as if there were quite a number of white men
in the attack. The remaining Indians took to flight, without
waiting to count their foes, and secreted themselves in the
thickets. After taking the scalp of the dead Indian, they
left the ground; and coming out the next day with a larger
party, traced the wounded Indian by his blood, and found
him dead in the spot where he had hidden. This was Kerr's
first adventure with the Indians, and might be construed as
an omen of future success ; although his next rencounter was
less propitious.
The time of a large portion of the young men who lived
on the frontiers, was occupied in hunting and trapping; lit-
tle attention being paid to cultivation of the earth, beyond
the wants of the family for bread, which was chiefly made
from corn meal. There was no market for produce ; while
there was a steady demand for skins and peltry, by the
traders, who collected them at various points along the wa-
ter-courses, and transmitted them, on pack-horses, across the
mountains, to Baltimore or Philadelphia. This manner of
dealing, made hunting a regular employment, like farming
in these days.
30
466 HAMILTON KERR.
In the spring of the year 1784, before Fort Harmer was
built, or any settlements made by the whites, between Ba-
ker's station and the mouth of Big Kenawha, a party of
young men left the post in a large canoe on a trapping and
hunting expedition. It was composed of Lewis and George
Wetzel, John Greene, Hamilton Kerr, and one other man.
They dropped down the river as low as Muskingum island,
where they encamped. The next day at evening they
went over to the mouth of the Muskingum, and set their
traps for beaver, returning to the island as a safe place for
their camp, against the attack of the Indians. The follow-
ing morning they went down again, and thirty or forty rods
above the mouth, landed two of their party to reconnoiter,
and examine the woods for signs of an enemy, while the
other three remained in the canoe, and went into the Mus-
kingum to examine their traps. They directly discovered
that several of them were missing, and immediately con-
cluded that a party of Indians had discovered their marks,
and stolen them. George Wetzel soon returned to the
canoe, and reported that he had seen no Indians, but plenty
of signs of bears, which had been wallowing and tearing
lown the weeds in several places. This confirmed their
suspicions that they were in the vicinity of a large party of
Indians. Taking George on board, they pushed up the
Ohio, and had proceeded twenty or thirty rods on their re-
turn, when four Indians stepped on to the bank, and from
behind trees fired upon the men in the canoe. George Wet-
zel was shot through the head, and fell dead into the boat.
Kerr was shot in the left arm above the elbow, splintering
the bone, and received a bullet at the same time through
the fleshy portion of his side. His dog, a noble, large an-
imal standing by his master, was also killed. The other
two men escaped injury; and pushing out into the stream
before they could reload, were soon out of danger.
HAMILTON KERR. 467
John Greene, who rambled farther into the woods than
George, had returned to within a few rods of the bank,
when the Indians fired, and hearing the report of their rifles,
rushed up to see what his comrades had shot at. As he ap-
proached within twenty yards of the bank, he saw an In-
dian behind a tree, in the act of pushing down a bullet in
his rifle. Comprehending at once the condition of the par-
ties, he instantly raised his piece, fired, and the Indian fell
dead, tumbling headlong down the bank, near the brink of
which he was standing, and rolled close to the water's edge.
The other Indians, hearing the report of the shot, and see-
ing their dead companion, came rushing upon their new
enemy before he could reload. His only safety was now
in flight; and running toward the swamp a short distance
back from the river, in the windings and turnings of the
pursuit, counted not less than ten or twelve Indians, whom
the shots and the war-cry of the savages had called into the
chase. After wading in the water for some time, and seeing
no chance for escape by flight, he secreted himself under
the tops of a fallen tree, whose leaves and branches shel-
tered him from observation. As a further precaution, he
buried himself beneath the water, leaving only so much of
his face uncovered as allowed of respiration. This was a
common mode of eluding pursuit, practiced by the natives,
as well as cunning white men. The Indians, a few rods
behind, traced him by the turbid appearance of the water,
and walked directly on to the trunk, beneath whose top he
lay concealed. Looking up through his leafy covert, he
plainly saw his enemies, peering into every crevice, and be-
hind every twig for their victim, vociferating in angry tones
their vengeful thoughts, and pointing with their gun-sticks
to the recent signs of his flight. Greene lay perfectly quiet,
hardly daring to breathe, fearing lest even the beating of
his heart should agitate the water; watching with intense
468 HAMILTON KERR.
anxiety their movements, until finally, to his great relief,
they gave up the search as hopeless. As soon as the dark-
ness of night concealed his movements, he left his watery
bed, wet, weary, and hungry. Having a long journey
before him, he instantly commenced his march for home,
thankful that he had been able to escape the scalping-knife
of his foes. He traveled across the ridges, the nearest
route, well known to the hunters of that day. In the course
of his journey he passed no less than three deserted Indian
hunting camps, so recently left that the fire was still burn-
ing, without being discovered. So rapid was his march,
that he reached Baker's before his companions in the canoe,
who pushed up stream as rapidly as they could, and buried
the dead man on an island twenty-five miles above Mari-
etta, now known as Williamson's. This mournful work de-
tained them some time, as they had no spades but their
wooden paddles with which to dig the grave. The favorite
dog of Kerr, whose dead body had made a pillow for the
head of his wounded master, was buried at the same place.
A few miles above this island at the head of the Long
reach, a spot well known to old as well as modern boatmen,
they discovered just at evening, during a heavy shower of
rain, on the Virginia shore, a white horse tied to a stake
near the water. On the top of the bank they saw a hickory
tree just stripped of the bark. The quick apprehension of
the borderers instantly understood these signs as denoting a
party of Indians who had stolen the horse, and were pre-
paring a bark canoe for crossing the river. The shower
coming on when they had finished it, the canoe was turned
bottom up, and the Indians had crept under as a shelter
from the storm. This prevented the whites from being seen.
They directly crossed to the other shore, and pushed rapidly
on until a turn in the river hid them from sight.
Kerr's arm was several months in healing, the bone being
HAMILTON KERR. 469
splintered, and no remedies but slippery-elm bark and such
other simples as the woods afforded. The injuries received
in this excursion, kept Hamilton from any other adventures
for some time. When able, he hunted deer in the neigh-
boring hills and visited the stations at Grave creek, where
Isaac Williams lived, and with whom he had become quite
a favorite, making various short tours of trapping and
hunting in his company, so that his house was as free to
him and nearly as much his home as that of his own father.
In 1785, the Indian depredations were frequent and de-
structive. Notice having been received of a large war party
fitting out for the attack of Grave creek, the settlement was
abandoned, and Mr. Williams moved his family, with the
rest of his neighbors, to Wheeling. Kerr also made this
place his home with his father. It was during this period
that he had a second narrow escape from death by the
Indians.
In the summer of 1785, in company with Thomas Mills
and Henry Smith, he went up the Ohio a few miles, near
the head of the first island above Wheeling, spearing fish
by torchlight. While busily occupied with their sport, think-
ing of no danger, in a quiet, shallow eddy near the shore,
ten or twelve Indians who had been attracted by the light,
rose up on the top of the bank, and fired a volley at them.
Mills, who was in the bow of the canoe near the torch, re-
ceived several balls in his body and limbs, and fell apparently
dead, into the bottom of the boat. The others were un-
harmed, but also fell down on the bottom of the boat, to
screen themselves from a repetition of the shots. The In-
dians seeing the effect of their fire, dropped their guns,
rushed down the bank, and into the river, with the intention
of dragging the canoe ashore, and securing the scalps of
their dead enemies. The splashing of the water gave no-
tice of their approach ; when Kerr, who was in the waist of
470 HAMILTON KERR.
the boat, sprang into the bow, and brandishing his fish-spear,
made motions to stab the first man who came within his
reach. The long, barbed points of the instrument, made it
a formidable weapon to the half-naked bodies of the sav-
ages, while the resolute bearing of the man who wielded it,
made them "cautious of approaching too near. Although
he could have plunged it into several of them, he did not
think it prudent to do so, lest they should seize it, and drag
him ashore, or pull him out of the canoe. After one or two
minutes spent in this mimic warfare, the boat gradually re-
ceded, by the whirl of the eddy, into deeper water, and the
man in the stern, having so far recovered his senses from
the first shock, as to begin to apply his paddle, the)- were
soon out of their reach. The Indians, now with loud yells,
and aggravated rage at their disappointment and folly, in
leaving all their guns on the top of the bank, rushed up to
regain them, and running along the sandy beach ahead of
the boat, waded into the water, breast-high, to bring them
nearer the canoe, which was now in the middle of the stream.
While exulting at the prospect of escape, a new enemy
sprang up on the opposite side of the river. A party of In-
dians on their own shore, hearing the firing and shouts of
their countrymen, began to fire at them. The balls passed
all around, and through the sides of the canoe, but missed
the mark, as they generally dropped into the bottom, at the
sight of the flash, and were hid by the sides of the boat
After a pursuit of one or two miles, Kerr concluded that
this slow progress would be their destruction, and pushing
manfully ahead, regardless of their shots, was soon out of
their reach. When the enraged Indians saw that their vic-
tims would escape, they fell to taunting them with insulting
language and obscene attitudes. Kerr then keenly felt the
v. ant of his trusty rille, with which he could have shot sev-
eral of them; but no one had taken his arms with him, not
HAMILTON KERR. 471
expecting to meet an enemy, or to have use for anything,
but the fish-spear. When they reached the garrison at
Wheeling, Mills was still alive, and taken into the town,
where, under the care of Mrs. Rebecca Williams, and one
other skillful matron, he finally recovered from his hopeless
condition, having not less than twelve or fourteen different
wounds, with an arm and a leg broken by the shots of the
savages. On this occasion, the intrepidity and presence of
mind in Kerr, no doubt saved their lives from the toma-
hawk, and knives of the Indians ; while his mode of defense,
in their condition, was the only one that could have been
effectual.
The winter after this adventure was passed in Wheeling.
Early in the spring of 1786, Kerr, in company with Isaac
Williams and a Dutchman named Jacob, made a visit to
the deserted plantations at Grave creek, to look after the
cattle and hogs that had been left there. They passed the
night in an empty cabin at Little Grave creek, about a mile
above the larger stream. Soon after daylight in the morning,
they heard a rifle shot in the direction of Mr. Williams' farm.
Not thinking of Indians, he attributed the shot to moving
boatmen, who sometimes, when short of provision, landed
at the deserted clearings and killed a hog. It so happened
that a party of four Indians, who had been scouting on
Wheeling creek, had that morning reached the Ohio with
their plunder, one white prisoner and some horses; seeing
Mr. Williams' hogs, they killed one with the rifle and put it
into their canoe, which had been secreted in the mouth of
the creek. Three of the Indians took possession of the
canoe with their prisoner, while the fourth was busied in
swimming the horses across the river. At this critical junc-
ture, Kerr and his companions started at a rapid gait to
arrest the marauders. Being in the prime of life and more
active than his companions, he reached the mouth of the
472 HAMILTON KERR.
creek first, and looking down the bank, saw the three Indians
standing in the canoe. At the feet of the one in the middle
of the boat lay four rifles and a dead hog, while a fourth
Indian was swimming a horse over the Ohio, a few rods
from the shore. An Indian in the stern had his paddle in
the water, in the act of shoving the canoe from the mouth
of the creek into the river. Before they were aware of his
presence, Kerr shot the Indian in the stern, who fell into the
river. The crack of his rifle had scarcely ceased when
Williams came on to the bank, and shot an Indian in the
bow of the canoe, who also fell overboard. At this time
Jacob came up, and handing his rifle to Kerr as the better
marksman, he shot the other Indian in the waist of the boat,
who also fell into the water, but still held on to the side of
the canoe with one hand. So amazed was the latter Indian
at the fall of his companions, that he never offered to raise
one of the rifles at his feet in self-defense, but acted like
one deprived of his senses. By this time, the canoe impelled
by the impetus given to it by the first Indian, had reached
the current of the Ohio, and was some rods below the mouth
of the creek. Kerr now reloaded his own gun, and seeing
a man in the bottom of the boat, raised it in act of firing,
when he, discovering the movement, called out, " Don't shoot,
I am a white man." He was directed to knock loose the
Indian's hand from the side of the canoe, and paddle to
shore. In reply, he said his arm was broken. The current,
however, set it near some rocks not far from land, on to
which he jumped and waded out. Kerr now aimed his rifle
at the Indian on the horse, who was near the middle of the
river. The shot struck close by him, splashing the water
on to his naked skin. Seeing the fate of his companions,
the Indian, with the bravery of an ancient Spartan, imme-
diately slipped from the horse, and swam for the abandoned
canoe, in which were the rifles and ammunition of the whole
HAMILTON KERR. 473
party. This was in fact an act of necessity, as well as of
noble daring, for he well knew he could not reach his country
without the means of killing game by the way. There was
also in this act but little hazard, as his enemies could not cross
the creek without a canoe, while the current had now set
the object of his solicitude beyond the reach of rifle shot.
He soon gained possession of the canoe, crossed with it to
the other shore, and taking out the arms and ammunition,
mounted the captive horse, and with a shout of defiance,
escaped into the woods. The canoe was turned adrift and
taken up near Maysville, with the dead hog still in it, which
had caused their discovery by their shooting, and been the
source of all their misfortunes.
The following year he moved with his father to Devol's
island, near Fort Harmer, where the latter kept several cows
and supplied the officers with milk, while Hamilton was
employed as a hunter to furnish the garrison with buffalo
meat and venison. Isaac Williams and several other families
also moved at the same time, being the spring of 1787, and
opened a plantation in the forest, opposite the mouth of the
Muskingum, on the Virginia shore. In the spring of 1791,
after the death of Capt. Rogers, one of the Ohio Company's
rangers, he was hired to supply his place, and was esteemed
the most active and brave man in that hazardous employ-
ment. He continued to serve during the whole war, and
several Indians fell by his hand, as related in the preceding
history of the Ohio Company settlements. During this
period, his father's family left the island, and lived within
the walls of the garrison at the Point. The Indians killed
his father early in the war, at the mouth of Duck creek,
which still further sharpened his revenge and hate of the
red men.
At the close of the war he married Susannah, the daugh-
ter of Col. John Nighswonger, one of the heroes of the
(yjt/i*
>^
474 HAMILTON KERB.
battle of Point Pleasant. She was well educated, and
could read German and English, while Hamilton could do
neither, having never been a day to school in his life. He
owned a share of land in the Ohio Company, the purchase
money for which was earned in the course of a single fall
and winter hunt; so profitable was that business in early
times to skillful hunters. With the most intelligent men
amongst the Ohio Company's settlers, Kerr was a great fa-
vorite, for his manly, upright conduct, vigilance, and bravery
in guarding the settlements from the attack of the Indians.
In person, he was of a full medium size, being five feet
ten inches in hight, as ascertained from one of Col. Sproat's
old pay-rolls, with limbs fashioned in nature's finest mould ;
form erect, and movements agile as any red man of the
forest; of a pleasant, cheerful temperament; fight complex-
ion, blue eyes, and reddish hair, denoting his Scotch descent;
fine, full forehead, with all the marks of a superior mind
and intellect. This had received no training but what his
own remarks on men and things had produced ; but for re-
flection and strong reasoning powers, was far superior to
men of his class, causing him always to be looked up to as
a leader in any dangerous emergency by his companions.
He was born in the year 17G4, malting him twenty years
old at the time the Indians wounded him at the mouth of
the Muskingum.
After the war, he settled on his land at the outlet of
Leading creek; learned to read and write, became a sub-
stantial farmer, a major in the militia, and highly esteemed
by all his neighbors. He has been dead several years,
leaving a large family of descendants, who live in Meigs
and Gallia counties.
ISAAC WILLIAMS AND MRS.
REBECCA WILLIAMS.
To those who are now enjoying the benefits of the toils
and dangers of the early explorers and pioneers of the
valley of the Ohio, there ought to be no more pleasant em-
ployment than that of recounting their exploits and preserv-
ing the remembrance of their names. It is a duty we owe
to their memory. Amongst that hardy list of adventurers,
on the left bank of the Ohio, none are more worthy of pres-
ervation than those at the head of this article.
Isaac Williams was born in Chester county, Penn., the
16th of July, 1737. While he was yet a boy, his parents
moved to Winchester, Va., then a frontier town. Soon
after this event his father died, and his mother married Mr.
Buckley. WThen he was about eighteen years old, the
colonial government employed him as a ranger, or spy, to
watch the movements of the Indians, for which his early
acquaintance with a hunter's fife eminently fitted him. In
this capacity he served in the army of Gen. Braddock,
during his short, but disastrous campaign. He was also
attached to the party which guarded the first convoy of pro-
visions to Fort du Quesne, after its surrender to Gen.
Forbes, in 1758. The stores were carried on pack-horses
.over the rough declivities of the mountains, continually
exposed to the attack of the Indians, for which the deep
ravines and narrow ridges of the mountains afforded every
facility.
After the peace made with the Indians, in 1765, by Col.
Bouquet, the country on the waters of the Monongahela
ISAAC WILLIAMS.
began to be settled by the people east of the mountains.
The fertility of the soil, and the immense growth of the
forest trees, so different from that on the eastern side of the
mountain ranges, gave a romantic charm to the new regions
on the waters of the Ohio, and made it a desirable abode to
the backwoodsmen, especially as it abounded with wild
game. Amongst the early emigrants to this region were
the parents of Mr. Williams, whom he conducted across the
mountains, in 1768, but did not finally locate himself in the
west until the following year, when he settled on the waters
of Buffalo creek, near the present town of West Liberty,
Brooke county, Va. He accompanied Ebenezer and Jon-
athan Zane when they explored and located the country at
and about Wheeling, in the year 1769. Previous to this
period, however, he had made several hunting and trapping
excursions to the waters of the Ohio, and was familiar with
its topography. In returning from one of these adventurous
expeditions in company with two other men, in the winter
of 1769, the following incident befell him.
Early in December, as they were crossing the glades, or
table-lands of the Alleghany mountains, they were over-
taken by a violent snow-storm. This is always a stormy,
cold region, but on the present occasion the snow fell to the
depth of five or six feet, and put a stop to their further
progress. It was succeeded by intensely cold weather.
While thus confined to their camp, with a scanty supply of
food, and no chance of procuring more, one of his compan-
ions was taken sick and died, partly from disease, and
having no nourishment but the tough, indigestible skins of
their peltry, from which the hair was first burned off and
then boiled in their kettle. Soon after the death of this
man his remaining companion, from the difficulty of pro-
curing fuel to keep up their fire, was so much frozen in the
feet that he could render no further assistance. He managed,
ISAAC WILLIAMS. 477
however, to bury the dead man in the snow. The feet
of the poor fellow were so badly frosted that he lost all his
toes and a part of each foot, rendering him unable to walk
for nearly a month. During this time their food consisted
of their skins, of which they had a good supply, boiled into
soup with the water of melted snow. The kind heart of
Mr. Williams would not allow him to leave his friend in this
suffering condition, while he went to the settlements for as-
sistance, lest he should be attacked by the wolves, or perish for
want of food. With a patience and fortitude that would have
awarded him a civic crown in the best days of the chival-
rous Romans, he remained with his helpless companion until
he was so far recovered as to be able to accompany him in
his return home. So much reduced was his own strength
from the effects of starvation, that it was several months
before he was restored to his usual health.
In 17G9 he became a resident of the western wilds, and
made his home on the waters of Buffalo creek, as before
noted. Here he found himself in a wide field for the ex-
ercise of his darling passion, hunting. From his boyhood,
he had discovered a great relish for the hunter's life, and in
this employment he for several years explored the recesses
of the forest, and followed the water-courses of the great
valley, to the mouth of the Ohio, and from thence, along the
shores of the Mississippi, to the banks of the turbid Missouri.
As early as the year 1770, he trapped the beaver on the
tributaries of this river, and returned in safety, with a rich
load of furs. During the prime of his life, he was occupied
in hunting, and in making entries of lands. This was done
by girdling a few trees, and planting a small patch of corn,
which operation entitled the person to four hundred acres
of land. Entries of this kind were aptly called tomahawk
improvements. An enterprising man could make a number
of these in a season, and sell them to persons, who, coming
478 REBECCA WILLIAMS.
later to the country, had not so good an opportunity to se-
lect the best lands, as the first adventurers. Mr. Williams
sold many of the rights for a few dollars, or the value of a
rifle-gun, which was then thought a fair equivalent; of so
little account was land then considered ; and besides, like
other hunters of the day, thought wild lands of little value,
except for hunting grounds. There was, however, another
advantage attached to these simple claims ; it gave the pos-
sessor the right of entering one thousand acres adjoining
the improvement, on condition of his paying a small sum
of money per acre into the treasury of the state of Virginia.
These entries were denominated "Pre-emption Rights ; " and
many of the richest lands on the left bank of the Ohio river
are now held under these titles. After the conquest of Kas-
kaskias and Post Vincent, by Gen. Clark, in 1778, Virginia
claimed the lands on the northwest side of the Ohio ; and
many similar entries were made in the present state of
Ohio, especially on the Muskingum river, as high up as
Duncan's falls. One tract, a few miles above Marietta, is
still known as Wiseman's bottom, after the man who made
an entry there.
While occupied in these pursuits he became acquainted
with Rebecca Martin, the daughter of Mr. Joseph Tomlin-
son, of Maryland, then a young widow, and married her in
October, 1775. Her former husband, John Martin, had
been a trader among the Indians, and was killed on the Big
Hockhocking, in the year 1770. A man by the name of
Hartness, her uncle on the mother's side, was killed with
him at the same time. As a striking proof of the venera-
tion of the Indians for William Penn, and the people of his
colony, two men from Pennsylvania, who were with them,
were spared. The two killed, were from Virginia. The
fact is referred to by Lord Dunmore, in his speech at the
Tndian treaty, near Chillicothe, in the year 1774. Mr.
REBECCA WILLIAMS. 479
Williams accompanied Dunmore, in this campaign, and
acted as a ranger until its close.
By this marriage he was united to a woman whose spirit
was congenial to his own. She was born on the 14th of
February, 1754, at Will's creek, on the Potomac, in the prov-
ince of Maryland, and had removed, with her two brothers,
Samuel and Joseph, into the western country, in 1771, and
was living with them as their housekeeper, near the mouth
of Grave creek ; and for weeks together, while they were
absent on tours of hunting, she was left entirely alone.
She was now in her twenty-first year, full of life and ac-
tivity, and as fearless of danger as the man who had chosen
her for his companion. One proof of her courageous spirit
is related by her niece, Mrs. Bakey, now living near Mari
etta, in Wood Co., Va.
In the spring of the year 1774, she made a visit to a sister,
Mrs. Baker, then living on the Ohio river opposite to the
mouth of Yellow creek. It was soon after the massacre of
Logan's relatives at Baker's station. Having finished her
visit, she prepared to return home in a canoe, by herself,
the traveling being entirely done by water. The distance
from her sister's to Grave creek was about fifty miles. She
left there in the afternoon, and paddled her light canoe rap-
idly along until dark. Knowing that the moon would rise
at a certain hour, she landed, and fastening the slender craft
to the willows she leaped on shore, and lying down in a
thick clump of bushes, waited the rising of the moon. As
soon as it had cleared the tops of the trees, and began to
shed its cheerful rays over the dark bosom of the Ohio, she
prepared to embark. The water being shallow near the
shore, she had to wade a few paces before getting into the
canoe; when just in the act of stepping on board, her naked
foot rested on the dead, cold body of an Indian, who had
been killed a short time before, and which, in the gloom of
480 REBECCA WILLIAMS.
the night, she had not seen in landing. Without screaming
or flinching, she stepped lightly into the canoe, with the re-
flection that she was thankful he was not alive. Resuming
the paddle, she arrived at the mouth of Grave creek without
any further adventure, early the following morning.
Walter Scott's Rebecca, the Jewess, was not more cele-
brated for her cures, and skill in treating wounds, than was
Rebecca Williams amongst the honest borderers of the Ohio
river. About the year 1784, while living a short time at Wheel-
ing, on account of Indian depredations, she, with the assist-
ance of Mrs. Zane, dressed the wounds of Mr. Mills,
fourteen in number, from rifle shots. He, with Hamilton
Kerr and one other man, were spearing fish by torch-light
about a mile above the garrison, when they were fired on
by a party of Indians secreted on the shore. Mills stood in
the bow of the canoe holding the torch, and as he was a
fair mark, received the most of the shots. One leg and one
arm were broken, in addition to the flesh wounds. Had he
been in the regular service, with plenty of surgeons, he
probably would have lost one or both limbs by amputation.
These women, with their fomentations and simple applica-
tions of slippery-elm bark, not only cured his wounds, at the
time deemed impossible, but also saved both his limbs. In
a conversation many years after, she said her principal
dressings were made of slippery-elm, the leaves of stramo-
nium, and daily ablutions with warm water. Many similar
cures of gun-shot wounds are related, as performed by her
in the first settlement of the country.
Their marriage was as unostentatious and simple as the
manners and habits of the parties. A traveling preacher
happening to come into the settlement, as they some-
times did, though rarely, they were married at her brother's
house, without any previous preparation of nice dresses,
bride-cakes, or bride-maids; he standing up in his hunting
REBECCA WILLIAMS. 481
dress, and she in a short gown and petticoat of homespun,
the common wear of the people.
In the summer of 1774, the year before her marriage, she
was one morning busily occupied in kindling a fire prepar-
atory to breakfast, with her back to the door, on her knees,
puffing away at the coals. Hearing some one step cau-
tiously on the floor, she looked round and beheld a tall In-
dian close to her side. He made a motion of silence to
her, at the same time shaking his tomahawk in a threatening
manner, if she made any alarm. He, however, did not
offer to harm her, but looking carefully around the cabin,
espied her brother's rifle hanging over the fire-place. This
he' seized upon, and fearing the arrival of some of the men,
hastened his departure without any further damage. While
he was with her in the house she preserved her presence of
mind, and betrayed no marks of fear; but no sooner had
he gone than she left the cabin and hid herself in the corn-
field until her brother Samuel came in. He was lame at
the time, and happened to be out of the way; so that it is
probable his life was saved from this circumstance. It was
but seldom that the Indians killed unresisting women or
children, except in the excitement of an attack, and when
they had met with resistance from the men.
In 1777, the depredations and massacres of the savages
were so frequent that the settlement at Grave creek, now
consisting of several families, was broken up. It was the
frontier station, and lower on the Ohio than any other
above the mouth of Big Kenawha. This year the Indians
made their great attack on the garrison and settlement of
Wheeling. Mr. Williams, with his wife and the Tomlinsons,
moved over on to the Monongahela river, above Red Stone
old fort. Here he remained until the spring of the year
1783, when he returned with his wife's relations to their
plantations on Grave creek. In the year 1784 he had to
31
482 ISAAC WILLIAMS.
remove again from his farm into the garrison at Wheeling.
Some time in the spring of the succeeding year he had the
following adventure with the Indians.
John Wetzel, a younger brother of Lewis, the noted In-
dian hunter and Indian hater, (having killed above thirty of
them,) then about sixteen years old, with a neighboring boy
of the same age, was in search of horses that had strayed
away in the woods on Wheeling creek, where the father of
John resided. One of the stray animals was a mare with
a young foal, belonging to John's sister; and she had offered
the colt to John as a reward for finding the mare. While
on this service they were captured by four Indians, who,
having come across the horses in the woods, had taken and
placed them in a thicket, expecting that their bells would
attract the notice of their owners, and they could then cap-
ture them or take their scalps. The horse wras ever a fa-
vorite object of plunder with the savages, as not only
facilitating their own escape from pursuit, but also assisted
them in carrying off the spoils. The boys, hearing the well
known tinkle of the bells, approached the spot where the
Indians lay concealed, and were taken prisoners. John, in
attempting to escape, was shot through the arm. On their
march to the Ohio, his companion made so much lamenta-
tion on account of his captivity, that the Indians killed him
with the tomahawk ; while John, who had once before been
a prisoner, made light of it, and went along cheerfully with
bis wounded arm.
The party struck the Ohio river early the following morn-
ing at a point near the mouth of Grave creek, just below
the clearing of Mr. Tomlinson. Here they found some
hogs belonging to Mr. Williams, and killing one of them
with a rifle shot, put it into a canoe they had secreted when
on their way out. Three of the Indians took possession of
the canoe with their prisoner, while the other Indian was
ISAAC WILLIAMS. 483
occupied in swimming the horses across the river. It so
happened, that Mr. Williams, with Hamilton Kerr, and Ja-
cob, a Dutchman, had come down from Wheeling, the eve-
ning before, to look after the stock left on the plantation,
and passed the night at the deserted cabin of Tomlinson.
While at the outlet of Little Grave creek, about a mile
above, they heard the report of a rifle shot, in the direction
of his plantation. " Dod rot 'em," exclaimed Williams, " a
Kentuck boat has landed at the creek, and they are shooting
my hogs." Immediately quickening their pace to a rapid
trot, they, in a few minutes, were within a short distance of
the creek, when they heard the loud snort of a horse. Kerr
being in the prime of life, and younger than Williams,
reached the mouth of the creek first. As he looked down
into the stream, he saw three Indians standing in a canoe ;
one was in the stern, one in the bow, and one in the middle
of the boat. At the feet of the latter lay four rifles and the
dead hog ; while the fourth Indian was swimming a horse
across the Ohio, only a few rods from shore. The one in
the stern was in the act of shoving the canoe from the
mouth of the creek into the river. Before they were aware
of his presence, Kerr shot the Indian in the stern, who fell
into the water. The crack of the rifle had barely ceased,
when Mr. Williams came on to the bank, and shot the Indian
in the bow of the canoe, who also fell overboard; Jacob
was now on the ground, and Kerr seizing his rifle, shot the
remaining Indian in the waist of the boat. He fell over
into the water, but still held on to the side of the canoe, with
one hand. The whole process did not occupy more than a
minute of time. The canoe, impelled by the impetus given
to it by the Indian first shot, had reached the current of the
Ohio, and was a rod or two below the mouth of the creek.
Kerr had now reloaded his gun, and seeing another Indian,
as he thought, laying in the bottom of the canoe, raised it
484 ISAAC WILLIAMS.
in the act of firing, when he called out, " Don't shoot, I am
a white man." Kerr told him to knock loose the Indian's
hand from the side of the boat, and paddle it to the shore.
He said his arm was broken, and he could not. The cur-
rent, however, set it near some rocks not far from land, on
to whioh he jumped, and waded out. Kerr now aimed his
rifle at the Indian on horseback, who, by this time, had
reached the middle of the Ohio. The shot struck near him,
splashing the water on to his naked skin. He, seeing the fate
of his companions, with the bravery of an ancient Spartan,
slipped from the back of the horse, and swam for the aban-
doned canoe, in which were the rifles of the four Indians.
This was, in fact, an act of necessity, as well as of noble
daring, as he well knew he could not reach his country,
without the means of killing game by the way. He also
was aware, that there was little danger in the act, as his
enemies could not cross the creek to molest him. He soon
gained possession of the boat, crossed, with the arms, to his
own side of the Ohio, mounted the captive horse, which,
with the others, had swam to the Indian shore, and with a
yell of defiance, escaped into the woods. The canoe was
turned adrift, and taken up near Maysville, with the dead
hog still in it, which had led to their discovery by the shot,
and was the caii3e of all their misfortunes.
It has been otated that Mrs. Williams, before her mar-
riage, acted as housekeeper for her brothers several years;
in consideration of which service, Joseph and Samuel made
an entry, of four hundred acres of land on the Virginia
shore of the Ohio river, in that broad, rich bottom, directly
opposite to the mouth of the Muskingum river, for their
sister; girdling the trees on four acres of land, fencing, and
planting it with corn, and building a cabin, in the spring of
the year 1773. They spent the summer on the spot, occu-
pying their time with hunting during the growth of the crop.
ISAAC WILLIAMS. 485
In this time they had exhausted their small stock of salt
and bread-stuff, and lived for two or three months on the
boiled meat of turkeys, which then filled the woods, and
was used without salt. So accustomed had Samuel become
to eating his food without this condiment, that it was some
time before he could again relish the taste of it ; a fact that
has often been verified in others under similar circum-
stances; showing that the use of salt is acquired by habit.
The following winter the two brothers hunted on the Great
Kenawha, where bears and beavers greatly abounded. Some
time in March, 1774, they arrived at the mouth of the river
on their return, and were detained some days by a remark-
ably high freshet in the Ohio river, which, from certain fixed
marks on Wheeling creek, is supposed to have been fully
equal to that of February, 1832. This year was long
known among the borderers as that of Dunmore's war;
serving .as a date for domestic events, and noted for Indian
depredations.
The land entered thus early for Mrs. Williams still re-
mains in the possession of her descendants, but was for
many years contested, in law, by other more recent claim-
ants, like all the Virginia western lands ; causing great ex-
pense and anxiety to the rightful owners.
The renewed and oft-repeated inroads of the Indians, led
Mr. Williams to turn his attention toward a more safe and
quiet home than that at Grave creek. Fort Harmer, at the
mouth of the Muskingum, having been erected in 1786, and
garrisoned by United States troops, he decided on occupying
the land belonging to his wife, which embraced a large
share of rich alluvions, and was in sight of the fort. The
piece opened by the Tomlinsons, in 1773, had grown over
with young saplings, but could be easily reclaimed. He
visited the spot, and put up a log-cabin in the winter, and
486 ISAAC WILLIAMS.
moved his family thither the 26th of March, 1787, being the
year before the arrival of the Ohio Company.
Soon after the removal to his forest domain, his wife gave
birth to a daughter; and was the only issue by this marriage.
He was now fifty-two yearn old, so that she might be called
the child of his old age. She was named Drusilla; and
married Mr. John Henderson ; but died when about twenty
years old, leaving no children.
Soon after the associates of the Ohio Company had set-
tled at Marietta, a very friendly intercourse was kept up
between them and Mr. Williams ; and as he had now turned
his attention more to farming than hunting, he was pleased
to see the new openings made in the forest, and the wilder-
ness changing into the home of civilized man. From the
destructive effect of an untimely frost in September, 1789,
the crops of corn were greatly damaged; and where late
planted, entirely ruined.
In the spring and summer of 1790, the inhabitants in the
new settlements of the Ohio Company, began to suffer from
the want of food, especially wholesome bread-stuffs. Many
families, especially at Belpre, had no other meal than that
made from moldy corn ; and were sometimes destitute even
of this, several days in succession. This moldy corn com-
manded the price of a dollar and a-half, and even two dol-
lars a bushel. When ground in their hand-mills, and made
into bread, few stomachs were able to digest, or retain it,
more than a few minutes. The writer of this article, has
often heard Charles Devol, Esq., then a small boy, relate,
with much feeling, his gastronomic trials with this moldy
meal made into sap-porridge; which, when made of sweet
corn meal, and the fresh saccharine juice of the maple, was
both a nourishing and a savory dish. The family, then liv-
ing at Belpre, had been without food for two days, when his
ISAAC WILLIAMS. 487
father returned from Marietta, just at evening, with a scanty
supply of moldy corn. The hand-mill was immediately
put in operation, and the meal cooked into sap-porridge,
as it was then the season of sugar-making. The famished
children swallowed eagerly the unsavory mess, which was
almost as instantly rejected; reminding us of the deadly
pottage of the children of the prophet ; but lacking the heal-
ing power of an Elijah to render it salutary and nutritious.
Disappointed of expected relief, the poor children went sup-
perless to bed, to dream of savory food and plenteous meals,
not realized in their waking hours.
It was during this period of want, that Isaac Williams dis-
played his benevolent feelings for the suffering colonists.
From the circumstance of his being in the country earlier,
he had more ground cleared, and had raised a large crop
of several hundred bushels of good, sound corn. This he
now distributed amongst the inhabitants at the low rate of
fifty cents a bushel, when at the same time he had been of-
fered, and urged to take, a dollar and twenty-five cents for
his whole crop, by speculators ; for man has ever been dis-
posed to take advantage of the distresses of his fellows.
" Dod rot 'em," said the honest hunter, "I would not let
them have a bushel." He not only parted with his corn at
this cheap rate, the common price in plentiful years, but he
also prudently apportioned the number of bushels to the
number of individuals in a family. An empty purse was
no bar to the needy applicant, but his wants were equally
supplied with those who had money, and a credit given un-
til more favorable seasons should enable him to discharge
the debt.
Capt. Devol, hearing of Mr. William's corn, and the low
rate at which he sold it, made a trip to Marietta, directly af-
ter the adventure, with the sap-porridge," to procure some
of it. The journey was made by land, and in the night,
488 ISAAC WILLIAMS.
traveling on the ridges adjacent to the river, as the stream
was so swollen by the spring flood, as to prevent the ascent
by water in a canoe. He chose to come in the night, on
account of danger from the Indians; and the intrepidity
of the man, may be estimated, from his traveling this dis-
tance, twelve or fourteen miles, alone. He reached Fort
Harmer at daylight; and Maj. Doughty, after giving him
a warm breakfast, directed two soldiers to set him across
the Ohio, in the garrison boat. Mr. Williams treated him
with much kindness; and after supplying him with corn,
also furnished him with his only canoe, in which to trans-
port it to his home. Capt. Devol was unwilling to take it;
but he urged it upon him, saying he could soon make an-
other. In after years, when Capt. Devol owned a fine farm
and mill on the Muskingum river, Mr. Williams used often
to visit him, and pass a night or two at his house, which was
the temple of hospitality, in the most social and pleasant
manner, talking of the trials and sufferings of bygone days.
He retained a relish for hunting to his latest years; and
whenever a little unwell, forsaking his comfortable home,
would take his rifle, and favorite old dog " Cap," accompa-
nied by one of his black servants, retire to the woods, and
encamping by some clear stream, remain there drinking the
pure water, and eating such food as his rifle procured, until
his health was restored. Medicine he never took, except
such simples as the forest afforded. The untrodden wilder-
ness was to him full of charms ; and before the close of the
Revolutionary war, he had hunted over a large portion of
the valley of the Ohio, sometimes with a companion, but
oftener alone, leaving his favorite Rebecca to oversee and
take charge of the little plantation, which was never very
extensive, until he moved to his new home, opposite the
mouth of the Muskingum.
From his sedate manners and quiet habits, the trapping
ISAAC WILLIAMS. 489
of the beaver was a favorite pursuit; and after he was
seventy years old, if he heard of the signs of one being seen
within fifty miles of his home, would mount his horse with
his traps, and not return until he had caught it. This was
a great art amongst the hunters of the west, and he who
was the most successful in this mystery, was accounted a
fortunate man. The proceeds of a few months hunt often
realizing three or four hundred dollars to the trapper. He
stood high in this branch of the hunter's vocation, and no
man could catch more beavers than himself; being eminently
qualified for this pursuit, both by disposition and by prac-
tice. He was a close observer of nature ; taciturn in his
manners, and cautious in his movements ; never in a hurry,
or disturbed by an unexpected occurrence. In many re-
spects he was an exact portrait of Cooper's beau ideal of a
master hunter, so finely portrayed in the Pioneer, and other
backwoods legends.
During the Indian war, from 1791 to 1795, he remained
unmolested in his cabin, a view of which is seen in the
sketch of Fort Harmer, on the opposite shore of the Ohio,
protected, in some measure, by the vicinity of that fort, as
well as by the stockade around his dwellings, which shel-
tered several families besides his own.
He seldom spoke of his own exploits, and when related,
they generally came from the lips of his companions.
There was only one situation in which he could be induced
to relax his natural reserve, and freely narrate the romantic
and hazardous adventures that had befallen him in his hunt-
ing and war excursions ; and that was when encamped by
the evening fire, in some remote spot, after the toils of the
day were closed, and the supper of venison and bear meat
ended. Here, while reclining on a bed of fresh autumnal
leaves, beneath the lofty branches of the forest, with no
listeners but the stars and his companion, the spirit of
490 ISAAC WILLIAMS.
narration would come upon him, and for hours he would re-
hearse the details of his youthful and hazardous adventures
by forest, flood, and field. In such situations, surrounded
by the works of God, his body and his mind felt a freedom
that the hut and the clearing could not give. In this man-
ner the late Alexander Henderson, a man of refined taste,
and cultivated manners, has said that he passed some of
the most interesting hours of his life, when hunting with
Mr. Williams on the head waters of the Little Kenawha.
In person, he was of the middle size, with an upright
frame, and muscular limbs; features firm, and strongly
marked; a mild expression of countenance, and taciturn,
quiet manners. In his youth he does not appear to have
been addicted to the rude sports and rough plays so con-
genial to most of the early borderers, but preferred social
converse, and an interchange of good offices with his fel-
lows. Although he lived at a time and in a situation where
he was deprived of all opportunity for religious instruction,
yet he appears to have had an intuitive dread of all vicious
words or actions. The writer distinctly recollects hearing
him reprove a keel-boatman, a class of men whose language
was intermingled with oaths, in the most severe manner, for
his profanity, as he passed the boat where the man was at
work. Like Isaac and Rebecca of old, this modern Isaac
and Rebecca were given to good deeds ; and many a poor,
sick, abandoned boatman, has been nursed and restored
to health beneath their humble roof. So intimately con-
nected are their names with the early settlers of the Ohio
Company, that they deserve to go down to posterity to-
gether. Many years before his death, he liberated all his
slaves, six or eight in number, and by Ins will left valuable
tokens of his love and good feeling for the oppressed and
despised African.
Full of days and good deeds, and strong in the faith of a
■"■^u.
H
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m
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HARM AN BLENNERHASSETT. 491
blessed immortality, Mr. Williams resigned his spirit to
Him who gave it, the 25th of September, 1820, aged eighty-
four years, and was buried in a beautiful grove, on his own
plantation, surrounded by the trees he so dearly loved when
living.
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT AND
MRS. MARGARET BLENNER-
HASSETT*
Harman Blennerhassett, Esq., was a descendant of a
noble family of Ireland, in the county of Cork. He was
born in Hampshire, England, in the year 1767, while his
parents were there on a visit. The family residence was
Castle Conway, in the county of Kerry, to which they
shortly after returned. He was educated with great care,
and when a boy attended the Westminster school, celebrated
for its classical excellence, completing his studies at Trinity
College, Dublin, whose honors he shared in company with
his relative, the celebrated T. A. Emmitt. They read law
together at the King's Inn Courts, Dublin; were admitted to
the bar On the same day in the year 1790, and between
* These celebrated individuals, although not attached to the Ohio Company settlers,
yet came into the territory so early as to he ranked among its pioneers. They fill so
large and interesting a space in the history of this region, and did so much for the
pecuniary benefit of the country of their adoption, that they deserve a place amongst
the settlers of Washington county.
492 HARM AN BLENNERHASSETT.
them existed ever after the warmest friendship. Having
spent some time in traveling in France and the Netherlands,
he returned and practiced at the bar in Ireland. Expecting,
however, to fall heir to a large estate in a few years, he
made but little effort to excel in the law, rather cultivating
his taste for the sciences, music, and general literature.
At the death of his father, in 1796, he became possessed
of a handsome fortune ; but on account of the troubles in
Ireland, in which he became politically involved, he sold the
estate to his cousin, Lord Ventry, and went to England,
where he soon after married Miss Agnew, daughter of the
lieutenant-governor of the Isle of Man, and granddaughter
of Gen. Agnew, who fell at the battle of Germantown.
Lord Kingsale, and Admiral De Courcey, of the navy, both
married sisters of Mr. Blennerhassett; who, expressing
rather freely his republican principles, in opposition to his
relations, finally concluded to visit the United States, and
make that country his future home, where he could utter his
sentiments, and enjoy the benefits of freedom, undisturbed
by spies or informers.
Before sailing for America, he visited London and pur-
chased a large library of classical and scientific books, with
a philosophical apparatus, embracing various branches, and
arrived in New York in 1797. By the aid of his letters,
wealth, and his own personal and literary merit, he became
acquainted with some of the first families in the city.*
Amongst others of his newly acquired friends, was Mr. Jo-
seph S. Lewis, a rich merchant of Philadelphia, who became
his business agent, and for many years his firm friend. Mr.
Blennerhassett named his youngest son Joseph Lewis, in
token of his regard for him. He was finally a considerable
loser by this connection, and after Mr. Blennerhassett's
* See Whig Review, 1844. Article by Mr. Wallace.
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 493
failure, and the destruction of his house and property,
became the owner of the island.
His stay in New York was of only a few months' contin-
uance; when, hearing of the rich valleys and beautiful
country on the Ohio river, he crossed the mountains, and
after spending a few weeks in Pittsburg, took passage for
Marietta, in the fall of the year 1797. Here he passed the
winter, examining the vicinity of that place for a spot on
which to make his permanent residence. He finally decided
on purchasing a plantation on an island in the Ohio river,
fourteen miles below the mouth of the Muskingum, within
the jurisdiction of the state of Virginia. The situation
was wild, romantic, and beautiful ; and as it was chiefly in
a state of nature, a few acres only being cleared, he could
reclaim it from the forest, adorn and cultivate it to his own
taste. Its location also gave him the privilege of holding
colored servants as his own property, which he could not do
in the Northwest Territory. The island was, moreover, near
the settlement of Belpre, composed chiefly of very intelli-
gent and well-educated men, disbanded officers of the
American army, whose society would at any time relieve
him of ennui. The island itself was a picture of beauty,
as well as all of its kind, at that early day, before the hand
of man had marred its shores. The drooping branches of
the willow laved their graceful foliage in the water, while
the more lofty sycamore and elm, with their giant arms,
protected them from the rude blasts of the storm, and gave
a grandeur and dignity to these primitive landscapes, now
only to be seen in the remoter regions of the west.
The island at present known as " Blennerhassett's," was
then called " Backus's," who had owned it since 1792. It
is said to have been located by Gen. Washington, as he
owned a large tract of land immediately below, called
" Washington's bottom," entered by him in the year 1770.
494 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
It was first surveyed in May, 1784, on a land warrant, issued
in 1780, and a patent made out by Patrick Henry, governor
of Virginia, in 1786, to Alexander Nelson, of Richmond, Va.;
who was a member of a mercantile firm in Philadelphia.
By a bill in chancery, of the High Court of Virginia, pro-
cured by Mr. Blennerhassett, to perfect his title, it appears
that Elijah Backus, of Norwich, Conn., bought of James Her-
ron, of Norfolk, Va., in the year 1792, two islands in the
Ohio river; the principal one being the first below the mouth
of the Little Kenavvha, then in the county of Monongalia,
containing two hundred and ninety-seven acres, for the sum
of two hundred and fifty pounds, Virginia currency, or about
eight hundred and eighty-three dollars and thirty-three cents.
This island is of a very peculiar form, narrow in the middle,
and broad at both extremities.
In March, 1798, Mr. Blennerhassett purchased the upper
portion, containing about one hundred and seventy acres,
for the sum of four thousand, five hundred dollars, and soon
after moved, with his wife and one child, on to his new pur-
chase, living in a large old block-house, standing about half
a mile below the upper end of the island, built in the time
of the Indian war, by Capt. James. Here he resided while
conducting the improvements near the upper end of the
island, and building his island mansion, which was com-
pleted in 1800. A good deal of labor and heavy expense
was necessary in preparing the ground for his buildings and
the gardens. It was covered, at this spot, with forest trees,
which had to be removed, and stumps eradicated, so as to
leave a smooth, level surface, with extensive landings up
and down the banks on both sides of the river, for conveni-
ent access to and from the island. Boats of various sizes
were also to be procured, and a company of eight or ten
black servants purchased, as waiters, grooms, watermen,
&c. His outlays, when the improvements were completed,
HARM AN BLENNERHASSETT. 495
amounted to more than forty thousand dollars. This sum,
expended chiefly amongst the mechanics, laborers, and
farmers of this new region, where money was scarce, and
hard to be obtained, was of very great advantage to their
interests ; and Mr. Blennerhassett may be considered as the
greatest benefactor, in this respect, that had ever settled
west of the mountains.
The island mansion was built with great taste and beauty ;
no expense being spared in its construction, that could add
to its usefulness or splendor. It consisted of a main build-
ing, fifty-two feet in length, thirty in width, and two stories
high. Porticoes, forty feet in length, in the form of wings,
projected in front, connected with offices, presenting each a
face of twenty-six feet, and twenty feet in depth, uniting
them with the main building; forming the half of an ellipsis,
and making, in the whole, a front of one hundred and four
feet. The left-hand office was occupied for the servant's
hall ; and the right for the library, philosophical apparatus
study, &c. The drawing which accompanies this memoir
is a correct likeness of the mansion, taken from the descrip-
tion of Col. Barker, one of the principal architects.
A handsome lawn of several acres occupied the front
ground ; while an extended opening was made through the
forest trees, on the head of the island, affording a view of
the river for several miles above, and bringing the mansion
under the notice of descending boats. Nicely graveled
walks, with a carriage-way, led from the house to the river,
passing through an ornamental gateway, with large stone
pillars. A fine hedge, of native hawthorn, bordered the
right side of the avenue to the house, while back of it lay
the flower garden, of about two acres, inclosed with neat
palings, to which were traced gooseberry bushes, peaches,
and other varieties of fruit-bearing trees, in the manner of
wall fruits. The garden was planted with flowering shrubs,
496 HARM AN BLENNERIIASSETT.
both exotic and native; but especially abounding in the lat-
ter, which the good taste of the occupants had selected from
the adjacent forests, and planted in thick masses, through
which wandered serpentine walks, bordered with flowers,
imitating a labyrinth. Arbors and grottoes, covered with
honeysuckles and eglantines, were placed at convenient in-
tervals, giving the whole a very romantic and beautiful ap-
pearance. On the opposite side of the house was a large
kitchen garden, and back of these, orchards of peach and
apple trees of the choicest varieties, procured from abroad,
as well as from the Belpre nurseries. Lower down on the
island was the farm, with about one hundred acres under
the nicest cultivation ; the luxuriant soil producing the finest
crops of grain and grass. For the last three or four years
of his residence, a large dairy was added to his other agri-
cultural pursuits, under the management of Thomas Neal,
who also superintended the labor of the farm. The garden
was conducted by Peter Taylor, a native of Lancashire, Eng-
land, who was bred to the pursuit, but under the direction
of Mr. Blennerhassett, whose fine taste in all that was beau-
tiful, ordered the arranging and laying out the grounds.
The mansion and offices were frame buildings, painted
with the purest white, contrasting tastefully with the green
foliage of the ornamental shade trees, which surrounded
it. An abundance of fine stone for building, could have
been quarried from the adjacent Virginia shore, but he pre-
ferred a structure of wood, as less liable to be damaged by
earthquakes. The finishing and furniture of the apartments
were adapted to the use for which they were intended. The
hall was a spacious room ; its walls painted a somber color,
with a beautiful cornice of plaster, bordered with a gilded
molding, running round the lofty ceiling ; while its furniture
was rich, heavy, and grand. The furniture of the drawing-
room was in strong contrast with the hall; light, airy, and
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 497
elegant; with splendid mirrors, gay-colored carpets, rich
curtains, with ornaments to correspond, arranged by his
lady with the nicest taste and harmonious effect. A large
quantity of massive silver plate ornamented the sideboards,
and decorated the tables. Yet they had not entirely com-
pleted their arrangements, when the destroyer appeared,
and frustrated all their designs for comfort and future hap-
piness. The whole establishment was noble, chastened by
the purest taste, without that glare of tinsel finery, too com-
mon among the wealthy.
Their style of living was in unison with the house and
furniture, elegant, easy, and comfortable.
Mr. Blennerhassett was a highly intellectual man, greatly
devoted to scientific pursuits, which his ample library and
leisure time afforded every facility for pursuing. He was
studious, and fond of experimenting in chemistry, electricity,
and galvanism. His apparatus, though not extensive, was
ample for such experiments as an amateur would wish to
make. Astronomy was also a favorite study; for which he
had a fine telescope to examine the constellations in their
courses, and a solar microscope, to inspect the minuter
bodies of the earth. In music, he possessed the nicest
taste, and an uncommon genius, composing harmonious
and beautiful airs, several pieces of which are now remem-
bered and played by a gentleman, who, when a youth, was
intimate in his family. His favorite instruments were the
base-viol and violoncello, on which he played with admira-
ble skill. The spacious hall of the mansion being constructed
so as to give effect to musical sounds, the tones of his viol
vibrated through it with thrilling effect, calling forth the
admiration of his guests. Electricity and galvanism re-
ceived a share of his attention, and many experiments were
tried in both these wonderful branches of modern science.
Amongst his trials in chemical operations, was that of
32
498 HARM AN BLENNER H ASSET T.
converting beef into adipocere, large pieces of which were
submerged in the beautiful little cove between the landing
and the sand-bar at the head of the island. He fancied it
might be used in place of spermaceti, for light ; but the cat-
fish and perch interfered so much with his trials, that he
could never brinp the adipocere to perfection. He was a
good classical scholar, and so highly was he enraptured with
Homer's Iliad, that it was said he could repeat the whole
poem in the original Greek.
His manners were gentlemanly, and disposition social,
hospitable, and kind, especially to those with whom he
wished to associate, but rather haughty to others. In mind,
he could not be said to be masculine and strong, but was
rather wavering and fickle ; easily duped and deceived by
the designing and dishonest. He had quite a taste for med-
icine, and read many authors on that subject, which, with
his natural propensities, often led him to think himself at-
tacked with imaginary diseases, and it was sometimes diffi-
cult to convince him they were merely ideal. To his sick
neighbors and servants, he was kind and attentive, often
visiting and prescribing for their complaints ; freely tender-
ing his medicines, of which he always kept an ample sup-
ply. His own heart being perfectly honest and free from
deceit, he was unsuspicious of others, and very credulous
in regard to their statements, which often led him into pecu-
niary losses in his business transactions.
In bargaining with a notorious cheat for a quantity of the
shells of the river clam, which, in the early settlement of
the country, before quarries of limestone were opened, were
calcined in log-lieap.j, and used for plastering rooms, the
fellow said it was a difficult matter to collect them, as he
had to dive under the water where it was six or eight feet
deep, and must charge fifty cents a bushel, when, in fact, he
could collect any quantity, where it was only a few inches.
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 499
Thinking the man told the truth, he paid him the price,
which was at least five times as much as they were worth.
He was very kind and charitable to the poor and unfor-
tunate backwoodsmen. A Virginian, who had lost his
house and furniture by fire, was soon after invited, with his
wife, to dine with him. This man owed him a considerable
sum of lent money. After dinner he told him he would
either cancel the debt, or give him an order on his store at
Marietta for an equal sum, and let the debt stand. The
sufferer was a man of honorable mind and just feelings. He,
therefore, chose not to add to his present obligations, but
accepted the canceling of the debt, which was immediately
done. This man still lives, and related the incident in
1846. Many such facts were known to have occurred while
he lived on the island.
His wife was still more charitable to the sick and poor in
the vicinity, many of whom felt the benefit of her gifts.
With all these kind acts fresh in their memories, several
of these men were found among the banditti, who ransacked
his house and insulted his wife, after he had been forced to
leave the island from the hue and cry of treason, which
maddened and infuriated the public mind in the valley of
the Ohio.
In person, Mr. Blennerhassett was tall, about six feet, but
slender, with a slight stoop in the shoulders. His motions
were not very graceful, either as an equestrian, or on foot;
forehead full, and well formed ; with rather a prominent
nose, and good proportioned face ; eyes weak, and sight im-
perfect; seeing objects distinctly only when near; so that
in reading, the surface of the page nearly touched his nose.
They had a nervous, restless agitation, which probably arose
from weakness of the optic nerves, requiring the constant
aid of glasses. Yet with this permanent and continual an-
noyance, he was a great student and operator in experiments.
500 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
He was also much attached to hunting, shooting quails,
and other small game on the island. To enjoy this sport,
he had to call in the aid of some other person, whose vision
was more acute than his own, who pointed the gun for him
at the game, and gave the word when to fire. This person
was often his wife, who, with the greatest kindness, attended
him in his short excursions, and with the tact of an experi-
enced sportsman, pointed out the object, leveled the gun, and
stood by with the most perfect coolness, while he discharged
the piece.
His general habits were sedentary and studious ; prefer-
ring the quiet of his library to the most brilliant assemblies.
In conversation, he was interesting and instructive; confin-
ing his remarks to the practical and useful, more than to the
amusing.
As a lawyer, his wife, who had probably heard his forensic
eloquence, has been heard to say that he was equal to Mr.
Emmitt ; and frequently urged him to enter as an advocate
at the higher courts of Virginia and Ohio, instead of wast-
ing his time in obscurity, at his philosophical pursuits on
the island. His library contained an ample supply of law
books. A list of thirty volumes, loaned to James Wilson,
a lawyer of Virginia, a few days before he left the island, is
now among his papers in the hands of his agent at Marietta.
Mr. Blennerhassett dressed in the old English style, with
scarlet or buff-colored small clothes, and silk stockings ;
shoes with silver buckles, and coat generally of blue broad-
cloth. When at home, his dress was rather careless ; often,
in warm weather, in his shirt-sleeves, without coat or
waist-coat ; and in winter, wore a thick woolen roundabout,
or short jacket.
In this quiet retreat, insulated and separated from the
noise and tumult of the surrounding world, amidst his
books, with the company of his accomplished wife and
MARGARET BLENNERHASSETT. 501
children, he possessed all that seemed necessary for the
happiness of man; and yet he lacked one thing, without
which no man can be happy : a firm belief in the overruling
providence of God. Voltaire and Rosseau, whose works
he studied and admired, had poisoned his mind to the simple
truths of the gospel, and the Bible was a book which he
seldom or never consulted. At least this was the fact while
he lived on the island ; whatever it might have been, after
misfortune and want had humbled and sorely tried him.
Mrs. Blennerhassett was more aspiring and ambitious;
with a temperament in strong contrast to that of her hus-
band. Her maiden, name was Margaret Agnew ; the daugh-
ter of Capt. Agnew, a brave officer in the British service,
and at one time the lieutenant-governor of the Isle of Man.
Gen. Agnew, who fell at the battle of Germantown, in the
American Revolution, was her grandfather, and a monu-
ment was erected to his memory by his granddaughter, af-
ter her arrival in America. She was educated and brought
up by two maiden aunts, who took great care to instruct
her in all the useful arts of housewifery, laundry, pastry,
sewing, &c, which was of great use to her in after-life, when
at the head of a family. They were led to this, in part from
their own limited means, teaching them to be frugal, and the
need there is, for every woman who expects to marry, to be
acquainted with all the useful branches of housekeeping.
In person, Mrs. Blennerhassett was tall and commanding,
of the most perfect proportions, with dignified and graceful
manners, finely molded features, and very fair, transparent
complexion; eyes dark blue, sparkling with life and intelli-
gence ; hair, a rich, deep brown, profuse and glossy, dressed
in the most elegant manner. When at her island-home, she
often wore a head-dress of colored silk stuff, folded very
full, something in the manner of an eastern turban, giving
a noble and attractive appearance to the whole person.
502 MARGARET BLE N NE RH ASS E TT.
These were of various colors, but always composed of a sin-
gle one, either of pink, yellow, or white, adjusted in the most
becoming manner and nicest taste ; in winch particular, few
women could equal her. White was a favorite color for
dress in the summer, and rich colored stuffs in the winter.
Her motions were all graceful, and greatly hightened by the
expression of her countenance. No one could be in her
company, even a few minutes, without being strongly at-
tracted by her fascinating manners. A very intelligent lady,
who was familiarly acquainted with her in her best days on
the island, and has since visited and seen the most elegant
and beautiful females in the courts of France and England,
as well as Washington city, says that she has beheld no one
who was equal to her in beauty of person, dignity of man-
ners, elegance of dress, and in short, all that is lovely and
finished in the female person, such as she was, when " queen
of the fairy isle."
When she rode on horseback, her dress was a fine, scarlet
broadcloth, ornamented with gold buttons ; a white beaver
hat, on which floated the graceful plumes of the ostrich, of
the same color. This was sometimes changed for blue or
yellow, with feathers to harmonize. She was a perfect
equestrian; always riding a very spirited horse, with rich
trappings, who seemed proud of his burthen ; and accom-
plished the ride to Marietta, of fourteen miles, in about two
hours ; dashing through and under the dark foliage of the
forest trees, which then covered the greater part of the dis-
tance, reminding one of the gay plumage and rapid flight
of some tropical bird, winging its way through the woods.
In these journeys she was generally accompanied by Ran-
som, a favorite black servant, who followed on horseback,
in a neat, showy dress, and had to apply both whip and
spur to keep in sight of his mistress. She sometimes came
to Marietta by water, in a light canoe, (the roads not being
MARGARET BLEN NERH AS SE T T . 503
yet opened for wheel-carriages,) navigated by Moses, an-
other of the colored servants, who was the principal water-
man, and had charge of the boats for the transport of pas-
sengers from the island to the main. Her shopping visits
were made in this way, as she directed the purchase of gro-
ceries, &c, for the family use, as well as for the clothing.
She possessed great personal activity; sometimes in fine
weather, choosing to walk that distance, instead of riding.
In addition to her feats in riding and walking, she could
vault, with the ease of a young fawn, over a five-rail fence,
with the mere aid of one hand placed on the top rail, and
was often seen to do so, when walking over the farm, and a
fence came in the way of her progress. It was performed
with such graceful movement, and so little effort, as to call
forth the wonder and admiration of the beholder.
She was passionately fond of dancing, and greatly ex-
celled in this healthful and charming exercise, moving
through the mazes and intricacies of the various figures,
with the grace and lightness of the " queen of the fairies."
Her tastes in this respect were often gratified in the numer-
ous balls and assemblies, given at that day in Marietta and
Belpre, as well as at her own house ; where the lofty hall
frequently resounded to the cheerful music and lively steps
of the dancers.
With all this relish for social amusements, Mrs. Blenner-
hassett was very domestic in her habits ; being not only ac-
complished in all the arts of housewifery, but was also an
excellent seamstress ; cutting out and making up with her
own hands much of the clothing of her husband, as well as
preparing that for the servants, which was then made by a
colored female. At that period, when tailors and mantua-
makers were rare in the western wilderness, this was an
accomplishment of real value. She being willing to prac-
tice these servile acts, when surrounded by all the wealth
504 MARGARET BLE N N E RH A S SE TT.
she could desire, is one of the finest and most remarkable
traits in her character; indicating a noble mind, elevated
above the influence of that false pride so often seen to at-
tend the high-born and wealthy.
She was a very early riser ; and when not prevented by in-
disposition, visited the kitchen by early dawn, and often man-
ipulated the pastry and cakes to be served up on the table
for the day ; when this service was completed, she laid aside
her working dress, and attired herself in the habiliments of
the lady of the mansion. At table she presided with grace
and dignity, and by her cheerful conversation and pleasant
address, set every one at ease about her, however rustic
their manners, or unaccustomed they might be to genteel
society.
Her mind was as highly cultivated as her person. She
was an accomplished Italian and French scholar ; and one
of the finest readers imaginable ; especially excelling in the
plays of Shakespeare, which she rehearsed with all the taste
and spirit of a first-rate actor. In history and the English
classics, she was equally well read ; and was often called
upon to decide a disputed point in literature, under discus-
sion by her husband and some learned guest. Her deci-
sions were generally satisfactory to both parties, because
founded on correct reasoning, and delivered in so gracious
a manner. Few women have ever lived, who combined so
many accomplishments and personal attractions. They
strongly impressed, not only intellectual and cultivated
minds, who could appreciate her merits, but also the unedu-
cated and lower classes. One of the young men, a farmer's
son, of Belpre, rented and cultivated a field of corn on the
island, near the avenue leading from the house to the river,
for the sole purpose of stealing a look at her beautiful per-
son, as she passed by, on her way to ride or walk, as she
was wont to do every pleasant day. Wirt's celebrated
HARM AN BLENNERHASSETT. 505
panegyric on this lady was in no way undeserved; although
in appearance so much like romance.
Eight years had passed rapidly and happily away since
they took possession of their island home. Two children,
Harman and Dominie, had been added to their domestic
blessings, whose lively prattle and cheerful smiles served to
make life still more desirable.
Parties of the young people from Marietta, Belpre, and
Wood county, with occasional visits from more distant re-
gions, whom the far-famed beauty of this western Eden had
called to see and admire, often assembled at their hospita-
ble mansion. Social parties of the older and more sedate
portions of the community, were invited to visit them, and
spend several days and nights on the island ; especially fe-
males of the families where they visited themselves : so that
they were as abundantly provided with social intercourse,
as if living on the main land. A large portion of their vis-
itors came by water, in row-boats, or canoes; as the coun-
try was so new, and destitute of bridges across the numerous
creeks, that carriages were but little used. If travelers
came by land, it was on horseback. A gentleman of taste,
who visited the island in 1806, describes it as "a scene of
enchantment, a western Paradise, where beauty, wealth,
and happiness, had found a home." The wild condition
of the surrounding wilderness, and the rude log-cabins in
which the inhabitants generally lived, by their striking con-
trast, added greatly to the marvelous beauty of the im-
provements on this remote island. Steamboats were then
unknown, and traveling on the western rivers was slow and
painful. Each man or family provided their own vessel;
usually fitted for the temporary voyage in the rudest man-
ner. A journey of one hundred miles was a long one;
more formidable than five hundred or a thousand at this
day. The settlement of Belpre was the only one from
506 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
Marietta to Cincinnati, that showed marks of civilization,
in its well-built houses, nicely cultivated farms, and blooming
orchards : indicating an intelligent and refined population,
who could appreciate the worth of their accomplished neigh-
bors. A gentleman who once lived in Marietta, and was a
great favorite in the family, from his many personal and
mental attractions, says, " I was but a boy when they left
the island, but I had been a favorite in the family for years,
and had passed many of my happiest days in their society.
My intimacy in the family of Blennerhassett, is like an
oasis in the desert of life. It is one of those 'green spots in
the memory's waste,' which death alone can obliterate ; but
the verdure of the recollection is destroyed by the knowl-
edge of their ruin and misfortunes."
In an evil hour this peaceful and happy residence was
entered by Aaron Burr, who, like Satan in the Eden of old,
visited this earthly Paradise, only to deceive and destroy.
"Like some lost, malignant spirit, going to and fro upon
the earth, to harass and sneer at poor humanity ; was
always so courteous, so polite and decorous ; so interesting,
nay, fascinating, when he strove to engage the attention,
that it was impossible to resist his influence. It was the at-
mosphere of his presence that poisoned all who came within
its reach."
In the spring of the year 1805, this intriguing and artful
man first visited the valley of the Ohio, his mind restless
and uneasy, a disappointed, vexed man, whose hands were
still red with the blood of the great and noble-minded Ham-
ilton. No ordinary occupation could satisfy the mind of
such a being; but some vast, difficult, and grand scheme of
ambition must be sought out, on which he could employ his
exuberant faculties. Filled with his future project of found-
ing a vast empire in the provinces of Mexico, with a portion
of the valley of the Mississippi, then, as he had ascertained,
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 507
ripe for revolution, (but the plan chiefly confined, at that
time, under a cloud of mystery, purporting to be a set-
tlement of the lands he had bargained for on the Washita
river.) " He descended the Ohio in a boat, landing as a
passing traveler, merely to see and admire the far-famed
improvements of the island. Mr. Blennerhassett, hearing
that a stranger was on his lawn, sent a servant to invite
him to the house. The wily serpent sent his card, with an
apology ; but Mr. Blennerhassett, with his usual hospitality,
walked out and insisted on his remaining a day or two.
He, however, made a visit of only a few hours ; long enough
to introduce the subject of a splendid land speculation on
the Red river, and to allude to the prospect of a war of the
United States with Spain, and the ease with which the Mexi-
cans might, with a little aid, throw off the foreign yoke
which had so long oppressed them. He then proceeded on
his way.
A large portion of the following winter was spent by Mr.
Blennerhassett and his lady, in Philadelphia and New York,
on a visit to his old friend Emmitt, where, it is probable, he
saw Burr again, and matured the plan for a participation in
the purchase of Baron Bastrop's lands on the Washita, as
he had addressed a letter to him on that subject before leav-
ing home, in December, wishing to become a partner in any
purchase he might make of western lands : also offering to
aid in the Mexican enterprise, as was afterward ascertained
in the trial at Richmond.
The next August we find Aaron Burr at Pittsburg, in
company with his accomplished daughter, Mrs. Theodosia
Alston, on his way down the Ohio river. He again visited
the island, with his daughter, where he spent several days ;
he, in the meantime, taking up his abode at Marietta, where
several of the inhabitants received him with marked atten-
tion; while others looked upon him with contempt and
508 IIARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
abhorrence, as the murderer of Col. Hamilton; especially
the old officers, friends and associates of that excellent man.
It was in September, at the period of the annual militia
muster; the regiment was assembled on the commons, and
Col. Burr was invited by the commander to exercise the
men, which he did, putting them through several evolutions.
In the evening there was a splendid ball, at which he at-
tended, and was long after known as the Burr ball.
Early in this month the contract was made for boats to
be built on the Muskingum river, six miles above the mouth,
for the purpose, as was said, of conveying the provisions
and adventurers to the settlement in the new purchase.
There were fifteen large bateaux; ten of them forty feet
long, ten feet wide, and two and a half feet deep; five
others were fifty feet long, pointed at each end, to push, or
row up stream as well as down. One of these was consid-
erably larger, and fitted up with convenient rooms, a fire-
place, and glass windows; intended for the use of Mr.
Blennerhassett and family, as he proposed taking them with
him to the new settlement, and is an evidence he did not
then think of any hostile act against the United States. To
these was added a keel-boat, sixty feet long, for the
transport of provisions. A contract for bacon, pork, flour,
whisky, &c, was made, to the amount of two thousand dol-
lars, and a bill drawn on Mr. Ogden, of New York, for the
payment. The boats cost about the same sum, for which
Mr. Blennerhassett was responsible. One main article of
the stores was kiln-dried, or parched corn, ground into meal ;
which is another evidence that the men engaged in the ex-
pedition, were to march a long distance by land, and carry
this parched meal on their backs ; of which, a pint mixec1
with a little water, is a day's ration, as practiced by the
western Indians. Several hundred barrels of this article
were prepared ; some of which was raised on the island and
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 509
parched in a kiln built for that purpose. The boats were to
be ready by the 9th of December ; rather a late period, on
account of ice, which usually forms in this month ; but they
were tardy in making the contract.
Col. Burr remained in the vicinity three or four weeks,
making a journey to Chillicothe. His son-in-law, Alston,
came out and joined his wife at the island, and with her
and Mr. Blennerhassett, who accompanied them, proceeded
on to Lexington, Ky., early in October. Many young men
in the vicinity of Marietta, Belpre, and various other points
on the river, were engaged to join in the expedition ; of which
Col. Burr was the leader. They were told that no injury
was intended to the United States ; that the President was
aware of the expedition and approved it; which was to
make a settlement on the tract of land purchased by the
leaders in the Baron Bastrop grant, and in the event of a
war breaking out between this country and Spain, which
had for some time been expected, they were to join with the
troops under Gen. Wilkinson, and march into the Mexican
provinces, whose inhabitants had long been ready for revolt,
and prepared to unite with them. This was no doubt the
truth, as believed by Mr. Blennerhassett, and those engaged
under him, whatever may have been the ulterior views of
Burr. Not one of all that number enlisted on the Ohio,
would have hearkened for a moment, to a separation of the
western from the eastern states ; and when the act of the
Ohio Legislature was passed, to suppress all armed assem-
blages, and take possession of boats with arms and pro-
visions, followed by the proclamation of the President, they,
almost to a man, refused to embark further in the enterprise.
The bateaux were calculated to carry about five hundred
men; and probably a large portion of that number had been
engaged, expecting to receive one hundred acres of land for
each private, and more for officers. As to their being required
510 HARMAN BLENNEKIIASSETT.
to furnish themselves with a good rifle and blanket, it was
of itself no evidence of hostility; as it is customary, in
making all new settlements, for men to be armed; as was
the case with the forty-eight pioneers of the Ohio Company
settlers, in 1788.
In the meantime, a rumor had gone abroad, that Col. Burr
and his associates were plotting treason on the western wa-
ters, and assembling an army to take possession of New
Orleans, rob the banks, seize the artillery, and set up a sep-
arate government west of the Alleghany mountains, of which
he was to be the chief. From the evidence on the trial at
Richmond, and other sources, it appears that Mr. Jefferson
was acquainted with the plan of invading Mexico, in the
event of a war with Spain, and approved it; so that Burr
had some ground for saying that the government favored
the project. But when no war took place, and the parties
had become deeply involved in building boats, collecting
provisions, and levying men, to which the baseness and
treachery of Wilkinson directly contributed, it was thought
a fitting time to punish the arch-enemy of the President,
who, by his chicanery, had well nigh ousted him from the
chair of state, and had since taken all opportunities to vil-
ify and abuse him. Another evidence that the government
was supposed to favor the enterprise, is the fact, that nearly
all its abettors and supporters in the west, until the procla-
mation appeared, were of the party called Republicans, or
friends of Mr. Jefferson, and was opposed by the Federal-
ists, who hated and despised Burr and all in which he was
engaged, as, from the character of the man, they thought it
boded nothing good.
By the last of October, rumor, with her thousand tongues,
aided by hundreds of newspapers, had filled the minds of
the people with strange alarms of coming danger, to which
the mystery which overshadowed the actual object of these
HA KM AN ELENNERHASSETT. 511
preparations greatly added, and many threats were thrown
out, of personal violence to Mr. Blennerhassett and Col.
Burr. Alarmed at these rumors of coming danger, Mrs.
Blennerhassett dispatched Peter Taylor to Kentucky, with a
letter requesting her husband immediately to return; where
he had gone on a visit with Mr. Alston. The history of this
journey, as related by Peter in his evidence on the trial, is
an amusing sketch of simplicity and truth. He was the
gardener on the island for several years, and was a single-
hearted, honest Englishman, who, after his employer's ruin,
purchased a farm at Waterfofd, in Washington county
Ohio, where he lived many years, much respected for his
industry and integrity.
During the month of September, and forepart of Octo-
ber, there appeared a series of articles, four or five in num-
ber, published in the Marietta Gazette, over the signature
of Querist, in which the writer advocated a separation of
the western from the eastern states, setting forth the rea-
sons for, and advantages of, such a division. These were
answered in a series of numbers, condemning the project,
over the signature of Regulus. They were well- written,
spirited articles. The former were probably written by
Burr; and the author of the last has remained concealed.
The result, however, was unfavorable to the project, and
roused the public mind in opposition both to the man and
the cause he had espoused. Some of the articles by Reg-
ulus were much applauded by the editor of the Aurora, a
leading government paper of that day, who considered the
writer a very able and patriotic man.
The last of November, Mr. Jefferson sent out John Gra-
ham, a clerk in one of the public offices, as a spy, or agent,
to watch the motions of the conspirators in the vicinity of
the island, and to ask the aid of the governor of Ohio in
suppressing the insurrection, by seizing on the boats and
512 HARM AN BLENNERIIASSETT.
preparations making on the Muskingum. While at Mari-
etta, Mr. Blennerhassett called on the agent once or twice,
talking freely with him on the objects of the expedition, and
showed him a letter he had recently received from Col.
Burr, in relation to the settlement on the Washita, in which
he says that the project of invading Mexico was abandoned,
as the difficulties between the United States and Spain were
adjusted. He also mentioned his arrest and trial before the
Federal Court, on charge of "treasonable practices," and
"a design to attack the Spanish dominions, and thereby en-
danger the peace of the United States ; " of which he was
acquitted. But all this would not satisfy Mr. Graham. He
visited the governor at Chillicothe, laid before him the sur-
mises of Mr. Jefferson ; and the Legislature, then in session,
on the second day of December, with closed doors, passed
an act authorizing the governor to call out the militia, on
his warrant to any sheriff or militia officer, with power to
arrest boats on the Ohio river, or men, supposed to be en-
gaged in this expedition ; and might be held to bail, in the
sum of fifty thousand dollars, or imprisoned, and the boats
confiscated. One thousand dollars were placed at the dis-
posal of the governor, to carry out the law.
Under this act a company of militia was called out, with
orders to capture and detain the boats and provisions on
the Muskingum, with all others descending the Ohio, under
suspicious circumstances. They were placed under the
command of Capt. Timothy Buell. A six-pounder was
planned in battery on the bank of the Ohio, in Marietta, and
every descending boat examined. Regular sentries and
guards were posted for several weeks, until the river was
closed with ice, and all navigation ceased. Many amusing
jokes were played off on the military during this campaign,
such as setting an empty tar-barrel on fire, and placing it
on an old boat, or a raft of logs, to float by on some dark;
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 513
rainy night. The sentries, after hailing, and receiving no
answer, fired several shots to enforce their order; but find-
ing the supposed boat escaping, sent out a file of men to
board and take possession, who, approaching in great
wrath, were still more vexed to find it all a hoax.
On the 6th of December, just before the order of the
governor arrived, Comfort Tyler, a gentleman from the state
of New York, landed at the island with four boats and
about thirty men, fitted out at the towns above, on the Ohio.
On the 9th, a party of young men from Belpre went up the
Muskingum to assist in navigating the bateaux and pro-
visions of parched meal from that place to the island. But
the militia guard received notice of their movements, and
waylaying the river a little above the town, took possession
of them all but one, which the superior management of the
young men from Belpre enabled them to bring by all the
guards, in the darkness of the night, and reach the island
in safety. Had they all escaped, they would have been of
little use, as the young men engaged had generally given
up the enterprise, on the news of the President's proclama-
tion, and the act of the Ohio Legislature.
Mr. Blennerhassett was at Marietta on the 6th of Decem-
ber, expecting to receive the boats ; but they were not quite
ready for delivery. On that day he heard of the act of the
assembly, and returned to the island, half resolved to
abandon the cause; but the arrival, that night, of Tyler,
and the remonstrances of his wife, who had entered with
great spirit into the enterprise, prevented him. Had he
listened to the dictates of his own mind, and the sugges-
tions of prudence, it would have saved him years of mis-
fortune and final ruin.
In the course of the day of the 9th of December, he
had notice that the Wood county militia had volunteered
their services, and would that night make an attack on
33
514 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
the island, arrest him, with the boats and men there as-
sembled, and perhaps burn his house. This accelerated
their departure, which took place on the following night.
They had learned that the river was watched at several
points below, and serious apprehensions felt for their future
safety; although the resolute young men on board, well
armed with their rifles, would not have been captured
by any moderate force. The Ohio river, from the Little to
the Big Kenawha, is very crooked and tortuous; making
the distance by water nearly double that by land.
Col. Phelps, the commander of the Wood county volun-
teers, took possession of the island the following morning,
and finding the objects of his search gone, determined not
to be foiled, and started immediately on horseback across
the country, for Point Pleasant, a village at the mouth of
the Big Kenawha, and arrived there several hours before
the boats. He directly mustered a party of men, to watch
the river all night and arrest the fugitives. It being quite
cold, with some ice in the stream, large fires were kindled,
for the double purpose of warming the guard and more
easily discovering the boats. Just before daylight, the men
being well filled with whisky, to keep out the cold, became
drowsy with their long watch, and all lay down by the fire.
During their short sleep, the four boats seeing the fires, and
aware of their object, floated quietly by, without any noise,
and were out of sight before the guard awakened. They
thus escaped this well laid plan for their capture, arriving
at the mouth of the Cumberland, the place of rendezvous,
unmolested.
On the 13th, Mr. Morgan Nevill and Mr. Robinson, with
a party of fourteen young men, arrived and landed at the
island. They were immediately arrested by the militia, be-
fore the return of Col. Phelps. A very amusing account of
this adventure is given in the "Token," an annual of 183G,
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 515
written by Mr. Nevill, in which he describes their trial be-
fore Justices Wolf and Kincheloe, as aiders and abettors in
the treason of Burr and Blennerhassett. So far was the
spirit of lawless arrest carried, that one or two persons in
Belpre, were taken at night from their beds, and hurried
over on to the island for trial, without any authority of law.
This was a few days before the celebrated move in the Sen-
ate of the United States, for the suspension of the act of
habeas corpus, so alarmed had they become ; but was pre-
vented by the more considerate negative of the House of
Representatives After a detention of three days, the young
men were discharged, for the want of proof.
Mrs. Blennerhassett, who had been left at the island, to
look after the household goods, and follow her husband at
a more convenient period, was absent at Marietta, when
they landed, for the purpose of procuring one of the large
boats that was fitted up for her use, and had been arrested
at Marietta; but was unsuccessful, and returned the evening
after the trial.
The conduct of the militia, in the absence of their com-
mander, was brutal and outrageous ; taking possession of
the house and the family stores in the cellar, without any
authority, as their orders only extended to the arrest of Mr.
Blennerhassett and the boats. The}*- tore up and burnt the
fences for their watch-fires, and forced the black servants to
cook for them, or be imprisoned. One of them discharged
his rifle through the ceiling of the large hall, the bullet pass-
ing up through the chamber, near where Mrs. Blennerhassett
and the children were sitting. The man said it was acci-
dental ; but being half-drunk, and made brutal by the whisky
they drank, they little knew or cared for their actions.
On the 17th of December, with the aid of the young men,
and the, kind assistance of Mr. A. W. Putnam, of Belpre,
one of their neighbors and a highly esteemed friend, she,
516 IIARMAN BLENNERIIASSETT.
with her children, was enabled to depart, taking with her a
part of the furniture, and some of her husband's choice
books. Mr. Putnam also furnished her with provisions for
the voyage, her own being destroyed by the militia, in whose
rude hands she was forced to leave her beautiful island-
home, which she was destined never again to visit. They
kept possession for several daj's after her departure, living
at free quarters, destroying the fences, and letting in the
cattle, which tramped down and ruined the beautiful shrub-
bery of the garden, barking and destroying the nice or-
chards of fruit trees, just coming into bearing; and this,
too, was done by men, on many of whom Mr. Blennerhas-
sett had bestowed numerous benevolent acts. It is due to
the commander, Col. Phelps, to say that these excesses were
mostly perpetrated in his absence, and that on his return
he did all he could to suppress them, and treated Mrs. Blen-
nerhassett with respect and kindness. This spot, which a
short time before was tho abode of peace and happiness,
adorned with all that could embellish or beautify its ap-
pearance, was now a scene of ruin,, resembling the ravages
of a hostile and savage foe, rather than the visitation of
the civil law.
Before leaving the island, Mr. Blennerhassett, not expecting
to return, had rented it to Col. Cushing, one of his worthy
Belpre friends, with all the stock of cattle, crops, &c. He
did all in his power to preserve what was left, and prevent
further waste. Col. Cushing kept possession of the island
one or two years, when it was taken out of his hands by
the creditors, and rented to a man who raised a large crop
of hemp. The porticoes and offices were stowed full of
this combustible article; when the black servants, during:
one of their Christmas gambols, in 1611, accidentally set it
on fire, and the whole mansion was consumed. The furni-
ture and library, a portion of which only was removed with
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 517
the family, were attached, and sold at auction at a great
sacrifice, to discharge some of the bills indorsed by him for
Aaron Burr, a few months after his departure.
With her two little sons, Harman and Dominic, the one
six, and the other about eight years old, she pursued her
way down the Ohio to join her husband. The young men,
her companions, afforded every aid in their power to make her
situation comfortable ; but the severity of the weather, the
floating ice in the river, and the unfinished state of her
cabin, hastily prepared for her reception, made the voyage
a very painful one. Late in December she passed the
mouth of the Cumberland, where she had hoped to find her
husband; but the flotilla had proceeded out of the Ohio
into the rapid waters of the Mississippi, and landed at the
mouth of the Bayou Piere, in the Mississippi territory. The
Ohio was frozen over soon after the boat in which she was
embarked left it, and was not again navigable until the last
of February, the winter being one of great severity. Early
in January she joined the boats of Col. Burr, a few miles
above Natchez, and was again restored, with her two little
boys, to her husband, who received them with joy and grat-
itude from the hands of their gallant conductors.
The whole country being roused from Pittsburg to New
Orleans, and the hue and cry raised on all sides to arrest
the traitors, Col. Burr abandoned the expedition as hopeless ;
and assembling his followers, now about one hundred and
thirty in number, made them a spirited speech, thanked
them for their faithful adherence, amidst so much opposi-
tion, and closed by saying that unforeseen circumstances had
occurred, which frustrated his plans, and the expedition was
at an end. All were now left, the distance of one thousand
or fifteen hundred miles from their homes, to shift for them-
selves. Several of the young men from Belpre, six or
eight in number, returned in the course of the spring.
518 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
Two brothers, Charles and John Dana, remained and set-
tled near the Walnut hills ; purchased lands, and entered
into the cultivation of cotton.
Some time in January, Col. Burr and Mr. Blennerhassett
were arrested, and brought before the United States Court,
at Natchez, on a charge of treason, and recognized to ap-
pear in February. Blennerhassett did appear, and was dis-
charged J7i chief; no proof appearing to convict him of any
treasonable design. Burr did not choose to appear; but
soon after the recognizance, he requested John Dana, with
two others, to take him in a skiff or row-boat, to a point
about twenty miles above Bayou Pierre, and land him in
the night ; intending to escape across the country by land.
The better to conceal his person from detection, before
starting he exchanged his nice suit of broadcloth clothes
and beaver hat with Mr. Dana, for his coarse boatman's
dress, and old slouched white wool hat, which would effec-
tually disguise him from recognition by his intimate ac-
quaintance. He proceeded safely for some days ; but was
finally arrested on the Tombigbee river, and with many
taunts and insults taken on to Richmond, where he arrived
the 26th of March, 1807. No bill was found by the grand
jury, until the 25th of June, when he was indicted on two
bills ; one for treason and the other for a misdemeanor.
After a long and tedious trial, he was acquitted, on a verdict
of " not guilty."
Mr. Blennerhassett supposing himself discharged from
further annoyance, some time in June started oh a journey
to visit the island, and examine into the condition of his
property; which, from various letters, he was told was going
fast to waste and destruction. Passing through Lexington,
Ky., where he had many friends and acquaintances, he was
again arrested, on a charge of treason, and for some days
confined in the jail; as an indictment had been found
HARM AN BLENNERHASSETT. 519
against him, as well as Burr, at Richmond.' He employed
Henry Clay as his counsel ; who expressed deep indignation
at the illegality of his client's arrest. " He had been dis-
charged already in chief, and why should he be again ar-
rested on the same supposed offense ? " But the govern-
ment was unrelenting, and nothing but the conviction cf
the offender could appease their wrath. He was taken, with
much ceremony and parade of the law, to Richmond, where
he again met Burr, the originator of all his troubles and
misfortunes. The magnanimity of the man is well shown,
in that he never recriminated or accused his destroyer with
deceiving him, inasmuch as he had entered voluntarily into
his plans, and therefore did not choose to lay his troubles
on the shoulders of another; although it is apparent, that
if he had never seen Aaron Burr, he would have escaped
this sudden ruin to his prosperity and happiness. The fol-
lowing letter is from the pen of Mrs. Blennerhassett, ad-
dressed to her husband at Lexington, and displays her noble
and elevated mind, as well as her deep conjugal affection.
It is copied from the sketch of Mr. Blennerhassett, by Wil-
liam Wallace, published in vol. ii, of the American Review,
1845.
"Natchez, August 3d, 1807.
My dearest love : After having experienced the greatest
disappointment in not hearing from you for two mails, I at
length heard of your arrest ; which afflicts and mortifies me,
because it was an arrest. I think that had you of y our own
accord gone to Richmond and solicited a trial, it would have
accorded better with your pride, and you would have es-
caped the unhappiness of missing my letters, which I wrote
every week to Marietta. God knows what you may feel and
suffer on our accounts, before this reaches, to inform you of
our health, and welfare in every particular; and knowing
this, I trust and feel your mind will rise superior to every
520 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
inconvenience that your present situation may subject you to ;
despising, as I do, the paltry malice of the upstart agents of
government. Let no solicitude whatever for us, damp your
spirits. We have many friends here, who do the utmost in
their power to counteract any disagreeable sensation occa-
sioned me by your absence. I shall live in the hope of hear-
ing from you by the next mail ; and entreat you, by all that
is dear to us, not to let any disagreeable feelings on account
of our separation, enervate your mind at this time. Re-
member that all here will read with great interest, anything
concerning you ; but still do not trust too much to yourself;
consider your want of practice at the bar, and don't spare
the fee of a lawyer. Apprise Col. Burr of my warmest ac-
knowledgments for his own and Mrs. Alston's kind remem-
brance, and tell him to assure her she has inspired me with
a warmth of attachment which can never diminish. I wish
him to urge her to write to me. God bless you, prays your
M. Blennerhassett."
On Burr's acquittal, Mr. Blennerhassett was never brought
to trial, but discharged from the indictment for treason, and
bound over in the sum of three thousand dollars, to appear
at Chillicothe, Ohio, on a misdemeanor; "for that whereas
he prepared an armed force, whose destination was the
Spanish territory." He did not appear, nor was he ever
called upon again; and thus ended this treasonable farce,
which had kept the whole of the United States in a ferment
for more than a year, and, like " the mountain in labor, at
last brought forth a mouse."
After the trial at Richmond, in 1807, he returned to
Natchez, where he staid about a year, and then bought,
with the remains of his fortune, a plantation, of one
thousand acres, in Claiborne county, Miss., seven miles
from Gibson Port, at a place called St. Catharine's, and
cultivated it with a small stock of slaves. While here he
HAKMA.N BLENNERHASSETT. 521
continued his literary pursuits, leaving Mrs. Blennerhassett
to superintend both in doors and out. The embargo destroyed
all commerce, and the war which soon followed put a stop
to the sale of cotton, and blasted his hopes of reinstating
his fortune from that source. In a letter to his attorney, at
Marietta, in 1808, wherein he proposes the sale of his island
for slaves, he says, that with thirty hands on his plantation,
he could in five years clear sixty thousand dollars. Cotton
was then in demand, and brought a high price.
His lady, with her characteristic energy, rose at early
dawn, mounted her horse and rode over the grounds, exam-
ining each field, and giving directions to the overseer as to
the work to be done that day, or any alteration to be made
in the plans, which circumstances required. They here
had the society of a few choice friends in Natchez, and
among the neighboring planters. On this plantation they
passed ten years ; in which time one son and daughter were
added to the number of their children. The daughter died
when young. Retaining still a fond recollection of his Ma-
rietta and Belpre friends, he, in the year 1818, sent one of
his sons to the college in Athens, Ohio, under the care of
W. P. Putnam, the son of his old friend, A. W. Putnam.
Here he remained a year, at the end of which time, find-
ing his fortune still decreasing, and means much cramped
by his indorsements for Col. Burr, amounting to thirty thou-
sand dollars, ten thousand of which were repaid by Mr.
Alston, he in 1819 sold his plantation, and moved his family
to Montreal ; the governor of the province, an old friend,
having given him hopes to expect a post on the bench, for
which he was well qualified. Misfortune having marked
him for her own, soon after his arrival his friend was re-
moved from office, and his expectations frustrated.
He remained here until the year 1822, when he removed
his family to England, under an assurance of a post from
522 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
the government, which was never realized, and resided in
the town of Bath, with a maiden sister.
It was at Montreal, with the prospects of poverty and
blighted hopes thickening around her, that she wrote those
beautiful and touching lines describing " The Island," and
her once happy home, that may well be called her " La-
ment," and are given below, as well worthy of preservation.
THE DESERTED ISLE.
Like mournful echo from the silent tomb,
That pines away upon the midnight air,
Whilst the pale moon breaks out with fitful gloom,
Fond memory turns with sad, but welcome care,
To scenes of desolation and despair;
Once bright with all that beauty could bestow,
That peace could shed, or youthful fancy know.
To thee, fair isle, reverts the pleasing dream ;
Again thou risest in thy green attire ;
Fresh, as at first, thy blooming graces seem;
Thy groves, thy fields, their wonted sweets respire ;
Again thou'rt all my heart could e'er desire.
0 why, dear isle, art thou not still my own ?
Thy charms could then for all my griefs atone.
The stranger that descends Ohio's stream,
Charm'd with the beauteous prospects that arise,
Marks the soft isles, that 'neath the glistening beam,
Dance in the wave, and mingle with the skies;
Sees also one, that now in ruin lies,
Which erst, like fairy queen, towered o'er the rest,
In every native charm by culture dress'd.
There rose the 9eat where once, in pride of life,
My eye could mark the queen of rivers flow ;
In summer's calmness, or in winter's strife,
Swoln with the rains, or baffling with the snow ;
Never again my heart such joy shall know. •
Havoc, and ruin, and rampant war, have past
Over that isle with their destroying blast.
HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT. 523
The black'nhig fire has swept throughout her halls,
The winds fly whistling through them, and the wave
No more in spring-floods o'er the sand-beach crawls ;
But furious drowns in one o'erwhelming grave,
Thy hallowed haunts it watered as a slave.
Drive on, destructive flood ! and ne'er again
On that devoted Lie let man remain.
For many blissful moments there I've known ;
Too many hopes have there met their decay,
Too many feelings now forever gone,
To wish that thou wouldst e'er again display
The joyful coloring of thy prime array.
Buried with thee, let them remain a blot ;
With thee, their sweets, their bitterness forgot.
And 0, that I could wholly wipe away
The memory of the ills that work'd thy fall :
The memory of that all eventful day,
When I return' d and found my own fair hall
Held by the infuriate populace in thrall,
My own fireside blockaded by a band,
That once found food and shelter at my hand.
My children, (0, a mother's pangs forbear,
Nor strike again that arrow through my soul,)
Clasping the ruffians in suppliant prayer,
To free their mother from unjust control ;
While with false crimes, and imprecations foul,
The wretches, vilest refuse of the earth,
Mock jurisdiction held, around my hearth.
Sweet isle ! methinks I see thy bosom torn,-
Again behold the ruthless rabble throng,
That wrought destruction, taste must ever mourn.
Alas, I see thee now, shall see thee long,
Yet ne'er shall bitter feelings urge the wrong ;
That to a mob would give the censure due,
To those that arm'd the plunder-greedy crew.
Thy shores are warm'd by bounteous suns in vain,
Columbia, if spite and envy spring
524 HARMAN BLENNERHASSETT.
To blast the beauty of mild nature's reign,
The European stranger, who would fling
O'er tangled woods refinement's polishing,
May find (expended every plan of taste,)
His work by ruffians rendered doubly waste.
In addition to the expectation of office in England, he
also had hopes of recovering an interest he held in an
estate in Ireland. Both of these, however, failed. He ul-
timately resided in the island of Guernsey, where he died
in 1831, aged sixty-three years.
Eleven years after his death, in 1842, when his widow and
children were reduced to extreme want, she returned to New
York with one of her sons, both of them in very poor health,
with the purpose of petitioning Congress for remuneration
in the destruction of the property on the island, by the
Wood county militia, in December, 1806. The petition is
couched in very feeling and appropriate language, in which
she sets forth the outrages offered to herself and family,
with the damages done to the house and property on the
island.
" Your memorialist does not desire to exaggerate the
conduct of the said armed men, or the injuries done by
them; but she can truly say, that before their visit the resi-
dence of her family had been noted for its elegance and
high state of improvement, and that they left it- in a state
of comparative ruin and waste; and as instances of the
mischievous and destructive spirit which appeared to govern
them, she would mention that while they occupied as a
guard-room one of the best apartments in the house, (the
building of which had cost nearly forty thousand dollars,) a
musket or rifle ball was deliberately fired into the ceiling,
by which it was much defaced and injured ; and that they
wantonly destroyed many pieces of valuable furniture.
She would also state, that, being apparently under no
HARMAN BLENNEEHASSETT. 525
subordination, they indulged in continual drunkenness and
riot, offering many indignities to your memorialist, and
treating her domestics with violence.
Your memorialist further represents, that these outrages
were committed upon an unoffending and defenseless family
in the absence of their natural protector; your memorial-
ist's husband being then away from his home ; and that in
answer to such remonstrances as she ventured to make
against the consumption, waste, and destruction of his pro-
perty, she was told by those who assumed to have the com-
mand, that they held the property for the United States, by
order of the President, and were privileged to use it, and
should use it, as they pleased. It is with pain that your
memorialist reverts to events, which, in their consequences,
have reduced a once happy family from affluence and com-
fort, to comparative want and wretchedness ; which blighted
the prospects of her children, and made herself, in the de-
cline of life, a wanderer on the face of the earth."
This memorial was directed to the care of Henry Clay,
then in the Senate of the United States, enveloped in a let-
ter from R. Emmitt, a son of the celebrated man of that
name. He says, " She is now in this city, residing in very
humble circumstances, bestowing her cares upon a son,
who, by long poverty and sickness, is reduced to utter im-
becility, both of mind and body, unable to assist her, or pro-
vide for his own wants. In her present destitute situation,
the smallest amount of relief would be thankfully received
by her. Her condition is one of absolute want, and she has
but a short time left to enjoy any better fortune in this
world."
Mr. Clay presented the memorial to the Senate, with some
very feeling and appropriate remarks ; having been formerly
well acquainted with the family, and employed as his attor-
ney, when arrested at Lexington, Ky. It was taken up, and
526 MARGARET BLE N NE RH A S SE TT.
referred to the committee of claims ; of which the Hon.
William Wocdbridge was chairman. His report on the
memorial is a very able and feeling document, in which he
advocates the claim as just, and one which ought to be al-
lowed, notwithstanding it had now been thirty-six years since
the events transpired. He says, " Not to do so, would be
unworthy of any wise or just nation, that is disposed to re-
spect, most of all, its own honor." This report sets forth
all the circumstances attending the " Burr treason," as de-
scribed in the foregoing biography. The documents which
accompany the report are very interesting, especially the
statement of Morgan Neville and William Robinson, jr.,
two of the young men who were arrested and tried on the
island, as partizans of Burr, in December, 1806, and written
for the future use of Mr. Blennerhassett, a few days after
these events transpired. It is given as a correct history of
the outrages on the island.
Statement of Messrs. Neville and Robinson, and affidavit
of Margaret Blennerhassett :
"On the 13th day of December, 1806, the boat in which
we were, was driven ashore, by ice and wind, on Backus's
island, about one mile below Mr. Blennerhassett's house;
we landed in the forenoon, and the wind continuing unfa-
vorable, did not afford us an opportunity of putting off until
after three o'clock in the evening, at which time we were
attacked by about twenty -five men, well armed, who rushed
upon us suddenly, and we, not being in a situation to resist
the fury of a mob, surrendered ; a strong guard was placed
in the boat, to prevent, we presume, those persons of our
party who remained in the boat, from going off with her,
while we were taken to the house of Mr. Blennerhassett.
On our arrival at the house we found it filled with militia;
another party of them were engaged in making fires, (around
the house,) of rails dragged from the fences of Mr. Blenner-
MARGARET BLE NNE RH AS S E TT. 527
hassett. At this time Mrs. Blennerhassett was from home.
When she returned, (about an hour after,) she remonstrated
against this outrage on the property, but without effect; the
officers declared that while they were on island, the pro-
perty absolutely belonged to them. We were informed, by
themselves, that their force consisted of forty men the first
night; and on the third day it was increased to eighty.
The officers were constantly issuing the whisky and meat,
which had been laid up for the use of the family ; and when-
ever any complaint was made by the friends of Mrs. Blen-
nerhassett, they invariably asserted that everything on the
farm was their own property. There appeared to us to be
no kind of subordination among the men ; the large room
they occupied on the first floor, presented a continued scene
of riot and drunkenness; the furniture appeared ruined by
the bayonets, and one of the men fired his gun against the
ceiling; the ball made a large hole, which completely spoiled
the beauty of the room. They insisted that the servants
should wait upon them, before attending to their mistress ;
when this was refused, they seized upon the kitchen, and
drove the negroes into the wash-house. We were detained
from Saturday evening until Tuesday morning; during all
which time there were never less than thirty, and frequently
from seventy to eighty men living in this riotous manner
entirely on the provisions of Mrs. Blennerhassett. When
we left the island, a cornfield near the house, in which the
corn was still remaining, was filled with cattle, the fences
having been pulled down to make fires. This we pledge
ourselves to be a true statement of these transactions, as
impression was made on us at the time.
Morgan Neville,
Wm. Roblnson, Jr."
Charles Fenton Mercer, Esq., also, in September, 1807,
soon after the trial at Richmond, made a full statement of
52S MARGARET B L E N N E R II A S S E T T .
hid knowledge of the events on which the accusation against
Mr. Blennerhassett was founded ; as they transpired between
the 20th of September and 6th of December, 1806, having
been himself at the island in November; with his opinion
of the objects of the expedition, in which he fully clears
Mr. Blennerhassett of any designs against the peace and
quiet, of the United States. Mr. D. Woodbridge, of Mari-
etta, in a letter to the chairman, of the 2d of April, 1842,
makes a statement of the loss of property, from the attach-
ment of the government, and the riotous conduct of the
Wood county volunteers on the island.
In August, 1842, while this subject was under consider-
ation, news arrived of the death of Mrs. Blennerhassett at
'Xew York ; and nothing more was done in the matter.
She, who had lived in wealth and splendor, and imparted
charity to hundreds of the poor, was indebted to others for
a grave. She died in the most destitute condition ; and her
last days passed under the soothing care of a charitable
society of Irish females in New York, by whom she was
buried. The reverses in this accomplished woman's for-
tune, and in that of her amiable husband, illustrate the un-
certainties of human life, and unfold the mysterious doings
of Providence with the children of men. More than forty
years have passed away since these events were transacted,
and not a vestige now remains of the splendid and happy
home of Harman and Margaret Blennerhassett. All has
passed away like the vision of a pleasant dream ; while the
thousands of passengers who annually travel up and down
the Ohio on steamboats, still eagerly inquire after, and gaze
upon "the island of Blennerhassett" with wonder and delight.
APPENDIX.
[Note A.] The acquaintances formed during his college residence at Cambridge,
in many cases ripened into close intimacy and friendship. Among his early friends
and correspondents, is the name of John Adams. The following extract of a letter,
written by this distinguished statesman, at Braintrec, Mass., December 5, 1760,
exhibits at that early period, their mental character and their insatiable thirst for
intellectual improvement, upon which were based their subsequent elevation. Tho
perusal may stimulate others to imitate so laudable an example.
Braintree, December 5th, 17C0.
Sir : I presume upon the merit of a brother, both in the academical and legal
family, to give you this trouble, and to ask the favor of your correspondence. The
science which we have bound ourselves to study for life, you know to be immensely
voluminous, perhaps intricate and involved ; so that an arduous application to books
at home, a critical observation of the course of practice, the conduct of the older
practitioners in courts, and a large correspondence with fellow students abroad, as
well as conversation in private companies, upon legal subjects, are needful to gain a
thorough mastery, if not to make a decent figure in the profession of law. The
design of this letter, then, is to desire that you would write me a report of any cause
of importance and curiosity, either in Courts of Admiralty or Common Law, that
you hear resolved in your colouy. And on my part, I am ready and engage to do the
same of any such causes that I shall hear argued in the province. It is an employ-
ment that gives me pleasure, and I find that revolving a case in my mind, stating it
on paper, recollecting the arguments on each side, and examining the points through
my books, that occur in the course of a trial, makes the impression deeper on my
memory, and lets me easier into the spirit of law and practice.
In view I send you the report of a cause argued in Boston last term, and should
be glad to know if the points, whether the statutes of mortmain were ever stirred ia
your colony S and by what criterion you determine what statutes are, and what are
not extended to you." (Here follows the case reported, which is too long for
insertion.)
[Note B.] " In the House of Representatives of the colony of Connecticut, Fri-
day, 21st of May, 13th, George iii, 1773. Mr. Speaker taring laid before the House
\ lettirr from the Speaker of the House of Burgesses of the coloLy of Virginia,
34
530 APPENDIX.
containing certain resolutions entered into by said house on the 12th of March last;
this House taking into consideration the contents of said letter, the above-mentioned
resolutions, and the reasons on which they are grounded, arc of opinion that they
are weighty and important in their nature and design, calculated and tending to
produce happy and salutary effects, in securing and supporting the ancient legal and
constitutional rights of this and the colonies in general, do approve and adopt the
measure, and thereupon
Resolved, That a Standing Committee of Correspondence and Inquiry, to consist
of nine persons, viz. : The Hon. Ebcnczer Silliman, Esq., "William Williams, Benja-
min Payne, Samuel Holdcn Parsons, Nathaniel Wales, Silas Dean, Samuel Bishop,
Joseph Trumbull, and Erastus Wolcott, Esq., whose business it shall be to obtain
all such intelligence, and take up and maintain correspondence with our sister colo-
nies, respecting the important considerations mentioned and expressed in the afore-
said resolutions of the patriotic House of Burgesses of Virginia, and the result of
such their proceedings from time to time to lay before this house.
Resolved, That the Speaker of this House do transmit to the Speakers of the dif-
ferent Assemblies of the British colonies on this continent, copies of these resolu-
tions, and request that they would come into similar measures, and communicate,
from time to time, with the said committee, on all matters wherein the common
welfare and safety of the colonics are concerned.
[Note C] In the House of representatives of the colony of Connecticut, June
3, 1774. Whereas a Congress of Commissioners from the several British colonies in
America, is proposed by some of our neighboring colonies, and thought necessary :
and whereas, it may be found expedient that such Congress should be convened be-
fore the next session of the Assembly,
Resolved, by this House, that the Committee of Correspondence be, and they arc
hereby, empowered, on application to them made, or from time to time as may be
found necessary, to appoint a suitable number to attend such Congress or Convention
of Commissioners, or Committees of the several colonics in British America; and
the persons thus to be chosen, shall be, and th?y hereby are, directed, in behalf at
the colony, to attend such Congress, to consult and advise on proper measures for
advancing the best good of the colonies; and such conferences from time to time to
report to this House.
[Note D.] "New London, July 28th, 1774.
Dear Sir : On the refusal of three of our commissioners to attend the Congress,
I have received a notification to attend a meeting of the Committee of Correspond-
ence, at Hartford, next Wednesday, to make a further appointment, and also a de-
sire to notify you of the time and place of our meeting. If you will come to New
London on Monday, we will go together. I hope no business of a private nature
will divert you from attending this important public business. As the eyes of aE
APPENDIX. 531
the continent are upon the Congress for relief, so I think we should be unpardonable, to
suffer small things to divert us from attending to make the appointment.
I am, sir, your friend,
Samuel H. Parsons.
Col. Joseph Trumbull, Norwich."
[Note E.] The following letter, written June 7, 1774, to Samuel Adams, by a
member of the Committee of Correspondence, soon after the passage of the resolution
of June 3d, by the Connecticut Assembly, illustrates the ardent patriotism which
inspired the gentlemen composing that committee, and their earnest desire and effi-
cient influence in promoting the important object of a Convention of the Colo-
nies, or General Congress. It alludes to a letter which may be found in Force's
Archives.
" Sir : You will have received a letter from our General Committee of Corres-
pondence before this comes to hand. By that you will find that a General Congress
of Commissioners from all the colonies is expected, and that in the opinion of people
here, that will be a necessary step to unite the several colonies in the most effectual
measures to oppose the designs of Administration ; who doubtless expect that the
other governments will sit still, tame spectators, while they wreak their vengeance on
Boston, if they are left untouched.
This town had a full meeting yesterday, in which it was easily seen that the spirit
of our people is as high as ever, and full as determined to oppose, with vigor and
resolution, the wicked and unjust attempts of our enemies. The Committee of Cor-
respondence have this day written to the Committee of Correspondence for the town
of Boston, on the subject."
[Note F.] " To the Honorable General Assembly now sitting, the memo-
rial of Samuel H. Parsons, humbly showeth : That in April, 1775, the memorialist*
Mr. Silas Dean and Col. Samuel Wyllys, with others, were induced, from the partic-
ular situation of public affairs, to undertake surprising and seizing the enemy's post
at Ticonderoga, without the knowledge and approbation of the Assembly ; and to
prosecute the business, were necessitated to take out a quantify of money from the
treasury, for which they gave their promissory receipt ; that the whole moneys were
delivered to the gentlemen sent on that service, and were actually expended therein.
That said receipts are still held against the promissors, notwithstanding the public
nave taken the post into their own hands, and repaid the expense. Your memorialist
therefore prays your honors to order said receipts to be given up ; that the sums
thereof be allowed the treasurer in settlement ; and he, as in duty bound, &c.
Dated in Hartford, the 30th of May, 1777.
Samuel H. Parsons.
The action of the Legislature, and the original receipts, are recorded in the office
of the Secretary of State at Hartford.
532 APPENDIX
[Note G.] Gen. Parsons to Gen. Washington :
"New Haven, May 25th, 1777.
Dear General : Having received information that the enemy were collecting
forage, horses, &c, on the east end of Long Island, I ordered a detachment from
the several regiments then at this place, consisting of one major, four captains, viz. :
Troop, Pond, Mansfield, and Savage, and nine subalterns, and two hundred and
twenty men, commissioned officers and privates, under the command of Col. Meigs,
to attack their different posts on that part of the island, and destroy the forage, etc.,
which they have collected. Col. Meigs embarked his men here, in thirteen whale-
boats, the 21st inst., and proceeded to Guilford, but the wind proving high, and the
sea rough, could not pass the sound until Friday, the 23d. He left Guilford, at
10 o'clock on the afternoon of the 23d, with one hundred and seventy of his de-
tachment, and under convoy of two armed sloops, and in company with another un-
armed, (to bring off prisoners.) crossed the sound, to the north branch of the island,
near Southold, where he arrived about 6 o'clock in the evening; the enemy's troops
on this branch of the island had marched for New York tvro days before ; but
about sixty of the enemy remaining at a place called Sagg Harbor, about fifteen
miles distant, on the south branch of the island, he ordered eleven whale-boats, with
as many men as could be safely transported across the bay, over the land to the bay,
where they re-embarked, to the number of one hundred and thirty, and at about 12
o'clock, arrived safe across the bay, within about four miles of the harbor; where,
having secured the boats in the woods, under the care of a guard, Col. Meigs formed
his remaining little detachment in proper order for attacking the different posts and
quarters of the enemy, and securing the vessels and forage at the same time. They
marched in the greatest order and silence, and at 2 o'clock arrived at the harbor.
The several divisions, with fixed bayonets, attacked the guards and posts assigned
them, whilst Capt. Troop, with thn f)ptarhm<>nt under his command, secured the ves-
sels and forage lying at the wharf. The alarm soon became general, when an armed
schooner of twelve guns and seventy men, within one hundred and fifty yards of the
wharf, be<*an a fire upon our troops, which continued, without cessation, for three-
quarters of an hour, with grape and round shot ; but the troops, with the greatest
intrepidity, returned the fire upon the schooner, and set fire to the vessels and forage,
and killed and captured all the soldiers and sailors, eicept about six, who made their
escape under cover of the night. Twelve brigs and sloops, one an armed vessel with
twelve guns, about one hundred and twenty tons of pressed hay, oats, corn, and other
forage, ten hogsheads of ruin, and a large quantity of other merchandize, were en-
tirely consumed. It gives mc the greatest satisfaction to hear the officers and sol-
diers, without exception, behaved with the greatest bravery, order, and intrepiditj.
Col. Meigs, having finished the business on which he was sent, returned safe, wilk
all his men, to Guilford, by 2 o'clock, P. M., yesterday, with ninety prisoners; hav-
ing, in twenty-five hours, by land and water, transported his men full ninety miles,
APPENDIX. 538
and succeeded in his attempts, beyond my most sanguine expectations, without losing
a single man, either killed or wounded.
It gives me singular pleasure to hear no disposition appeared in any one soldier, to
plunder the inhabitants, or violate private property, in the smallest degree; and that-
even the clothing and othei articles belonging to the prisoners, the soldiers, with a
generosity not learned from British troops, have, with gre^.t cheerfulness, restored to
them, where they have fallen into their hands.
Maj. Humphreys, who waits on your excellency, with the account, was in the
action, with Col. Meigs, and will be able to give any further necessary inform-
ation, &c,: &c."
[Note H.] " Peekskill, July 30th, 1777.
Dear General : The designs of the enemy, and the importance of the posts in
the various parts of the country, are, doubtless, better understood by your excellency,
than I can pretend to know them. This ought not to prevent my proposing my sen-
timents to your excellency's consideration : in this I do no more than my duty, and
if I am mistaken, it can be no ill consequence to any one but myself. The posts ou
the North river have always appeared to me of greater importance to the enemy,
than any in America, and the most difficult to obtain, if any considerable body of
men were left to defend them. In this light they have been generally viewed, as
the communication between the eastern and southern states will be almost wholly
cut off, if the enemy hold the passes in or near the river. When I was last at head-
' quarters, it was thought of so much importance, that Gen. Nixon's brigade wa3
'•ordered not to march for Albany, until I should arrive within a day's march of
Peekskill, when three brigades and the militia would have then been left at the post.
If the post is of so much importance to be held, and the intention of the enemy not
fully known, it appears to me very necessary that a body of troops, sufficient for the
defense of it, should be left here. The militia are to leave us to-morrow ; two brig-
ades are ordered over the river for Philadelphia. About two thousand men are then
left to defend the forts, man the ships, and other commands, and to defend the
passes through the mountains; one thousand of which will be necessarily detached
over the river, and in the ships, and to other posts; the remaining number much
too small to answer the expected purposes. That the enemy do not design to attack
any other place at present, I think most probable for these reasons : That no object
can be of so much importance toward subjugating the country; and if a junction of
Mr. Howe's army, with that at the northward, is an event they wish to take place, it
can no other way be so easily effected, as by this river. The force left in and about
York island, is certainly much larger than is necessary for the defense of New
York. I think there can be doubt but they have six thousand men left there, and
unless this army is much greater than I conceive it to be, he cannot have with the
fleet, men sufficient to effect anything considerable against the force he would expect
to meet at any other place southward of this post. On these grounds, I am still oi
534 APPENDIX.
opinion the enemy are designed here, and the present maneuver is to draw off our
troops from this place. The difficulty of carrying the post, if a good body of troops
«cre left here, I think will fully justify the maneuver of the enemy. They have
never attempted to obstruct our passage over the river, which was always in their
power. This I think strengthens the opinion they design to attack here. Under
these circumstances I feel myself exceedingly concerned that so many of the troops
are drawn to so great a distance; 'tis not my own reputation only which gives me so
much concern, though I am very sensible the little I have will be forever lost, if the
post is uot maintained, and I think the most sanguine person can have very little
hope of it, with no greater force than will remain here ; with the four brigades, and
what assistance we can have from the militia, there might be a prospect of maintain-
ing it against the main body of the enemy until your excellency's arrival here ;
otherwise I see very little prospect of holding out one day. However, I hope I may
be mistaken in my conjecture ; if I should be, I shall be heartily rejoiced. The two
brigades should join you, and I wish I may be added to the number.
I am your excellency's obedient servant,
Samuel H. Parsons.
To Gen. Washington.
[Note L.] Gen. Parsons to Gov. Trumbull :
THE ATTACK ON FORT MONTGOMERY.
Extract. Danbury, October 7th, 1777.
Sir : I came this morning to forward, with all possible expedition, such troops as
I should find coming to our aid from Connecticut. I am much pleased to find my
countrymen seem again roused from the stupor which had sewed them. I think by
appearances that we shall soon receive a re-cnforccmcnt of tmo thousand men from
this State. Happy would I have been had the fourth of this body arrived yesterday.
I am sorry to inform your excellency that the enemy made a successful attack on
Fort Montgomery yesterday. The 5th, they landed about fifteen hundred men at
King's Ferry, on the east side of the river, under cover of their ships and armed ves-
sels, and the night after, re-embarked most of them. Which, with a large additional
number, (about twenty-five hundred in the whole,) were landed on the west side
(the 6th) in the morning, keeping a large reserve on board and at King's Ferry.
About 10 o'clock the enemy began the attack on the fort, which lasted without
cessation, uutil near half-after six in the evening, when the fort was carried by
storm, after eight or ten unsuccessful attempts, in which they were repulsed, with
great loss. The courage and bravery displayed by the troops (principally militia from
New York) who defended the post, would do honor to the best disciplined regiment.
No terms would be accepted, but with fortitude seldom found, ihcy undauntedly
stood the shock, determined to defend the fort or sell their lives as dear as possible.
The fort was finally taken, merely for want of men to man the lines, and not for
want of spirit in the men. But about five hundred was; afforded to man the post and
APPENDIX. 535
outworks belonging to thein : a number of men not more than sufficient to defend
the largest fort. The post on the east side was left in a weak, defenseless state, and
could afford but little aid.
Thus was a post of importance, and the lives and liberties of some of the bravest
men, made a sacrifice to the careless iuatteution of our countrymen to objects of
great and extensive public importance. The enemy must have suffered much, as
more than three hours of this attack the musketry was incessant within forty yards,
and less a greater part of the time. Gov. Clinton, who commanded, and Col. Lamb
and some other officers, escaped after the enemy had entered. Gen. James Clinton
was wounded, and is a prisouer. Maj. Humphrey, Col. Dubois, Lieut. Col. Liv-
ingston, and sundry other officers, are missing.
This event is unfortunate, but I hope will not be attended by any very ill conse-
quences. I think a little more patience and public virtue, (which is now very scarce.)
will set all things right again.
I am, with esteem, your excellency's obedient servant,
Samuel H. Parsons.
Letter from Gen. Parsons to Gov. Trumbull :
THE CAPTURE OF FORT MONTGOMERY, AND THE ADVANCE OF GEN. CLIN-
TON UP THE NORTH RIVER.
JFishkill, October 9th, 1777
Sir : I wrote yesterday, from Danbury, an account of the misfortune which had
befallen this post, merely for the want of a timely re-enforcement of men sufficient to
man the lines. On that head I can only add, that should this misfortune have the
happy effect to rouse my countrymen to more vigorous exertions, and to the exercise
of a degree of patience; submission and perseverance, necessary to accomplish any
thing great, or save the country from inevitable ruin, wc may consider the event as
fortunate, rather than as an event from which any ill effects will follow.
Gov. Clinton, his brother, Gen. James Clinton, Col. Lamb, Col. Maj. Humphrey,
and most of the officers, and a great part of the men, who were supposed to be lost,
have got in, many of them badly wounded. The garrison was defended with the
utmost bravery: no men could do more. Our loss cannot yet be ascertained : I
hope not so considerable as we feared. The army of the enemy arc now advancing.
We have no doubt Albany is their object. Should they attack this post., from which
they arc seven miles distant, and the same spirit of inattention seize our countrymen .
I fear you will hear no better news from here. Wc shall fight the enemy if possi-
ble. We shall do our utmost to defend ourselves, if attacked. The troops are in
good spirits. The issue is in the disposal of the great Arbiter of all events. I think
it of absolute necessity that all who can bear arms, and can be spared, should be
immediately sent forward to Poughkcepsie, except those on their march for this post.-
who will join us here.
Gen. Clinton, who commands the British forces in person, must be defeated at
536 APPENDIX.
Albany, or before he arrives there, or Gen. Gates will be undone. Every exertion b
necessary to animate and encourage the people, in this important crisis. That we
are embarked in the cause of justice and truth — in the cause of God and man-
kind — is beyond a doubt. That we shall finally succeed, I think equally certain.
When public spirit prevails over private interest — and injustice (so scandalously prev-
alent at this time) is restrained, and religion, and virtue, and a sense of our depend-
ence on Heaven for all our mercies, and especially deliverance from imminent dan-
ger, takes place of the vain confidence in our own arm and on our own strength :
then, and not till then, will our salvation be brought out; but I cannot say that a
profound belief of these things, and a careless neglect of using the means put into
our hands for our own deliverance, is any evidence of the sincerity of our profession.
As Gen. Putnam is exceedingly busy, I have wrote by his desire.
I have the honor to be,
Your excellency's obedient servant,
Samuel H. Parsons.
Letter from Gen. Parsons to Gov. Trumbull.
THE RETREAT OF GEN. CLINTON DOWN THE NORTH RIVER.
Peekskill, Oct. 22d, 1777.
Sir : The enemy prevented our designed attack upon them by a very sudden em-
barkation of their troops on board their ships, which still lie off Verplank's Point.
Every favorable opportunity has offered for their going to New York, but no move-
ments have taken place. Their Northern Army is more within your excellency's
knowledge than mine. If we should soon be ordered toward New York, I think
some aid from Connecticut will be much wanted. As I understand fourteen hun-
dred men are ordered from the cast side of Connecticut river to join Gen. Gates,
under his present situation would it not be best to order them to join this part of the
army as soon as possible.
The militia from this post are all returned home.
I am your excellency's obedient servant,
S. H. Parsons.
[Note K.] Gen. Parsons to Gen. Washington.
THE STATE OF THE GARRISON AT WEST POINT, AND THE CONTINUANCE
OF HIS COMMAND AT THAT POST.
West Point, June 5th, 1779.
Dear General : In answer to your questions, by Capt. Christie, of the Pennsyl-
vania regiment, I have given him general information of the state of this garrison,
which will be explained by the proper key. The garrison arc in high spirits, and
arc very desirous to receive the enemy's attack. I cannot promise the post will be
successfully defended, but I am certain every exertion will be made by the troops to
secure the possession of that honor to themselves and their country, which they so
APPENDIX. 537
frequently anticipate in reflection. If any more troops are ordered here, and should
I continue in command of the post for any length of time, I would beg your excel-
lency to order my brigade to compose part of the garrison. Two regiments of that
brigade are perfectly acquainted with the country, and in that respect are better able
to answer all the purposes expected from the garrison.
S. H. Parsons.
[Note. M.] Letter from Gen. Parsons to Gen. Washington,
IN RELATION TO THE INVASION OF CONNECTICUT BY GEN. TRYON,
JULY, 1779.
Redding, July 9th, 1779.
Dear General : I have this moment arrived here, after a tour of sixty miles since
eleven o'clock last night. The few militia at New Haven, behaved exceedingly well,
repulsed the enemy several times, and considerable loss was suffered by the enemy.
They burnt a number of houses at East and West Haven, and plundered New Haven.
They have destroyed Fairfield — almost every house ; the abuses of women, children,
and old men, are unparalleled. They embarked from Fairfield yesterday and passed
over the sound, but there is reason to think they design an attack on Norwalk and
the other town3. Gen. Wolcott has received an express, informing him that four
thousand of the enemy are in possession of Horseneck, and marching eastward. I
have wrote to Col. Way land, and the small number of infantry, desiring them to
march to the coast. I hope it will be agreeable to your excellency's intentions. I
hear nothing of Glover's brigade. Is it possible to send one thousand continental
troops "5 They will serve to steady the militia, and render them a formidable body.
I will write you from Norwalk, where I shall be to-night.
I am your excellency's obedient servant.
Samuel H. Parsons.
Gen. Parsons to Geu. Washington,
INFORMING HIM OF GEN. TRYON's LANDING AND BURNING OF NOR-
WALK BATTLE WITH TRYON RETREAT OF THE ENEMY, ETC.
Wilton, July 11th, 1779.
Dear General : In my last I informed you that the enemy landed last night.
This morning, the enemy, on their advance, were met by the militia, and some skir-
mishing ensued, but without any considerable effect on either side. At about six
o'clock the troops under Gen. Wolcott, and my small detachment of about one hun-
dred and fifty continental troops joined and took possession of an eminence the north
end of the town. The enemy advanced in our front and on our left flank, until
about nine o'clock, when they were checked in their progress by the vigorous exer-
tions of the parties of militia and continental troops sent out to oppose them, and in
53S APPENDIX.
turn were compelled to retire from hill to hill, sometimes in great disorder. We
continued to advance upon them until near eleven o'clock, when a column having
nearly gained our right flauk, the militia in the center gave way and retreated in
disorder. This gave the enemy possession of our ground. Gen. Wolcott, who com-
manded, exerted himself upon this occasion to rally the troops and bring them to
ordefr again, but without effect, until they had retired about two miles, when som:
troops being again formed, returned to the aid of the right aud left wings, who had
retired but a small distance, and in order. With these the enemy were pursued again.
and retreated with precipitation to their ships.
I have the pleasure to assure your excellency the continental troops, without
exception, they being all engaged, behaved with the greatest bravery. Capt. Betts,
who was the first engaged with the enemy, aud who continued longest in the action,
deserves particular notice for his great fortitude and prudent conduct in the battle.
He continued advancing on the enemy until the center of the main body gave way,
and he with his party advanced near a mile at the time, by his prudence was able to
effect a regular retreat, without any considerable loss. Capt. Eels, on the right, and
Capt. Sherman, on the left, were also engaged, and when obliged to retire, kept
their order, and retreated with regularity. A body of the militia— I think they were
commanded by Maj. Porter — and another considerable detachment, deserve honorable
mention to be made of them.
I am not yet able to ascertain our own or the enemy's loss, but in my next shall
be able to give a more particular account. In my handful of continental troops I
have lost five men killed, a lieutenant and six privates wounded ; I don't know of
any missing: some loss the militia have sustained. I am satisfied the loss of the
enemy must have been considerable.
About twenty boats landed on the west side of the harbor, at five o'clock, and
immediately began to set fire to the buildings. They completed burning the town at
about twelve o'clock. This appeared to have been their sole business, as they did not
stay to carry off any plunder of considerable value. A few Tory houses are left, which
I hope our people will burn, as the burners are here, and have committed no act by
which the public can seize them. I imagine Stamford will be the next object to
wreak their hellish malice upon. To that place I shall repair to-morrow.
I am fully persuaded that five hundred more men, such as the brave militia I have
before mentioned, and the one hundred and fifty continentals, would have given the
enemy a total defeat. The numbers of the enemy were about two thousand— our
numbers between nine and eleven hundred.
I am, dear General, your obedient servant.
Samuel II. Parsons.
A more full and detailed statement of the movements of Gen. Tryon, and the
depredations committed by him upon the sea coast, may be found in letters from
APPENDIX. 539
Gen. Parsons to Gen. Washington, dated July 14th and 20th, 1779, and to Gen.
Heath, July 12th.
His correspondence with Gen. Washington is large, and details with great precision
and minuteness the movements of the enemy, as well as the plans and continued
movements of the few under his command ; and likewise exhibits the mutual confi-
dence existing between the writer and the commander-in-chief. Time and space,
however, do not admit a transcript.