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+Project Gutenberg's Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by Frank H. Severance
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier
+
+Author: Frank H. Severance
+
+Release Date: August 5, 2011 [EBook #36974]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD TRAILS ON THE NIAGARA FRONTIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLD TRAILS
+ ON THE
+ NIAGARA FRONTIER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: THE VISION OF BRÉBEUF.
+ _Drawn by H. H. Green._ _See Page 15._]
+
+
+
+ OLD TRAILS
+ ON THE
+ NIAGARA FRONTIER
+
+ BY FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+ BUFFALO N Y
+ MDCCCXCIX
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT 1899
+ BY FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+ THE MATTHEWS-NORTHRUP CO.,
+ COMPLETE ART-PRINTING WORKS,
+ BUFFALO, N. Y.
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE SCHOOLS
+ OF BUFFALO,
+
+ MANY OF WHOM, ON SUNDRY PLEASANT OCCASIONS, HAVE ACCOMPANIED ME, IN
+ SCHOOL-ROOM TALKS, OVER SOME OF THE OLD TRAILS WHICH RUN IN AND OUT
+ OF OUR HOME REGION, THESE STUDIES OF NIAGARA FRONTIER HISTORY ARE
+ CORDIALLY INSCRIBED.
+ F. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ DEDICATION, v
+ PREFACE, ix
+ THE CROSS BEARERS, 1
+ THE PASCHAL OF THE GREAT PINCH, 43
+ WITH BOLTON AT FORT NIAGARA, 63
+ WHAT BEFEL DAVID OGDEN, 107
+ A FORT NIAGARA CENTENNIAL, 141
+ THE JOURNALS AND JOURNEYS OF AN EARLY BUFFALO MERCHANT, 163
+ MISADVENTURES OF ROBERT MARSH, 195
+ UNDERGROUND TRAILS, 227
+ NIAGARA AND THE POETS, 275
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The essays herein contained have been written at "odd moments," and
+for divers purposes. Their chief value lies in the fact that they
+illustrate, several of them by means of individual experiences, certain
+typical and well-defined periods in the history of the Niagara region.
+By "Niagara region," a phrase which no doubt occurs pretty often in the
+following pages, I mean to designate in a historic, not a scenic, sense
+the frontier territory of the Niagara from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. It
+is a region which has a concrete but as yet for the most part unwritten
+history of its own. The value of its past to the student, as is ever the
+case with "local history" in its worthy aspect, depends upon the
+importance of its relation to the general history of our country. That
+the Niagara region has played an important part in that history, is an
+assurance wholly superfluous for even the most casual student of
+American development. All that the following studies undertake is to
+give a glimpse, with such fidelity as may be, of events and conditions
+hereabouts existing, at periods which may fairly be termed typical.
+
+"The Cross Bearers," a paper originally prepared as a lecture for a
+class that was studying the history of the Catholic Church in America,
+is, so far as I am aware, the first attempt to review in a single
+narrative all of the French missions in this immediate vicinity, and the
+work of the English-speaking missionary priests who said mass in the
+Niagara region prior to its full organization under ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction. The data are drawn from the original sources--the Jesuit
+Relations, Champlain, Le Clercq, Hennepin, Charlevoix, Crespel and other
+early writers whose works, in any edition, are often inaccessible to the
+student. For data relating to Bishop Burke, and for other valuable
+assistance, I am indebted to my friend the Very Rev. Wm. R. Harris, Dean
+of St. Catharines.
+
+"The Paschal of the Great Pinch" is an attempt to picture, in narrative
+form, conditions conceived to exist at Fort Niagara in 1687-'8, when the
+Marquis de Denonville made his abortive attempt to occupy that point.
+Lest any reader shall be in doubt as to the genuineness of the memoirs
+of the Chevalier De Tregay, I beg to assure him that Lieut. De Tregay is
+no myth. His name, and practically all the facts on which my sketch is
+based, will be found in the Paris Documents (IV.), "Documentary History
+of the State of New York," Vol. I. This paper stands for the French
+period on the Niagara; the two next following, for the British period.
+
+"With Bolton at Fort Niagara" is almost wholly drawn from unpublished
+records, chiefly the Haldimand Papers, the originals of which are in the
+British Museum, but certified copies of which are readily accessible to
+the student in the Archives at Ottawa. I have made but a slight study of
+the great mass of material from which practically the history of the
+Niagara region during the Revolution is to be written; yet it is
+probable that this slight study makes known for the first time, to
+students of our home history, such facts as the employment of Hessians
+on the Niagara during the Revolution, the first bringing hither of the
+American flag, possibly even the work and fate of Lieut. Col. Bolton
+himself.
+
+The next paper, "What Befel David Ogden," is drawn from a widely
+different, though scarcely less known source. The personal narrative is
+based on an obscure pamphlet by Josiah Priest, published at
+Lansingburgh, N. Y., in 1840. I am aware that Priest is not altogether
+trustworthy as a historian. Dr. Thos. W. Field calls him a "prolific,
+needy and unscrupulous author" [_See_ "An Essay Toward an Indian
+Bibliography"]; yet he concedes to his works "a large amount of historic
+material obtained at some pains from sources more or less authentic." My
+judgment is, that Priest is least trustworthy in his more ambitious
+work; whereas his unpretentious pamphlets, wretchedly printed at a
+country press sixty years ago, contain true narratives of individual
+undertakings in the Revolution, Indian captivities and other pioneer
+experiences, gathered by the writer direct from the hero whose
+adventures he wrote down, without literary skill it is true, but also
+without apparent perversion or exaggeration. The very circumstantiality
+with which David Ogden's experiences are narrated is evidence of their
+genuineness. Corroborative evidence is also furnished by the
+lately-published muster-rolls of New York regiments during the
+Revolution. In the Third Regiment of Tryon County militia, among the
+enlisted men, appears the name of David Ogden ["New York in the
+Revolution," 2d ed., p. 181], and there was but one David Ogden, not
+merely in the Tryon County militia, but so far as these records show, in
+the entire soldiery of New York State. In the same regiment there was
+also a "Daniel" Ogden, Sr., possibly David's father. The name Daniel
+Ogden also occurs in the list of Tryon County Rangers ["New York in the
+Revolution," 2d ed., p. 186], a service in which we would naturally
+expect to find one whom the Indian Brant called "the beaver hunter, that
+old scouter." In short, I think we may accept David as altogether
+genuine, and in his adventures--never told before, I believe, as a part
+of Niagara history--may find an example of patriotic suffering and
+endurance wholly typical of what many another underwent at that time and
+in this region.
+
+The "Fort Niagara Centennial Address" is here included because its most
+important part relates to that period in our history immediately
+following the Revolution, the "hold-over period," during which, for
+thirteen years after the Treaty of 1783, the British continued to occupy
+Fort Niagara and other lake posts. What I say on the negotiations
+leading to the final relinquishment of Fort Niagara is based on
+information gleaned from the manuscript records in London and Ottawa.
+
+"The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant" is also a
+contribution to local annals from an unpublished source, being drawn
+from the MS. journals of John Lay, very kindly placed in my hands by
+members of his family. They afford a picture of conditions hereabouts
+and elsewhere, during the years 1810-'23, which I have thought worthy of
+preservation.
+
+In the "Misadventures of Robert Marsh" I have endeavored by means of a
+personal narrative to illustrate another period in our history. The
+misguided Marsh fairly stands for many of the so-called Patriots whose
+uprising on this border is known as Mackenzie's Rebellion of 1837-'8.
+The considerable literature on this subject includes a number of
+personal narratives, for the most part published in small editions and
+now hard to find; but the scarcest of all, so far as my experience has
+discovered, is that from which I have drawn the story of Robert Marsh:
+"Seven Years of My Life, or Narrative of a Patriot Exile, who together
+with eighty-two American Citizens were illegally tried for rebellion in
+Upper Canada and transported to Van Dieman's Land," etc., etc. It is an
+exceedingly prolix and pretentious title, after the fashion of the time,
+prefacing a badly-written, poorly-printed volume of 207 pages, turned
+out by the press of Faxon & Stevens, Buffalo, 1848. In view of the fact
+that neither in Sabin nor any other bibliography have I found any
+mention of this book, and the further fact that in fifteen years of
+somewhat diligent book-hunting I have discovered but one copy, it is no
+exaggeration to call Marsh's "Narrative" "scarce," if not "rare."
+
+The incidents related in "Underground Trails" are illustrative of many
+an episode at the eastern end of Lake Erie in the days preceding the
+Civil War. I had the facts of the principal adventures some years ago
+from the late Mr. Frank Henry of Erie, Pa., who had himself been a
+participant in more than one worthy enterprise of the Underground
+Railroad. Sketches based on information supplied by Mr. Henry, and
+originally written out for the Erie Gazette, are the latter part of the
+paper as it now stands.
+
+The last essay, "Niagara and the Poets," is a following of "Old Trails"
+chiefly in a literary sense, but it is thought its inclusion here will
+not be found inappropriate to the general character of the collection.
+
+I must add a word of grateful acknowledgment for help received from
+Douglas Brymner, Dominion Archivist, at Ottawa; from the Hon. Peter A.
+Porter of Niagara Falls, N. Y., Charles W. Dobbins of New York City, and
+John Miller, Erie, Pa. F. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+The Cross Bearers.
+
+
+
+
+THE CROSS BEARERS.
+
+
+I invite you to consider briefly with me the beginnings of known history
+in our home region. Of the general character of that history, as a part
+of the exploration and settlement of the lake region, you are already
+familiar. What I undertake is to direct special attention to a few of
+the individuals who made that history--for history, in the ultimate
+analysis, is merely the record of the result of personal character and
+influence; and it is striking to note how relatively few and individual
+are the dominating minds.
+
+Remembering this, when we turn to trace the story of the Niagara, we
+find the initial impulses strikingly different from those which lie at
+the base of history in many places. Often the first chapter in the story
+is a record of war for war's sake--the aim being conquest, acquisition
+of territory, or the search for gold. Not so here. The first invasion of
+white men in this mid-lake region was a mission of peace and good will.
+Our history begins in a sweet and heroic obedience to commands passed
+down direct from the Founder of Christianity Himself. Into these wilds,
+long before the banner of any earthly kingdom was planted here, was
+borne the cross of Christ. Here the crucifix preceded the sword; the
+altar was built before the hearth.
+
+Now, I care not what the faith of the student be, he cannot escape the
+facts. The cross is stamped upon the first page of our home history--of
+this Buffalo and the banks of the Niagara; and whoever would know
+something of that history must follow the footsteps of those who first
+brought the cross to these shores. It is, therefore, a brief following
+of the personal experiences of these early cross bearers that we
+undertake; but first, a word may be permitted by way of reminder as to
+the conditions here existing when our recorded history begins.
+
+From remote days unrecorded, the territory bordering the Niagara,
+between Lakes Erie and Ontario, was occupied by a nation of Indians
+called the Neuters. A few of their villages were on the east side of the
+river, the easternmost being supposed to have stood near the present
+site of Lockport. The greater part of the Niagara peninsula of Ontario
+and the north shore of Lake Erie was their territory. To the east of
+them, in the Genesee valley and beyond, dwelt the Senecas, the
+westernmost of the Iroquois tribes. To the north of them, on Lake Huron
+and the Georgian Bay, dwelt the Hurons. About 1650 the Iroquois overran
+the Neuter territory, destroyed the nation and made the region east of
+the Niagara a part of their own territory; though more than a century
+elapsed, after their conquest of the Neuters, before the Senecas made
+permanent villages on Buffalo Creek and near the Niagara. It is
+necessary to bear this fact in mind, in considering the visits of white
+men to this region during that period; it had become territory of the
+Senecas, but they only occupied it at intervals, on hunting or fishing
+expeditions.
+
+During the latter years of Neuter possession of our region, missionaries
+began to approach the Niagara from two directions; but long before any
+brave soul had neared it through what is now New York State,--then the
+heart of the fierce Iroquois country,--others, more successful, had come
+down from the early-established missions among the Hurons, had sojourned
+among the Neuters and had offered Christian prayers among the savages
+east of the Niagara.
+
+Note, therefore, that the first white man known to have visited the
+Niagara region was a Catholic priest. Moreover, so far as is
+ascertained, he was the first man, coming from what is now Canada, to
+bring the Christian faith into the present territory of the United
+States. This man was Joseph de la Roche Dallion.[1] The date of his
+visit is 1626.
+
+Father Dallion was a Franciscan of the Recollect reform, who had been
+for a time at the mission among the Hurons, then carried on jointly by
+priests and lay brothers of the Recollects and also by Fathers of the
+Society of Jesus. On October 18th of this year (1626), he left his
+companions, resolved to carry the cross among the people of the Neuter
+nation. An interpreter, Bruslé, had "told wonders" of these people.
+Bruslé, it would seem, therefore, had been among them; and although, as
+I have said, Father Dallion was the first white man known to have
+reached the Niagara, yet it is just to consider the probabilities in the
+case of this all but unknown interpreter. There are plausible grounds
+for belief, but no proof, that Étienne Bruslé was the first white man
+who ever saw Niagara Falls. No adventurer in our region had a more
+remarkable career than his, yet but little of it is known to us. He was
+with Champlain on his journey to the Huron country. He left that
+explorer in September, 1615, at the outlet of Lake Simcoe, and went on a
+most perilous mission into the country of the Andastes, allies of the
+Hurons, to enlist them against the Iroquois. The Andastes lived on the
+head-waters of the Susquehanna, and along the south shore of Lake Erie,
+the present site of Buffalo being generally included within the bounds
+of their territory. Champlain saw nothing more of Bruslé for three
+years, but in the summer of 1618 met him at Saut St. Louis. Bruslé had
+had wonderful adventures, had even been bound to the stake and burned so
+severely that he must have been frightfully scarred. The name by which
+we know him may have been given him on this account. He was saved from
+death by what the Indians regarded as an exhibition of wrath on the part
+of the Great Spirit. I find no trace of him between 1618 and 1626, when
+Father Dallion appears to have taken counsel of him regarding the
+Neuters. Bruslé was murdered by the Hurons near Penetanguishene in 1632.
+What is known of him is learned from Champlain's narrative of the voyage
+of 1618 (edition of 1627). Sagard also speaks of him, and says he made
+an exploration of the upper lakes--a claim not generally credited.
+Parkman, drawing from these sources and the "Relations," tells his story
+in "The Pioneers of France in the New World," admiringly calls him "That
+Pioneer of Pioneers," and says that he seems to have visited the Eries
+in 1615.
+
+The interesting thing about him in connection with our present study is
+the fact that he appears to have been the forerunner of Dallion among
+the savages of the Niagara. There is no white man named in history who
+may be even conjectured, with any plausibility, to have visited the
+Niagara earlier than Bruslé.[2]
+
+Stimulated by this interpreter's reports, by the encouragement of his
+companions and the promptings of his own zeal, Father Dallion set out
+for the unknown regions. Two Frenchmen, Grenole and Lavallée,
+accompanied him. They tramped the trail for six days through the woods,
+apparently rounding the western end of Lake Ontario, and coming eastward
+through the Niagara Peninsula. They were well received at the villages,
+given venison, squashes and parched corn to eat, and were shown no sign
+of hostility. "All were astonished to see me dressed as I was," writes
+the father, "and to see that I desired nothing of theirs, except that I
+invited them by signs to lift their eyes to heaven, make the sign of the
+cross and receive the faith of Jesus Christ." The good priest, however,
+had another object, somewhat unusual to the men of his calling. At the
+sixth village, where he had been advised to remain, a council was held.
+"There I told them, as well as I could, that I came on behalf of the
+French to contract alliance and friendship with them, and to invite them
+to come to trade. I also begged them to allow me to remain in their
+country, to be able to instruct them in the law of our God, which is the
+only means of going to paradise." The Neuters accepted the priest's
+offers, and the first recorded trade in the Niagara region was made when
+he presented them "little knives and other trifles." They adopted him
+into the tribe, and gave him a father, the chief Souharissen.
+
+After this cordial welcome, Grenole and Lavallée returned to the Hurons,
+leaving Father Joseph "the happiest man in the world, hoping to do
+something there to advance God's glory, or at least to discover the
+means, which would be no small thing, and to endeavor to discover the
+mouth of the river of Hiroquois, in order to bring them to trade." After
+speaking of the people and his efforts to teach them, he continues: "I
+have always seen them constant in their resolution to go with at least
+four canoes to the trade, if I would guide them, the whole difficulty
+being that we did not know the way. Yroquet, an Indian known in those
+countries, who had come there with twenty of his men hunting for beaver,
+and who took fully 500, would never give us any mark to know the mouth
+of the river. He and several Hurons assured us that it was only ten
+days' journey to the trading place; but we were afraid of taking one
+river for another, and losing our way or dying of hunger on the land."
+So excellent an authority as Dr. John Gilmary Shea says: "This was
+evidently the Niagara River, and the route through Lake Ontario. He
+(Dallion) apparently crossed the river, as he was on the Iroquois
+frontier." The great conquest of the Neuters by the Iroquois was not
+until 1648 or 1650. Just what the "Iroquois frontier" was in 1627 is
+uncertain. It appears to have been about midway between the Niagara and
+the Genesee, the easternmost Neuter village being some thirty miles east
+of the Niagara. The Recollect appears therefore as the first man to
+write of the Niagara, from personal knowledge, and of its mouth as a
+place of trade. The above quotations are from the letter Father Dallion
+wrote to one of his friends in France July 18, 1627, he having then
+returned to Toanchain, a Huron village. I have followed the text as
+given by Sagard. It is significant that Le Clercq, in his "Premier
+Établissement de la Foy," etc., gives a portion of Dallion's account of
+his visit to the Neuters, but omits nearly everything he says about
+trade.
+
+Father Dallion sojourned three winter months with the Neuters, but the
+latter part of the stay was far from agreeable. The Hurons, he says,
+having discovered that he talked of leading the Neuters to trade, at
+once spread false and evil reports of him. They said he was a great
+magician; that he was a poisoner, that he tainted the air of the country
+where he tarried, and that if the Neuters did not kill him, he would
+burn their villages and kill their children. The priest was at a
+disadvantage in not having much command of the Neuter dialect, and it is
+not strange, after the evil report had once been started, that he should
+have seemed to engage in some devilish incantation whenever he held the
+cross before them or sought to baptize the children. When one reflects
+upon the dense wall of ignorance and superstition against which his
+every effort at moral or spiritual teaching was impotent, the admiration
+for the martyr spirit which animated the effort is tempered by amazement
+that an acute and sagacious man should have thought it well to "labor"
+in such an obviously ineffective way. But history is full of instances
+of ardent devotion to aims which the "practical" man would denounce at
+once as unattainable. That Father Dallion was animated by the spirit of
+the martyrs is attested in his own account of what befel him. A
+treacherous band of ten came to him and tried to pick a quarrel. "One
+knocked me down with a blow of his fist, another took an ax and tried to
+split my head. God averted his hand; the blow fell on a post near me. I
+also received much other ill-treatment; but that is what we came to seek
+in this country." His assailants robbed him of many of his possessions,
+including his breviary and compass. These precious things, which were no
+doubt "big medicine" in the eyes of his ungracious hosts, were
+afterwards returned. The news of his maltreatment reached the ears of
+Fathers Brébeuf and De la Nouë at the Huron mission. They sent the
+messenger, Grenole, to bring him back, if found alive. Father Dallion
+returned with Grenole early in the year 1627; and so ended the first
+recorded visit of white man to the Niagara region.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For fourteen years succeeding, I find no allusion to our district. Then
+comes an episode which is so adventurous and so heroic, so endowed with
+beauty and devotion, that it should be familiar to all who give any
+heed to what has happened in the vicinity of the Niagara.
+
+Jean de Brébeuf was a missionary priest of the Jesuits. That implies
+much; but in his case even such a general imputation of exalted
+qualities falls short of justice. His is a superb figure, a splendid
+acquisition to the line of heroic figures that pass in shadowy
+procession along the horizon of our home history. Trace the narrative of
+his life as sedulously as we may, examine his character and conduct in
+whatever critical light we may choose to study them, and still the noble
+figure of Father Brébeuf is seen without a flaw. There were those of his
+order whose acts were at times open to two constructions. Some of them
+were charged, by men of other faith and hostile allegiance, with using
+their priestly privileges as a cloak for worldly objects. No such charge
+was ever brought against Father Brébeuf. The guilelessness and heroism
+of his life are unassailable.
+
+He was of a noble Normandy family, and when he comes upon the scene, on
+the banks of the Niagara, he was forty-seven years old. He had come out
+to Quebec fifteen years before and had been assigned to the Huron
+mission. In 1628 he was called back to Quebec, but five years later he
+was allowed to return to his charge in the remote wilderness. The record
+of his work and sufferings there is not a part of our present story.
+Those who seek a marvelous exemplification of human endurance and
+devotion, may find it in the ancient Relations of the order. He lived
+amid threats and plots against his life, he endured what seems
+unendurable, and his zeal throve on the experience. In November, 1640,
+he and a companion, the priest Joseph Chaumonot, resolved to carry the
+cross to the Neuter nation. They no doubt knew of Father Dallion's
+dismal experience; and were spurred on thereby. Like him, they sought
+martyrdom. Their route from the Huron country to the Niagara has been
+traced with skill and probable accuracy by the Very Rev. Wm. R. Harris,
+Dean of St. Catharines. At this time the Neuter nation lived to the
+north of Lake Erie throughout what we know as the Niagara Peninsula, and
+on both sides of the Niagara, their most eastern village being near the
+present site of Lockport. From an uncertain boundary, thereabouts, they
+confronted the possessions of the Senecas, who a few years later were to
+wipe them off the face of the earth and occupy all their territory east
+of the lake and river.
+
+Fathers Brébeuf and Chaumonot set out on their hazardous mission
+November 2d, in the year named, from a Huron town in the present
+township of Medonte, Ontario. (Near Penetanguishene, on Georgian Bay.)
+Their probable path was through the present towns of Beeton,
+Orangeville, Georgetown, Hamilton and St. Catharines. They came out upon
+the Niagara just north of the Queenston escarpment. The journey thus far
+had been a succession of hardships. The interpreters whom they had
+engaged to act as guides deserted them at the outset. Ahead of them went
+the reputation which the Hurons spread abroad, that they were magicians
+and carried all manner of evils with them. Father Brébeuf was a man of
+extraordinary physical strength. Many a time, in years gone by, he had
+astonished the Indians by his endurance at the paddle, and in carrying
+great loads over the portages. His companion, Chaumonot, was smaller and
+weaker, but was equally sustained by faith in Divine guidance. On their
+way through the forests, Father Brébeuf was cheered by a vision of
+angels, beckoning him on; but when he and his companion finally stood on
+the banks of the Niagara, under the leaden sky of late November, there
+was little of the beatific in the prospect. They crossed the swirling
+stream--by what means must be left to conjecture, the probability being
+in favor of a light bark canoe--and on the eastern bank found themselves
+in the hostile village of Onguiara--the first-mentioned settlement on
+the banks of our river.
+
+Here the half-famished priests were charged with having come to ruin the
+people. They were refused shelter and food, but finally found
+opportunity to step into a wigwam, where Indian custom, augmented by
+fear, permitted them to remain. The braves gathered around, and proposed
+to put them to death. "I am tired," cried one, "eating the dark flesh of
+our enemies, and I want to taste the white flesh of the Frenchman." So
+at least is the record in the Relation. Another drew bow to pierce the
+heart of Chaumonot; but all fell back in awe when the stalwart Brébeuf
+stepped forth into their midst, without weapon and without fear, and
+raising his hand exclaimed: "We have not come here for any other purpose
+than to do you a friendly service. We wish to teach you to worship the
+Master of Life, so that you may be happy in this world and in the
+other."
+
+Whether or not any of the spiritual import of his speech was
+comprehended cannot be said; but the temper of the crowd changed, so
+that, instead of threatening immediate death, they began to take a
+curious, childish interest in the two "black-gowns"; examining the
+priests' clothes, and appropriating their hats and other loose articles.
+The travelers completely mystified them by reading a written message,
+and thus getting at another's thoughts without a spoken word. The
+Relation is rich in details of this sort, and of the wretchedness of the
+life which the missionaries led. They visited other "towns," as the
+collections of bark wigwams are called; but everywhere they were looked
+upon as necromancers, and their lives were spared only through fear.
+
+Far into the winter the priests endured all manner of hardship. Food was
+sometimes thrown to them as to a worthless dog, sometimes denied
+altogether, and then they had to make shift with such roots and barks or
+chance game as their poor woodcraft enabled them to procure, or the
+meager winter woods afforded. On one occasion, when a chief frankly told
+them that his people would have killed them long before, but for fear
+that the spirits of the priests would in vengeance destroy them,
+Brébeuf began to assure him that his mission was only to do good;
+whereupon the savage replied by spitting in the priest's face; and the
+priest thanked God that he was worthy of the same indignity which had
+been put upon Jesus Christ. When one faces his foes in such a spirit,
+there is absolutely nothing to fear. And yet, after four months of these
+experiences, there seems not to have been the slightest sign of any good
+result. The savages were as invulnerable to any moral or spiritual
+teachings as the chill earth itself. Dumb brutes would have shown more
+return for kindness than they. The saying of Chateaubriand, that man
+without religion is the most dangerous animal that walks the earth,
+found full justification in these savages. Finally, Brébeuf and his
+associate determined to withdraw from the absolutely fruitless field,
+and began to retrace their steps towards Huronia.
+
+It was near the middle of February, 1641, when they began their retreat
+from the land of the Neuters. The story of that retreat, as indeed of
+the whole mission, has been most beautifully told, with a sympathetic
+fervency impossible for one not richly endowed with faith to simulate,
+by Dean Harris. Let his account of what happened stand here:
+
+"The snow was falling when they left the village Onguiara, crossed the
+Niagara River near Queenston, ascended its banks and disappeared in the
+shadowy forest. The path, which led through an unbroken wilderness, lay
+buried in snow. The cold pierced them through and through. The cords on
+Fr. Chaumonot's snow-shoe broke, and his stiffened fingers could
+scarcely tie the knot. Innumerable flakes of snow were falling from
+innumerable branches. Their only food was a pittance of Indian corn
+mixed with melted snow; their only guide, a compass. Worn and spent with
+hardships, these saintly men, carrying in sacks their portable altar,
+were returning to announce to their priestly companions on the Wye the
+dismal news of their melancholy failure and defeat. There was not a
+hungry wolf that passed them but looked back and half forgave their
+being human. There was not a tree but looked down upon them with pity
+and commiseration. Night was closing in when, spent with fatigue, they
+saw smoke rising at a distance. Soon they reached a clearing and
+descried before them a cluster of bark lodges. Here these Christian
+soldiers of the cross bivouacked for the night.
+
+"Early that evening while Chaumonot, worn with traveling and overcome
+with sleep, threw himself to rest on a bed that was not made up since
+the creation of the world, Father Brébeuf, to escape for a time the
+acrid and pungent smoke that filled the cabin, went out to commune with
+God alone in prayer.... He moved toward the margin of the woods, when
+presently he stopped as if transfixed. Far away to the southeast, high
+in the air and boldly outlined, a huge cross floated suspended in
+mid-heaven. Was it stationary? No, it moved toward him from the land of
+the Iroquois. The saintly face lighted with unwonted splendor, for he
+saw in the vision the presage of the martyr's crown. Tree and hillside,
+lodge and village, faded away, and while the cross was still slowly
+approaching, the soul of the great priest went out in ecstasy, in loving
+adoration to his Lord and his God.... Overcome with emotion, he
+exclaimed, 'Who will separate me from the love of my Lord? Shall
+tribulation, nakedness, peril, distress, or famine, or the sword?'
+Emparadised in ecstatic vision, he again cries out with enthusiastic
+loyalty, '_Sentio me vehementer impelli ad moriendum pro Christo_'--'I
+feel within me a mighty impulse to die for Christ'--and flinging himself
+upon his knees as a victim for the sacrifice or a holocaust for sin, he
+registered his wondrous vow to meet martyrdom, when it came to him, with
+the joy and resignation befitting a disciple of his Lord.
+
+"When he returned to himself the cross had faded away, innumerable stars
+were brightly shining, the cold was wrapping him in icy mantle, and he
+retraced his footsteps to the smoky cabin. He flung himself beside his
+weary brother and laid him down to rest. When morning broke they began
+anew their toilsome journey, holding friendly converse.
+
+"'Was the cross large?' asked Father Chaumonot.
+
+"'Large,' spoke back the other, 'yes, large enough to crucify us all.'"
+
+It is idle to insist on judgments by the ordinary standards in a case
+like this. As Parkman says, it belongs not to history, but to
+psychology. Brébeuf saw the luminous cross in the heavens above the
+Niagara; not the material, out-reaching arms of Niagara's spray, rising
+columnar from the chasm, then resting, with crosslike extensions on the
+quiet air, white and pallid under the winter moon. Such phenomena are
+not unusual above the cataract, but may not be offered in explanation of
+the priest's vision. He was in the neighborhood of Grimsby, full twenty
+miles from the falls, when he saw the cross; much too far away to catch
+the gleam of frosted spray. Nor is it a gracious spirit which seeks a
+material explanation for his vision. The cross truly presaged his
+martyrdom; and although the feet of Father Brébeuf never again sought
+the ungrateful land of the Neuters, yet his visit and his vision were
+not wholly without fruit. They endow local history with an example of
+pure devotion to the betterment of others, unsurpassed in all the annals
+of the holy orders. To Brébeuf the miraculous cross foretold martyrdom,
+and thereby was it a sign of conquest and of victory to this heroic
+Constantine of the Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Brébeuf and Chaumonot had turned their backs on the Neuters, the
+Niagara region was apparently unvisited by white men for more than a
+quarter of a century. These were not, however, years of peaceful hunting
+and still more placid corn and pumpkin-growing, such as some romantic
+writers have been fond of ascribing to the red men when they were
+unmolested by the whites. As a matter of fact, and as Fathers Dallion,
+Brébeuf and Chaumonot had discovered, the people who claimed the banks
+of the lower reaches of the Niagara as within their territory, were the
+embodiment of all that was vile and barbarous. There is no record that
+they had a village at the angle of lake and river, where now stands old
+Fort Niagara. It would have been strange, however, if they did not
+occasionally occupy that sightly plateau with their wigwams or huts,
+while they were laying in a supply of fish. If trees ever covered the
+spot they were killed by early camp-fires, probably long before the
+coming of the whites. Among the earliest allusions to the point is one
+which speaks of the difficulty of getting wood there; and such a
+treeless tract, in this part of the country, could usually be attributed
+to the denudation consequent on Indian occupancy.
+
+A decade or so after the retreat of the missionaries came that fierce
+Indian strife which annihilated the Neuters and gave Niagara's banks
+into the keeping of the fiercer but somewhat nobler Iroquois. The story
+of this Indian war has been told with all possible illumination from the
+few meager records that are known; and it only concerns the present
+chronicle to note that about 1650 the site of Fort Niagara passed under
+Seneca domination. The Senecas had no permanent town in the vicinity,
+but undoubtedly made it a rendezvous for war parties, and for hunting
+and fishing expeditions.
+
+Meanwhile, the Jesuits in their Relations, and after them the
+cartographers in Europe, were making hearsay allusions to the Niagara or
+locating it, with much inaccuracy, on their now grotesque maps. In 1648
+the Jesuit Ragueneau, writing to the Superior at Paris, mentions
+Niagara, which he had never seen or approached, as "a cataract of
+frightful height." L'Allemant in the Relation published in 1642, had
+alluded to the river, but not to the fall. Sanson, in 1656, put
+"Ongiara" on his famous map; and four years later the map of Creuxius,
+published with his great "Historiæ Canadensis," gave our river and fall
+the Latin dignity of "Ongiara Catarractes." One map-maker copied from
+another, so that even by the middle of the seventeenth century, the
+reading and student world--small and ecclesiastical as it mostly
+was--began to have some inkling of the main features and continental
+position of the mid-lake region for the possession of which, a little
+later, several Forts Niagara were to be projected. It is not, however,
+until 1669 that we come to another definite episode in the history of
+the region.
+
+In that year came hither the Sulpitian missionaries, François Dollier de
+Casson and René de Bréhant[3] de Galinée. They were bent on carrying the
+cross to nations hitherto unreached, on Western rivers. With them was
+the young Robert Cavelier, known as La Salle, who was less interested in
+carrying the cross than in exploring the country. Their expedition left
+Montreal July 6th, nine canoes in all. They made their way up the St.
+Lawrence, skirted the south shore of Lake Ontario, and on Aug. 10th were
+at Irondequoit Bay. They made a most eventful visit to the Seneca
+villages south of the bay. Thence they continued westward, apparently by
+Indian trails overland, and not by canoe. De Galinée, who was the
+historian of the expedition, says that they came to a river "one eighth
+of a league broad and extremely rapid, forming the outlet or
+communication from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario," and he continues with a
+somewhat detailed account of Niagara Falls, which, although he passed
+near them, he did not turn aside to see. The Sulpitians and La Salle
+crossed the river, apparently below Lewiston. They may indeed have come
+to the river at its mouth, skirting the lake shore. One may infer either
+course from the narrative of de Galinée, which goes on to say that five
+days after passing the river they "arrived at the extremity of Lake
+Ontario, where there is a fine, large sandy bay ... and where we
+unloaded our canoes."
+
+Pushing on westward, late in September, on the trail between Burlington
+Bay and the Grand River, they met Joliet, returning from his expedition
+in search of copper mines on Lake Superior. This meeting in the
+wilderness is a suggestive and picturesque subject, but we may not dwell
+on it here. Joliet, though he had thus preceded LaSalle and the
+Sulpitians in the exploration of the lakes, had gone west by the old
+northern route along the Ottawa, Lake Nipissing and the French River. He
+was never on the Niagara, for after his meeting with LaSalle, he
+continued eastward by way of the Grand River valley and Lake Ontario.
+Fear of the savages deterred him from coming by way of the Niagara, and
+thereby, it is not unlikely, becoming the white discoverer of Niagara
+Falls.[4] He was the first white man, so far as records relate, to come
+eastward through the Detroit River and Lake Erie. Our lake was therefore
+"discovered" from the west--a fact perhaps without parallel in the
+history of American exploration.
+
+After the meeting with Joliet, La Salle left the missionaries, who,
+taking advantage of information had from Joliet, followed the Grand
+River down to Lake Erie. Subsequently they passed through Lake Erie to
+the westward, the first of white men to explore the lake in that
+direction. De Galinée's map (1669) is the first that gives us the north
+shore of Lake Erie with approximate accuracy. On October 15th this
+devout man and his companion reached Lake Erie, which they described as
+"a vast sea, tossed by tempestuous winds." Deterred by the lateness of
+the season from attempting further travel by this course, they
+determined to winter where they were, and built a cabin for their
+shelter.
+
+Occasionally they were visited in their hut by Iroquois beaver hunters.
+For five months and eleven days they remained in their winter quarters
+and on the 23d of March, 1670, being Passion Sunday, they erected a
+cross as a memorial of their long sojourn. The official record of the
+act is as follows:
+
+ "We the undersigned certify that we have seen affixed on the lands
+ of the lake called Erié the arms of the King of France with this
+ inscription: 'The year of salvation 1669, Clement IX. being seated
+ in St. Peter's chair, Louis XIV. reigning in France, M. de
+ Courcelle being Governor of New France, and M. Talon being
+ intendant therein for the King, there arrived in this place two
+ missionaries from Montreal accompanied by seven other Frenchmen,
+ who, the first of all European peoples, have wintered on this lake,
+ of which, as of a territory not occupied, they have taken
+ possession in the name of their King by the apposition of his arms,
+ which they have attached to the foot of this cross. In witness
+ whereof we have signed the present certificate.'
+
+ "FRANCOIS DOLLIER,
+ "Priest of the Diocese of Nantes in Brittany.
+ "DE GALINÉE,
+ "Deacon of the Diocese of Rennes in Brittany."
+
+The winter was exceedingly mild, but the stream[5] was still frozen on
+the 26th of March, when they portaged their canoes and goods to the lake
+to resume their westward journey. Unfortunately losing one of their
+canoes in a gale they were obliged to divide their party, four men with
+the luggage going in the two remaining canoes; while the rest, including
+the missionaries, undertook the wearisome journey on foot all the way
+from Long Point to the mouth of the Kettle Creek. De Galinée grows
+enthusiastic in his admiration for the immense quantities of game and
+fruits opposite Long Point and calls the country the terrestrial
+Paradise of Canada. "The grapes were as large and as sweet as the finest
+in France. The wine made from them was as good as _vin de Grave_." He
+admires the profusion of walnuts, chestnuts, wild apples and plums.
+Bears were fatter and better to the palate than the most "savory" pigs
+in France. Deer wandered in herds of fifty to an hundred. Sometimes even
+two hundred would be seen feeding together. Before arriving at the sand
+beach which then connected Long Point with the mainland they had to
+cross two streams. To cross the first stream they were forced to walk
+four leagues inland before they found a satisfactory place to cross. One
+whole day was spent in constructing a raft to cross Big Creek, and after
+another delay caused by a severe snow-storm, they successfully effected
+a crossing and found on the west side a marshy meadow two hundred paces
+wide into which they sank to their girdles in mud and slush. Beset by
+dangers and retarded by inclement weather, they at last arrived at
+Kettle Creek, where they expected to find the canoe in which Joliet had
+come down Lake Huron and the Detroit and which he had told them was
+hidden there. Great was their disappointment to find that the Indians
+had taken it. However, later in the day, while gathering some wood for a
+fire, they found the canoe between two logs and joyfully bore it to the
+lake. In the vicinity of their encampment the hunters failed to secure
+any game, and for four or five days the party subsisted on boiled maize.
+The whole party then paddled up the lake to a place where game was
+plentiful and the hunters saw more than two hundred deer in one herd,
+but missed their aim. Disheartened at their failure and craving meat,
+they shot and skinned a miserable wolf and had it ready for the kettle
+when one of the men saw some thirty deer on the other side of the small
+lake they were on. The party succeeded in surrounding the deer and,
+forcing them into the water, killed ten of them. Now well supplied with
+both fresh and smoked meat, they continued their journey, traveled
+nearly fifty miles in one day and came to a beautiful sand beach (Point
+Pelée), where they drew up their canoes and camped for the night. During
+the night a terrific gale came up from the northeast. Awakened by the
+storm they made all shift to save their canoes and cargoes. Dollier's
+and de Galinée's canoes were saved, but the other one was swept away
+with its contents of provisions, goods for barter, ammunition, and,
+worst of all, the altar service, with which they intended establishing
+their mission among the Pottawatamies.
+
+The loss of their altar service caused them to abandon the mission and
+they set out to return to Montreal, but strangely enough chose the long,
+roundabout journey by way of the Detroit, Lake Huron and the French
+River, in preference to the route by which they had come, or by the
+outlet of Lake Erie, which they had crossed the autumn before. Thus de
+Galinée and Dollier de Casson, like Joliet,--not to revert to Champlain
+half a century earlier,--missed the opportunity, which seemed to wait
+for them, of exploring the eastern end of Lake Erie, of correctly
+mapping the Niagara and observing and describing its incomparable
+cataract. Obviously the Niagara region was shunned less on account of
+its real difficulties, which were not then known, than through terror of
+the Iroquois. Our two Sulpitians reached Montreal June 18, 1670, which
+date marks the close of the third missionary visitation in the history
+of the Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now I approach the point at which many writers of our local history
+have chosen to begin their story--the famous expedition of La Salle and
+his companions in 1678-'79. For the purpose of the present study we may
+omit the more familiar aspects of that adventure, and limit our regard
+to the acts of the holy men who continue the interrupted chain of
+missionary work on the Niagara. On December 6th, St. Nicholas Day, 1678,
+with an advance party under La Motte de Lussiére, came the Flemish
+Recollect, Louis Hennepin. As the bark in which they had crossed stormy
+Lake Ontario at length entered the Niagara, they chanted the Ambrosian
+hymn, "Te Deum Laudamus," and there is no gainsaying the sincerity of
+that thank-offering for perils escaped. Five days later, being encamped
+on the present site of Niagara, Ont., Father Hennepin celebrated the
+first mass ever said in the vicinity. A few days later, on the site of
+Lewiston, he had completed a bark chapel, in which was held the first
+Christian service which had been held on the eastern side of the Niagara
+since the visit of Brébeuf thirty-eight years before. Father Hennepin
+has left abundant chronicles of his activities on the Niagara. As soon
+as the construction of the Griffon was begun above the falls a chapel
+was established there, near the mouth of Cayuga Creek. Having blessed
+this pioneer vessel of the upper lakes, when she was launched, he set
+out for Fort Frontenac in the interests of the enterprise, and was
+accompanied to the Niagara, on his return, by the Superior of the
+mission, Father Gabriel de la Ribourde, and Fathers Zénobius Membré and
+Melithon Watteaux. All through that summer these devoted priests shared
+the varied labors of the camp. Hennepin tells us how he and his
+companions toiled back and forth over the portage around the falls,
+sometimes with their portable altar, sometimes with provisions, rigging
+or other equipment for the ship. "Father Gabriel," he says, "though of
+sixty-five years of age, bore with great vigor the fatigue of that
+journey, and went thrice up and down those three mountains, which are
+pretty high and steep." This glimpse of the saintly old priest is a
+reminiscence to cherish in our local annals. He was the last of a noble
+family in Burgundy who gave up worldly wealth and station to enter the
+Order of St. Francis. He came to Canada in 1670, and was the first
+Superior of the restored Recollect mission in that country. There is a
+discrepancy between Hennepin and Le Clercq as to his age; the former
+says he was sixty-five years old in 1679, when he was on the Niagara;
+the later speaks of him as being in his seventieth year in 1680. Of the
+three missionaries who with La Salle sailed up the Niagara in August,
+1679, and with prayers and hymns boldly faced the dangers of the unknown
+lake, the venerable Father Gabriel was first of all to receive the
+martyr's crown. A year later, September 9, 1680, while engaged at his
+devotions, he was basely murdered by three Indians. To Father Membré
+there were allotted five years of missionary labor before he, too, was
+to fall a victim to the savage. Father Hennepin lived many years, and
+his chronicles stand to-day as in some respects the foundation of our
+local history. But cherish as we may the memory of this trio of
+missionaries, the imagination turns with a yet fonder regard back to the
+devoted priest who was not permitted to voyage westward from the Niagara
+with the gallant La Salle. When the Griffon sailed, Father Melithon
+Watteaux was left behind in the little palisaded house at Niagara as
+chaplain. He takes his place in our history as the first Catholic priest
+appointed to minister to whites in New York State. On May 27, 1679, La
+Salle had made a grant of land at Niagara to these Recollect Fathers,
+for a residence and cemetery, and this was the first property in the
+present State of New York to which the Catholic Church held title. Who
+can say what were the experiences of the priest during the succeeding
+winter in the loneliness and dangers of the savage-infested wilderness?
+Nowhere have I as yet found any detailed account of his sojourn. We
+know, however, that it was not long. During the succeeding years there
+was some passing to and fro. In 1680 La Salle, returning east, passed
+the site of his ruined and abandoned fort. He was again on the Niagara
+in 1681 with a considerable party bound for the Miami. Father Membré,
+who was with him, returned east in October, 1682, by the Niagara route;
+and La Salle himself passed down the river again in 1683--his last visit
+to the Niagara. His blockhouse, within which was Father Melithon's
+chapel, had been burned by the Senecas.
+
+From this time on for over half a century the missionary work in our
+region centered at Fort Niagara, which still stands, a manifold reminder
+of the romantic past, at the mouth of the river. Four years after La
+Salle's last passage through the Niagara--in 1687--the Marquis de
+Denonville led his famous expedition against the Senecas. With him in
+this campaign was a band of Western Indians, who were attended by the
+Jesuit Father Enjalran. He was wounded in the battle with the Senecas
+near Boughton Hill, but appears to have accompanied de Denonville to his
+rendezvous on the site of Fort Niagara. Here he undoubtedly exercised
+his sacred office; and since the construction of Fort Niagara began at
+this time his name may head the list of priests officiating at that
+stronghold. He was soon after dispatched on a peace mission to the West,
+which was the special scene of his labors. His part, for some years to
+come, was to be an important one as Superior of the Jesuit Mission at
+Michillimackinac.
+
+As soon as Fort Niagara was garrisoned, Father Jean de Lamberville was
+sent thither as chaplain. For the student, it would be profitable to
+dwell at length upon the ministrations of this devoted priest. He was of
+the Society of Jesus, had come out to Canada in 1668, and labored in the
+Onondaga mission from 1671 to 1687. His work is indelibly written on the
+history of missions in our State. He was the innocent cause of a party
+of Iroquois falling into the hands of the French, who sent them to
+France, where they toiled in the king's galleys. When de Denonville, in
+1687, left at Fort Niagara a garrison of one hundred men under the
+Chevalier de la Mothe, Father Lamberville came to minister to them. The
+hostile Iroquois had been dealt a heavy blow, but a more insidious and
+dreadful enemy soon appeared within the gates. The provisions which had
+been left for the men proved utterly unfit for food, so that disease,
+with astounding swiftness, swept away most of the garrison, including
+the commander. Father Lamberville, himself, was soon stricken down with
+the scurvy. Every man in the fort would no doubt have perished but for
+the timely arrival of a party of friendly Miami Indians, through whose
+good offices the few survivors, Father Lamberville among them, were
+enabled to make their way to Catarouquoi--now Kingston, Ont. There he
+recovered; and he continued in the Canadian missions until 1698, when he
+returned to France.
+
+Not willing to see his ambitious fort on the Niagara so soon abandoned,
+de Denonville sent out a new garrison and with them came Father Pierre
+Milet. He had labored, with rich results, among the Onondagas and
+Oneidas. No sooner was he among his countrymen, in this remote and
+forlorn corner of the earth, than he took up his spiritual work with
+characteristic zeal. On Good Friday of that year, 1688, in the center of
+the square within the palisades, he caused to be erected a great cross.
+It was of wood, eighteen feet high, hewn from the forest trees and
+neatly framed. On the arms of it was carved in abbreviated words the
+sacred legend, "_Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus_," and in the midst of
+it was engraven the Sacred Heart. Surrounded by the officers of the
+garrison,--gallant men of France, with shining records, some of them
+were,--by the soldiers, laborers and friendly Indians, Father Milet
+solemnly blessed it. Can you not see the little band, kneeling about
+that symbol of conquest? Around them were the humble cabins and quarters
+of the soldiers. One of them, holding the altar, was consecrated to
+worship. Beyond ran the palisades and earthworks--feeble fortifications
+between the feeble garrison and the limitless, foe-infested wilderness.
+On one hand smiled the blue Ontario, and at their feet ran the gleaming
+Niagara, already a synonym of hardship and suffering in the annals of
+three of the religious orders. What wonder that the sense of isolation
+and feebleness was borne in upon the little band, or that they devoutly
+bowed before the cross which was the visible emblem of their strength
+and consolation in the wilderness. Where is the artist who shall paint
+us this scene, unique in the annals of any people?
+
+And yet, but a few months later--September 15th of that year--the
+garrison was recalled, the post abandoned, the palisades broken down,
+the cabins left rifled and empty; and when priest and soldiers had
+sailed away, and only the prowling wolf or the stealthy Indian ventured
+near the spot, Father Milet's great cross still loomed amid the
+solitude, a silent witness of the faith which knows no vanquishing.
+
+There followed an interim in the occupancy of the Niagara when neither
+sword nor altar held sway here; nor was the altar reëstablished in our
+region until the permanent rebuilding of Fort Niagara in 1726. True,
+Father Charlevoix passed up the river in 1721, and has left an
+interesting account of his journey, his view of the falls, and his brief
+tarrying at the carrying-place--now Lewiston. This spot was the
+principal rendezvous of the region for many years; and here, at the
+cabin of the interpreter Joncaire, where Father Charlevoix was received,
+we may be sure that spiritual ministrations were not omitted. A somewhat
+similar incident, twenty-eight years later, was the coming to these
+shores of the Jesuit Father Bonnecamps. He was not only the spiritual
+leader but appears to have acted as pilot and guide to De Céloron's
+expedition--an abortive attempt on the part of Louis XV. to reësablish
+the claims of France to the inland regions of America. The expedition
+came up the St. Lawrence and through Lake Ontario, reaching Fort Niagara
+on July 6, 1749. It passed up the river, across to the south shore of
+Lake Erie and by way of Chautauqua Lake and the Allegheny down the Ohio.
+Returning from its utterly futile adventure, we find the party resting
+at Fort Niagara for three days, October 19-21. Who the resident chaplain
+was at the post at that date I have not been able to ascertain; but we
+may be sure that he had a glad greeting for Father Bonnecamps. From
+1726, when, as already mentioned, the fort was rebuilt, until its
+surrender to Sir Wm. Johnson in 1759, a garrison was continually
+maintained, and without doubt was constantly attended by a chaplain. The
+register of the post during these years has never been found--the
+presumption being that it was destroyed by the English--so that the
+complete list of priests who ministered there is not known.
+
+Only here and there from other sources do we glean a name by which to
+continue the succession. Father Crespel was stationed at Fort Niagara
+for about three years from 1729, interrupting his ministrations there
+with a journey to Detroit, where his order--the Society of Jesus--had
+established a mission. Of Fort Niagara at this time he says: "I found
+the place very agreeable; hunting and fishing were very productive; the
+woods in their greatest beauty, and full of walnut and chestnut trees,
+oaks, elms and some others, far superior to any we see in France." But
+not even the banks of the Niagara were to prove an earthly paradise.
+"The fever," he continues, "soon destroyed the pleasures we began to
+find, and much incommoded us, until the beginning of autumn, which
+season dispelled the unwholesome air. We passed the winter very quietly,
+and would have passed it very agreeably, if the vessel which was to have
+brought us refreshments had not encountered a storm on the lake, and
+been obliged to put back to Frontenac, which laid us under the necessity
+of drinking nothing but water. As the winter advanced, she dared not
+proceed, and we did not receive our stores till May."
+
+Remember the utter isolation of this post and mission at the period we
+are considering. To be sure, it was a link in the chain of French posts,
+which included Quebec, Montreal, Kingston, Niagara, Detroit,
+Michillimackinac; but in winter the water route for transport was
+closed, and Niagara, like the upper posts, was thrown on its own
+resources for existence. There is no place in our domain to-day which
+fairly may be compared to it for isolation and remoteness. The upper
+reaches of Alaskan rivers are scarcely less known to the world than was
+the Niagara at the beginning of the last century. A little fringe of
+settlement--hostile settlement at that--stretched up the Hudson from New
+York. Even the Mohawk Valley was still unsettled. From the Hudson to
+the remotest West the wilderness stretched as a sea, and Fort Niagara
+was buried in its midst. Although a full century had gone by since
+Father Dallion first reached its shores, there was now no trace of white
+men on the banks of the Niagara save at the fort at its mouth, where
+Father Crespel ministered, and at the carrying-place, where Joncaire the
+interpreter lived with the Indians. Not even the first Indian villages
+on Buffalo Creek were to be established for half a century to come.
+
+After Father Crespel's return from Detroit, he remained two years longer
+at Fort Niagara, caring for the spiritual life of the little garrison,
+and learning the Iroquois and Ottawah languages well enough to converse
+with the Indians. "This enabled me," he writes, "to enjoy their company
+when I took a walk in the environs of our post." The ability to converse
+with the Indians afterwards saved his life. When his three years of
+residence at Niagara expired he was relieved, according to the custom of
+his order, and he passed a season in the convent at Quebec. While he was
+undoubtedly immediately succeeded at Niagara by another chaplain, I have
+been unable to learn his name or aught of his ministrations. Indeed,
+there are but few glimpses of the post to be had from 1733 to 1759, when
+it fell into the hands of the English. One of the most interesting of
+these is of the visit of the Sulpitian missionary, the Abbé Piquet, who
+in 1751 came to Fort Niagara from his successful mission at La
+Présentation--now Ogdensburg. It is recorded of him that while here he
+exhorted the Senecas to beware of the white man's brandy; his name may
+perhaps stand as that of the first avowed temperance worker in the
+Niagara region.
+
+But the end of the French _régime_ was at hand. For more than a century
+our home region had been claimed by France; for the last thirty-three
+years the lily-strewn standard of Louis had flaunted defiance to the
+English from the banks of the Niagara. Now on a scorching July day the
+little fort found itself surrounded, with Sir Wm. Johnson's cannon
+roaring from the wilderness. There was a gallant defense, a baptism of
+fire and blood, an honorable capitulation. But in that fierce conflict
+at least one of the consecrated soldiers of the cross--Father Claude
+Virot--fell before British bullets; and when the triple cross of Britain
+floated over Fort Niagara, the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara river had been overthrown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On this eventful day in 1759, when seemingly the opportunities for the
+Catholic Church to continue its work on the Niagara were at an end,
+there was, in the poor parish of Maryborough, county Kildare, Ireland, a
+little lad of six whose mission it was to be to bring hither again the
+blessed offices of his faith. This was Edmund Burke, afterwards Bishop
+of Zion, and first Vicar-Apostolic of Nova Scotia, but whose name shines
+not less in the annals of his church because of his zeal as missionary
+in Upper Canada. Having come to Quebec in 1786, he was, in 1794,
+commissioned Vicar-General for the whole of Upper Canada--the province
+having then been established two years. In that year we find him at
+Niagara, where he was the first English-speaking priest to hold Catholic
+service. True, there was at the post that year a French missionary named
+Le Dru, who could speak English; but he had been ordered out of the
+province for cause. The field was ripe for a man of Father Burke's
+character and energy. His early mission was near Detroit; he was the
+first English-speaking priest in Ohio, and it is worthy of note that he
+was at Niagara on his way east, July 22, 1796--only three weeks before
+the British finally evacuated Fort Niagara and the Americans took
+possession. Through his efforts in that year, the Church procured a
+large lot at Niagara, Ont., where he proposed a missionary
+establishment. There had probably never been a time, since the English
+conquest, when there had not been Catholics among the troops quartered
+on the Niagara; but under a British and Protestant commandant no
+suitable provision for their worship had been made. In 1798--two years
+after the British had relinquished the fort on the east side of the
+river to the Americans--Father Burke, being at the British garrison on
+the Canadian side, wrote to Monseigneur Plessis:
+
+ Here I am at Niagara, instead of having carried out my original
+ design of going on to Detroit, thence returning to Kingston to pass
+ the winter. The commander of the garrison, annoyed by the continual
+ complaints of the civic officials against the Catholic soldiers,
+ who used to frequent the taverns during the hours of service on
+ Sunday, gave orders that officers and men should attend the
+ Protestant service. They had attended for three consecutive Sundays
+ when I represented to the commander the iniquity of this order. He
+ replied that he would send them to mass if the chaplain was there,
+ and he thought it very extraordinary that whilst a chaplain was
+ paid by the king for the battalion, instead of attending to his
+ duty he should be in charge of a mission, his men were without
+ religious services, and his sick were dying without the sacraments.
+ You see, therefore, that I have reason for stopping short at
+ Niagara; for we must not permit four companies, of whom three
+ fourths both of officers and men are Catholics, to frequent the
+ Protestant church.
+
+The name of the priest against whom the charge of neglect appears to
+lie, was Duval; but it is not clear that he had ever attended the troops
+to the Niagara station. But after Father Burke came Father Désjardines
+and an unbroken succession, with the district fully organized in
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now, although our story of mission work in the Niagara region has
+been long--has reviewed the visitations of two centuries--the reader may
+have remarked the striking fact that every priest who came into our
+territory, up to the opening of the nineteenth century, came from
+Canada. This fact is the more remarkable when we recall the
+long-continued and vigorous missions of the Jesuits in what is now New
+York State, extending west nearly to the Genesee River. But the fact
+stands that no priest from those early establishments made his way
+westward to the present site of Buffalo. Fathers Lamberville and Milet
+had been stationed among the Onondagas and Oneidas before coming into
+our region at Fort Niagara; but they came thither from Canada, by way of
+Lake Ontario, and not through the wilderness of Western New York. The
+westernmost mission among the Iroquois was that of Fathers Carheil and
+Garnier at Cayuga, where they were at work ten years before La Salle
+built the Griffon on the Niagara. It is interesting to note that this
+mission, which was established nearest to our own region, was "dedicated
+to God under the invocation of St. Joseph," and that, two hundred years
+after, the first Bishop of Buffalo obtained from his Holiness, Pope Pius
+IX., permission that St. Joseph should be the principal patron saint of
+this diocese.
+
+The earliest episcopal jurisdiction of the territory now embraced in the
+city of Buffalo, dating from the first visit of Dallion to the land of
+the Neuters, was directly vested in the diocese of Rouen--for it was the
+rule that regions new-visited belonged to the government of the bishop
+from a port in whose diocese the expedition bearing the missionary had
+sailed; and this stood until a local ecclesiastical government was
+formed; the first ecclesiastical association of our region, on the New
+York side, therefore, is with that grand old city, Rouen, the home of La
+Salle, scene of the martyrdom of the Maid of Orleans, and the center,
+through many centuries, of mighty impulses affecting the New World. From
+1657 to 1670 our region was embraced in the jurisdiction of the Vicar
+Apostolic of New France; and from 1670 to the Conquest in the diocese of
+Quebec. There are involved here, of course, all the questions which grew
+out of the strife for possession of the Niagara region by the French,
+English and Dutch. Into these questions we may not enter now further
+than to note that from 1684 the English claimed jurisdiction of all the
+region on the east bank of the Niagara and the present site of Buffalo.
+This claim was in part based on the Treaty of Albany at which the
+Senecas had signified their allegiance to King Charles; and by that
+acquiescence nominally put the east side of the Niagara under British
+rule. The next year, when the Duke of York came to the throne, he
+decreed that the Archbishop of Canterbury should hold ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction over the whole Colony of New York. It is very doubtful,
+however, if the Archbishop of Canterbury had ever heard of the
+Niagara--the first English translation of Hennepin did not appear for
+fourteen years after this date; and nothing is more unlikely than that
+the Senecas who visited the Niagara at this period, or even the Dutch
+and English traders who gave them rum for beaver-skins, had ever heard
+of the Archbishop of Canterbury, or cared a copper for his
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction, either on the Niagara or even in the
+settlements on the Hudson. In the New York Colony, and afterward State,
+the legal discrimination against Catholics continued down to 1784, when
+the law which condemned Catholic priests to imprisonment or even death
+was repealed. At the date of its repeal there was not a Catholic
+congregation in the State. Those Catholics who were among the pioneer
+settlers of Western New York had to go as far east as Albany to perform
+their religious duties or get their children baptized. Four years
+later--in 1788--our region was included in the newly-formed diocese of
+Baltimore. In 1808 we came into the new diocese of New York. Not until
+1821 do we find record of the visit of a priest to Buffalo. In 1829 the
+Church acquired its first property here--through its benefactor whose
+name and memory are preserved by one of our noblest institutions--Louis
+Le Couteulx--and the first Buffalo parish was established under the Rev.
+Nicholas Mertz.
+
+We are coming very close to the present; and yet still later, in 1847,
+when the diocese of Buffalo was formed, there were but sixteen priests
+in the sixteen great counties which constituted it. It is superfluous to
+contrast that time with the present. There is nothing more striking, to
+the student of the history and development of our region during the last
+half century, than the increase of the Catholic Church--in parishes and
+schools, in means of propaganda, in material wealth with its vast
+resources and power for good, and especially in that personal zeal and
+unflagging devotion which know no limit and no exhaustion, and are drawn
+from the same source of strength that inspired and sustained Brébeuf and
+Chaumonot and their fellow-heroes of the cross on the banks of the
+Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+The Paschal of the Great Pinch.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASCHAL OF THE GREAT PINCH.
+
+ _An Episode in the History of Fort Niagara; being an Extract from
+ the hitherto unknown Memoirs of the Chevalier De Tregay, Lieutenant
+ under the Sieur de Troyes, commanding at Fort Denonville (now
+ called Niagara), in the Year of Starvation 1687; with Captain
+ Désbergeres at that remote fortress from the joyfull Easter of 1688
+ till its abandonment; Soldier of His Excellency the Sr. de Brissay,
+ Marquis de Denonville, Governor and Lieutenant General in New
+ France; and humble Servitor of His Serene Majesty Louis XIV._
+
+
+It has been my lot to suffer in many far parts of the earth; to bleed a
+little and go hungry for the King; to lie freezing for fame and
+France--and gain nothing thereby but a distemper; but so it is to be a
+soldier.
+
+And I have seen trouble in my day. I have fought in Flanders on an empty
+stomach, and have burned my brain among the Spaniards so that I could
+neither fight nor run away; but of all the heavy employment I ever knew,
+naught can compare with what befel in the remote parts of New France,
+where I was with the troops that the Marquis de Denonville took through
+the wilderness into the cantons of the Iroquois, and afterwards employed
+to build a stockade and cabins at the mouth of the Strait of Niagara, on
+the east side, in the way where they go a beaver-hunting. "Fort
+Denonville," the Sieur de Brissay decreed it should be called, for he
+held great hopes of the service which it should do him against both the
+Iroquois and the English; but now that he has fallen into the disfavor
+that has ever been the reward of faithful service in this accursed land,
+his name is no more given even to that unhappy spot, but rather it is
+called Fort Niagara.
+
+There were some hundreds of us all told that reached that fair plateau,
+after we left the river of the Senecas. It was mid-summer of the year of
+grace 1687, and we made at first a pleasant camp, somewhat overlooking
+the great lake, while to the west side of the point the great river made
+good haven for our batteaux and canoes. There was fine stir of air at
+night, so that we slept wholesomely, and the wounded began to mend at a
+great rate. And of a truth, tho' I have adventured in many lands, I have
+seen no spot which in all its demesne offered a fairer prospect to a man
+of taste. On the north of us, like the great sea itself, lay the Lake
+Ontario, which on a summer morning, when touched by a little wind, with
+the sun aslant, was like the lapis lazuli I have seen in the King's
+palace--very blue, yet all bright with white and gold. The river behind
+the camp ran mightily strong, yet for the most part glassy and green
+like the precious green-stone the lapidaries call verd-antique. Behind
+us to the south lay the forest, and four leagues away rose the triple
+mountains wherein is the great fall; but these are not such mountains as
+we have in Italy and Spain, being more of the nature of a great
+table-land, making an exceeding hard portage to reach the Strait of
+Erie above the great fall.
+
+It was truly a most fit place for a fort, and the Marquis de Denonville
+let none in his command rest day or night until we had made a
+fortification, in part of earth, surmounted by palisades which the
+soldiers cut in the woods. There was much of hazard and fatigue in this
+work, for the whole plain about the fort had no trees; so that some of
+us went into the forest along the shore to the eastward and some cut
+their sticks on the west side of the river. It was hard work, getting
+them up the high bank; but so pressed were we, somewhat by fear of an
+attack, and even more by the zeal of our commander, that in three days
+we had built there a pretty good fort with four bastions, where we put
+two great guns and some pattareras; and we had begun to build some
+cabins on the four sides of the square in the middle of it. And as we
+worked, our number was constantly diminished; for the Sieurs Du Luth and
+Durantaye, with that one-handed Chevalier de Tonty of whom they tell so
+much, and our allies the savages who had come from the Illinois to join
+the Governor in his assault upon the Iroquois, as soon as their wounded
+were able to be moved, took themselves off up the Niagara and over the
+mountain portage I have spoken of; for they kept a post and place of
+trade at the Detroit, and at Michillimackinac. And then presently the
+Marquis himself and all whom he would let go sailed away around the
+great lake for Montreal. But he ordered that an hundred, officers and
+men, stay behind to hold this new Fort Denonville. He had placed in
+command over us the Sieur de Troyes, of whom it would not become me to
+speak in any wise ill.
+
+There were sour looks and sad, as the main force marched to the
+batteaux. But the Marquis did not choose to heed anything of that. We
+were put on parade for the embarkation--though we made a sorry show of
+it, for there were even then more rags than lace or good leather--and
+His Excellency spoke a farewell word in the hearing of us all.
+
+"You are to complete your quarters with all convenient expediency," he
+said to De Troyes, who stood attentive, before us. "There will be no
+lack of provision sent. You have here in these waters the finest fish in
+the world. There is naught to fear from these Iroquois wasps--have we
+not just torn to pieces their nests?"
+
+He said this with a fine bravado, though methought he lacked somewhat of
+sincerity; for surely scattered wasps might prove troublesome enough to
+those of us who stayed behind. But De Troyes made no reply, and saluted
+gravely. And so, with a jaunty word about the pleasant spot where we
+were to abide, and a light promise to send fresh troops in the spring,
+the General took himself off, and we were left behind to look out for
+the wasps. As the boats passed the sandbar and turned to skirt the lake
+shore to the westward, we gave them a salvo of musketry; but De Troyes
+raised his hand--although the great Marquis was yet in sight and almost
+in hailing distance--and forbade another discharge.
+
+"Save your powder," was all he said; and the very brevity of it seemed
+to mean more than many words, and put us into a low mood for that whole
+day.
+
+Now for a time that followed there was work enough to keep each man
+busy, which is best for all who are in this trade of war, especially in
+the wilderness. It was on the third of August that M. de Brissay left
+us, he having sent off some of the militia ahead of him; and he bade M.
+de Vaudreuil stay behind for a space, to help the Sieur de Troyes
+complete the fort and cabins, and this he did right ably, for as all
+Canada and the King himself know, M. de Vaudreuil was a man of exceeding
+great energy and resources in these matters. There was a vast deal of
+fetching and carrying, of hewing and sawing and framing. And
+notwithstanding that the sun of that climate was desperately hot the men
+worked with good hearts, so that there was soon finished an excellent
+lodgment for the commandant; with a chimney of sticks and clay, and
+boards arranged into a sort of bedstead; and this M. de Troyes shared
+with M. de Vaudreuil, until such time as the latter gentleman quit us.
+There were three other cabins built, with chimneys, doors and little
+windows. We also constructed a baking-house with a large oven and
+chimney, partly covered with boards and the remainder with hurdles and
+clay. We also built an extensive framed building without chimney, and a
+large store-house with pillars eight feet high, and made from time to
+time yet other constructions for the men and goods--though, _Dieu
+défend_! we had spare room for both, soon enough. In the square in the
+midst of the buildings we digged a well; and although the water was
+sweet enough, yet from the first, for lack of proper curbing and
+protection, it was ever much roiled and impure when we drew it, a
+detriment alike to health and cookery.
+
+M. de Vaudreuil seeing us at last well roofed, and having directed for a
+little the getting of a store of firewood, made his adieux. Even then,
+in those fine August days, a spirit of discontent was among us, and more
+than one spark of a soldier, who at the first camp had been hot upon
+staying on the Niagara, sought now to be taken in M. de Vaudreuil's
+escort. But that gentleman replied, that he wished to make a good report
+of us all to the Governor, and that, for his part, he hoped he might
+come to us early in the spring, with the promised detachment of troops.
+And so we parted.
+
+Now the spring before, when we had all followed the Marquis de
+Denonville across Lake Ontario to harass the cantons of the Iroquois,
+this establishment of a post on the Niagara was assuredly a part of that
+gentleman's plan. It is not for me, who am but a mere lieutenant of
+marines, to show how a great commander should conduct his expeditions;
+yet I do declare that while there was no lack of provision made for
+killing such of the savages as would permit it, there was next to none
+for maintaining troops who were to be left penned up in the savages'
+country. We who were left at Fort Denonville had but few mattocks or
+even axes. Of ammunition there was none too much. In the Senecas'
+country we had destroyed thousands of minots[6] of corn, but had brought
+along scarce a week's rations of it to this corner. We had none of us
+gone a-soldiering with our pockets full of seed, and even if we had
+brought ample store of corn and pumpkin seed, of lentils and salad
+plants, the season was too late to have done much in gardening. We made
+some feeble attempts at it; but no rain fell, the earth baked under the
+sun so hard that great cracks came in it; and what few shoots of corn
+and pumpkin thrust upward through this parched soil, withered away
+before any strengthening juices came in them. To hunt far from the fort
+we durst not, save in considerable parties; so that if we made ourselves
+safe from the savages, we also made every other living thing safe
+against us. To fish was well nigh our only recourse; but although many
+of our men labored diligently at it, they met with but indifferent
+return.
+
+Thus it was that our most ardent hopes, our very life itself, hung upon
+the coming of the promised supplies. There was joy at the fort when at
+length the sail of the little bark was seen; even De Troyes, who had
+grown exceeding grave and melancholy, took on again something of his
+wonted spirit. But we were not quite yet to be succored, for it was the
+season of the most light and trifling airs, so that the bark for two
+days hung idly on the shining lake, some leagues away from the mouth of
+the river, while we idled and fretted like children, impatient for her
+coming. When once we had her within the bar, there was no time lost in
+unlading. It was a poor soldier indeed who could not work to secure the
+comfort of his own belly; and the store was so ample that we felt secure
+for the winter, come what might. The bark that fetched these things had
+been so delayed by the calms, that she weighed and sailed with the first
+favoring breeze; and it was not until her sail had fall'n below the
+horizon that we fairly had sight or smell of what she had brought.
+
+From the first the stores proved bad; still, we made shift to use the
+best, eked out with what the near-by forest and river afforded. For many
+weeks we saw no foes. There was little work to do, and the men idled
+through the days, with no word on their lips but to complain of the food
+and wish for spring. When the frosts began to fall we had a more
+vigorous spell of it; but now for the first time appeared the Iroquois
+wasps. One of our parties, which had gone toward the great fall of the
+Niagara, lost two men; those who returned reported that their comrades
+were taken all unawares by the savages. Another party, seeking game to
+the eastward where a stream cuts through the high bank on its way to the
+lake,[7] never came back at all. Here we found their bodies and buried
+them; but their scalps, after the manner of these people, had been
+taken.
+
+Christmas drew on, but never was a sorrier season kept by soldiers of
+France. De Troyes had fallen ill. Naught ailed him that we could see
+save low spirits and a thinning of the blood, which made him too weak to
+walk. The Father Jean de Lamberville, who had stayed with us, and who
+would have been our hope and consolation in those days, very early fell
+desperate ill of a distemper, so that the men had not the help of his
+ministrations and holy example. Others there were who either from
+feebleness or lack of discipline openly refused their daily duty and
+went unpunished. We had fair store of brandy; and on Christmas eve those
+of us who still held some soul for sport essayed to lighten the hour. We
+brewed a comfortable draught, built the blaze high, for the frosts were
+getting exceeding sharp, gathered as many as could be had of officers
+and worthy men into our cabin, and made brave to sing the songs of
+France. And now here was a strange thing: that while the hardiest and
+soundest amongst us had made good show of cheer, had eaten the vile food
+and tried to speak lightly of our ills, no sooner did we hear our own
+voices in the songs that carried us back to the pleasantries of our
+native land, than we fell a-sobbing and weeping like children; which
+weakness I attribute to the distemper that was already in our blood.
+
+For the days that followed I have no heart to set down much. We never
+went without the palisades except well guarded to fetch firewood. This
+duty indeed made the burden of every day. A prodigious store of wood was
+needed, for the cold surpassed anything I had ever known. The snow fell
+heavily, and there were storms when for days the gale drave straight
+across our bleak plateau. There was no blood in us to withstand the icy
+blasts. Do what we would the chill of the tomb was in the cabins where
+the men lay. The wood-choppers one day, facing such a storm, fell in the
+deep drifts just outside the gate. None durst go out to them. The second
+day the wolves found them--and we saw it all!
+
+There was not a charge of powder left in the fort. There was not a
+mouthful of fit food. The biscuits had from the first been full of worms
+and weevils. The salted meat, either from the admixture of sea-water
+through leaky casks, or from other cause, was rotten beyond the power
+even of a starving man to hold.
+
+_Le scorbut_ broke out. I had seen it on shipboard, and knew the signs.
+De Troyes now seldom left his cabin; and when, in the way of duty, I
+made my devoirs, and he asked after the men, I made shift to hide the
+truth. But it could not be for long.
+
+"My poor fellows," he sighed one day, as he turned feebly on his couch
+of planks, "it must be with all as it is with me--see, look here, De
+Tregay, do you know the sign?" and he bared his shrunken arm and side.
+
+Indeed I knew the signs--the dry, pallid skin, with the purple blotches
+and indurations. He saw I was at a loss for words.
+
+"_Sang de Dieu!_" he cried, "Is this what soldiers of France must come
+to, for the glory of"----. He stopped short, as if lacking spirit to go
+on. "Now I bethink me," he added, in a melancholy voice, "it _is_ what
+soldiers must come to." Then, after a while he asked:
+
+"How many dead today, De Tregay?"
+
+How many dead! From a garrison of gallant men-at-arms we had become a
+charnel-house. In six weeks we had lost sixty men. From a hundred at the
+beginning of autumn, we were now scarce forty, and February was not
+gone. A few of us, perhaps with stouter stomachs than the rest, did all
+the duty of the post. We brought the firewood and we buried the
+dead--picking the frozen clods with infinite toil, that we might lay the
+bones of our comrades beyond the reach of wolves. Sometimes it was the
+scurvy, sometimes it was the cold, sometimes, methinks, it was naught
+but a weak will--or as we say, the broken heart; but it mattered not,
+the end was the same. More than twenty died in March; and although we
+were now but a handful of skeletons and accustomed to death, I had no
+thought of sorrow or of grief, so dulled had my spirit become, until one
+morning I found the brave De Troyes drawing with frightful pains his
+dying breath. With the name of a maid he loved upon his lips, the light
+went out; and with heavy heart I buried him in that crowded ground, and
+fain would have lain down with him.
+
+And now with our commander under the snow, what little spirit still
+burned in the best of us seemed to die down. I too bore the signs of the
+distemper, yet to no great extent, for of all the garrison I had labored
+by exercise to keep myself wholesome, and in the woods I had tasted of
+barks and buds and roots of little herbs, hoping to find something akin
+in its juices to the _herbe de scorbut_[8] which I have known to cure
+sick sailors. But now I gave over these last efforts for life; for,
+thought I, spring is tardy in these latitudes. Many weeks must yet pass
+before the noble Marquis at Montreal (where comforts are) will care to
+send the promised troop. And the Western savages, our allies the
+Illinois, the Ottawais, the Miamis, were they not coming to succor us
+here and to raid the Iroquois cantons? But of what account is the
+savage's word!
+
+So I thought, and I turned myself on my pallet. I listened. There was no
+sound in all the place save the beating of a sleet. "It is appointed," I
+said within me. "Let the end come." And presently, being numb with the
+cold, I thought I was on a sunny hillside in Anjou. It was the time of
+the grape-harvest, and the smell of the vines, laughter and sunshine
+filled the air. Young lads and maids, playmates of my boyhood days, came
+and took me by the hand....
+
+A twinge of pain made the vision pass. I opened my eyes upon a huge
+savage, painted and bedaubed, after their fashion. It was the grip of
+his vast fist that had brought me back from Anjou.
+
+"The Iroquois, then," I thought, "have learned of our extremity, and
+have broken in, to finish all. So much the better," and I was for
+sinking back upon the boards, when the savage took from a little pouch a
+handful of the parched corn which they carry on their expeditions.
+"Eat," he said, in the language of the Miamis. And then I knew that
+relief had come--and I knew no more for a space.
+
+Now this was Michitonka himself, who had led his war party from beyond
+Lake Erie, where the Chevalier de Tonty and Du Luth were, to see how we
+fared at Fort Denonville, and to make an expedition against the
+Senecas--of whom we saw no more, from the time the Miamis arrived. There
+were of all our garrison but twelve not dead, and among those who threw
+off the distemper was the Father de Lamberville. His recovery gave us
+the greatest joy. He lay for many weeks at the very verge of the grave,
+and it was marvelous to all to see his skin, which had been so empurpled
+and full of malignant humors, come wholesome and fair again. I have
+often remarked, in this hard country, that of all Europeans the Fathers
+of the Holy Orders may be brought nearest to death, and yet regain their
+wonted health. They have the same prejudice for life that the wildest
+savage has. But as for the rest of us, who are neither savage nor holy,
+it is by a slim chance that we live at all.
+
+Now the Father, and two or three of the others who had the strength to
+risk it, set out with a part of Michitonka's people to Cataracouy[9] and
+Montreal, to carry the news of our extremity. And on a soft April day as
+we looked over lake, we saw a sail; and we knew that we had kept the
+fort until the relief company was sent as had been commanded. But it had
+been a great pinch.
+
+Now I am come to that which after all I chiefly set out to write down;
+for I have ever held that great woes should be passed over with few
+words, but it is meet to dwell upon the hour of gladness. And this hour
+was now arrived, when we saw approach the new commandant, the Sieur
+Désbergeres, captain of one of the companies of the Detachment of the
+Marine, and with him the Father Milet, of the Society of Jesus. There
+was a goodly company, whose names are well writ on the history of this
+New France: the Sieurs De la Mothe, La Rabelle, Demuratre de Clerin and
+de Gemerais, and others, besides a host of fine fellows of the common
+rank; with fresh food that meant life to us.
+
+Of all who came that April day, it was the Father Milet who did the
+most. The very morning that he landed, we knelt about him at mass; and
+scarce had he rested in his cabin than he marked a spot in the midst of
+the square, where a cross should stand, and bade as many as could, get
+about the hewing of it; and although I was yet feeble and might rest as
+I liked, I chose to share in the work, for so I found my pleasure. A
+fair straight oak was felled and well hewn, and with infinite toil the
+timber was taken within the palisades and further dressed; and while the
+carpenters toiled to mortise the cross-piece and fasten it with pins,
+Father Milet himself traced upon the arms the symbols for the legend:
+
+ Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus.
+
+And these letters were well cut into the wood, in the midst of them
+being the sign of the Sacred Heart. We had it well made, and a place dug
+for it, on a Thursday; and on the next morning, which was Good Friday,
+the reverend Father placed his little portable altar in the midst of the
+square, where we all, officers and men, and even some of the Miamis who
+were yet with us, assembled for the mass. Then we raised the great cross
+and planted it firmly in the midst of the little square. The service of
+the blessing of it lay hold of my mind mightily, for my fancy was that
+this great sign of victory had sprung from the midst of the graves where
+De Troyes and four score of my comrades lay; and being in this tender
+mood (for I was still weak in body) the words which the Father read from
+his breviary seemed to rest the more clearly in my mind.
+
+"_Adjutorium nostrum in nomine Domini._" Father Milet had a good voice,
+with a sort of tenderness in it, so that we were every one disposed to
+such silence and attention, that I could even hear the little waves
+lapping the shore below the fort. And when he began with the
+"_Oramus_"--"_Rogamus te Domine sancte Pater omnipotens_,"--I was that
+moved, by the joy of it, and my own memories, that I wept--and I a
+soldier!
+
+It may be believed that the Sunday which followed, which was the
+Paschal, was kept by us with such worship and rejoicing as had never yet
+been known in those remote parts. Holy men had been on that river
+before, it is true; but none had abode there for long, nor had any set
+up so great a cross, nor had there ever such new life come to men as we
+knew at Fort Denonville that Easter.
+
+For a space, all things went well. What with the season (for spring ever
+inspires men to new undertakings) and the bitter lessons learned in the
+great pinch of the past winter, we were no more an idle set, but kept
+all at work, and well. Yet the Iroquois pestered us vastly, being set on
+thereto by the English, who claimed this spot. And in September there
+came that pilot Maheut, bringing his bark La General over the shoal at
+the river's mouth all unexpected; and she was scarce anchored in the
+little roadstead than Désbergeres knew he was to abandon all. It was
+cause of chagrin to the great Marquis, I make no doubt, thus to drop the
+prize he had so tried to hold; but some of us in the fort had no stomach
+for another winter on the Niagara, and we made haste to execute the
+orders which the Marquis de Denonville had sent. We put the guns on
+board La General. We set the gate open, and tore down the rows of pales
+on the south and east sides of the square. Indeed the wind had long ago
+begun this work, so that towards the lake the pales (being but little
+set in the earth) had fallen or leaned over, so they could readily have
+been scaled, or broken through. But as the order was, we left the cabins
+and quarters standing, with doors ajar, to welcome who might come,
+Iroquois or wolf, for there was naught within. But Father Milet took
+down from above the door of his cabin the little sun dial. "The shadow
+of the great cross falls divers ways," was his saying.
+
+Early the next morning, being the 15th of September, of the year 1688,
+being ready for the embarkation, Father Milet summoned us to the last
+mass he might say in the place. It was a sad morning, for the clouds
+hung heavy; the lake was of a somber and forbidding cast, and the very
+touch in the air forebode autumnal gales. As we knelt around the cross
+for the last time, the ensign brought the standards which Désbergeres
+had kept, and holding the staves, knelt also. Certain Miamis, too, who
+were about to make the Niagara portage, stayed to see what the priest
+might do. And at the end of the office Father Milet did an uncommon
+thing, for he was mightily moved. He turned from us toward the cross,
+and throwing wide his arms spoke the last word--"Amen."
+
+There were both gladness and sorrow in our hearts as we embarked. Lake
+and sky took on the hue of lead, foreboding storm. We durst carry but
+little sail, and at the sunset hour were scarce a league off shore. As
+it chanced, Father Milet and I stood together on the deck and gazed
+through the gloom toward that dark coast. While we thus stood, there
+came a rift betwixt the banked clouds to the west, so that the sun, just
+as it slipped from sight, lighted those Niagara shores, and we saw but
+for an instant, above the blackness and the desolation, the great cross
+as in fire or blood gleam red.
+
+
+
+
+With Bolton at Fort Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+WITH BOLTON AT FORT NIAGARA.
+
+
+One pleasant September day in 1897 it was my good fortune, under expert
+guidance, to follow for a little the one solitary trail made by the
+American patriots in Western New York during the Revolutionary War, the
+one expedition of our colonial forces approaching this region during
+that period. This was the famous "raid" led by Gen. John Sullivan in the
+summer of 1779. Our quest took us up the long hill slope west of Conesus
+Lake, in what is now the town of Groveland, Livingston Co., to a
+spot--among the most memorable in the annals of Western New York, yet
+unmarked and known to but a few--where a detachment of Sullivan's army,
+under Lieut. Boyd, were waylaid and massacred by the Indians. It was on
+the 13th of September that this tragedy occurred. Two days later Gen.
+Sullivan, having accomplished the main purpose of his raid--the
+destruction of Indian villages and crops--turned back towards
+Pennsylvania, returning to Easton, whence the expedition had started. He
+had come within about eighty miles of the Niagara. "Though I had it not
+in command," wrote Gen. Sullivan in his report to the Secretary of War,
+"I should have ventured to have paid [Fort] Niagara a visit, had I been
+supplied with fifteen days' provisions in addition to what I had, which
+I am persuaded from the bravery and ardor of our troops would have
+fallen into our hands."[10] This was the nearest approach to any attempt
+made by the Americans to enter this region during that war.
+
+The events of Sullivan's expedition are well known. Few episodes of the
+Revolution are more fully recorded. But what is the reverse of the
+picture? What lay at the other side of this Western New York wilderness
+which Sullivan failed to penetrate? What was going on, up and down the
+Niagara, and on Buffalo Creek, during those momentous years? We know
+that the region was British, that old Fort Niagara was its garrison, the
+principal rendezvous of the Indians and the base from which scalping
+parties set out to harry the frontier settlements. The most dreadful
+frontier tragedies of the war--Wyoming, Cherry Valley, and others--were
+planned here and carried out with British coöperation. But who were the
+men and what were the incidents of the time, upon our Niagara frontier?
+So far as I am aware, that period is for the most part a blank in our
+histories. One may search the books in vain for any adequate
+narrative--indeed for any but the most meager data--of the history of
+the Niagara region during the Revolution. The materials are not lacking,
+they are in fact abundant. In this paper I undertake only to give an
+inkling of the character of events in this region during that grave
+period in our nation's history.[11]
+
+In 1778, Colonel Haldimand, afterward Sir Frederick, succeeded Gen. Guy
+Carleton in the command of the British forces in Canada. He was
+Commander in Chief, and Governor of Canada, until his recall in 1784.
+Lord North was England's Prime Minister, Lord George Germaine in charge
+of American affairs in the Cabinet. Haldimand took up his residence at
+Quebec, and therefrom, for a decade, administered the affairs of the
+Canadian frontier with zeal and adroitness. He was a thorough soldier,
+as his letters show. He was also an adept in the treatment of matters
+which, like the retention by the British of the frontier posts for
+thirteen years after they had been ceded to the Americans by treaty,
+called for dogged determination, veiled behind diplomatic courtesies.
+The troops which he commanded were scattered from the mouth of the St.
+Lawrence to Lake Michigan; but to no part of this long line of
+wilderness defense--a line which was substantially the enemy's
+frontier--did he pay more constant attention than to Fort Niagara. There
+were good reasons for this. Fort Niagara was not only the key to the
+upper lakes, the base of supplies for Detroit, Michillimackinac and
+minor posts, but it had long been an important trading post and the
+principal rendezvous of the Six Nations, upon whose peculiarly efficient
+services against the American frontiers Sir Frederick relied scarcely
+less than he did upon the British troops themselves. It was, therefore,
+with no ordinary solicitude that he made his appointments for Niagara.
+
+I cannot state positively the names of all officers in command at Fort
+Niagara from the time war was begun, down to 1777. Lieut. Lernault,
+afterwards at Detroit, was here for a time; but about the spring of '77
+we find Fort Niagara put under the command of Lieut. Col. Mason Bolton,
+of the 34th Royal Artillery. He had then seen some years of service in
+America; had campaigned in Florida and the West Indies; had been sent to
+Mackinac and as far west as the Illinois; and it was no slight tribute
+to his ability and fidelity, when Haldimand put the Niagara frontier
+into his hands. Here, for over three years, he was the chief in command.
+In military rank, even if in nothing else, he was the principal man in
+this region during the crucial period of the Revolution. He commanded
+the garrison at Fort Niagara, and its dependencies at Schlosser and Fort
+Erie. Buffalo was then unthought of--it was merely Te-hos-e-ro-ron, the
+place of the basswoods; but at the Indian villages farther up Buffalo
+Creek, which came into existence in 1780, the name of Col. Bolton stood
+for the highest military authority of the region. And yet, incredible as
+it may seem, after all these years in which--to adapt Carlyle's
+phrase--the Torch of History has been so assiduously brandished about, I
+do not know of any printed book which offers any information about Col.
+Mason Bolton or the life he led here. Indeed, with one or two
+exceptions, in which he is barely alluded to, I think all printed
+literature may be searched in vain for so much as a mention of his name.
+
+Other chief men of this frontier, at the period we are considering, were
+Col. Guy Johnson, Superintendent of Indian Affairs; Sir John Johnson,
+son of the Sir William who captured Fort Niagara from the French in
+1759; Col. John Butler, of the Queen's Rangers; his son Walter;
+Sayenqueraghta, the King of the Senecas; Rowland Montour, his half-breed
+son-in-law; and Brant, the Mohawk hero, who, equipped with a New England
+schooling and enlightened by a trip to England, here returned to lead
+out scalping parties in the British interests.
+
+Col. Bolton had been for some time without authentic news of the enemy,
+when on the morning of December 14, 1777, the little garrison was thrown
+into unwonted activity by the arrival of Capt. La Mothe, who reported
+that Gen. Howe had taken Philadelphia, and that the rebels had
+"sustained an incredible loss." By a forced march of Howe, La Mothe
+averred, Gen. Washington had been defeated, "with 11,000 rebels killed,
+wounded and prisoners." Two days later the excitement was increased by
+the arrival at the fort of some Delaware Indians, who brought the great
+news that Washington was killed and his army totally routed. "I had a
+meeting of the chiefs of the Six Nations," wrote Bolton to Gen.
+Carleton, "about an hour after the express arrived and told them the
+news. They seemed extremely pleased and have been in good temper ever
+since their arrival." Oddly enough, this news was confirmed by a soldier
+of the 7th Regiment, who had been taken prisoner by the Americans, but
+had escaped and made his way to Niagara. He further embellished the
+report by declaring that 9,000 men under Lord Percy defeated 13,000
+rebels at Bear's Hill on December 20th, under Washington, that Gates was
+sent for to take the command when Washington was killed, and that 7,000
+volunteers from Ireland had joined Howe's army. Washington at this time,
+the reader will remember, had gone into winter quarters with his army at
+Valley Forge.
+
+There were 2,300 Indians at Fort Niagara at this period, all making
+perpetual demands for beef, flour and rum. The license of the jubilee
+over Washington's death probably was limited only by the scantiness of
+provisions and the impossibility of adding to the store. Cold weather
+shut down on the establishment, the vessels were laid up, and all winter
+long Col. Bolton and his men had no word contradicting the report of
+Washington's death. As late as April 8th, the following spring, he wrote
+to Gen. Carleton that "all accounts confirm Washington being killed and
+his army defeated in December last, and that Gates was sent for to take
+the command."
+
+The British early were apprised of Sullivan's intended raid, and
+although powerless to prevent it, kept well posted as to its progress.
+The various parties which Sullivan encountered, were directed from Fort
+Niagara. "Since the rebels visit the Indian country," wrote Gen.
+Haldimand to Sir John Johnson, September 14, 1779, "I am happy they are
+advancing so far. They can never reach Niagara and their difficulties
+and danger of retreat will, in proportion as they advance, increase."
+Again he wrote twelve days later: "You will be able to make your way to
+Niagara, and if the rebels should be encouraged to advance as far as
+that place, I am convinced that few of them will escape from famine or
+the sword. All in my power to do for you is to push up provisions, which
+shall be done with the utmost vigor, while the river and lake remain
+navigable, although it may throw me into great distress in this part of
+the province, should anything happen to prevent the arrival of the fall
+victuallers." There was however genuine alarm at Fort Niagara, and even
+Sir Frederick himself, though he wrote so confidently to Bolton, in his
+letters to the Ministry expressed grave apprehensions of what might
+happen.
+
+What did happen was bad enough for British interests, for though the
+Americans turned back, the raid had driven in upon Bolton a horde of
+frightened, hungry and irresponsible Indians, who had to be fed at the
+King's expense and were a source of unmeasured concern to the overworked
+commandant, notwithstanding the independent organization of the Indian
+Department which was effected.
+
+To arrive at a just idea of conditions hereabouts at this period, we
+must keep in mind the relation of the fluctuating population, Indians
+and whites, to the uncertain and often inadequate food supply.
+
+Fort Niagara at this time--the fall of '78--was a fortification 1,100
+yards in circumference, with five bastions and two blockhouses. Capt.
+John Johnson thought 1,000 men were needed to defend it; "the present
+strength," he wrote, "amounting to no more than 200 rank and file,
+including fifteen men of the Royal Artillery and the sick, a number
+barely sufficient to defend the outworks (if they were in a state of
+defense) and return the necessary sentries, should the place be infested
+by a considerable force.... With a garrison of 500 or a less number, it
+is impregnable against all the savages in America, but if a strong body
+of troops with artillery should move this way, I believe no engineer who
+has ever seen these works will say it can hold out any considerable
+time."
+
+On May 1st, 1778, there had been in the garrison at Fort Niagara 311
+men. Half a dozen more were stationed at Fort Schlosser, and thirty-two
+at Fort Erie, a total of 349, of whom 255 were reported as fit for duty.
+At this time Maj. Butler's Rangers, numbering 106, had gone on "an
+expedition with the Indians towards the settlements of Pennsylvania or
+New York, whichever he finds most practicable and advantageous to the
+King's service." These raids from Fort Niagara were far more frequent
+than one would infer from the histories--even from the American
+histories whose authors are not to be suspected of purposely minimizing
+either their number or effect. But it appears from the records that not
+infrequently the expeditions accomplished nothing of more consequence
+than to steal stock. Horses, cattle and sheep were in more than one
+instance driven away from settlements far down on the Mohawk or
+Susquehanna, and brought back alive or dead along the old trails, to
+Fort Niagara.
+
+To illustrate the methods of the time: In a report to Brig. Gen. Powell,
+Maj. Butler wrote: "In the spring of 1778 I found it absolutely
+requisite for the good of His Majesty's service, with the consent and
+approbation of Lt. Col. Bolton, and on the application of the chiefs and
+warriors of the five united nations ..., to proceed to the frontiers of
+the colonies in rebellion, with as many officers and men of my corps as
+were then raised, in order to protect the Indian settlements and to
+annoy the enemy." At this time many of his men were new recruits from
+the colonies, sons or heads of Loyalist--or as we used to say, on this
+side the border, of Tory--families. As they approached American frontier
+settlements, the loyalty to King George of some of his men became
+suspicious, so that Butler issued a proclamation that all deserters, if
+apprehended, were to be shot. In the letter just quoted from he reports
+that this order had a good effect. Many curious circumstances arose at
+the time, due to the British or American allegiance of men who before
+the war had been friendly neighbors, but who now met as hostiles, as
+captor and captive, sometimes as victor and victim. There was a constant
+flight, by one route and another, of Loyalist refugees to Fort Niagara.
+Thus, by a return of Feb. 12, 1779, 1,346 people were drawing rations
+from the stores of that place, of whom sixty-four were "distressed
+families," that is, Tories who had fled from the colonies (mostly from
+the Mohawk Valley); and 445 Indians. The war parties left early in the
+spring, and during the summer the supply boats could get up from the
+lower stations. Then came that march of destruction up the Genesee
+Valley; winter shut down on lake and river communication, and the most
+distressed period the frontier had known under British rule set in. In
+October, immediately after the invasion, Col. Bolton wrote (I quote
+briefly from a very full report): "Joseph Brant ... assures me that if
+500 men had joined the Rangers in time, there is no doubt that instead
+of 300, at least 1,000 warriors would have turned out, and with that
+force he is convinced that Mr. Sullivan would have had some reason to
+repent of his expedition; but the Indians not being supported as they
+expected, thought of nothing more than carrying off their families, and
+we had at this Post the 21st of last month 5,036 to supply with
+provisions, and notwithstanding a number of parties have been sent out
+since, we have still on the ground 3,678 to maintain. I am convinced
+your Excellency will not be surprised, if I am extremely alarmed, for to
+support such a multitude I think will be absolutely impossible. I have
+requested of Major Butler to try his utmost to prevail on the Indians
+whose villages have been destroyed to go down to Montreal for the
+winter, where, I have assured him, they would be well taken care of; and
+to inform all the rest who have not suffered by the enemy that they must
+return home and take care of their corn."
+
+Neither plan worked as hoped for. It was difficult to get the Indians to
+consent to go down the river, or even to Carleton Island; and as
+Sullivan had destroyed every village save two, few of the Senecas could
+be induced to return into the Genesee country. Bolton's urgent appeals
+for extra provisions were also doomed to disappointment, owing to the
+lateness of the season or the lack of transports.
+
+The winter after Sullivan's raid, Guy Johnson distributed clothing to
+more than 3,000 Indians at Fort Niagara. But the cost of clothing them
+was trifling compared with the cost of feeding them. Expeditions against
+the distant American settlements were planned, not more through the
+desire for retaliation, than from the necessity of reducing the number
+of dependents on Fort Niagara. When the inroads on provisions grew
+serious, the Indians were encouraged to go on the war-path. But so
+exceedingly severe was the winter, so deep was the snow on the trails,
+that not until the middle of February could any parties be induced to
+set out. The number camped around the fort, consuming the King's pork,
+beef, flour and rum, rose as we have seen, to more than 5,000. Many
+starved and many froze.
+
+Much could be said regarding the British policy of dealing with the
+Indians at Fort Niagara, but I may only touch upon the subject at this
+time. Haldimand, and behind him the British Ministry, placed great
+reliance upon them. The uniform instruction was that the Indians should
+be maintained as allies. On April 10, 1778, Lord George Germaine wrote
+to Gen. Haldimand that the designs of the rebels against Niagara and
+Detroit were not likely to be successful as long as the Six Nations
+continued faithful. Presents, honors, and the full license of the
+tomahawk and scalping-knife were allowed them. With a view to promoting
+their fidelity, Joseph Brant was made a colonel. Significant, too, was
+the settling of a generous allowance for life upon Brant's sister, Sir
+William Johnson's consort; which act was approved, about this time, by
+the august council at Whitehall.
+
+The British watched the state of the Indian mind as the sailor watches
+his barometer at the coming of a storm. And the Indian mind, though
+always cunning, was sometimes childlike in the directness and simplicity
+of its conclusions. The constant flight to Fort Niagara of refugee
+Tories was remarked by the savages, and in turn noted and reported to
+Gen. Haldimand. "The frequent passing of white people to Niagara," wrote
+Capt. John Johnson to Gen. Carleton, October 6, 1778, "is much taken
+note of by the Indians, who say they are running away and that they (the
+Tories) have begun the quarrel and leave them (the Indians) to defend
+it." However, Johnson counted on being able to change their minds, for
+he added: "I hope in my next to inform you of giving the rebels an
+eternal thrashing."
+
+The usual British good sense--the national tradesman's instinct--seems
+to have been temporarily suspended, held in abeyance, at the demands of
+these Indians. In his report of May 12, '78, Col. Bolton writes that he
+has approved bills for nearly £18,000 "for sundries furnished savages
+which Maj. Butler thought absolutely necessary, notwithstanding all the
+presents sent to their posts last year; 2,700 being assembled at a time
+when I little expected such a number, obliged me to send to Detroit for
+a supply of provisions, and to buy up all the cattle, etc., that could
+possibly be procured, otherwise this garrison must have been distressed
+or the savages offended, and of course, I suppose, would have joined the
+rebels. Even after all that was done for them they scarce seemed
+satisfied." In June he writes that only eight out of twenty puncheons of
+rum ordered for Fort Niagara had been received, and that "much wine has
+been given to the savages that was intended for this post."
+
+One reads in this old correspondence, with mingled amusement and
+amazement, of the marvelous attentions paid these wily savages.
+Childlike, whatever they saw in the cargoes of the merchants, they
+wanted, and England humored and pampered them, lest they transfer their
+affections. We have Guy Johnson's word for it, under date of Niagara,
+July 3, 1780, that "many of the Indians will no longer wear tinsel lace,
+and are become good judges of gold and silver. They frequently demand
+and have received wine, tea, coffee, candles and many such articles, and
+they are frequently nice in the choice of the finest black and other
+cloth for blankets, and the best linnen and cambrick with other things
+needless to enumerate.... The Six Nations are not so fond of gaudy
+colors as of good and substantial things, but they are passionately fond
+of silver ornaments and neat arrows." Elsewhere in these letters a
+requisition for port wine is explained on the ground that it was
+demanded by the chiefs when they were sick--dainty treatment, truly, for
+stalwart savages whose more accustomed diet was cornmeal and water, and
+who could feast, when fortune favored, on the reeking entrails of a dead
+horse.
+
+Now and then, it is true, advantages were taken of the Indians in ways
+which, presumably, it was thought they would not detect; all, we must
+grant, in the interest of economy. One was in the matter of powder. The
+Indians were furnished with a grade inferior to the garrison powder.
+This was shown by a series of tests made at Fort Niagara by order of
+Brig. Gen. Powell--Col. Bolton's successor--on July 10, 1782. We may
+suppose it to have been an agreeable summer day, that there was leisure
+at the fort to indulge in experiments, and that there were no astute
+Indians on hand to be unduly edified by the result. At Gen. Powell's
+order an eight-inch mortar was elevated to forty-five degrees, and six
+rounds fired, to find out how far one half a pound of powder would throw
+a forty-six pound shell. The first trial, with the garrison powder, sent
+the shell 239 yards. For rounds two and three Indian Department powder
+was used; the fine-glazed kind sent the shell eighty-two yards, the
+coarser grain carried it but seventy-nine yards. Once more the garrison
+powder was used; the shell flew 243 yards, while a second trial of the
+two sorts of Indian Department powder sent it but eighty-four and
+seventy-six yards, or about three to one in favor of the white man. With
+the garrison powder, a musket and carbine ball went through a two and
+one-quarter-inch oak plank, at the distance of fifty yards, and lodged
+in one six inches behind it; but with the Indian powder these balls
+would not go through the first plank.
+
+This seems like taking a base advantage of the trustful Indian ally,
+especially since he was to use his powder against the common foe, the
+American rebel; in reality, however, the Indians were wasteful and
+irresponsible, and squandered their ammunition on the little birds of
+the forest and even in harmless but expensive salvos into the empty air.
+
+Another economy was practiced in the Indian Department: when the stock
+ran low the rum was watered. Sometimes the precious contents of the
+casks were augmented one third, sometimes even two thirds, with the more
+abundant beverage from Niagara River, so that the garrison rum, like
+the garrison powder, "carried" two or three times as well as did that of
+the Indian Department; but whether this had a salutary effect upon the
+thirsty recipients is a problem the solution of which lies outside the
+range of the exact historian.
+
+Difficult as it was to hold the allegiance of the savage, it was harder
+yet--nay, it was impossible--to make him fight according to the rules of
+civilized warfare. The British Government from the Ministry down stand
+in history in an equivocal position in this matter. Over and over again
+in the correspondence which I have examined, one finds vigorous
+condemnation of the Indian method of slaughter of women and children,
+and the torture of captives. Over and over again the officers are urged
+not to allow it; and over and over again they report, after a raid, that
+they deplore the acts of wantonness which were committed, and which they
+were unable to prevent. But nowhere do I find any suggestion that the
+services of the Indians be dispensed with. Throughout the Revolution,
+the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas and Delawares--for the last, also, were
+often at Fort Niagara--were sent against the Americans, by the British.
+The Oneidas, as is well known, were divided and vacillating in their
+allegiance. In August, 1780, 132 of them who hitherto had been
+ostensibly friendly to the Americans, were induced to go to Niagara and
+give their pledges to the British. When they arrived Guy Johnson put on
+a severe front and censured them for their lack of steadfastness to the
+King. According to him, some 500 Oneidas in all came to the fort that
+year and declared themselves ready to fight the Americans. The last
+party that arrived delivered up to the Superintendent a commission
+which, he says, "the Rebels had issued with a view to form the Oneidas
+into a corps, ... they also delivered up to me the Rebel flag."
+
+So far as I am aware this is the first mention of the Stars and Stripes
+on the banks of the Niagara. By resolution of June 14, 1777, the
+American Congress had decreed "That the flag of the thirteen United
+States be thirteen stripes alternate red and white; that the union be
+thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new
+constellation." A little over three years had passed since John Paul
+Jones had first flung to the breeze, at the mast of his ship Ranger,
+this bright banner of the new nation. It was not to appear in a British
+port for two and a half years to come; sixteen years were to pass before
+it could fly triumphant over the old walls of Fort Niagara; but France
+had saluted it, Americans were fighting for it, and although it is first
+found here in hostile hands, yet I like to reckon from that August day
+in 1780, the beginning, if in prophecy only, of the reign of that new
+constellation over the Niagara region.
+
+Col. Bolton's life at Fort Niagara was one of infinite care. Besides the
+routine of the garrison, he was constantly harrassed by the demands of
+the Indians, whom the British did not wish to feed, but whom they dared
+not offend. The old fort, which now sleeps so quietly at the mouth of
+the river, was a busy place in those days. There was constant coming and
+going. Schooners, snows[12] and batteaux with provisions from Quebec, or
+with munitions of war or detachments of troops for Detroit or
+Michillimackinac, were constantly arriving. I question if the lower
+Niagara were not busier in that period than it is now. The transfer of
+supplies around the falls--the "great portage"--was hard and tedious
+work. Not Quebec, but Great Britain, was the real base of supplies.
+There were many detentions, and constant interruption in shipment, at
+every stage of the way. Sometimes a cargo of salt pork from Ireland or
+flour from London would reach Quebec too late in the summer to admit of
+transfer to the posts until spring. Sometimes, in crossing Lake Ontario,
+the provisions would be damaged so as to be unfit for use; sometimes
+they would be lost. Then not only the garrison at Niagara had to face
+starvation, but Col. Bolton soon had his ears ringing with messages and
+maledictions from Detroit and Mackinac, buried still farther in the
+wilderness, and all looking to Niagara for food and clothing. At such
+times of distress the upper posts questioned whether goods intended for
+them were not irregularly held at Niagara; the meanwhile, Col. Bolton
+would be straining every effort to get provisions enough to keep his own
+command from starvation. Indian supplies and traders' goods, too, were
+liable to loss and detention; and on very slight provocation, the
+demands of the Indians grew insolent.
+
+There were constant desertions, too, among the troops. Indeed, there
+seems never to have been a time at Fort Niagara when desertions were not
+frequent, and, more than once, so numerous as to threaten the very
+existence of the garrison. This, however, not in Bolton's time. As the
+correspondence shows, he enjoyed the utmost confidence of his superiors,
+and there is nothing to indicate that his men were not as devoted to him
+as any officer could expect at a frontier post where service meant hard
+work and possible starvation.
+
+Frequent as had been the raids against the settlements before the
+expedition of Sullivan, they became thereafter even more frequent; and,
+if less disastrous, they were so merely because the American frontier
+settlements had already paid their utmost tribute to Butler and Brant.
+The expeditions, along certain much-worn trails, had to go farther and
+farther in order to find foes to attack or cattle to steal. This was
+especially so in the valleys of the Mohawk and Susquehanna; yet in one
+quarter and another this border warfare went on, and there is no lack of
+evidence, in the official correspondence, of its effectiveness. Thus,
+writing from Fort Niagara, August 24, 1780, Guy Johnson reports: "I have
+the pleasure to inform your excellency that the partys who subdivided
+after Capt. Brant's success at the Cleysburg"--an expedition which he
+had previously reported--"have all been successful; that Capt. Brant
+has destroyed twenty houses in Schoharie and taken and killed twelve
+persons, besides releasing several women and children. Among the
+prisoners is Lieut. Vrooman, the settlement of that name being that
+which was destroyed. The other divisions of that party have been also
+successful, particularly Capt. David's party, and the number of killed
+and taken by them within that time, so far as it has come to my hands,
+is, killed, thirty-five, taken, forty-six, released, forty.... The
+remaining inhabitants on the frontiers are drawing in so as to deprive
+the rebels of any useful resources from them. I have at present on
+service, several partys that set out within one and the same week, and I
+apprehend that falling on the frontiers in different places at the same
+time will have a good effect." September 18th he writes, telling of the
+destruction of "Kleysberg," "containing a church, 100 houses and as many
+barnes, besides mills and 500 cattle and horses." In the same letter he
+wrote: "I have now 405 warriors out in different parties and quarters,
+exclusive of some marched from Kadaragawas.... The greater part of the
+rest are at their planting grounds, and many sick here, as fevers and
+fluxes have for some time prevailed at this Post." October 1st he
+reports the number of men in the war parties sent out from Fort Niagara
+as 892. A return, dated June 30, 1781, shows that the war parties "have
+killed and taken during the season already 150 persons." September 30th
+he reports an expedition under Walter Johnson and Montour, in which
+about "twenty rebels" were killed; and on that day Capt. Nelles arrived
+with eleven prisoners taken in Pennsylvania. A postscript to this letter
+says: "Since writing, I have received the disagreeable news of the death
+of the gallant Montour, who died of the wounds he received in the action
+before related. He was a chief of the greatest spirit and readiness, and
+his death is a loss." We can well believe that; for Montour, who, from
+the American view-point, had the reputation of being a fiend incarnate,
+had indeed shown "spirit and readiness" in stealing cattle, burning log
+cabins, killing and scalping their occupants or bringing them captive to
+Fort Niagara.
+
+In another paper[13] I have stated that I have traced out the individual
+experiences in captivity of thirty-two of these Americans, who were
+taken by the Indians and British and brought as prisoners to Fort
+Niagara. How much might be done on this line may be judged from a review
+of Col. Johnson's transactions, furnished by that officer at Montreal,
+March 24, 1782, in which it is stated that the number of Americans
+killed and taken captive by parties from Fort Niagara, amounted at that
+time to near 900. The time was rife with like experiences. For instance,
+there was the famous raid on Cherry Valley, from which Mrs. Jane
+Campbell and her four children, after a long detention among the
+Indians, were brought to Fort Niagara. There was Jane Moore, who was
+also taken at Cherry Valley, and who subsequently was married to Capt.
+Powell of the Niagara garrison in the winter of 1779--the ceremony, by
+the Church of England service, so impressing Joseph Brant that he
+immediately led up to the minister the squaw with whom he had been
+living for a long time, and insisted on being married over again, white
+man's fashion. There was Lieut. Col. Stacia, another prisoner from
+Cherry Valley, whose head Molly Brant wanted for a football. Some of the
+stories of these captives, like that of Alexander Harper, who ran the
+gauntlet at Fort Niagara (the ordeal apparently being made light in his
+case), are familiar to readers of our history; others, I venture to say,
+are unknown. For instance, there were John and Robert Brice, two little
+boys, who were taken in 1779 near Rensselaerville by a scouting party,
+and brought, with other prisoners and eight scalps, to Fort Niagara. But
+they did not come together. Robert, who was but eleven years old, was
+taken to Fort Erie and sold to a lake sailor for the sum of £3. This
+little Son of the Revolution was kept on the upper lakes until 1783,
+when he was summoned to Fort Niagara where he met his brother John, from
+whom he had parted near the mouth of the Unadilla River some four years
+before. They were sent to Montreal with nearly 200 liberated captives,
+and ultimately the boys reached Albany and their friends. Then there is
+the story of Nancy Bundy, who, her husband and children being killed,
+was brought to Fort Niagara and sold into servitude for $8. There was
+the famous Indian fighter, Moses Van Campen, whose adventures and
+captivity in our region are the subject of a whole book. There were
+Horatio Jones and Jasper Parrish, who passed from Indian captives into
+the useful role of interpreters for the whites.
+
+Thus I might go on, naming by the score the heroes and heroines of
+Indian captivities whose sufferings and whose adventures make up the
+most romantic chapter in our home annals, as yet for the most part
+unwritten. But I take time now to dwell, briefly as possible, upon but
+one of these captivities--one of the notable incidents during Col.
+Bolton's time at Fort Niagara. This was the capture of the Gilbert
+family. It made so great a stir, even in those days accustomed to war
+and Indian raids, that in 1784 a little book was published in
+Philadelphia giving the history of it. The original edition[14] has long
+since been one of the scarcest of Americana. But in the unpublished
+correspondence between Gen. Haldimand and the officers at Fort Niagara,
+I find sundry allusions to "the Quaker's family," and statements which
+go to show that the British at least were disposed to treat them well,
+and to effect their exchange as soon as possible. Notwithstanding, it
+was a long and cruel captivity, and presents some features of peculiar
+significance in our local history.
+
+About sunrise on the morning of April 25, 1780, a party of eleven
+painted Indians suddenly issued from the woods bordering Mahoning Creek,
+in Northampton County, Penn. They had come from Fort Niagara, and were
+one of those scalping parties for the success of which so many
+encouraging messages had passed from Whitehall to Quebec, and from
+Quebec to the frontier, and to stimulate which Guy Johnson had been so
+lavish with the fine linen, silver ornaments and port wine. The party
+was commanded by Rowland Montour, John Montour being second in command.
+Undiscovered, they surrounded the log house of the old Quaker miller,
+Benjamin Gilbert. With tomahawk raised and flint-locks cocked they
+suddenly appeared at door and windows. The old Quaker offered his hand
+as a brother. It was refused. Partly from the Quaker habit of
+non-resistance, partly from the obvious certainty that to attempt to
+escape meant death, the whole household submitted to be bound, while
+their home was plundered and burned. Loading three of Gilbert's horses
+with booty, and placing heavy packs on the back of each prisoner old
+enough to bear them, the expedition took the trail for Fort Niagara,
+more than 200 miles away. This was "war" in "the good old days."
+
+There were twelve prisoners in the party, of whom but five were men.
+The patriarch of the household, Benjamin, was sixty-nine years old;
+Elizabeth, his wife, was fifty-five; Joseph, Benjamin's son by a former
+wife, aged forty-one; another son, Jesse, aged nineteen, and his wife
+Sarah, the same age. There were three younger children, Rebecca, Abner
+and Elizabeth, respectively sixteen, fourteen and twelve; Thomas Peart,
+son to Benjamin Gilbert's wife by a former husband, aged twenty-three; a
+nephew, Benjamin Gilbert, aged eleven; a hired man, Andrew Harrigar,
+twenty-six; and Abigail Dodson, the fourteen-year-old daughter of a
+neighbor; she had had the ill-luck to come to Gilbert's mill that
+morning for grist, and was taken with the rest. Half a mile distant
+lived Mrs. Gilbert's oldest son, Benjamin Peart, aged twenty-seven, his
+wife Elizabeth, who was but twenty, and their nine-months-old child.
+Montour added these to his party, making fifteen prisoners in all,
+burned their house and urged all along the trail, their first stop being
+near "Mochunk." (Mauch Chunk.)
+
+I must omit most of the details of their march northward. On the evening
+of the first day Benjamin Peart fainted from fatigue and Rowland Montour
+was with difficulty restrained from tomahawking him. At night the men
+prisoners were secured in a way which was usual on these raids,
+throughout Western New York and Pennsylvania, during those dismal years.
+The Indians cut down a sapling five or six inches in diameter, and cut
+notches in it large enough to receive the ankles of the prisoners. After
+fixing their legs in these notches, they placed another pole over the
+first, and thus secured them as in stocks. This upper pole was then
+crossed at each end by stakes driven into the ground. The prisoners thus
+lay on the ground, on their backs. Straps or ropes around their necks
+were made fast to near-by trees. Sometimes a blanket was granted them
+for covering, sometimes not. What rest might be had, preparatory to
+another day's forced march, I leave to the imagination.
+
+During the early stages of this march the old couple were constantly
+threatened with death, because unable to keep up. On the fourth day four
+negroes who claimed that they were loyal to the King, that they had
+escaped from the Americans and had set out for Fort Niagara, were taken
+up by Montour from a camp where he had left them on his way down the
+valley. These negroes frequently whipped and tortured the prisoners for
+sport, Montour making no objection. On the 4th of May, the Indians
+separated into two companies; one taking the westward path, and with
+this party went Thomas Peart, Joseph Gilbert, Benjamin Gilbert--the
+little boy of eleven--and Sarah, wife of Jesse. The others kept on the
+northerly course. Andrew Harrigar, terrified by the Indian boast that
+those who had gone with the other party "were killed and scalped, and
+you may expect the same fate tonight," took a kettle, under pretence of
+bringing water, but ran away under cover of darkness. After incredible
+hardships he regained the settlements. His escape so angered Rowland
+Montour that he threw Jesse Gilbert down, and lifted his tomahawk for
+the fatal blow; Elizabeth, Jesse's mother, knelt over him, pressed her
+head to her son's brow and begged the captain to spare his life. Montour
+kicked her over and tied them both by their necks to a tree; after a
+time, his passion cooling, he loosed them, bade them pack up and take
+the trail. This is but a sample incident. I pass over many.
+
+None suffered more on the march than Elizabeth Peart, the girl mother.
+The Indians would not let her husband relieve her by carrying her child,
+and she was ever the victim of the whimsical moods of her captors. At
+one time they would let her ride one of the horses; at another, would
+compel her to walk, carrying the child, and would beat her if she lagged
+behind. By the 14th of May Elizabeth Gilbert had become so weak that she
+could only keep the trail when led and supported by her children. On
+this day the main party was rejoined by a portion of the party that had
+branched off to westward; with them were two of the four captives,
+Benjamin Gilbert, Jr., and Sarah, wife of Jesse. On this day old
+Benjamin was painted black, the custom of the Indians with prisoners
+whom they intended to kill. Later on they were joined by British
+soldiers, who took away the four negroes and did something to alleviate
+the sufferings of the white prisoners. The expedition had exhausted its
+provisions and all that had been taken from the Gilberts. A chance
+hedgehog, and roots dug in the woods, sustained them for some days. May
+the 17th they ferried across the Genesee River on a log raft.
+Provisions were brought from Fort Niagara, an Indian having been sent
+ahead, on the best horse; and on the morning of the 21st of May they
+heard, faintly booming beyond the intervening forest, the morning gun at
+Fort Niagara. An incident of that day's march was a meeting with
+Montour's wife. She was the daughter of the great Seneca Sayenqueraghta,
+the man who led the Indians at Wyoming,[15] and whose influence was
+greater in this region, at the time we are studying, than even that of
+Brant himself. He was the Old King of the Senecas, called Old Smoke by
+the whites. Smoke's Creek, the well-known stream which empties into Lake
+Erie just beyond the southwest limit of Buffalo, between South Park and
+Woodlawn Beach, preserves his name to our day. It was there that he
+lived in his last years; and somewhere on its margin, in a now unknown
+grave, he was buried. His daughter the "Princess," was, next to Molly
+Brant, the grandest Indian woman of the time on the Niagara. As she met
+the wretched Gilberts, "she was dressed altogether in the Indian
+costume, and was shining with gold lace and silver baubles." To her
+Rowland Montour presented the girl Rebecca, as a daughter. The princess
+took a silver ring from her finger and put it on Rebecca's, which act
+completed the adoption of this little Quaker maid of sixteen into one
+of the most famous--possibly the most infamous--family of the Niagara
+region during the Revolutionary period.
+
+At a village not far from Fort Niagara, apparently near the present
+Tuscarora village on the heights east of Lewiston, Montour painted
+Jesse, Abner, Rebecca and Elizabeth Gilbert, Jr., as Indians are
+painted, and gave each a belt of wampum; but while these marks of favor
+were shown to the young people, the mother, because of her feebleness,
+was continually the victim of the displeasure and the blows of the
+Indians. On May 23d, being at the Landing--what is now Lewiston--they
+were visited by Captains Powell and Dace from the fort, and the next
+day, just one month from the time of their capture, they trudged down
+the trail which is now the pleasant river road, towards the old fort,
+protected with difficulty from the blows of the Indians along the way.
+
+Now followed the dispersion of this unhappy family. After the Indian
+custom, the young and active prisoners were sought by the Indians for
+adoption. Many brave American boys went out to live, in the most menial
+servitude, among the Senecas and other tribes who during the later years
+of the Revolution lived on the Genesee, the Tonawanda, Buffalo,
+Cazenove, Smoke's, and Cattaraugus creeks. The old man and his wife and
+their son Jesse were surrendered to Col. Johnson. Benjamin Peart, Mrs.
+Gilbert's son, was carried off to the Genesee. The other members of the
+party were held in captivity in various places; but I may only stay now
+to note what befel the little Rebecca and her sister-in-law, Elizabeth
+Peart.
+
+As already stated, Rebecca had been adopted by Rowland Montour's wife.
+In the general allotment of prisoners, her cousin, Benjamin Gilbert, the
+lad of eleven, also fell to this daughter of Sayenqueraghta. She took
+the children to a cabin where her father's family, eleven in number,
+were assembled. After the usual grand lamentation for the dead, whose
+places were supposed now to be filled by the white prisoners, this royal
+household departed by easy stages for their summer's corn-planting. They
+tarried at the Landing, while clothing was had from the fort. The little
+Quaker girl was dressed after the Indian fashion, "with short-clothes,
+leggins and a gold-laced hat"; while Benjamin, "as a badge of his
+dignity, wore a silver medal hanging from his neck." They moved up to
+Fort Schlosser (just above the falls, near where the present power-house
+stands), thence by canoe to Fort Erie; then "four miles further, up
+Buffalo Creek, where they pitched their tent for a settlement." Here the
+women planted corn; but the little Rebecca, not being strong, was
+allowed to look after the cooking. The whole household, queen, princess
+and slave, had to work. The men of course were exempt; but the chief
+advantage of Sayenqueraghta's high rank was that he could procure more
+provisions from the King's stores at Fort Niagara than could the humbler
+members of the tribe. The boy Ben had an easy time of it. He roamed at
+will with the Indian boys over the territory that is now Buffalo;
+fished in the lake, hunted or idled without constraint, and it is
+recorded that he was so pleased with the Indian mode of life, that but
+for his sister's constant admonition he would have dropped all thought
+of return to civilization, and cheerfully have become as good an Indian
+as the best of them. At eleven years of age savagery takes easy hold.
+
+These children lived with Montour's Indian relatives for over two years;
+sharing in the feasts when there was plenty, going pinched with hunger
+on the frequent occasions when improvidence had exhausted the supply.
+There were numerous expeditions, afoot and by canoe, to Fort Niagara. On
+one occasion Rebecca, with her Indian family, were entertained by
+British officers at Fort Erie, when Old Smoke drank so much wine that
+when he came to paddle his canoe homeward, across the river, he narrowly
+escaped an upset on the rocky reef, just outside the entrance to Buffalo
+Creek. On every visit to Fort Niagara Rebecca would look for release;
+but although the officers were kind to her, they did not choose to
+interfere with so powerful a family as Montour's. It was shortly after
+one of these disappointments that she heard of her father's death. For
+some months she was sick; then came news of the death of her Indian
+father, Rowland Montour, who succumbed to wounds received in the attack
+already noted. There was great mourning in the lodge on Buffalo Creek,
+and Rebecca had to make a feint of sorrow, weeping aloud with the rest.
+
+In the winter of '81-'82 a scheme was devised by friends at the fort
+for abducting her from the Indians, but it was not undertaken. In the
+spring of '82 peremptory orders came from Gen. Haldimand that all the
+remaining members of the Gilbert family who were still in captivity
+should be taken from the Indians; but after a council fire had been
+lighted, Old Smoke, Montour's widow, and the rest of the family, Rebecca
+and Ben included, moved six miles up the lake shore--apparently to
+Smoke's Creek--where they stayed several weeks making maple sugar. Then,
+a great pigeon roost being reported, men and boys went off to it, some
+fifty miles, and the delighted young Ben went too. Of all the Gilbert
+captives he alone seems to have had experiences too full of wholesome
+adventure and easy living to warrant the expenditure of the least bit of
+sympathy upon him. But sooner or later the wily Indians had to heed Sir
+Frederick's command, and on the 1st of June, 1782, after upwards of two
+years of captivity, Rebecca and her cousin were released at Fort
+Niagara, and two days later, with others, embarked for Montreal.
+
+Far more cheerless were the experiences of Elizabeth Peart. She was
+parted from her husband, adopted by a Seneca family, and was also
+brought to raise corn on Buffalo Creek. Early in her servitude among the
+Indians her babe was taken from her and carried across to Canada. She
+was but twenty years old herself; the family that had taken her came by
+canoe to Buffalo Creek, where they settled for the corn-planting. This
+was in the spring of 1780. All manner of drudgery and burdens were put
+upon her. Her work was to cultivate the corn. Falling sick, the Indians
+built a hut for her by the side of the cornfield, and then utterly
+neglected her. Here she remained through the summer, regaining strength
+enough to care for and gather the corn; when this was done, her Indian
+father permitted her to come and live again in the family lodge. At one
+time a drunken Indian attacked her, knocked her down, and dragged her
+about, beating her. At another, all provision failing, she tramped with
+others four days through the snow to Fort Niagara. Here Capt. Powell's
+wife--who had been a prisoner herself--interceded in Elizabeth's behalf,
+but to no avail. She was however given an opportunity to see her babe,
+which was being cared for by an Indian family on the Canadian side of
+the river, opposite Fort Niagara. This privilege was gained for the poor
+mother by bribing her Indian father with a bottle of rum. So far as I am
+aware, this was the best use to which a bottle of rum was put during the
+Revolutionary War. But back to Buffalo Creek the unhappy mother had to
+come. Her release was finally obtained by artifice. Being allowed to
+visit Fort Niagara, where she had some needlework to do for the white
+people, she feigned sickness, and by one excuse and another the Indians
+were put off until she could be shipped away to Montreal.
+
+Of the Gilbert family and those taken with them by Montour, only the old
+man died in captivity. The adventures of each one would make a long
+story, but may not be entered upon here. By the close of '82 they were
+all released from the Indians, and after a detention at Montreal,
+reached their friends in Pennsylvania and set about the reëstablishment
+of homes.
+
+Beyond question, Elizabeth Peart and Rebecca Gilbert were the first
+white women ever on the site of the present city of Buffalo. They were
+brave, patient, patriotic girls; no truer Daughters of the American
+Revolution are known to history. It would seem fitting that their memory
+should be preserved and their story known--much fuller than I have here
+sketched it--by the patriotic Daughters of the Revolution of our own
+day, who give heed to American beginnings in this region.
+
+I have dwelt at length on the Gilbert captivity, not more because of its
+own importance than to illustrate the responsibilities which constantly
+rested on the commandant at Niagara, at this period. We now turn to
+other phases of the service which engaged the attention and taxed the
+endurance of Col. Bolton.
+
+From the time of the conquest of Canada in 1760 down to the opening of
+the Revolution, there had been a slow but steady growth of shipping on
+the lakes, especially on Lake Ontario. On this lake, as early as 1767,
+there were four brigs of from forty to seventy tons, and sixteen armed
+deck-cutters. Besides the "King's ships" there were still much travel
+and traffic by means of canoes and batteaux. One of the first effects of
+the war with the American colonies was to beget active ship-building
+operations by the British; for Lake Ontario, at Oswegatchie, Oswego and
+Niagara; and for Lake Erie, at Navy Island, Detroit and Pine River. An
+official return made in July, 1778, the summer after Col. Bolton assumed
+command at Niagara, enumerates twelve sailing craft built for Lake
+Ontario since the British gained control of that lake in 1759, and
+sixteen for Lake Erie; seven of the Lake Ontario boats had been cast
+away, two were laid up and decayed; so that at this time--midsummer of
+'78--there were still in service only the snow Haldimand, eighteen guns,
+built at Oswegatchie in 1771; the snow Seneca, eighteen guns, built in
+1777; and the sloop Caldwell, two guns, built in 1774. A memorandum
+records that Capt. Andrews, in the spring of 1778, sought permission to
+build another vessel at Niagara, to take the place of the Haldimand,
+which, he was informed, could not last more than another year. The
+vessel built, in accordance with this recommendation, was a schooner;
+her construction was entrusted to Capt. Shank, at Niagara, across the
+river from the fort. We may be sure that Col. Bolton visited the yard
+from time to time to note the progress of the work. There was discussion
+over her lines. "Capt. Shank was told that he was making her too
+flat-bottomed, and that she would upset." The builder laughed at his
+critics and stuck to his model. She was launched, named the Ontario, and
+was hastened forward to completion, for the King's service had urgent
+need of her.
+
+Col. Bolton had long been in bad health, wearied with the cares and
+perplexities of his position and eager to get away from Fort Niagara.
+One source of constant annoyance to his military mind was the traders'
+supplies, which turned the fort into a warehouse and laid distasteful
+duties upon its commandant. His letters contain many allusions to the
+"incredible plague and trouble caused by merchants' goods frequently
+sent without a single person to care for them." "Last year," so he wrote
+in May, '78, "every place in this fort was lumbered with them, and
+vessels were obliged to navigate the lakes until Nov. 30th." The vessels
+were primarily for the King's service, but when unemployed were allowed
+to be used in transporting merchants' goods, under certain regulations.
+The next statement in the same letter gives some idea of the magnitude
+of the transactions involved in the various departments in this region
+at the period: "I have drawn a bill of £14,760-9-5"--nearly $74,000--"on
+acct. of sundries furnished Indians by Maj. Butler, also another on
+acct. of Naval Dept. at Detroit for £4,070-18-9. Between us I am
+heartily sick of bills and accounts and if the other posts are as
+expensive to Government as this has been I think Old England had done
+much better in letting the savages take possession of them than to have
+put herself to half the enormous sum she has been at in keeping them.
+Neither does the climate agree with my constitution, which has already
+suffered by being employed many years in the West Indies and Florida,
+for I have been extremely ill the two winters I have spent here with
+rheumatism and a disorder in my breast."
+
+One source of annoyance to Bolton was a detachment of Hessians which was
+sent to augment the garrison at Fort Niagara. Col. Bolton did not find
+them to his liking, nor was life at a backwoods post at all congenial to
+these mercenaries, fighting England's battles to pay their monarch's
+debts. They refused to work on the fortifications at Niagara; whereupon,
+in November, 1779, Col. Bolton packed them off down to Carleton Island.
+Alexander Fraser, in charge of that post, wrote to Gen. Haldimand that
+he had ordered the "jagers" to be replaced by a company of the 34th.
+"Capt. Count Wittgenstein," he added, "fears bad consequences should the
+Jagers be ordered to return." Nowhere in America does the British
+employment of Hessian troops appear to have been less satisfactory than
+on this frontier. At Carleton Island, as at Niagara, they refused to
+work, many of them were accused of selling their necessaries for rum,
+and the Count de Wittgenstein himself was reprimanded.
+
+There were difficulties, too, with the lake service. Desertion and
+discontent followed an attempt to shorten the seamen's rations. In the
+summer of '78, the sailors on board the snow Seneca, at Niagara, asked
+to be discharged, alleging that their time had expired the preceding
+November, and the yet more remarkable reason that they objected to the
+service because they had been brought up on shore and life on the
+rolling deep of Lake Ontario afforded "no opportunity of exercising our
+Religion, neither does confinement agree with our healths." Like many
+lake sailors at this period they were probably French Canadian
+Catholics, with loyalty none too strong to the British cause.
+
+Bolton stuck to his post throughout that season, the year of alarm that
+followed, and the succeeding period of distress. The most frequent
+entries in his letters record the arrival of war parties, and his
+anxiety over the enormous expense incurred for the Indians by Maj.
+Butler. "Scalps and prisoners are coming in every day, which is all the
+news this place affords," he writes in June, '78; and again, the same
+month: "Ninety savages are just arrived with thirteen scalps and two
+prisoners, and forty more with two scalps are expected. All of these
+gentry, I am informed, must be clothed."[16] While there does not seem
+ever to have been an open break between Bolton and Butler, yet the
+former looked with dismay, if not disapproval, upon the endless
+expenditure incurred for the Indians. In August, 1778, he wrote: "Maj.
+Butler, chief of the Indian Department, gives orders to the merchants to
+supply the savages with everything to answer their demands, of which
+undoubtedly he is the best judge and only person who can satisfy them or
+keep them in temper. He also signs a certificate that the goods and cash
+issued and paid by his order were indispensably necessary for the
+government of His Majesty's service. The commanding officer of this
+post is thus obliged to draw bills for the amount of all these accounts,
+of which it is impossible he can be a judge or know anything about.... I
+only mention these things to show Yr Excellency the disagreeable part
+that falls to my lot as commanding officer; besides this is such a
+complicated command that even an officer of much superior abilities than
+I am master of, would find himself sometimes not a little embarrassed at
+this Post."
+
+Bolton was seriously ill during the winter of '79-'80, as indeed were
+many of his garrison. In April, 1780, he reports his wretched health to
+Gen. Haldimand. All through the succeeding summer he stuck to his post;
+but on September 13th, worn out and discouraged, he asked to be allowed
+to retire from the command of the upper posts and lakes. September 30th
+he again wrote, begging for leave of absence. Some weeks later the
+desired permission was sent, and Bolton determined to stay no longer.
+Late in October the new Ontario, which Capt. Shank had built across the
+river from the fort, was finished and rigged; she carried sixteen guns,
+and was declared ready for service. She was ordered to convey a company
+of the 34th down to Carleton Island. It was a notable departure. The
+season was so late, no other opportunity for crossing Lake Ontario might
+be afforded until spring. Lieut. Royce, with thirty men of the 34th,
+embarked, under orders; so did Lieut. Colleton of the Royal Artillery.
+Capt. Andrews, superintendent of naval construction, at whose
+solicitations the Ontario had been built, being at Fort Niagara at the
+time, also took passage. There was the full complement of officers and
+crew. Several passengers--licensed Indian traders and fur merchants,
+probably--crowded aboard; and among those who sailed away from Fort
+Niagara that last October day, was Col. Bolton. It was the Ontario's
+first voyage; and we may be sure that there was no lack of speculation
+and wise opinion in the throng of spectators who watched her round the
+bar at the mouth of the river and take her course down the lake. The old
+criticism about her flat bottom and lack of draught was sure to be
+recalled. But the Ontario, with her notable passenger list, had sailed,
+and the only port she ever reached was the bottom of the lake. It is
+supposed she foundered, some forty miles east of Niagara, near a place
+called Golden Hill. On the beach there, some days after, a few articles
+were found, supposed to have come ashore; but no other sign, no word of
+the Ontario or of any of the throng that sailed in her has been had from
+that day to this. In due time news of the loss reached Quebec. Sincere
+but short were the expressions of sorrow in the correspondence that
+followed. "The loss of so many good officers and men," wrote Haldimand,
+"particularly at this period, and the disappointment of forwarding
+provisions for the great consumption at the upper posts, will be
+severely felt."[17] It was the fortune of war, and already the thought
+turned to those who had depended upon a return cargo of provisions by
+the Ontario. And so passes Mason Bolton out of the history of Fort
+Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+
+What Befel David Ogden.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT BEFEL DAVID OGDEN.
+
+
+It was my privilege, in the summer of 1896, to share in the exercises
+which marked the Centennial of the delivery of Fort Niagara by Great
+Britain to the United States. As I stood in that old stronghold on the
+bank above the blue lake, strolled across the ancient parade ground, or
+passed from one historic building to another, I found myself constantly
+forgetting the actual day and hour, and slipping back a century or two.
+There was a great crowd at Fort Niagara on this August day; thousands of
+people--citizens, officials, soldiers and pleasure-seekers; but with
+them came and went, to my retrospective vision, many more thousands yet:
+missionary priests, French adventurers, traders, soldiers of the
+scarlet, and of the buff and blue. I saw Butler's Rangers in their green
+suits; and I saw a horde of savages, now begging for rations from the
+King's stores, now coming in from their forays, famished but exultant,
+displaying the scalps they had taken, or leading their ragged and
+woebegone captives. It was upon these captives, whose romantic
+misfortunes make a long and dramatic chapter in the history of Fort
+Niagara, that my regard was prone to center. Their stories have nowhere
+been told, so far as I am aware, as a part of the history of the place;
+many of them never can be told; but of others some details may be
+recorded.
+
+Throughout the whole period of the Revolutionary War, Fort Niagara was a
+garrisoned British post, of varying strength. It was the supply depot
+for all arms and provisions which were destined for the upper posts of
+Detroit and Michillimackinac; it was the rendezvous of the Senecas, who
+worked the Government for all the blankets and guns, trinkets and
+provisions which they could get; it was the headquarters of Col. Guy
+Johnson, Indian Superintendent; and it was the resting-place and base of
+operations of They-en-dan-e-gey-ah--in English, Joseph Brant; of Butler
+and his rangers, and of numerous other less famous but more cruel
+Indians, British and Tory leaders. No American troops reached Fort
+Niagara to attack it. Only once was it even threatened. Yet throughout
+the whole period of the war parties sallied forth from Fort Niagara to
+plunder, capture or kill the rebel settlers wherever they could be
+reached.
+
+Sixty years ago Judge Samuel De Veaux wrote of this phase of the history
+of Fort Niagara:
+
+ This old fort is as much noted for enormity and crime, as for any
+ good ever derived from it by the nation in occupation.... During
+ the American Revolution it was the headquarters of all that was
+ barbarous, unrelenting and cruel. There, were congregated the
+ leaders and chiefs of those bands of murderers and miscreants, that
+ carried death and destruction into the remote American settlements.
+ There, civilized Europe revelled with savage America; and ladies of
+ education and refinement mingled in the society of those whose
+ only distinction was to wield the bloody tomahawk and
+ scalping-knife. There, the squaws of the forest were raised to
+ eminence, and the most unholy unions between them and officers of
+ the highest rank, smiled upon and countenanced. There, in their
+ strong hold, like a nest of vultures, securely, for seven years,
+ they sallied forth and preyed upon the distant settlements of the
+ Mohawks and Susquehannahs. It was the depot of their plunder; there
+ they planned their forays, and there they returned to feast, until
+ the hour of action came again.[18]
+
+This striking passage, which the worthy author did not substantiate by a
+single fact, may stand as the present text. I have undertaken to trace
+some of the flights of the birds of prey from this nest, and to bring
+together the details relating to the captives who were brought hither.
+From many sources I have traced out the narratives of thirty-two persons
+who were brought to Fort Niagara captive by the Indians, during the
+years 1778 to 1783. Among them is my boy hero Davy Ogden, whose
+adventures I undertake to tell with some minuteness. Just how many
+American prisoners were brought into Fort Niagara during this period I
+am unable to say, though it is possible that from the official
+correspondence of the time figures could be had on which a very close
+estimate could be based. My examination of the subject warrants the
+assertion that several hundred were brought in by the war parties under
+Indian, British and Tory leaders. In this correspondence, very little of
+which has ever been published, one may find such entries as the
+following:
+
+Guy Johnson wrote from Fort Niagara, June 30, 1781:
+
+ In my last letter of the 24th inst. I had just time to enclose a
+ copy of Lieut. Nelles's letter with an account of his success,
+ since which he arrived at this place with more particular
+ information by which I find that he killed thirteen and took seven
+ (the Indians not having reckoned two of the persons whom they left
+ unscalped)....
+
+Again:
+
+ I have the honor to transmit to Your Excellency a general letter
+ containing the state of the garrison and of my Department to the
+ 1st inst., and a return, at the foot, of the war parties that have
+ been on service this year, ... by which it will appear that they
+ have killed and taken during the season already 150 persons,
+ including those last brought in....
+
+Again he reports, August 30, 1781:
+
+ The party with Capt. Caldwell and some of the Indians with Capt.
+ Lottridge are returning, having destroyed several settlements in
+ Ulster County, and about 100 of the Indians are gone against other
+ parts of the frontiers, and I have some large parties under good
+ leaders still on service as well as scouts towards Fort Pitt....
+
+Not only are there many returns of this sort, but also tabulated
+statements, giving the number of prisoners sent down from Fort Niagara
+to Montreal on given dates, with their names, ages, names of their
+captors, and the places where they were taken. There were many shipments
+during the summer of '83, and the latest return of this sort which I
+have found in the archives is dated August 1st of that year, when eleven
+prisoners were sent from the fort to Montreal. It was probably not far
+from this time that the last American prisoner of the Revolution was
+released from Fort Niagara. But let the reader beware of forming hasty
+conclusions as to the cruelty or brutality of the British at Fort
+Niagara. In the first place, remember that harshness or kindness in the
+treatment of the helpless depends in good degree--and always has
+depended--upon the temperament and mood of the individual custodian.
+There were those in command at Fort Niagara who appear to have been
+capable of almost any iniquity. Others gave frequent and conspicuous
+proofs of their humanity. Remember, secondly, that the prisoners
+primarily belonged to the Indians who captured them. The Indian custom
+of adoption--the taking into the family circle of a prisoner in place of
+a son or husband who had been killed by the enemy--was an Iroquois
+custom, dating back much further than their acquaintance with the
+English. Many of the Americans who were detained in this fashion by
+their Indian captors, probably never were given over to the British.
+Some, as we know, like Mary Jemison, the White Woman of the Genesee,
+adopted the Indian mode of life and refused to leave it. Others died in
+captivity, some escaped. Horatio Jones and Jasper Parrish were first
+prisoners, then utilized as interpreters, but remained among the
+Indians.[19] And in many cases, especially of women and children, we
+know that they were got away from the Indians by the British officers at
+Fort Niagara, only after considerable trouble and expense. In these
+cases the British were the real benefactors of the Americans, and the
+kindness in the act cannot always be put aside on the mere ground of
+military exchange, prisoner for prisoner. Gen. Haldimand is quoted to
+the effect that he "does not intend to enter into an exchange of
+prisoners, but he will not add to the distresses attending the present
+war, by detaining helpless women and children from their families."[20]
+
+I have spoken of Mrs. Campbell, who was held some months at Kanadasaga.
+The letter just cited further illustrates the point I would make:
+
+ A former application had been made in behalf of Col. Campbell to
+ procure the exchange of his family for that of Col. Butler, and the
+ officer commanding the upper posts collected Mr. Campbell's and the
+ family of a Mr. Moore, and procured their release from the Indians
+ upon the above mentioned condition with infinite trouble and a very
+ heavy expense. They are now at Fort Niagara where the best care
+ that circumstances will admit of, is taken of them, and I am to
+ acquaint you that Mrs. Campbell & any other women or children that
+ shall be specified shall be safely conducted to Fort Schuyler, or
+ to any other place that shall be thought most convenient, provided
+ Mrs. Butler & her family consisting of a like number shall in the
+ same manner have safe conduct to my advance post upon Lake
+ Champlain in order that she may cross the lake before the ice
+ breaks up.
+
+The official correspondence carried on during the years 1779 to '83,
+between Gen. Haldimand and the commanding officers at Fort Niagara shows
+in more than one instance that American prisoners were a burden and a
+trouble at that post. Sometimes, as in the case of Mrs. Campbell, who
+was finally exchanged for Mrs. Butler and her children, they were
+detained as hostages. More often, they were received from the Indians in
+exchange for presents, the British being obliged to humor the Indians
+and thus retain their invaluable services. Thus, under date of Oct. 2,
+1779, we find Col. Bolton writing from Fort Niagara to Gen. Haldimand:
+"I should be glad to know what to do with the prisoners sent here by
+Capt. Lernault. Some of them I forwarded to Carleton Island, and Maj.
+Nairne has applied for leave to send them to Montreal. I have also many
+here belonging to the Indians, who have not as yet agreed to deliver
+them up."[21]
+
+I could multiply at great length these citations from the official
+correspondence, but enough has been given to show that the wholesale
+condemnation of the British, into whose hands American prisoners fell,
+is not warranted by the facts. But there is no plainer fact in it all
+than that the British organized and aided the Indian raids, and were,
+therefore, joint culprits in general.
+
+And this brings us to the subject of scalps. For many years Fort Niagara
+was called a scalp-market. The statement is frequent in early writers
+that the British officers offered about eight dollars for every
+American's scalp, and that it was this offer, more than anything else,
+which fired the Indians to their most horrible deeds. Many scalps were
+brought into Fort Niagara, but I have failed, as yet, to find any
+report, or figure, or allusion, in the British archives pointing to the
+payment of anything whatever. Further search may discover something to
+settle this not unimportant matter; for we may readily believe that if
+such payments were made the matter would be passed over as unobtrusively
+as possible, especially in the reports to the Ministry. The facts appear
+to be that warriors who brought scalps into Fort Niagara gave them to
+the Superintendent of Indian Affairs, or his deputy, and then received
+presents from him. Probably these presents were proportioned to the
+success on the warpath.
+
+These facts and reflections are offered to assist the reader's ready
+understanding and imagination in following in detail the adventures of
+one out of the many prisoners whose paths we have glanced at; for of all
+these unfortunate patriots who were thus brought to the "vultures' nest"
+none has laid hold of my interest and my imagination more strongly than
+has David Ogden. He was born in a troublous time, and the hazards of
+border life were his sole heritage, save alone a sturdy intrepidity of
+character which chiefly commends him to me as the typical hero of all
+the heroic souls, men, women, and children, who came through great
+bereavements and hardships, into old Fort Niagara as prisoners of war.
+Davy was born at Fishkill, Dutchess Co., New York, in 1764. His parents
+made one remove after another, in the restless American fashion, for
+some years taking such chances of betterment as new settlements
+afforded; first at Waterford, Saratoga Co.; then in the wilderness on
+the head-waters of the Susquehanna near the present village of
+Huntsville; then up the river to the settlement known in those days as
+Newtown Martin, now Middlefield; and later, for safety, to Cherry
+Valley. Here David's mother and her four boys were at the time of the
+famous massacre of November, 1778. When the alarm was given Mrs. Ogden
+snatched a blanket, and with her little ones began a flight through the
+woods towards the Mohawk. With them also fled Col. Campbell, of the
+patriot militia. Coming to a deserted cabin whose owner had fled, they
+did not scruple to help themselves to a loaf of bread, which Col.
+Campbell cut up with his sword. After another flight of some hours
+through a storm of mingled snow and rain, they came to the house of one
+Lyons, a Tory, who was absent, presumably because busied in the black
+work at Cherry Valley. Mrs. Lyons, who seems to have shared her
+husband's sentiments, refused the refugees anything to eat, but finally
+let the mother and children spend the night on the floor. Col. Campbell
+left the Ogdens here and pushed on alone towards Canajoharie; while Mrs.
+Odgen and her hungry little ones went on by themselves through the snow.
+That day they came to a more hospitable house, where the keen suffering
+of that adventure ended; and some days later, on the Mohawk, the father
+rejoined the family, he also having escaped the massacre at Cherry
+Valley.
+
+This incident may be reckoned the mere prelude of our Davy's adventures;
+for the next spring, having reached the mature age of fourteen, he
+volunteered in the service of his country, entered upon the regular life
+of a soldier, and began to have adventures on his own account. The year
+that followed was spent in arduous but not particularly romantic
+service. He was marched from one point to another on the Mohawk and the
+Hudson; saw André hanged at Tappan, and finally was sent to the frontier
+again, where at Fort Stanwix,[22] in the spring of 1781, what we may
+regard as the real adventures of Davy Ogden began.
+
+A party of eleven wood-choppers were at work in the heavy timber about
+two miles from the fort, and every day an armed guard was sent out from
+the garrison to protect them. On March 2d, Corporal Samuel Betts and six
+soldiers, Davy among them, were detailed on this service. I conceive of
+my hero at this time as a sturdy, well-seasoned lad, to whom woodcraft
+and pioneer soldiering had become second nature. I would like to see him
+among city boys of his own age to-day. Most things that they know, and
+think of, would be quite out of his range. But there is a common ground
+on which all healthy, high-minded boys, of whatever time or station in
+life, stand on a level. I do not know that he had ever been to school,
+or that he could read, though I think his mother must have looked to
+that. But I do know that he was well educated. He was innocent of the
+bicycle, but I'll warrant he could skate. I know he could swim like an
+otter--as I shall presently record--and when it came to running, he
+would have been a champion of the cinder-path, to-day. He knew the ways
+of poverty and of self-denial; knew the signs of the forest, of wild
+animal and Indian; and best of all, I am sure he knew just why he was
+carrying a heavy flint-lock in the ragged, hungry ranks of the American
+"rebels." It must be admitted, I linger somewhat over my hero; but I
+like the lad, and would have the reader come into sympathy with him. I
+can see him now as he followed the corporal out of the fort that March
+morning. He wore the three-cornered cocked-up hat of the prescribed
+uniform, and his powder-horn was slung at his side. The whole guard
+very likely wore snowshoes, for the snow lay three feet deep in the
+woods, and a thaw had weakened the crust.
+
+Late in the afternoon, soldiers and wood-choppers were startled by the
+yells of Indians and Tories, who had gained a hill between them and the
+fort. Brant had achieved another of his surprises, and there was no
+escape from his party, which seemed to fill the woods. His evident
+intent was to make captives and not to kill, though his men had orders
+to shoot or tomahawk any who fired in self-defense. Two of Davy's
+companions were wounded by the enemy. One of them, Timothy Runnels, was
+shot in the mouth, "the ball coming through his cheek; and yet not a
+tooth was disturbed, a pretty good evidence, in the opinion of his
+comrades, that his mouth was wide open when the ball went in." It fared
+more seriously with the other wounded soldier. This man, whose name was
+Morfat, had his thigh broken by a bullet. The Indians rushed upon him as
+he fell at Davy's side, tomahawked him, scalped him, stripped him and
+left him naked upon the snow, thus visiting a special vengeance upon one
+who was said to be a deserter from the British. It is further chronicled
+that Morfat did not immediately die, but lived until he was found, hours
+after, by a party from the fort, finally expiring as his comrades bore
+him through the gate of Fort Stanwix.
+
+Davy Ogden had seen this dreadful thing, but with no sign of fear or
+sickness. He had already mastered that scorn of suffering and death
+which always commended the brave to their Indian captors. He was ranged
+up with the other prisoners, and Brant asked of each his name. When Davy
+gave his, the great chief exclaimed:
+
+"What, a son of Ogden the beaver-hunter, that old scouter? Ugh! I wish
+it were he instead of you! But we will take care of his boy or he may
+become a scouter too!"
+
+Thus began David's captivity, as the prisoner, and perhaps receiving
+some of the special regard, of Brant himself. There could have been
+little doubt in Davy's mind, from the moment of his capture, that he was
+to be carried to Fort Niagara; yet the first move of the party was
+characteristic of Indian strategy; for instead of taking the trail
+westward, they all marched off to the eastward, coming upon the Mohawk
+some miles below Fort Stanwix. They forded the river twice, the icy
+water coming above their waists. On emerging upon the road between Fort
+Stanwix and Fort Herkimer, Brant halted his sixteen prisoners and caused
+the buckles to be cut from their shoes. These he placed in a row in the
+road, where the first passing American would be sure to see them. There
+was something of a taunt in the act, and a good deal of humor; and we
+may be sure that Joseph Brant, who was educated enough, and of great
+nature enough, to enjoy a joke, had many a laugh on his way back to
+Niagara as he thought of those thirty-two buckles in a row.
+
+The prisoners tied up their shoes with deerskin strings, and trudged
+along through the night until the gleam of fires ahead and a chorus of
+yells turned their thoughts towards the stake and an ignominious
+martyrdom. But their fate was easier to meet. In a volley of sixteen
+distinct yells for the prisoners and one for the scalp, the party--said
+to number 100 Indians and fifty Tories--entered the first camp, where
+squaws were boiling huge kettles of samp--pounded corn--eaten without
+salt. All fared equally well, and all slept on the ground in the snow,
+Davy and his fellows being guarded by British soldiers.
+
+The next day's march brought them to Oneida Castle, often the
+headquarters of Brant in his expeditions. Here the Indians dug up from
+the snow a store of unhusked corn, and shelled and pounded a quantity
+for their long march. Here, too, Davy's three-cornered Revolutionary hat
+was taken from him, and in its place was given him a raccoon skin. All
+of the captives except the corporal were similarly treated and the
+Indians showed them how to tie the head and tail together. On some the
+legs stuck up and on others the legs hung down. I do not know how Davy
+wore his--with a touch of taste and an air of gaiety, no doubt; and we
+may be sure it made a better head-covering for a march of 250 miles at
+that season than would the stiff hat he had lost. Corporal Betts alone
+was permitted to keep his hat, as insignia of rank, and it is to be
+hoped he got some comfort out of it.
+
+It would take too long to give all the dismal details of Davy's dreary
+tramp across the State. Other captivities which I have spoken of had
+incidents of more dire misery and greater horror than befel the party
+to which Ogden belonged; and this is one reason why I have chosen to
+dwell upon his adventures, because my aim is, by a personal narrative,
+to illustrate the average experience of the time.
+
+There were hundreds of American prisoners brought to Fort Niagara during
+the period we are studying, but it would be far from just to their
+captors, and would throw our historical perspective out of focus, to
+take the extreme cases as types for the whole.
+
+Yet, put it mildly as we can, the experience persists in being serious.
+At Oneida Castle Brant, evidently fearing pursuit, roused his party in
+the middle of the night, and a forced march was begun through the heavy
+timber and up and down the long hills to the westward. When the moon
+went down they halted, but at the first streak of daylight they pushed
+on, not waiting even to boil their samp. An occasional handful of
+parched corn, pounded fine and taken with a swallow of water, was all
+the food any of the party had that day.
+
+The next encampment was on the Onondaga River, south of the lake; and
+here occurred an incident as characteristic of Indian character as was
+the row of shoe-buckles in the road. Some Indians found a small cannon,
+which had probably been abandoned by one of the detachments sent out by
+Sullivan on his retreat from the Genesee in '79. Brant, who had plenty
+of powder, ordered his American prisoners to load and fire this gun a
+number of times, the Indians meanwhile yelling in delight and the
+Tories and British enjoying the chagrin of the helpless Americans. Then
+the march was resumed; over the watershed to Cayuga Lake, which they
+crossed on the ice near the outlet, a long train, each man far from his
+fellow, for the ice was rotten and full of air-holes; then along the old
+trail to Seneca River, which they forded; thence the route was west by
+north, one camp being somewhere between the present villages of Waterloo
+and Lyons. Brant on this expedition appears to have kept to the north of
+Kanadasaga.[23] A day later they came to the outlet of Canandaigua Lake,
+where the Indians, finding a human head which they said was the head of
+a Yankee, had an improvised game of football with it, with taunts and
+threats for the edification of their prisoners. The next day they
+crossed the Genesee River, at or near the old Genesee Castle. And still,
+as throughout all this march, unsalted, often uncooked, samp was their
+only food.
+
+On the march Davy and each of his fellows had worn about their necks a
+rope of some fourteen or sixteen feet in length. In the daytime these
+ropes were wound about their necks and tied. At night they were unwound,
+each prisoner placed between two captors, and one end of the rope was
+fastened to each of the double guard. Under the circumstances it is no
+reflection upon our hero's courage that he had not made his escape.
+
+West of the Genesee, and beyond the country which had been ravaged by
+Sullivan, signs of Indian occupancy multiplied; but as yet there was no
+other food than corn to be had for their ill-conditioned bodies. As they
+filed along the trail, through the snow and mud of March, they met
+another large party just setting out from Niagara on a foray for
+prisoners and scalps. There were noisy greetings and many exultant
+yells; and as the outbound savages passed the prisoners, they snatched
+from each one's head the raccoon-skin cap; so that for the rest of the
+journey Davy and his companions met the weather bare-headed--all save
+Corporal Betts, to whom again was still spared the old three-cornered
+hat. The incident bespeaks either the lack of control or the negligent
+good nature of Brant, for fifteen raccoon-skins at Fort Niagara would
+surely have been worth at least fifteen quarts of rum. Corporal Betts,
+however, must have got little comfort out of his hat; for seeing him
+look so soldierly in it, the whim seized upon Brant to compel the
+unlucky corporal to review his woebegone troops.
+
+"Drill your men," said the fun-loving chief, "and let us see if these
+Yankees can go through the tactics of Baron Steuben."
+
+And so poor Betts, but with a broken spirit, mustered his forlorn guard,
+dressed them in a straight line, and put them through the manual
+according to Steuben. I doubt if the history of Western New York can
+show a stranger military function than this reluctant muster of patriot
+prisoners under compulsion of a playful tiger of an Indian, jeered at
+meanwhile by British soldiers from Fort Niagara. When these latter went
+too far in their ridicule Brant stopped them. "The Yankees," he said
+angrily, "do it a damned sight better than you can."
+
+This affair took place, as nearly as I can make out, somewhere between
+Batavia and Lockport; probably not far from the old Indian village of
+Tonawanda.
+
+Being now in the valley of the Tonawanda, Brant seems to have sent ahead
+a runner to announce his approach; for the second or third day after
+crossing the Genesee they were met by a party from the fort, bringing
+pork and flour, whereupon there was a camp and a feast; with the not
+strange result that many of them had to return to the astringent parched
+corn as a corrective.
+
+From this point on Davy and his friends were subjected to a new
+experience; for, as they passed through the Indian villages, the old
+women and children exercised their accustomed privilege of beating and
+abusing the prisoners. On one occasion, as Davy was plodding along the
+path, a squaw ran up to him, and, all unawares, hit him a terrific blow
+on the side of the head, whereupon the boy came near getting into
+trouble by making a vigorous effort to kick the lady. At another time,
+as David marched near Brant, he saw a young Indian raise a pole,
+intending to give the prisoner a whack over the head. Davy dodged, and
+the blow fell on Brant's back. The chief, though undoubtedly hurt, paid
+no attention to the Indian lad, but advised Davy to run, and Davy,
+knowing perfectly well that to run away meant torture and death, wisely
+ran towards the fort, which was but a few miles distant. A companion
+named Hawkins, who had marched with him, ran by his side. And, as they
+ran, they came upon still another village of the Senecas, from which two
+young savages took after them. Believing that their pursuers would
+tomahawk them, the boys let out a link or two of their speed, and coming
+to a creek where logs made a bridge, Hawkins hid under the bridge, while
+Davy ran behind a great buttonwood tree. The young Indians, however, had
+seen them, and on coming up, one of them promptly went under the bridge,
+and the other around the tree for Davy. This Indian held out his hand in
+friendship, and said: "Brother, stop." And the boys, seeing that the
+Indians had no tomahawks and could do them no harm, were reassured, and
+they all went on together toward Fort Niagara.
+
+Soon they met a detail of soldiers from the fort, who detained them
+until the rest of the party came up, when Davy saw that some of his
+friends had been so badly wounded by the assaults of these village
+Indians that they were now being carried. As the party went on together,
+the path was continually lined with Indians, whose camps were on the
+open plains about the fort; and the clubbing and beating of the
+prisoners became incessant. This was all a regular part of a triumphal
+return to Fort Niagara of a party of British and Indians with American
+prisoners, and was the mild preliminary of that dread ordeal known as
+running the gauntlet.
+
+When Davy, well to the front of the procession, had been marched some
+distance farther through the wood, he looked out upon a clearing, across
+which extended a long line of fallen trees, which lay piled with the
+butts inward, so that the sharpened points of the forked branches all
+pointed outwards, making a _chevaux-de-frise_ upon which one might
+impale himself, but which could scarcely be scaled. Beyond this barrier,
+as Davy looked, he saw, first, the wagon road which ran between this
+_chevaux-de-frise_ and the palisades or pickets of the fort beyond.
+Within the palisades he could see the outlines of the fortification, the
+upper part of the old castle which still stands there, and other
+buildings, and over all the red flag of Great Britain. But while he
+noted these things, his chief regard must have fallen upon the great
+crowd of Indians who were ranged along on either side of the road
+between the outwork of fallen trees and the palisades--two close ranks
+of painted savages in front, and behind them on either side a dense mass
+of yelling, gesticulating bucks, squaws, old men and children, impatient
+for the passing of the prisoners. Beyond, the British sentries, officers
+and other inmates of the fort, awaited the sport, like spectators at a
+play.
+
+Davy knew the gravity and the chances of the situation. He knew the
+Indian custom, which does not seem to have been at all interfered with
+by the officers in command at Niagara,[24] which allowed the spectator
+to assault or wound the prisoner who should run between the ranks, in
+any way which his ingenuity could suggest, except with hatchets and
+knives; these could be used only on prisoners whose faces were painted
+black, by which sign wretches doomed to death were known; yet any
+prisoner, even the black-painted ones, who lived through the gauntlet
+and gained the gate of the fort, was safe from Indian judgment, and
+could rest his case upon the mercies of the British.
+
+I do not know whether or not Davy's heart stood still for a second, but
+I am bound to say there was not a drop of craven blood in his veins. He
+was not exactly in training, as we would say of a sprinter today--his
+diet, the reader will remember, had been somewhat deficient. But if he
+hesitated or trembled it was not for long. We can see him as he stands
+between the soldiers from the fort--bareheaded, ragged, dirty; a blanket
+pinned about his shoulders and still with the rope about his neck by
+which he was secured at night. And now, as his guards look back to see
+the others come up, Davy tightens the leather strap at his waist, takes
+a deep breath, bends low, darts forward, and is half way down the line
+before the waiting Indians know he is coming.
+
+How he does run! And how the yells and execrations follow! There is a
+flight of stones and clubs, but not one touches the boy. One huge
+savage steps forward, to throw the runner backward--he clutches only the
+blanket, which is left in his hands, and Davy runs freer than before.
+The twenty rods of this race for life are passed, and as the boy dashes
+upon the bridge by which the road into the fort crosses the outer ditch,
+he is confronted by an evil-looking squaw, who aims a blow with her fist
+square at his face. Davy knocks up her arm with such force that she
+sprawls heavily to the ground, striking her head on one of the great
+spikes that held the planking. And straight on runs Davy, not down the
+road along the wall to the place set for prisoners, but through the
+inner gate, under the guard-house; and so, panting and spent, out upon
+the old parade-ground.
+
+Thus came the boy-soldier of the Revolution, David Ogden, to Fort
+Niagara, 118 years ago.
+
+The sentries hailed him with laughter and jeers, and asked him what he
+was doing there. "Go back," they said, "under the guard-house and down
+the road outside the wall, to the bottom."
+
+This was where Guy Johnson's house stood, and there the prisoners were
+to report. But when Davy looked forth he concluded that discretion was
+the better part of valor, for the angry Indians had closed upon his
+fellows who followed, and were clubbing them, knocking them down and
+kicking them; so that of the whole party taken prisoners near Fort
+Stanwix, Davy Ogden was the only one who reached Fort Niagara without
+serious harm. Turning back upon the parade ground he flatly refused to
+go out again, whereupon the officer of the guard was called, who
+questioned him, took pity on him, and sheltered him in his own quarters
+for three days.
+
+Now, if this were a mere story, we would expect, right here, a happy
+turn in Davy's fortunes. As matter of fact, the most dismal days in
+Davy's life were just to begin. He had hoped that the worst would be
+detention at the fort, and a speedy shipment down the lake to Montreal,
+for exchange. But after some days he was summoned to Guy Johnson's
+house, where were many Indians, and here he was handed over to a squaw
+to be her son, in place of one she had lost in the war. David was
+powerless; and after what, many years later, he described as a powwow
+had been held over him, he was led away by the squaw and her husband. A
+British soldier, named Hank Haff, added to his grief by telling him that
+he was adopted by the Indians and would have to live with them forever;
+and, as he was led off across the plain, away from his friends and even
+from communication with the British, who were at least of his own blood,
+it was small consolation to know that his adopted father's name was
+Skun-nun-do, that the hideous old hag, his mother, was Gunna-go-let,
+that there was a daughter in the wigwam named Au-lee-zer-quot,
+or that his own name was henceforth to be Chee-chee-le-coo, or
+"Chipping-bird"--a good deal, I submit, for a soldier of the Revolution
+to bear, even if he were only a boy.[25]
+
+David lived with this fine family for over two years, being virtually
+their slave, and always under circumstances which made escape
+impossible. He dressed in Indian fashion, and learned their language,
+their yells and signal whoops. During the first months of his adoption,
+their wigwam was about four miles from the fort--presumably east or
+southeast of it; and one of David's first duties was to go with
+Gunna-go-let out on to the treeless plain overlooking Lake Ontario,
+where the old squaw had found a prize in the shape of a horse which had
+died of starvation. David helped her cut up the carcass and "tote" it
+home--and he was glad to eat of the soup which she made of it. They were
+always hungry. Skun-nun-do being a warrior, the burden of providing for
+the family fell upon Gunna-go-let. Her principal recourse was to cut
+faggots in the woods and carry them to the fort. Many a time did she and
+Davy Ogden carry their loads of firewood on their backs up to the fort,
+glad to receive in exchange cast-off meat, stale bread or rum. So much
+of this work did Davy do during the two years that he was kept with
+these Indians that his back became sore, then calloused.
+
+When he had lived with Gunna-go-let three months, she packed up and
+moved her wigwam to the carrying-place, now Lewiston. Here there was
+cleared land, and some 200 huts or wigwams were pitched, while the
+Indians planted, hoed and gathered a crop of corn. Davy was kept hard at
+work in the field, or in carrying brooms, baskets and other things to
+the fort for sale.
+
+When he had been at the carrying-place about a year and a half, he saw a
+large party of captives brought in from the settlements. Among them was
+a young woman who had been at Fort Stanwix when Ogden was on duty there.
+As she sat in the camp, Davy being present, she began to observe him
+carefully. Although our hero was dressed as an Indian--Indian gaiters, a
+short frock belted at the waist, and with his hair cut close to the
+scalp over the whole head except a long tuft on the crown--yet this poor
+girl saw his real condition and soon learned who he was. There was no
+chance for confidences. What little they said had to be spoken freely,
+without feeling, as if casually between strangers indifferent to each
+other. She told David that she was gathering cowslip greens in a field,
+when an Indian rushed upon her and carried her away. What she endured
+while being brought to the Niagara I leave to the imagination. Davy saw
+her carried away by her captors across the river into Canada; and thus
+vanishes Hannah Armstrong, for I find no mention of her except in this
+reminiscence of her drawn from Ogden's own lips.
+
+About this time David was taken to the fort, old Gunna-go-let having
+heard that the British would give her a present for the lad. Davy
+trudged the nine miles from their hut to the fort with a good heart, for
+to him the news meant a chance of exchange. At Guy Johnson's house he
+and his mother sat expectant on the steps. Presently out came Capt.
+Powell, who had married Jane Moore--who had herself been brought to the
+fort a captive from Cherry Valley. This fine couple, from whom the lad
+had some right to expect kindness, paraded up and down the "stoop" or
+verandah of the house for a while, the wife hanging on her captain's arm
+and both ignoring the boy. At length they paused, and Capt. Powell said:
+
+"You are one of the squaw boys? Do you want to quit the Indians?"
+
+"Yes," said Davy, heart in mouth.
+
+"What for?" quizzed the captain.
+
+"To be exchanged--to get back home, to my own country."
+
+"Well," said Powell, "if you really want to get free from the Indians
+come up and enlist in Butler's Rangers. Then we can ransom you from this
+old squaw--will you do it?"
+
+"No, I won't!" blazed Davy, fiercely.
+
+Capt. Powell turned on his heel. "Go back with the Indians again and be
+damned!" and with that he vanished into the house; and we have no means
+of knowing whether Jane, his wife, had by this time become so "Tory"
+that she made no protest; but it is pleasanter to think of her as
+remembering her own captivity, and, still loyal at heart, as interceding
+for the boy.[26] But that was the end of it for this time, and back
+Davy went, with an angry squaw, to continue his ignoble servitude until
+the next spring. Then word spread all through the region that the
+prisoners must be brought into Fort Niagara, and this time Davy was not
+disappointed, for with many others he was hurried on board the schooner
+Seneca and carried to Oswego. Obviously the news of the preparations for
+a peace had reached Niagara. Although the Treaty of Paris was not signed
+until September 3d of that year (1783), yet the preliminary articles had
+been agreed upon in January. The order from the British Ministry to
+cease hostilities reached Sir Guy Carleton about the 1st of April, and a
+week or so would suffice for its transmission to Niagara. Captives who
+had been detained and claimed by the Indians continued to be brought in
+during that summer, but we hear no more of returning war parties
+arriving with new prisoners. The War of the Revolution was over, even at
+remote Niagara, although for one pretext and another--and for some good
+reasons--the British held on to Fort Niagara and kept up its garrison
+for thirteen years more.
+
+With the sailing of the Seneca the connection of Davy Ogden with Fort
+Niagara ended; but no one who has followed his fortunes thus far can
+wish to drop him, as it were, in the middle of Lake Ontario. That is
+where Davy came near going, for a gale came up which not only made him
+and the throng of others who were fastened below decks desperately sick,
+but came near wrecking the schooner. She was compelled to put in at
+Buck's Island, and after some days reached Oswego, then strongly
+garrisoned. Here Davy stayed, still a prisoner, but living with the
+British Indians, through the winter. In the spring, with a companion
+named Danforth, who stole a loaf of bread for their sustenance, he made
+his escape. He ran through the woods, twenty-four miles in four hours;
+swam the Oswego River, and on reaching the far side, and fearing
+pursuit, did not stop to dress, but ran on naked through the woods until
+he and his companion hoped they had distanced their pursuers. A party
+had been sent after them from the fort, but on reaching the point where
+the boys had plunged into the river, gave up the chase. Ogden and
+Danforth pressed on, around Oneida Lake--having an adventure with a bear
+by the way, and another with rattlesnakes--and finally, following old
+trails, reached Fort Herkimer, having finished their loaf of bread and
+run seventy miles on the last day of their flight. Here Davy was among
+friends. The officers promptly clothed him, gave him passports, and in a
+few days he found his parents at Warrensburg, in Schoharie County.
+
+When the War of 1812 broke out, David took his gun again. He fought at
+the Battle of Queenston, where forty men in his own company were killed
+or wounded. Two bullets passed through his clothes, but he was unharmed.
+We can imagine the interest with which he viewed the Lewiston plateau
+where he had lived with Gunna-go-let more than thirty years before.
+After the war he returned East, and in 1840 was living in the town of
+Franklin, Delaware Co., being then seventy-six years old. The story of
+his adventures was gathered from his own lips, but I do not think it has
+ever been told before as a part of the history of the Niagara frontier.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Fort Niagara Centennial.
+
+
+
+
+A FORT NIAGARA CENTENNIAL.
+
+_With Especial Reference to the British Retention of that Post for
+Thirteen Years after the Treaty of 1783._[27]
+
+
+The part assigned to me in these exercises is to review the history of
+Fort Niagara; to summon from the shades and rehabilitate the figures
+whose ambitions or whose patriotism are web and woof of the fabric which
+Time has woven here. It is a long procession, led by the disciples of
+St. Francis and Loyola--first the Cross, then the scalping-knife, the
+sword and musket. These came with adventurers of France, under sanction
+of Louis the Magnificent, who first builded our Fort Niagara and with
+varying fortunes kept here a feeble footing for four score years, until,
+one July day, Great Britain's wave of continental conquest passed up the
+Niagara; and here, as on all the frontier from Duquesne to Quebec,
+
+ "The lilies withered where the Lion trod."[28]
+
+The fragile emblem of France vanished from these shores, and the triple
+cross waved over Fort Niagara until, 100 years ago to-day, it gave way
+to a fairer flag. This is the event we celebrate, this, with the
+succeeding years, the period we review: a period embracing three great
+wars between three great nations; covering our Nation's birth, growth,
+assertion and maintenance of independence. The story of Fort Niagara is
+peculiarly the story of the fur trade and the strife for commercial
+monopoly; and it is, too, in considerable measure, the story of our
+neighbor, the magnificent colony of Canada, herself worthy of full
+sisterhood among the nations. It is a story replete with incident of
+battle and siege, of Indian cruelty, of patriot captivity, of white
+man's duplicity, of famine, disease and death,--of all the varied forms
+of misery and wretchedness of a frontier post, which we in days of ease
+are wont to call picturesque and romantic. It is a story without a dull
+page, and it is two and a half centuries long.
+
+Obviously something must be here omitted, for your committee have
+allotted me fifteen minutes in which to tell it!
+
+Let us note, then, in briefest way, the essential data of the spot where
+we stand.
+
+A French exploratory expedition headed by Robert Cavelier, called La
+Salle, attempted the first fortification here in 1679.[29] There was a
+temporary Indian village on the west side of the river, but no
+settlement here, neither were there trees on this point. Here, under the
+direction of La Motte de Lussiere, were built two timber redoubts,
+joined by a palisade. This structure, called Fort Conty, burned the same
+year, and the site of Fort Niagara was unfortified until the summer of
+1687, when the Marquis de Denonville, Governor General of Canada, after
+his expedition against the Senecas, made rendezvous on this point, and
+(metaphorically) shaking his fist at his rival Dongan, the Governor of
+the English Colony of New York, built here a fort which was called Fort
+Denonville. It was a timber stockade, of four bastions; was built in
+three days, occupied for eleven months by a garrison which dwindled from
+100 men to a dozen, and would no doubt entirely have succumbed to the
+scurvy and the besieging Iroquois but for the timely arrival of friendly
+Miamis. It was finally abandoned September 15, 1688, the palisades being
+torn down, but the little huts which had sheltered the garrison left
+standing. How long they endured is not recorded. All traces of them had
+evidently vanished by 1721, when in May of that year Charlevoix rounded
+yonder point in his canoe and came up the Niagara. His Journal gives no
+account of any structure here. Four years more elapsed before the French
+ventured to take decided stand on this ground. In 1725 Governor De
+Vaudreuil deputed the General De Longueil to erect a fort here. The work
+was entrusted to the royal engineer Chaussegros de Léry--the elder of
+the two distinguished engineers bearing that name. He came to this spot,
+got his stone from Lewiston Heights and his timber from the forest west
+of the river, and built the "castle." Some of the cut stone was
+apparently brought from the vicinity of Fort Frontenac, now Kingston,
+across the lake. The oldest part of this familiar pile, and more or less
+of the superstructure, is therefore 171 years old.[30] There is,
+however, probably but little suggestion of the original building in the
+present construction, which has been several times altered and enlarged.
+But from 1725 to the present hour Fort Niagara has existed and, with one
+brief interim, has been continuously and successively garrisoned by the
+troops of France, England, and the United States.
+
+By 1727 De Léry had completed the fortification of the "castle," and the
+French held the post until 1759, when it surrendered to the English
+under Sir William Johnson. It was in its last defence by the French that
+the famous Capt. Pouchot first established the fortification to the
+eastward, with two bastions and a curtain-wall, apparently on about the
+same lines as those since maintained. The story of the siege, the
+battle, and the surrender is an eventful one; it is also one of the most
+familiar episodes in the history of the place, and may not be dwelt upon
+here.
+
+July 25, 1759, marks the end of the French period in the history of Fort
+Niagara. The real significance of that period was even less in its
+military than in its commercial aspect. During the first century and
+more of our story the possession of the Niagara was coveted for the sake
+of the fur trade which it controlled. I cannot better tell the story of
+that hundred years in less than a hundred words, than to symbolize Fort
+Niagara as a beaver skin, held by an Indian, a Frenchman, an Englishman
+and a Dutchman, each of the last three trying to pull it away from the
+others (the poor Dutchman being early bowled over in the scuffle), and
+each European equally eager to placate the Indian with fine words, with
+prayers or with brandy, or to stick a knife into his white brother's
+back.
+
+This vicinity also has peculiar precedence in the religious records of
+our State. It was near here[31] that Father Melithon Watteaux, the first
+Catholic priest to minister to whites in what is now New York State, set
+up his altar.[32] It has been claimed, too, by eminent authority, that
+on this bank of the Niagara, was acquired by the Catholic Church its
+first title to property in this State[33]; and here at Fort Niagara,
+under the French _régime_, ministered Fathers Lamberville and Milet,
+Crespel and others of shining memory. But the capture of Fort Niagara by
+Sir William Johnson overthrew the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara.
+
+The first period of British possession of this point extends from 1759
+to 1796. This includes the Revolutionary period, with sixteen years
+before war was begun, and thirteen years after peace was declared. When
+yielded up by the French, most of the buildings were of wood. Exceptions
+were the castle, the old barracks and magazine, the two latter,
+probably, dating from 1756, when the French engineer, Capt. Pouchot,
+practically rebuilt the fort. The southwest blockhouse may also be of
+French construction. A tablet on the wall of yonder bake-house says it
+was erected in 1762. There were constant repairs and alterations under
+the English, and several periods of important construction. They rebuilt
+the bastions and waged constant warfare against the encroaching lake. In
+1789 Capt. Gother Mann, Royal Engineer, made report on the needs of the
+place, and his recommendations were followed the succeeding year. In his
+report for 1790 he enumerates various works which have been accomplished
+on the fortifications, and says: "The blockhouse [has been] moved to
+the gorge of the ravelin so as to form a guard-house for the same, and
+to flank the line of picketts.... A blockhouse has been built on the
+lake side." This obviously refers to the solid old structure still
+standing there.[34]
+
+The real life of the place during the pre-Revolutionary days can only be
+hinted at here. It was the scene of Sir William Johnson's activities,
+the rendezvous and recruiting post for Western expeditions. Here was
+held the great treaty of 1764; and here England made that alliance with
+the tribes which turned their tomahawks against the "American rebels."
+It may not be too much to say that the greatest horrors of the
+Revolutionary War had their source in this spot. Without Fort Niagara
+there would have been no massacre of Wyoming,[35] no Cherry Valley and
+Bowman's Creek outrages. Here it was that the cunning of Montour and of
+Brant joined with the zeal of the Butlers and Guy Johnson, and all were
+directed and sanctioned by the able and merciless Haldimand, then
+Governor General of Canada. When Sullivan, the avenger, approached in
+1779, Fort Niagara trembled; had he but known the weakness of the
+garrison then, one page of our history would have been altered. The
+British breathed easier when he turned back, but another avenger was in
+the camp; for the 5,000 inflocking Indians created a scarcity of
+provisions; and starvation, disease and death, as had been the case more
+than once before on this point, became the real commanders of the
+garrison at Fort Niagara.
+
+I hurry over the Revolutionary period in order to dwell, briefly, on the
+time following the treaty of 1783. By that treaty Great Britain
+acknowledged the independence of this country. When it was signed the
+British held the posts of Point au Fer and Dutchmen's Point on Lake
+Champlain, Oswegatchie on the St. Lawrence, Oswego, Niagara, Detroit and
+Mackinac. The last three were important depots for the fur trade and
+were remote from the settled sections of the country. The British
+alleged that they held on to these posts because of the non-fulfillment
+of certain clauses in the treaty by the American Government. But
+Congress was impotent; it could only recommend action on the part of the
+States, and the impoverished States were at loggerheads with each other.
+England waited to see the new Nation succumb to its own domestic
+difficulties. It is exceedingly interesting to note at this juncture the
+attitude of Gov. Haldimand. In November, 1784, more than a year after
+the signing of the treaty, he wrote to Brig. Gen. St. Leger: "Different
+attempts having been made by the American States to get possession of
+the posts in the Upper Country, I have thought it my duty uniformly to
+oppose the same until His Majesty's orders for that purpose shall be
+received, and my conduct upon that occasion having been approved, as you
+will see by enclosed extract of a letter from His Majesty's Minister of
+State, I have only to recommend to you a strict attention to the same,
+which will be more than ever necessary as uncommon returns of furs from
+the Upper Country this year have increased the anxiety of the Americans
+to become masters of it, and have prompted them to make sacrifices to
+the Indians for that purpose"; and he adds, after more in this vein,
+that should evacuation be ordered, "on no account whatever are any
+stores or provisions to be left in the forts" for the use of the
+Americans.
+
+Not only did Haldimand, during the years immediately following the
+treaty, refuse to consider any overtures made by the Americans looking
+to a transfer of the posts, but he was especially solicitous in
+maintaining the garrisons, keeping them provisioned, and the
+fortifications in good repair. There were over 2,000, troops, Loyalists
+and Indians, at Fort Niagara, October 1, 1783. A year later it was much
+the best-equipped post west of Montreal; and ten years later it was not
+only well garrisoned and armed, mounting twelve 24-pounders, ten
+12-pounders, two howitzers and five mortars, with large store of shell
+and powder, but it had become such an important depot of supply to the
+impoverished Loyalists that a great scandal had arisen over the matter
+of feeding them with King's stores; and the last spring of the
+Britishers' sojourn here was enlivened by the proceedings of a court of
+inquiry, with a possible court-martial in prospect, over a wholesale
+embezzlement of the King's flour.
+
+Haldimand prized Niagara at its true value. In October, 1782, several
+months before peace was declared, with admirable forethought and
+diplomacy, he wrote to the Minister: "In case a peace or truce should
+take place during the winter ... great care should be taken that Niagara
+and Oswego should be annexed to Canada, or comprehended in the general
+words, that each of the contending parties in North America should
+retain what they possessed at the time. The possession of these two
+forts is essentially necessary to the security as well as trade of the
+country."[36] He ordered the commandant at Fort Niagara to be very much
+on his guard against surprise by the wily Americans, and at the same
+time to "be very industrious in giving every satisfaction to our Indian
+allies."[37]
+
+On the 2d of May, 1783, an express messenger from Gen. Washington
+arrived at Fort Niagara, bringing the terms of the treaty. The news gave
+great uneasiness to Indian-Supt. Butler. "Strict attention to the
+Indians," he wrote next day to Capt. Mathews, "has hitherto kept them in
+good humor, but now I am fearful of a sudden and disagreeable change in
+their conduct. The Indians, finding that their lands are ceded to the
+Americans, will greatly sour their tempers and make them very
+troublesome." The British, with good reason, were constantly considering
+the effect of evacuation upon the Indians.
+
+The Americans made an ineffectual effort to get early possession of the
+posts. New York State made a proposition for garrisoning Oswego and
+Niagara, but Congress did not accede. On January 21, 1784, Gov. Clinton
+advised the New York State Senate and Assembly on the subject. The
+British commander [Haldimand], he said, had treated the Provisional
+Articles as a suspension of hostilities only, "declined to withdraw his
+garrison and refused us even to visit those posts."[38] The Legislature
+agreed with the Governor that nothing could be done until spring.[39]
+Spring found them equally impotent. In March Gov. Clinton sent a copy of
+the proclamation announcing the ratification of the treaty to Gen.
+Haldimand: "Having no doubt that Your Excellency will, as soon as the
+season admits, withdraw the British garrisons under your command from
+the places they now hold in the United States, agreeable to the 7th
+Article of the Treaty, it becomes a part of my duty to make the
+necessary provisions for receiving the Post of Niagara and the other
+posts within the limits of this State, and it is for this purpose I have
+now to request that Your Excellency would give me every possible
+information of the time when these posts are to be delivered up."
+
+Lieut.-Col. Fish, who carried Gov. Clinton's letter to Quebec, received
+no satisfaction. Gen. Haldimand evaded anything like a direct reply,
+saying that he would obey the instructions of His Majesty's
+Ministers--whom he was meanwhile urging to hold on to the posts--but he
+gave the American officer the gratuitous information that in his
+[Haldimand's] private opinion "the posts should not be evacuated until
+such time as the American States should carry into execution the
+articles of the treaty in favor of the Loyalists; that in conformity to
+that article [I quote from Haldimand's report of the interview to Lord
+North], I had given liberty to many of the unhappy people to go into the
+States in order to solicit the recovery of their estates and effects,
+but that they were glad to return, without effecting anything after
+having been insulted in the grossest manner; that although in compliance
+with His Majesty's order, and [to] shun everything which might tend to
+prevent a reconciliation between the two countries, I had make no public
+representation on that head. I could not be insensible to the sufferings
+of those who had a right to look up to me for protection, and that such
+conduct towards the Loyalists was not a likely means to engage Great
+Britain to evacuate the posts; for in all my transactions," he adds, "I
+never used the words either of my 'delivering' or their 'receiving' the
+posts, for reasons mentioned in one of my former letters to Your
+Lordship." And with this poor satisfaction Col. Fish was sent back to
+Gov. Clinton.[40]
+
+In June, Maj.-Gen. Knox, Secretary of War, sent Lieut.-Col. Hull to
+Quebec on the same errand. In a most courteous letter he asked to be
+notified of the time of evacuation, and proposed, "as a matter of mutual
+convenience, an exchange of certain cannon and stores now at these posts
+for others to be delivered at West Point upon Hudson's River, New York,
+or some other convenient place," and he added that Lieut.-Col. Hull was
+fully authorized to make final arrangements, "so that there may remain
+no impediment to the march of the American troops destined for this
+service." Holdfast Haldimand sent him back with no satisfaction
+whatever, and again exulted, in his report to Lord Sydney, over his
+success in withstanding the Americans.[41] It was with great reluctance
+that in the summer of 1784 he reduced the number of British vessels by
+one on each of the lakes Erie and Ontario. "It appears to be an object
+of National advantage," he wrote to an official of the British Treasury,
+"to prevent the fur trade from being diverted to the American States,
+and no measure is so likely to have effect as the disallowing, as long
+as it shall be in our power, the navigation of the lakes by vessels or
+small crafts of any kind belonging to individuals; hence I was the more
+inclined to indulge the merchants, though in opposition to the plan of
+economy which I had laid down."[42]
+
+In October, 1784, Congress ordered 700 men to be raised for garrisoning
+the posts; but the season was late, the States impotent or indifferent,
+and nothing came of the order. Congress faithfully exercised all the
+power it possessed in the matter. In 1783, and again in 1787, it
+unanimously recommended to the States (and the British commissioner was
+aware, when the treaty was made, that Congress could do no more than
+recommend) to comply speedily and exactly with that portion of the
+treaty that concerned creditors and Royalists. The States were unable to
+act in concert, and alleged infractions of the compact by the British,
+as, indeed, there were. There was a sporadic show of indignation in
+various quarters over the continued retention of the posts; but in view
+of more vital matters, and consciousness that the British claim of
+unfulfilled conditions was not wholly unfounded, the agitation slumbered
+for long periods, and matters remained _in statu quo_.
+
+The establishment of the Federal Constitution in 1789 gave the States a
+new and firmer union; and the success of Wayne's expedition materially
+loosened the British hold on the Indians and the trade of the lake
+region; so that Great Britain readily agreed to the express stipulation
+in the commercial treaty of 1794, that the posts should be evacuated "on
+or before the 1st of June, 1796." This treaty, commonly called Jay's,
+was signed in London, November 19, 1794, but not ratified until October
+28, 1795. No transfer of troops was then reasonably to be expected
+during the winter. Indeed, it was not until April 25, 1796, that Lord
+Dorchester officially informed his council at Castle St. Louis that he
+had received a copy of the treaty. Even then the transfer was postponed
+until assurances could be had that English traders among the Indians
+should not be unduly dealt with.[43] There was much highly-interesting
+correspondence between Lord Dorchester and the commandant at Niagara on
+this point; with James McHenry, our Secretary of War; with Robert
+Liston, the British Minister at Philadelphia; and, of course, with the
+Duke of Portland and others of the Ministry. Capt. Lewis, representing
+the United States, was sent to Quebec for definite information of
+British intention. He fared better than the American emissaries had
+twelve years before. He was cordially received and supplied with a copy
+of the official order commanding evacuation of the posts. Whereupon,
+having received the assurance which his Government had so long sought,
+he immediately requested that the posts should not be evacuated until
+the troops of the United States should be at hand to protect the works
+and public buildings. "Being desirous," wrote Lord Dorchester, "to meet
+the wishes of the President, I have qualified my orders in a manner that
+I think will answer this purpose."[44] Thus it happened that the
+evacuation occurred at several different dates. It not being thought
+necessary to await the coming of American forces at the small posts on
+Lake Champlain and at Oswegatchie, the British withdrew from those
+points without ceremony about July 1st. Detroit followed, July 11th;
+then Oswego, July 15th. Most of the garrison appears to have left Fort
+Niagara early in July, but an officer's guard remained until August
+11th,[45] when American troops arrived from Oswego, and the Stars and
+Stripes went to the masthead.
+
+I have dwelt upon this period in the history of Fort Niagara at some
+length, partly because it is the exact period marked by our celebration
+today, partly because most of the data just related are gleaned from
+unpublished official MSS., of which but scant use appears to have been
+made by writers on the subject.
+
+Of Fort Niagara under the American flag I shall be very brief. No loyal
+American can take pride in telling of its surrender to the British,
+December 19, 1813. There was neither a gallant defense nor a generous
+enemy. Cowardice on the one hand and retaliation on the other sum up the
+episode. The place was restored to the United States March 27, 1815,
+and with the exception of one brief interim has been maintained as a
+garrison to this day. The Morgan affair of 1826 need only be alluded
+to. The last defensive work of consequence--the brick facing of the
+bastions, fronting east--dates from 1861.
+
+In the continental view, Fort Niagara was never of paramount importance.
+Before the British conquest, Niagara was the key to the inner door, but
+Quebec was the master-lock. The French Niagara need never have been
+attacked; after the fall of Quebec it would inevitably have become Great
+Britain's without a blow. In English hands its importance was great, its
+expense enormous. Without it, Detroit and Mackinac could not have
+existed; yet England's struggle with the rebellious colonies would have
+been inevitable, and would have terminated exactly as it did, had she
+never possessed a post in the lake region. And of Fort Niagara as an
+American possession, the American historian can say nothing more true
+than this: that it is a striking exemplification of the fact that his
+beloved country is ill prepared upon her frontiers for anything save a
+state of international amity and undisturbed peace.
+
+
+
+
+The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant.
+
+
+
+
+THE JOURNALS AND JOURNEYS OF AN EARLY BUFFALO MERCHANT.
+
+
+On the frosty morning of February 5, 1822, a strange equipage turned out
+of Erie Street into Willink Avenue, Buffalo, drove down that steep and
+ungraded highway for a short distance, then crossed to Onondaga Street,
+and turning into Crow, was soon lost to sight among the snowdrifts that
+lined the road running round the south shore of Lake Erie. At least,
+such I take to have been the route, through streets now familiar as
+Main, Washington and Exchange, which a traveler would choose who was
+bound up the south shore of Lake Erie.
+
+The equipage, as I have said, was a strange one, and a good many people
+came out to see it; not so much to look at the vehicle as to bid
+good-bye to its solitary passenger. The conveyance itself was nothing
+more nor less than a good-sized crockery-crate, set upon runners. Thills
+were attached, in which was harnessed a well-conditioned horse. The
+baggage, snugly stowed, included a saddle and saddle-bags, and a sack of
+oats for the horse. Sitting among his effects, the passenger, though
+raised but a few inches above the snow, looked snug and comfortable.
+With a chorus of well-wishes following him, he left the village and by
+nightfall had traveled many miles to the westward, taking his course on
+the ice that covered Lake Erie.
+
+This was John Lay, a merchant of the early Buffalo, whom even yet it is
+only necessary to introduce to the young people and to new-comers. The
+older generation remembers well the enterprising and successful merchant
+who shared fortunes with Buffalo in her most romantic days. Before going
+after him, up the ice-covered lake, let us make his closer acquaintance.
+
+Mr. Lay, who was of good New-England stock, came to Buffalo in 1810 to
+clerk in the general store of his brother-in-law, Eli Hart. Mr. Hart had
+built his store on Main near the corner of Erie Street, the site now
+occupied by the American Express Co.'s building. His dwelling was on
+Erie Street, adjoining, and between the house and store was an ample
+garden. The space now occupied by St. Paul's Church and the Erie County
+Savings Bank was a rough common; native timber still stood thick along
+the east side of Main, above South Division Street; the town had been
+laid out in streets and lots for four years, and the population,
+exceeding at that time 400, was rapidly increasing. There was a turnpike
+road to the eastward, with a stage route. Buffalo Creek flowed lazily
+into the lake; no harbor had been begun; and on quiet days in summer the
+bees could still be heard humming among the basswoods by its waters.
+
+This was the Buffalo to which young Lay had come. Looking back to those
+times, even more novel than the condition of the frontier village, was
+the character of the frontier trade carried on by Mr. Hart. The trade of
+the villagers was less important than that which was held with the
+Canadians or English who were in office under the Government. To them
+they sold India goods, silks and muslins. Side by side with these the
+shelves were stocked with hardware, crockery, cottonades, jeans and
+flannels, Indian supplies, groceries and liquors. The young New
+Englander soon found that with such customers as Red Jacket and other
+representative red-men his usefulness was impaired unless he could speak
+Indian. With characteristic energy he set himself at the task, and in
+three months had mastered the Seneca. New goods came from the East by
+the old Mohawk River and Lewiston route, were poled up the Niagara from
+Schlosser's, above the falls, on flatboats, and were stored in a log
+house at the foot of Main Street.
+
+Up to 1810 the growth of Buffalo had been exceedingly slow, even for a
+remote frontier point. But about the time Mr. Lay came here new life was
+shown. Ohio and Michigan were filling up, and the tide of migration
+strengthened. Mr. Hart's market extended yearly farther west and
+southwest, and for a time the firm did a profitable business.
+
+Then came the war, paralysis of trade, and destruction of property. Mr.
+Lay was enrolled as a private in Butts's Company, for defense. The night
+the village was burned he with his brother-in-law, Eli Hart, were in
+their store. The people were in terror, fearing massacre by the
+Indians, hesitating to fly, not knowing in which direction safety lay.
+
+"John," said Mr. Hart, "there's all that liquor in the cellar--the
+redskins mustn't get at that."
+
+Together they went down and knocked in the heads of all the casks until,
+as Mr. Lay said afterwards, they stood up to their knees in liquor. As
+he was coming up from the work he encountered a villainous-looking
+Onondaga chief, who was knocking off the iron shutters from the store
+windows. They had been none too quick in letting the whisky run into the
+ground. Mr. Lay said to the Indian:
+
+"You no hurt friend?"
+
+Just then a soldier jumped from his horse before the door. Mr. Lay
+caught up a pair of saddle-bags, filled with silver and valuable papers,
+threw them across the horse, and cried out to his brother-in-law:
+
+"Here, jump on and strike out for the woods."
+
+Mr. Hart took this advice and started. The horse was shot from under
+him, but the rider fell unharmed, and, catching up the saddle-bags, made
+his way on foot to the house of another brother-in-law, Mr. Comstock.
+Later that day they came back to the town, and with others they picked
+up thirty dead bodies and put them into Rees's blacksmith shop, where
+the next day they were burned with the shop.
+
+After starting his relatives toward safety, Mr. Lay thought of himself.
+The Onondaga had disappeared, and Mr. Lay went into the house, took a
+long surtout that hung on the wall and put it on. As he stepped out of
+the door he was taken prisoner, and that night, with many others,
+soldiers and civilians, was carried across the river to Canada.
+
+And here begins an episode over which I am tempted to linger; for the
+details of his captivity, as they were related to me by his widow, the
+late Mrs. Frances Lay, are worthy of consideration. I will only
+rehearse, as briefly as possible, the chief events of this captivity in
+Canada, which, although not recorded in Mr. Lay's journals, resulted in
+one of his most arduous and adventurous journeys.
+
+The night of December 30, 1813, was bitterly cold. The captured and the
+captors made a hard march from Fort Erie to Newark--or, as we know it
+now, Niagara, Ont., on Lake Ontario. The town was full of Indians, and
+many of the Indians were full of whisky. Under the escort of a
+body-guard Mr. Lay was allowed to go to the house of a Mrs. Secord, whom
+he knew. While there, the enemy surrounded the house and demanded Lay,
+but Mrs. Secord hid him in a closet, and kept him concealed until Mr.
+Hart, who had followed with a flag of truce, had learned of his safety.
+Then came the long, hard march through Canadian snows to Montreal. The
+prisoners were put on short rations, were grudgingly given water to
+drink, and were treated with such unnecessary harshness that Mr. Lay
+boldly told the officer in charge of the expedition that on reaching
+Montreal he should report him to the Government for violating the laws
+of civilized warfare.
+
+In March he was exchanged at Greenbush, opposite Albany. There he got
+some bounty and footed it across the country to Oneida, where his father
+lived. As he walked through the village he saw his father's sleigh in
+front of the postoffice, where his parents had gone, hoping for news
+from him. They burned his war-rags, and he rested for a time at his
+father's home, sick of the horrors of war and fearful lest his
+constitution had been wrecked by the hardships he had undergone. It will
+be noted that this enforced journey from Buffalo through Canada to
+Montreal and thence south and west to Oneida had been made in the dead
+of winter and chiefly, if not wholly, on foot. Instead of killing him,
+as his anxious parents feared it might, the experience seems to have
+taught him the pleasures of pedestrianism, for it is on foot and alone
+that we are to see him undertaking some of his most extended journeys.
+
+I cannot even pause to call attention to the slow recovery of Buffalo
+from her absolute prostration. The first house rebuilt here after the
+burning was that of Mrs. Mary Atkins, a young widow, whose husband,
+Lieut. Asael Atkins, had died of an epidemic only ten days before the
+village was destroyed. The young widow had fled with the rest, finding
+shelter at Williamsville, until her new house was raised on the
+foundation of the old. It stood on the corner of Church and Pearl
+streets, where the Stafford Building now is.
+
+The reader is perhaps wondering what all this has to do with John Lay.
+Merely this: that when, at Mr. Hart's solicitation, Mr. Lay once more
+returned to Buffalo, he boarded across the common from the rebuilt
+store, with the Widow Atkins, and later on married her daughter Frances,
+who, many years his junior, long survived him, and to whose vigorous
+memory and kind graciousness we are indebted for these pictures of the
+past.
+
+The years that followed the War of 1812 were devoted by Messrs. Hart &
+Lay to a new upbuilding of their business. Mr. Hart, who had ample
+capital, went to New York to do the buying for the firm, and continued
+to reside there, establishing as many as five general stores in
+different parts of Western New York. He had discerned in his young
+relative a rare combination of business talents, made him a partner, and
+entrusted him with the entire conduct of the business at Buffalo. After
+peace was declared the commercial opportunities of a well-equipped firm
+here were great. Each season brought in larger demands from the western
+country. Much of the money that accrued from the sale of lands of the
+Holland Purchase flowed in the course of trade into their hands. The
+pioneer families of towns to the west of Buffalo came hither to trade,
+and personal friendships were cemented among residents scattered through
+a large section. I find no period of our local history so full of
+activities. From Western New York to Illinois it was a time of
+foundation-laying. Let me quote a few paragraphs from memoranda which
+Mrs. Lay made relating to this period:
+
+ The war had brought men of strong character, able to cope with
+ pioneer life; among others, professional men, surgeons, doctors
+ and lawyers: Trowbridge, Marshall, Johnson, and many others. Elliot
+ of Erie was a young lawyer, of whom Mr. Lay had often said, "His
+ word is as good as his bond." Another friend was Hamot of Erie, who
+ had married Mr. Hart's niece. He made frequent visits to his
+ countryman, Louis Le Couteulx. [At whose house, by the way, John
+ Lay and Frances Atkins were married, Red Jacket being among the
+ guests.] At Erie, then a naval station, were the families of
+ Dickinson, Brown, Kelso, Reed, Col. Christy, and many others, all
+ numbered among Mr. Lay's patrons. Albert H. Tracy came here about
+ that time; he brought a letter from his brother Phineas, who had
+ married Mr. Lay's sister. He requested Mr. Lay to do for him what
+ he could in the way of business. Mr. Lay gave him a room over his
+ store, and candles and wood for five years. Even in those days Mr.
+ Tracy used to declare that he should make public life his business.
+
+ Hart & Lay became consignees for the Astors in the fur business. I
+ well remember that one vessel-load of furs from the West got wet.
+ To dry them Mr. Lay spread them on the grass, filling the green
+ where the churches now are. The wet skins tainted the air so
+ strongly that Mr. Lay was threatened with indictment--but he saved
+ the Astors a large sum of money.
+
+Hart & Lay acquired tracts of land in Canada, Ohio and Michigan. To look
+after these and other interests Mr. Lay made several adventurous
+journeys to the West--such journeys as deserve to be chronicled with
+minutest details, which are not known to have been preserved. On one
+occasion, to look after Detroit interests, he went up the lake on the
+ice with Maj. Barton and his wife; the party slept in the wigwams of
+Indians, and Mr. Lay has left on record his admiration of Mrs. Barton's
+ability to make even such rough traveling agreeable.
+
+A still wilder journey took him to Chicago. He went alone, save for his
+Indian guides, and somewhere in the Western wilderness they came to him
+and told him they had lost the trail. Before it was regained their
+provisions were exhausted, and they lived for a time on a few kernels of
+corn, a little mutton tallow, and a sip of whisky. Fort Dearborn--or
+Chicago--at that date had but one house, a fur-trading post. When Mr.
+Lay and his guides reached there they were so near starvation that the
+people dared give them only a teaspoonful of pigeon soup at a time. Nor
+had starvation been the only peril on this journey. An attempt to rob
+him, if not to murder him, lent a grim spice to the experience. Mr. Lay
+discovered that he was followed, and kept his big horse-pistols in
+readiness. One night, as he lay in a log-house, he suddenly felt a hand
+moving along the belt which he wore at his waist. Instantly he raised
+his pistol and fired. The robber dashed through the window, and he was
+molested no more.
+
+Such adventurous journeyings as these formed no inconsiderable part of
+the work of this pushing Buffalo merchant during the half dozen years
+that followed the burning of the town. Business grew so that half a
+dozen clerks were employed, and there were frequently crowds of people
+waiting to be served. The store became a favorite rendezvous of
+prominent men of the place.
+
+Many a war episode was told over there. Albert Gallatin and Henry Clay,
+Jackson and the United States banks--the great men and measures of the
+day--were hotly discussed there; and many a time did the group listen as
+Mr. Lay read from _Niles' Register_, of which he was a constant
+subscriber. There were sometimes lively scrimmages there, as the
+following incident, narrated by Mrs. Lay, will illustrate:
+
+There was a family in New York City whose son was about to form a
+misalliance. His friends put him under Mr. Hart's care, and he brought
+the youth to Buffalo. Here, however, an undreamed-of difficulty was
+encountered. A young Seneca squaw, well known in town as Suse, saw the
+youth from New York and fell desperately in love with him. Mr. Lay, not
+caring to take the responsibility of such a match-making, shipped the
+young man back to New York. The forest maiden was disconsolate; but,
+unlike _Viola_, she told her love, nor "let concealment, like the worm
+i' the bud, feed on her damask cheek." Not a bit of it. On the contrary,
+whenever Suse saw Mr. Lay she would ask him where her friend was. One
+day she went into the store, and, going up to the counter behind which
+Mr. Lay was busy, drew a club from under her blanket and "let him have
+it" over the shoulders. The attack was sudden, but just as suddenly did
+he jump over the counter and tackle her. Suse was a love-lorn maid, but
+she was strong as a wildcat and as savage. Albert H. Tracy, who was in
+the store, afterwards described the trouble to Mrs. Lay.
+
+"I never saw a fight," he said, "where both parties came so near being
+killed; but Lay got the better of her, and yanked her out into the
+street with her clothes torn off from her."
+
+"I should think you would have helped John," said the gentle lady, as
+Mr. Tracy told her this.
+
+By the close of the year 1821, although still a young man, the subject
+of this sketch had made a considerable fortune. Feeling the need of
+rest, and anxious to extend his horizon beyond the frontier scenes to
+which he was accustomed, he decided to go to Europe. Telling Mr. Hart to
+get another partner, the business was temporarily left in other hands;
+and on February 5, 1822, as narrated at the opening of this paper, Mr.
+Lay drove out of town in a crockery-crate, and took his course up the
+ice-covered lake, bound for Europe.
+
+Recall, if you please, something of the conditions of those times. No
+modern journeyings that we can conceive of, short of actual exploration
+in unknown regions, are quite comparable to such an undertaking as Mr.
+Lay proposed. Partly, perhaps, because it was a truly extraordinary
+thing for a frontier merchant to stop work and set off for an indefinite
+period of sight-seeing; and partly, too, because he was a man whose love
+for the accumulation of knowledge was regulated by precise habits, we
+are now able to follow him in the closely-written, faded pages of half a
+dozen fat journals, written by his own hand day by day during the two
+years of his wanderings. No portion of these journals has ever been
+published; yet they are full of interesting pictures of the past, and
+show Mr. Lay to have been a close observer and a receptive student of
+nature and of men.
+
+The reason for his crockery-crate outfit may have been divined. He
+wanted a sleigh which he could leave behind without loss when the snow
+disappeared.
+
+Business took him first to Cleveland, which he reached in six days,
+driving much of the distance on the lake. Returning, at Erie he headed
+south and followed the old French Creek route to the Allegheny.
+Presently the snow disappeared. The crockery-crate sleigh was abandoned,
+and the journey lightly continued in the saddle; among the few
+_impedimenta_ which were carried in the saddle-bags being "a fine
+picture of Niagara Falls, painted on satin, and many Indian curiosities
+to present to friends on the other side."
+
+Pittsburg was reached March 2d; and, after a delay of four days, during
+which he sold his horse for $30, we find our traveler embarked on the
+new steamer Gen. Neville, carrying $120,000 worth of freight and fifty
+passengers.
+
+Those were the palmy days of river travel. There were no railroads to
+cut freight rates, or to divert the passenger traffic. The steamers were
+the great transporters of the middle West. The Ohio country was just
+emerging from the famous period which made the name "river-man"
+synonymous with all that was disreputable. It was still the day of poor
+taverns, poor food, much bad liquor, fighting, and every manifestation
+of the early American vulgarity, ignorance and boastfulness which amazed
+every foreigner who ventured to travel in that part of the United
+States, and sent him home to magnify his bad impressions in a book. But
+with all its discomforts, the great Southern river route of 1822 proved
+infinitely enjoyable to our Buffalonian. At Louisville, where the falls
+intercepted travel, he reëmbarked on the boat Frankfort for a
+fourteen-days' journey to New Orleans. Her cargo included barrels of
+whisky, hogsheads of tobacco, some flour and cotton, packs of furs, and
+two barrels of bear's oil--how many years, I wonder, since that last
+item has been found in a bill of lading on an Ohio steamer!
+
+I must hurry our traveler on to New Orleans, where, on a Sunday, he
+witnessed a Congo dance, attended by 5,000 people, and at a theater saw
+"The Battle of Chippewa" enacted. There are antiquarians of the Niagara
+Frontier today who would start for New Orleans by first train if they
+thought they could see that play.
+
+April 27th, Mr. Lay sailed from New Orleans, the only passenger on the
+ship Triton, 310 tons, cotton-laden, for Liverpool. It was ten days
+before they passed the bar of the Mississippi and entered the Gulf, and
+it was not until June 28th that they anchored in the Mersey. The
+chronicle of this sixty days' voyage, as is apt to be the case with
+journals kept at sea, is exceedingly minute in detail. Day after day it
+is recorded that "we sailed thirty miles to-day," "sailed forty miles
+to-day," etc. There's travel for you--thirty miles on long tacks, in
+twenty-four hours! The ocean greyhound was as yet unborn. The chief
+diversion of the passage was a gale which blew them along 195 miles in
+twenty-four hours; and an encounter with a whaleship that had not heard
+a word from the United States in three years. "I tossed into their
+boat," Mr. Lay writes, "a package of newspapers. The captain clutched
+them with the avidity of a starving man."
+
+Ashore in Liverpool, the first sight he saw was a cripple being carried
+through the streets--the only survivor from the wreck of the President,
+just lost on the Irish coast.[46]
+
+He hastened to London just too late to witness the coronation of George
+IV., but followed the multitude to Scotland, where, as he writes, "the
+outlay of attentions to this bad man was beyond belief. Many of the
+nobility were nearly ruined thereby." He was in Edinburgh on the night
+of August 15, 1822, when that city paid homage to the new King; saw the
+whole coast of Fife illuminated "with bonfires composed of thirty tons
+of coal and nearly 1,000 gallons of tar and other combustibles"; and the
+next day, wearing a badge of Edinburgh University, was thereby enabled
+to gain a good place to view the guests as they passed on their way to a
+royal levee. To the nobility our Buffalonian gave little heed; but when
+Sir Walter Scott's carriage drove slowly by he gazed his fill. "He has
+gray thin hair and a thoughtful look," Mr. Lay wrote. "The Heart of
+Midlothian" had just been published, and Mr. Lay went on foot over all
+the ground mentioned in that historical romance. He stayed in pleasant
+private lodgings in Edinburgh for six months, making pedestrian
+excursions to various parts of Scotland. In twenty-eight days of these
+wanderings he walked 260 miles.
+
+Instead of following him closely in these rambles, my readers are asked
+to recall, for a moment, the time of this visit. Great Britain was as
+yet, to all intents and purposes, in the eighteenth century. She had few
+canals and no railroads, no applied uses of steam and electricity. True,
+Stephenson had experimented on the Killingworth Railway in 1814; but
+Parliament had passed the first railway act only a few months before Mr.
+Lay reached England, and the railway era did not actually set in until
+eight years later. There is no reference in the Lay journals to steam
+locomotives or railways. Liverpool, which was built up by the African
+slave trade, was still carrying it on; the Reform Bill was not born in
+Parliament; it was still the old _régime_.
+
+Our traveler was much struck by the general bad opinion which prevailed
+regarding America. On meeting him, people often could not conceal their
+surprise that so intelligent and well-read a man should be an American,
+and a frontier tradesman at that. They quizzed him about the workings of
+popular government.
+
+ I told them [writes this true-hearted democrat] that as long as we
+ demanded from our public men honesty and upright dealings, our
+ institutions would be safe, but when men could be bought or sold I
+ feared the influence would operate ruinously, as all former
+ republics had failed for lack of integrity and honesty.
+
+His political talks brought to him these definitions, which I copy from
+his journal:
+
+ Tory was originally a name given to the wild Irish robbers who
+ favored the massacre of the Protestants in 1641. It was afterward
+ applied to all highflyers of the Church. Whig was a name first
+ given to the country field-elevation meetings, their ordinary drink
+ being whig, or whey, or coagulated sour milk. Those against the
+ Court interest during the reigns of Charles II. and James II. and
+ for the Court in the reigns of William and George I. were called
+ Whigs. A Yankee is thus defined by an Englishman, who gives me what
+ is most likely the correct derivation of the epithet: The Cherokee
+ word eanker [?] signifies coward or slave. The Virginians gave the
+ New Englanders this name for not assisting in a war with the
+ Cherokees in the early settlement of their country, but after the
+ affair of Bunker Hill the New Englanders gloried in the name, and
+ in retaliation called the Virginians Buckskins, in allusion to
+ their ancestors being hunters, and selling as well as wearing
+ buckskins in place of cloth.
+
+In Edinburgh he saw and heard much of some of Scotia's chief literary
+folk. Burns had been dead twenty-six years, but he was still much spoken
+of, much read, and admired far more than when he lived. With Mr.
+Stenhouse, who for years was an intimate of Burns, Mr. Lay formed a
+close acquaintance:
+
+ Mr. Stenhouse has in his possession [says the journal] the mss. of
+ all of Burns's writings. I have had the pleasure of perusing them,
+ which I think a great treat. In the last of Burns's letters which I
+ read he speaks of his approaching dissolution with sorrow, of the
+ last events in his life in the most touching and delicate language.
+
+The journal relates some original Burns anecdotes, which Mr. Lay had
+from the former companions of the bard, but which have probably never
+been made public, possibly because--in characteristic contrast to the
+letter referred to above--they are touching but _not_ delicate.
+
+Our Buffalonian encountered numerous literary lions, and writes
+entertainingly of them. He speaks often of Scott, who he says "is quite
+the theme. He is constantly writing--something from his pen is shortly
+expected. I saw him walking on the day of the grand procession. He is
+very lame, has been lame from his youth, a fact I did not know before."
+James Hogg, author of the "Winter Evening Tales," lived near Edinburgh.
+Mr. Lay described him as "a singular rustic sort of a genius, but withal
+clever--very little is said about him."
+
+I have touched upon Mr. Lay's achievements in pedestrianism, a mode of
+travel which he doubtless adopted partly because of the vigorous
+pleasure it afforded, partly because it was the only way in which to
+visit some sections of the country. A man who had walked from Fort Erie
+to Montreal, to say nothing of hundreds of miles done under pleasanter
+circumstances, would naturally take an interest in the pedestrian
+achievements of others. Whoever cares for this "sport" will find in the
+Lay journals unexpected revelations on the diversions and contests of
+three-quarters of a century ago. Have we not regarded the walking-match
+as a modern mania, certainly not antedating Weston's achievements? Yet
+listen to this page of the old journal, dated Edinburgh, Aug. 27, 1822:
+
+ I went to see a pedestrian named Russell, from the north of
+ England, who had undertaken to walk 102 miles in twenty-four
+ successive hours. He commenced his task yesterday at 1.15 o'clock.
+ The spot chosen was in the vale between the Mound and the North
+ Bridge, which gave an opportunity for a great number of spectators
+ to see him to advantage; yet the numbers were so great and so much
+ interested that there were persons constantly employed to clear his
+ way. The ground he walked over measured one eighth of a mile. I saw
+ him walk the last mile, which he did in twelve minutes. He finished
+ his task with eleven minutes to spare, and was raised on the
+ shoulders of men and borne away to be put into a carriage from
+ which the horses were taken. The multitude then drew him through
+ many principal streets of the city in triumph. The Earl of Fyfe
+ agreed to give him £30 if he finished his work within the given
+ time. He also got donations from others. Large bets were depending,
+ one of 500 guineas. He carried a small blue flag toward the last
+ and was loudly cheered by the spectators at intervals.
+
+Nor was the "sport" confined to Scotland. August 4, 1823, being in
+London, Mr. Lay writes:
+
+ To-day a girl of eight years of age undertook to walk thirty miles
+ in eight consecutive hours. She accomplished her task in seven
+ hours and forty-nine minutes without being distressed. A wager of
+ 100 sovereigns was laid. This great pedestrian feat took place at
+ Chelsea.
+
+A few weeks later he writes again:
+
+ This is truly the age of pedestrianism. A man has just accomplished
+ 1,250 miles in twenty successive days. He is now to walk backward
+ forty miles a day for three successive days. Mr. Irvine, the
+ pedestrian, who attempted to walk from London to York and back, 394
+ miles, in five days and eight hours, accomplished it in five days
+ seven and one-half hours.
+
+With men walking backwards and eight-years-old girls on the track, these
+Britons of three-quarters of a century ago still deserve the palm. But
+Mr. Lay's own achievements are not to be lightly passed over. Before
+leaving London he wrote: "The whole length of my perambulations in
+London and vicinity exceeds 1,200 miles."
+
+The journals, especially during the months of his residence in Scotland,
+abound in descriptions of people and of customs now pleasant to recall
+because for the most part obsolete. He heard much rugged theology from
+Scotland's greatest preachers; had an encounter with robbers in the dark
+and poorly-policed streets of Edinburgh; had his pockets picked while
+watching the King; and saw a boy hanged in public for house-breaking.
+With friends he went to a Scotch wedding, the description of which is so
+long that I can only give parts of it:
+
+ About forty had assembled. The priest, a Protestant, united them
+ with much ceremony, giving them a long lecture, after which dinner
+ was served up and whisky toddy. At six, dancing commenced and was
+ kept up with spirit until eleven, when we had tea, after which
+ dancing continued until three in the morning. The Scotch dances
+ differ from the American, and the dancers hold out longer. The
+ girls particularly do not tire so early as ours at home. We retired
+ to the house where the bride and groom were to be bedded. The
+ females of the party first put the bride to bed, and the bridegroom
+ was then led in by the men. After both were in bed liquor was
+ served. The groom threw his left-leg hose. Whoever it lights upon
+ is next to be married. The stocking lighted on my head, which
+ caused a universal shout. We reached home at half past six in the
+ morning, on foot.
+
+I have been much too long in getting Mr. Lay to London, to go about much
+with him there. And yet the temptation is great, for to an American of
+Mr. Lay's intelligence and inquiring mind the great city was beyond
+doubt the most diverting spot on earth. One of the first sights he
+saw--a May-day procession of chimney-sweeps, their clothes covered with
+gilt paper--belonged more to the seventeenth century than to the
+nineteenth. Peel and Wilberforce, Brougham and Lord Gower, were
+celebrities whom he lost no time in seeing. On the Thames he saw the
+grand annual rowing match for the Othello wherry prize, given by Edmund
+Kean in commemoration of Garrick's last public appearance on June 10,
+1776. Mr. Lay's description of the race, and of Kean himself, who
+"witnessed the whole in an eight-oared cutter," is full of color and
+appreciative spirit. He saw a man brought before the Lord Mayor who "on
+a wager had eaten two pounds of candles and drank seven glasses of rum,"
+and who at another time had eaten at one meal "nine pounds of ox hearts
+and taken drink proportionately"; and he went to Bartholomew's Fair,
+that most audacious of English orgies, against which even the public
+sentiment of that loose day was beginning to protest. As American
+visitors at Quebec feel to-day a flush of patriotic resentment when the
+orderly in the citadel shows them the little cannon captured at Bunker
+Hill, so our loyal friend, with more interest than pleasure, saw in the
+chapel at Whitehall, "on each side and over the altar eight or ten
+eagles, taken from the French, and flags of different nations; the
+eagle of the United States is among them, two taken at New Orleans, one
+at Fort Niagara, one at Queenston, and three at Detroit"; but like the
+American at Quebec, who, the familiar story has it, on being taunted
+with the captured Bunker Hill trophy, promptly replied, "Yes, you got
+the cannon, but we kept the hill," Mr. Lay, we may be sure, found
+consolation in the thought that though we lost a few eagle-crested
+standards, we kept the Bird o' Freedom's nest.
+
+On July 5, 1823, he crossed London Bridge on foot, and set out on an
+exploration of rural England; tourings in which I can not take space to
+follow him. When he first went abroad he had contemplated a trip on the
+continent. This, however, he found it advisable to abandon, and on
+October 5, 1823, on board the Galatea, he was beating down the channel,
+bound for Boston. The journey homeward was full of grim adventure. A
+tempest attended them across the Atlantic. In one night of terror,
+"which I can never forget," he writes, "the ship went twice entirely
+around the compass, and in very short space, with continual seas
+breaking over her." The sailors mutinied and tried to throw the first
+mate into the sea. Swords, pistols and muskets were made ready by the
+captain. Mr. Lay armed himself and helped put down the rebellion. When
+the captain was once more sure of his command, "Jack, a Swede, was taken
+from his confinement, lashed up, and whipped with a cat-o'-nine-tails,
+then sent to duty." The dose of cat was afterwards administered to the
+others. It is no wonder that the traveler's heart was cheered when, on
+November 13th, the storm-tossed Galatea passed under the guns of Forts
+Warren and Independence and he stepped ashore at Boston.
+
+He did not hurry away, but explored that city and vicinity thoroughly,
+going everywhere on foot, as he had, for the most part, in England. He
+visited the theaters and saw the celebrities of the day, both of the
+stage and the pulpit. At the old Boston Theater, Cooper was playing
+_Marc Antony_, with Mr. Finn as _Brutus_, and Mr. Barrett as _Cassius_.
+
+On November 20th he pictures a New-England Thanksgiving:
+
+ This is Thanksgiving Day throughout the State of Massachusetts. It
+ is most strictly observed in this city; no business whatever is
+ transacted--all shops remained shut throughout the day. All the
+ churches in the city were open, divine service performed, and
+ everything wore the appearance of Sunday. Great dinners are
+ prepared and eaten on this occasion, and in the evening the
+ theaters and ball-rooms tremble with delight and carriages fill
+ the streets.... A drunken, riotous gang of fellows got under our
+ windows yelping and making a great tumult.
+
+A week later, sending his baggage ahead by stage-coach, he passed over
+Cambridge Bridge, on foot for Buffalo, by way of New York, Philadelphia,
+Washington, Pittsburg and Erie.
+
+Once more I must regret that reasonable demands on the reader's patience
+will not let me dwell with much detail on the incidents and observations
+of this unusual journey. No man could take such a grand walk and fail
+to see and learn much of interest. But here was a practical, shrewd,
+observant gentleman who, just returned from two years in Great Britain,
+was studying his own countrymen and weighing their condition and ideas
+by most intelligent standards. The result is that the pages of the
+journals reflect with unaccustomed fidelity the spirit of those days,
+and form a series of historical pictures not unworthy our careful
+attention. Just a glimpse or two by the way, and I am through.
+
+The long-settled towns of Massachusetts and Connecticut appeared to him
+in the main thrifty and growing. Hartford he found a place of 7,000
+inhabitants, "completely but irregularly built, the streets crooked and
+dirty, with sidewalks but no pavements." He passed through Wethersfield,
+"famous for its quantities of onions. A church was built here, and its
+bell purchased," he records, "with this vegetable." New Haven struck him
+as "elegant, but not very flourishing, with 300 students in Yale."
+Walking from twenty-five to thirty-five miles a day, he reached Rye,
+just over the New York State line, on the ninth day from Boston, and
+found people burning turf or peat for fuel, the first of this that he
+had noticed in the United States.
+
+At Harlem Bridge, which crosses to New York Island, he found some fine
+houses, "the summer residences of opulent New Yorkers"; and the next day
+"set out for New York, seven miles distant, over a perfectly straight
+and broad road, through a rough, rocky and unpleasing region." In New
+York, where he rested a few days, he reviewed his New England walk of
+212 miles:
+
+ The general aspect of the country is pleasing; inns are provided
+ with the best, the people are kind and attentive. I think I have
+ never seen tables better spread. I passed through thirty-six towns
+ on the journey, which are of no mean appearance. I never had a more
+ pleasant or satisfactory excursion. There are a great number of
+ coaches for public conveyance plying on this great road. The fare
+ is $12 for the whole distance. Formerly it was 254 miles between
+ Boston and New York, but the roads are now straightened, which has
+ shortened the distance to 212 miles.
+
+He had experienced a Boston Thanksgiving. In New York, on Thursday,
+December 18th, he had another one. Thanksgiving then was a matter of
+State proclamation, as now, but the day had not been given its National
+character, and in many of the States was not observed at all. We have
+seen what it was like in Boston. In New York, "business appears as brisk
+as on any other laboring day." The churches, however, were open for
+service, and our traveler went to hear the Rev. Mr. Cummings in
+Vanderventer Street, and to contribute to a collection in behalf of the
+Greeks.
+
+Four days before Christmas he crossed to Hoboken, and trudged his way
+through New Jersey snow and mud to Philadelphia, which he reached on
+Christmas. At the theater that night he attended--
+
+ a benefit for Mr. Booth of Covent Garden, London, and was filled
+ with admiration for Mr. Booth, but the dancing by Miss Hathwell was
+ shocking in the extreme. The house was for a long time in great
+ uproar, and nothing would quiet them but an assurance from the
+ manager of Mr. Booth's reappearance.
+
+This of course was Junius Brutus Booth. Here is Mr. Lay's pen-picture of
+Philadelphia seventy-six years ago:
+
+ The streets of Philadelphia cross at right angles; are perfectly
+ straight, well-paved but miserably lighted. The sidewalks break
+ with wooden bars on which various things are suspended, and in the
+ lower streets these bars are appropriated for drying the
+ washwomen's clothes. Carpets are shaken in the streets at all
+ hours, and to the annoyance of the passer-by. Mr. Peale of the old
+ Philadelphia Museum was lecturing three nights a week on galvanism,
+ and entertaining the populace with a magic lantern.
+
+It is much the same Philadelphia yet.
+
+January 8th, Mr. Lay took his way south to Baltimore, making slow
+progress because of muddy roads; but he had set out to walk, and so he
+pushed ahead on to Washington, although there were eight coaches daily
+for the conveyance of passengers between the two cities, the fare being
+$4. The road for part of the way lay through a wilderness. "The inns
+generally were bad and the attention to travelers indifferent."
+
+In Washington, which he reached on January 14th, he lost no time in
+going to the House of Representatives, where he was soon greeted by
+Albert H. Tracy, whose career in Congress I assume to be familiar to the
+reader.
+
+ On the day named, the House was crowded to excess with spectators,
+ a great number of whom were ladies, in consequence of Mr. Clay's
+ taking the floor. He spoke for two hours on the subject of internal
+ improvements, and the next day the question of erecting a statue to
+ Washington somewhere about the Capitol, was debated warmly.
+
+On his return North, in passing through Baltimore, he called on Henry
+Niles, who as editor of _Niles' Weekly Register_, was to thousands of
+Americans of that day what Horace Greeley became later on--an oracle;
+and on January 18th struck out over a fine turnpike road for Pittsburg.
+
+The Pittsburg pike was then the greatest highway to the West. The Erie
+Canal was nearing completion, and the stage-routes across New York State
+saw much traffic. Yet the South-Pennsylvania route led more directly to
+the Ohio region, and it had more traffic from the West to the East than
+the more northern highways had for years to come. In the eastern part of
+the State it extends through one of the most fertile and best-settled
+parts of the United States. Farther west it climbs a forest-clad
+mountain, winds through picturesque valleys, and from one end of the
+great State to the other is yet a pleasant path for the modern tourist.
+The great Conestoga wagons in endless trains, which our pedestrian
+seldom lost sight of, have now disappeared. The wayside inns are gone or
+have lost their early character, and the locomotive has everywhere set a
+new pace for progress.
+
+When Mr. Lay entered the Blue Ridge section, beyond Chambersburg, he
+found Dutch almost the only language spoken. The season was at first
+mild, and as he tramped along the Juniata, it seemed to him like May.
+"Land," he notes, "is to be had at from $1 to $3 per acre." It took him
+seventeen days to walk to Pittsburg. Of the journey as a whole he says:
+
+ At Chambersburg the great stage route from Philadelphia unites with
+ the Baltimore road. Taverns on these roads are frequent and nearly
+ in sight of each other. The gates for the collection of tolls
+ differ in distance--some five, others ten, and others twenty-five
+ miles asunder. Notwithstanding the travel is great the stock yields
+ no profit, but, on the contrary, it is a sinking concern on some
+ parts, and several of the companies are in debt for opening the
+ road. About $100 per mile are annually expended in repairs. It cost
+ a great sum to open the road, particularly that portion leading
+ over the mountains and across the valleys.
+
+ Taverns are very cheap in their charges; meals are a fourth of a
+ dollar, beds 6¼ cents, liquors remarkably cheap. Their tables
+ are loaded with food in variety, well prepared and cleanly served
+ up with the kindest attention and smiling cheerfulness. The women
+ are foremost in kind abilities. Beer is made at Chambersburg of an
+ excellent quality and at other places. A good deal of this beverage
+ is used and becoming quite common; it is found at most of the good
+ taverns. Whisky is universally drank and it is most prevalent.
+ Places for divine service are rarely to be met with immediately on
+ the road. The inhabitants, however, are provided with them not far
+ distant in the back settlements, for almost the whole distance. The
+ weather has been so cold that for the two last days before reaching
+ Pittsburg I could not keep myself comfortable in walking; indeed, I
+ thought several times I might perish.
+
+In Pittsburg he lodged at the old Spread Eagle Tavern, and afterwards at
+Conrad Upperman's inn on Front Street at $2 a week. He found the city
+dull and depressed:
+
+ The streets are almost deserted, a great number of the houses not
+ tenanted, shops shut, merchants and mechanics failed; the rivers
+ are both banked by ice, and many other things wearing the aspect of
+ decayed trade and stagnation of commerce. Money I find purchases
+ things very low. Flour from this city is sent over the mountains to
+ Philadelphia for $1 per barrel, which will little more than half
+ pay the wagoner's expenses for the 280 miles. Superfine flour was
+ $4.12½ in Philadelphia, and coal three cents per bushel. Coal
+ for cooking is getting in use in this city--probably two-thirds the
+ cooking is with coal.
+
+He had had no trouble up to this point in sending his baggage ahead. It
+was some days before the stage left for Erie. All was at length
+dispatched, however, and on February 14th he crossed over to
+Allegheny--I think there was no bridge there then--and marched along,
+day after day, through Harmony, Mercer and Meadville, his progress much
+impeded by heavy snow; at Waterford he met his old friend G. A. Elliott,
+and went to a country dance; and, finally, on February 20th found
+himself at Mr. Hamot's dinner-table in Erie, surrounded by old friends.
+They held him for two days; then, in spite of heavy snow, he set out on
+foot for Buffalo. Even the faded pages of the old journal which hold the
+record of these last few days bespeak the eager nervousness which one
+long absent feels as his wanderings bring him near home. With undaunted
+spirit, our walker pushed on eastward to the house of Col. N. Bird, two
+miles beyond Westfield; and the next day, with Col. Bird, drove through
+a violent snow-storm to Mayville to visit Mr. William Peacock--the first
+ride he had taken since landing in Boston in November of the previous
+year. But he was known throughout the neighborhood, and his friends seem
+to have taken possession of him. From Mr. Bird's he went in a
+stage-sleigh to Fredonia to visit the Burtons. Snow two feet deep
+detained him in Hanover town, where friends showed him "some tea-seed
+bought of a New-England peddler, who left written directions for its
+cultivation." "It's all an imposition," is Mr. Lay's comment--but what a
+horde of smooth-tongued tricksters New England has to answer for!
+
+The stage made its way through the drifts with difficulty to the
+Cattaraugus, where Mr. Lay left it, and stoutly set out on foot once
+more. For the closing stages of this great journey let me quote direct
+from the journal:
+
+ I proceeded over banks of drifted snow until I reached James
+ Marks's, who served breakfast. The stage wagon came up again, when
+ we went on through the Four-mile woods, stopping to see friends and
+ spending the night with Russell Goodrich. On February 29th [two
+ years and twenty-four days from the date of setting out] I drove
+ into Buffalo on Goodrich's sleigh and went straight to Rathbun's,
+ where I met a great number of friends, and was invited to take a
+ ride in Rathbun's fine sleigh with four beautiful greys. We drove
+ down the Niagara as far as Mrs. Seely's and upset once.
+
+What happier climax could there have been for this happy home-coming!
+
+
+
+
+Misadventures of Robert Marsh.
+
+
+
+
+MISADVENTURES OF ROBERT MARSH.
+
+
+Robert Marsh claimed American citizenship, but the eventful year of 1837
+found him on the Canadian side of the Niagara River. His brother was a
+baker at Chippewa, and Robert drove a cart, laden with the bakery
+products, back and forth between the neighboring villages. From St.
+Catharines to Fort Erie he dispensed bread and crackers and the other
+perhaps not wholly harmless ammunition that was moulded in that Chippewa
+bakery; and he naturally absorbed the ideas and the sentiments of the
+men he met. The Niagara district was at fever heat. Mackenzie had sown
+his Patriot literature broadcast, and what with real and imaginary
+wrongs the majority of the community sentiment seemed ripe for
+rebellion.
+
+It is easy enough now, as one reads the story of that uprising, to see
+that the rebels never had a ghost of a chance. The grip of the
+Government never was in real danger of being thrown off in the upper
+province; but a very little rebellion looks great in the eyes of the
+rebel who hazards his neck thereby; and it is no wonder that Robert
+Marsh came to the conclusion that the colonial government of Canada was
+about to be overthrown, or that he decided to cast in his lot with
+those who should win glory in the cause of freedom. As an American
+citizen he had a right to do this. History was full of high precedents.
+Did not Byron espouse the cause of the Greeks? Did not Lafayette make
+his name immortal in the ranks of American rebels? One part of America
+had lately thrown off the hated yoke of Great Britain; why should not
+another part? So our cracker peddler reasoned; and reasoning thus, began
+the train of adventures for the narration of which I draw in brief upon
+his own obscure narrative. It is a story that leads us over some strange
+old trails, and its value lies chiefly in the fact that it illustrates,
+by means of a personal experience, a well-defined period in the history
+of the Niagara region. Robert Marsh is hardly an ideal hero, but he is a
+fair type of a class who contrived greatly to delude themselves, and to
+pay roundly for their experience. He thought as many others thought;
+what he adventured was also adventured by many other men of spirit; and
+what he endured before he got through with it was the unhappy lot of
+many of his fellows.
+
+It was a time of great discontent and discouragement on both sides of
+the border. Throughout the Holland Purchase the difficulties over land
+titles had reached a climax, and the sheriff and his deputies enforced
+the law at the risk of their lives. This year of 1837 also brought the
+financial panic which is still a high-water mark of hard times in our
+history. Buffalo suffered keenly, and it is not strange that such of
+her young men as had a drop of adventurous blood in their veins were
+ready to turn "Patriot" for the time being; though as a matter of sober
+fact it must be recorded that the enthusiasm of the majority did not
+blind their judgment to the hopelessness of the rebellion. On the
+Canadian side the case was different. Unlike their American brethren,
+many of the residents there felt that they had not a representative
+government. It is not necessary now, nor is it essential to our story,
+to rehearse the grievances which the Canadian Patriots undertook to
+correct by taking up arms against the established authority. They are
+presented with great elaboration in many histories; they are detailed
+with curious ardor in the Declaration of Rights, a document
+ostentatiously patterned after the Declaration of Independence. William
+Lyon Mackenzie was a long way from being a Thomas Jefferson; yet he and
+his associates undertook a reform which--taking it at their
+valuation--was as truly in behalf of liberty as was the work of the
+Signers of the Declaration of Independence. They made the same appeal to
+justice; argued from the same point of view for man's inalienable
+rights; they were temperate, too, in their demands, and sought liberty
+without bloodshed. Yet while the American patriots were enabled to
+persist and win their cause, though after two bitter and exhausting
+wars, their Canadian imitators were ignominiously obliterated in a few
+weeks. In the one case the cause of Liberty won her brightest star. In
+the other, there is complete defeat, without a monument save the
+derision of posterity.
+
+It was in November of this year of rebellion 1837 that Marsh, being at
+Chippewa, decided to cast in his lot with the Patriots. "I began to
+think," he says, "that I must soon become an actor on one side or the
+other." He saw the Government troops patrolling every inch of the
+Canadian bank of the Niagara, and concentrating in the vicinity of
+Chippewa. "Boats of every description were brought from different parts;
+at the same time they were mustering all their cannon and mortars
+intending to drive them [the Patriots] off; one would think by their
+talk, that they would not only kill them all, but with their cannon mow
+down all the trees, and what the balls failed in hitting the trees would
+fall upon, and thus demolish the whole Patriot army." Our hero's
+observations have this peculiar value: they are on the common level. He
+heard the boasts and braggadocio of the common soldier; the diplomatic
+or guarded speech of officers and officials he did not record. He heard
+all about the plot to seize the Caroline, and could not believe it at
+first. But, he says, "when I beheld the men get in the boats and shove
+off and the beacon lights kindled on the shore, that they might the more
+safely find the way back, my eyes were on the stretch, towards where the
+ill-fated boat lay." When he saw the party return and heard them boast
+of what they had done, he thought it high time for him to leave the
+place. "Judge my feelings," he says, "on beholding this boat on fire,
+perhaps some on board, within two short miles of the Falls of Niagara,
+going at the rate of twelve miles an hour."[47]
+
+The Caroline was burned on the 29th of December. On the next day our
+hero and a friend set out to join the Patriots. Let me quote in
+condensed fashion from his narrative, which is a tolerably graphic
+contribution to the history of this famous episode:
+
+"We succeeded in reaching the river six miles above Chippewa about 11
+o'clock in the evening, after a tedious and dangerous journey through an
+extensive swamp. There is a small settlement in a part of this swamp
+which has been called Sodom. There were many Indians prowling about. We
+managed to evade them but with much difficulty. There were sentinels
+every few rods along the line." A friendly woman at a farmhouse let them
+take a boat. They offered her $5 for its use, but she declined; "she
+said she would not take anything ... as she knew our situation and felt
+anxious to do all in her power to help us across the river; she also
+told us that her husband had taken Mackenzie across a few nights
+previous. 'Leave the boat in the mouth of the creek,' said she,
+pointing across the river towards Grand Island, ... 'there is a man
+there that will fetch it back, you have only to fasten it, say nothing
+and go your way.' We were convinced that we were not the only ones
+assisted by this patriotic lady."
+
+Marsh and his companion, whose surname was Thomas, launched the boat
+with much difficulty, and with muffled oars they rowed across to Grand
+Island. "It was about 1 o'clock in the morning and we had to go eight or
+nine miles through the woods and no road. There had been a light fall of
+snow, and in places [was] ice that would bear a man, but oftener would
+not; once or twice in crossing streams the ice gave way and we found
+ourselves nearly to the middle in water." Our patriot's path, the reader
+will note, was hard from the outset, but he kept on, expecting to be
+with his friends again in a few days, and little dreaming of what lay
+ahead of him. "We at near daylight succeeded in reaching White Haven, a
+small village, where we were hailed by one of our militia sentinels:
+'Who comes there?' 'Friends.' 'Advance and give the countersign.' Of
+course we advanced, but we could not give the countersign; a guard was
+immediately dispatched with us to headquarters, where we underwent a
+strict examination."
+
+He was sent across to Tonawanda, where he took the cars for Schlosser.
+There the blood-stains on the dock where Durfee had been killed sealed
+his resolution; he crossed to Navy Island and presented himself at the
+headquarters of William Lyon Mackenzie, the peppery little Scotchman
+who was the prime organizer of the Provisional Government, and of
+General Van Rensselaer, commander-in-chief of the Patriot Army. "The
+General produced the list and asked me the length of time I wished to
+enlist. I was so confident of success that I unhesitatingly replied,
+'Seven years or during the war.' The General remarked, 'I wish I had
+2,000 such men, we have about 1,000 already,[48] and I think this
+Caroline affair will soon swell our force to 2,000, and then I shall
+make an attack at some point where they least expect, ... and as you are
+well acquainted there I want you to be by my side.'" Here was preferment
+indeed, for Marsh believed that Van Rensselaer was brave and able;
+history has a different verdict; but we must assume that our hero
+entered upon the campaign with high hopes and who knows what visions of
+glory.
+
+Now, at the risk of tiresomeness, I venture to dwell a little longer on
+this occupancy of Navy Island; I promise to get over ground faster
+farther along in the story. It is assumed that the reader knows the
+principal facts of this familiar episode; but in Marsh's journal I find
+graphic details of the affair not elsewhere given, to my knowledge. Let
+me quote from his obscure record:
+
+ After my informing the General of their preparations and intention
+ of attacking the Island, breastworks were hastily thrown up, and
+ all necessary arrangements made to give them a warm reception.
+ There were twenty-five cannon, mostly well mounted, which could
+ easily be concentrated at any point required; and manned by men
+ that knew how to handle them. Besides other preparations, tops of
+ trees and underbrush were thrown over the bank at different places
+ to prevent them landing. I know there were various opinions
+ respecting the strength of the Island, but from close observation,
+ during these days of my enlistment, it is my candid opinion that if
+ they had attacked the Island, as was expected, they would mostly or
+ all have found a watery grave. The tories were fearful of this, for
+ when the attempt was made men could not be found to hazard their
+ lives in so rash an attempt....
+
+ It was hoped and much regretted by all on the Island that the
+ attempt was not made; for if they had done so it would have thinned
+ their ranks and made it the more easy for us to have entered Canada
+ at that place. They finally concluded to bring all their artillery
+ to bear upon us, and thus exterminate all within their reach. They
+ were accordingly arranged in martial pomp, opposite the Island, the
+ distance of about three-quarters of a mile. Now the work of
+ destruction commences; the balls and bombs fly in all directions.
+ The tops of the trees appear to be a great eye-sore to them. I
+ suppose they thought by commencing an attack upon them, their
+ falling would aid materially in the destruction of lives below.
+
+Robert, the reader will have observed, had a fine gift of sarcasm. The
+thundering of artillery was heard, by times, he says, for twenty and
+thirty miles around, for a week, "[the enemy] being obliged to cease
+firing at times for her cannons to cool. They were very lavish with Her
+Gracious Majesty's powder and balls." He continues:
+
+ I recollect a man standing behind the breastwork where were four of
+ us sitting as the balls were whistling through the trees. "Well,"
+ says he, "if this is the way to kill the timber on this island, it
+ certainly is a very expensive way as well as somewhat comical; I
+ should think it would be cheaper to come over with axes, and if
+ they are not in too big a hurry, girdle the trees and they will die
+ the sooner." I remarked: "They did not know how to use an axe, but
+ understood girdling in a different way." An old gentleman from
+ Canada taking the hint quickly responded, "Yes. Canada can testify
+ to the fact of their having other ways of girdling besides with the
+ axe, and unless there is a speedy stop put to it, there will not be
+ a green tree left." There was another gentleman about to say
+ something of their manner of swindling in other parts of the world,
+ he had just commenced about Ireland when I felt a sudden jar at my
+ back, and the other three that set near me did the same; we rose up
+ and discovered that a cannon ball had found its way through our
+ breastwork, but was kind enough to stop after just stirring the
+ dirt at our backs. I had only moved about an inch of dirt when I
+ picked up a six-pound ball.
+
+ As it happened, our gun was a six-pounder. We concluded, as that
+ was the only ball that had as yet been willing to pay us a visit,
+ we would send it back as quick as it come. We immediately put it
+ into our gun and wheeled around the corner of the breastwork.
+ "Hold," said I, "there is Queen Ann's Pocket Piece, as it is
+ called, it will soon be opposite, and then we'll show them what we
+ can do." It was not mounted, but swung under the ex [axle] of a
+ cart, such as are used for drawing saw-logs, with very large
+ wheels. I had seen it previous to my leaving Chippewa. I think
+ there was six horses attached to the cart, for it was very heavy,
+ it being a twenty-four-pounder. I suppose it was their intention to
+ split the Island in two with it, hoping by so doing it might loosen
+ at the roots and move off with the current and go over the falls,
+ and thus accomplish their great work of destruction at once. As
+ they were opposite, the words "ready, fire," were given; we had the
+ satisfaction of seeing the horses leave the battleground with all
+ possible speed. The gun was forsaken in no time, and in less than
+ five minutes there was scarcely a man to be seen. The ball had
+ gone about three feet further to the left than had been intended;
+ it was intended to lop the wheels, but it severed the tongue from
+ the ex and the horses took the liberty to move off as fast as
+ possible.
+
+ We were about to give them another shot, when the officer of the
+ day came up and told us the orders from headquarters were not to
+ fire unless it was absolutely necessary, that we must be saving of
+ our ammunition. I told him that it was their own ball that we had
+ just sent back. When he saw the execution it had done he smiled and
+ went on, remarking, "They begin to fire a little lower." "Yes,"
+ said I, "and as that was the first, we thought we would send it
+ back and let them know we did not want it, that we had balls of our
+ own."
+
+This incident was the beginning of more active operations. For the next
+nine days and nights there was a great deal of firing, with one killed
+and three wounded. The Patriot army held on to its absurd stronghold for
+four weeks, causing, as Marsh quaintly puts it, "much noise and
+confusion on both sides"; and he at least was keenly disappointed when
+it was evacuated, Jan. 12, 1838. The handful of Patriots scattered and
+Chippewa composed herself to the repose which, but for one ripple of
+disturbance in 1866, continues to the present day.
+
+Up to the end of this abortive campaign Robert Marsh's chief
+misadventure had been to cut himself off, practically, from a safe
+return to the community where his best interests lay. But he had a stout
+heart if a perverse head. "I was born of Patriot parentage," he boasted;
+"I am not a Patriot today and tomorrow the reverse"; and being fairly
+identified with the rebels, he determined to woo the fortunes of war
+wherever opportunity offered. His ardor must have been considerable,
+for he made his way in the dead of winter from Buffalo to Detroit; just
+how I do not know; but he speaks of arriving at Sandusky "after a
+tedious walk of five days." Here he joined a party for an attack on
+Malden, but the Patriots were themselves attacked by some 300 Canadian
+troops who came across the lake in sleighs; there was a lively fight on
+the ice, with some loss of life, when each party was glad to retire.
+Next he tried it with a band of rebels on Fighting Island, below
+Detroit; treachery and "the power of British gold" seem to have kept
+Canada from falling into their hands; and presently, "being sick of
+island fighting," as he puts it, he made his way to Detroit, where, all
+through that troubled summer of '38, he appears to have been one of the
+most active and ardent of the plotters. Certain it is that he was
+promptly to the front for the battle of Windsor, and was with the
+invaders on Dec. 4, 1838, when a band of 164 misguided men crossed the
+Detroit River to take Canada. He was "Lieutenant" Marsh on this
+expedition, but it was the emptiest of honors. At four in the morning
+they attacked the barracks on the river banks above Windsor, and, as
+often happens with the most fatuous enterprises, met at the outset with
+success. They burned the barracks and took thirty-eight prisoners (whom
+they could not hold), looking meanwhile across the river for help which
+never came. "We were about planting our standard," wrote Marsh
+afterward; "the flag was a splendid one, with two stars for Upper and
+Lower Canada. We had just succeeded in getting a long spar and was in
+the act of raising it, as the cry was heard,--'There comes the
+Red-coats! There are the dragoons!'" Our Patriot, it will be observed,
+made no nice distinctions between British and Canadian troops; that
+distinction will not fail to be made for him, in a province which has
+always claimed the honor--to which it is fully entitled--of putting down
+this troublesome uprising without having to call for help upon the
+British regulars. But the invaders did not raise nice points then. They
+hastily formed and withstood the attack for a little; but it was a
+hopeless stand, for numbers and discipline were all on the other side.
+According to Marsh, the regulars numbered 600. There was sharp firing,
+eleven Patriots and forty-four Canadians were killed; and seeing this,
+and learning, later than his friends across the river, that discretion
+is the better part of valor, he did the only thing that remained to
+do--he took to the woods.
+
+The woods were full just then of discreet Patriots, and several of them
+held a breathless council of war. Here is Marsh's account of it:
+
+ It was finally concluded for every man to do the best he could for
+ himself. We accordingly separated and I found myself pursued by a
+ man hollowing at the top of his voice, "Stop there, stop, you
+ damned rebel, or I'll shoot you! stop, stop!" I was near a fence at
+ that time crossing a field. I proceeded to the fence, dropped on
+ one knee, put my rifle through the fence, took deliberate aim. He
+ had a gun and was gaining on me. I had a cannister of powder, pouch
+ of balls, two pistols and an overcoat on, which prevented me from
+ attempting to run. I saw all hopes of escape was useless; I
+ discharged my rifle, but cannot say whether it hit the mark or not,
+ for I did not look, but immediately rose and walked off. At any
+ rate I heard no more "Stop there, you damned rebel."
+
+Marsh's narrative is too diffuse, not to mention other faults, for me to
+follow it _verbatim et (il-)literatim_. I give the events of the next
+few days as simply as possible. After he fired his gun through the fence
+at the red-coat who followed no more--his last shot, be it remarked, for
+the relief of Canada--he found that he was very tired. It was late in
+the day of the battle and he had eaten nothing for nearly forty-eight
+hours. Pushing on through the woods he came to a barn, but had scarcely
+entered when it was surrounded by ten or twelve "dragoons," as he calls
+them. He scrambled up a ladder to the hay-mow, dug a hole in the hay,
+crawled in and smoothed it over himself, and, he says, "had just got a
+pistol in each hand as the door flew open; in they rushed, crying, 'Come
+out, you damned rebel, we'll shoot you, we'll not take you before the
+Colonel to be shot, come out, come out, we'll hang you.' Said another,
+'We'll quarter you and feed you to the hogs as we've just served one!'
+They thrust their swords into the hay, and threatened to burn the barn;
+but as it belonged to one of their sort, they thought better of it and
+went off. They soon came back, and saying they would place a sentry,
+disappeared again." Marsh tore up certain papers which he feared would
+be troublesome if found on him and then slept. It was dark when he
+awoke. He crept out of the barn and wandered through the woods until
+daylight, narrowly escaping some Indians. He applied at the house of a
+French settler for something to eat; frankly admitting, what it
+obviously was folly to deny, that he was a fugitive. Three "large bony
+Frenchmen" came to the door, made him their prisoner and marched him off
+through the woods to Sandwich, where he was stripped of his valuables
+and locked up with several others, his captors cheerfully assuring them
+that they would have a fine shooting-match tomorrow. Marsh stoutly
+maintained that, as he owed the Queen no allegiance, he was not a rebel;
+but his protests did him no good. He was not shot on the morrow,
+although others of the captives were summarily executed, without a
+pretext of trial or even a chance to say their prayers.
+
+And now begins an imprisonment of ten months full of such distress and
+atrocity that I should not please, however much I might edify, by its
+recital. We read today of the horrors of Spanish and Turkish massacres
+or of Siberian prisons, and every page of history has its record of
+inhumanity--its Black Hole, its Dartmoor, its Andersonville. In this
+dishonor roll of official outrages surely may be included the backwoods
+prisons of Upper Canada in 1838 and '39. Our misadventurer was shifted
+from one to another. At Fort Malden, on the shore of Lake Erie, he was
+kept for seven weeks in a small room with twenty-eight other men. It was
+the dead of winter, but they had no warmth save from their emaciated and
+vermin-infested bodies. They were ironed two and two, day and night.
+They were so crowded that there was not floor-room for all to sleep at
+once. According to Marsh, who afterwards wrote a minute record of this
+imprisonment, their feeding and care would have been fatal to a herd of
+hogs. The acme of the miseries of the prison at Fort Malden I cannot
+even hint at with propriety. When transferred from Sandwich to Malden,
+and later from Malden to London, Marsh, like many of his fellow
+sufferers, had his feet frozen; and when his limbs swelled so that life
+itself was threatened, it was not the surgeon but a clumsy blacksmith
+who cut off the irons and supplied new ones.
+
+In London the treatment of Malden was repeated. Here the trials began.
+The gallows was erected close to the jail wall; day by day the doomed
+ones walked out of a door in the second story to the death platform; and
+day by day Marsh and the other wretches in the cells heard the drop as
+it swung, in falling, against the jail wall. Marsh lived in hourly
+expectation of the summons, but before his turn came there was a stay in
+the work which had been going on under the warrants signed by Sir George
+Arthur--as great a tyrant, probably, as ever held power on the American
+continent. A far more philosophic writer than Robert Marsh has called
+him the Robespierre of Canada. Whatever may be held as to the illegality
+of the trials which sent some twenty-five men to the gallows at this
+time, certain it is that the hangings stopped before our hero's neck was
+stretched. Fate still had her quiver full of evil days for him; and
+fortune, like a gleam of sun between clouds, moved him on to the prison
+at Toronto, where his mother came to see him.
+
+It was in the early spring of 1839 that he was transferred to Toronto.
+In June following, with a boatload of companions, he was shipped down to
+Fort Henry at Kingston. Here, for three months, he was deluded with the
+constant expectation of release; but he must have had some
+foreshadowings of his fate when, after three months of wretched
+existence at Fort Henry, he was again sent on, down the river to Quebec;
+and there, on September 28, 1839, he and 137 companions in irons were
+put aboard the British prison-ship Buffalo, commanded by Capt. Wood.
+They were stowed on the third deck, below the water line; 140 sailors
+were placed over them; and the Buffalo took her course down the widening
+gulf. The dismal departure was lightened by a touch of human nature.
+There were several of the convicts who, like Marsh, claimed American
+citizenship, and American blood will show itself.[49] As the prisoners
+were marched down with clanking chains from Fort Henry for the shipment
+to Quebec, many of them thought that it was their last shift before
+release. "There were three or four very good singers amongst us," says
+Marsh, "which made the fort ring with the 'American Star,' 'Hunters of
+Kentucky' and other similar songs, which caused many to flock to our
+windows. Some of them remarked, 'You will not feel like singing in
+Botany Bay.' 'Give us "Botany Bay,"' said one, and it was done in good
+style."
+
+If the reader will permit the digression, it may afford a little
+entertainment to consider for a moment these old songs. The literature
+of every war includes its patriotic songs--seldom the work of great
+poets, and most popular when they appeal to the quick sympathies and
+sense of humor of the common people. Every people has such songs,
+sometimes cherished and sung for generations. England has them without
+number, Canada has hers, the United States has hers; and among the most
+popular for many years, strange as it now may seem, were "The American
+Star" and "The Hunters of Kentucky," which were sung by these
+none-too-worthy representatives of the United States, through Canadian
+prison bars, this autumn morning sixty years ago. Both songs had their
+origin, I believe, at the time of the War of 1812. That such barren and
+bombastic lines as "The American Star" should have remained popular a
+quarter of a century seems incredible, and appears to indicate that the
+youth of the country were very hard up for patriotic songs worth
+singing. Here follows "The American Star":
+
+ Come, strike the bold anthem, the war dogs are howling,
+ Already they eagerly snuff up their prey,
+ The red clouds of war o'er our forests are scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away;
+ The infants, affrighted, cling close to their mothers,
+ The youths grasp their swords, for the combat prepare,
+ While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers and brothers,
+ Who rush to display the American Star.
+
+ Come blow the shrill bugle, the loud drum awaken,
+ The dread rifle seize, let the cannon deep roar;
+ No heart with pale fear, or faint doubtings be shaken,
+ No slave's hostile foot leave a print on our shore.
+ Shall mothers, wives, daughters and sisters left weeping,
+ Insulted by ruffians, be dragged to despair!
+ Oh no! from her hills the proud eagle comes sweeping
+ And waves to the brave the American Star.
+
+ The spirits of Washington, Warren, Montgomery,
+ Look down from the clouds with bright aspect serene;
+ Come, soldiers, a tear and a toast to their memory,
+ Rejoicing they'll see us as they once have been.
+ To us the high boon by the gods has been granted,
+ To speed the glad tidings of liberty far;
+ Let millions invade us, we'll meet them undaunted,
+ And vanquish them by the American Star.
+
+ Your hands, then, dear comrades, round Liberty's altar,
+ United we swear by the souls of the brave
+ Not one from the strong resolution shall falter,
+ To live independent, or sink to the grave!
+ Then, freemen, fill up--Lo, the striped banner's flying,
+ The high bird of liberty screams through the air;
+ Beneath her oppression and tyranny dying--
+ Success to the beaming American Star.
+
+Every one of its turgid and wordy lines bespeaks the struggling infancy
+of a National literature. "The Hunters of Kentucky" is a little better,
+because it has humor--though of the primitive backwoods type--in it. If
+the reader has not heard it lately, perhaps he can stand a little of it.
+It was inspired by the battle of New Orleans:
+
+ Ye gentlemen and ladies fair,
+ Who grace this famous city,
+ Just listen, if you've time to spare,
+ While I rehearse a ditty;
+ And for the opportunity
+ Conceive yourselves quite lucky,
+ For 'tis not often that you see
+ A hunter from Kentucky;
+ O! Kentucky,
+ The hunters of Kentucky.
+
+ We are a hardy free-born race,
+ Each man to fear a stranger;
+ Whate'er the game, we join in chase,
+ Despising toil and danger;
+ And if a daring foe annoys,
+ Whate'er his strength or force is,
+ We'll show him that Kentucky boys
+ Are alligators,--horses:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ I s'pose you've read it in the prints,
+ How Packenham attempted
+ To make Old Hickory Jackson wince,
+ But soon his schemes repented;
+ For we, with rifles ready cock'd,
+ Thought such occasion lucky,
+ And soon around the general flock'd
+ The hunters of Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ I s'pose you've heard how New Orleans
+ Is famed for wealth and beauty;
+ There's gals of every hue, it seems,
+ From snowy white to sooty:
+ So, Packenham he made his brags
+ If he in fight was lucky,
+ He'd have their gals and cotton bags,
+ In spite of Old Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ But Jackson he was wide awake,
+ And wasn't scared at trifles,
+ For well he knew what aim we take
+ With our Kentucky rifles;
+ So, he led us down to Cypress Swamp,
+ The ground was low and mucky;
+ There stood John Bull in martial pomp--
+ But here was Old Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ We raised a bank to hide our breasts,
+ Not that we thought of dying,
+ But then we always like to rest,
+ Unless the game is flying;
+ Behind it stood our little force--
+ None wish'd it to be greater,
+ For every man was half a horse
+ And half an alligator:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ They didn't let our patience tire
+ Before they show'd their faces;
+ We didn't choose to waste our fire,
+ But snugly kept our places;
+ And when so near we saw them wink,
+ We thought it time to stop 'em,
+ It would have done you good, I think,
+ To see Kentuckians drop 'em:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ They found, at length, 'twas vain to fight,
+ When lead was all their booty,
+ And so, they wisely took to flight,
+ And left us all the beauty.
+ And now, if danger e'er annoys,
+ Remember what our trade is;
+ Just send for us Kentucky boys,
+ And we'll protect you, ladies:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+At least it has a gallant ending, which was not altogether apposite to
+the situation of Marsh and his fellow-prisoners at Kingston. "Botany
+Bay" was more in their line just then; but, at any rate, it was just as
+philosophic to go into exile singing as mourning or cursing.
+
+Were I a Herman Melville or a Clark Russell I should be tempted to dwell
+on this dreary voyage of the prison-ship Buffalo. Even Marsh's humble
+chronicle of it is graphic with unstudied incidents. They ran into rough
+weather at once; so that to the wretchedness of their imprisonment was
+added the misery of seasickness. No one had told them of their
+destination, and many of them, like Marsh, stoutly maintained from first
+to last that they were transported without a sentence. Their daily life
+in this dark and crowded 'tween-decks, practically the hold of a
+staggering old sailer, could not be detailed without offense; and if it
+could be, I have no desire to heap up the horrors. In mid-voyage there
+was an attempted mutiny; the convicts tried to seize the ship; but the
+only result was heavier irons, closer confinement, and a stricter
+guard. After two months of the stormy Atlantic the Buffalo put into Rio
+Janeiro, where she lay three tantalizing days. "It happened to be the
+Emperor's birthday," says Marsh, "and although we were not allowed to go
+on shore, we could discover through a skylight the flags on the
+pinnacles of houses and hills apparently reaching to the clouds." A
+little fruit was had aboard to allay the scurvy which was making havoc,
+and the Buffalo lumbered away again and ran straight into a savage gale,
+in which she sprung a bad leak. She was an old ship, and had formerly
+been a man-of-war, but for some years now had been employed as a convict
+transport between England and New South Wales. From Rio around the Cape
+of Good Hope the log kept by Robert Marsh is a story of sickness and
+death. Those who had had their limbs frozen in Canada now found the skin
+and flesh coming away and the sea water on their bare feet gave them
+excruciating agony. The shotted sack slid into the shark-patrolled
+waters of the Indian Ocean, and the wretches who still lived were
+envious of the dead. And on the 13th of February, 1840, four months and
+a half from Quebec, the Buffalo anchored in Hobart Town harbor, Van
+Dieman's Land.
+
+And now a word about this antipodean land on which our unlucky hero
+looked out from the prison-ship. We are wont to regard it, perhaps, as a
+new and well-nigh unknown part of the world; possibly some of us would
+have to think twice if asked off-hand, Where is Van Dieman's Land? Of
+course we remember, when we glance at the map, that it is a good-sized
+island just south of Australia. From extreme north to extreme south it
+is about as far as from Buffalo to Philadelphia, and east and west not
+quite so far as from Buffalo to Albany. And here is a coincidence:
+Hobart Town, in the harbor of which the prison-ship Buffalo dropped
+anchor with her load of misery, is exactly as far south of the equator
+as Buffalo is north of it. Other parallel data may perhaps be helpful:
+It was in 1642 that the navigator Tasman discovered the island, naming
+it after his Dutch patron, Van Dieman. The explorer's name has now been
+substituted, as it should be, and Tasmania, not Van Dieman's Land,
+appears on modern maps. The history of that land dates from 1642. It was
+in 1641 that those adventurous missioners, Brébeuf and Chaumonot, first
+carried their portable altar across the Niagara; and from the Relations
+of their order for that year the world gained the first actual glimpse
+of the Niagara region. In the world's annals, therefore, this far-away
+island and our own Niagara and lake region are of the same age. One
+other parallel may be ventured. The first permanent settlement in Van
+Dieman's Land was made in 1803. In 1804 Buffalo had fifteen actual
+settlers and a few squatters. But here our parallels end, for when, on
+that February morning of 1840, the unhappy Marsh was put ashore, he
+found a community unlike any that has ever existed in this happier part
+of the world. For over thirty years England had been sending thither her
+worst criminals. Shipload after shipload, year after year, of the most
+depraved and vicious of mankind, had been sent out. England had made of
+it and of Botany Bay a dumping-ground for whatever manner of evil men
+and women she could scrape from her London slums. There was some free
+colonization, but it went on slowly. Honest men hesitated to go where
+society was so handicapped. The treatment of the convicts varied
+according to the Governors, but for years before Marsh arrived it seems
+to have been as harsh and brutalizing as imperiousness and cruelty could
+devise. In 1836 Sir John Franklin was sent out to the station. He was an
+exceptionally humane and generous man, according to most accounts. Marsh
+does not complain of any severity from him, but calls him an old granny,
+a glutton and a temporizer in his promises to convicts. It is something
+foreign to our purpose to dwell upon this point, nor is it a gracious
+thing to seek any imputation against a character which history delights
+to hold as the embodiment of the gallant and heroic. We must remember
+that Robert Marsh's point of view was not likely to bring him to
+favorable estimates of those in authority over him and through whom his
+very real oppression came. Years after, when the great explorer's bones
+lay whitening in the unknown North, this far-away colony raised to his
+memory a noble bronze statue, which stands to-day in Franklin Square,
+Hobart, not far from the old Government House, the scene of his
+uncongenial administration.
+
+And now behold our hero marched ashore with his fellows; reeling like a
+drunken man, the strange effect of firm earth under foot after months
+of heaving seaway; examined, ticketed and numbered, clad in Her
+Majesty's livery, and sent to a near-by country station, where he is put
+to work under savage overseers at carrying stone for road-building; and
+thus began five years of unmitigated suffering for Robert Marsh in that
+detestable land. There were about 43,000 convicts on the island at the
+time, 25,000 of whom were driven to daily work in chain gangs, on the
+roads, in the wet mines or the forest. The rest were ex-convicts; had
+served their sentences and counted themselves among the free population,
+which all told did not then exceed 60,000. Conceive of a free community,
+nearly one half of whom, men and women, were former convicts, but not
+regenerate. For years the brothels of London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, were
+emptied into Van Dieman's Land. A reputable writer has said that at this
+time female virtue was unknown in the island. The wealthy land-owners,
+under government patronage, were autocrats in their own domain. The
+whipping-post, the triangle--a refinement of cruelty--and the gallows
+were familiar sights. The slightest failure at his daily task sent the
+convict to the whipping-post or to solitary confinement.
+
+Official iniquity flourished under Sir George Arthur's reign of eleven
+years. He was Franklin's predecessor, and his minions were still in
+control when Marsh came under their power. He was shifted from station
+to station; fed like a dog, lodged in the meanest huts and worked well
+nigh to death. The worst characters were his overseers, and the day
+began with the lash. A convict's strength would give out under his load;
+he would lag behind, or stop to rest. At once he would be taken to the
+station, stripped to the waist--if he chanced to have anything
+on--strung up to the post or triangle, and flogged. As an additional
+measure of reform, brine was thrown into the gashes which the lash had
+made. These were the milder forms of daily punishment. Sir George
+Arthur's prouder record comes from the executions. Travelers to-day tell
+us that Tasmania is really a second England; in its settled portions it
+is a land of pleasant vales and gentle rivers, rich in harvests of the
+temperate zone. "Appleland," some have called it, from its fruitful
+orchards; but no tree transplanted from Merrie England ever flourished
+more than the black stock from Tyburn Hill. Sir George hanged 1,500
+during his stay. Marsh tells of a compassionate clergyman who was
+watching with interest the erection of a gallows. "Yes," he said, "I
+suppose it will do, but it is not as large as we need. I think ten will
+hang comfortable, but twelve will be rather crowded."
+
+It is small wonder that our hero tried to escape. He took to the
+bush--which means the unexplored and inhospitable forest--with a band of
+friends; was captured, punished, and thereafter dressed in
+magpie--trousers and frock one half black, one half yellow; and in this
+garb, which advertised to all that he had been a bush-ranger, he worked
+on until the spring of 1842, when Sir John Franklin made him a
+ticket-of-leave man. This relieved him from the overseers, and gave him
+permission to work, for whatever wages he could get, in an assigned
+district.
+
+And now again, of this new phase of his misadventures, a long story
+could be made. At that time the best circumstanced ticket-of-leave men
+got about a shilling a day and boarded themselves. But there was little
+work and many seekers. They roamed over the country, turned away from
+plantation after plantation, and in many cases became the boldest of
+outlaws. Escape from the island was well nigh impossible; but after many
+hardships, utterly unable to get honest work, Marsh was one of a party
+that determined to try it. Making their way eighty miles to the
+seashore, they hid in the woods, where for a week or so they gathered
+firewood, buried potatoes and snared kangaroo. One of their number
+reached a settlement and returned with the word that an American whaler
+was coming to take them off. After six days more of waiting the vessel
+hove in sight. As she tried to draw near and send boats ashore a storm
+came up and she narrowly escaped the breakers. At this critical moment a
+British armed patrol schooner rounded a point down the coast and the
+American made her escape with great difficulty, leaving the score of
+runaway convicts at their precarious lookout, hopeless and despondent.
+
+They were soon arrested, Marsh among them. He was tried for breaking his
+patrol, and sent to an inland district, 100 miles through the bush and
+swamps. "It was all punishment," he says pathetically, in describing
+this journey on which he nearly perished. So down-hearted and distressed
+were they, so appalled by the war of nature and man against them, that
+one of Marsh's companions, with fagged-out brain, came to the conclusion
+that they were really in hell and that the devil himself was in charge
+of them. But there is always a turn to the tide. They trapped a kangaroo
+and did not starve. Marsh reached his district and this time found work,
+which had to be light, for he was weak, emaciated and troubled day and
+night with a pain in his chest. And finally the glad word came that he
+was gazetted for pardon and could go to Hobart. There, on January 27,
+1845, after ten months in Canada prisons, four and a half months in a
+transport ship, and five years in a convict colony, he went on board the
+American whaler Steiglitz of Sag Harbor, Selah Young, master, a free
+man.
+
+The Steiglitz was bound out on a whaling voyage. No matter, she would
+take Marsh away from that hell. She cruised for whale off New Zealand,
+then made north, and in April anchored off Honolulu. King Hamehameha
+III., on hearing the story of the convict Americans, welcomed them
+ashore, and there Marsh stayed for four months, exploring the islands
+and waiting for a chance to get home. At last it came in the welcome
+shape of the whaler Samuel Robertson, Capt. Warner, bound for New
+Bedford. She touched at the Society Islands and Pernambuco, and on March
+13, 1846, after seven years four and a half months absence, Marsh
+stepped ashore in his own country again. The people of New Bedford
+helped him and a few others as far as Utica. There one of his comrades
+in exile left him for his home in Watertown, and others went their
+several ways. Marsh was helped as far as Canandaigua, where his brother
+met him and took him to his home in Avon; and after a time of
+recuperation there, they came on to Buffalo, where he met his father,
+his mother and sister. He soon crossed the river, visited Toronto, and
+probably looked over the scenes of his early cracker-peddling and
+subsequent campaigning, up and down the Niagara. He had traveled 77,000
+miles, but here his journey ended; and here the Patriot exile told his
+story, which I have drawn on in an imperfect way, for this true
+chronicle of old trails.
+
+
+
+
+Underground Trails.
+
+
+
+
+UNDERGROUND TRAILS.
+
+
+It was Dame Nature who decreed that the Niagara region should be
+peculiarly a place of trails. When she set the great cataract midway
+between two lakes, she thereby ordained that in days to come the Indian
+should go around the falls, on foot. The Indian trail was a footpath;
+nothing more. Here it followed the margin of a stream; there, well nigh
+indiscernable, it crossed a rocky plateau; again, worn deep in yielding
+loam, it led through thick woods, twisting and turning around trees and
+boulders, with detours for swamps or bad ground, and long stretches
+along favorable slopes or sightly ridges. Who can hazard a guess as to
+the time when, or by what manner of men, these trails were first
+established in our region? Immemorial in their source--akin in natural
+origins to the path the deer makes in going to the salt-lick or to
+drink--they were old, established, when our history begins. And when the
+white man came he followed the old trails. Traveling like the Indian, by
+water when he could; when lakes and rivers did not serve, he found the
+footpaths ready made for him in the forest. Armies came, cutting
+military roads. Settlers followed to banish forests, drain swamps, and
+make new highways. And yet the horseman, the military train, the wagon
+of the pioneer, the early stage-coach, the railroad, each in its day,
+along many of the most direct and important thoroughfares, has but
+followed the ancient ways. The thing is axiomatic. Nature for the most
+part decrees where men shall walk. Her lakes and rivers and her hills
+may be strewn by whim; but there are plain reasons enough for our
+road-building. We go where we can, with safety and expedition. So ran
+the red man. We still follow the old trails.
+
+Other aspects of our frontier are worthy of a thought. Two nations look
+across the Niagara, so that, even though its flow were placid from lake
+to lake, it would still be a political barrier, a halting-place. This
+fact has filled it full of trails in history. Again, as the gateway of
+the West, the paths of immigration and of commerce for a century have
+here converged. The early settlers of Michigan and Wisconsin went by the
+old Lewiston ferry. From Buffalo by boat, and from old Suspension Bridge
+by rail, who can estimate the thousands who have gone on to create the
+New West? From the earliest Iroquois raid upon the Neuters, down to
+yesterday's excursion, the Niagara frontier has been peculiarly a region
+of passing, of coming and going, along old trails.
+
+Now of all the paths that have led hitherward, none has greater
+significance in American history than that known as the Underground
+Railroad. Other paths, touching here, have led to war, to wealth, to
+pleasure; but this led to Liberty. Thousands of negro slaves, gaining
+after infinite hardships these shores of the lake or river, have looked
+across the smiling expanse to such an elysium as only a slave can dream
+of. Once the passage made, no matter how poor the passenger, freedom
+became his possession and the heritage of his children. The chattel
+became a man. I can never sail upon the blue lake, or down the pleasant
+river, without seeing in fancy this throng of famished, frightened,
+blindly hopeful blacks, for whom these waters were the gateway to new
+life. The most vital part of the Underground Railroad was the over-water
+ferry. Bark canoe and great steamer alike leave no lasting trail; but to
+him who reads the history of our region, this fair waterway at our door
+is thronged as a street; and every secret traveler thereby is worthy of
+his attention. Much has been recorded of these refugees, who came,
+singly or in small parties, for more than thirty years preceding the
+Civil War. Indeed, runaway slaves passed this way to Canada soon after
+the War of 1812. The tales of soldiers returning to Kentucky from the
+Niagara frontier and other campaigns of that war, first planted in the
+minds of Southern slaves the idea that Canada was a land of freedom. By
+1830 many earnest people who disapproved of slavery, the Quakers
+prominent among them, were giving organized aid to the escaping blacks.
+In many secret ways the refugees were passed on from one friend to
+another. Hiding-places were established, and routes which were found
+advantageous were regularly followed.
+
+It is no part of my present plan to enter upon a general sketch of the
+Underground Railroad. That task has already been admirably performed, at
+voluminous length, by careful students. My aim in this paper is to
+bring together a number of incidents and narratives, particularly
+illustrative of its work at the eastern end of Lake Erie and along the
+Niagara frontier, in order that the student may the better appreciate
+how vital this phase of the slavery issue was, even in this region, for
+more than a generation preceding the Civil War. There were established
+routes for the passage of fugitive slaves: From the seaboard States to
+the North, by water from Newberne, S. C, and Portsmouth, Va.; or by land
+routes from Washington and Philadelphia, to and through New England and
+so into Quebec. There was "John Brown's route" through Eastern Kansas
+and Nebraska; and there were many routes through Iowa and Illinois, most
+of them leading to Chicago and other Lake Michigan ports, whence the
+refugees came by boat to Canadian points, chiefly along the north shore
+of Lake Erie; or even, in some cases, by water to Collingwood on
+Georgian Bay, where a considerable number of runaway slaves were carried
+prior to the Civil War. But the travel by these extreme East and West
+routes was insignificant as compared with the number that came through
+Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, to points on the south shore of
+Lake Erie and the Detroit and Niagara rivers at either end. The region
+bounded by the Ohio, the Allegheny, and the western border of Indiana
+was a vast plexus of Underground routes. The negroes were taken across
+to Canada in great numbers from Detroit and other points on that river;
+from Sandusky to Point Pelee; from Ashtabula to Port Stanley; from
+Conneaut to Port Burwell; from Erie to Long Point; and from all
+south-shore points on Lake Erie they were brought by steamer to Buffalo.
+Often, the vessel captains would put the refugees ashore between Long
+Point and Buffalo. At other times, the fugitives were sent to stations
+at Black Rock or Niagara Falls, whence they were soon set across the
+river and were free. There were some long routes across New York State,
+the chief one being up the Hudson and Mohawk valleys to Lake Ontario
+ports. There was some crossing to Kingston, and some from Rochester to
+Port Dalhousie or Toronto. Another route led from Harrisburg up the
+Susquehanna to Williamsport, thence to Elmira, and northwesterly,
+avoiding large towns, to Niagara Falls. But the most active part in the
+Underground Railroad operations in New York State was borne by the
+western counties. There were numerous routes through Allegany,
+Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties, along which the negroes were
+helped; all converging at Buffalo or on the Niagara. In the old towns of
+this section are still many houses and other buildings which are pointed
+out to the visitor as having been former stations on the Underground.
+The Pettit house at Fredonia is a distinguished example.
+
+It is impossible to state even approximately the number of refugee
+negroes who crossed by these routes to Upper Canada, now Ontario. In
+1844 the number was estimated at 40,000;[50] in 1852 the Anti-Slavery
+Society of Canada stated in its annual report that there were about
+30,000 blacks in Canada West; in 1858 the number was estimated as high
+as 75,000.[51] This figure is probably excessive; but since the negroes
+continued to come, up to the hour of the Emancipation Proclamation, it
+is probably within the fact to say that more than 50,000 crossed to
+Upper Canada, nearly all from points on Lake Erie, the Detroit and
+Niagara rivers.
+
+Runaway slaves appeared in Buffalo at least as early as the '30's.
+"Professor Edward Orton recalls that in 1838, soon after his father
+moved to Buffalo, two sleigh-loads of negroes from the Western Reserve
+were brought to the house in the night-time; and Mr. Frederick Nicholson
+of Warsaw, N. Y., states that the Underground work in his vicinity began
+in 1840. From this time on there was apparently no cessation of
+migrations of fugitives into Canada at Black Rock, Buffalo and other
+points."[52] Those too were the days of much passenger travel on Lake
+Erie, and certain boats came to be known as friendly to the Underground
+cause. One boat which ran between Cleveland and Buffalo gave employment
+to the fugitive William Wells Brown. It became known at Cleveland that
+Brown would take escaped slaves under his protection without charge,
+hence he rarely failed to find a little company ready to sail when he
+started out from Cleveland. "In the year 1842," he says, "I conveyed
+from the 1st of May to the 1st of December, sixty-nine fugitives over
+Lake Erie to Canada."[53] Many anecdotes are told of the search for
+runaways on the lake steamers. Lake travel in the _ante-bellum_ days was
+ever liable to be enlivened by an exciting episode in a "nigger-chase";
+but usually, it would seem, the negroes could rely upon the friendliness
+of the captains for concealment or other assistance.
+
+There are chronicled, too, many little histories of flights which
+brought the fugitive to Buffalo. I pass over those which are readily
+accessible elsewhere to the student of this phase of our home
+history.[54] It is well, however, to devote a paragraph or two to one
+famous affair which most if not all American writers on the Underground
+Railroad appear to have overlooked.
+
+One day in 1836 an intelligent negro, riding a thoroughbred but jaded
+horse, appeared on the streets of Buffalo. His appearance must have
+advertised him to all as a runaway slave. I do not know that he made any
+attempt to conceal the fact. His chief concern was to sell the horse as
+quickly as possible, and get across to Canada. And there, presently, we
+find him, settled at historic old Niagara, near the mouth of the river.
+Here, even at that date, so many negroes had made their way from the
+South, that more than 400 occupied a quarter known as Negro Town. The
+newcomer, whose name was Moseby, admitted that he had run away from a
+plantation in Kentucky, and had used a horse that formerly belonged to
+his master to make his way North. A Kentucky grand jury soon found a
+true bill against him for horse-stealing, and civil officers traced him
+to Niagara, and made requisition for his arrest and extradition. The
+year before, Sir Francis Bond Head had succeeded Sir John Colborne as
+Governor of Canada West, and before him the case was laid. Sir Francis
+regarded the charge as lawful, notwithstanding the avowal of Moseby's
+owners that if they could get him back to Kentucky they would "make an
+example of him"; in plainer words, would whip him to death as a warning
+to all slaves who dared to dream of seeking freedom in Canada.
+
+Moseby was arrested and locked up in the Niagara jail; whereupon great
+excitement arose, the blacks and many sympathizing whites declaring that
+he should never be carried back South. The Governor, Sir Francis, was
+petitioned not to surrender Moseby; he replied that his duty was to give
+him up as a felon, "although he would have armed the province to protect
+a slave." For more than a week crowds of negroes, men and women, camped
+before the jail, day and night. Under the leadership of a mulatto
+schoolmaster named Holmes, and of Mrs. Carter, a negress with a gift for
+making fiery speeches, the mob were kept worked up to a high pitch of
+excitement, although, as a contemporary writer avers, they were
+unarmed, showed "good sense, forbearance and resolution," and declared
+their intention not to commit any violence against the English law. They
+even agreed that Moseby should remain in jail until they could raise the
+price of the horse, but threatened, "if any attempt were made to take
+him from the prison, and send him across to Lewiston, they would resist
+it at the hazard of their lives." The order, however, came for Moseby's
+delivery to the slave-hunters, and the sheriff and a party of constables
+attempted to execute it. Moseby was brought out from the jail,
+handcuffed and placed in a cart; whereupon the mob attacked the
+officers. The military was called out to help the civil force and
+ordered to fire on the assailants. Two negroes were killed, two or three
+wounded, and Moseby ran off and was not pursued. The negro women played
+a curiously-prominent part in the affair. "They had been most active in
+the fray, throwing themselves fearlessly between the black men and the
+whites, who, of course, shrank from injuring them. One woman had seized
+the sheriff, and held him pinioned in her arms; another, on one of the
+artillery-men presenting his piece, and swearing that he would shoot her
+if she did not get out of his way, gave him only one glance of
+unutterable contempt, and with one hand knocking up his piece, and
+collaring him with the other, held him in such a manner as to prevent
+his firing."[55]
+
+Soon after, in the same year, the Governor of Kentucky made requisition
+on the Governor of the province of Canada West for the surrender of
+Jesse Happy, another runaway slave, also on a charge of horse-stealing.
+Sir Francis held him in confinement in Hamilton jail, but refused to
+deliver him up until he had laid the case before the Home Government. In
+a most interesting report to the Colonial Secretary, under date of
+Toronto, Oct. 8, 1837, he asked for instructions "as a matter of general
+policy," and reviewed the Moseby case in a fair and broad spirit, highly
+creditable to him alike as an administrator and a friend of the
+oppressed. "I am by no means desirous," he wrote, "that this province
+should become an asylum for the guilty of any color; at the same time
+the documents submitted with this dispatch will I conceive show that the
+subject of giving up fugitive slaves to the authorities of the adjoining
+republican States is one respecting which it is highly desirable I
+should receive from Her Majesty's Government specific instructions....
+It may be argued that the slave escaping from bondage on his master's
+horse is a vicious struggle between two guilty parties, of which the
+slave-owner is not only the aggressor, but the blackest criminal of the
+two. It is a case of the dealer in human flesh _versus_ the stealer of
+horse-flesh; and it may be argued that, if the British Government does
+not feel itself authorized to pass judgment on the plaintiff, neither
+should it on the defendant." Sir Francis continues in this ingenious
+strain, observing that "it is as much a theft in the slave walking from
+slavery to liberty in his master's shoes as riding on his master's
+horse." To give up a slave for trial to the American laws, he argued,
+was in fact giving him back to his former master; and he held that,
+until the State authorities could separate trial from unjust punishment,
+however willing the Government of Canada might be to deliver up a man
+for trial, it was justified in refusing to deliver him up for
+punishment, "unless sufficient security be entered into in this
+province, that the person delivered up for trial shall be brought back
+to Upper Canada as soon as his trial or the punishment awarded by it
+shall be concluded." And he added this final argument, begging that
+instructions should be sent to him at once:
+
+ It is argued, that the republican states have no right, under the
+ pretext of any human treaty, to claim from the British Government,
+ which does not recognize slavery, beings who by slave-law are not
+ recognized as _men_ and who actually existed as brute beasts in
+ moral darkness, until on reaching British soil they suddenly heard,
+ for the first time in their lives, the sacred words, "Let there be
+ light; and there was light!" From that moment it is argued they
+ were created _men_, and if this be true, it is said they cannot be
+ held responsible for conduct prior to their existence.[56]
+
+Sir Francis left the Home Government in no doubt as to his own feelings
+in the matter; and although I have seen no further report regarding
+Jesse Happy, neither do I know of any case in which a refugee in Canada
+for whom requisition was thus made was permitted to go back to slavery.
+It did sometimes happen, however, that refugees were enticed across the
+river on one pretext or another, or grew careless and took their chances
+on the American side, only to fall into the clutches of the
+ever-watchful slave-hunters.
+
+British love of fair play could be counted on to stand up for the rights
+of the negro on British soil; but that by no means implies that this
+inpouring of ignorant blacks, unfitted for many kinds of pioneer work
+and ill able to withstand the climate, was welcomed by the communities
+in which they settled. At best, they were tolerated. Very different from
+the spirit shown in Sir Francis Bond Head's plea, is the tone of much
+tourist comment, especially during the later years of the Abolition
+movement. Thus, in 1854, the Hon. Amelia M. Murray wrote, just after her
+Niagara visit:
+
+"One of the evils consequent upon Southern Slavery, is the ignorant and
+miserable set of coloured people who throw themselves into Canada.... I
+must regret that the well-meant enthusiasm of the Abolitionists has been
+without judgment."[57] Another particularly unamiable critic, W. Howard
+Russell, a much-exploited English war correspondent who wrote
+voluminously of the United States during the Civil War, and who showed
+less good will to this country than any other man who ever wrote so
+much, came to Niagara in the winter of 1862, and in sourly recording his
+unpleasant impressions wrote: "There are too many free negroes and too
+many Irish located in the immediate neighborhood of the American town,
+to cause the doctrines of the Abolitionists to be received with much
+favor by the American population; and the Irish of course are opposed to
+free negroes, where they are attracted by paper mills, hotel service,
+bricklaying, plastering, housebuilding, and the like--the Americans
+monopolizing the higher branches of labor and money-making, including
+the guide business."[58] A few pages farther on, however, describing his
+sight-seeing on the Canadian side, he speaks of "our guide, a strapping
+specimen of negro or mulatto." Quotations of like purport from English
+writers during the years immediately preceding the Civil War, might be
+multiplied. One rarely will find any opinion at all favorable to the
+refugee black, and never any expression of sympathy with the
+Abolitionists by English tourists who wrote books, or endorsal of the
+work accomplished by the Underground Railroad.
+
+From its importance as a terminal of the Underground, one would look to
+Buffalo for a wealth of reminiscence on this subject. On the contrary,
+comparatively little seems to have been gathered up regarding Buffalo
+stations and workers. The Buffalo of _ante-bellum_ days was not a large
+place, and many "personally-escorted" refugees were taken direct from
+country stations to the river ferries, without having to be hid away in
+the city. Certain houses there were, however, which served as stations.
+One of these, on Ferry Street near Niagara, long since disappeared. When
+the "Morris Butler house," at the corner of Utica Street and Linwood
+Avenue, built about 1857, was taken down a few years ago, hiding-places
+were found on either side of the front door, accessible only from the
+cellar. Old residents then recalled that Mr. Butler was reputed to keep
+the last station on the Underground route to Canada.[59]
+
+Many years before Mr. Butler's time runaway slaves used to appear in
+Buffalo, eagerly asking the way to Canada. Those days were recalled by
+the death, on Aug. 2, 1899, in the Kent County House of Refuge, Chatham,
+Ont., of "Mammy" Chadwick, reputed to be over 100 years old. She was
+born a slave in Virginia; was many times sold, once at auction in New
+Orleans, and later taken to Kentucky. She escaped and made her way by
+the Underground to Buffalo in 1837. She always fixed her arrival at Fort
+Erie as "in de year dat de Queen was crowned." She married in Fort
+Erie, but after a few years went to Chatham, in the midst of a district
+full of refugee blacks, and there she lived for sixty years, rejoicing
+in the distinction of having nursed in their infancy many who became
+Chatham's oldest and most prominent citizens.
+
+There still lives at Fort Erie an active old woman who came to Buffalo,
+a refugee from slavery, some time prior to 1837; she herself says, "a
+good while before the Canadian Rebellion," and her memory is so clear
+and vigorous in general that there appears no warrant for mistrusting it
+on this point. This interesting woman is Mrs. Betsy Robinson, known
+throughout the neighborhood as "Aunt Betsy." She lately told her story
+to me at length. Robbed of all the picturesque detail with which she
+invested it, the bare facts are here recorded. Her father, mother, and
+their seven children were slaves on a plantation in Rockingham County,
+Virginia. There came a change of ownership, and Baker (her father) heard
+he was to be sold to New Orleans--the fate which the Virginia slave most
+dreaded; "and yet," says Aunt Betsy, "I've seen dem slaves, in gangs
+bein' sent off to New Orleans, singin' and playin' on jewsharps, lettin'
+on to be that careless an' happy." But not so Baker. He made ready to
+escape. For a week beforehand his wife hid food in the woods. On a dark
+night the whole family stole away from the plantation, crossed a river,
+probably the north fork of the Shenandoah, and pushed northward. The
+father had procured three "passes," which commended them for assistance
+to friends along the way. According to Aunt Betsy, there were a good
+many white people in the South in those days who helped the runaway. She
+was a little girl then, and she now recalls the child's vivid
+impressions of the weeks they spent traveling and hiding in the
+mountains, which she says were full of rattlesnakes, wolves and deer. It
+was a wild country that they crossed, for they came out near Washington,
+Pa. Here the Quakers helped them; and her father and brothers worked in
+the coal mines for a time. Then they came on to Pittsburg. From that
+city north there was no lack of help. "We walked all the way," she says.
+"There was no railroads in them days, an' I don't remember's we got any
+wagon-rides. You see, we was so many, nine in all. I remember we went to
+Erie, and came through Fredonia. We walked through Buffalo--it was
+little then, you know--and down the river road. My father missed the
+Black Rock ferry an' we went away down where the bridge is now. I
+remember we had to walk back up the river, and then we got brought
+across to Fort Erie. That was a good while before the Canadian
+Rebellion."[60]
+
+Samuel Murray, a free-born negro, came to Buffalo from Reading, Pa., in
+1852. For a time he was employed at the American Hotel, and went to
+work very early in the morning. It was, he has said, a common
+occurrence to meet strange negroes, who would ask him the way to Canada.
+"Many a time," said Murray, "I have gone into the hotel and taken food
+for them. Then I would walk out Niagara Street to the ferry and see them
+on the boat bound for Canada." Mr. Murray has related the following
+incidents:
+
+"There was a free black man living in Buffalo in the '50's who made a
+business of going to the South after the wives of former slaves who had
+found comfortable homes, either in the Northern States or in Canada.
+They paid him well for his work, and he rarely failed to accomplish his
+mission.
+
+"While connected with the Underground Railroad in Buffalo word was sent
+us that a colored man from Detroit, a traitor to his color, was coming
+to Buffalo. This man made a business of informing Southerners of the
+whereabouts of their slaves, and was paid a good sum per head for those
+that they recovered. When we heard that he was coming a meeting was held
+and a committee appointed to arrange for his reception. After being here
+a few days, not thinking that he was known, he was met by the committee
+and taken out in the woods where the Parade House now stands. Here he
+was tied to a tree, stripped and cow-hided until he was almost dead. He
+lay for a time insensible in a pool of his own blood. Finally regaining
+consciousness, he made his way back into Buffalo and as soon as he was
+able complained to the city authorities. His assailants were identified,
+arrested, and locked up in the old jail to await the result of his
+injuries. After a time the excitement caused by the affair subsided and
+the men were let out one day without having been tried." The sympathy of
+the sheriff, and probably that of the community as a whole, was plainly
+not with the renegade who got flogged.
+
+Another celebrated Underground case was the arrest at Niagara Falls of a
+slave named Sneedon, on a charge of murder, undoubtedly trumped up to
+procure his return South. Sneedon is described as a fine-looking man,
+with a complexion almost white. He was brought to trial in Buffalo, when
+Eli Cook pleaded his case so successfully that he was acquitted. No
+sooner was he released than he was spirited away _via_ the Underground
+Railroad.
+
+Niagara Falls, far more than Buffalo, was the scene of interesting
+episodes in the Underground days. Not only did many refugee negroes find
+employment in the vicinity, especially on the Canada side, but many
+Southern planters used to visit there, bringing their retinue of blacks.
+Many a time the trusted body-servant, or slave-girl, would leave master
+or mistress in the discharge of some errand, and never come back.
+Instances are related, too, of sudden meetings, at the Falls hotels,
+between negro waiters and the former masters they had run away from. It
+is recorded that when Gen. Peter B. Porter brought his Kentucky wife
+home with him to Niagara Falls, she was attended by a numerous retinue
+of negro servants, but that one by one they "scented freedom in the air"
+and ran away, though probably not to any immediate betterment of their
+condition.
+
+Henry Clay visited Buffalo in September, 1849. When he left for
+Cleveland his black servant Levi was missing, but whether he had gone
+voluntarily or against his wishes Mr. Clay was uncertain. "There are
+circumstances having a tendency both ways," he wrote to Lewis L. Hodges
+of Buffalo, in his effort to trace the lost property. "If voluntarily, I
+will take no trouble about him, as it is probable that in a reversal of
+our conditions I would have done the same thing."[61] The absentee had
+merely been left in Buffalo--probably he missed the boat--and reported
+in due time to his master at Ashland. The incident, however, suggests
+the hazards of Northern travel which in those years awaited wealthy
+Southerners, who were fond of making long sojourns at Niagara Falls,
+accompanied by many servants.
+
+An "old resident of Buffalo" is to be credited with the following
+reminiscence:
+
+"I remember one attempt that was made to capture a runaway slave. It was
+right up here on Niagara Street. The negro ventured out in daytime and
+was seized by a couple of men who had been on the watch for him. The
+slave was a muscular fellow, and fought desperately for his liberty; but
+his captors began beating him over the head with their whips, and he
+would have been overpowered and carried off if his cries had not
+attracted the attention of two Abolitionists, who ran up and joined in
+the scuffle. It was just above Ferry Street, and they pulled and hauled
+at that slave and pounded him and each other until it looked as though
+somebody would be killed. At last, however, the slave, with the help of
+his friends, got away and ran for his life, and the slave-chasers and
+the Abolitionists dropped from blows to high words, the former
+threatening prosecutions and vengeance, but I presume nothing came of
+it."[62]
+
+Nowhere were the friends of the fugitive more active or more successful
+than in the towns along the south shore of Lake Erie, from Erie to
+Buffalo.[63] Some years ago it was my good fortune to become acquainted
+with Mr. Frank Henry of Erie, who had been a very active "conductor" on
+the Underground.[64] From him I had the facts of the following
+experiences, which he had not in earlier years thought it prudent to
+make public. These I now submit, partly in Mr. Henry's own language, as
+fairly-illustrative episodes in the history of Underground trails at the
+eastern end of Lake Erie.
+
+In the year 1841 Capt. David Porter Dobbins, afterwards Superintendent
+of Life Saving Stations in the Ninth U. S. District, including Lakes
+Erie and Ontario, was a citizen of Erie. In politics he was one of the
+sturdy, old-time Democrats, not a few of whom, in marked contrast to
+their "Copperhead" neighbors, secretly sympathized with and aided the
+runaway slaves. Capt. Dobbins had in his employ a black man named
+William Mason, his surname being taken, as was the usual, but not
+invariable, custom among slaves, from that of his first master. Now
+Mason, some time before he came into the employ of Capt. Dobbins, had
+apparently become tired of getting only the blows and abuse of an
+overseer in return for his toil; so one night he quietly left his "old
+Kentucky home," determined to gain his freedom or die in the attempt. In
+good time he succeeded in getting to Detroit, then a small town; and
+there he found work, took unto himself a wife, and essayed to settle
+down. Instead, however, of settling, he soon found himself more badly
+stirred up than ever before, for his wife proved to be a veritable
+she-devil in petticoats, with a tongue keener than his master's lash.
+They parted, and the unfaithful wife informed against him to the
+slave-hunters. Mason fled, made his way to Erie, and was given work by
+Capt. Dobbins. He was a stalwart negro, intelligent above the average,
+altogether too fine a prize to let slip easily, and the professional
+slave-hunters lost no time in hunting him out.
+
+For many years prior to the Civil War a large class of men made their
+living by ferreting out and recapturing fugitive slaves and returning
+them to their old masters; or, as was often the case, selling them into
+slavery again. Free black men, peaceful citizens of the Northern States,
+were sometimes seized, to be sold to unscrupulous men who stood ever
+ready to buy them. There was but little hope for the negro who found
+himself carried south of Mason and Dixon's line in the clutches of these
+hard men, who were generally provided with a minute description of
+runaways from the border States, and received a large commission for
+capturing and returning them into bondage.
+
+One day, as Mason was cutting up a quarter of beef in Capt. Dobbins's
+house, two men came in, making plausible excuses. Mason saw they were
+watching him closely, and his suspicions were at once aroused.
+
+"Is your name William?" one of them asked.
+
+"No," said Mason curtly, pretending to be busy with his beef.
+
+Then they told him to take off his shoe and let them see if there was a
+scar on his foot. On his refusing to do so, they produced handcuffs and
+called on him to surrender. Livid with desperation and fear, Mason
+rushed upon them with his huge butcher-knive, and the fellows took to
+their heels to save their heads. They lost no time in getting a warrant
+from a magistrate on some pretext or other, and placed it in the hands
+of an officer for execution.
+
+While the little by-play with the butcher-knife was going on, Capt.
+Dobbins had entered the house, and to him Mason rushed in appeal.
+Swearing "by de hosts of heaben" that he would never be captured, he
+piteously begged for help and the protection of his employer. And in
+Capt. Dobbins he had a friend who was equal to any emergency. Calling
+Mason from the room his employer hurried with him to Josiah Kellogg's
+house, then one of the finest places in Erie, with a commanding view
+from its high bank over lake and bay.[65] To this house Mason was
+hurried, and Mrs. Kellogg comprehended the situation at a glance. The
+fugitive was soon so carefully hidden that, to use the Captain's
+expression, "The Devil himself couldn't have found him, sir!"
+
+Expeditious as they were, they had been none too quick. Capt. Dobbins
+had scarcely regained his own door, when the two slave-hunters came
+back with the sheriff and demanded Mason.
+
+"Search the premises at your pleasure," was the response.
+
+The house was ransacked from cellar to garret, but, needless to say,
+Mason was not to be found.
+
+There was living in Erie at that time a big burly negro, Lemuel Gates by
+name, whose strength was only surpassed by his good nature. He was
+willing enough to lend himself to the cause of humanity. The Captain
+owned a very fast horse, and while the officer and his disappointed and
+suspicious companions were still lurking around, just at nightfall, he
+harnessed his horse into the buggy and seated the Hercules by his side.
+All this was quietly done in the barn with closed doors. At a given
+signal, the servant-girl threw open the doors, the Captain cracked his
+whip, and out they dashed at full speed. He took good care to be seen
+and recognized by the spies on watch, and then laid his course for
+Hamlin Russell's house at Belle Valley. Mr. Russell was a noted
+Abolitionist, and lived on a cross-road between the Wattsburg and Lake
+Pleasant roads. Just beyond Marvintown, at Davison's, the Lake Pleasant
+road forks off from the Wattsburg road to the right. The travelers took
+the Lake road. When Mr. Russell's house was reached, the Captain slipped
+a half-eagle into the hand of his grinning companion, with the needless
+advice that it would be well to make tracks for home as fast as
+possible. Mr. Russell was told of the clever ruse, and then Capt.
+Dobbins drove leisurely homeward. At the junction of the two roads he
+met the officer and his comrades in hot pursuit.
+
+"Where is Mason?" they demanded.
+
+"Find out," was the Captain's only answer, as he drove quietly along,
+chuckling to himself over the success of his strategy; while the
+slave-hunters worked themselves into a passion over a fruitless search
+of Mr. Russell's innocent premises.
+
+Early one morning a few days afterward, as Capt. Dobbins was on the bank
+of the lake, he saw a vessel round the point of the Peninsula, sail up
+the channel, and cast anchor in Misery Bay, then, and for many years
+afterwards, a favorite anchorage for wind-bound vessels. Soon a yawl was
+seen to put off for the shore with the master of the vessel aboard.
+Capt. Dobbins contrived to see him during the day, and was delighted to
+find him an old and formerly intimate shipmate. The ship-master heartily
+entered into the Captain's plans, and it was agreed to put Mason aboard
+of the vessel at two o'clock the next morning.
+
+At the time of which we write, the steamer docks and lumber-yards which
+later were built along the shore at that point, were yet undreamed of,
+and the waters of the bay broke unhindered at the foot of the high bank
+on which stood Mrs. Kellogg's house, where Mason was hid. It would not
+do openly to borrow a boat, and Capt. Dobbins had no small difficulty in
+getting a craft for the conveyance of his _protégé_ to the vessel. At
+last, late at night, a little, leaky old skiff was temporarily
+confiscated. By this time a strong breeze had sprung up, and it was
+difficult to approach the shore. A tree had fallen over the bank with
+its top in the water, and the Captain found precarious anchorage for his
+leaky tub by clinging to its branches. With a cry like the call of the
+whip-poor-will the runaway was summoned. In his hurry to get down the
+bank he slipped and fell headlong into the fallen treetop; while a small
+avalanche of stones and earth came crashing after and nearly swamped the
+boat. When the boat had been lightened of its unexpected cargo, the
+voyage across the bay began. The poor darky, however, was no sooner sure
+that his neck was not broken by the tumble, than he was nearly dead with
+the fear of drowning. Their boat, a little skiff just big enough for one
+person, leaked like a sieve, and soon became water-logged in the seaway.
+Mason's hat was a stiff "plug," a former gift of charity. It had
+suffered sorely by the plunge down the bank, but its ruin was made
+complete by the Captain ordering its owner to fall to and bail out the
+boat with it. The brim soon vanished, but the upper part did very well
+as a bucket; and the owner consoled himself that in thus sacrificing his
+hat he saved his life. It was a close call for safety. The Captain
+tugged away at the oars as never before, and the shivering negro scooped
+away for dear life to keep the boat afloat. In after years Capt. Dobbins
+experienced shipwreck more than once, but he used to say that never had
+he been in greater peril than when making that memorable trip across
+Presque Isle Bay in the wild darkness and storm of midnight. The vessel
+was at length reached. She was loaded with staves, and a great hole was
+made in the deck load, within which Mason was snugly stowed away, while
+the staves were piled over him again. Capt. Dobbins reached the mainland
+in safety before daylight, and during the morning had the satisfaction
+of seeing the wind haul around off land, when the vessel weighed anchor
+and sailed away.
+
+Knowing that pursuit was impossible (there were no steam tugs on the bay
+in those days), Capt. Dobbins quietly told the officer that he was tired
+of being watched, and that if he would come along, he would show him
+where Mason was. The Captain had notified some of his friends, and when
+the bank of the lake was reached, a crowd had gathered, for the affair
+had created quite a stir in the village.
+
+"Do you see that sail?" said the Captain, pointing to the retreating
+vessel.
+
+"Well?" was the impatient answer.
+
+"Mason is aboard of her," was the quiet reply. The befooled magistrate
+of the law, who had taken great care to bring handcuffs for his expected
+prisoner, acknowledged himself beaten; while the "nigger-chasers" were
+glad to sneak off, followed by the shouts and jeers of the crowd.
+"Pretty well done--for a Democrat," said Mr. Russell to the Captain a
+few days afterwards. "After your conversion to our principles you will
+make a good Abolitionist."
+
+Some years after the event above narrated, as Capt. Dobbins[66] was in
+the cabin of his vessel as she lay at Buffalo, a respectably-dressed
+black man was shown into the cabin. It was Mason, who had come to repay
+his benefactor with thanks and even with proffered money. He had settled
+somewhere back of Kingston, Ontario, on land which the Canadian
+Government at that time gave to actual settlers. He had married an
+amiable woman, and was prosperous and happy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I give the following incident substantially as it was set down for me by
+Mr. Frank Henry:
+
+In the summer of 1858 Mr. Jehiel Towner (now deceased) sent me a note
+from the city of Erie, asking me to call on him that evening. When night
+came I rode into town from my home in Harborcreek, and saw Mr. Towner.
+"There are three 'passengers' hidden in town, Henry," said he, "and we
+must land them somewhere on the Canada shore. You are just the man for
+this work; will you undertake to get them across?"
+
+You must remember that we never had anything to do with "runaway
+niggers" in those days, nor even with "fugitive slaves"; we simply
+"assisted passengers." I knew well enough that there was a big risk in
+the present case, but I promised to do my part, and so after talking
+over matters a little I drove home.
+
+The next night just about dusk a wagon was driven into my yard. The
+driver, one Hamilton Waters, was a free mulatto, known to everybody
+around Erie. He had brought a little boy with him as guide, for he was
+almost as blind as a bat. In his wagon were three of the
+strangest-looking "passengers" I ever saw; I can remember how oddly they
+looked as they clambered out of the wagon. There was a man they called
+Sam, a great strapping negro, who might have been forty years old. He
+was a loose-jointed fellow, with a head like a pumpkin, and a mouth like
+a cavern, its vast circumference always stretched in a glorious grin;
+for no matter how badly Sam might feel, or how frightened, the grin had
+so grown into his black cheeks that it never vanished. I remember how, a
+few nights after, when the poor fellow was scared just about out of his
+wits, his grin, though a little ghastly, was as broad as ever. Sam was
+one of the queerest characters I ever met. His long arms seemed all
+wrists, his legs all ankles; and when he walked, his nether limbs had a
+flail-like flop that made him look like a runaway windmill. The bases
+upon which rested this fearfully-and wonderfully-made superstructure
+were abundantly ample. On one foot he wore an old shoe--at least number
+twelve in size--and on the other a heavy boot; and his trousers-legs, by
+a grim fatality, were similarly unbalanced, for while the one was tucked
+into the boot-top, its fellow, from the knee down, had wholly vanished.
+Sam wore a weather-beaten and brimless "tile" on his head, and in his
+hand carried an old-fashioned long-barreled rifle. He set great store
+by his "ole smooth bo'," though he handled it in a gingerly sort of way,
+that suggested a greater fear of its kicks than confidence in its aim.
+Sam's companions were an intelligent-looking negro about twenty-five
+years old, named Martin, and his wife, a pretty quadroon girl, with thin
+lips and a pleasant voice, for all the world like _Eliza_ in "Uncle
+Tom's Cabin." She carried a plump little piccaninny against her breast,
+over which a thin shawl was tightly drawn. She was an uncommonly
+attractive young woman, and I made up my mind then and there that she
+shouldn't be carried back to slavery if I had any say in the matter.
+
+The only persons besides myself who knew of their arrival were William
+P. Trimble and Maj. F. L. Fitch. The party was conducted to the old
+Methodist church in Wesleyville, which had served for a long time as a
+place of rendezvous and concealment. Except for the regular Sunday
+services, and a Thursday-night prayer-meeting, the church was never
+opened, unless for an occasional funeral, and so it was as safe a place
+as could well have been found. In case of unexpected intruders, the
+fugitives could crawl up into the attic and remain as safe as if in
+Liberia.
+
+It was my plan to take the "passengers" from the mouth of Four-Mile
+Creek across the lake to Long Point light-house, on the Canada shore,
+but the wind hung in a bad quarter for the next two or three days, and
+our party had to keep in the dark. One rainy night, however--it was a
+miserable, drizzling rain, and dark as Egypt--I was suddenly notified
+that a sailboat was in readiness off the mouth of Four-Mile Creek. At
+first I was at a loss what to do. I didn't dare go home for provisions,
+for I had good reason to believe that my house was nightly watched by a
+cowardly wretch, whose only concern was to secure the $500 offered by
+Sam's former master for the capture of the slaves. In the vicinity lived
+a well-to-do farmer, a devoted pro-slavery Democrat. Notwithstanding his
+politics, I knew the man was the soul of honor, and possessed a great
+generous heart. So I marshaled my black brigade out of the church, and
+marched them off, through the rain, single file, to his house. In answer
+to our knock, our friend threw open the door; then, with a thousand
+interrogation points frozen into his face, he stood for a minute, one
+hand holding a candle above his head, the other shading his eyes, as he
+stared at the wet and shivering group of darkies, the very picture of
+dumfounded astonishment. In less time than it takes to tell it, however,
+he grasped the situation, hustled us all into the house and shut the
+door with a most expressive slam.
+
+"What in ---- does all this mean?" was his pious ejaculation.
+
+He saw what it meant, and it needed but few words of explanation on my
+part. "They are a party of fugitives from slavery," said I, calling our
+friend by name. "We are about to cross the lake to Canada; the party are
+destitute and closely pursued; their only crime is a desire for freedom.
+This young woman and mother has been sold from her husband and child to
+a dealer in the far South, and if captured, she will be consigned to a
+life of shame." The story was all too common in those days, and needed
+no fine words. The young girl's eyes pleaded more forcibly than any
+words I could have spoken.
+
+"Well--what do you want of me?" demanded our host, trying hard to look
+fierce and angry.
+
+"Clothing and provisions," I replied.
+
+"Now look here," said he, in his gruffest voice, "this is a bad job--bad
+job." Then, turning to the negroes: "Better go back. Canada is full of
+runaway niggers now. They're freezin' and starvin' by thousands. Was
+over in Canada t'other day. Saw six niggers by the roadside, with their
+heads cut off. Bones of niggers danglin' in the trees. Crows pickin'
+their eyes out. _You_ better go back, d'ye _hear_?" he added, turning
+suddenly towards Sam.
+
+Poor Sam shook in his shoes, and his eyes rolled in terror. He fingered
+his cherished smooth-bore as though uncertain whether to shoot his
+entertainer, or save all his ammunition for Canada crows, while he cast
+a helpless look of appeal upon his companions. The young woman, however,
+with her keener insight, had seen through the sham brusqueness of their
+host; and although she was evidently appalled by the horrible picture of
+what lay before them across the lake, her heart told her it was
+immeasurably to be preferred to a return to the only fate which awaited
+her in the South. Her thoughts lay in her face, and our friend read
+them; and not having a stone in his broad bosom, but a big, warm,
+thumping old heart, was moved to pity and to aid. He set about getting a
+basket of provisions. Then he skirmished around and found a blanket and
+hood for the woman; all the time declaring that _he_ never would help
+runaway niggers, no sir! and drawing (for Sam's especial delectation)
+the most horrible pictures of Canadian hospitality that he could conjure
+up. "You'll find 'em on shore waitin' for ye," said he; "they'll catch
+ye and kill ye and string ye up for a scare-crow." Seeing that Sam was
+coatless, he stripped off his own coat and bundled it upon the
+astonished darky with the consoling remark: "When they get hold of _you_
+they'll tan your black hide, stretch it for drum-heads, and beat 'God
+Save the Queen' out of ye every day in the year."
+
+All being in readiness, our benefactor plunged his hand into his pocket,
+and pulling it out full of small change thrust it into the woman's
+hands, still urging them to go back to the old life. At the door Sam
+turned back and spoke for the first time:
+
+"Look 'e hyar, Massa, you's good to we uns an' 'fo' de Lo'd I tank yer.
+Ef enny No'then gemmen hankah fur my chances in de Souf, I' zign in dair
+favo'. 'Fo' de good Lo'd I tank ye, Massa, I does, _shuah_!"
+
+Here Sam's feelings got the better of him, and we were hurrying off,
+when our entertainer said:
+
+"See here, now, Henry, remember you were never at my house with a lot of
+damned niggers in the night. Do you understand?"
+
+"All right, sir. You are the last man who would ever be charged with
+Abolitionism, and that's the reason why we came here tonight. Mum is the
+word."
+
+The rain had stopped and the stars were shining in a cheerful way as we
+all trudged down the wet road to the lake shore. Our boat was found
+close in shore, and Martin and his wife had waded out to it, while Sam
+and I stood talking in low tones on the beach. Suddenly a crash like the
+breaking of fence-boards was heard on the bank near by, and to the
+westward of us. We looked up quickly and saw the form of a man climb
+over the fence and then crouch down in the shadow. Up came Sam's rifle,
+and with a hurried aim he fired at the moving object. His old gun was
+trusty and his aim true, and had it not been for a lucky blow from my
+hand, which knocked the gun upwards just as he fired, and sent the ball
+whistling harmlessly over the bank, there'd have been one less mean man
+in the world, and we should have had a corpse to dispose of. I scrambled
+up the bank, with my heart in my mouth, I'll confess, just in time to
+see the sneak scurry along in the direction of the highway. I watched a
+long time at the creek after the boat left, and seeing no one astir
+started for home. By the time I reached the Lake road the moon had come
+up, and a fresh carriage-track could be plainly seen. I followed it down
+the road a short distance, when it turned, ran across the sod, and ended
+at the fence, which had been freshly gnawed by horses. It then turned
+back into the highway, followed up the crossroad to Wesleyville, and
+thence came to the city.
+
+The fugitives reached the promised land in safety, and I heard from them
+several times thereafter. The man Sam subsequently made two or three
+successful trips back to the old home, once for a wife and afterwards
+for other friends. He made some money in the Canada oil fields, and some
+time after sent me $100, $50 for myself to invest in books, and $50 for
+the fishermen who carried them safely across to Long Point and liberty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of all the places which have sheltered the fugitive slave there is none
+better known, along the southeastern shore of Lake Erie, than the old
+Methodist church at Wesleyville, Erie Co., Pennsylvania. It stands today
+much as it stood a half century since; though repairs have been made
+from time to time, and of late years modern coal stoves have replaced
+the capacious but fervid old wood-eaters known as box-stoves. Dedicated
+to God, it has been doubly hallowed by being devoted to the cause of
+humanity. To more than one wretch, worn out with the toils of a long
+flight, it has proved a glorious house of refuge; and if safety lay not
+within the shadow of its sacred altar, it surely did amidst the shadowy
+gloom of its dingy garret.
+
+In the year 1856 there lived in Caldwell County, in western Kentucky, a
+well-to-do farmer named Wilson. He owned a large and well-stocked farm,
+which he had inherited, with several slaves, from his father. Mr. Wilson
+was an easy-going and indulgent master, and reaped a greater reward of
+affection from his "people" than he did of pecuniary gain from his
+plantation. In the autumn of the above-named year he died, and his
+servants were divided among the heirs, who lived in Daviess County, in
+the same State. Two of the slaves, Jack and Nannie, a young man and his
+sister, fell to the lot of a hard master named Watson. The housekeeper
+dying, Nannie was taken from the field to fill her place. Nothing could
+have been worse for the poor girl. She was handsome, her young master a
+brute. Because she defended her honor she was cruelly punished and
+locked up for many hours. Her brother succeeded in freeing her, and
+together they fled, only to be recaptured. They were whipped so terribly
+that the girl Nannie died. Jack survived, heart-broken, quiet for a
+time, but with a growing resolve in his heart. One night his master came
+home from a debauch, and ordered Jack to perform some unreasonable and
+impossible task. Because the poor boy failed, the master flew at him
+with an open knife. It was death for one of them. The image of poor Nan,
+beaten to an awful death, rose before Jack's eyes. In a moment he became
+a tiger. Seizing a cart-stake, he dealt his master a blow that killed
+him. The blood of his sister was avenged.
+
+Once more Jack fled. The murder of the master had aroused the
+neighborhood. Blood-hounds, both brute and human, scoured the woods and
+swamps; flaming handbills offered great rewards for Jack Watson, dead or
+alive. With incredible cunning, and grown wary as a wild animal, Jack
+lurked in the vicinity a long time. When the excitement had somewhat
+abated, he found his way to Salem, Ohio, and was for a time in the
+employ of a worthy Quaker named Bonsell, whose descendants still live in
+that locality. It was then a neighborhood of Friends, and Jack's life
+among them brought him great good. He learned to read and write, and
+became in heart and conduct a changed man. His life, however, was
+haunted by two ghastly forms; and as often as the image of his murdered
+master rose before him, that of Nan came also to justify the deed. These
+apparitions wore upon him, and made his life unnatural and highly
+sensitive. On one occasion, while in Pittsburg, he saw what he took to
+be the ghost of his murdered master coming toward him in the street. He
+turned and fled in abject terror, much to the astonishment of all
+passers-by. Long afterward he learned that the supposed apparition was a
+half-brother of his former master.
+
+Jack now determined to devote his life to freeing his countrymen from
+bondage. In due time he found his way to the house of Mr. John Young, a
+noted Abolitionist of Wilmington township, in Mercer County,
+Pennsylvania. Mr. Young was one of the first men in Mercer County to
+proclaim his political convictions to the world, and to stand by them,
+bravely and consistently, and through many a dangerous hour, until
+slavery was a thing of the past. No man ever asked brave John Young for
+help and was refused. His house was known among Abolitionists far and
+wide as a safe station for the Underground Road.
+
+While Jack was at Mr. Young's he fell in with a young minister, himself
+a former fugitive from Kentucky, and who was at the time an earnest
+Baptist preacher in Syracuse, N. Y. This friend, named Jarm W. Loguen,
+promised Jack shelter if he could but reach Syracuse, and so Jack was
+"forwarded" along the road.
+
+When he reached Erie, the late Mr. Thomas Elliott, of Harborcreek,
+carried him to Wesleyville. His pursuers were incidentally heard of as
+being in the vicinity of Meadville, and it was necessary to proceed with
+great caution; so Jack was hidden away for a few days beneath the
+shelter of the old church roof.
+
+It so happened that at this time a protracted meeting was in progress in
+the church. It was a great awakening, well remembered yet in the
+neighborhood. There were meetings every night, though the church was
+shut up during the day. During the evening meetings Jack would stay
+quietly concealed in the garret; but after the congregation dispersed
+and the key was turned in the door, he would descend, stir up a rousing
+fire, and make himself as comfortable as possible until the meeting-hour
+came round again. It is related that Mr. David Chambers generously kept
+the house supplied with fuel; and his boys, to whose lot fell the
+manipulation of the wood-pile, were in constant wonder at the
+disappearance of the wood. "I shan't be very sorry when this revival
+winds up," said one of them confidentially to the other; "it takes an
+awful lot of wood to run a red-hot revival." The meanwhile black Jack
+toasted his shins by the revival fire, and found, no doubt, a deal of
+comfort in the sacred atmosphere of the sheltering church.
+
+The meetings grew in interest with every night. Scores were gathered
+into the fold of the church, and the whole community, young and old,
+were touched by the mysterious power. The meetings were conducted by the
+Rev. John McLean, afterwards a venerable superannuate of the East Ohio
+Conference, yet living (at least a few years ago) in Canfield, Mahoning
+County, Ohio; by the Rev. B. Marsteller, and others. The interest came
+to a climax one Sunday night. A most thrilling sermon had been preached.
+Every heart was on fire with the sacred excitement, and it seemed as if
+the Holy Spirit were almost tangible in their very midst. The church was
+full, even to the gallery that surrounds three sides of the interior.
+Methodists are not--at least were not in those days--afraid to shout;
+and Jack, hidden above the ceiling, had long been a rapt listener to the
+earnest exhortations. His murder, his people in bondage, all the sorrows
+and sins of his eventful life, rose before his eyes. Overcome with
+contrition, he knelt upon the rickety old boards, and poured out his
+troubles in prayer. Meanwhile, down below, the excitement grew. The Rev.
+James Sullivan made an impassioned exhortation, and when he finished,
+the altar was crowded with penitents. The service resolved itself into a
+general prayer-meeting. Men embraced each other in the aisles, or knelt
+in tearful prayer together; while shouts of victory and groans of
+repentance filled the church. God bless the good old-fashioned shouting
+Methodists, who shouted all the louder as the Lord drew near! Some of
+the old revival hymns, sent rolling across winter fields, and throbbing
+and ringing through the midnight air, would set the very universe
+rejoicing, and scatter the legions of Satan in dismay. Alas that the
+religion of lungs--the shouting, noisy, devout, glorious old worship, is
+passing away! The whispers of the Devil too often drown the modulations
+of modern prayer, and instead of glorified visions of angels and the
+saints, the eyes of modern worshipers rest weariedly upon the things of
+the world.
+
+As the tide of excitement swelled higher and wilder that night, it
+caught poor Jack, up in the garret. Through narrow cracks he could see
+the emotions and devotions of the audience; and in his enthusiasm he
+wholly forgot that he was in concealment and his presence known to only
+two or three of the worshipers.
+
+"Come up, sinners, come up to the Throne of Grace and cast your heavy
+burdens down," called the pastor, his face aglow with exercise and
+emotion, and his heart throbbing with exultation. "Praise be to God on
+High for this glorious harvest of souls."
+
+"Glory, glory, amen!" rose from all parts of the church.
+
+"Glory, glory, amen!" came back a voice from the unknown above.
+
+The hubbub was at such a pitch down stairs that Jack's unconscious
+response was scarcely heard; but to those in the gallery it was plainly
+audible.
+
+"Lord God of Sabbaoth," prayed the minister, "come down upon us tonight.
+Send Thy Spirit into our midst!"
+
+"Amen! glory! hallelujah!" shouted Jack in the garret.
+
+The people in the gallery were in holy fear. "It is Gabriel," they said.
+
+"We come to Thee, Lord! We come, we come!" cried the repentent sinners
+down stairs.
+
+"I come, I come, glory to God, hallelujah, amen!" shouted back the
+Gabriel in the garret, clapping his hands in the fervor of his ecstacy.
+
+All at once his Abolition friends below heard him. They were struck with
+consternation and looked at each other in dismay. If Jack was
+discovered, there would be trouble; they must quiet him at any hazard.
+"The idea of that nigger getting the power in the garret! A stop must be
+put to that at once. A revival in full blast is an unusual treat for an
+Underground Railroad traveler; he should take with gratitude what he
+could hear, and keep still for the safety of his skin." So thought his
+frightened friends, who at once cast about for means to quiet him.
+
+Now it so happened--how fortunate that there is always a way out of a
+dilemma!--that the old stove-pipe, which connected with the chimney in
+the attic, frequently became disconnected; and on more than one occasion
+incipient fires had started among the dry boards of the garret floor.
+The people were used to seeing the boys go aloft to look after the
+safety of the house; so, when Dempster M. Chambers, a son of Mr.
+Stewart Chambers, inspired by a happy thought, scrambled up the ladder
+and crawled through the trap-door into the gloom, those who noticed it
+thought only that the old stove-pipe had slipped out, and continued to
+throw their sins as fuel into the general religious blaze; or thinking
+of the fires of hell, gave little heed to lesser flames. Jack was soon
+quieted, and the meeting, having consumed itself with its own fervor,
+broke up without further incident. There is no doubt, however, that
+certain worthy people who were seated in the gallery have ever stoutly
+maintained that the Angel Gabriel actually replied to the prayers of
+that memorable night.[67]
+
+In due time Jack Watson reached the home of his friend, the Rev. Jarm W.
+Loguen; and during the dark days of the War he rendered valuable aid to
+the Union cause along the Kentucky and Virginia borders, and in one
+guerrilla skirmish he lost his left arm. A few years since he was still
+living on a preëmpted land-claim in Rice County, Kansas.
+
+The following incident, connected with Watson's career, will not be out
+of place in closing this sketch:
+
+Some years since the Rev. Glezen Fillmore, a famous pioneer of the
+Methodist Episcopal Church in Buffalo, and for more than half a century
+an honored member of the Genesee Conference, was engaged in raising
+funds for the Freedmen's Aid Society. One day his cousin, the late
+ex-President Millard Fillmore, rode out from Buffalo to visit him.
+During the conversation the venerable preacher related the story of
+Watson's escape, as Watson himself had told it while at Fillmore's
+Underground Railroad depot. The former President was strongly touched by
+the story, and at its close he drew a check for fifty dollars for the
+Freedmen. "Thank you, thank you," said the good old parson. "I was
+praying that the Lord would open your heart to give ten dollars, and
+here are fifty."
+
+No study of Underground Railroad work in this region, even though, like
+the present paper, it aims to be chiefly anecdotal, can neglect
+recognition of the fact that it was a Buffalo man in the Presidential
+chair who, by signing the Fugitive Slave act of 1850, brought upon his
+head the maledictions of the Abolitionists, who were so stimulated
+thereby in their humanitarian law-breaking, that the most active period
+in Underground Railroad work dates from the stroke of Millard Fillmore's
+pen which sought to put a stop to it. No passage in American history
+displays more acrimony than this. Wherever the friends of the negro were
+at work on Underground lines, Mr. Fillmore was denounced in the most
+intemperate terms. In his home city of Buffalo, some who had hitherto
+prided themselves upon his distinguished acquaintance, estranged
+themselves from him, and on his return to Buffalo he found cold and
+formal treatment from people whom he had formerly greeted as friends.
+Insults were offered him; and the changed demeanor of many of his
+townsmen showed itself even in the church which he attended. Certain
+ardent souls there were who refused any longer to worship where he
+did.[68] Mr. Fillmore met all these hostile demonstrations, as he
+sustained the angry protests and denunciations of the Abolitionists in
+general, in dignified impurturbability, resting his case upon the
+constitutionality of his conduct. The act of 1850 reaffirmed the act of
+1793, and both rested upon the explicit provision in the Constitution
+which declares that "no person held to service or labor in one State
+under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of
+any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor;
+but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or
+labor may be due." Obviously, so far as this section was concerned, many
+people of the North were in rebellion against the Constitution of the
+United States for many years before the Civil War. That the work of the
+Underground Railroad was justifiable in the humanitarian aspect needs no
+argument now. But the student of that period cannot overcome the legal
+stand taken by Mr. Fillmore, his advisers and sympathizers, unless he
+asserts, as Mr. Seward asserted, that the provision of the Constitution
+relating to the rendition of slaves was of no binding force. "The law of
+nations," he declared, "disavows such compacts--the law of nature
+written on the hearts and consciences of men repudiates them."[69] This
+was met by the plausible assertion that "the hostility which was
+directed against the law of 1850 would have been equally violent against
+any law which effectually carried out the provision of the
+Constitution."[70] During the years that followed, efforts were made to
+recover fugitive slaves under this law. Special officers were appointed
+to execute it, but in most Northern communities they were regarded with
+odium, and every possible obstacle put in the way of the discharge of
+their offensive duties. Many tragic affairs occurred; but the
+organization of the Underground Railroad was too thorough, its operation
+was in the hands of men too discreet and determined, to be seriously
+disturbed by a law which found so little moral support in the
+communities through which its devious trails ran. Thus the work went on,
+through civil contention and bloody war, until the Emancipator came to
+loose all shackles, to put an end to property in slaves, and to stop all
+work, because abolishing all need, of the Underground Railroad.
+
+
+
+
+Niagara and the Poets.
+
+
+
+
+NIAGARA AND THE POETS.
+
+
+On a day in July, 1804, a ruddy-faced, handsome young Irishman, whose
+appearance must have commanded unusual attention in wild frontier
+surroundings, came out of the woods that overlooked Lake Erie, picking
+his way among the still-standing stumps, and trudged down the Indian
+trail, which had not long been made passable for wagons. Presently he
+came into the better part of the road, named Willink Avenue, passed a
+dozen scattered houses, and finally stopped at John Crow's log tavern,
+the principal inn of the infant Buffalo. He was dusty, tired, and
+disgusted with the fortune that had brought an accident some distance
+back in the woods, compelling him to finish this stage of his journey,
+not merely on foot, but disabled. Here, surrounded by more Indians than
+whites, he lodged for a day or so before continuing his journey to
+Niagara Falls; and here, according to his own testimony, he wrote a long
+poem, which was not only, in all probability, the first poem ever
+composed in Buffalo, and one of the bitterest tirades against America
+and American institutions to be found in literature; but which
+contained, so far as I have been able to discover, the first allusion to
+Niagara Falls, written by one who actually traveled thither, in the
+poetry of any language.
+
+The poetry of Niagara Falls is contemporary with the first knowledge of
+the cataract among civilized men. One may make this statement with
+positiveness, inasmuch as the first book printed in Europe which
+mentions Niagara Falls contains a poem in which allusion is made to that
+wonder. This work is the excessively rare "Des Sauvages" of Champlain
+(Paris, 1604),[71] in which, after the dedication, is a sonnet,
+inscribed "Le Sievr de la Franchise av discovrs Dv Sievr Champlain." It
+seems proper, in quoting this first of all Niagara poems, to follow as
+closely as may be in modern type the archaic spelling of the original:
+
+ Mvses, si vous chantez, vrayment ie vous conseille
+ Que vous louëz Champlain, pour estre courageux:
+ Sans crainte des hasards, il a veu tant de lieux,
+ Que ses relations nous contentent l'oreille.
+ Il a veu le Perou,[72] Mexique & la Merueille
+ Du Vulcan infernal qui vomit tant de feux,
+ Et les saults Mocosans,[73] qui offensent les yeux
+ De ceux qui osent voir leur cheute nonpareille.
+ Il nous promet encor de passer plus auant,
+ Reduire les Gentils, & trouuer le Leuant,
+ Par le Nort, ou le Su, pour aller à la Chine.
+ C'est charitablement tout pour l'amour de Dieu.
+ Fy des lasches poltrons qui ne bougent d'vn lieu!
+ Leur vie, sans mentir, me paroist trop mesquine.
+
+I regret that some research has failed to discover any further
+information regarding the poet De la Franchise. Obviously, he took
+rather more than the permissible measure of poet's license in saying
+that Champlain had seen Peru, a country far beyond the known range of
+Champlain's travels. But in the phrase "_les saults Mocosans_," the
+falls of Mocosa, we have the ancient name of the undefined territory
+afterwards labeled "Virginia." The intent of the allusion is made
+plainer by Marc Lescarbot, who in 1610 wrote a poem in which he speaks
+of "great falls which the Indians say they encounter in ascending the
+St. Lawrence as far as the neighborhood of Virginia."[74] The allusion
+can only be to Niagara.
+
+It is gratifying to find our incomparable cataract a theme for song,
+even though known only by aboriginal report, thus at the very dawn of
+exploration in this part of America. It is fitting, too, that the French
+should be the first to sing of what they discovered. More than a century
+after De la Franchise and Lescarbot, a Frenchman who really saw the
+falls introduced them to the muse, though only by a quotation. This was
+Father Charlevoix, who, writing "From the Fall of Niagara, May 14,
+1721," to the Duchess of Lesdiguieres, was moved to aid his description
+by quoting poetry. "Ovid," the priest wrote to the duchess, "gives us
+the description of such another cataract, situated according to him in
+the delightful valley of Tempe. I will not pretend that the country of
+Niagara is as fine as that, though I believe its cataract much the
+noblest of the two," and he thereupon quotes these lines from the
+"Metamorphoses":
+
+ Est nemus Hæmoniæ, prærupta quod undique claudit
+ Sylva; vocant Tempe, per quæ Peneus ab imo
+ Effusus Pindo spumosis volvitur undis,
+ Dejectisque gravi tenues agitantia fumos
+ Nubila conducit, summisque aspergine sylvas,
+ Impluit, et sonitu plusquam vicina fatigat.
+
+It would be strange if there were not other impressionable Frenchmen who
+composed or quoted verses expressive of Niagara's grandeur, during the
+eighty-one years that elapsed between the French discovery of Niagara
+Falls and the English Conquest--a period of over three-quarters of a
+century during which earth's most magnificent cataract belonged to
+France. But if priest or soldier, coureur-de-bois or verse-maker at the
+court of Louis said aught in meter of Niagara in all that time, I have
+not found it.
+
+A little thunder by Sir William Johnson's guns at Fort Niagara, a little
+blood on the Plains of Abraham, and Niagara Falls was handed over to
+Great Britain. Four years after the Conquest English poetry made its
+first claim to our cataract. In 1764 appeared that ever-delightful work,
+"The Traveller, or, a Prospect of Society," wherein we read:
+
+ Have we not seen at pleasure's lordly call
+ The smiling long-frequented village fall?
+ Behold the duteous son, the sire decayed,
+ The modest matron or the blushing maid,
+ Forced from their homes, a melancholy train,
+ To traverse climes beyond the western main;
+ Where wild Oswego spreads her swamps around
+ And Niagara[75] stuns with thundering sound.
+ Even now, perhaps, as there some pilgrim strays
+ Through tangled forests and through dangerous ways,
+ Where beasts with man divided empire claim,
+ And the brown Indian marks with murderous aim;
+ There, while above the giddy tempest flies,
+ And all around distressful yells arise,
+ The pensive exile, bending with his woe,
+ To stop too fearful and too faint to go,
+ Casts a long look where England's glories shine,
+ And bids his bosom sympathize with mine.[76]
+
+Obviously, Oliver Goldsmith's "Traveller," in its American allusions,
+reflected the current literature of those years when Englishmen heard
+more of Oswego than they ever have since. Niagara and Oswego were
+uttermost points told of in the dispatches, during that long war,
+reached and held by England's "far-flung battle line"; but if Britain's
+poets found any inspiration in Niagara's mighty fount for a half century
+after Goldsmith, I know it not.
+
+And this brings us again to our first visiting poet, Tom Moore, whose
+approach to Niagara by way of Buffalo in 1804 has been described.
+Penning an epistle in rhyme from "Buffalo, on Lake Erie," to the Hon. W.
+R. Spencer--writing, we are warranted in fancying, after a supper of
+poor bacon and tea, or an evening among the loutish Indians who hung
+about Crow's log-tavern--he recorded his emotions in no amiable mood:
+
+ Even now, as wandering upon Erie's shore
+ I hear Niagara's distant cataract roar,[77]
+ I sigh for home--alas! these weary feet
+ Have many a mile to journey, ere we meet.
+
+Niagara in 1804 was most easily approached from the East by schooner on
+Lake Ontario from Oswego, though the overland trail through the woods
+was beginning to be used. Moore came by the land route. The record of
+the journey is to be found in the preface to his American Poems, and in
+his letters to his mother, published for the first time in his
+"Memoirs, Journal and Correspondence," edited by Earl Russell and issued
+in London and Boston in 1853-'56. The letters narrating his adventures
+in the region are dated "Geneva, Genessee County, July 17, 1804";
+"Chippewa, Upper Canada, July 22d"; "Niagara, July 24th";--in which he
+copies a description of the falls from his journal, not elsewhere
+published--and "Chippewa, July 25th," signed "Tom." There is no mention
+in these letters of Buffalo, but in the prefatory narrative above
+alluded to we have this interesting account of the visit:
+
+ It is but too true, of all grand objects, whether in nature or art,
+ that facility of access to them much diminishes the feeling of
+ reverence they ought to inspire. Of this fault, however, the route
+ to Niagara, at this period--at least the portion of it which led
+ through the Genesee country--could not justly be accused. The
+ latter part of the journey, which lay chiefly through yet but
+ half-cleared woods, we were obliged to perform on foot; and a
+ slight accident I met with in the course of our rugged walk laid me
+ up for some days at Buffalo.
+
+And so laid up--perhaps with a blistered heel--he sought relief by
+driving his quill into the heart of democracy. His friend, he lamented,
+had often told him of happy hours passed amid the classic associations
+and art treasures of Italy:
+
+ But here alas, by Erie's stormy lake,
+ As far from such bright haunts my course I take,
+ No proud remembrance o'er the fancy plays,
+ No classic dream, no star of other days
+ Hath left the visionary light behind,
+ That lingering radiance of immortal mind,
+ Which gilds and hallows even the rudest scene,
+ The humblest shed where Genius once had been.
+
+He views, not merely his immediate surroundings in the pioneer village
+by Lake Erie, but the general character of the whole land:
+
+ All that creation's varying mass assumes,
+ Of grand or lovely, here aspires and blooms.
+ Bold rise the mountains, rich the gardens glow,
+ Bright lakes expand and conquering rivers flow;
+ But mind, immortal mind, without whose ray
+ This world's a wilderness and man but clay,
+ Mind, mind alone, in barren still repose,
+ Nor blooms, nor rises, nor expands, nor flows.
+ Take Christians, Mohawks, democrats and all,
+ From the rude wigwam to the Congress Hall,
+ From man the savage, whether slaved or free,
+ To man the civilized, less tame than he,
+ 'Tis one dull chaos, one unfertile strife
+ Betwixt half-polished and half-barbarous life;
+ Where every ill the ancient world could brew
+ Is mixed with every grossness of the new;
+ Where all corrupts, though little can entice,
+ And naught is known of luxury, but its vice!
+ Is this the region then, is this the clime
+ For soaring fancies? for those dreams sublime,
+ Which all their miracles of light reveal
+ To heads that meditate and hearts that feel?
+ Alas! not so!
+
+And after much more of proud protest against Columbia and "the mob mania
+that imbrutes her now," our disapproving poet turned in to make the
+best, let us hope, of Landlord Crow's poor quarters, and to prepare for
+Niagara. Years afterwards he admitted that there was some soul for song
+among the men of the Far West of that day. Very complacently he tells us
+that "Even then, on the shores of those far lakes, the title of
+'Poet'--however in that instance unworthily bestowed--bespoke a kind and
+distinguished welcome for its wearer. The captain who commanded the
+packet in which I crossed Lake Ontario, in addition to other marks of
+courtesy, begged, on parting with me, to be allowed to decline payment
+for my passage." I cannot do better than to quote further from his
+account of the visit to the falls:
+
+ When we arrived at length at the inn, in the neighborhood of the
+ Falls, it was too late to think of visiting them that evening; and
+ I lay awake almost the whole night with the sound of the cataract
+ in my ears. The day following I consider as a sort of era in my
+ life; and the first glimpse I caught of that wonderful cataract
+ gave me a feeling which nothing in this world can ever awaken
+ again. It was through an opening among the trees, as we approached
+ the spot where the full view of the Falls was to burst upon us,
+ that I caught this glimpse of the mighty mass of waters falling
+ smoothly over the edge of the precipice; and so overwhelming was
+ the notion it gave me of the awful spectacle I was approaching,
+ that during the short interval that followed, imagination had far
+ outrun the reality--and vast and wonderful as was the scene that
+ then opened upon me, my first feeling was that of disappointment.
+ It would have been impossible, indeed, for anything real to come up
+ to the vision I had, in these few seconds, formed of it, and those
+ awful scriptural words, 'The fountains of the great deep were
+ broken up,' can alone give any notion of the vague wonders for
+ which I was prepared.
+
+ But, in spite of the start thus got by imagination, the triumph of
+ reality was, in the end, but the greater; for the gradual glory of
+ the scene that opened upon me soon took possession of my whole
+ mind; presenting from day to day, some new beauty or wonder, and
+ like all that is most sublime in nature or art, awakening sad as
+ well as elevating thoughts. I retain in my memory but one other
+ dream--for such do events so long past appear--which can by any
+ respect be associated with the grand vision I have just been
+ describing; and however different the nature of their appeals to
+ the imagination, I should find it difficult to say on which
+ occasion I felt most deeply affected, when looking at the Falls
+ of Niagara, or when standing by moonlight among the ruins of the
+ Coliseum.
+
+It was the tranquillity and unapproachableness of the great fall, in the
+midst of so much turmoil, which most impressed him. He tried to express
+this in a Song of the Spirit of the region:
+
+ There amid the island sedge,
+ Just upon the cataract's edge,
+ Where the foot of living man
+ Never trod since time began,
+ Lone I sit at close of day,[78] ...
+
+The poem as a whole, however, is not a strong one, even for Tom Moore.
+
+As the Irish bard sailed back to England, another pedestrian poet was
+making ready for a tour to Niagara. This was the Paisley weaver,
+rhymster and roamer, Alexander Wilson, whose fame as an ornithologist
+outshines his reputation as a poet. Yet in him America has--by
+adoption--her Oliver Goldsmith. In 1794, being then twenty-eight years
+old, he arrived in Philadelphia. For eight years he taught school, or
+botanized, roamed the woods with his gun, worked at the loom, and
+peddled his verses among the inhabitants of New Jersey. In October,
+1804, accompanied by his nephew and another friend, he set out on a
+walking expedition to Niagara, which he satisfactorily accomplished. His
+companions left him, but he persevered, and reached home after an
+absence of fifty-nine days and a walk of 1,260 miles. It is very
+pleasant, especially for one who has himself toured afoot over a
+considerable part of this same route, to follow our naturalist poet and
+his friends on their long walk through the wilderness, in the pages of
+Wilson's descriptive poem, "The Foresters." Its first edition, it is
+believed, is a quaint little volume of 106 pages, published at Newtown,
+Penn., in 1818.[79] The route led through Bucks and Northumberland
+counties, over the mountains and up the valley of the Susquehanna; past
+Newtown, N. Y., now Elmira, and so on to the Indian village of
+Catherine, near the head of Seneca Lake. Here, a quarter of a century
+before, Sullivan and his raiders had brought desolation, traces of which
+stirred our singer to some of his loftiest flights. In that romantic
+wilderness of rocky glen and marsh and lake, the region where Montour
+Falls and Watkins now are, Wilson lingered to shoot wild fowl. Thence
+the route lay through that interval of long ascents--so long that the
+trudging poet thought
+
+ To Heaven's own gates the mountain seemed to rise
+
+--and equally long descents, from Seneca Lake to Cayuga. Here, after a
+night's rest, under a pioneer's roof:
+
+ Our boat now ready and our baggage stored,
+ Provisions, mast and oars and sails aboard,
+ With three loud cheers that echoed from the steep,
+ We launched our skiff "Niagara" to the deep.
+
+Down to old Cayuga bridge they sailed and through the outlet, passed the
+salt marshes and so on to Fort Oswego. That post had been abandoned on
+the 28th of October, about a week before Wilson arrived there. A
+desolate, woebegone place he found it:
+
+ Those struggling huts that on the left appear,
+ Where fence, or field, or cultured garden green,
+ Or blessed plough, or spade were never seen,
+ Is old Oswego; once renowned in trade,
+ Where numerous tribes their annual visits paid.
+ From distant wilds, the beaver's rich retreat,
+ For one whole moon they trudged with weary feet;
+ Piled their rich furs within the crowded store,
+ Replaced their packs and plodded back for more.
+ But time and war have banished all their trains
+ And naught but potash, salt and rum remains.
+ The boisterous boatman, drunk but twice a day,
+ Begs of the landlord; but forgets to pay;
+ Pledges his salt, a cask for every quart,
+ Pleased thus for poison with his pay to part.
+ From morn to night here noise and riot reign;
+ From night to morn 'tis noise and roar again.
+
+Not a flattering picture, truly, and yet no doubt a trustworthy one, of
+this period in Oswego's history.
+
+But we must hurry along with the poet to his destination, although the
+temptation to linger with him in this part of the journey is great.
+Indeed, "The Foresters" is a historic chronicle of no slight value.
+There is no doubting the fidelity of its pictures of the state of nature
+and of man along this storied route as seen by its author at the
+beginning of the century; while his poetic philosophizing is now shrewd,
+now absurd, but always ardently American in tone.
+
+Our foresters undertook to coast along the Ontario shore in their frail
+"Niagara"; narrowly escaped swamping, and were picked up by
+
+ A friendly sloop for Queenstown Harbor bound,
+
+where they arrived safely, after being gloriously seasick. It was the
+season of autumn gales. A few days before a British packet called the
+Speedy, with some twenty or thirty persons on board, including a judge
+advocate, other judges, witnesses and an Indian prisoner, had foundered
+and every soul perished. No part of the Speedy was afterwards found but
+the pump, which Wilson says his captain picked up and carried to
+Queenston.
+
+Wilson had moralized, philosophized and rhapsodized all the way from the
+Schuylkill. His verse, as he approaches the Mecca of his wanderings,
+fairly palpitates with expectation and excitement. He was not a bard to
+sing in a majestic strain, but his description of the falls and their
+environment is vivid and of historic value. As they tramped through the
+forest,--
+
+ Heavy and slow, increasing on the ear,
+ Deep through the woods a rising storm we hear.
+ Th' approaching gust still loud and louder grows,
+ As when the strong northeast resistless blows,
+ Or black tornado, rushing through the wood,
+ Alarms th' affrighted swains with uproar rude.
+ Yet the blue heavens displayed their clearest sky,
+ And dead below the silent forests lie;
+ And not a breath the lightest leaf assailed;
+ But all around tranquillity prevailed.
+ "What noise is that?" we ask with anxious mien,
+ A dull salt-driver passing with his team.
+ "Noise? noise?--why, nothing that I hear or see
+ But Nagra Falls--Pray, whereabouts live ye?"
+
+This touch of realism ushers in a long and over-wrought description of
+the whole scene. The "crashing roar," he says,
+
+ ---- bade us kneel and Time's great God adore.
+
+Whatever may have been his emotions, his adjectives are sadly
+inadequate, and his verse devoid of true poetic fervor. More than one of
+his descriptive passages, however, give us those glimpses of conditions
+past and gone, which the historian values. For instance, this:
+
+ High o'er the wat'ry uproar, silent seen,
+ Sailing sedate, in majesty serene,
+ Now midst the pillared spray sublimely lost,
+ Swept the gray eagles, gazing calm and slow,
+ On all the horrors of the gulf below;
+ Intent, alone, to sate themselves with blood,
+ From the torn victims of the raging flood.
+
+Wilson was not the man to mistake a bird; and many other early travelers
+have testified to the former presence of eagles in considerable numbers,
+haunting the gorge below the falls in quest of the remains of animals
+that had been carried down stream.
+
+Moore, as we have seen, denounced the country for its lack of
+
+ That lingering radiance of immortal mind
+
+which so inspires the poet in older lands. He was right in his fact, but
+absurd in his fault-finding. It has somewhere been said of him, that
+Niagara Falls was the only thing he found in America which overcame his
+self-importance; but we must remember his youth, the flatteries on which
+he had fed at home and the crudities of American life at that time. For
+a quarter of a century after Tom Moore's visit there was much in the
+crass assertiveness of American democracy which was as ridiculous in its
+way as the Old-World ideas of class and social distinctions were in
+their way--and vastly more vulgar and offensive. Read, in evidence, Mrs.
+Trollope and Capt. Basil Hall, two of America's severest and sincerest
+critics. It should be put down to Tom Moore's credit, too, that before
+he died he admitted to Washington Irving and to others that his writings
+on America were the greatest sin of his early life.[80]
+
+Like Moore, Alexander Wilson felt America's lack of a poet; and, like
+Barlow and Humphreys and Freneau and others of forgotten fame, he
+undertook--like them again, unsuccessfully--to supply the lack. There is
+something pathetic--or grotesque, as we look at it--in the patriotic
+efforts of these commonplace men to be great for their country's sake.
+
+ To Europe's shores renowned in deathless song,
+
+asks Wilson,
+
+ Must all the honors of the bard belong?
+ And rural Poetry's enchanting strain
+ Be only heard beyond th' Atlantic main?
+ Yet Nature's charms that bloom so lovely here,
+ Unhailed arrive, unheeded disappear;
+ While bare black heaths and brooks of half a mile
+ Can rouse the thousand bards of Britain's Isle.
+ There, scarce a stream creeps down its narrow bed,
+ There scarce a hillock lifts its little head,
+ Or humble hamlet peeps their glades among
+ But lives and murmurs in immortal song.
+ Our Western world, with all its matchless floods,
+ Our vast transparent lakes and boundless woods,
+ Stamped with the traits of majesty sublime,
+ Unhonored weep the silent lapse of time,
+ Spread their wild grandeur to the unconscious sky,
+ In sweetest seasons pass unheeded by;
+ While scarce one Muse returns the songs they gave,
+ Or seeks to snatch their glories from the grave.
+
+This solicitude by the early American writers, lest the poetic themes of
+their country should go unsung, contrasts amusingly, as does Moore's
+ill-natured complaining, with the prophetic assurance of Bishop
+Berkeley's famous lines, written half a century or so before, in
+allusion to America:
+
+ The muse, disgusted at an age and clime
+ Barren of every glorious theme,
+ In distant lands now waits a better time,
+ Producing subjects worthy fame.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ Westward the course of empire takes its way, ...
+
+I have found no other pilgrim poets making Niagara their theme, until
+the War of 1812 came to create heroes and leave ruin along the frontier,
+and stir a few patriotic singers to hurl back defiance to the British
+hordes. Iambic defiance, unless kindled by a grand genius, is a poor
+sort of fireworks, even when it undertakes to combine patriotism and
+natural grandeur. Certainly something might be expected of a poet who
+sandwiches Niagara Falls in between bloody battles, and gives us the
+magnificent in nature, the gallant in warfare and the loftiest
+patriotism in purpose, the three strains woven in a triple pæan of
+passion, ninety-four duodecimo pages in length. Such a work was offered
+to the world at Baltimore in 1818, with this title-page: "Battle of
+Niagara, a Poem Without Notes, and Goldau, or the Maniac Harper. Eagles
+and Stars and Rainbows. By Jehu O' Cataract, author of 'Keep Cool.'" I
+have never seen "Keep Cool," but it must be very different from the
+"Battle of Niagara," or it belies its name. The fiery Jehu O' Cataract
+was John Neal.[81]
+
+The "Battle of Niagara," he informs the reader, was written when he was
+a prisoner; when he "felt the victories of his countrymen." "I have
+attempted," he says, "to do justice to American scenery and American
+character, not to versify minutiæ of battles." The poem has a metrical
+introduction and four cantos, in which is told, none too lucidly, the
+story of the battle of Niagara; with such flights of eagles,
+scintillation of stars and breaking of rainbows, that no brief quotation
+can do it justice. In style it is now Miltonic, now reminiscent of
+Walter Scott. The opening canto is mainly an apostrophe to the Bird, and
+a vision of glittering horsemen. Canto two is a dissertation on Lake
+Ontario, with word-pictures of the primitive Indian. The rest of the
+poem is devoted to the battle near the great cataract--and throughout
+all are sprinkled the eagles, stars and rainbows. Do not infer from this
+characterization that the production is wholly bad; it is merely a good
+specimen of that early American poetry which was just bad enough to
+escape being good.
+
+A brief passage or two will sufficiently illustrate the author's trait
+of painting in high colors. He is a word-impressionist whose brush, with
+indiscreet dashes, mars the composition. I select two passages
+descriptive of the battle:
+
+ The drum is rolled again. The bugle sings
+ And far upon the wind the cross flag flings
+ A radiant challenge to its starry foe,
+ That floats--a sheet of light!--away below,
+ Where troops are forming--slowly in the night
+ Of mighty waters; where an angry light
+ Bounds from the cataract, and fills the skies
+ With visions--rainbows--and the foamy dyes
+ That one may see at morn in youthful poets' eyes.
+
+ Niagara! Niagara! I hear
+ Thy tumbling waters. And I see thee rear
+ Thy thundering sceptre to the clouded skies:
+ I see it wave--I hear the ocean rise,
+ And roll obedient to thy call. I hear
+ The tempest-hymning of thy floods in fear;
+ The quaking mountains and the nodding trees--
+ The reeling birds and the careering breeze--
+ The tottering hills, unsteadied in thy roar;
+ Niagara! as thy dark waters pour
+ One everlasting earthquake rocks thy lofty shore!
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ The cavalcade went by. The day hath gone;
+ And yet the soldier lives; his cheerful tone
+ Rises in boisterous song; while slowly calls
+ The monarch spirit of the mighty falls:
+ Soldier, be firm! and mind your watchfires well;
+ Sleep not to-night!
+
+The following picture of the camp at sunset, as the reveille rings over
+the field, and Niagara's muffled drums vibrate through the dusk,
+presents many of the elements of true poetry:
+
+ Low stooping from his arch, the glorious sun
+ Hath left the storm with which his course begun;
+ And now in rolling clouds goes calmly home
+ In heavenly pomp adown the far blue dome.
+ In sweet-toned minstrelsy is heard the cry,
+ All clear and smooth, along the echoing sky,
+ Of many a fresh-blown bugle full and strong,
+ The soldier's instrument! the soldier's song!
+ Niagara, too, is heard; his thunder comes
+ Like far-off battle--hosts of rolling drums.
+ All o'er the western heaven the flaming clouds
+ Detach themselves and float like hovering shrouds.
+ Loosely unwoven, and afar unfurled,
+ A sunset canopy enwraps the world.
+ The Vesper hymn grows soft. In parting day
+ Wings flit about. The warblings die away,
+ The shores are dizzy and the hills look dim,
+ The cataract falls deeper and the landscapes swim.
+
+Jehu O' Cataract does not always hold his fancy with so steady a rein as
+this. He is prone to eccentric flights, to bathos and absurdities. His
+apostrophe to Lake Ontario, several hundred lines in length, has many
+fine fancies, but his luxuriant imagination continually wrecks itself on
+extravagancies which break down the effect. This I think the following
+lines illustrate:
+
+ ... He had fought with savages, whose breath
+ He felt upon his cheek like mildew till his death.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ So stood the battle. Bravely it was fought,
+ Lions and Eagles met. That hill was bought
+ And sold in desperate combat. Wrapped in flame,
+ Died these idolaters of bannered fame.
+ Three times that meteor hill was bravely lost--
+ Three times 'twas bravely won, while madly tost,
+ Encountering red plumes in the dusky air;
+ While Slaughter shouted in her bloody lair,
+ And spectres blew their horns and shook their whistling hair.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+There are allusions to Niagara in some of the ballads of the War of
+1812, one of the finest of which, "Sea and Land Victories," beginning
+
+ With half the western world at stake
+ See Perry on the midland lake,--
+
+appeared in the Naval Songster of 1815, and was a great favorite half a
+century or more ago. So far, however, as the last War with Great Britain
+has added to our store of poetry by turning the attention of the poets
+to the Niagara region as a strikingly picturesque scene of war, there is
+little worthy of attention. One ambitious work is remembered, when
+remembered at all, as a curio of literature. This is "The Fredoniad, or
+Independence Preserved," an epic poem by Richard Emmons, a Kentuckian,
+afterwards a physician of Philadelphia. He worked on it for ten years,
+finally printed it in 1826, and in 1830 got it through a second edition,
+ostentatiously dedicated to Lafayette. "The Fredoniad" is a history in
+verse of the War of 1812; it was published in four volumes; it has forty
+cantos, filling 1,404 duodecimo pages, or a total length of about 42,000
+lines. The first and second cantos are devoted to Hell, the third to
+Heaven, and the fourth to Detroit. About one-third of the whole work is
+occupied with military operations on the Niagara frontier. Nothing from
+Fort Erie to Fort Niagara escapes this meter-machine. The Doctor's
+poetic feet stretch out to miles and leagues, but not a single verse do
+I find that prompts to quotation; though, I am free to confess, I have
+not read them all, and much doubt if any one save the infatuated author,
+and perhaps his proof-reader, ever did read the whole of "The
+Fredoniad."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No sooner was the frontier at peace, and the pathways of travel
+multiplied and smoothed, than there set in the first great era of
+tourist travel to Niagara. From 1825, when the opening of the Erie Canal
+first made the falls easily accessible to the East, the tide of visitors
+steadily swelled. In that year came one other poetizing pilgrim, from
+York, now Toronto, who, returning home, published in his own city a
+duodecimo of forty-six pages, entitled "Wonders of the West, or a Day at
+the Falls of Niagara in 1825. A Poem. By a Canadian." The author was J.
+S. Alexander, said to have been a Toronto school-teacher. It is a great
+curio, though of not the least value as poetry; in fact, as verse it is
+ridiculously bad. The author does not narrate his own adventures at
+Niagara, but makes his descriptive and historical passages incidental to
+the story of a hero named _St. Julian_. Never was the name of this
+beloved patron saint of travelers more unhappily bestowed, for this _St.
+Julian_ is a lugubrious, crack-brained individual who mourns the
+supposed death of a lady-love, _Eleanor St. Fleur_. Other characters are
+introduced; all French except a remarkable driver named _Wogee_, who
+tells legends and historic incidents in as good verse, apparently, as
+the author was able to produce. _St. Julian_ is twice on the point of
+committing suicide; once on Queenston Heights, and again at the falls.
+Just as he is about to throw himself into the river he hears his
+_Ellen's_ voice--the lady, it seems, had come from France by a different
+route--all the mysteries are cleared up, and the reunited lovers and
+their friends decide to "hasten hence,"
+
+ Again to our dear native France,
+ Where we shall talk of all we saw,
+ At thy dread falls, Niagara.[82]
+
+From about this date the personal adventures of individuals bound for
+Niagara cease to be told in verse, and if they were they would cease to
+be of much historic interest. The relation of the poets to Niagara no
+longer concerns us because of its historic aspect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There remains, however, an even more important division of the subject.
+The review must be less narrative than critical, to satisfy the natural
+inquiry, What impress upon the poetry of our literature has this
+greatest of cataracts made during the three-quarters of a century that
+it has been easily accessible to the world? What of the supreme in
+poetry has been prompted by this mighty example of the supreme in
+nature? The proposition at once suggests subtleties of analysis which
+must not be entered upon in this brief survey. The answer to the
+question is attempted chiefly by the historical method. A few selected
+examples of the verse which relates to Niagara will, by their very
+nature, indicate the logical answer to the fundamental inquiry.
+
+There is much significance in the fact, that what has been called the
+best poem on Niagara was written by one who never saw the falls.
+Chronologically, so far as I have ascertained, it is the work which
+should next be considered, for it appeared in the columns of a
+New-England newspaper, about the time when the newly-opened highway to
+the West robbed Niagara forever of her majestic solitude, and filled the
+world with her praise. They may have been travelers' tales that
+prompted, but it was the spiritual vision of the true poet that inspired
+the lines printed in the _Connecticut Mirror_ at Hartford, about 1825,
+by the delicate, gentle youth, John G. C. Brainard. It is a poem much
+quoted, of a character fairly indicated by these lines:
+
+ It would seem
+ As if God formed thee from his "hollow hand"
+ And hung his bow upon thine awful front;
+ And spoke in that loud voice, which seemed to him
+ Who dwelt in Patmos for his Savior's sake,
+ "The sound of many waters"; and bade
+ Thy flood to chronicle the ages back,
+ And notch his centuries in the eternal rocks.
+
+Measured by the strength of an Emerson or a Lowell, this is but feeble
+blank verse, approaching the bombastic; but as compared with what had
+gone before, and much that was to follow, on the Niagara theme, it is a
+not unwelcome variation.
+
+The soul's vision, through imagination's magic glass, receives more of
+Poesy's divine light than is shed upon all the rapt gazers at the
+veritable cliff and falling flood.
+
+During the formative years of what we now regard as an established
+literary taste, but which later generations will modify in turn, most
+American poetry was imitative of English models. Later, as has been
+shown, there was an assertively patriotic era; and later still, one of
+great laudation of America's newly-discovered wonders, which in the case
+of Niagara took the form of apostrophe and devotion. To the patriotic
+literature of Niagara, besides examples already cited, belongs Joseph
+Rodman Drake's "Niagara," printed with "The Culprit Fay, and Other
+Poems" in 1835.[83] It is a poem which would strike the critical ear of
+today, I think, as artificial; its sentiment, however, is not to be
+impeached. The poet sings of the love of freedom which distinguishes the
+Swiss mountaineer; of the sailor's daring and bravery; of the soldier's
+heroism, even to death. Niagara, like the alp, the sea, and the battle,
+symbolizes freedom, triumph and glory:
+
+ Then pour thy broad wave like a flood from the heavens,
+ Each son that thou rearest, in the battle's wild shock,
+ When the death-speaking note of the trumpet is given,
+ Will charge like thy torrent or stand like thy rock.
+
+ Let his roof be the cloud and the rock be his pillow,
+ Let him stride the rough mountain or toss on the foam,
+ Let him strike fast and well on the field or the billow,
+ In triumph and glory for God and his home!
+
+Nine years after Drake came Mrs. Sigourney, who, notwithstanding her
+genuine love of nature and of mankind, her sincerity and occasional
+genius, was hopelessly of the sentimental school. Like Frances S.
+Osgood, N. P. Willis and others now lost in even deeper oblivion, she
+found great favor with her day and generation. Few things from her
+ever-productive pen had a warmer welcome than the lines beginning:
+
+ Up to the table-rock, where the great flood
+ Reveals its fullest glory,
+
+and her "Farewell to Niagara," concluding
+
+ ... it were sweet
+ To linger here, and be thy worshipper,
+ Until death's footstep broke this dream of life.
+
+Supremely devout in tone, her Niagara poems are commonplace in
+imagination. Her fancy rarely reaches higher than the perfectly obvious.
+I confess that I cannot read her lines without a vision of the lady
+herself standing in rapt attitude on the edge of Table Rock, with
+note-book in hand and pencil uplifted to catch the purest inspiration
+from the scene before her. She is the type of a considerable train of
+writers whose Niagara effusions leave on the reader's mind little
+impression beyond an iterated "Oh, thou great Niagara, Oh!" Such a one
+was Richard Kelsey, whose "Niagara and Other Poems," printed in London
+in 1848, is likely to be encountered in old London bookshops. I have
+read Mr. Kelsey's "Niagara" several times. Once when I first secured the
+handsome gilt-edged volume; again, later on, to discover why I failed to
+remember any word or thought of it; and again, in the preparation of
+this paper, that I might justly characterize it. But I am free to
+confess that beyond a general impression of Parnassian attitudinizing
+and extravagant apostrophe I get nothing out of its pages. Decidedly
+better are the lines "On Visiting the Falls of Niagara," by Lord
+Morpeth, the Earl of Carlisle, who visited Niagara in 1841.[84] He, too,
+begins with the inevitable apostrophe:
+
+ There's nothing great or bright, thou glorious fall!
+ Thou mayst not to the fancy's sense recall--
+
+but he saves himself with a fairly creditable sentiment:
+
+ Oh! may the wars that madden in thy deeps
+ There spend their rage nor climb the encircling steeps,
+ And till the conflict of thy surges cease
+ The nations on thy bank repose in peace.
+
+A British poet who should perhaps have mention in this connection is
+Thomas Campbell, whose poem, "The Emigrant," contains an allusion to
+Niagara. It was published anonymously in 1823 in the _New Monthly
+Magazine_, which Campbell then edited.[85]
+
+No poem on Niagara that I know of is more entitled to our respectful
+consideration than the elaborate work which was published in 1848 by the
+Rev. C. H. A. Bulkley of Mt. Morris, N. Y. It is a serious attempt to
+produce a great poem with Niagara Falls as its theme. Its length--about
+3,600 lines--secures to Western New York the palm for elaborate
+treatment of the cataract in verse. "Much," says the author, "has been
+written hitherto upon Niagara in fugitive verse, but no attempt like
+this has been made to present its united wonders as the theme of a
+single poem. It seems a bold adventure and one too hazardous, because of
+the greatness of the subject and the obscurity of the bard; but his
+countrymen are called upon to judge it with impartiality, and pronounce
+its life or its death. The author would not shrink from criticism....
+His object has been, not so much to describe at length the scenery of
+Niagara in order to excite emotions in the reader similar to those of
+the beholder, for this would be a vain endeavor, as to give a transcript
+of what passes through the mind of one who is supposed to witness so
+grand an achievement of nature. The difficulty," he adds, "with those
+who visit this wonderful cataract is to give utterance to those feelings
+and thoughts that crowd within and often, because thus pent up, produce
+what may be termed the pain of delight."
+
+Of a poem which fills 132 duodecimo pages it is difficult to give a fair
+idea in a few words. There is an introductory apostrophe, followed by a
+specific apostrophe to the falls as a vast form of life. Farther on the
+cataract is apostrophized as a destroyer, as an historian, a warning
+prophet, an oracle of truth, a tireless laborer. There are many passages
+descriptive of the islands, the gorge, the whirlpool, etc. Then come
+more apostrophes to the fall respecting its origin and early life. It is
+viewed as the presence-chamber of God, and as a proof of Deity. Finally,
+we have the cataract's hymn to the Creator, and the flood's death-dirge.
+
+No long poem is without its commonplace intervals. Mr. Bulkley's
+"Niagara" has them to excess, yet as a whole it is the work of a refined
+and scholarly mind, its imagination hampered by its religious habit, but
+now and than quickened to lofty flights, and strikingly sustained and
+noble in its diction. Only a true poet takes such cognizance of initial
+impulses and relations in nature as this:
+
+ In thy hoarse strains is heard the desolate wail
+ Of streams unnumbered wandering far away,
+ From mountain homes where, 'neath the shady rocks
+ Their parent springs gave them a peaceful birth.
+
+It presents many of the elements of a great poem, reaching the climax in
+the cataract's hymn to the Creator, beginning
+
+ Oh mighty Architect of Nature's home!
+
+At about this period--to be exact, in 1848--there was published in New
+York City, as a pamphlet or thin booklet, a poem entitled "Niagara," by
+"A Member of the Ohio Bar," of whose identity I know nothing. It is a
+composition of some merit, chiefly interesting by reason of its
+concluding lines:
+
+ ... Then so live,
+ That when in the last fearful mortal hour,
+ Thy wave, borne on at unexpected speed,
+ O'erhangs the yawning chasm, soon to fall,
+ Thou start not back affrighted, like a youth
+ That wakes from sleep to find his feeble bark
+ Suspended o'er Niagara, and with shrieks
+ And unavailing cries alarms the air,
+ Tossing his hands in frenzied fear a moment,
+ Then borne away forever! But with gaze
+ Calm and serene look through the eddying mists,
+ On Faith's unclouded bow, and take thy plunge
+ As one whose Father's arms are stretched beneath,
+ Who falls into the bosom of his God!
+
+The close parallelism of these lines with the exalted conclusion of
+"Thanatopsis" is of course obvious; but they embody a symbolism which is
+one of the best that has been suggested by Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the sublime to the ridiculous was never a shorter descent than in
+this matter of Niagara poetry. At about the time Mr. Bulkley wrote, and
+for some years after, it was the pernicious custom to keep public albums
+at the Table Rock and other points at the falls, for the record of
+"impressions." Needless to say, these albums filled up with rubbish. To
+bad taste was added the iniquity of publication, so that future
+generations may be acquainted with one of the least creditable of native
+American literary whims. The editor of one of these albums, issued in
+1856, lamented that "the innumerable host of visitors who have
+perpetrated composition in the volumes of manuscript now before us,
+should have added so little to the general stock of legitimate and
+permanent literature"; and he adds--by way seemingly of adequate
+excuse--that "the actual amount of frivolous nonsense which constitutes
+so large a portion of the contents ... is not all to be calculated by
+the specimens now and then exhibited. We have given the best," he says,
+"always taking care that decency shall not be outraged, nor delicacy
+shocked; and in this respect, however improbable it may seem, precaution
+has been by no means unnecessary." What a commentary on the sublime in
+nature, as reflected on man in the mass!
+
+These Table-Rock Albums contain some true poetry; much would-be fine
+verse which falls below mediocre; much of horse-play or puerility; and
+now and then a gleam of wit. Here first appeared the lines which I
+remember to have conned years ago in a school-rhetoric, and for which, I
+believe, N. P. Willis was responsible:
+
+ To view Niagara Falls one day,
+ A parson and a tailor took their way;
+ The parson cried, whilst wrapped in wonder,
+ And listening to the cataract's thunder,
+ "Lord! how thy works amaze our eyes,
+ And fill our hearts with vast surprise";--
+ The tailor merely made his note:
+ "Lord! what a place to sponge a coat!"
+
+There has been many a visitor at Niagara Falls who shares the sentiments
+of one disciple of the realistic school:
+
+ Loud roars the waters, O,
+ Loud roars the waters, O,
+ When I come to the Falls again
+ I hope they will not spatter so.
+
+Another writes:
+
+ My thoughts are strange, sublime and deep,
+ As I look up to thee--
+ What a glorious place for washing sheep,
+ Niagara would be!
+
+Examples of such doggerel could be multiplied by scores, but without
+profit. There was sense if not poetry in the wight who wrote:
+
+ I have been to "Termination Rock"
+ Where many have been before;
+ But as I can't describe the scene
+ I wont say any more.
+
+Infinitely better than this are the light but pleasing verses written in
+a child's album, years ago, by the late Col. Peter A. Porter of Niagara
+Falls. He pictured the discovery of the falls by La Salle and Hennepin
+and ponders upon the changes that have followed:
+
+ What troops of tourists have encamped upon the river's brink;
+ What poets shed from countless quills Niagaras of ink;
+ What artist armies tried to fix the evanescent bow
+ Of the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ And stately inns feed scores of guests from well-replenished larder,
+ And hackmen drive their horses hard, but drive a bargain harder,
+ And screaming locomotives rush in anger to and fro;
+ But the waters fall as once they fell two hundred years ago.
+
+ And brides of every age and clime frequent the islands' bower,
+ And gaze from off the stone-built perch--hence called the Bridal
+ Tower--
+ And many a lunar belle goes forth to meet a lunar beau,
+ By the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.
+
+Towards the close of the long poem the author takes a more serious tone,
+but throughout he keeps up a happy cleverness, agreeably in contrast to
+the prevailing high gush on one hand and balderdash on the other.
+
+Among the writers of serious and sometimes creditable verse whose names
+appear in the Table-Rock Albums were Henry D. O'Reilly, C. R. Rowland,
+Sarah Pratt, Maria del Occidente, George Menzies, Henry Lindsay, the
+Rev. John Dowling, J. S. Buckingham, the Hon. C. N. Vivian, Douglas
+Stuart, A. S. Ridgely of Baltimore, H. W. Parker, and Josef Leopold
+Stiger. Several of these names are not unknown in literature. Prof.
+Buckingham is remembered as an earlier Bryce, whose elaborate
+three-volume work on America is still of value. Vivian was a
+distinguished traveler who wrote books; and Josef Leopold Stiger's
+stanzas beginning
+
+ Sei mir gegrüsst, des jungen Weltreichs Stolz und Zierde!
+
+are by no means the worst of Niagara poems.
+
+I cannot conceive of Niagara Falls as a scene promotive of humor, or
+suggestive of wit. Others may see both in John G. Saxe's verses, of
+which the first stanza will suffice to quote:
+
+ See Niagara's torrent pour over the height,
+ How rapid the stream! how majestic the flood
+ Rolls on, and descends in the strength of his might,
+ As a monstrous great frog leaps into the mud!
+
+The "poem" contains six more stanzas of the same stamp.
+
+The writing of jingles and doggerel having Niagara as a theme did not
+cease when the Albums were no longer kept up. If there is no humor or
+grotesqueness in Niagara, there is much of both in the human accessories
+with which the spot is constantly supplied, and these will never cease
+to stimulate the wits. I believe that a study of this field--not in a
+restricted, but a general survey--would discover a decided improvement,
+in taste if not in native wit, as compared with the compositions which
+found favor half a century ago. Without entering that field, however, it
+will suffice to submit in evidence one "poem" from a recent publication,
+which shows that the making of these American _genre_ sketches, with
+Niagara in the background, is not yet a lost art:
+
+ Before Niagara Falls they stood,
+ He raised aloft his head,
+ For he was in poetic mood,
+ And this is what he said:
+
+ "Oh, work sublime! Oh, wondrous law
+ That rules thy presence here!
+ How filled I am with boundless awe
+ To view thy waters clear!
+
+ "What myriad rainbow colors float
+ About thee like a veil,
+ And in what countless streams remote
+ Thy life has left its trail!"
+
+ "Yes, George," the maiden cried in haste,
+ "Such shades I've never seen,
+ I'm going to have my next new waist
+ The color of that green."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From about 1850 down to the present hour there is a striking dearth
+of verse, worthy to be called poetry, with Niagara for its theme.
+Newspapers and magazines would no doubt yield a store if they could be
+gleaned; perchance the one Niagara pearl of poetry is thus overlooked;
+but it is reasonably safe to assume that few really great poems sink
+utterly from sight. There is, or was, a self-styled Bard of Niagara,
+whose verses, printed at Montreal in 1872, need not detain us. The only
+long work on the subject of real merit that I know of, which has
+appeared in recent years, is George Houghton's "Niagara," published in
+1882. Like Mr. Bulkley, he has a true poet's grasp of the material
+aspect of his subject:
+
+ Formed when the oceans were fashioned, when all the world was
+ a workshop;
+ Loud roared the furnace fires and tall leapt the smoke from
+ volcanoes,
+ Scooped were round bowls for lakes and grooves for the sliding
+ of rivers,
+ Whilst with a cunning hand, the mountains were linked together.
+ Then through the day-dawn, lurid with cloud, and rent by forked
+ lightning,
+ Stricken by earthquake beneath, above by the rattle of thunder,
+ Sudden the clamor was pierced by a voice, deep-lunged and
+ portentous--
+ Thine, O Niagara, crying, "Now is creation completed!"
+
+He sees in imagination the million sources of the streams in forest and
+prairie, which ultimately pour their gathered "tribute of silver" from
+the rich Western land into the lap of Niagara. He makes skillful use of
+the Indian legendry associated with the river; he listens to Niagara's
+"dolorous fugue," and resolves it into many contributory cries. In
+exquisite fancy he listens to the incantation of the siren rapids:
+
+ Thus, in some midnight obscure, bent down by the storm of temptation
+ (So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),
+ Pine trees, thrusting their way and trampling down one another,
+ Curious, lean and listen, replying in sobs and in whispers;
+ Till of the secret possessed, which brings sure blight to the hearer
+ (So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),
+ Faltering, they stagger brinkward--clutch at the roots of the grasses,
+ Cry--a pitiful cry of remorse--and plunge down in the darkness.
+
+The cataract in its varied aspects is considered with a thought for
+those who
+
+ Sin, and with wine-cup deadened, scoff at the dread of hereafter,--
+ And, because all seems lost, besiege Death's door-way with gladness.
+
+The master-stroke of the poem is in two lines:
+
+ That alone is august which is gazed upon by the noble,
+ That alone is gladsome which eyes full of gladness discover.
+
+Herein lies the rebuking judgment upon Niagara's detractors, not all of
+whom have perpetrated album rhymes.
+
+Mr. Houghton, as the reader will note, recognizes the tragic aspect of
+Niagara. Considering the insistence with which accident and suicide
+attend, making here an unappeased altar to the weaknesses and woes of
+mankind, this aspect of Niagara has been singularly neglected by the
+poets. We have it, however, exquisitely expressed, in the best of all
+recent Niagara verse--a sonnet entitled "At Niagara," by Richard Watson
+Gilder.[86] The following lines illustrate our point:
+
+ There at the chasm's edge behold her lean
+ Trembling, as, 'neath the charm,
+ A wild bird lifts no wing to 'scape from harm;
+ Her very soul drawn to the glittering, green,
+ Smooth, lustrous, awful, lovely curve of peril;
+ While far below the bending sea of beryl
+ Thunder and tumult--whence a billowy spray
+ Enclouds the day.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is a considerable amount of recent verse commonly called
+"fugitive" that has Niagara for its theme, but I find little that calls
+for special attention. A few Buffalo writers, the Rev. John C. Lord,
+Judge Jesse Walker, David Gray, Jas. W. Ward, Henry Chandler, and the
+Rev. Benjamin Copeland among them, have found inspiration in the lake
+and river for some of the best lines that adorn the purely local
+literature of the Niagara region. Indeed, I know of no allusion to
+Niagara more exquisitely poetical than the lines in David Gray's
+historical poem, "The Last of the Kah-Kwahs," in which he compares the
+Indian villages sleeping in ever-threatened peace to
+
+ ... the isle
+ That, locked in wild Niagara's fierce embrace,
+ Still wears a smile of summer on its face--
+ Love in the clasp of Madness.
+
+With this beautiful imagery in mind, recall the lines of Byron:
+
+ On the verge
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ An Iris sits amidst the infernal surge
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ Resembling, 'mid the tortures of the scene,
+ Love watching Madness with unalterable mien.
+
+Byron did not write of Niagara, but these stanzas beginning
+
+ The roar of waters ...
+
+often have been applied to our cataract. Mr. Gray may or may not have
+been familiar with them. In any event he improved on the earlier poet's
+figure.
+
+Merely as a matter of chronicle, it is well to record here the names of
+several writers, some of them of considerable reputation, who have
+contributed to the poetry of Niagara. Alfred B. Street's well-known
+narrative poem, "Frontenac," contains Niagara passages. So does Levi
+Bishop's metrical volume "Teuchsa Grondie" ("Whip-poor-will"), the
+Niagara portion dedicated to the Hon. Augustus S. Porter. Ever since
+Chateaubriand wrote "Atala," authors have been prompted to associate
+Indian legends with Niagara, but none has done this more happily than
+William Trumbull, whose poem, "The Legend of the White Canoe,"
+illustrated by F. V. Du Mond, is one of the most artistic works in all
+the literature of Niagara.
+
+The Rev. William Ellery Channing, the Rev. Joseph H. Clinch, the Rev.
+Joseph Cook, Christopher P. Cranch, Oliver I. Taylor, Grenville Mellen,
+Prof. Moffat, John Savage, Augustus N. Lowry, Claude James Baxley of
+Virginia, Abraham Coles, M. D., Henry Howard Brownell, the Rev. Roswell
+Park, Willis Gaylord Clark, Mary J. Wines, M. E. Wood, E. H. Dewart, G.
+W. Cutter, J. N. McJilton, and the Chicago writer, Harriet Monroe, are,
+most of them, minor poets (some, perhaps, but poets by courtesy), whose
+tributes to our cataract are contained in their collected volumes of
+verse. In E. G. Holland's "Niagara and Other Poems" (1861), is a poem on
+Niagara thirty-one pages long, with several pages of notes, "composed
+for the most part by the Drachenfels, one of the Seven Mountains of the
+Rhine, in the vicinity of Bonn, September, 1856, and delivered as a part
+of an address on American Scenery the day following." Among the Canadian
+poets who have attempted the theme, besides several already named, may
+be recorded John Breakenridge, a volume of whose verse was printed at
+Kingston in 1846; Charles Sangster, James Breckenridge, John Imrie, and
+William Rice, the last three of Toronto. The French-Canadian poet, Louis
+Fréchette, has written an excellent poem, "Le Niagara." Wm. Sharpe, M.
+D., "of Ireland," wrote at length in verse on "Niagara and Nature
+Worship." Charles Pelham Mulvaney touches the region in his poem, "South
+Africa Remembered at Niagara." One of the most striking effusions on the
+subject comes from the successful Australian writer, Douglas Sladen. It
+is entitled "To the American Fall at Niagara," and is dated "Niagara,
+Oct. 18, 1899":
+
+ Niagara, national emblem! Cataract
+ Born of the maddened rapids, sweeping down
+ Direct, resistless from the abyss's crown
+ Into the deep, fierce pool with vast impact
+ Scarce broken by the giant boulders, stacked
+ To meet thine onslaught, threatening to drown
+ Each tillaged plain, each level-loving town
+ 'Twixt thee and ocean. Lo! the type exact!
+
+ America Niagarized the world.
+ Europe, a hundred years agone, beheld
+ An avalanche, like pent-up Erie, hurled
+ Through barriers, to which the rocks of eld
+ Seemed toy things--leaping into godlike space
+ A sign and wonder to the human race.[87]
+
+Friedrich Bodenstedt and Wilhelm Meister of Germany, J. B. Scandella and
+the Rev. Santo Santelli of Italy ("Cascada di Niagara," 1841), have
+place among our Niagara poets. So, conspicuously, has Juan Antonio
+Perez Bonalde, whose illustrated volume, "El Poema del Niagara,"
+dedicated to Emilio Castelar, with a prose introduction of twenty-five
+pages by the Cuban martyr José Martí, was published in New York,
+reaching at least a second edition, in 1883. Several Mexican poets have
+addressed themselves to Niagara. "Á la Catarata del Niágara" is a sonnet
+by Don Manuel Carpio, whose collected works have been issued at Vera
+Cruz, Paris, and perhaps elsewhere. In the dramatic works of Don
+Vincente Riva Palacio and Don Juan A. Mateos is found "La Catarata del
+Niágara," a three-act drama in verse; the first two acts occur in
+Mexico, in the house of _Dona Rosa_, the third act is at Niagara Falls,
+the time being 1847.[88] The Spanish poet Antonio Vinageras, nearly
+fifty years ago, wrote a long ode on Niagara, dedicating it to "la
+célebre poetisa, Doña Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda." In no language is
+there a nobler poem on Niagara than the familiar work by Maria José
+Heredosia, translated from the Spanish by William Cullen Bryant. The
+Comte de Fleury, who visited Niagara a few years ago, left a somewhat
+poetical souvenir in French verse. Fredrika Bremer, whose prose is often
+unmetered poetry even after translation, wrote of Niagara in a brief
+poem. The following is a close paraphrase of the Swedish original:
+
+ Niagara is the betrothal of Earth's life
+ With the Heavenly life.
+ That has Niagara told me to-day.
+ And now can I leave Niagara. She has
+ Told me her word of primeval being.
+
+Another Scandinavian poet, John Nyborn, has written a meritorious poem
+on Niagara Falls, an adaptation of which, in English, was published some
+years since by Dr. Albin Bernays.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is a striking fact that Niagara's stimulus to the poetic mind has
+been quite as often through the ear as through the eye. The best
+passages of the best poems are prompted by the sound of the falling
+waters, rather than by the expanse of the flood, the height of cliffs,
+or the play of light. In Mr. Bulkley's work, which indeed exhausts the
+whole store of simile and comparison, we perpetually hear the voice of
+the falls, the myriad voices of nature, the awful voice of God.
+
+ "Minstrel of the Floods,"
+
+he cries:
+
+ What pæans full of triumph dost thou hymn!
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ However varied is the rhythm sweet
+ Of thine unceasing song! The ripple oft
+ Astray along thy banks a lyric is
+ Of love; the cool drops trickling down thy sides
+ Are gentle sonnets; and thy lesser falls
+ Are strains elegiac, that sadly sound
+ A monody of grief; thy whirlpool fierce,
+ A shrill-toned battle-song; thy river's rush
+ A strain heroic with its couplet rhymes;
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ While the full sweep of thy close-crowded tide
+ Resounds supreme o'er all, an epic grand.
+
+Of this class, too, is the "Apostrophe to Niagara," by one B. Frank
+Palmer, in 1855. It is said to have been "written with the pencil in a
+few minutes, the author seated on the bank, drenched, from the mighty
+bath at Termination Rock, and still listening to the roar and feeling
+the eternal jar of the cataract." The Rev. T. Starr King, upon reading
+it in 1855, said: "The apostrophe has the music of Niagara in it." As a
+typical example of the devotional apostrophe it is perhaps well to give
+it in full:
+
+ This is Jehovah's fullest organ strain!
+ I hear the liquid music rolling, breaking.
+ From the gigantic pipes the great refrain
+ Bursts on my ravished ear, high thoughts awaking!
+
+ The low sub-bass, uprising from the deep,
+ Swells the great pæan as it rolls supernal--
+ Anon, I hear, at one majestic sweep
+ The diapason of the keys eternal!
+
+ Standing beneath Niagara's angry flood--
+ The thundering cataract above me bounding--
+ I hear the echo: "Man, there is a God!"
+ From the great arches of the gorge resounding!
+
+ Behold, O man! nor shrink aghast in fear!
+ Survey the vortex boiling deep before thee!
+ The Hand that ope'd the liquid gateway here
+ Hath set the beauteous bow of promise o'er thee!
+
+ Here, in the hollow of that Mighty Hand,
+ Which holds the basin of the tidal ocean,
+ Let not the jarring of the spray-washed strand
+ Disturb the orisons of pure devotion.
+
+ Roll on, Niagara! great River King!
+ Beneath thy sceptre all earth's rulers, mortal,
+ Bow reverently; and bards shall ever sing
+ The matchless grandeur of thy peerless portal!
+
+ I hear, Niagara, in this grand strain,
+ His voice, who speaks in flood, in flame and thunder--
+ Forever mayst thou, singing, roll and reign--
+ Earth's grand, sublime, supreme, supernal wonder.
+
+Such lines as these--which might be many times multiplied--recall Eugene
+Thayer's ingenious and highly poetic paper on "The Music of
+Niagara."[89] Indeed, many of the prose writers, as well as the
+versifiers, have found their best tribute to Niagara inspired by the
+mere sound of falling waters.
+
+That Niagara's supreme appeal to the emotions is not through the eye but
+through the ear, finds a striking illustration in "Thoughts on Niagara,"
+a poem of about eighty lines written prior to 1854 by Michael McGuire, a
+blind man.[90] Here was one whose only impressions of the cataract came
+through senses other than that of sight. As is usual with the blind, he
+uses phrases that imply consciousness of light; yet to him, as to other
+poets whose devotional natures respond to this exhibition of natural
+laws, all the phenomena merge in "the voice of God":
+
+ I stood where swift Niagara pours its flood
+ Into the darksome caverns where it falls,
+ And heard its voice, as voice of God, proclaim
+ The power of Him, who let it on its course
+ Commence, with the green earth's first creation;
+
+ And I was where the atmosphere shed tears,
+ As giving back the drops the waters wept,
+ On reaching that great sepulchre of floods,--
+ Or bringing from above the bow of God,
+ To plant its beauties in the pearly spray.
+
+ And as I stood and heard, _though seeing nought_,
+ Sad thoughts took deep possession of my mind,
+ And rude imagination venturing forth,
+ Did toil to pencil, though in vain, that scene,
+ Which, in its every feature, spoke of God.
+
+The poem, which as a whole is far above commonplace, develops a pathetic
+prayer for sight; and employs much exalted imagery attuned to the
+central idea that here Omnipotence speaks without ceasing; here is
+
+ A temple, where Jehovah is felt most.
+
+But for the most part, the world's strong singers have passed Niagara
+by; nor has Niagara's newest aspect, that of a vast engine of energy to
+be used for the good of man, yet found worthy recognition by any poet of
+potentials.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This survey, though incomplete, is yet sufficiently comprehensive to
+warrant a few conclusions. More than half of all the verse on the
+subject which I have examined was written during the second quarter of
+this century. The first quarter, as has been shown, was the age of
+Niagara's literary discovery, and produced a few chronicles of curious
+interest. During the last half of the century--the time in which
+practically the whole brilliant and substantial fabric of American
+literature has been created--Niagara well-nigh has been ignored by the
+poets. In all our list, Goldsmith and Moore are the British writers of
+chief eminence who have touched the subject in verse, though many
+British poets, from Edwin Arnold to Oscar Wilde, have written poetic
+prose about Niagara. Of native Americans, I have found no names in the
+list of Niagara singers greater than those of Drake and Mrs. Sigourney.
+Emerson nor Lowell, Whittier nor Longfellow, Holmes nor Stedman, has
+given our Niagara wonder the dowry of a single line. Whitman, indeed,
+alludes to Niagara in his poem "By Blue Ontario's Shore," but his poetic
+vision makes no pause at the falls; nor does that of Joseph O'Connor,
+who in his stirring and exalted Columbian poem, "The Philosophy of
+America," finds a touch of color for his continental cosmorama by
+letting his sweeping glance fall for a moment,
+
+ To where, 'twixt Erie and Ontario,
+ Leaps green Niagara with a giant roar.
+
+But in such a symphony as his, Niagara is a subservient element, not the
+dominating theme. Most of the Niagara poets have been of local repute,
+unknown to fame.
+
+What, then, must we conclude? Shall we say with Martin Farquhar
+Tupper--who has contributed to the alleged poetry of the place--that
+there is nothing sublime about Niagara? The many poetic and impassioned
+passages in prose descriptions are against such a view. If dimensions,
+volume, exhibition of power, are elements of sublimity, Niagara Falls
+are sublime. But it cannot be said that superlative exhibitions of
+nature, some essentially universal phenomena, like those of the sea and
+sky, excepted, have been made the specific subject of verse, with a high
+degree of success. The reason is not far to seek, and lies in the
+inherent nature of poetry. It is a chief essential of poetry that it
+express, in imaginative form, the insight of the human soul. The feeble
+poets who have addressed themselves to Niagara have stopped, for the
+most part, with purely objective utterance. In some few instances, as we
+have seen, a truly subjective regard has given us noble lines.
+
+The poetic in nature is essentially independent of the detail of natural
+phenomena. A waterfall 150 feet high is not intrinsically any more
+poetic than one but half that height; or a thunder-peal than the tinkle
+of a rill. True poetry must be self-expression, as well as interpretive
+of truths which are manifested through physical phenomena. Hence it is
+in the nature of things that a nameless brook shall have its Tennyson,
+or a Niagara flow unsung.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[1] Often spelled "Daillon" or "d'Allion," the latter form suggesting
+origin from the name of a place, as is common in the French. Charlevoix
+sometimes wrongly has it "de Dallion." I follow the spelling as given in
+the priest's own signature to a letter to a friend in Paris, dated at
+"Tonachain [Toanchain], Huron village, this 18th July, 1627," and signed
+"Joseph De La Roche Dallion." The student of seventeenth-century history
+need not be reminded that little uniformity in the spelling of proper
+names can be looked for, either in printed books or manuscripts. In
+French, as in English, men spelled their names in different
+ways--Shakespeare, it is said, achieving thirty-nine variations. The
+matter bears on our present study because the diversity of spelling may
+involve the young student in perplexity. Thus, the name of the priests
+Lalemant (there were three of them) is given by Le Clercq as
+"Lallemant," by Charlevoix (a much later historian) as "Lallemant" or
+"Lalemant," but in the contemporary "Relations" of 1641-'42 as
+"Lallemant," "Lalemant" or "L'allemant." Many other names are equally
+variable, changes due to elision being sometimes, but not always,
+indicated by accents, as "Bruslé," "Brûlé." Thus we have "Jolliet" or
+"Joliet," "De Gallinée" or "De Galinée," "Du Lu," "Du Luth," "Duluth,"
+etc. When we turn to modern English, the confusion is much--and
+needlessly--increased. Dr. Shea, the learned translator and editor of Le
+Clercq, apparently aimed to put all the names into English, without
+accents. Parkman, or his publishers, have been guilty of many
+inconsistencies, now speaking of "Brébeuf," now of "Brebeuf," and
+changing "Le Clercq" to "Le Clerc." The "Historical Writings" of
+Buffalo's pre-eminent student in this field, Orsamus H. Marshall, share
+with many less valuable works--the present, no doubt, among them--these
+inconsistencies of style in the use of proper names.
+
+
+[2] Mr. Consul W. Butterfield, whose "History of Brûlé's Discoveries and
+Explorations, 1610-1626," has appeared since the above was written, is
+of opinion that Brûlé did not visit the falls, nor gain any particular
+knowledge of Lake Erie, as that lake is not shown on Champlain's map of
+1632; but that he and his Indian escort crossed the Niagara near Lake
+Ontario, "into what is now Western New York, in the present county of
+Niagara," and that "the journey was doubtless pursued through what are
+now the counties of Erie, Genesee, Wyoming, Livingston, Steuben and
+Chemung into Tioga," and thence down the Susquehanna. It is probable
+that Brûlé's party would follow existing trails, and one of the best
+defined trails, at a later period when the Senecas occupied the country
+as far west as the Niagara, followed this easterly course; but there
+were other trails, one of which lay along the east bank of the Niagara.
+So long as we have no other original source of information except
+Champlain, Sagard and Le Caron, none of whom has left any explicit
+record of Brûlé's journeyings hereabouts, so long must his exact path in
+the Niagara region remain untraced.
+
+
+[3] "Brehan de Gallinée," in Margry. Shea has it "Brehaut de Galinée."
+
+
+[4] Why Joliet left the Lake Erie route on his way east, for one much
+more difficult, has been a matter of some discussion. According to the
+Abbé Galinée, he was induced to turn aside by an Iroquois Indian who had
+been a prisoner among the Ottawas. Joliet persuaded the Ottawas to let
+this prisoner return with him. As they drew near the Niagara the
+Iroquois became afraid lest he should fall into the hands of the ancient
+enemies of the Iroquois, the Andastes, although the habitat of that
+people is usually given as from about the site of Buffalo to the west
+and southwest. At any rate it was the representations of this Iroquois
+prisoner and guide which apparently turned Joliet into the Grand River
+and kept him away from the Niagara. The paragraph in de Galinée bearing
+on the matter is as follows:
+
+"Ce fut cet Iroquois qui montra à M. Jolliet un nouveau chemin que les
+François n'avoient point sceu jusques alors pour revenir des Outaouacs
+dans le pays des Iroquois. Cependant la crainte que ce sauvage eut de
+retomber entre les mains des Antastoes luy fit dire à M. Jolliet qu'il
+falloit qu'il quittast son canot et marchast par terre plustost qu'il
+n'eust fallu, et mesme sans cette terreur du sauvage, M. Jolliet eust pu
+venir par eau jusques dans le lac Ontario, en faisant un portage de
+demi-lieue pour éviter le grand sault dont j'ay déjà parlé, mais entin
+il fut obligé par son guide de faire cinquante lieues par terre, et
+abandonner son canot sur lebord du lac Erié."
+
+It is singular that so important a relation in the history of our region
+has never been published in English. De Galinée's original MS. Journal
+is preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale, in Paris. It was first
+printed in French by M. Pierre Margry in 1879; but five years prior to
+that date Mr. O. H. Marshall of Buffalo, having been granted access to
+M. Margry's MS. copy, made extracts, which were printed in English in
+1874. These were only a small portion of the Abbé's valuable record. The
+Ontario Historical Society has for some time contemplated the
+translation and publication of the complete Journal--a work which
+students of the early history of the lake region will hope soon to see
+accomplished.
+
+
+[5] Probably that now known as Patterson's Creek.
+
+
+[6] A minot is an old French measure; about three bushels.
+
+
+[7] Evidently at Four or Six Mile Creek.
+
+
+[8] Probably what the English call scurvy-grass.
+
+
+[9] Otherwise Fort Frontenac, now Kingston, Ont.
+
+
+[10] Sullivan to Jay, Teaogo (Tioga), Sept. 30, 1779.
+
+
+[11] I first struck the trail in London, among the Colonial Papers
+preserved in the Public Records Office. Subsequently, in the Archives
+Department at Ottawa, I found that trail broaden into a fair highway.
+Something has been gleaned at Albany; more, no doubt, is to be looked
+for at Washington; but it is an amazing fact that our Government is far
+less liberal in granting access for students to its official records
+than is either England or Canada. But the Niagara region was British
+during the Revolution, and its history is chiefly to be sought in
+British archives. Especially in the Haldimand Papers, preserved in the
+British Museum, but of which verified copies are readily accessible in
+the Archives at Ottawa, is the Revolutionary history of the Niagara to
+be found. Besides the 232 great volumes in which these papers are
+gathered, there are thousands of other MSS. of value to an inquirer
+seeking the history of this region; especially the correspondence,
+during all that term of years, between the commandants at Fort Niagara
+and other upper lake posts, and the Commander in Chief of the British
+forces in America; between that general and the Ministry in London, and
+between the commandants at the posts and the Indian agents, fur traders
+and many classes and conditions of men. For the incidents here recorded
+I have drawn, almost exclusively, on these unpublished sources.
+
+
+[12] A snow is a three-masted craft, the smallest mast abaft the
+mainmast being rigged with a try-sail. Possibly, on the lakes where
+shipyards were primitive, this type was not always adhered to; but the
+correspondence and orders of the period under notice carefully
+discriminate between snows and schooners.
+
+
+[13] See "What Befel David Ogden," in this volume.
+
+
+[14] "A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Benjamin Gilbert
+and his Family; Who were surprised by the Indians, and taken from their
+Farms, on the Frontiers of Pennsylvania, in the Spring, 1780.
+Philadelphia: Printed and sold by Joseph Crukshank, in Market-street,
+between Second and Third-streets. M DCC LXXXIV." 12mo, pp. iv-96. It was
+reprinted in London (12mo, pp. 123) in 1785, and again (12mo, pp. 124,
+"Reprinted and sold by James Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard street") in
+1790. A "third edition, revised and enlarged," 16mo, pp. 240, bears date
+Philadelphia, 1848. Of a later edition (8vo, pp. 38, Lancaster, Pa.,
+1890) privately printed, only 150 copies were issued. The work was
+written by William Walton, to whom the facts were told by the Gilberts
+after their return. (Field.) Ketchum made some use of the "Narrative" in
+his "Buffalo and the Senecas," as has Wm. Clement Bryant and perhaps
+other local writers. See also "Account of Benjamin Gilbert," Vol. III.,
+Register of Pennsylvania. A reissue of the original work, carefully
+edited, would not only be a useful book for students of the history of
+Buffalo and the Niagara region, but would offer much in the way of
+extraordinary adventure for the edification of "the general reader."
+
+
+[15] Ketchum says he could not have done so. ("History of Buffalo," Vol.
+I., p. 328.) But Ketchum was misled, as many writers have been in
+ascribing the leadership to Brant. My assertion rests on the evidence of
+contemporary documents in the Archives at Ottawa, especially the MS.
+"Anecdotes of Capt. Joseph Brant, Niagara, 1778," in the handwriting of
+Col. Daniel Claus. Wm. Clement Bryant published a part of it in his
+"Captain Brant and the Old King," _q. v._
+
+
+[16] What became of all the scalps brought in to Fort Niagara during
+these years, and delivered up to the British officers, if not for pay,
+certainly for presents? The human scalp, properly dried, is not readily
+perishable, if cared for. Very many of them--from youthful heads or
+those white with age, the long tresses of women and the soft ringlets of
+children--became the property of officers at this post. Little is said
+on this subject in the correspondence; we do not see them with flags and
+other trophies in the cathedrals and museums of England. What became of
+them?
+
+
+[17] In another letter to Lord George Germaine, dated Nov. 20, 1780, we
+have a few additional particulars. It is probably the fullest account of
+this calamity in existence. "It is with great concern," wrote Haldimand,
+"I acquaint your Lordship of a most unfortunate event which is just
+reported to me to have happened upon Lake Ontario about the 1st. [Nov.,
+1780.] A very fine snow [schooner] carrying 16 guns, which was built
+last winter, sailed the 31st ultimo from Niagara and was seen several
+times the same day near the north shore. The next day it blew very hard,
+and the vessel's boats, binnacle, gratings, some hats, etc., were found
+upon the opposite shore, the wind having changed suddenly, by Lt. Col.
+Butler about forty miles from Niagara, on his way from Oswego, so there
+cannot be a doubt that she is totally lost and her crew, consisting of
+forty seamen, perished, together with Lt. Col. Bolton of the King's
+Regiment, whom I had permitted to leave Niagara on account of his bad
+state of health, Lt. Colleton of the Royal Artillery, Lt. Royce and
+thirty men of the 34th Regiment, who were crossing the lake to reinforce
+Carleton Island. Capt. Andrews who commanded the vessel and the naval
+armament upon that lake was a most zealous, active, intelligent officer.
+The loss of so many good officers and men is much aggravated by the
+consequences that will follow this misfortune in the disappointment of
+conveying provisions across the lake for the garrison of Niagara and
+Detroit, which are not near completed for the winter consumption, and
+there is not a possibility of affording them much assistance with the
+vessels that remain, it being dangerous to navigate the lake later than
+the 20th inst., particularly as the large vessels are almost worn out.
+The master builder and carpenters are sent off to repair this evil."
+
+
+[18] "The Falls of Niagara, or Tourist's Guide," etc., by S. De Veaux.
+Buffalo, 1839.
+
+
+[19] Capt. Parrish became Indian agent, but Capt. Jones held the office
+of interpreter for many years. "Their councils [with the Indians] were
+held at a council house belonging to the Senecas situated a few rods
+east of the bend in the road just this side of the red bridge across
+Buffalo Creek on the Aurora Plank Road, then little more than an Indian
+trail; but much of their business was transacted at the store of Hart &
+Lay, situated on the west side of Main Street, midway between Swan and
+Erie streets, and on the common opposite, then known as Ellicott
+Square."--MS. narrative of Capt. Jones's captivity, by Orlando Allen, in
+possession of William L. Bryant of Buffalo. Horatio Jones was captured
+about 1777 near Bedford, Pa., being aged 14; was taken to a town on the
+Genesee River, where he ran the gauntlet, was adopted, and lived with
+the Indians until liberated by the Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1784. The
+MS. narrative above quoted is Orlando Allen's chronicle of facts given
+to him by Capts. Jones and Parrish, and is of exceptional value.
+
+
+[20] Brig. Powell to Col. van Schaick, Feb. 13, 1780; Haldimand Papers,
+"Correspondence relating to exchange of prisoners," etc., B. 175.
+
+
+[21] I cannot better show the real state of affairs at Fort Niagara,
+towards the close of the Revolutionary War, than by submitting the
+following "Review of Col. Johnson's Transactions," which I copy from the
+Canadian Archives. [Series B, Vol. 106, p. 123, _et seq._] I do not know
+that it has ever been printed. Obviously written at the instigation of
+Col. Johnson, it is perhaps colored to justify his administrative
+conduct; but in any event it is a most useful picture of conditions at
+the time. Except for some slight changes in punctuation in order to make
+the meaning more readily apparent, the statement is given verbatim:
+
+ MONTREAL, 24th March, 1782.
+
+Before Colonel Johnson arrived at Niagara in 1779 the Six Nations lived
+in their original possession the nearest of which was about 100 and the
+farthest about 300 miles from that post. Their warriors were called upon
+as the service required parties, which in 1776 amounted to about 70 men,
+and the expenses attending them and a few occasional meetings ought to
+have been and he presumes were a mere Trifle when compared with what
+must attend their situation when all [were] driven to Niagara, exposed
+to every want, to every temptation and with every claim which their
+distinguished sacrifices and the tenor of Soloman [solemn] Treaties had
+entitled them to from Government. The years 1777 & 1778 exhibited only a
+larger number occasionally employed and for their fidelity and
+attachment to Government they were invaded in 1779 by a rebel army
+reported to be from 5 to 600 men with a train of Artillery who forced
+them to retire to Niagara leaving behind them very fine plantations of
+corn and vegetables, with their cloathing, arms, silver works, Wampum
+Kettles and Implements of Husbandry, the collection of ages of which
+were distroyed in a deliberate manner and march of the rebels. Two
+villages only escaped that were out of their route.
+
+The Indians having always apprehended that their distinguished Loyalty
+might draw some such calamity towards them had stipulated that under
+such circumstances they effected [expected] to have their losses made up
+as well as a liberal continuation of favors and to be supported at the
+expence of Government till they could be reinstated in their former
+possessions. They were accordingly advised to form camps around Niagara
+which they were beginning to do at the time of Colonel Johnson's arrival
+who found them much chagrined and prepared to reconcile them to their
+disaster which he foresaw would be a work of time requiring great
+judgement and address in effecting which he was afterwards successful
+beyond his most sanguine expectations, and this was the state of the
+Indians at Colonel Johnson's arrival. As to the state and regulation of
+Colonel Johnson's offices and department at that period he found the
+duties performed by 2 or three persons the rest little acquainted with
+them and considered as less capable of learning them, and the whole
+number inadequate to that of the Indians, and the then requisite calls
+of the service, and that it was necessary after refusing the present
+wants of the Indians to keep their minds occupied by constant military
+employment, all which he laid before the Commander in Chief who
+frequently honoured his conduct with particular approbation.
+
+By His Instructions he was to apply to Lieut. Colonel Bolton, more
+especially regarding the modes of this place and the public accounts &c
+from whom he received no further information, than that they were kept,
+and made up by the established house at that post, and consider of
+goods, orders and all contingencies and disbursements for Indians,
+ranging parties, Prisoners, &c. That they were generally arranged half
+yearly as well as the nature of them and of the changeable people they
+had to deal with would permit; that he believed many demands were
+therefore outstanding and that he was glad to have done with passing
+[i. e., granting of passes] as it was impossible for him or any person
+that had other duties to discharge to give them much attention. At which
+Colonel Johnson expressed his concern but was told that the house was
+established in the business and thro' the impossibility of having proper
+circulating cash in another channell they advanced all monies and
+settled all accounts and that that mode had been found most eligable.
+Colonel Johnson thereupon issued the best orders he could devise for the
+preventing abuses and the better regulation of matters relating to goods
+payment of expenses, and proceeding to the discharge of the principal
+objects of his duty, he, accordingly to a plan long since proposed,
+formed the Indians into Companies and by degrees taught them to feel the
+convenience of having officers set apart to each, which they were soon
+not only reconciled to but highly pleased with, by which means he gave
+some degree of method and form to the most Independent race of the
+Indians, greatly facilitated all business with them and by a prudent
+arrangement of his officers those who were before uninformed became in a
+little time some of the most approved and usefull persons in his
+department, being constantly quartered at such places or sent on some
+services as tended most to their improvement and the public advantage,
+whilst by spiriting up and employing the Indians with constant party's
+along the frontiers from Fort Stanwix to Fort Pitt he so harrassed the
+back settlements, as finally to drive numbers of them from their
+plantation destroying their houses, mills, graneries, &c, frequently
+defeating their scouting parties killing and captivating many of their
+people amounting in the whole to near 900 and all this with few or no
+instances of savage cruelty exclusive of what they performed when
+assisted by His Majesty's Troops as will appear from his returns. By
+these means he presented [? preserved] the spirit of the Indians and
+kept their minds so occupied as to prevent their being disgusted at the
+want of Military aid, which had been long their Topic and which could
+then be afforded according to their requisitions; neither did he admit
+any point of negociation during this period of peculiar hurry, for
+knowing the importance the Oneidas &c., were off [of] to the rebels and
+the obstruction they gave to all means of intelligence from that
+quarter, he sent a private Belt and message on pretence of former
+Friendship for them, in consequence of which he was shortly joined by
+430 of them of [whom] 130 were men who have since on all occasions
+peculiarly distinguished themselves, and after defeating the rebel
+Invitation to the Indians he by the renewal of the great covenant chain
+and war Belt which he sent thro' all the nations animation to the most
+western Indians.
+
+Soon after with intention to reduce the vast consumption of provisions,
+he with much difficulty prevailed on part of the Indians to begin some
+new plantation, that they might supply themselves with grain, &c; but
+this being an object of the most serious and National concern, and urged
+in the strongest terms by the commander-in-chief, Col. Johnson, during
+the winter 1780, took indefatigable pains to persuade the whole to
+remove and settle the ensuing season on advantageous terms. He had
+himself visited for that purpose but finding that their treaties with
+and expectations from Government, combined with their natural Indulgence
+to render it a matter of infinite difficulty which would encrease by
+delay and probably become unsurmountable he procured some grain from
+Detroit and liberally rewarded the families of Influence at additional
+expence to sett the example to the rest and assisted their beginning to
+prevent a disappointment by which means he has enabled before the end of
+May last to settle the whole about 3500 souls exclusive of those who had
+joined the 2 farms that had not been distroyed by the rebels and thereby
+with a little future assistance, and good management to create a saving
+of £100,000 pr annum N. York currency at the rate of provision is worth
+there to Government, together with a reduction of rum and of all Indian
+Expenses, as will appear from the reduced accounts since these
+settlements were made. The peculiar circumstances above mentioned and
+the constant disappointment of goods from the Crown at the times they
+were most wanted will easily account for the occasional expence. The
+house which conducted the Business at Niagara was perpetually thronged
+by Indians and others. Lieut. Colonel Bolton often sent verbal orders
+for articles as did some other secretaries and sometimes necessity
+required it and often they were charged and others substituted of equal
+value with other irregularities, the consequence of a crew of Indians
+before unknown, of an encrease of duties, and the necessity for sending
+them to plant well satisfied.
+
+The number of prisoners thrown upon Colonel Johnson from time to time
+and of Indian Chiefs and their families about his quarters was attended
+with vast trouble and an Expense which it was impossible to ascertain
+with exactness and when he directed the moiety of certain articles of
+consumption to be placed to the account of the Crown, he soon found
+himself lower. The merchants have since been accused of fraud by a clerk
+who lived some time with them, the investigation of which he was called
+suddenly to attend and he now finds that many articles undoubtedly
+issued have been placed to his account instead of their [the] Crown, and
+many false and malicious insinuations circulated to the prejudice of his
+character and his influence with the Indians which is rendered the more
+injurious by his abrupt departure from the shortness of the time, which
+did not permit his calling and explaining to the chiefs the reasons for
+his leaving them as [he] undoubtedly should have done, and therefore,
+and on every public account, his presence is not only effected
+[expected], but is become more necessary among them than ever. This
+brief summary is candidly prepared and is capable of sufficient proof
+and Illustration.
+
+
+[22] Site of Rome, N. Y.
+
+
+[23] Perhaps more correctly, according to eminent authority (Lewis H.
+Morgan), "Ga-nun-da-sa-ga." It was one of the most important of the
+Seneca towns, situated near the site of the present town of Geneva. Gen.
+Sullivan destroyed it in September, 1779, and no attempt was ever made
+to rebuild it.
+
+
+[24] Except perhaps in the case of Capt. Alexander Harper and his party,
+for whom the ordeal was made light, most of the Indians having been
+enticed away from the vicinity of the fort; but this was apparently due
+to Brant, rather than to the British.--_See_ Ketchum's "History of
+Buffalo," Vol. I., pp. 374, 375.
+
+
+[25] I have followed the old narrative in the spelling of these Indian
+names, which, no doubt, students of Indian linguistics will discover are
+not wholly in accord with the genius of the Seneca tongue.
+
+
+[26] Ketchum gives Capt. Powell a better character than this incident
+would indicate; and says that he "visited the prisoners among the
+Senecas, at Buffalo Creek, several times during the time they remained
+there, not only to encourage them by his counsel and sympathy, but to
+administer to their necessities, and to procure their release; which was
+ultimately accomplished, mainly through his efforts, assisted by other
+officers at the fort, which [_sic_] the example and interest of Jane
+Moore, the Cherry Valley captive had influenced to coöperate in this
+work of mercy." ["History of Buffalo," Vol. I., p. 376.] I have adhered
+to the spirit and in part, to the language, of Ogden's own narrative.
+
+
+[27] Address delivered at Fort Niagara, N. Y., at the celebration of the
+centennial of British evacuation, August 11, 1896. Amplification on some
+points, not possible in the brief time allotted for the spoken address
+on that occasion, is here made in foot-notes.
+
+
+[28] See Oliver Wendell Holmes's beautiful poem, "Francis Parkman," read
+at the meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society in memory of the
+historian, who died November 8, 1893.
+
+
+[29] The first official step towards such fortification was taken by
+Frontenac. On Nov. 14, 1674, he wrote to the Minister, Colbert: "Sieur
+Joliet ... has returned three months ago, and discovered some very fine
+Countries, and a navigation so easy through the beautiful rivers he has
+found, that a person can go from Lake Ontario and Fort Frontenac in a
+bark to the Gulf of Mexico, there being only one carrying place, half a
+league in length, where Lake Ontario communicates with Lake Erie. A
+settlement would be made at this point and another bark built on Lake
+Erie. These are projects which it will be possible to effect when Peace
+will be firmly established, and whenever it will please the King to
+prosecute these discoveries." [Paris Docs. I., N. Y. Colonial MSS.]
+Joliet, it must be remembered, was never on the Niagara; whatever
+representations he made to Frontenac regarding it were based on hearsay,
+very likely on reports made to him by La Salle at their meeting in 1669;
+so that priority in promoting the Niagara route reverts after all to
+that gallant adventurer.
+
+
+[30] In 1896.
+
+
+[31] In the palisaded cabin on the site of Lewiston.
+
+
+[32] Father Watteaux (also spelled "Watteau," "Vatteaux," etc.) was
+first only in the sense of being assigned to a located mission. "Father
+Gabriel [de la Ribourde] was named Superior.... Father Melithon was to
+remain at Niagara and make it his mission." (Le Clercq, Shea's
+translation, Vol. I., p. 112.) "Father Melithon remained in the house at
+Niagara with some laborers and clerks." (_Ib._, p. 113.) This was in the
+summer of 1679; but six months earlier mass had been celebrated on the
+New York side of the Niagara by Father Hennepin.
+
+
+[33] This statement, which I have elsewhere accepted (_See_ "The
+Cross-Bearers," p. 28 of this volume), is on the usually unimpeachable
+authority of Dr. John Gilmary Shea, the historian of the Catholic Church
+in America. (_See_ "The Catholic Church in Colonial Days," p. 322.) I
+find, however, on referring to the authorities on which Dr. Shea rests
+his statement that the particular grant made on the date named--May 27,
+1679--was not at Niagara but at Fort Frontenac. (Hennepin, "Nouvelle
+Découverte," p. 108.) At Frontenac La Salle had seigniorial rights, and
+could pass title as he wished; but on the Niagara he had no right to
+confer title, for he held no delegated power beyond the letters patent
+from the King, which permitted him to explore and build forts, under
+certain restrictions.
+
+
+[34] This would seem to fix the date of the northeast blockhouse at
+1790; but on examination of other sources of information I discover
+strong evidence that the original construction was earlier. The Duke de
+la Rochefoucault Liancourt, who visited Fort Niagara in June, 1795,
+wrote: "All the buildings, within the precincts of the fort, are of
+stone, and were built by the French." ("Travels," etc., London ed.,
+1799, Vol. I., p. 257.) This would make them antedate July, 1759, which
+is not true of the bakehouse. The Duke may therefore have erred
+regarding other buildings, the northeast blockhouse among them; yet had
+it been but four or five years old, he would not be likely to attribute
+it to the French. Pouchot's plan of the fort (1759) does not show it. I
+have seen the original sketch of a plan in the British Museum, dated
+Niagara, 1773, which shows, with several buildings long since destroyed,
+two constructions where the blockhouses now stand, with this note: "Two
+stone redoubts built in 1770 and 1771." An accompanying sketch of the
+southwest redoubt shows a striking similarity to the southwest
+blockhouse as it now stands, although a roadway ran through it and a gun
+was mounted on top. These redoubts may have been remodeled by Gother
+Mann.
+
+
+[35] Although I am aware that some American writers, and probably all
+Canadian writers who touch the subject, are offering evidence that there
+was no "massacre" at Wyoming, I still find in the details of that affair
+what I regard as abundant warrant for the designation of "massacre."
+
+
+[36] Haldimand to T. Townshend, October 25, 1782.
+
+
+[37] Haldimand to Lord North, June 2, 1782. In the same letter he wrote
+"I have lately received a letter from Brig.-Gen. Maclean who commands at
+Niagara.... Affairs with the Indians are in a very critical state. I
+have ordered and insisted upon Sir John Johnson's immediate departure
+for Niagara in hopes that his influence may be of use in preventing the
+bad consequences which may be apprehended. I have been assured by the
+officers who brought me the accounts of the cessation of arms, via New
+York, that Gen. Schuyler and the American officers made no secret of
+their hostile intentions against the Indians and such Royalists as had
+served amongst them. It is to be hoped that the American Congress will
+adopt a line of conduct more consonant to humanity as well as Policy."
+
+
+[38] The full story of the efforts of the United States Government to
+obtain possession of Fort Niagara and the other posts on the northern
+frontier would make a long chapter. I have barely touched a few features
+of it. One episode was the mission of the Baron Steuben to Haldimand, to
+claim the delivery of the posts. Washington selected Steuben because of
+his appreciation of that general's tact and soundness of judgment in
+military matters. The President's instructions under date of July 12,
+1783, were characteristically precise and judicious. Steuben was to
+procure from General Haldimand, if possible, immediate cession of the
+posts; failing in that, he was to get a pledge of an early cession; "but
+if this cannot be done," wrote Washington, "you will endeavor to procure
+from him positive and definite assurances, that he will as soon as
+possible give information of the time that shall be fixed on for the
+evacuation of these posts, and that the troops of his Britannic Majesty
+shall not be drawn therefrom until sufficient previous notice shall be
+given of that event; that the troops of the United States may be ready
+to occupy the fortresses as soon as they shall be abandoned by those of
+his Britannic Majesty." An exchange of artillery and stores was also to
+be proposed. Having made these arrangements with Haldimand, Steuben was
+to go to Oswego, thence to Niagara, and after viewing the situation, and
+noting the strength and all the military and strategic conditions, was
+to pass on to Detroit. Armed with these instructions from the
+Commander-in-Chief, Steuben went to Canada, and on the 8th of August met
+Gen. Haldimand at Sorel. For once, the man who had disciplined the
+American Army met his match. His report to Washington indicates an
+uncommonly positive reception.
+
+"To the first proposition which I had in charge to make," he wrote to
+Washington, Aug. 23, 1783 ["Correspondence of the Revolution," IV., 41,
+42], "Gen. Haldimand replied that he had not received any orders for
+making the least arrangement for the evacuation of a single post; that
+he had only received orders to cease hostilities; those he had strictly
+complied with, not only by restraining the British troops, but also the
+savages, from committing the least hostile act; but that, until he
+should receive positive orders for that purpose, he would not evacuate
+an inch of ground. I informed him that I was not instructed to insist on
+an immediate evacuation of the posts in question, but that I was ordered
+to demand a safe conduct to, and a liberty of visiting the posts on our
+frontiers, and now occupied by the British, that I might judge of the
+arrangements necessary to be made for securing the interests of the
+United States. To this he answered that the precaution was premature;
+that the peace was not yet signed; that he was only authorized to cease
+hostilities; and that, in this point of view, he could not permit that I
+should visit a single post occupied by the British. Neither would he
+agree that any kind of negotiation should take place between the United
+States and the Indians, if in his power to prevent it, and that the door
+of communication should, on his part, be shut, until he received
+positive orders from his court to open it. My last proposal was that he
+should enter into an agreement to advise Congress of the evacuation of
+the posts, three months previous to their abandonment. This, for the
+reason before mentioned, he refused, declaring that until the definite
+treaty should be signed, he would not enter into any kind of agreement
+or negotiation whatever."
+
+
+[39] The inability of the New York State Government to accomplish
+anything in the matter at this time is illustrated by the following
+extract from Gov. Clinton's speech to the Senate and Assembly, January
+21, 1784: "You will perceive from the communication which relates to the
+subject that I have not been inattentive to the circumstances of the
+western posts within this State. They are undoubtedly of great
+importance for the protection of our trade and frontier settlements, and
+it was with concern I learnt that the propositions made by the State for
+governing those posts were not acceded to by Congress. It affords me,
+however, some satisfaction to find that the Commander-in-Chief was in
+pursuit of measures for that purpose, but my expostulations proved
+fruitless. The British commander in that Department treating the
+Provisional Articles as a suspension of hostilities only, declined to
+withdraw his garrisons and refused us even to visit these posts. It is
+necessary for me to add that it will now be impracticable to take
+possession of them until spring, and that I have no reason to believe
+that Congress have, or are likely to make any provision for the expense
+which will necessarily occur, it therefore remains for you to take this
+interesting subject into your further consideration."
+
+To this the Senate made answer: "The circumstances of our western posts
+excite our anxiety. We shall make no comment on the conduct of the
+British officer in Canada as explained by your Excellency's
+communication. It would be in vain. Convinced that our frontier
+settlements, slowly emerging from the utter ruin with which they were so
+lately overwhelmed, and our fur trade which constitutes a valuable
+branch in our remittances, will be protected by these posts, we shall
+adopt the best measures in our power for their reëstablishment."
+
+
+[40] "Lt.-Col. Fish," the Governor General's report continues, "gave me
+the strongest assurances that the proceedings against the Loyalists were
+disapproved by the leading men in the different States, and gave me a
+recent instance of Gov. Clinton having [? saving] Capt. Moore [?] of the
+53d Regiment from the insolence of the mob in New York."
+
+
+[41] "Lt.-Col. Hull in the American service, arrived here on the 10th
+inst. with a letter from Major Gen. Knox, dated New York the 13th
+June.... I did not think myself, from the tenor of Yr Lordship's letter
+of the 8th of April, authorized to give publicly, any reason for
+delaying the evacuation of the Posts, tho' perhaps it might have had
+some effect in quickening the efforts of Congress to produce the
+execution of the Article of the Difinitive Treaty in favor of the
+Royalists, tho' I held the same private conversation to Lt.-Col. Hull as
+I had to Lt.-Col. Fish."--Haldimand to Lord Sydney Quebec, July 16,
+1784.
+
+
+[42] Haldimand to Thos. Steile, Esq., of the Treasury; Quebec, Sept. 1,
+1784.
+
+
+[43] At the risk of overloading my pages with citations from this old
+correspondence, I venture to give the following letter from Lord
+Dorchester to Lt.-Gov. Simcoe, so admirably does it illustrate the
+British apprehensions at the time. It is dated Quebec, Apr. 3, 1796:
+
+"Circumstances have arisen, which will probably, for a time, delay the
+evacuation of the Upper Posts, among which some relating to the
+interests of the Indians do not appear the least important. By the 8th
+article of the treaty entered into the 3d August last, between Mr. Wayne
+and them, it is stipulated that no person shall be allowed to reside
+among or to trade with these Indian tribes, unless they be furnished
+with a license from the Government of the United States, and that every
+person so trading shall be delivered up by the Indians to an American
+Superintendent, to be dealt with according to law, which is inconsistent
+with the third article of the Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation,
+previously concluded between His Majesty and the United States by which
+it is agreed that 'it shall at all times be free to His Majesty's
+subjects and to the citizens of the United States and also to the
+Indians, dwelling on either side of the Boundary Line, freely to _pass
+and repass_, by land or inland navigation, into the respective
+territories and countries of the two parties on the Continent of America
+(the country within the limits of the Hudson Bay Co. only excepted), and
+to navigate the lakes, rivers and waters thereof, and freely to carry on
+trade and commerce _with each other_.'
+
+"Previously therefore to the actual execution of the treaty on our part,
+it is requisite that we should be convinced that the stipulations
+entered into by the United States will also be fulfilled by them; and on
+a point so interesting to His Majesty's subjects and more especially to
+the Indians, it is indispensably necessary that all doubts and
+misconceptions should be removed. His Majesty's Minister at Philadelphia
+is accordingly instructed to require an explanation on this subject.
+Till therefore the same shall be satisfactorily terminated I shall delay
+the surrender of the Posts. These matters you will be pleased to explain
+to the Indians, pointing out to them at the same time the benevolent
+care and regard always manifested towards them by the King their Father,
+and particularly the attention that has been shown to their interests on
+the present occasion."
+
+
+[44] Dorchester to Robert Liston (British Minister at Philadelphia),
+June 6, 1796.
+
+
+[45] Under date of Niagara, August 6, 1796, Peter Russell wrote to the
+Duke of Portland: "All the posts we held on the American side of the
+line in the vicinity of this province, are given up to the United States
+agreeable to the treaty, excepting that of Niagara, which remains
+occupied by a small detachment from the 5th Regiment, until the garrison
+they have ordered thither may arrive from Oswego. And I understand that
+they have not yet taken possession of Michillimackinac from the want of
+provisions. I have directed the officers commanding his Majesty's troops
+in this Province to make me a return of the effective number that may
+remain after the departure of the 5th and 24th Regiments, and of their
+distribution." On August 20th he wrote: "The Fort of Niagara was
+delivered up to a detachment of troops belonging to the United States of
+America on the 11th inst. and the guard left in it by the 5th Regiment
+has sailed for Lower Canada." Mackinac, the last of the posts to be
+surrendered, did not pass into the hands of the Americans until the
+following October.
+
+
+[46] This must not be confounded with the wreck of the steamer
+President, which was never heard from after the storm of March 13, 1841.
+The President of which Mr. Lay wrote was obviously a bark, ship, or
+other sailing craft.
+
+
+[47] In one Canadian work, John Charles Dent's "Story of the Upper
+Canadian Rebellion," statements are printed to show that the Caroline
+did not go over the falls, but that her hull sank in shallow water not
+far below the Schlosser landing. There is however a mass of evidence to
+other effect. It is striking that so sensational an episode, happening
+within the memory of many men yet living, should be thus befogged. The
+contemporary accounts which were published in American newspapers were
+wildly exaggerated, one report making the loss of life exceed ninety.
+(There was but one man killed.) Mackenzie himself is said to have spread
+these extravagant reports. He had a gift for the sort of journalism
+which in this later day is called "yellow," a chief iniquity of which is
+its wanton perversion of contemporary record, and the ultimate confusion
+of history.
+
+
+[48] By the end of December, 1837, about 600 men had resorted to Navy
+Island in the guise of "Patriots." Although this number was later
+somewhat increased, the entire "army" at that point probably never
+numbered 1,000.
+
+
+[49] There were about 150 Patriots, claiming to be citizens of the
+United States, who were taken prisoners in Upper Canada, and transported
+to Van Dieman's Land. Among those taken near Windsor, besides Marsh,
+were Ezra Horton, Joseph Horton and John Simons of Buffalo, John W.
+Simmons and Truman Woodbury of Lockport. Taken at Windmill Point, near
+Prescott, was Asa M. Richardson of Buffalo. Taken at Short Hills,
+Welland Co., was Linus W. Miller of Chautauqua Co., who afterwards wrote
+a book on the rebellion and his exile; and Benjamin Waite, whose
+"Letters from Van Dieman's Land" were published in Buffalo in 1843.
+Waite died at Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 9, 1895, aged eighty-two. It is
+not unlikely that some Americans who underwent that exile are still
+living. I have seen no list of Americans captured during the outbreak in
+Lower Canada.
+
+
+[50] _See_ "Reminiscences of Levi Coffin," p. 253.
+
+
+[51] _See_ "John Brown and His Men," p. 171.
+
+
+[52] _See_ Siebert's "The Underground Railroad," pp. 35, 36.
+
+
+[53] "Narrative of William W. Brown," 1848, pp. 107, 108. Quoted by
+Siebert.
+
+
+[54] There is a considerable literature on the specific subject of the
+Underground Railroad, and a great deal more relating to it is to be
+found in works dealing more broadly with slavery, and the political
+history of our country. Of especial local interest is Eber M. Pettit's
+"Sketches in the History of the Underground Railroad," etc., Fredonia,
+1879. The author, "for many years a conductor on the Underground
+Railroad line from slavery to freedom," has recorded many episodes in
+which the fugitives were brought to Buffalo, Black Rock, or Niagara
+Falls, and gives valuable and interesting data regarding the routes and
+men who operated them in Western New York and Western Pennsylvania.
+
+
+[55] I have drawn these facts from Mrs. Jameson's "Winter Studies and
+Summer Rambles in Canada," published in London in 1838. Mrs. Jameson was
+at Niagara in 1837, apparently during or soon after the riot. She called
+on one of the negro women who had been foremost in the fray. This woman
+was "apparently about five-and-twenty," had been a slave in Virginia,
+but had run away at sixteen. This would indicate that she may have come
+a refugee to the Niagara as early as 1828. William Kirby, in his "Annals
+of Niagara," has told Moseby's story, with more detail than Mrs.
+Jameson; he reports only one as killed in the _mêlée_--the schoolmaster
+Holmes--and adds that "Moseby lived quietly the rest of his life in St.
+Catharines and Niagara." Sir Francis Bond Head's official communication
+to the Home Government regarding the matter reports two as killed.
+
+
+[56] _See_ "A Narrative," by Sir Francis Bond Head, Bart., 2d ed.,
+London, 1839, pp. 200-204.
+
+
+[57] "Letters from the United States, Cuba and Canada," London, 1856, p.
+118.
+
+
+[58] "Canada, Its Defences, Condition and Resources," by W. Howard
+Russell, LL. D., London, 1865, pp. 33, 34.
+
+
+[59] Mr. Butler's name does not appear in Siebert's history, "The
+Underground Railroad." The "operators" for Erie County named therein (p.
+414) are Gideon Barker, the Hon. Wm. Haywood, Geo. W. Johnson, Deacon
+Henry Moore, and Messrs. Aldrich and Williams. For Niagara County he
+names Thomas Binmore, W. H. Childs, M. C. Richardson, Lyman Spaulding.
+Chautauqua and Wyoming counties present longer lists, and thirty-six are
+named for Monroe County. As appears from my text, the Erie County list
+could be extended.
+
+
+[60] No doubt an investigator could find a number of former slaves, rich
+in reminiscences of Underground days, still living in the villages and
+towns of the Niagara Peninsula, though they would not be very numerous,
+for, as Aunt Betsy says, "the old heads are 'bout all gone now." Between
+Fort Erie and Ridgeway lives Daniel Woods, a former slave, who came by
+the Underground. Harriet Black, a sister-in-law of Mrs. Robinson, still
+living near Ridgeway, was also a "passenger." Probably others live at
+St. Catharines, Niagara and other points of former negro settlement, who
+could tell thrilling tales of their escape from the South. There are
+many survivors on the Canada side of the Niagara, of another class; men
+or women who were born in slavery but were "freed by the bayonet," and
+came North with no fear of the slave-catchers. Of this class at Fort
+Erie are Melford Harris and Thomas Banks. Mr. Banks was sold from
+Virginia to go "down the river"; got his freedom at Natchez, joined the
+102d Michigan Infantry, and fought for the Union until the end of the
+war. His case is probably typical of many, but does not belong to the
+records of the Underground Railroad.
+
+
+[61] H. Clay to Lewis L. Hodges; original letter in possession of the
+Buffalo Historical Society.
+
+
+[62] Anonymous reminiscences published in the Buffalo Courier, about
+1887.
+
+
+[63] Apparently the greatest travel, at least over these particular
+routes, was during 1840-41. It was a justifiable boast of the
+"conductors" that a "passenger" was never lost. In a journal of notes,
+which was annually kept for many years by one of the zealous
+anti-slavery men of that day, I find the following entry in 1841:
+"Nov. 1.--The week has been cold; some hard freezing and snow; now warm;
+assisted six fugitives from oppression, from this land of equal rights
+to the despotic government of Great Britain, where they can enjoy their
+liberty. Last night put them on board a steamboat and paid their passage
+to Buffalo."
+
+
+[64] When I knew Frank Henry, he was light-house keeper at Erie. He died
+in October, 1889, and his funeral was a memorable one. After the body
+had been viewed by his friends, while it lay in state in the parlor of
+his old home in Wesleyville, the casket was lifted to the shoulders of
+the pall-bearers, who carried it through the streets of the little
+village to the church, all the friends, which included all the villagers
+and many from the city and the country round about, following in
+procession on foot. The little church could not hold the assemblage, but
+the overflow waited until the service was over, content, if near enough
+the windows or the open door, to hear but a portion of the eulogies his
+beloved pastor pronounced. Then they all proceeded to the graveyard
+behind the historic church and laid him away. He was a man of an
+exceptionally frank and lovable character. Prof. Wilbur H. Siebert
+mentions him in his history, "The Underground Railroad from Slavery to
+Freedom"; but nowhere else, I believe, is as much recorded of the work
+which he did for the refugee slaves as in the incidents told in the
+following pages; and these, we may be assured, are but examples of the
+service in which he was engaged for a good many years.
+
+
+[65] Afterwards long known as the Lowry Mansion, on Second Street,
+between French and Holland streets. It is still standing.
+
+
+[66] Capt. D. P. Dobbins was for many years a distinguished resident of
+Buffalo. As vessel master, Government official, and especially as
+inventor of the Dobbins life-boat, he acquired a wide reputation; but
+little has been told of his Underground Railroad work. He died in 1892.
+
+
+[67] I had the facts of this experience from Mr. Frank Henry, and first
+wrote them out and printed them in the Erie Gazette in 1880. (Ah, Time,
+why hasten so!) In 1894 H. U. Johnson of Orwell, O., published a book
+entitled "From Dixie to Canada, Romances and Realities of the
+Underground Railroad," in which a chapter is devoted to Jack Watson, and
+this experience at the Wesleyville church is narrated, considerably
+embellished, but in parts with striking similarity to the version for
+which Frank Henry and I were responsible. Mr. Johnson gives no credit
+for his facts to any source.
+
+
+[68] Such an one was the anti-slavery worker, Sallie Holley, who had
+formerly taken great pleasure in the sermons of Mr. Fillmore's pastor,
+the Rev. Dr. Hosmer of the Unitarian Church. When Mr. Fillmore returned
+to Buffalo and was seen again in his accustomed seat, Miss Holley
+refused to attend there. "I cannot consent," she wrote, "that my name
+shall stand on the books of a church that will countenance voting for
+any pro-slavery presidential candidate. Think of a woman-whipper and a
+baby-stealer being countenanced as a Christian!"--_See_ "A Life for
+Liberty," edited by John White Chadwick, pp. 60, 69.
+
+
+[69] _See_ Seward's "Works," Vol. I., p. 65, _et seq._
+
+
+[70] _See_ Chamberlain's "Biography of Millard Fillmore," p. 136.
+
+
+[71] For the knowledge that the first mention of Niagara Falls is in
+Champlain's "Des Sauvages," we are indebted to the Hon. Peter A. Porter
+of Niagara Falls, who recently discovered, by comparison of early texts,
+that the allusions to the falls in Marc Lescarbot's "Histoire de la
+Nouvelle France" (1609), heretofore attributed to Jacques Cartier, are
+really quotations from "Des Sauvages," published some five years before.
+There is, apparently, no warrant for the oft-repeated statement that
+Cartier, in 1535, was the first white man to hear of the falls. That
+distinction passes to Champlain, who heard of them in 1603, and whose
+first book, printed at the end of that year or early in 1604, gave to
+the world its first knowledge of the great cataract.--_See_ "Champlain
+not Cartier," by Peter A. Porter, Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1899.
+
+
+[72] Champlain a bien été jusqu'à Mexico, comme on peut le voir dans son
+voyage aux Indes Occidentales; mais il ne s'est pas rendu au Pérou, que
+nous sachions.--_Note in Quebec reprint, 1870._ Nor had he been to
+Niagara.
+
+
+[73] Mocosa est le nom ancien de la Virginie. Cette expression, _saults
+Mocosans_, semble donner à entendre que, dès 1603 au moins, l'on avait
+quelque connaissance de la grande chute de Niagara.--_Note in Quebec
+reprint, 1870._
+
+
+[74] "Lescarbot écrit, en 1610, une pièce de vers dans laquelle il parle
+des grands sauts que les sauvages disent rencontrer en remontant le
+Saint-Laurent jusqu'au voisinage de la Virginie."--_Benj. Sulte,
+"Mélanges D'Histoire et de Litterature" p. 425._
+
+
+[75] The pronunciation of "Niagara" here, the reader will remark, is
+necessarily with the primary accent on the third syllable; the correct
+pronunciation, as eminent authorities maintain; and, as I hold, the more
+musical. "Ni-ag'-a-ra" gives us one hard syllable; "Ni [or better,
+-nee]-a-ga'-ra" makes each syllable end in a vowel, and softens the word
+to the ear. "Ni-ag'-a-ra" would have been impossible to the Iroquois
+tongue. But the word is now too fixed in its perverted usage to make
+reform likely, and we may expect to hear the harsh "Ni-ag'-a-ra" to the
+end of the chapter.
+
+
+[76] Dr. Samuel Johnson, as is well known, was responsible for a number
+of lines in "The Traveller." In the verses above quoted the line
+
+ "To stop too fearful and too faint to go"
+
+is attributed to him. Thus near does the mighty Johnson, the "Great Cham
+of Literature," come to legitimate inclusion among the poets of Niagara!
+
+
+[77] This is not necessarily hyperbole, by any means. Before the Niagara
+region was much settled, filled with the din of towns, the roar of
+trains, screech of whistles and all manner of ear-offending sounds,
+Niagara's voice could be heard for many miles. Many early travelers
+testify to the same effect as Moore. An early resident of Buffalo, the
+late Hon. Lewis F. Allen, has told me that many a time, seated on the
+veranda of his house on Niagara Street near Ferry, in the calm of a
+summer evening, he has heard the roar of Niagara Falls.
+
+
+[78] Introduced in the Epistle to Lady Charlotte Rawdon. In Moore's day
+there was a tiny islet, called Gull Island, near the edge of the
+Horseshoe Fall. It long since disappeared.
+
+
+[79] It had prior publication, serially, with illustrations, in the
+"Portfolio" of Philadelphia, 1809-'10.
+
+
+[80] Tom Moore's infantile criticisms of American institutions have
+often been quoted with approbation by persons sharing his supposed
+hostile views. What his maturer judgment was may be gathered from the
+following extract from a letter which he wrote, July 12, 1818, to J. E.
+Hall, editor of the "Portfolio," Philadelphia. I am not aware that it
+ever has been published. I quote from the original manuscript, in my
+possession:
+
+"You are mistaken in thinking that my present views of politics are a
+_change_ from those I formerly entertained. They are but a _return_ to
+those of my school & college days--to principles, of which I may say
+what Propertius said of his mistress: _Cynthia prima fuit, Cynthia finis
+erit_. The only thing that has ever made them _librate_ in their _orbit_
+was that foolish disgust I took at what I thought the _consequences_ of
+democratic principles in America--but I judged by the _abuse_, not the
+_use_--and the little information I took the trouble of seeking came to
+me through twisted and tainted channels--and, in short, I was a rash boy
+& made a fool of myself. But, thank Heaven, I soon righted again, and I
+trust it was the only deviation from the path of pure public feeling I
+ever shall have to reproach myself with. I mean to take some opportunity
+(most probably in the Life of Sheridan I am preparing) of telling the
+few to whom my opinions can be of any importance, how much I regret &
+how sincerely I retract every syllable, injurious to the great cause of
+Liberty, which my hasty view of America & her society provoked me into
+uttering....
+
+"Always faithfully & cordially Yours,
+
+ "THOMAS MOORE."
+
+
+[81] John Neal, or "Yankee Neal," as he was called, is a figure in early
+American letters which should not be forgotten. He was of Quaker
+descent, but was read out of the Society of Friends in his youth, as he
+says, "for knocking a man head over heels, for writing a tragedy, for
+paying a militia fine and for desiring to be turned out whether or no."
+He was a pioneer in American literature, and won success at home and
+abroad several years before Cooper became known. He was the first
+American contributor to English and Scotch quarterlies, and compelled
+attention to American topics at a time when English literature was
+regarded as the monopoly of Great Britain. His career was exceedingly
+varied and picturesque. He was an artist, lawyer, traveler, journalist
+and athlete. He is said to have established the first gymnasium in this
+country, on foreign models, and was the first to advocate, in 1838, in a
+Fourth-of-July oration, the right of woman suffrage. His writings are
+many, varied, and for the most part hard to find nowadays.
+
+
+[82] Those interested in scarce Americana may care to know that this
+"Wonders of the West" is said by some authorities to be the second
+book--certain almanacs and small prints excluded--that was published in
+Canada West, now Ontario. Of its only predecessor, "St. Ursula's
+Convent, or the Nuns of Canada," Kingston, 1824, no copy is believed to
+exist. Of the York school-master's Niagara poem, I know of but two
+copies, one owned by M. Phileas Gagnon, the Quebec bibliophile; the
+other in my own possession. It is at least of interest to observe that
+Ontario's native poetry began with a tribute to her greatest natural
+wonder, though it could be wished with a more creditable example.
+
+
+[83] It is a striking fact that "The Culprit Fay," which appeared in
+1819, was the outgrowth of a conversation between Drake, Halleck and
+Cooper, concerning the unsung poetry of American rivers.--_See_
+Richardson's "American Literature," Vol. II., p. 24.
+
+
+[84] Lord Morpeth made three visits to Niagara. He was the friend and
+guest, during his American travels, of Mr. Wadsworth at the Geneseo
+Homestead; and was also entertained by ex-President Van Buren and other
+distinguished men. His writings reveal a poetic, reflective temperament,
+but rarely rise above the commonplace in thought or expression.
+
+
+[85] The lines are not included in ordinary editions of Campbell's
+poems. The original MS. is in the possession of the Buffalo Public
+Library.
+
+
+[86] _See_ "Five Books of Song," by R. W. Gilder, 1894.
+
+
+[87] Dedicatory sonnet in "Younger American Poets, 1830-1890," edited by
+Douglas Sladen and G. B. Roberts.
+
+
+[88] The only edition I have seen was printed in the City of Mexico in
+1871.
+
+
+[89] _See_ Scribner's Monthly, Feb., 1881.
+
+
+[90] _See_ "Beauties and Achievements of the Blind," by Wm. Artman and
+L. V. Hall, Dansville, N. Y., 1854.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by
+Frank H. Severance
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+ .poem span.i20 {display: block; margin-left: 20em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i24 {display: block; margin-left: 24em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i6 {display: block; margin-left: 6em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by Frank H. Severance
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier
+
+Author: Frank H. Severance
+
+Release Date: August 5, 2011 [EBook #36974]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD TRAILS ON THE NIAGARA FRONTIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 670px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="670" height="1024" alt="" title="" />
+<h2><span class="smcap">Old Trails
+on the
+Niagara Frontier</span></h2>
+<h4><span class="smcap">Frank H. Severance</span></h4>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 710px;">
+<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="710" height="1010" alt="THE VISION OF BR&Eacute;BEUF." title="" />
+<span class="caption">THE VISION OF BR&Eacute;BEUF.</span>
+<p class="center"><i>Drawn by H. H. Green.</i> &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; <i>See Page 15.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<h1><span class="smcap">Old Trails<br />
+on the<br />
+Niagara Frontier</span></h1>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h3><span class="smcap">By Frank H. Severance</span></h3>
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<h4>BUFFALO N Y</h4>
+
+<h5>MDCCCXCIX</h5>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h5><span class="smcap">Copyright 1899</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">By Frank H. Severance</span></h5>
+
+<hr style="width: 5%;" />
+<p class="center"><small>THE MATTHEWS-NORTHRUP CO.,</small><br />
+COMPLETE ART-PRINTING WORKS,<br />
+BUFFALO, N. Y.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4>TO THE</h4>
+
+<h2><span class="smcap">Young People of the Schools</span></h2>
+
+<h4>OF BUFFALO,</h4>
+
+<div class="pblockquot">
+<p class="noin"><span class="smcap">Many of whom, on sundry pleasant
+occasions, have accompanied me, in
+school-room talks, over some of the
+Old Trails which run in and out
+of our home region, these studies
+of Niagara Frontier History are
+cordially inscribed.</span></p>
+
+<p class="ralign">F. H. S.</p>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Dedication,</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_v">v</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Preface</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Cross Bearers</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Paschal of the Great Pinch</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">With Bolton at Fort Niagara</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">What Befel David Ogden</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Fort Niagara Centennial</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Misadventures of Robert Marsh</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Underground Trails</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Niagara and The Poets</span>,</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The essays herein contained have been written at "odd
+moments," and for divers purposes. Their chief value lies
+in the fact that they illustrate, several of them by means of individual
+experiences, certain typical and well-defined periods in the
+history of the Niagara region. By "Niagara region," a phrase
+which no doubt occurs pretty often in the following pages, I
+mean to designate in a historic, not a scenic, sense the frontier
+territory of the Niagara from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. It is a
+region which has a concrete but as yet for the most part unwritten
+history of its own. The value of its past to the student, as is ever
+the case with "local history" in its worthy aspect, depends upon
+the importance of its relation to the general history of our country.
+That the Niagara region has played an important part in that
+history, is an assurance wholly superfluous for even the most
+casual student of American development. All that the following
+studies undertake is to give a glimpse, with such fidelity as may be,
+of events and conditions hereabouts existing, at periods which may
+fairly be termed typical.</p>
+
+<p>"The Cross Bearers," a paper originally prepared as a lecture
+for a class that was studying the history of the Catholic Church in
+America, is, so far as I am aware, the first attempt to review in a
+single narrative all of the French missions in this immediate
+vicinity, and the work of the English-speaking missionary priests
+who said mass in the Niagara region prior to its full organization
+under ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The data are drawn from the
+original sources&mdash;the Jesuit Relations, Champlain, Le Clercq,
+Hennepin, Charlevoix, Crespel and other early writers whose
+works, in any edition, are often inaccessible to the student. For
+data relating to Bishop Burke, and for other valuable assistance,
+I am indebted to my friend the Very Rev. Wm. R. Harris, Dean
+of St. Catharines.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The Paschal of the Great Pinch" is an attempt to picture,
+in narrative form, conditions conceived to exist at Fort Niagara in
+1687-'8, when the Marquis de Denonville made his abortive
+attempt to occupy that point. Lest any reader shall be in doubt
+as to the genuineness of the memoirs of the Chevalier De Tregay, I
+beg to assure him that Lieut. De Tregay is no myth. His name,
+and practically all the facts on which my sketch is based, will be
+found in the Paris Documents (IV.), "Documentary History of
+the State of New York," Vol. I. This paper stands for the
+French period on the Niagara; the two next following, for the
+British period.</p>
+
+<p>"With Bolton at Fort Niagara" is almost wholly drawn from
+unpublished records, chiefly the Haldimand Papers, the originals
+of which are in the British Museum, but certified copies of which
+are readily accessible to the student in the Archives at Ottawa. I
+have made but a slight study of the great mass of material from
+which practically the history of the Niagara region during the
+Revolution is to be written; yet it is probable that this slight
+study makes known for the first time, to students of our home
+history, such facts as the employment of Hessians on the Niagara
+during the Revolution, the first bringing hither of the American
+flag, possibly even the work and fate of Lieut. Col. Bolton
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>The next paper, "What Befel David Ogden," is drawn from
+a widely different, though scarcely less known source. The personal
+narrative is based on an obscure pamphlet by Josiah Priest,
+published at Lansingburgh, N. Y., in 1840. I am aware that
+Priest is not altogether trustworthy as a historian. Dr. Thos. W.
+Field calls him a "prolific, needy and unscrupulous author"
+[<i>See</i> "An Essay Toward an Indian Bibliography"]; yet he concedes
+to his works "a large amount of historic material obtained
+at some pains from sources more or less authentic." My judgment
+is, that Priest is least trustworthy in his more ambitious
+work; whereas his unpretentious pamphlets, wretchedly printed at
+a country press sixty years ago, contain true narratives of individual
+undertakings in the Revolution, Indian captivities and other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
+pioneer experiences, gathered by the writer direct from the hero
+whose adventures he wrote down, without literary skill it is true,
+but also without apparent perversion or exaggeration. The very
+circumstantiality with which David Ogden's experiences are
+narrated is evidence of their genuineness. Corroborative evidence
+is also furnished by the lately-published muster-rolls of New York
+regiments during the Revolution. In the Third Regiment of
+Tryon County militia, among the enlisted men, appears the name
+of David Ogden ["New York in the Revolution," 2d ed., p. 181],
+and there was but one David Ogden, not merely in the Tryon
+County militia, but so far as these records show, in the entire
+soldiery of New York State. In the same regiment there was also
+a "Daniel" Ogden, Sr., possibly David's father. The name
+Daniel Ogden also occurs in the list of Tryon County Rangers
+["New York in the Revolution," 2d ed., p. 186], a service in
+which we would naturally expect to find one whom the Indian
+Brant called "the beaver hunter, that old scouter." In short, I
+think we may accept David as altogether genuine, and in his
+adventures&mdash;never told before, I believe, as a part of Niagara
+history&mdash;may find an example of patriotic suffering and endurance
+wholly typical of what many another underwent at that time and
+in this region.</p>
+
+<p>The "Fort Niagara Centennial Address" is here included
+because its most important part relates to that period in our history
+immediately following the Revolution, the "hold-over period,"
+during which, for thirteen years after the Treaty of 1783, the
+British continued to occupy Fort Niagara and other lake posts.
+What I say on the negotiations leading to the final relinquishment
+of Fort Niagara is based on information gleaned from the manuscript
+records in London and Ottawa.</p>
+
+<p>"The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant" is
+also a contribution to local annals from an unpublished source,
+being drawn from the MS. journals of John Lay, very kindly
+placed in my hands by members of his family. They afford a
+picture of conditions hereabouts and elsewhere, during the years
+1810-'23, which I have thought worthy of preservation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the "Misadventures of Robert Marsh" I have endeavored
+by means of a personal narrative to illustrate another period
+in our history. The misguided Marsh fairly stands for many of
+the so-called Patriots whose uprising on this border is known as
+Mackenzie's Rebellion of 1837-'8. The considerable literature on
+this subject includes a number of personal narratives, for the most
+part published in small editions and now hard to find; but the
+scarcest of all, so far as my experience has discovered, is that
+from which I have drawn the story of Robert Marsh: "Seven
+Years of My Life, or Narrative of a Patriot Exile, who together
+with eighty-two American Citizens were illegally tried for
+rebellion in Upper Canada and transported to Van Dieman's
+Land," etc., etc. It is an exceedingly prolix and pretentious title,
+after the fashion of the time, prefacing a badly-written, poorly-printed
+volume of 207 pages, turned out by the press of Faxon &amp;
+Stevens, Buffalo, 1848. In view of the fact that neither in Sabin
+nor any other bibliography have I found any mention of this book,
+and the further fact that in fifteen years of somewhat diligent book-hunting
+I have discovered but one copy, it is no exaggeration to
+call Marsh's "Narrative" "scarce," if not "rare."</p>
+
+<p>The incidents related in "Underground Trails" are illustrative
+of many an episode at the eastern end of Lake Erie in the
+days preceding the Civil War. I had the facts of the principal
+adventures some years ago from the late Mr. Frank Henry of Erie,
+Pa., who had himself been a participant in more than one worthy
+enterprise of the Underground Railroad. Sketches based on
+information supplied by Mr. Henry, and originally written out for
+the Erie Gazette, are the latter part of the paper as it now stands.</p>
+
+<p>The last essay, "Niagara and the Poets," is a following of "Old
+Trails" chiefly in a literary sense, but it is thought its inclusion
+here will not be found inappropriate to the general character of
+the collection.</p>
+
+<p>I must add a word of grateful acknowledgment for help received
+from Douglas Brymner, Dominion Archivist, at Ottawa; from the
+Hon. Peter A. Porter of Niagara Falls, N. Y., Charles W. Dobbins
+of New York City, and John Miller, Erie, Pa. F. H. S.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>The Cross Bearers.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE CROSS BEARERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I invite you to consider briefly with me the
+beginnings of known history in our home region.
+Of the general character of that history, as a part
+of the exploration and settlement of the lake region,
+you are already familiar. What I undertake is to
+direct special attention to a few of the individuals
+who made that history&mdash;for history, in the ultimate
+analysis, is merely the record of the result of personal
+character and influence; and it is striking to note how
+relatively few and individual are the dominating minds.</p>
+
+<p>Remembering this, when we turn to trace the story
+of the Niagara, we find the initial impulses strikingly
+different from those which lie at the base of history in
+many places. Often the first chapter in the story is a
+record of war for war's sake&mdash;the aim being conquest,
+acquisition of territory, or the search for gold. Not so
+here. The first invasion of white men in this mid-lake
+region was a mission of peace and good will. Our
+history begins in a sweet and heroic obedience to commands
+passed down direct from the Founder of Christianity
+Himself. Into these wilds, long before the
+banner of any earthly kingdom was planted here, was
+borne the cross of Christ. Here the crucifix preceded
+the sword; the altar was built before the hearth.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Now, I care not what the faith of the student be, he
+cannot escape the facts. The cross is stamped upon
+the first page of our home history&mdash;of this Buffalo and
+the banks of the Niagara; and whoever would know
+something of that history must follow the footsteps of
+those who first brought the cross to these shores. It
+is, therefore, a brief following of the personal experiences
+of these early cross bearers that we undertake;
+but first, a word may be permitted by way of reminder
+as to the conditions here existing when our
+recorded history begins.</p>
+
+<p>From remote days unrecorded, the territory bordering
+the Niagara, between Lakes Erie and Ontario, was
+occupied by a nation of Indians called the Neuters. A
+few of their villages were on the east side of the river,
+the easternmost being supposed to have stood near the
+present site of Lockport. The greater part of the
+Niagara peninsula of Ontario and the north shore of
+Lake Erie was their territory. To the east of them, in
+the Genesee valley and beyond, dwelt the Senecas, the
+westernmost of the Iroquois tribes. To the north of
+them, on Lake Huron and the Georgian Bay, dwelt
+the Hurons. About 1650 the Iroquois overran the
+Neuter territory, destroyed the nation and made the
+region east of the Niagara a part of their own territory;
+though more than a century elapsed, after their
+conquest of the Neuters, before the Senecas made permanent
+villages on Buffalo Creek and near the Niagara.
+It is necessary to bear this fact in mind, in considering
+the visits of white men to this region during that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+period; it had become territory of the Senecas, but
+they only occupied it at intervals, on hunting or fishing
+expeditions.</p>
+
+<p>During the latter years of Neuter possession of our
+region, missionaries began to approach the Niagara
+from two directions; but long before any brave soul
+had neared it through what is now New York State,&mdash;then
+the heart of the fierce Iroquois country,&mdash;others,
+more successful, had come down from the early-established
+missions among the Hurons, had sojourned
+among the Neuters and had offered Christian prayers
+among the savages east of the Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>Note, therefore, that the first white man known to
+have visited the Niagara region was a Catholic priest.
+Moreover, so far as is ascertained, he was the first man,
+coming from what is now Canada, to bring the Christian
+faith into the present territory of the United
+States. This man was Joseph de la Roche Dallion.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+The date of his visit is 1626.</p>
+
+<p>Father Dallion was a Franciscan of the Recollect
+reform, who had been for a time at the mission among
+the Hurons, then carried on jointly by priests and lay
+brothers of the Recollects and also by Fathers of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+Society of Jesus. On October 18th of this year
+(1626), he left his companions, resolved to carry the
+cross among the people of the Neuter nation. An interpreter,
+Brusl&eacute;, had "told wonders" of these people.
+Brusl&eacute;, it would seem, therefore, had been among them;
+and although, as I have said, Father Dallion was the
+first white man known to have reached the Niagara, yet
+it is just to consider the probabilities in the case of
+this all but unknown interpreter. There are plausible
+grounds for belief, but no proof, that &Eacute;tienne Brusl&eacute;
+was the first white man who ever saw Niagara Falls.
+No adventurer in our region had a more remarkable
+career than his, yet but little of it is known to us. He
+was with Champlain on his journey to the Huron
+country. He left that explorer in September, 1615,
+at the outlet of Lake Simcoe, and went on a most
+perilous mission into the country of the Andastes, allies
+of the Hurons, to enlist them against the Iroquois.
+The Andastes lived on the head-waters of the Susquehanna,
+and along the south shore of Lake Erie, the
+present site of Buffalo being generally included within
+the bounds of their territory. Champlain saw nothing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+more of Brusl&eacute; for three years, but in the summer of
+1618 met him at Saut St. Louis. Brusl&eacute; had had
+wonderful adventures, had even been bound to the
+stake and burned so severely that he must have been
+frightfully scarred. The name by which we know him
+may have been given him on this account. He was
+saved from death by what the Indians regarded as an
+exhibition of wrath on the part of the Great Spirit. I
+find no trace of him between 1618 and 1626, when
+Father Dallion appears to have taken counsel of him
+regarding the Neuters. Brusl&eacute; was murdered by the
+Hurons near Penetanguishene in 1632. What is
+known of him is learned from Champlain's narrative of
+the voyage of 1618 (edition of 1627). Sagard also
+speaks of him, and says he made an exploration of the
+upper lakes&mdash;a claim not generally credited. Parkman,
+drawing from these sources and the "Relations," tells his
+story in "The Pioneers of France in the New World,"
+admiringly calls him "That Pioneer of Pioneers," and
+says that he seems to have visited the Eries in 1615.</p>
+
+<p>The interesting thing about him in connection with
+our present study is the fact that he appears to have
+been the forerunner of Dallion among the savages of
+the Niagara. There is no white man named in history
+who may be even conjectured, with any plausibility, to
+have visited the Niagara earlier than Brusl&eacute;.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Stimulated by this interpreter's reports, by the
+encouragement of his companions and the promptings
+of his own zeal, Father Dallion set out for the unknown
+regions. Two Frenchmen, Grenole and Lavall&eacute;e,
+accompanied him. They tramped the trail for six days
+through the woods, apparently rounding the western
+end of Lake Ontario, and coming eastward through
+the Niagara Peninsula. They were well received at
+the villages, given venison, squashes and parched corn
+to eat, and were shown no sign of hostility. "All
+were astonished to see me dressed as I was," writes
+the father, "and to see that I desired nothing of theirs,
+except that I invited them by signs to lift their eyes
+to heaven, make the sign of the cross and receive the
+faith of Jesus Christ." The good priest, however,
+had another object, somewhat unusual to the men of his
+calling. At the sixth village, where he had been
+advised to remain, a council was held. "There I
+told them, as well as I could, that I came on behalf of
+the French to contract alliance and friendship with
+them, and to invite them to come to trade. I also
+begged them to allow me to remain in their country,
+to be able to instruct them in the law of our God,
+which is the only means of going to paradise." The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+Neuters accepted the priest's offers, and the first recorded
+trade in the Niagara region was made when
+he presented them "little knives and other trifles."
+They adopted him into the tribe, and gave him a
+father, the chief Souharissen.</p>
+
+<p>After this cordial welcome, Grenole and Lavall&eacute;e
+returned to the Hurons, leaving Father Joseph "the
+happiest man in the world, hoping to do something
+there to advance God's glory, or at least to discover
+the means, which would be no small thing, and to endeavor
+to discover the mouth of the river of Hiroquois,
+in order to bring them to trade." After speaking of
+the people and his efforts to teach them, he continues:
+"I have always seen them constant in their resolution
+to go with at least four canoes to the trade, if I would
+guide them, the whole difficulty being that we did not
+know the way. Yroquet, an Indian known in those
+countries, who had come there with twenty of his men
+hunting for beaver, and who took fully 500, would
+never give us any mark to know the mouth of the
+river. He and several Hurons assured us that it was
+only ten days' journey to the trading place; but we
+were afraid of taking one river for another, and losing
+our way or dying of hunger on the land." So excellent
+an authority as Dr. John Gilmary Shea says:
+"This was evidently the Niagara River, and the route
+through Lake Ontario. He (Dallion) apparently
+crossed the river, as he was on the Iroquois frontier."
+The great conquest of the Neuters by the Iroquois was
+not until 1648 or 1650. Just what the "Iroquois<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+frontier" was in 1627 is uncertain. It appears to have
+been about midway between the Niagara and the Genesee,
+the easternmost Neuter village being some thirty
+miles east of the Niagara. The Recollect appears therefore
+as the first man to write of the Niagara, from personal
+knowledge, and of its mouth as a place of trade.
+The above quotations are from the letter Father Dallion
+wrote to one of his friends in France July 18, 1627,
+he having then returned to Toanchain, a Huron village.
+I have followed the text as given by Sagard. It is
+significant that Le Clercq, in his "Premier &Eacute;tablissement
+de la Foy," etc., gives a portion of Dallion's
+account of his visit to the Neuters, but omits nearly
+everything he says about trade.</p>
+
+<p>Father Dallion sojourned three winter months with
+the Neuters, but the latter part of the stay was far
+from agreeable. The Hurons, he says, having discovered
+that he talked of leading the Neuters to trade,
+at once spread false and evil reports of him. They
+said he was a great magician; that he was a poisoner,
+that he tainted the air of the country where he tarried,
+and that if the Neuters did not kill him, he
+would burn their villages and kill their children. The
+priest was at a disadvantage in not having much command
+of the Neuter dialect, and it is not strange, after
+the evil report had once been started, that he should
+have seemed to engage in some devilish incantation
+whenever he held the cross before them or sought to
+baptize the children. When one reflects upon the
+dense wall of ignorance and superstition against which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+his every effort at moral or spiritual teaching was impotent,
+the admiration for the martyr spirit which
+animated the effort is tempered by amazement that an
+acute and sagacious man should have thought it well
+to "labor" in such an obviously ineffective way. But
+history is full of instances of ardent devotion to aims
+which the "practical" man would denounce at once
+as unattainable. That Father Dallion was animated
+by the spirit of the martyrs is attested in his own
+account of what befel him. A treacherous band of
+ten came to him and tried to pick a quarrel. "One
+knocked me down with a blow of his fist, another took
+an ax and tried to split my head. God averted his
+hand; the blow fell on a post near me. I also
+received much other ill-treatment; but that is what
+we came to seek in this country." His assailants
+robbed him of many of his possessions, including his
+breviary and compass. These precious things, which
+were no doubt "big medicine" in the eyes of his ungracious
+hosts, were afterwards returned. The news
+of his maltreatment reached the ears of Fathers Br&eacute;beuf
+and De la Nou&euml; at the Huron mission. They sent the
+messenger, Grenole, to bring him back, if found alive.
+Father Dallion returned with Grenole early in the year
+1627; and so ended the first recorded visit of white
+man to the Niagara region.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>For fourteen years succeeding, I find no allusion to
+our district. Then comes an episode which is so
+adventurous and so heroic, so endowed with beauty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+and devotion, that it should be familiar to all who give
+any heed to what has happened in the vicinity of the
+Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>Jean de Br&eacute;beuf was a missionary priest of the
+Jesuits. That implies much; but in his case even
+such a general imputation of exalted qualities falls
+short of justice. His is a superb figure, a splendid
+acquisition to the line of heroic figures that pass in
+shadowy procession along the horizon of our home
+history. Trace the narrative of his life as sedulously
+as we may, examine his character and conduct in whatever
+critical light we may choose to study them, and
+still the noble figure of Father Br&eacute;beuf is seen without
+a flaw. There were those of his order whose acts were
+at times open to two constructions. Some of them
+were charged, by men of other faith and hostile allegiance,
+with using their priestly privileges as a cloak
+for worldly objects. No such charge was ever brought
+against Father Br&eacute;beuf. The guilelessness and heroism
+of his life are unassailable.</p>
+
+<p>He was of a noble Normandy family, and when he
+comes upon the scene, on the banks of the Niagara, he
+was forty-seven years old. He had come out to
+Quebec fifteen years before and had been assigned to
+the Huron mission. In 1628 he was called back to
+Quebec, but five years later he was allowed to return
+to his charge in the remote wilderness. The record of
+his work and sufferings there is not a part of our present
+story. Those who seek a marvelous exemplification
+of human endurance and devotion, may find it in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+the ancient Relations of the order. He lived amid
+threats and plots against his life, he endured what
+seems unendurable, and his zeal throve on the experience.
+In November, 1640, he and a companion, the
+priest Joseph Chaumonot, resolved to carry the cross
+to the Neuter nation. They no doubt knew of Father
+Dallion's dismal experience; and were spurred on
+thereby. Like him, they sought martyrdom. Their
+route from the Huron country to the Niagara has been
+traced with skill and probable accuracy by the Very
+Rev. Wm. R. Harris, Dean of St. Catharines. At
+this time the Neuter nation lived to the north of Lake
+Erie throughout what we know as the Niagara Peninsula,
+and on both sides of the Niagara, their most eastern
+village being near the present site of Lockport.
+From an uncertain boundary, thereabouts, they confronted
+the possessions of the Senecas, who a few years
+later were to wipe them off the face of the earth and
+occupy all their territory east of the lake and river.</p>
+
+<p>Fathers Br&eacute;beuf and Chaumonot set out on their
+hazardous mission November 2d, in the year named,
+from a Huron town in the present township of
+Medonte, Ontario. (Near Penetanguishene, on Georgian
+Bay.) Their probable path was through the present
+towns of Beeton, Orangeville, Georgetown, Hamilton
+and St. Catharines. They came out upon the Niagara
+just north of the Queenston escarpment. The journey
+thus far had been a succession of hardships. The
+interpreters whom they had engaged to act as guides
+deserted them at the outset. Ahead of them went the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+reputation which the Hurons spread abroad, that they
+were magicians and carried all manner of evils with
+them. Father Br&eacute;beuf was a man of extraordinary
+physical strength. Many a time, in years gone by, he
+had astonished the Indians by his endurance at the
+paddle, and in carrying great loads over the portages.
+His companion, Chaumonot, was smaller and weaker,
+but was equally sustained by faith in Divine guidance.
+On their way through the forests, Father Br&eacute;beuf
+was cheered by a vision of angels, beckoning him
+on; but when he and his companion finally stood on
+the banks of the Niagara, under the leaden sky of late
+November, there was little of the beatific in the
+prospect. They crossed the swirling stream&mdash;by
+what means must be left to conjecture, the probability
+being in favor of a light bark canoe&mdash;and on the
+eastern bank found themselves in the hostile village of
+Onguiara&mdash;the first-mentioned settlement on the banks
+of our river.</p>
+
+<p>Here the half-famished priests were charged with
+having come to ruin the people. They were refused
+shelter and food, but finally found opportunity to step
+into a wigwam, where Indian custom, augmented by
+fear, permitted them to remain. The braves gathered
+around, and proposed to put them to death. "I am
+tired," cried one, "eating the dark flesh of our
+enemies, and I want to taste the white flesh of the
+Frenchman." So at least is the record in the Relation.
+Another drew bow to pierce the heart of Chaumonot;
+but all fell back in awe when the stalwart Br&eacute;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>beuf
+stepped forth into their midst, without weapon
+and without fear, and raising his hand exclaimed:
+"We have not come here for any other purpose than
+to do you a friendly service. We wish to teach you
+to worship the Master of Life, so that you may be
+happy in this world and in the other."</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not any of the spiritual import of his
+speech was comprehended cannot be said; but the
+temper of the crowd changed, so that, instead of
+threatening immediate death, they began to take a
+curious, childish interest in the two "black-gowns";
+examining the priests' clothes, and appropriating their
+hats and other loose articles. The travelers completely
+mystified them by reading a written message, and thus
+getting at another's thoughts without a spoken word.
+The Relation is rich in details of this sort, and of the
+wretchedness of the life which the missionaries led.
+They visited other "towns," as the collections of bark
+wigwams are called; but everywhere they were looked
+upon as necromancers, and their lives were spared only
+through fear.</p>
+
+<p>Far into the winter the priests endured all manner
+of hardship. Food was sometimes thrown to them as
+to a worthless dog, sometimes denied altogether, and
+then they had to make shift with such roots and barks
+or chance game as their poor woodcraft enabled them
+to procure, or the meager winter woods afforded. On
+one occasion, when a chief frankly told them that his
+people would have killed them long before, but for
+fear that the spirits of the priests would in vengeance<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+destroy them, Br&eacute;beuf began to assure him that his
+mission was only to do good; whereupon the savage
+replied by spitting in the priest's face; and the priest
+thanked God that he was worthy of the same indignity
+which had been put upon Jesus Christ. When one
+faces his foes in such a spirit, there is absolutely
+nothing to fear. And yet, after four months of these
+experiences, there seems not to have been the slightest
+sign of any good result. The savages were as invulnerable
+to any moral or spiritual teachings as the chill
+earth itself. Dumb brutes would have shown more
+return for kindness than they. The saying of Chateaubriand,
+that man without religion is the most dangerous
+animal that walks the earth, found full justification
+in these savages. Finally, Br&eacute;beuf and his
+associate determined to withdraw from the absolutely
+fruitless field, and began to retrace their steps towards
+Huronia.</p>
+
+<p>It was near the middle of February, 1641, when they
+began their retreat from the land of the Neuters. The
+story of that retreat, as indeed of the whole mission,
+has been most beautifully told, with a sympathetic fervency
+impossible for one not richly endowed with faith
+to simulate, by Dean Harris. Let his account of what
+happened stand here:</p>
+
+<p>"The snow was falling when they left the village
+Onguiara, crossed the Niagara River near Queenston,
+ascended its banks and disappeared in the shadowy
+forest. The path, which led through an unbroken
+wilderness, lay buried in snow. The cold pierced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+them through and through. The cords on Fr. Chaumonot's
+snow-shoe broke, and his stiffened fingers
+could scarcely tie the knot. Innumerable flakes of
+snow were falling from innumerable branches. Their
+only food was a pittance of Indian corn mixed with
+melted snow; their only guide, a compass. Worn and
+spent with hardships, these saintly men, carrying in
+sacks their portable altar, were returning to announce
+to their priestly companions on the Wye the dismal
+news of their melancholy failure and defeat. There
+was not a hungry wolf that passed them but looked
+back and half forgave their being human. There was
+not a tree but looked down upon them with pity and
+commiseration. Night was closing in when, spent with
+fatigue, they saw smoke rising at a distance. Soon
+they reached a clearing and descried before them a
+cluster of bark lodges. Here these Christian soldiers
+of the cross bivouacked for the night.</p>
+
+<p>"Early that evening while Chaumonot, worn with
+traveling and overcome with sleep, threw himself to
+rest on a bed that was not made up since the creation
+of the world, Father Br&eacute;beuf, to escape for a time the
+acrid and pungent smoke that filled the cabin, went
+out to commune with God alone in prayer....
+He moved toward the margin of the woods, when
+presently he stopped as if transfixed. Far away to the
+southeast, high in the air and boldly outlined, a huge
+cross floated suspended in mid-heaven. Was it stationary?
+No, it moved toward him from the land of
+the Iroquois. The saintly face lighted with unwonted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+splendor, for he saw in the vision the presage of the
+martyr's crown. Tree and hillside, lodge and village,
+faded away, and while the cross was still slowly
+approaching, the soul of the great priest went out in
+ecstasy, in loving adoration to his Lord and his God.... Overcome
+with emotion, he exclaimed, 'Who
+will separate me from the love of my Lord? Shall
+tribulation, nakedness, peril, distress, or famine, or the
+sword?' Emparadised in ecstatic vision, he again cries
+out with enthusiastic loyalty, '<i>Sentio me vehementer
+impelli ad moriendum pro Christo</i>'&mdash;'I feel within me
+a mighty impulse to die for Christ'&mdash;and flinging himself
+upon his knees as a victim for the sacrifice or a
+holocaust for sin, he registered his wondrous vow to
+meet martyrdom, when it came to him, with the joy
+and resignation befitting a disciple of his Lord.</p>
+
+<p>"When he returned to himself the cross had faded
+away, innumerable stars were brightly shining, the cold
+was wrapping him in icy mantle, and he retraced his
+footsteps to the smoky cabin. He flung himself beside
+his weary brother and laid him down to rest. When
+morning broke they began anew their toilsome journey,
+holding friendly converse.</p>
+
+<p>"'Was the cross large?' asked Father Chaumonot.</p>
+
+<p>"'Large,' spoke back the other, 'yes, large enough
+to crucify us all.'"</p>
+
+<p>It is idle to insist on judgments by the ordinary
+standards in a case like this. As Parkman says, it
+belongs not to history, but to psychology. Br&eacute;beuf
+saw the luminous cross in the heavens above the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+Niagara; not the material, out-reaching arms of
+Niagara's spray, rising columnar from the chasm, then
+resting, with crosslike extensions on the quiet air,
+white and pallid under the winter moon. Such phenomena
+are not unusual above the cataract, but may
+not be offered in explanation of the priest's vision.
+He was in the neighborhood of Grimsby, full twenty
+miles from the falls, when he saw the cross; much too
+far away to catch the gleam of frosted spray. Nor is
+it a gracious spirit which seeks a material explanation
+for his vision. The cross truly presaged his martyrdom;
+and although the feet of Father Br&eacute;beuf never
+again sought the ungrateful land of the Neuters, yet
+his visit and his vision were not wholly without fruit.
+They endow local history with an example of pure
+devotion to the betterment of others, unsurpassed in
+all the annals of the holy orders. To Br&eacute;beuf the
+miraculous cross foretold martyrdom, and thereby was
+it a sign of conquest and of victory to this heroic
+Constantine of the Niagara.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>After Br&eacute;beuf and Chaumonot had turned their backs
+on the Neuters, the Niagara region was apparently
+unvisited by white men for more than a quarter of a
+century. These were not, however, years of peaceful
+hunting and still more placid corn and pumpkin-growing,
+such as some romantic writers have been fond of ascribing
+to the red men when they were unmolested by the
+whites. As a matter of fact, and as Fathers Dallion,
+Br&eacute;beuf and Chaumonot had discovered, the people<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+who claimed the banks of the lower reaches of the
+Niagara as within their territory, were the embodiment
+of all that was vile and barbarous. There is no record
+that they had a village at the angle of lake and river,
+where now stands old Fort Niagara. It would have
+been strange, however, if they did not occasionally
+occupy that sightly plateau with their wigwams or
+huts, while they were laying in a supply of fish. If
+trees ever covered the spot they were killed by early
+camp-fires, probably long before the coming of the
+whites. Among the earliest allusions to the point is
+one which speaks of the difficulty of getting wood
+there; and such a treeless tract, in this part of the
+country, could usually be attributed to the denudation
+consequent on Indian occupancy.</p>
+
+<p>A decade or so after the retreat of the missionaries
+came that fierce Indian strife which annihilated the
+Neuters and gave Niagara's banks into the keeping of
+the fiercer but somewhat nobler Iroquois. The story
+of this Indian war has been told with all possible
+illumination from the few meager records that are
+known; and it only concerns the present chronicle to
+note that about 1650 the site of Fort Niagara passed
+under Seneca domination. The Senecas had no permanent
+town in the vicinity, but undoubtedly made it
+a rendezvous for war parties, and for hunting and fishing
+expeditions.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the Jesuits in their Relations, and after
+them the cartographers in Europe, were making hearsay
+allusions to the Niagara or locating it, with much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+inaccuracy, on their now grotesque maps. In 1648
+the Jesuit Ragueneau, writing to the Superior at Paris,
+mentions Niagara, which he had never seen or approached,
+as "a cataract of frightful height." L'Allemant
+in the Relation published in 1642, had alluded
+to the river, but not to the fall. Sanson, in 1656, put
+"Ongiara" on his famous map; and four years later the
+map of Creuxius, published with his great "Histori&aelig;
+Canadensis," gave our river and fall the Latin dignity
+of "Ongiara Catarractes." One map-maker copied
+from another, so that even by the middle of the seventeenth
+century, the reading and student world&mdash;small
+and ecclesiastical as it mostly was&mdash;began to have
+some inkling of the main features and continental
+position of the mid-lake region for the possession of
+which, a little later, several Forts Niagara were to be
+projected. It is not, however, until 1669 that we
+come to another definite episode in the history of the
+region.</p>
+
+<p>In that year came hither the Sulpitian missionaries,
+Fran&ccedil;ois Dollier de Casson and Ren&eacute; de Br&eacute;hant<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> de
+Galin&eacute;e. They were bent on carrying the cross to
+nations hitherto unreached, on Western rivers. With
+them was the young Robert Cavelier, known as La Salle,
+who was less interested in carrying the cross than in
+exploring the country. Their expedition left Montreal
+July 6th, nine canoes in all. They made their way
+up the St. Lawrence, skirted the south shore of Lake
+Ontario, and on Aug. 10th were at Irondequoit Bay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+They made a most eventful visit to the Seneca villages
+south of the bay. Thence they continued westward,
+apparently by Indian trails overland, and not by canoe.
+De Galin&eacute;e, who was the historian of the expedition,
+says that they came to a river "one eighth of a league
+broad and extremely rapid, forming the outlet or
+communication from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario," and
+he continues with a somewhat detailed account of Niagara
+Falls, which, although he passed near them, he did
+not turn aside to see. The Sulpitians and La Salle
+crossed the river, apparently below Lewiston. They
+may indeed have come to the river at its mouth,
+skirting the lake shore. One may infer either course
+from the narrative of de Galin&eacute;e, which goes on to say
+that five days after passing the river they "arrived at the
+extremity of Lake Ontario, where there is a fine, large
+sandy bay ... and where we unloaded our canoes."</p>
+
+<p>Pushing on westward, late in September, on the trail
+between Burlington Bay and the Grand River, they met
+Joliet, returning from his expedition in search of copper
+mines on Lake Superior. This meeting in the wilderness
+is a suggestive and picturesque subject, but we
+may not dwell on it here. Joliet, though he had thus
+preceded LaSalle and the Sulpitians in the exploration
+of the lakes, had gone west by the old northern route
+along the Ottawa, Lake Nipissing and the French River.
+He was never on the Niagara, for after his meeting
+with LaSalle, he continued eastward by way of the
+Grand River valley and Lake Ontario. Fear of the
+savages deterred him from coming by way of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+Niagara, and thereby, it is not unlikely, becoming
+the white discoverer of Niagara Falls.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> He was the
+first white man, so far as records relate, to come eastward
+through the Detroit River and Lake Erie. Our
+lake was therefore "discovered" from the west&mdash;a fact
+perhaps without parallel in the history of American
+exploration.</p>
+
+<p>After the meeting with Joliet, La Salle left the missionaries,
+who, taking advantage of information had from
+Joliet, followed the Grand River down to Lake Erie.
+Subsequently they passed through Lake Erie to the westward,
+the first of white men to explore the lake in that
+direction. De Galin&eacute;e's map (1669) is the first that
+gives us the north shore of Lake Erie with approximate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+accuracy. On October 15th this devout man and his
+companion reached Lake Erie, which they described
+as "a vast sea, tossed by tempestuous winds." Deterred
+by the lateness of the season from attempting further
+travel by this course, they determined to winter where
+they were, and built a cabin for their shelter.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally they were visited in their hut by
+Iroquois beaver hunters. For five months and eleven
+days they remained in their winter quarters and on the
+23d of March, 1670, being Passion Sunday, they
+erected a cross as a memorial of their long sojourn.
+The official record of the act is as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"We the undersigned certify that we have seen affixed on the
+lands of the lake called Eri&eacute; the arms of the King of France with
+this inscription: 'The year of salvation 1669, Clement IX. being
+seated in St. Peter's chair, Louis XIV. reigning in France, M. de
+Courcelle being Governor of New France, and M. Talon being
+intendant therein for the King, there arrived in this place two
+missionaries from Montreal accompanied by seven other Frenchmen,
+who, the first of all European peoples, have wintered on this
+lake, of which, as of a territory not occupied, they have taken
+possession in the name of their King by the apposition of his
+arms, which they have attached to the foot of this cross. In witness
+whereof we have signed the present certificate.'</p>
+
+<p class="ralign">
+<span style="margin-right: 8em;">"FRANCOIS DOLLIER,</span><br />
+"Priest of the Diocese of Nantes in Brittany. &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
+<span style="margin-right: 11.5em;">"DE GALIN&Eacute;E,</span><br />
+"Deacon of the Diocese of Rennes in Brittany."
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The winter was exceedingly mild, but the stream<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
+was still frozen on the 26th of March, when they portaged
+their canoes and goods to the lake to resume<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+their westward journey. Unfortunately losing one of
+their canoes in a gale they were obliged to divide their
+party, four men with the luggage going in the two
+remaining canoes; while the rest, including the missionaries,
+undertook the wearisome journey on foot all
+the way from Long Point to the mouth of the Kettle
+Creek. De Galin&eacute;e grows enthusiastic in his admiration
+for the immense quantities of game and fruits opposite
+Long Point and calls the country the terrestrial Paradise
+of Canada. "The grapes were as large and as
+sweet as the finest in France. The wine made from
+them was as good as <i>vin de Grave</i>." He admires the
+profusion of walnuts, chestnuts, wild apples and plums.
+Bears were fatter and better to the palate than
+the most "savory" pigs in France. Deer wandered
+in herds of fifty to an hundred. Sometimes even two
+hundred would be seen feeding together. Before arriving
+at the sand beach which then connected Long Point
+with the mainland they had to cross two streams. To
+cross the first stream they were forced to walk four
+leagues inland before they found a satisfactory place
+to cross. One whole day was spent in constructing a
+raft to cross Big Creek, and after another delay caused
+by a severe snow-storm, they successfully effected a
+crossing and found on the west side a marshy meadow
+two hundred paces wide into which they sank to their
+girdles in mud and slush. Beset by dangers and retarded
+by inclement weather, they at last arrived at
+Kettle Creek, where they expected to find the canoe
+in which Joliet had come down Lake Huron and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+Detroit and which he had told them was hidden there.
+Great was their disappointment to find that the Indians
+had taken it. However, later in the day, while gathering
+some wood for a fire, they found the canoe between
+two logs and joyfully bore it to the lake. In
+the vicinity of their encampment the hunters failed to
+secure any game, and for four or five days the party
+subsisted on boiled maize. The whole party then
+paddled up the lake to a place where game was plentiful
+and the hunters saw more than two hundred deer
+in one herd, but missed their aim. Disheartened
+at their failure and craving meat, they shot and
+skinned a miserable wolf and had it ready for the kettle
+when one of the men saw some thirty deer on the
+other side of the small lake they were on. The party
+succeeded in surrounding the deer and, forcing them
+into the water, killed ten of them. Now well supplied
+with both fresh and smoked meat, they continued their
+journey, traveled nearly fifty miles in one day and
+came to a beautiful sand beach (Point Pel&eacute;e), where
+they drew up their canoes and camped for the night.
+During the night a terrific gale came up from the
+northeast. Awakened by the storm they made all
+shift to save their canoes and cargoes. Dollier's and
+de Galin&eacute;e's canoes were saved, but the other one was
+swept away with its contents of provisions, goods for
+barter, ammunition, and, worst of all, the altar service,
+with which they intended establishing their mission
+among the Pottawatamies.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of their altar service caused them to aban<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>don
+the mission and they set out to return to Montreal,
+but strangely enough chose the long, roundabout
+journey by way of the Detroit, Lake Huron and the
+French River, in preference to the route by which they
+had come, or by the outlet of Lake Erie, which they had
+crossed the autumn before. Thus de Galin&eacute;e and Dollier
+de Casson, like Joliet,&mdash;not to revert to Champlain
+half a century earlier,&mdash;missed the opportunity, which
+seemed to wait for them, of exploring the eastern end
+of Lake Erie, of correctly mapping the Niagara and
+observing and describing its incomparable cataract.
+Obviously the Niagara region was shunned less on
+account of its real difficulties, which were not then
+known, than through terror of the Iroquois. Our two
+Sulpitians reached Montreal June 18, 1670, which
+date marks the close of the third missionary visitation
+in the history of the Niagara.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And now I approach the point at which many writers
+of our local history have chosen to begin their story&mdash;the
+famous expedition of La Salle and his companions
+in 1678-'79. For the purpose of the present study we
+may omit the more familiar aspects of that adventure,
+and limit our regard to the acts of the holy men who
+continue the interrupted chain of missionary work on the
+Niagara. On December 6th, St. Nicholas Day, 1678,
+with an advance party under La Motte de Lussi&eacute;re,
+came the Flemish Recollect, Louis Hennepin. As the
+bark in which they had crossed stormy Lake Ontario
+at length entered the Niagara, they chanted the Am<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>brosian
+hymn, "Te Deum Laudamus," and there is
+no gainsaying the sincerity of that thank-offering for
+perils escaped. Five days later, being encamped on
+the present site of Niagara, Ont., Father Hennepin
+celebrated the first mass ever said in the vicinity. A
+few days later, on the site of Lewiston, he had completed
+a bark chapel, in which was held the first Christian
+service which had been held on the eastern side of
+the Niagara since the visit of Br&eacute;beuf thirty-eight years
+before. Father Hennepin has left abundant chronicles
+of his activities on the Niagara. As soon as the construction
+of the Griffon was begun above the falls a
+chapel was established there, near the mouth of Cayuga
+Creek. Having blessed this pioneer vessel of the
+upper lakes, when she was launched, he set out for
+Fort Frontenac in the interests of the enterprise, and
+was accompanied to the Niagara, on his return, by the
+Superior of the mission, Father Gabriel de la Ribourde,
+and Fathers Z&eacute;nobius Membr&eacute; and Melithon Watteaux.
+All through that summer these devoted priests shared
+the varied labors of the camp. Hennepin tells us how
+he and his companions toiled back and forth over the
+portage around the falls, sometimes with their portable
+altar, sometimes with provisions, rigging or other
+equipment for the ship. "Father Gabriel," he says,
+"though of sixty-five years of age, bore with great
+vigor the fatigue of that journey, and went thrice up
+and down those three mountains, which are pretty high
+and steep." This glimpse of the saintly old priest is
+a reminiscence to cherish in our local annals. He was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+the last of a noble family in Burgundy who gave up
+worldly wealth and station to enter the Order of St.
+Francis. He came to Canada in 1670, and was the
+first Superior of the restored Recollect mission in that
+country. There is a discrepancy between Hennepin
+and Le Clercq as to his age; the former says he was
+sixty-five years old in 1679, when he was on the Niagara;
+the later speaks of him as being in his seventieth
+year in 1680. Of the three missionaries who with
+La Salle sailed up the Niagara in August, 1679, and
+with prayers and hymns boldly faced the dangers of
+the unknown lake, the venerable Father Gabriel was
+first of all to receive the martyr's crown. A year
+later, September 9, 1680, while engaged at his devotions,
+he was basely murdered by three Indians. To
+Father Membr&eacute; there were allotted five years of missionary
+labor before he, too, was to fall a victim to
+the savage. Father Hennepin lived many years, and
+his chronicles stand to-day as in some respects the
+foundation of our local history. But cherish as we may
+the memory of this trio of missionaries, the imagination
+turns with a yet fonder regard back to the
+devoted priest who was not permitted to voyage westward
+from the Niagara with the gallant La Salle.
+When the Griffon sailed, Father Melithon Watteaux
+was left behind in the little palisaded house at Niagara
+as chaplain. He takes his place in our history as the
+first Catholic priest appointed to minister to whites in
+New York State. On May 27, 1679, La Salle had made
+a grant of land at Niagara to these Recollect Fathers,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+for a residence and cemetery, and this was the first
+property in the present State of New York to which
+the Catholic Church held title. Who can say what
+were the experiences of the priest during the succeeding
+winter in the loneliness and dangers of the savage-infested
+wilderness? Nowhere have I as yet found
+any detailed account of his sojourn. We know, however,
+that it was not long. During the succeeding
+years there was some passing to and fro. In 1680 La
+Salle, returning east, passed the site of his ruined and
+abandoned fort. He was again on the Niagara in 1681
+with a considerable party bound for the Miami.
+Father Membr&eacute;, who was with him, returned east in
+October, 1682, by the Niagara route; and La Salle himself
+passed down the river again in 1683&mdash;his last visit to
+the Niagara. His blockhouse, within which was Father
+Melithon's chapel, had been burned by the Senecas.</p>
+
+<p>From this time on for over half a century the
+missionary work in our region centered at Fort Niagara,
+which still stands, a manifold reminder of the
+romantic past, at the mouth of the river. Four years
+after La Salle's last passage through the Niagara&mdash;in
+1687&mdash;the Marquis de Denonville led his famous
+expedition against the Senecas. With him in this campaign
+was a band of Western Indians, who were attended
+by the Jesuit Father Enjalran. He was wounded
+in the battle with the Senecas near Boughton Hill, but
+appears to have accompanied de Denonville to his
+rendezvous on the site of Fort Niagara. Here he undoubtedly
+exercised his sacred office; and since the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+construction of Fort Niagara began at this time his
+name may head the list of priests officiating at that
+stronghold. He was soon after dispatched on a peace
+mission to the West, which was the special scene of
+his labors. His part, for some years to come, was to
+be an important one as Superior of the Jesuit Mission
+at Michillimackinac.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Fort Niagara was garrisoned, Father Jean
+de Lamberville was sent thither as chaplain. For
+the student, it would be profitable to dwell at length
+upon the ministrations of this devoted priest. He was
+of the Society of Jesus, had come out to Canada in
+1668, and labored in the Onondaga mission from 1671
+to 1687. His work is indelibly written on the history
+of missions in our State. He was the innocent cause
+of a party of Iroquois falling into the hands of the
+French, who sent them to France, where they toiled
+in the king's galleys. When de Denonville, in 1687,
+left at Fort Niagara a garrison of one hundred men under
+the Chevalier de la Mothe, Father Lamberville came to
+minister to them. The hostile Iroquois had been dealt
+a heavy blow, but a more insidious and dreadful enemy
+soon appeared within the gates. The provisions which
+had been left for the men proved utterly unfit for food,
+so that disease, with astounding swiftness, swept away
+most of the garrison, including the commander. Father
+Lamberville, himself, was soon stricken down with the
+scurvy. Every man in the fort would no doubt have
+perished but for the timely arrival of a party of friendly
+Miami Indians, through whose good offices the few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+survivors, Father Lamberville among them, were enabled
+to make their way to Catarouquoi&mdash;now Kingston,
+Ont. There he recovered; and he continued in
+the Canadian missions until 1698, when he returned to
+France.</p>
+
+<p>Not willing to see his ambitious fort on the Niagara
+so soon abandoned, de Denonville sent out a new garrison
+and with them came Father Pierre Milet. He
+had labored, with rich results, among the Onondagas
+and Oneidas. No sooner was he among his countrymen,
+in this remote and forlorn corner of the earth,
+than he took up his spiritual work with characteristic
+zeal. On Good Friday of that year, 1688, in the
+center of the square within the palisades, he caused to
+be erected a great cross. It was of wood, eighteen
+feet high, hewn from the forest trees and neatly framed.
+On the arms of it was carved in abbreviated words the
+sacred legend, "<i>Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus</i>," and
+in the midst of it was engraven the Sacred Heart.
+Surrounded by the officers of the garrison,&mdash;gallant
+men of France, with shining records, some of them
+were,&mdash;by the soldiers, laborers and friendly Indians,
+Father Milet solemnly blessed it. Can you not see
+the little band, kneeling about that symbol of conquest?
+Around them were the humble cabins and
+quarters of the soldiers. One of them, holding the
+altar, was consecrated to worship. Beyond ran the
+palisades and earthworks&mdash;feeble fortifications between
+the feeble garrison and the limitless, foe-infested
+wilderness. On one hand smiled the blue Ontario,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+and at their feet ran the gleaming Niagara, already a
+synonym of hardship and suffering in the annals of
+three of the religious orders. What wonder that the
+sense of isolation and feebleness was borne in upon
+the little band, or that they devoutly bowed before the
+cross which was the visible emblem of their strength
+and consolation in the wilderness. Where is the artist
+who shall paint us this scene, unique in the annals of
+any people?</p>
+
+<p>And yet, but a few months later&mdash;September 15th
+of that year&mdash;the garrison was recalled, the post
+abandoned, the palisades broken down, the cabins left
+rifled and empty; and when priest and soldiers had
+sailed away, and only the prowling wolf or the stealthy
+Indian ventured near the spot, Father Milet's great
+cross still loomed amid the solitude, a silent witness of
+the faith which knows no vanquishing.</p>
+
+<p>There followed an interim in the occupancy of the
+Niagara when neither sword nor altar held sway here;
+nor was the altar re&euml;stablished in our region until the
+permanent rebuilding of Fort Niagara in 1726. True,
+Father Charlevoix passed up the river in 1721, and has
+left an interesting account of his journey, his view of
+the falls, and his brief tarrying at the carrying-place&mdash;now
+Lewiston. This spot was the principal rendezvous
+of the region for many years; and here, at the cabin
+of the interpreter Joncaire, where Father Charlevoix
+was received, we may be sure that spiritual ministrations
+were not omitted. A somewhat similar incident,
+twenty-eight years later, was the coming to these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+shores of the Jesuit Father Bonnecamps. He was not
+only the spiritual leader but appears to have acted as
+pilot and guide to De C&eacute;loron's expedition&mdash;an
+abortive attempt on the part of Louis XV. to re&euml;sablish
+the claims of France to the inland regions of
+America. The expedition came up the St. Lawrence
+and through Lake Ontario, reaching Fort Niagara on
+July 6, 1749. It passed up the river, across to the south
+shore of Lake Erie and by way of Chautauqua Lake
+and the Allegheny down the Ohio. Returning from
+its utterly futile adventure, we find the party resting
+at Fort Niagara for three days, October 19-21. Who
+the resident chaplain was at the post at that date I
+have not been able to ascertain; but we may be sure
+that he had a glad greeting for Father Bonnecamps.
+From 1726, when, as already mentioned, the fort was
+rebuilt, until its surrender to Sir Wm. Johnson in
+1759, a garrison was continually maintained, and without
+doubt was constantly attended by a chaplain.
+The register of the post during these years has never
+been found&mdash;the presumption being that it was
+destroyed by the English&mdash;so that the complete list
+of priests who ministered there is not known.</p>
+
+<p>Only here and there from other sources do we glean
+a name by which to continue the succession. Father
+Crespel was stationed at Fort Niagara for about three
+years from 1729, interrupting his ministrations there
+with a journey to Detroit, where his order&mdash;the
+Society of Jesus&mdash;had established a mission. Of Fort
+Niagara at this time he says: "I found the place<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+very agreeable; hunting and fishing were very productive;
+the woods in their greatest beauty, and full of
+walnut and chestnut trees, oaks, elms and some others,
+far superior to any we see in France." But not even the
+banks of the Niagara were to prove an earthly paradise.
+"The fever," he continues, "soon destroyed the
+pleasures we began to find, and much incommoded us,
+until the beginning of autumn, which season dispelled
+the unwholesome air. We passed the winter very quietly,
+and would have passed it very agreeably, if the vessel
+which was to have brought us refreshments had not
+encountered a storm on the lake, and been obliged to
+put back to Frontenac, which laid us under the necessity
+of drinking nothing but water. As the winter advanced,
+she dared not proceed, and we did not receive our
+stores till May."</p>
+
+<p>Remember the utter isolation of this post and mission
+at the period we are considering. To be sure, it
+was a link in the chain of French posts, which included
+Quebec, Montreal, Kingston, Niagara, Detroit, Michillimackinac;
+but in winter the water route for transport
+was closed, and Niagara, like the upper posts, was
+thrown on its own resources for existence. There is
+no place in our domain to-day which fairly may be
+compared to it for isolation and remoteness. The
+upper reaches of Alaskan rivers are scarcely less known
+to the world than was the Niagara at the beginning of
+the last century. A little fringe of settlement&mdash;hostile
+settlement at that&mdash;stretched up the Hudson from
+New York. Even the Mohawk Valley was still unset<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>tled.
+From the Hudson to the remotest West the
+wilderness stretched as a sea, and Fort Niagara was
+buried in its midst. Although a full century had gone
+by since Father Dallion first reached its shores, there
+was now no trace of white men on the banks of the Niagara
+save at the fort at its mouth, where Father Crespel
+ministered, and at the carrying-place, where Joncaire
+the interpreter lived with the Indians. Not even the
+first Indian villages on Buffalo Creek were to be established
+for half a century to come.</p>
+
+<p>After Father Crespel's return from Detroit, he remained
+two years longer at Fort Niagara, caring for
+the spiritual life of the little garrison, and learning the
+Iroquois and Ottawah languages well enough to converse
+with the Indians. "This enabled me," he
+writes, "to enjoy their company when I took a walk
+in the environs of our post." The ability to converse
+with the Indians afterwards saved his life. When his
+three years of residence at Niagara expired he was
+relieved, according to the custom of his order, and he
+passed a season in the convent at Quebec. While he
+was undoubtedly immediately succeeded at Niagara by
+another chaplain, I have been unable to learn his name
+or aught of his ministrations. Indeed, there are but
+few glimpses of the post to be had from 1733 to 1759,
+when it fell into the hands of the English. One of the
+most interesting of these is of the visit of the Sulpitian
+missionary, the Abb&eacute; Piquet, who in 1751 came to Fort
+Niagara from his successful mission at La Pr&eacute;sentation&mdash;now
+Ogdensburg. It is recorded of him that while here<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+he exhorted the Senecas to beware of the white man's
+brandy; his name may perhaps stand as that of the first
+avowed temperance worker in the Niagara region.</p>
+
+<p>But the end of the French <i>r&eacute;gime</i> was at hand. For
+more than a century our home region had been claimed
+by France; for the last thirty-three years the lily-strewn
+standard of Louis had flaunted defiance to the
+English from the banks of the Niagara. Now on a
+scorching July day the little fort found itself surrounded,
+with Sir Wm. Johnson's cannon roaring from the
+wilderness. There was a gallant defense, a baptism of
+fire and blood, an honorable capitulation. But in that
+fierce conflict at least one of the consecrated soldiers
+of the cross&mdash;Father Claude Virot&mdash;fell before British
+bullets; and when the triple cross of Britain floated over
+Fort Niagara, the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara river had been overthrown.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>On this eventful day in 1759, when seemingly the
+opportunities for the Catholic Church to continue its
+work on the Niagara were at an end, there was, in the
+poor parish of Maryborough, county Kildare, Ireland,
+a little lad of six whose mission it was to be to bring
+hither again the blessed offices of his faith. This was
+Edmund Burke, afterwards Bishop of Zion, and first
+Vicar-Apostolic of Nova Scotia, but whose name shines
+not less in the annals of his church because of his zeal
+as missionary in Upper Canada. Having come to
+Quebec in 1786, he was, in 1794, commissioned Vicar-General
+for the whole of Upper Canada&mdash;the province<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+having then been established two years. In that year
+we find him at Niagara, where he was the first English-speaking
+priest to hold Catholic service. True, there
+was at the post that year a French missionary named
+Le Dru, who could speak English; but he had been
+ordered out of the province for cause. The field was
+ripe for a man of Father Burke's character and energy.
+His early mission was near Detroit; he was the first
+English-speaking priest in Ohio, and it is worthy of
+note that he was at Niagara on his way east, July 22,
+1796&mdash;only three weeks before the British finally
+evacuated Fort Niagara and the Americans took possession.
+Through his efforts in that year, the Church
+procured a large lot at Niagara, Ont., where he proposed
+a missionary establishment. There had probably
+never been a time, since the English conquest, when
+there had not been Catholics among the troops quartered
+on the Niagara; but under a British and Protestant
+commandant no suitable provision for their worship had
+been made. In 1798&mdash;two years after the British had
+relinquished the fort on the east side of the river to the
+Americans&mdash;Father Burke, being at the British garrison
+on the Canadian side, wrote to Monseigneur Plessis:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Here I am at Niagara, instead of having carried out my original
+design of going on to Detroit, thence returning to Kingston to
+pass the winter. The commander of the garrison, annoyed by
+the continual complaints of the civic officials against the Catholic
+soldiers, who used to frequent the taverns during the hours of
+service on Sunday, gave orders that officers and men should attend
+the Protestant service. They had attended for three consecutive
+Sundays when I represented to the commander the iniquity of this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+order. He replied that he would send them to mass if the chaplain
+was there, and he thought it very extraordinary that whilst a
+chaplain was paid by the king for the battalion, instead of attending
+to his duty he should be in charge of a mission, his men were
+without religious services, and his sick were dying without the
+sacraments. You see, therefore, that I have reason for stopping
+short at Niagara; for we must not permit four companies, of
+whom three fourths both of officers and men are Catholics, to
+frequent the Protestant church.</p></div>
+
+<p>The name of the priest against whom the charge
+of neglect appears to lie, was Duval; but it is not
+clear that he had ever attended the troops to the
+Niagara station. But after Father Burke came Father
+D&eacute;sjardines and an unbroken succession, with the district
+fully organized in ecclesiastical jurisdiction.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And now, although our story of mission work in the
+Niagara region has been long&mdash;has reviewed the visitations
+of two centuries&mdash;the reader may have remarked
+the striking fact that every priest who came
+into our territory, up to the opening of the nineteenth
+century, came from Canada. This fact is the more
+remarkable when we recall the long-continued and vigorous
+missions of the Jesuits in what is now New York
+State, extending west nearly to the Genesee River. But
+the fact stands that no priest from those early establishments
+made his way westward to the present site of
+Buffalo. Fathers Lamberville and Milet had been stationed
+among the Onondagas and Oneidas before coming
+into our region at Fort Niagara; but they came
+thither from Canada, by way of Lake Ontario, and not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+through the wilderness of Western New York. The
+westernmost mission among the Iroquois was that of
+Fathers Carheil and Garnier at Cayuga, where they
+were at work ten years before La Salle built the Griffon
+on the Niagara. It is interesting to note that this
+mission, which was established nearest to our own
+region, was "dedicated to God under the invocation
+of St. Joseph," and that, two hundred years after, the
+first Bishop of Buffalo obtained from his Holiness,
+Pope Pius IX., permission that St. Joseph should be
+the principal patron saint of this diocese.</p>
+
+<p>The earliest episcopal jurisdiction of the territory
+now embraced in the city of Buffalo, dating from the
+first visit of Dallion to the land of the Neuters, was
+directly vested in the diocese of Rouen&mdash;for it was
+the rule that regions new-visited belonged to the government
+of the bishop from a port in whose diocese
+the expedition bearing the missionary had sailed; and
+this stood until a local ecclesiastical government was
+formed; the first ecclesiastical association of our region,
+on the New York side, therefore, is with that
+grand old city, Rouen, the home of La Salle, scene of
+the martyrdom of the Maid of Orleans, and the center,
+through many centuries, of mighty impulses affecting
+the New World. From 1657 to 1670 our region was
+embraced in the jurisdiction of the Vicar Apostolic of
+New France; and from 1670 to the Conquest in the
+diocese of Quebec. There are involved here, of
+course, all the questions which grew out of the strife
+for possession of the Niagara region by the French,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+English and Dutch. Into these questions we may not
+enter now further than to note that from 1684 the English
+claimed jurisdiction of all the region on the east
+bank of the Niagara and the present site of Buffalo.
+This claim was in part based on the Treaty of Albany
+at which the Senecas had signified their allegiance to
+King Charles; and by that acquiescence nominally put
+the east side of the Niagara under British rule. The
+next year, when the Duke of York came to the throne,
+he decreed that the Archbishop of Canterbury should
+hold ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the whole Colony
+of New York. It is very doubtful, however, if the
+Archbishop of Canterbury had ever heard of the Niagara&mdash;the
+first English translation of Hennepin did not
+appear for fourteen years after this date; and nothing
+is more unlikely than that the Senecas who visited the
+Niagara at this period, or even the Dutch and English
+traders who gave them rum for beaver-skins, had ever
+heard of the Archbishop of Canterbury, or cared a
+copper for his ecclesiastical jurisdiction, either on the
+Niagara or even in the settlements on the Hudson. In
+the New York Colony, and afterward State, the legal
+discrimination against Catholics continued down to
+1784, when the law which condemned Catholic priests
+to imprisonment or even death was repealed. At the
+date of its repeal there was not a Catholic congregation
+in the State. Those Catholics who were among
+the pioneer settlers of Western New York had to go as
+far east as Albany to perform their religious duties or
+get their children baptized. Four years later&mdash;in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+1788&mdash;our region was included in the newly-formed
+diocese of Baltimore. In 1808 we came into the new
+diocese of New York. Not until 1821 do we find
+record of the visit of a priest to Buffalo. In 1829 the
+Church acquired its first property here&mdash;through its
+benefactor whose name and memory are preserved by
+one of our noblest institutions&mdash;Louis Le Couteulx&mdash;and
+the first Buffalo parish was established under the
+Rev. Nicholas Mertz.</p>
+
+<p>We are coming very close to the present; and yet
+still later, in 1847, when the diocese of Buffalo was
+formed, there were but sixteen priests in the sixteen
+great counties which constituted it. It is superfluous
+to contrast that time with the present. There is nothing
+more striking, to the student of the history and
+development of our region during the last half century,
+than the increase of the Catholic Church&mdash;in parishes
+and schools, in means of propaganda, in material wealth
+with its vast resources and power for good, and especially
+in that personal zeal and unflagging devotion
+which know no limit and no exhaustion, and are drawn
+from the same source of strength that inspired and sustained
+Br&eacute;beuf and Chaumonot and their fellow-heroes
+of the cross on the banks of the Niagara.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>The Paschal of the Great Pinch.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE PASCHAL OF THE GREAT PINCH.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>An Episode in the History of Fort Niagara; being an Extract
+from the hitherto unknown Memoirs of the Chevalier De Tregay,
+Lieutenant under the Sieur de Troyes, commanding at
+Fort Denonville (now called Niagara), in the Year of Starvation
+1687; with Captain D&eacute;sbergeres at that remote fortress
+from the joyfull Easter of 1688 till its abandonment; Soldier
+of His Excellency the Sr. de Brissay, Marquis de Denonville,
+Governor and Lieutenant General in New France; and humble
+Servitor of His Serene Majesty Louis XIV.</i></p></div>
+
+
+<p>It has been my lot to suffer in many far parts of
+the earth; to bleed a little and go hungry for the
+King; to lie freezing for fame and France&mdash;and
+gain nothing thereby but a distemper; but so it is to
+be a soldier.</p>
+
+<p>And I have seen trouble in my day. I have fought
+in Flanders on an empty stomach, and have burned my
+brain among the Spaniards so that I could neither fight
+nor run away; but of all the heavy employment I ever
+knew, naught can compare with what befel in the
+remote parts of New France, where I was with the
+troops that the Marquis de Denonville took through
+the wilderness into the cantons of the Iroquois, and
+afterwards employed to build a stockade and cabins at
+the mouth of the Strait of Niagara, on the east side,
+in the way where they go a beaver-hunting. "Fort<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Denonville," the Sieur de Brissay decreed it should be
+called, for he held great hopes of the service which it
+should do him against both the Iroquois and the English;
+but now that he has fallen into the disfavor that
+has ever been the reward of faithful service in this
+accursed land, his name is no more given even to that
+unhappy spot, but rather it is called Fort Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>There were some hundreds of us all told that reached
+that fair plateau, after we left the river of the Senecas.
+It was mid-summer of the year of grace 1687, and we
+made at first a pleasant camp, somewhat overlooking
+the great lake, while to the west side of the point the
+great river made good haven for our batteaux and
+canoes. There was fine stir of air at night, so that we
+slept wholesomely, and the wounded began to mend at
+a great rate. And of a truth, tho' I have adventured
+in many lands, I have seen no spot which in all its
+demesne offered a fairer prospect to a man of taste.
+On the north of us, like the great sea itself, lay the
+Lake Ontario, which on a summer morning, when
+touched by a little wind, with the sun aslant, was like
+the lapis lazuli I have seen in the King's palace&mdash;very
+blue, yet all bright with white and gold. The
+river behind the camp ran mightily strong, yet for the
+most part glassy and green like the precious green-stone
+the lapidaries call verd-antique. Behind us to the south
+lay the forest, and four leagues away rose the triple
+mountains wherein is the great fall; but these are not
+such mountains as we have in Italy and Spain, being
+more of the nature of a great table-land, making an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+exceeding hard portage to reach the Strait of Erie
+above the great fall.</p>
+
+<p>It was truly a most fit place for a fort, and the Marquis
+de Denonville let none in his command rest day
+or night until we had made a fortification, in part of
+earth, surmounted by palisades which the soldiers cut
+in the woods. There was much of hazard and fatigue
+in this work, for the whole plain about the fort had no
+trees; so that some of us went into the forest along
+the shore to the eastward and some cut their sticks on
+the west side of the river. It was hard work, getting
+them up the high bank; but so pressed were we, somewhat
+by fear of an attack, and even more by the zeal
+of our commander, that in three days we had built
+there a pretty good fort with four bastions, where we
+put two great guns and some pattareras; and we had
+begun to build some cabins on the four sides of the
+square in the middle of it. And as we worked, our
+number was constantly diminished; for the Sieurs Du
+Luth and Durantaye, with that one-handed Chevalier
+de Tonty of whom they tell so much, and our allies
+the savages who had come from the Illinois to join the
+Governor in his assault upon the Iroquois, as soon as
+their wounded were able to be moved, took themselves
+off up the Niagara and over the mountain portage I
+have spoken of; for they kept a post and place of trade
+at the Detroit, and at Michillimackinac. And then
+presently the Marquis himself and all whom he would
+let go sailed away around the great lake for Montreal.
+But he ordered that an hundred, officers and men, stay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+behind to hold this new Fort Denonville. He
+had placed in command over us the Sieur de
+Troyes, of whom it would not become me to speak in
+any wise ill.</p>
+
+<p>There were sour looks and sad, as the main force
+marched to the batteaux. But the Marquis did not
+choose to heed anything of that. We were put on
+parade for the embarkation&mdash;though we made a sorry
+show of it, for there were even then more rags than
+lace or good leather&mdash;and His Excellency spoke a
+farewell word in the hearing of us all.</p>
+
+<p>"You are to complete your quarters with all convenient
+expediency," he said to De Troyes, who stood
+attentive, before us. "There will be no lack of provision
+sent. You have here in these waters the finest
+fish in the world. There is naught to fear from these
+Iroquois wasps&mdash;have we not just torn to pieces their
+nests?"</p>
+
+<p>He said this with a fine bravado, though methought
+he lacked somewhat of sincerity; for surely scattered
+wasps might prove troublesome enough to those of us
+who stayed behind. But De Troyes made no reply,
+and saluted gravely. And so, with a jaunty word about
+the pleasant spot where we were to abide, and a light
+promise to send fresh troops in the spring, the General
+took himself off, and we were left behind to look out
+for the wasps. As the boats passed the sandbar and
+turned to skirt the lake shore to the westward, we gave
+them a salvo of musketry; but De Troyes raised his
+hand&mdash;although the great Marquis was yet in sight<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+and almost in hailing distance&mdash;and forbade another
+discharge.</p>
+
+<p>"Save your powder," was all he said; and the very
+brevity of it seemed to mean more than many words,
+and put us into a low mood for that whole day.</p>
+
+<p>Now for a time that followed there was work enough
+to keep each man busy, which is best for all who are in
+this trade of war, especially in the wilderness. It was
+on the third of August that M. de Brissay left us, he
+having sent off some of the militia ahead of him; and
+he bade M. de Vaudreuil stay behind for a space, to
+help the Sieur de Troyes complete the fort and cabins,
+and this he did right ably, for as all Canada and the
+King himself know, M. de Vaudreuil was a man of
+exceeding great energy and resources in these matters.
+There was a vast deal of fetching and carrying, of hewing
+and sawing and framing. And notwithstanding
+that the sun of that climate was desperately hot the men
+worked with good hearts, so that there was soon finished
+an excellent lodgment for the commandant; with a
+chimney of sticks and clay, and boards arranged into a
+sort of bedstead; and this M. de Troyes shared with M.
+de Vaudreuil, until such time as the latter gentleman
+quit us. There were three other cabins built, with chimneys,
+doors and little windows. We also constructed
+a baking-house with a large oven and chimney, partly
+covered with boards and the remainder with hurdles
+and clay. We also built an extensive framed building
+without chimney, and a large store-house with pillars
+eight feet high, and made from time to time yet other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+constructions for the men and goods&mdash;though, <i>Dieu
+d&eacute;fend</i>! we had spare room for both, soon enough. In
+the square in the midst of the buildings we digged a
+well; and although the water was sweet enough, yet
+from the first, for lack of proper curbing and protection,
+it was ever much roiled and impure when we drew
+it, a detriment alike to health and cookery.</p>
+
+<p>M. de Vaudreuil seeing us at last well roofed, and
+having directed for a little the getting of a store of
+firewood, made his adieux. Even then, in those fine
+August days, a spirit of discontent was among us, and
+more than one spark of a soldier, who at the first camp
+had been hot upon staying on the Niagara, sought now
+to be taken in M. de Vaudreuil's escort. But that
+gentleman replied, that he wished to make a good report
+of us all to the Governor, and that, for his part,
+he hoped he might come to us early in the spring,
+with the promised detachment of troops. And so we
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>Now the spring before, when we had all followed
+the Marquis de Denonville across Lake Ontario to
+harass the cantons of the Iroquois, this establishment
+of a post on the Niagara was assuredly a part of that
+gentleman's plan. It is not for me, who am but a
+mere lieutenant of marines, to show how a great commander
+should conduct his expeditions; yet I do declare
+that while there was no lack of provision made
+for killing such of the savages as would permit it, there
+was next to none for maintaining troops who were to
+be left penned up in the savages' country. We who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+were left at Fort Denonville had but few mattocks or
+even axes. Of ammunition there was none too much.
+In the Senecas' country we had destroyed thousands of
+minots<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> of corn, but had brought along scarce a week's
+rations of it to this corner. We had none of us gone
+a-soldiering with our pockets full of seed, and even if
+we had brought ample store of corn and pumpkin seed,
+of lentils and salad plants, the season was too late to
+have done much in gardening. We made some feeble
+attempts at it; but no rain fell, the earth baked under
+the sun so hard that great cracks came in it; and what
+few shoots of corn and pumpkin thrust upward through
+this parched soil, withered away before any strengthening
+juices came in them. To hunt far from the fort
+we durst not, save in considerable parties; so that if
+we made ourselves safe from the savages, we also made
+every other living thing safe against us. To fish was
+well nigh our only recourse; but although many of our
+men labored diligently at it, they met with but indifferent
+return.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was that our most ardent hopes, our very life
+itself, hung upon the coming of the promised supplies.
+There was joy at the fort when at length the sail of the
+little bark was seen; even De Troyes, who had grown
+exceeding grave and melancholy, took on again something
+of his wonted spirit. But we were not quite yet
+to be succored, for it was the season of the most light
+and trifling airs, so that the bark for two days hung
+idly on the shining lake, some leagues away from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+mouth of the river, while we idled and fretted like
+children, impatient for her coming. When once we
+had her within the bar, there was no time lost in unlading.
+It was a poor soldier indeed who could not
+work to secure the comfort of his own belly; and the
+store was so ample that we felt secure for the winter,
+come what might. The bark that fetched these things
+had been so delayed by the calms, that she weighed
+and sailed with the first favoring breeze; and it was
+not until her sail had fall'n below the horizon that
+we fairly had sight or smell of what she had brought.</p>
+
+<p>From the first the stores proved bad; still, we made
+shift to use the best, eked out with what the near-by
+forest and river afforded. For many weeks we saw no
+foes. There was little work to do, and the men idled
+through the days, with no word on their lips but to complain
+of the food and wish for spring. When the frosts
+began to fall we had a more vigorous spell of it; but
+now for the first time appeared the Iroquois wasps.
+One of our parties, which had gone toward the great
+fall of the Niagara, lost two men; those who returned
+reported that their comrades were taken all unawares
+by the savages. Another party, seeking game to the
+eastward where a stream cuts through the high bank on
+its way to the lake,<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> never came back at all. Here we
+found their bodies and buried them; but their scalps,
+after the manner of these people, had been taken.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas drew on, but never was a sorrier season
+kept by soldiers of France. De Troyes had fallen ill.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+Naught ailed him that we could see save low spirits and
+a thinning of the blood, which made him too weak to
+walk. The Father Jean de Lamberville, who had
+stayed with us, and who would have been our hope
+and consolation in those days, very early fell desperate
+ill of a distemper, so that the men had not the help of
+his ministrations and holy example. Others there were
+who either from feebleness or lack of discipline openly
+refused their daily duty and went unpunished. We
+had fair store of brandy; and on Christmas eve those
+of us who still held some soul for sport essayed to
+lighten the hour. We brewed a comfortable draught,
+built the blaze high, for the frosts were getting exceeding
+sharp, gathered as many as could be had of officers
+and worthy men into our cabin, and made brave to
+sing the songs of France. And now here was a strange
+thing: that while the hardiest and soundest amongst
+us had made good show of cheer, had eaten the vile
+food and tried to speak lightly of our ills, no sooner
+did we hear our own voices in the songs that carried us
+back to the pleasantries of our native land, than we
+fell a-sobbing and weeping like children; which weakness
+I attribute to the distemper that was already in
+our blood.</p>
+
+<p>For the days that followed I have no heart to set
+down much. We never went without the palisades
+except well guarded to fetch firewood. This duty
+indeed made the burden of every day. A prodigious
+store of wood was needed, for the cold surpassed anything
+I had ever known. The snow fell heavily, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+there were storms when for days the gale drave straight
+across our bleak plateau. There was no blood in us
+to withstand the icy blasts. Do what we would the chill
+of the tomb was in the cabins where the men lay.
+The wood-choppers one day, facing such a storm, fell
+in the deep drifts just outside the gate. None durst go
+out to them. The second day the wolves found them&mdash;and
+we saw it all!</p>
+
+<p>There was not a charge of powder left in the fort.
+There was not a mouthful of fit food. The biscuits
+had from the first been full of worms and weevils.
+The salted meat, either from the admixture of sea-water
+through leaky casks, or from other cause, was rotten
+beyond the power even of a starving man to hold.</p>
+
+<p><i>Le scorbut</i> broke out. I had seen it on shipboard,
+and knew the signs. De Troyes now seldom left his
+cabin; and when, in the way of duty, I made my devoirs,
+and he asked after the men, I made shift to hide
+the truth. But it could not be for long.</p>
+
+<p>"My poor fellows," he sighed one day, as he turned
+feebly on his couch of planks, "it must be with all as
+it is with me&mdash;see, look here, De Tregay, do you
+know the sign?" and he bared his shrunken arm and
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed I knew the signs&mdash;the dry, pallid skin, with
+the purple blotches and indurations. He saw I was at
+a loss for words.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Sang de Dieu!</i>" he cried, "Is this what soldiers
+of France must come to, for the glory of"&mdash;&mdash;. He
+stopped short, as if lacking spirit to go on. "Now I be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>think
+me," he added, in a melancholy voice, "it <i>is</i> what
+soldiers must come to." Then, after a while he asked:</p>
+
+<p>"How many dead today, De Tregay?"</p>
+
+<p>How many dead! From a garrison of gallant men-at-arms
+we had become a charnel-house. In six weeks
+we had lost sixty men. From a hundred at the beginning
+of autumn, we were now scarce forty, and February
+was not gone. A few of us, perhaps with stouter
+stomachs than the rest, did all the duty of the post.
+We brought the firewood and we buried the dead&mdash;picking
+the frozen clods with infinite toil, that we
+might lay the bones of our comrades beyond the reach
+of wolves. Sometimes it was the scurvy, sometimes it
+was the cold, sometimes, methinks, it was naught but a
+weak will&mdash;or as we say, the broken heart; but it
+mattered not, the end was the same. More than twenty
+died in March; and although we were now but a handful
+of skeletons and accustomed to death, I had no
+thought of sorrow or of grief, so dulled had my spirit
+become, until one morning I found the brave De Troyes
+drawing with frightful pains his dying breath. With the
+name of a maid he loved upon his lips, the light went
+out; and with heavy heart I buried him in that crowded
+ground, and fain would have lain down with him.</p>
+
+<p>And now with our commander under the snow, what
+little spirit still burned in the best of us seemed to die
+down. I too bore the signs of the distemper, yet to
+no great extent, for of all the garrison I had labored
+by exercise to keep myself wholesome, and in the
+woods I had tasted of barks and buds and roots of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+little herbs, hoping to find something akin in its juices
+to the <i>herbe de scorbut</i><a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> which I have known to cure
+sick sailors. But now I gave over these last efforts for
+life; for, thought I, spring is tardy in these latitudes.
+Many weeks must yet pass before the noble Marquis at
+Montreal (where comforts are) will care to send the
+promised troop. And the Western savages, our allies
+the Illinois, the Ottawais, the Miamis, were they not
+coming to succor us here and to raid the Iroquois cantons?
+But of what account is the savage's word!</p>
+
+<p>So I thought, and I turned myself on my pallet. I
+listened. There was no sound in all the place save the
+beating of a sleet. "It is appointed," I said within
+me. "Let the end come." And presently, being
+numb with the cold, I thought I was on a sunny hillside
+in Anjou. It was the time of the grape-harvest,
+and the smell of the vines, laughter and sunshine filled
+the air. Young lads and maids, playmates of my boyhood
+days, came and took me by the hand....</p>
+
+<p>A twinge of pain made the vision pass. I opened
+my eyes upon a huge savage, painted and bedaubed,
+after their fashion. It was the grip of his vast fist that
+had brought me back from Anjou.</p>
+
+<p>"The Iroquois, then," I thought, "have learned of
+our extremity, and have broken in, to finish all. So
+much the better," and I was for sinking back upon the
+boards, when the savage took from a little pouch a
+handful of the parched corn which they carry on their
+expeditions. "Eat," he said, in the language of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+Miamis. And then I knew that relief had come&mdash;and
+I knew no more for a space.</p>
+
+<p>Now this was Michitonka himself, who had led his
+war party from beyond Lake Erie, where the Chevalier
+de Tonty and Du Luth were, to see how we fared at
+Fort Denonville, and to make an expedition against
+the Senecas&mdash;of whom we saw no more, from the
+time the Miamis arrived. There were of all our garrison
+but twelve not dead, and among those who threw
+off the distemper was the Father de Lamberville. His
+recovery gave us the greatest joy. He lay for many
+weeks at the very verge of the grave, and it was marvelous
+to all to see his skin, which had been so empurpled
+and full of malignant humors, come wholesome
+and fair again. I have often remarked, in this hard
+country, that of all Europeans the Fathers of the Holy
+Orders may be brought nearest to death, and yet regain
+their wonted health. They have the same prejudice
+for life that the wildest savage has. But as for the rest
+of us, who are neither savage nor holy, it is by a slim
+chance that we live at all.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Father, and two or three of the others who
+had the strength to risk it, set out with a part of Michitonka's
+people to Cataracouy<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and Montreal, to carry
+the news of our extremity. And on a soft April day as
+we looked over lake, we saw a sail; and we knew that
+we had kept the fort until the relief company was sent as
+had been commanded. But it had been a great pinch.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Now I am come to that which after all I chiefly set
+out to write down; for I have ever held that great
+woes should be passed over with few words, but it is
+meet to dwell upon the hour of gladness. And this
+hour was now arrived, when we saw approach the new
+commandant, the Sieur D&eacute;sbergeres, captain of one of
+the companies of the Detachment of the Marine, and
+with him the Father Milet, of the Society of Jesus.
+There was a goodly company, whose names are well
+writ on the history of this New France: the Sieurs De
+la Mothe, La Rabelle, Demuratre de Clerin and de
+Gemerais, and others, besides a host of fine fellows of
+the common rank; with fresh food that meant life to us.</p>
+
+<p>Of all who came that April day, it was the Father
+Milet who did the most. The very morning that he
+landed, we knelt about him at mass; and scarce had
+he rested in his cabin than he marked a spot in the
+midst of the square, where a cross should stand, and
+bade as many as could, get about the hewing of it;
+and although I was yet feeble and might rest as I liked,
+I chose to share in the work, for so I found my
+pleasure. A fair straight oak was felled and well hewn,
+and with infinite toil the timber was taken within the
+palisades and further dressed; and while the carpenters
+toiled to mortise the cross-piece and fasten it with pins,
+Father Milet himself traced upon the arms the symbols
+for the legend:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 295px;">
+<img src="images/symbol.png" width="295" height="25" alt="Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus." title="Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus." />
+</div>
+
+<p>And these letters were well cut into the wood, in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+midst of them being the sign of the Sacred Heart.
+We had it well made, and a place dug for it, on a
+Thursday; and on the next morning, which was Good
+Friday, the reverend Father placed his little portable
+altar in the midst of the square, where we all, officers
+and men, and even some of the Miamis who were yet
+with us, assembled for the mass. Then we raised the
+great cross and planted it firmly in the midst of the
+little square. The service of the blessing of it lay
+hold of my mind mightily, for my fancy was that this
+great sign of victory had sprung from the midst of the
+graves where De Troyes and four score of my comrades
+lay; and being in this tender mood (for I was still
+weak in body) the words which the Father read from his
+breviary seemed to rest the more clearly in my mind.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Adjutorium nostrum in nomine Domini.</i>" Father
+Milet had a good voice, with a sort of tenderness in
+it, so that we were every one disposed to such silence
+and attention, that I could even hear the little waves
+lapping the shore below the fort. And when he began
+with the "<i>Oramus</i>"&mdash;"<i>Rogamus te Domine sancte
+Pater omnipotens</i>,"&mdash;I was that moved, by the joy of
+it, and my own memories, that I wept&mdash;and I a
+soldier!</p>
+
+<p>It may be believed that the Sunday which followed,
+which was the Paschal, was kept by us with such worship
+and rejoicing as had never yet been known in
+those remote parts. Holy men had been on that
+river before, it is true; but none had abode there for
+long, nor had any set up so great a cross, nor had there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+ever such new life come to men as we knew at Fort
+Denonville that Easter.</p>
+
+<p>For a space, all things went well. What with the
+season (for spring ever inspires men to new undertakings)
+and the bitter lessons learned in the great pinch
+of the past winter, we were no more an idle set, but
+kept all at work, and well. Yet the Iroquois pestered
+us vastly, being set on thereto by the English, who
+claimed this spot. And in September there came that
+pilot Maheut, bringing his bark La General over the
+shoal at the river's mouth all unexpected; and she was
+scarce anchored in the little roadstead than D&eacute;sbergeres
+knew he was to abandon all. It was cause of chagrin
+to the great Marquis, I make no doubt, thus to drop
+the prize he had so tried to hold; but some of us in
+the fort had no stomach for another winter on the
+Niagara, and we made haste to execute the orders
+which the Marquis de Denonville had sent. We put
+the guns on board La General. We set the gate open,
+and tore down the rows of pales on the south and east
+sides of the square. Indeed the wind had long ago
+begun this work, so that towards the lake the pales
+(being but little set in the earth) had fallen or leaned
+over, so they could readily have been scaled, or broken
+through. But as the order was, we left the cabins and
+quarters standing, with doors ajar, to welcome who
+might come, Iroquois or wolf, for there was naught
+within. But Father Milet took down from above the
+door of his cabin the little sun dial. "The shadow of
+the great cross falls divers ways," was his saying.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Early the next morning, being the 15th of September,
+of the year 1688, being ready for the embarkation,
+Father Milet summoned us to the last mass he
+might say in the place. It was a sad morning, for the
+clouds hung heavy; the lake was of a somber and forbidding
+cast, and the very touch in the air forebode
+autumnal gales. As we knelt around the cross for the
+last time, the ensign brought the standards which D&eacute;sbergeres
+had kept, and holding the staves, knelt also.
+Certain Miamis, too, who were about to make the
+Niagara portage, stayed to see what the priest might
+do. And at the end of the office Father Milet did an
+uncommon thing, for he was mightily moved. He
+turned from us toward the cross, and throwing wide his
+arms spoke the last word&mdash;"Amen."</p>
+
+<p>There were both gladness and sorrow in our hearts as
+we embarked. Lake and sky took on the hue of lead,
+foreboding storm. We durst carry but little sail, and at
+the sunset hour were scarce a league off shore. As it
+chanced, Father Milet and I stood together on the
+deck and gazed through the gloom toward that dark
+coast. While we thus stood, there came a rift betwixt
+the banked clouds to the west, so that the sun, just as
+it slipped from sight, lighted those Niagara shores,
+and we saw but for an instant, above the blackness and
+the desolation, the great cross as in fire or blood
+gleam red.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>With Bolton at Fort Niagara.</h1>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+<h2>WITH BOLTON AT FORT NIAGARA.</h2>
+
+
+<p>One pleasant September day in 1897 it was
+my good fortune, under expert guidance, to follow
+for a little the one solitary trail made by the
+American patriots in Western New York during the Revolutionary
+War, the one expedition of our colonial forces
+approaching this region during that period. This was
+the famous "raid" led by Gen. John Sullivan in the
+summer of 1779. Our quest took us up the long hill
+slope west of Conesus Lake, in what is now the town
+of Groveland, Livingston Co., to a spot&mdash;among the
+most memorable in the annals of Western New York,
+yet unmarked and known to but a few&mdash;where a detachment
+of Sullivan's army, under Lieut. Boyd, were
+waylaid and massacred by the Indians. It was on the
+13th of September that this tragedy occurred. Two
+days later Gen. Sullivan, having accomplished the
+main purpose of his raid&mdash;the destruction of Indian
+villages and crops&mdash;turned back towards Pennsylvania,
+returning to Easton, whence the expedition had started.
+He had come within about eighty miles of the Niagara.
+"Though I had it not in command," wrote Gen.
+Sullivan in his report to the Secretary of War, "I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+should have ventured to have paid [Fort] Niagara a
+visit, had I been supplied with fifteen days' provisions
+in addition to what I had, which I am persuaded from
+the bravery and ardor of our troops would have fallen
+into our hands."<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> This was the nearest approach to
+any attempt made by the Americans to enter this region
+during that war.</p>
+
+<p>The events of Sullivan's expedition are well known.
+Few episodes of the Revolution are more fully recorded.
+But what is the reverse of the picture? What
+lay at the other side of this Western New York wilderness
+which Sullivan failed to penetrate? What was
+going on, up and down the Niagara, and on Buffalo
+Creek, during those momentous years? We know that
+the region was British, that old Fort Niagara was its
+garrison, the principal rendezvous of the Indians and
+the base from which scalping parties set out to harry
+the frontier settlements. The most dreadful frontier
+tragedies of the war&mdash;Wyoming, Cherry Valley, and
+others&mdash;were planned here and carried out with
+British co&ouml;peration. But who were the men and what
+were the incidents of the time, upon our Niagara
+frontier? So far as I am aware, that period is for the
+most part a blank in our histories. One may search
+the books in vain for any adequate narrative&mdash;indeed
+for any but the most meager data&mdash;of the history of
+the Niagara region during the Revolution. The
+materials are not lacking, they are in fact abundant.
+In this paper I undertake only to give an inkling of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+the character of events in this region during that grave
+period in our nation's history.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1778, Colonel Haldimand, afterward Sir Frederick,
+succeeded Gen. Guy Carleton in the command of the
+British forces in Canada. He was Commander in
+Chief, and Governor of Canada, until his recall in 1784.
+Lord North was England's Prime Minister, Lord
+George Germaine in charge of American affairs in the
+Cabinet. Haldimand took up his residence at Quebec,
+and therefrom, for a decade, administered the affairs of
+the Canadian frontier with zeal and adroitness. He
+was a thorough soldier, as his letters show. He was
+also an adept in the treatment of matters which, like
+the retention by the British of the frontier posts for
+thirteen years after they had been ceded to the Americans
+by treaty, called for dogged determination, veiled
+behind diplomatic courtesies. The troops which he
+commanded were scattered from the mouth of the St.
+Lawrence to Lake Michigan; but to no part of this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+long line of wilderness defense&mdash;a line which was substantially
+the enemy's frontier&mdash;did he pay more
+constant attention than to Fort Niagara. There were
+good reasons for this. Fort Niagara was not only
+the key to the upper lakes, the base of supplies for
+Detroit, Michillimackinac and minor posts, but it
+had long been an important trading post and the
+principal rendezvous of the Six Nations, upon whose
+peculiarly efficient services against the American
+frontiers Sir Frederick relied scarcely less than he did
+upon the British troops themselves. It was, therefore,
+with no ordinary solicitude that he made his appointments
+for Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot state positively the names of all officers in
+command at Fort Niagara from the time war was begun,
+down to 1777. Lieut. Lernault, afterwards at Detroit,
+was here for a time; but about the spring of '77
+we find Fort Niagara put under the command of Lieut.
+Col. Mason Bolton, of the 34th Royal Artillery. He
+had then seen some years of service in America; had
+campaigned in Florida and the West Indies; had been
+sent to Mackinac and as far west as the Illinois; and it
+was no slight tribute to his ability and fidelity, when Haldimand
+put the Niagara frontier into his hands. Here,
+for over three years, he was the chief in command.
+In military rank, even if in nothing else, he was the
+principal man in this region during the crucial period
+of the Revolution. He commanded the garrison at
+Fort Niagara, and its dependencies at Schlosser and
+Fort Erie. Buffalo was then unthought of&mdash;it was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+merely Te-hos-e-ro-ron, the place of the basswoods;
+but at the Indian villages farther up Buffalo Creek,
+which came into existence in 1780, the name of Col.
+Bolton stood for the highest military authority of the
+region. And yet, incredible as it may seem, after all
+these years in which&mdash;to adapt Carlyle's phrase&mdash;the
+Torch of History has been so assiduously brandished
+about, I do not know of any printed book which offers
+any information about Col. Mason Bolton or the life he
+led here. Indeed, with one or two exceptions, in
+which he is barely alluded to, I think all printed
+literature may be searched in vain for so much as a
+mention of his name.</p>
+
+<p>Other chief men of this frontier, at the period we
+are considering, were Col. Guy Johnson, Superintendent
+of Indian Affairs; Sir John Johnson, son of the
+Sir William who captured Fort Niagara from the
+French in 1759; Col. John Butler, of the Queen's
+Rangers; his son Walter; Sayenqueraghta, the King
+of the Senecas; Rowland Montour, his half-breed son-in-law;
+and Brant, the Mohawk hero, who, equipped
+with a New England schooling and enlightened by a
+trip to England, here returned to lead out scalping
+parties in the British interests.</p>
+
+<p>Col. Bolton had been for some time without authentic
+news of the enemy, when on the morning of
+December 14, 1777, the little garrison was thrown
+into unwonted activity by the arrival of Capt. La
+Mothe, who reported that Gen. Howe had taken Philadelphia,
+and that the rebels had "sustained an incred<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>ible
+loss." By a forced march of Howe, La Mothe
+averred, Gen. Washington had been defeated, "with
+11,000 rebels killed, wounded and prisoners." Two
+days later the excitement was increased by the arrival
+at the fort of some Delaware Indians, who brought the
+great news that Washington was killed and his army
+totally routed. "I had a meeting of the chiefs of the
+Six Nations," wrote Bolton to Gen. Carleton, "about
+an hour after the express arrived and told them the
+news. They seemed extremely pleased and have been
+in good temper ever since their arrival." Oddly
+enough, this news was confirmed by a soldier of the
+7th Regiment, who had been taken prisoner by the
+Americans, but had escaped and made his way to Niagara.
+He further embellished the report by declaring
+that 9,000 men under Lord Percy defeated 13,000
+rebels at Bear's Hill on December 20th, under Washington,
+that Gates was sent for to take the command when
+Washington was killed, and that 7,000 volunteers from
+Ireland had joined Howe's army. Washington at this
+time, the reader will remember, had gone into winter
+quarters with his army at Valley Forge.</p>
+
+<p>There were 2,300 Indians at Fort Niagara at this
+period, all making perpetual demands for beef, flour
+and rum. The license of the jubilee over Washington's
+death probably was limited only by the scantiness
+of provisions and the impossibility of adding to the
+store. Cold weather shut down on the establishment,
+the vessels were laid up, and all winter long Col.
+Bolton and his men had no word contradicting the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+report of Washington's death. As late as April 8th,
+the following spring, he wrote to Gen. Carleton that
+"all accounts confirm Washington being killed and his
+army defeated in December last, and that Gates was
+sent for to take the command."</p>
+
+<p>The British early were apprised of Sullivan's intended
+raid, and although powerless to prevent it, kept well
+posted as to its progress. The various parties which
+Sullivan encountered, were directed from Fort Niagara.
+"Since the rebels visit the Indian country," wrote
+Gen. Haldimand to Sir John Johnson, September 14,
+1779, "I am happy they are advancing so far. They
+can never reach Niagara and their difficulties and
+danger of retreat will, in proportion as they advance,
+increase." Again he wrote twelve days later: "You
+will be able to make your way to Niagara, and if the
+rebels should be encouraged to advance as far as that
+place, I am convinced that few of them will escape
+from famine or the sword. All in my power to do for
+you is to push up provisions, which shall be done with
+the utmost vigor, while the river and lake remain navigable,
+although it may throw me into great distress in
+this part of the province, should anything happen to
+prevent the arrival of the fall victuallers." There was
+however genuine alarm at Fort Niagara, and even Sir
+Frederick himself, though he wrote so confidently to
+Bolton, in his letters to the Ministry expressed grave
+apprehensions of what might happen.</p>
+
+<p>What did happen was bad enough for British interests,
+for though the Americans turned back, the raid<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+had driven in upon Bolton a horde of frightened,
+hungry and irresponsible Indians, who had to be fed at
+the King's expense and were a source of unmeasured
+concern to the overworked commandant, notwithstanding
+the independent organization of the Indian Department
+which was effected.</p>
+
+<p>To arrive at a just idea of conditions hereabouts
+at this period, we must keep in mind the relation of
+the fluctuating population, Indians and whites, to the
+uncertain and often inadequate food supply.</p>
+
+<p>Fort Niagara at this time&mdash;the fall of '78&mdash;was a
+fortification 1,100 yards in circumference, with five
+bastions and two blockhouses. Capt. John Johnson
+thought 1,000 men were needed to defend it; "the
+present strength," he wrote, "amounting to no more
+than 200 rank and file, including fifteen men of the
+Royal Artillery and the sick, a number barely sufficient
+to defend the outworks (if they were in a state of
+defense) and return the necessary sentries, should the
+place be infested by a considerable force....
+With a garrison of 500 or a less number, it is impregnable
+against all the savages in America, but if a
+strong body of troops with artillery should move this
+way, I believe no engineer who has ever seen these
+works will say it can hold out any considerable time."</p>
+
+<p>On May 1st, 1778, there had been in the garrison at
+Fort Niagara 311 men. Half a dozen more were stationed
+at Fort Schlosser, and thirty-two at Fort Erie, a
+total of 349, of whom 255 were reported as fit for duty.
+At this time Maj. Butler's Rangers, numbering 106,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+had gone on "an expedition with the Indians towards
+the settlements of Pennsylvania or New York, whichever
+he finds most practicable and advantageous to the
+King's service." These raids from Fort Niagara were
+far more frequent than one would infer from the histories&mdash;even
+from the American histories whose authors
+are not to be suspected of purposely minimizing either
+their number or effect. But it appears from the records
+that not infrequently the expeditions accomplished
+nothing of more consequence than to steal stock.
+Horses, cattle and sheep were in more than one instance
+driven away from settlements far down on the
+Mohawk or Susquehanna, and brought back alive or
+dead along the old trails, to Fort Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>To illustrate the methods of the time: In a report to
+Brig. Gen. Powell, Maj. Butler wrote: "In the spring
+of 1778 I found it absolutely requisite for the good of
+His Majesty's service, with the consent and approbation
+of Lt. Col. Bolton, and on the application of the
+chiefs and warriors of the five united nations ...,
+to proceed to the frontiers of the colonies in rebellion,
+with as many officers and men of my corps as were
+then raised, in order to protect the Indian settlements
+and to annoy the enemy." At this time many of his
+men were new recruits from the colonies, sons or
+heads of Loyalist&mdash;or as we used to say, on this side
+the border, of Tory&mdash;families. As they approached
+American frontier settlements, the loyalty to King
+George of some of his men became suspicious, so that
+Butler issued a proclamation that all deserters, if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+apprehended, were to be shot. In the letter just quoted
+from he reports that this order had a good effect.
+Many curious circumstances arose at the time, due to
+the British or American allegiance of men who before
+the war had been friendly neighbors, but who now
+met as hostiles, as captor and captive, sometimes as
+victor and victim. There was a constant flight, by
+one route and another, of Loyalist refugees to Fort
+Niagara. Thus, by a return of Feb. 12, 1779, 1,346
+people were drawing rations from the stores of that
+place, of whom sixty-four were "distressed families,"
+that is, Tories who had fled from the colonies (mostly
+from the Mohawk Valley); and 445 Indians. The war
+parties left early in the spring, and during the summer
+the supply boats could get up from the lower stations.
+Then came that march of destruction up the Genesee
+Valley; winter shut down on lake and river communication,
+and the most distressed period the frontier had
+known under British rule set in. In October, immediately
+after the invasion, Col. Bolton wrote (I quote
+briefly from a very full report): "Joseph Brant ...
+assures me that if 500 men had joined the Rangers in
+time, there is no doubt that instead of 300, at least
+1,000 warriors would have turned out, and with that
+force he is convinced that Mr. Sullivan would have had
+some reason to repent of his expedition; but the
+Indians not being supported as they expected, thought
+of nothing more than carrying off their families, and
+we had at this Post the 21st of last month 5,036 to
+supply with provisions, and notwithstanding a number<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+of parties have been sent out since, we have still on
+the ground 3,678 to maintain. I am convinced your
+Excellency will not be surprised, if I am extremely
+alarmed, for to support such a multitude I think will be
+absolutely impossible. I have requested of Major Butler
+to try his utmost to prevail on the Indians whose
+villages have been destroyed to go down to Montreal
+for the winter, where, I have assured him, they would
+be well taken care of; and to inform all the rest who
+have not suffered by the enemy that they must return
+home and take care of their corn."</p>
+
+<p>Neither plan worked as hoped for. It was difficult
+to get the Indians to consent to go down the river, or
+even to Carleton Island; and as Sullivan had destroyed
+every village save two, few of the Senecas could be induced
+to return into the Genesee country. Bolton's
+urgent appeals for extra provisions were also doomed to
+disappointment, owing to the lateness of the season or
+the lack of transports.</p>
+
+<p>The winter after Sullivan's raid, Guy Johnson distributed
+clothing to more than 3,000 Indians at Fort Niagara.
+But the cost of clothing them was trifling compared
+with the cost of feeding them. Expeditions against the
+distant American settlements were planned, not more
+through the desire for retaliation, than from the necessity
+of reducing the number of dependents on Fort
+Niagara. When the inroads on provisions grew serious,
+the Indians were encouraged to go on the war-path.
+But so exceedingly severe was the winter, so deep was
+the snow on the trails, that not until the middle of Feb<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>ruary
+could any parties be induced to set out. The
+number camped around the fort, consuming the King's
+pork, beef, flour and rum, rose as we have seen, to
+more than 5,000. Many starved and many froze.</p>
+
+<p>Much could be said regarding the British policy of
+dealing with the Indians at Fort Niagara, but I may
+only touch upon the subject at this time. Haldimand,
+and behind him the British Ministry, placed great
+reliance upon them. The uniform instruction was
+that the Indians should be maintained as allies. On
+April 10, 1778, Lord George Germaine wrote to Gen.
+Haldimand that the designs of the rebels against Niagara
+and Detroit were not likely to be successful as
+long as the Six Nations continued faithful. Presents,
+honors, and the full license of the tomahawk and scalping-knife
+were allowed them. With a view to promoting
+their fidelity, Joseph Brant was made a colonel.
+Significant, too, was the settling of a generous allowance
+for life upon Brant's sister, Sir William Johnson's consort;
+which act was approved, about this time, by the
+august council at Whitehall.</p>
+
+<p>The British watched the state of the Indian mind as
+the sailor watches his barometer at the coming of a
+storm. And the Indian mind, though always cunning,
+was sometimes childlike in the directness and simplicity
+of its conclusions. The constant flight to Fort Niagara
+of refugee Tories was remarked by the savages,
+and in turn noted and reported to Gen. Haldimand.
+"The frequent passing of white people to Niagara,"
+wrote Capt. John Johnson to Gen. Carleton, October<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+6, 1778, "is much taken note of by the Indians, who
+say they are running away and that they (the Tories)
+have begun the quarrel and leave them (the Indians) to
+defend it." However, Johnson counted on being able
+to change their minds, for he added: "I hope in my
+next to inform you of giving the rebels an eternal
+thrashing."</p>
+
+<p>The usual British good sense&mdash;the national tradesman's
+instinct&mdash;seems to have been temporarily suspended,
+held in abeyance, at the demands of these
+Indians. In his report of May 12, '78, Col. Bolton
+writes that he has approved bills for nearly &pound;18,000
+"for sundries furnished savages which Maj. Butler
+thought absolutely necessary, notwithstanding all the
+presents sent to their posts last year; 2,700 being
+assembled at a time when I little expected such a
+number, obliged me to send to Detroit for a supply of
+provisions, and to buy up all the cattle, etc., that
+could possibly be procured, otherwise this garrison
+must have been distressed or the savages offended, and
+of course, I suppose, would have joined the rebels.
+Even after all that was done for them they scarce
+seemed satisfied." In June he writes that only eight
+out of twenty puncheons of rum ordered for Fort Niagara
+had been received, and that "much wine has been
+given to the savages that was intended for this post."</p>
+
+<p>One reads in this old correspondence, with mingled
+amusement and amazement, of the marvelous attentions
+paid these wily savages. Childlike, whatever they
+saw in the cargoes of the merchants, they wanted, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+England humored and pampered them, lest they transfer
+their affections. We have Guy Johnson's word for
+it, under date of Niagara, July 3, 1780, that "many
+of the Indians will no longer wear tinsel lace, and are
+become good judges of gold and silver. They frequently
+demand and have received wine, tea, coffee,
+candles and many such articles, and they are frequently
+nice in the choice of the finest black and other cloth
+for blankets, and the best linnen and cambrick with
+other things needless to enumerate.... The Six
+Nations are not so fond of gaudy colors as of good and
+substantial things, but they are passionately fond of
+silver ornaments and neat arrows." Elsewhere in
+these letters a requisition for port wine is explained on
+the ground that it was demanded by the chiefs when
+they were sick&mdash;dainty treatment, truly, for stalwart
+savages whose more accustomed diet was cornmeal and
+water, and who could feast, when fortune favored, on
+the reeking entrails of a dead horse.</p>
+
+<p>Now and then, it is true, advantages were taken of
+the Indians in ways which, presumably, it was thought
+they would not detect; all, we must grant, in the interest
+of economy. One was in the matter of powder.
+The Indians were furnished with a grade inferior to
+the garrison powder. This was shown by a series of
+tests made at Fort Niagara by order of Brig. Gen.
+Powell&mdash;Col. Bolton's successor&mdash;on July 10, 1782.
+We may suppose it to have been an agreeable summer
+day, that there was leisure at the fort to indulge in
+experiments, and that there were no astute Indians on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+hand to be unduly edified by the result. At Gen.
+Powell's order an eight-inch mortar was elevated to
+forty-five degrees, and six rounds fired, to find out how
+far one half a pound of powder would throw a forty-six
+pound shell. The first trial, with the garrison powder,
+sent the shell 239 yards. For rounds two and three Indian
+Department powder was used; the fine-glazed kind
+sent the shell eighty-two yards, the coarser grain carried
+it but seventy-nine yards. Once more the garrison
+powder was used; the shell flew 243 yards, while
+a second trial of the two sorts of Indian Department
+powder sent it but eighty-four and seventy-six yards,
+or about three to one in favor of the white man. With
+the garrison powder, a musket and carbine ball went
+through a two and one-quarter-inch oak plank, at the
+distance of fifty yards, and lodged in one six inches
+behind it; but with the Indian powder these balls
+would not go through the first plank.</p>
+
+<p>This seems like taking a base advantage of the trustful
+Indian ally, especially since he was to use his powder
+against the common foe, the American rebel; in
+reality, however, the Indians were wasteful and irresponsible,
+and squandered their ammunition on the little
+birds of the forest and even in harmless but expensive
+salvos into the empty air.</p>
+
+<p>Another economy was practiced in the Indian Department:
+when the stock ran low the rum was watered.
+Sometimes the precious contents of the casks
+were augmented one third, sometimes even two thirds,
+with the more abundant beverage from Niagara River, so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+that the garrison rum, like the garrison powder, "carried"
+two or three times as well as did that of the
+Indian Department; but whether this had a salutary
+effect upon the thirsty recipients is a problem the solution
+of which lies outside the range of the exact historian.</p>
+
+<p>Difficult as it was to hold the allegiance of the savage,
+it was harder yet&mdash;nay, it was impossible&mdash;to
+make him fight according to the rules of civilized warfare.
+The British Government from the Ministry down
+stand in history in an equivocal position in this matter.
+Over and over again in the correspondence which I
+have examined, one finds vigorous condemnation of
+the Indian method of slaughter of women and children,
+and the torture of captives. Over and over again
+the officers are urged not to allow it; and over and
+over again they report, after a raid, that they deplore
+the acts of wantonness which were committed, and
+which they were unable to prevent. But nowhere do I
+find any suggestion that the services of the Indians be
+dispensed with. Throughout the Revolution, the Senecas,
+Cayugas, Onondagas and Delawares&mdash;for the
+last, also, were often at Fort Niagara&mdash;were sent
+against the Americans, by the British. The Oneidas,
+as is well known, were divided and vacillating in their
+allegiance. In August, 1780, 132 of them who hitherto
+had been ostensibly friendly to the Americans,
+were induced to go to Niagara and give their pledges
+to the British. When they arrived Guy Johnson put
+on a severe front and censured them for their lack of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+steadfastness to the King. According to him, some
+500 Oneidas in all came to the fort that year and
+declared themselves ready to fight the Americans.
+The last party that arrived delivered up to the Superintendent
+a commission which, he says, "the Rebels
+had issued with a view to form the Oneidas into a
+corps, ... they also delivered up to me the
+Rebel flag."</p>
+
+<p>So far as I am aware this is the first mention of the
+Stars and Stripes on the banks of the Niagara. By
+resolution of June 14, 1777, the American Congress
+had decreed "That the flag of the thirteen United
+States be thirteen stripes alternate red and white; that
+the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing
+a new constellation." A little over three
+years had passed since John Paul Jones had first flung
+to the breeze, at the mast of his ship Ranger, this
+bright banner of the new nation. It was not to appear
+in a British port for two and a half years to come;
+sixteen years were to pass before it could fly triumphant
+over the old walls of Fort Niagara; but France had
+saluted it, Americans were fighting for it, and although
+it is first found here in hostile hands, yet I like to reckon
+from that August day in 1780, the beginning, if in
+prophecy only, of the reign of that new constellation
+over the Niagara region.</p>
+
+<p>Col. Bolton's life at Fort Niagara was one of infinite
+care. Besides the routine of the garrison, he was constantly
+harrassed by the demands of the Indians, whom
+the British did not wish to feed, but whom they dared<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+not offend. The old fort, which now sleeps so quietly
+at the mouth of the river, was a busy place in those
+days. There was constant coming and going. Schooners,
+snows<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> and batteaux with provisions from Quebec,
+or with munitions of war or detachments of troops
+for Detroit or Michillimackinac, were constantly arriving.
+I question if the lower Niagara were not busier
+in that period than it is now. The transfer of supplies
+around the falls&mdash;the "great portage"&mdash;was hard
+and tedious work. Not Quebec, but Great Britain, was
+the real base of supplies. There were many detentions,
+and constant interruption in shipment, at every
+stage of the way. Sometimes a cargo of salt pork
+from Ireland or flour from London would reach Quebec
+too late in the summer to admit of transfer to the
+posts until spring. Sometimes, in crossing Lake Ontario,
+the provisions would be damaged so as to be unfit
+for use; sometimes they would be lost. Then not
+only the garrison at Niagara had to face starvation, but
+Col. Bolton soon had his ears ringing with messages
+and maledictions from Detroit and Mackinac, buried
+still farther in the wilderness, and all looking to Niagara
+for food and clothing. At such times of distress
+the upper posts questioned whether goods intended for
+them were not irregularly held at Niagara; the meanwhile,
+Col. Bolton would be straining every effort to get
+provisions enough to keep his own command from star<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>vation.
+Indian supplies and traders' goods, too, were
+liable to loss and detention; and on very slight provocation,
+the demands of the Indians grew insolent.</p>
+
+<p>There were constant desertions, too, among the
+troops. Indeed, there seems never to have been a time
+at Fort Niagara when desertions were not frequent, and,
+more than once, so numerous as to threaten the very
+existence of the garrison. This, however, not in Bolton's
+time. As the correspondence shows, he enjoyed
+the utmost confidence of his superiors, and there is
+nothing to indicate that his men were not as devoted
+to him as any officer could expect at a frontier post
+where service meant hard work and possible starvation.</p>
+
+<p>Frequent as had been the raids against the settlements
+before the expedition of Sullivan, they became
+thereafter even more frequent; and, if less disastrous,
+they were so merely because the American frontier
+settlements had already paid their utmost tribute to Butler
+and Brant. The expeditions, along certain much-worn
+trails, had to go farther and farther in order to
+find foes to attack or cattle to steal. This was especially
+so in the valleys of the Mohawk and Susquehanna;
+yet in one quarter and another this border warfare
+went on, and there is no lack of evidence, in the
+official correspondence, of its effectiveness. Thus,
+writing from Fort Niagara, August 24, 1780, Guy
+Johnson reports: "I have the pleasure to inform your
+excellency that the partys who subdivided after Capt.
+Brant's success at the Cleysburg"&mdash;an expedition
+which he had previously reported&mdash;"have all been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+successful; that Capt. Brant has destroyed twenty
+houses in Schoharie and taken and killed twelve persons,
+besides releasing several women and children. Among
+the prisoners is Lieut. Vrooman, the settlement of that
+name being that which was destroyed. The other
+divisions of that party have been also successful, particularly
+Capt. David's party, and the number of killed
+and taken by them within that time, so far as it has
+come to my hands, is, killed, thirty-five, taken, forty-six,
+released, forty.... The remaining inhabitants
+on the frontiers are drawing in so as to deprive
+the rebels of any useful resources from them. I have
+at present on service, several partys that set out within
+one and the same week, and I apprehend that falling
+on the frontiers in different places at the same time will
+have a good effect." September 18th he writes, telling
+of the destruction of "Kleysberg," "containing a
+church, 100 houses and as many barnes, besides mills
+and 500 cattle and horses." In the same letter he
+wrote: "I have now 405 warriors out in different
+parties and quarters, exclusive of some marched from
+Kadaragawas.... The greater part of the rest
+are at their planting grounds, and many sick here, as
+fevers and fluxes have for some time prevailed at this
+Post." October 1st he reports the number of men in
+the war parties sent out from Fort Niagara as 892. A
+return, dated June 30, 1781, shows that the war parties
+"have killed and taken during the season already 150
+persons." September 30th he reports an expedition
+under Walter Johnson and Montour, in which about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+"twenty rebels" were killed; and on that day Capt.
+Nelles arrived with eleven prisoners taken in Pennsylvania.
+A postscript to this letter says: "Since writing,
+I have received the disagreeable news of the death
+of the gallant Montour, who died of the wounds he
+received in the action before related. He was a chief
+of the greatest spirit and readiness, and his death is a
+loss." We can well believe that; for Montour, who,
+from the American view-point, had the reputation of
+being a fiend incarnate, had indeed shown "spirit and
+readiness" in stealing cattle, burning log cabins, killing
+and scalping their occupants or bringing them
+captive to Fort Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>In another paper<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> I have stated that I have traced out
+the individual experiences in captivity of thirty-two of
+these Americans, who were taken by the Indians and
+British and brought as prisoners to Fort Niagara. How
+much might be done on this line may be judged from a
+review of Col. Johnson's transactions, furnished by that
+officer at Montreal, March 24, 1782, in which it is
+stated that the number of Americans killed and taken
+captive by parties from Fort Niagara, amounted at that
+time to near 900. The time was rife with like experiences.
+For instance, there was the famous raid on
+Cherry Valley, from which Mrs. Jane Campbell and
+her four children, after a long detention among the
+Indians, were brought to Fort Niagara. There was
+Jane Moore, who was also taken at Cherry Valley, and
+who subsequently was married to Capt. Powell of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+Niagara garrison in the winter of 1779&mdash;the ceremony,
+by the Church of England service, so impressing
+Joseph Brant that he immediately led up to the
+minister the squaw with whom he had been living for a
+long time, and insisted on being married over again,
+white man's fashion. There was Lieut. Col. Stacia,
+another prisoner from Cherry Valley, whose head
+Molly Brant wanted for a football. Some of the stories
+of these captives, like that of Alexander Harper, who
+ran the gauntlet at Fort Niagara (the ordeal apparently
+being made light in his case), are familiar to readers
+of our history; others, I venture to say, are unknown.
+For instance, there were John and Robert Brice, two
+little boys, who were taken in 1779 near Rensselaerville
+by a scouting party, and brought, with other prisoners
+and eight scalps, to Fort Niagara. But they did not
+come together. Robert, who was but eleven years old,
+was taken to Fort Erie and sold to a lake sailor for the
+sum of &pound;3. This little Son of the Revolution was kept
+on the upper lakes until 1783, when he was summoned
+to Fort Niagara where he met his brother John, from
+whom he had parted near the mouth of the Unadilla
+River some four years before. They were sent to
+Montreal with nearly 200 liberated captives, and ultimately
+the boys reached Albany and their friends.
+Then there is the story of Nancy Bundy, who, her husband
+and children being killed, was brought to Fort
+Niagara and sold into servitude for $8. There was the
+famous Indian fighter, Moses Van Campen, whose adventures
+and captivity in our region are the subject<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+of a whole book. There were Horatio Jones and
+Jasper Parrish, who passed from Indian captives into
+the useful role of interpreters for the whites.</p>
+
+<p>Thus I might go on, naming by the score the heroes
+and heroines of Indian captivities whose sufferings
+and whose adventures make up the most romantic
+chapter in our home annals, as yet for the most part
+unwritten. But I take time now to dwell, briefly as
+possible, upon but one of these captivities&mdash;one of
+the notable incidents during Col. Bolton's time at Fort
+Niagara. This was the capture of the Gilbert family.
+It made so great a stir, even in those days accustomed
+to war and Indian raids, that in 1784 a little book
+was published in Philadelphia giving the history of it.
+The original edition<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> has long since been one of the
+scarcest of Americana. But in the unpublished correspondence
+between Gen. Haldimand and the officers at
+Fort Niagara, I find sundry allusions to "the Quaker's
+family," and statements which go to show that the
+British at least were disposed to treat them well, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+to effect their exchange as soon as possible. Notwithstanding,
+it was a long and cruel captivity, and presents
+some features of peculiar significance in our local
+history.</p>
+
+<p>About sunrise on the morning of April 25, 1780,
+a party of eleven painted Indians suddenly issued from
+the woods bordering Mahoning Creek, in Northampton
+County, Penn. They had come from Fort Niagara, and
+were one of those scalping parties for the success of
+which so many encouraging messages had passed from
+Whitehall to Quebec, and from Quebec to the frontier,
+and to stimulate which Guy Johnson had been so lavish
+with the fine linen, silver ornaments and port wine.
+The party was commanded by Rowland Montour, John
+Montour being second in command. Undiscovered,
+they surrounded the log house of the old Quaker
+miller, Benjamin Gilbert. With tomahawk raised and
+flint-locks cocked they suddenly appeared at door and
+windows. The old Quaker offered his hand as a
+brother. It was refused. Partly from the Quaker
+habit of non-resistance, partly from the obvious certainty
+that to attempt to escape meant death, the whole
+household submitted to be bound, while their home
+was plundered and burned. Loading three of Gilbert's
+horses with booty, and placing heavy packs on
+the back of each prisoner old enough to bear them, the
+expedition took the trail for Fort Niagara, more than
+200 miles away. This was "war" in "the good old
+days."</p>
+
+<p>There were twelve prisoners in the party, of whom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+but five were men. The patriarch of the household,
+Benjamin, was sixty-nine years old; Elizabeth, his wife,
+was fifty-five; Joseph, Benjamin's son by a former wife,
+aged forty-one; another son, Jesse, aged nineteen,
+and his wife Sarah, the same age. There were three
+younger children, Rebecca, Abner and Elizabeth,
+respectively sixteen, fourteen and twelve; Thomas
+Peart, son to Benjamin Gilbert's wife by a former
+husband, aged twenty-three; a nephew, Benjamin Gilbert,
+aged eleven; a hired man, Andrew Harrigar,
+twenty-six; and Abigail Dodson, the fourteen-year-old
+daughter of a neighbor; she had had the ill-luck to
+come to Gilbert's mill that morning for grist, and was
+taken with the rest. Half a mile distant lived Mrs.
+Gilbert's oldest son, Benjamin Peart, aged twenty-seven,
+his wife Elizabeth, who was but twenty, and
+their nine-months-old child. Montour added these to
+his party, making fifteen prisoners in all, burned their
+house and urged all along the trail, their first stop being
+near "Mochunk." (Mauch Chunk.)</p>
+
+<p>I must omit most of the details of their march northward.
+On the evening of the first day Benjamin Peart
+fainted from fatigue and Rowland Montour was with
+difficulty restrained from tomahawking him. At night
+the men prisoners were secured in a way which was
+usual on these raids, throughout Western New York and
+Pennsylvania, during those dismal years. The Indians
+cut down a sapling five or six inches in diameter, and
+cut notches in it large enough to receive the ankles of
+the prisoners. After fixing their legs in these notches,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+they placed another pole over the first, and thus secured
+them as in stocks. This upper pole was then crossed
+at each end by stakes driven into the ground. The
+prisoners thus lay on the ground, on their backs.
+Straps or ropes around their necks were made fast to
+near-by trees. Sometimes a blanket was granted them
+for covering, sometimes not. What rest might be had,
+preparatory to another day's forced march, I leave to
+the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>During the early stages of this march the old couple
+were constantly threatened with death, because unable
+to keep up. On the fourth day four negroes who
+claimed that they were loyal to the King, that they
+had escaped from the Americans and had set out for
+Fort Niagara, were taken up by Montour from a camp
+where he had left them on his way down the valley.
+These negroes frequently whipped and tortured the
+prisoners for sport, Montour making no objection.
+On the 4th of May, the Indians separated into two
+companies; one taking the westward path, and with
+this party went Thomas Peart, Joseph Gilbert, Benjamin
+Gilbert&mdash;the little boy of eleven&mdash;and Sarah,
+wife of Jesse. The others kept on the northerly
+course. Andrew Harrigar, terrified by the Indian
+boast that those who had gone with the other party
+"were killed and scalped, and you may expect the same
+fate tonight," took a kettle, under pretence of bringing
+water, but ran away under cover of darkness. After incredible
+hardships he regained the settlements. His
+escape so angered Rowland Montour that he threw<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+Jesse Gilbert down, and lifted his tomahawk for the
+fatal blow; Elizabeth, Jesse's mother, knelt over him,
+pressed her head to her son's brow and begged the
+captain to spare his life. Montour kicked her over and
+tied them both by their necks to a tree; after a time,
+his passion cooling, he loosed them, bade them pack
+up and take the trail. This is but a sample incident.
+I pass over many.</p>
+
+<p>None suffered more on the march than Elizabeth
+Peart, the girl mother. The Indians would not let her
+husband relieve her by carrying her child, and she was
+ever the victim of the whimsical moods of her captors.
+At one time they would let her ride one of the horses;
+at another, would compel her to walk, carrying the
+child, and would beat her if she lagged behind. By
+the 14th of May Elizabeth Gilbert had become so
+weak that she could only keep the trail when led and
+supported by her children. On this day the main
+party was rejoined by a portion of the party that had
+branched off to westward; with them were two of the
+four captives, Benjamin Gilbert, Jr., and Sarah, wife of
+Jesse. On this day old Benjamin was painted black,
+the custom of the Indians with prisoners whom they
+intended to kill. Later on they were joined by British
+soldiers, who took away the four negroes and did
+something to alleviate the sufferings of the white
+prisoners. The expedition had exhausted its provisions
+and all that had been taken from the Gilberts.
+A chance hedgehog, and roots dug in the woods, sustained
+them for some days. May the 17th they ferried<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+across the Genesee River on a log raft. Provisions
+were brought from Fort Niagara, an Indian having been
+sent ahead, on the best horse; and on the morning of
+the 21st of May they heard, faintly booming beyond
+the intervening forest, the morning gun at Fort Niagara.
+An incident of that day's march was a meeting
+with Montour's wife. She was the daughter of the
+great Seneca Sayenqueraghta, the man who led the Indians
+at Wyoming,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> and whose influence was greater
+in this region, at the time we are studying, than even
+that of Brant himself. He was the Old King of the
+Senecas, called Old Smoke by the whites. Smoke's
+Creek, the well-known stream which empties into
+Lake Erie just beyond the southwest limit of Buffalo,
+between South Park and Woodlawn Beach, preserves
+his name to our day. It was there that he lived in
+his last years; and somewhere on its margin, in a
+now unknown grave, he was buried. His daughter
+the "Princess," was, next to Molly Brant, the grandest
+Indian woman of the time on the Niagara. As she
+met the wretched Gilberts, "she was dressed altogether
+in the Indian costume, and was shining with gold lace
+and silver baubles." To her Rowland Montour presented
+the girl Rebecca, as a daughter. The princess
+took a silver ring from her finger and put it on Rebecca's,
+which act completed the adoption of this little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+Quaker maid of sixteen into one of the most famous&mdash;possibly
+the most infamous&mdash;family of the Niagara
+region during the Revolutionary period.</p>
+
+<p>At a village not far from Fort Niagara, apparently
+near the present Tuscarora village on the heights east
+of Lewiston, Montour painted Jesse, Abner, Rebecca
+and Elizabeth Gilbert, Jr., as Indians are painted, and
+gave each a belt of wampum; but while these marks of
+favor were shown to the young people, the mother, because
+of her feebleness, was continually the victim of
+the displeasure and the blows of the Indians. On May
+23d, being at the Landing&mdash;what is now Lewiston&mdash;they
+were visited by Captains Powell and Dace
+from the fort, and the next day, just one month
+from the time of their capture, they trudged down
+the trail which is now the pleasant river road, towards
+the old fort, protected with difficulty from the blows of
+the Indians along the way.</p>
+
+<p>Now followed the dispersion of this unhappy family.
+After the Indian custom, the young and active prisoners
+were sought by the Indians for adoption. Many brave
+American boys went out to live, in the most menial
+servitude, among the Senecas and other tribes who
+during the later years of the Revolution lived on the
+Genesee, the Tonawanda, Buffalo, Cazenove, Smoke's,
+and Cattaraugus creeks. The old man and his wife
+and their son Jesse were surrendered to Col. Johnson.
+Benjamin Peart, Mrs. Gilbert's son, was carried off to
+the Genesee. The other members of the party were
+held in captivity in various places; but I may only stay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+now to note what befel the little Rebecca and her
+sister-in-law, Elizabeth Peart.</p>
+
+<p>As already stated, Rebecca had been adopted by
+Rowland Montour's wife. In the general allotment of
+prisoners, her cousin, Benjamin Gilbert, the lad of
+eleven, also fell to this daughter of Sayenqueraghta.
+She took the children to a cabin where her father's
+family, eleven in number, were assembled. After the
+usual grand lamentation for the dead, whose places
+were supposed now to be filled by the white prisoners,
+this royal household departed by easy stages for their
+summer's corn-planting. They tarried at the Landing,
+while clothing was had from the fort. The little
+Quaker girl was dressed after the Indian fashion,
+"with short-clothes, leggins and a gold-laced hat";
+while Benjamin, "as a badge of his dignity, wore a
+silver medal hanging from his neck." They moved
+up to Fort Schlosser (just above the falls, near where
+the present power-house stands), thence by canoe to
+Fort Erie; then "four miles further, up Buffalo Creek,
+where they pitched their tent for a settlement." Here
+the women planted corn; but the little Rebecca, not
+being strong, was allowed to look after the cooking.
+The whole household, queen, princess and slave, had
+to work. The men of course were exempt; but the
+chief advantage of Sayenqueraghta's high rank was
+that he could procure more provisions from the King's
+stores at Fort Niagara than could the humbler members
+of the tribe. The boy Ben had an easy time of
+it. He roamed at will with the Indian boys over the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+territory that is now Buffalo; fished in the lake,
+hunted or idled without constraint, and it is recorded
+that he was so pleased with the Indian mode of life,
+that but for his sister's constant admonition he would
+have dropped all thought of return to civilization, and
+cheerfully have become as good an Indian as the best of
+them. At eleven years of age savagery takes easy hold.</p>
+
+<p>These children lived with Montour's Indian relatives
+for over two years; sharing in the feasts when
+there was plenty, going pinched with hunger on the
+frequent occasions when improvidence had exhausted
+the supply. There were numerous expeditions, afoot
+and by canoe, to Fort Niagara. On one occasion
+Rebecca, with her Indian family, were entertained by
+British officers at Fort Erie, when Old Smoke drank so
+much wine that when he came to paddle his canoe
+homeward, across the river, he narrowly escaped an
+upset on the rocky reef, just outside the entrance to
+Buffalo Creek. On every visit to Fort Niagara Rebecca
+would look for release; but although the officers
+were kind to her, they did not choose to interfere with
+so powerful a family as Montour's. It was shortly
+after one of these disappointments that she heard of
+her father's death. For some months she was sick;
+then came news of the death of her Indian father,
+Rowland Montour, who succumbed to wounds received
+in the attack already noted. There was great mourning
+in the lodge on Buffalo Creek, and Rebecca had to
+make a feint of sorrow, weeping aloud with the rest.</p>
+
+<p>In the winter of '81-'82 a scheme was devised by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+friends at the fort for abducting her from the Indians,
+but it was not undertaken. In the spring of '82 peremptory
+orders came from Gen. Haldimand that all the
+remaining members of the Gilbert family who were still
+in captivity should be taken from the Indians; but after
+a council fire had been lighted, Old Smoke, Montour's
+widow, and the rest of the family, Rebecca and Ben
+included, moved six miles up the lake shore&mdash;apparently
+to Smoke's Creek&mdash;where they stayed several
+weeks making maple sugar. Then, a great pigeon
+roost being reported, men and boys went off to it,
+some fifty miles, and the delighted young Ben went
+too. Of all the Gilbert captives he alone seems to
+have had experiences too full of wholesome adventure
+and easy living to warrant the expenditure of the least
+bit of sympathy upon him. But sooner or later the
+wily Indians had to heed Sir Frederick's command,
+and on the 1st of June, 1782, after upwards of two
+years of captivity, Rebecca and her cousin were released
+at Fort Niagara, and two days later, with others,
+embarked for Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>Far more cheerless were the experiences of Elizabeth
+Peart. She was parted from her husband, adopted
+by a Seneca family, and was also brought to raise corn
+on Buffalo Creek. Early in her servitude among the
+Indians her babe was taken from her and carried across
+to Canada. She was but twenty years old herself; the
+family that had taken her came by canoe to Buffalo
+Creek, where they settled for the corn-planting. This
+was in the spring of 1780. All manner of drudgery<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+and burdens were put upon her. Her work was to
+cultivate the corn. Falling sick, the Indians built a
+hut for her by the side of the cornfield, and then
+utterly neglected her. Here she remained through the
+summer, regaining strength enough to care for and
+gather the corn; when this was done, her Indian
+father permitted her to come and live again in the
+family lodge. At one time a drunken Indian attacked
+her, knocked her down, and dragged her about, beating
+her. At another, all provision failing, she tramped
+with others four days through the snow to Fort Niagara.
+Here Capt. Powell's wife&mdash;who had been a
+prisoner herself&mdash;interceded in Elizabeth's behalf,
+but to no avail. She was however given an opportunity
+to see her babe, which was being cared for by
+an Indian family on the Canadian side of the river, opposite
+Fort Niagara. This privilege was gained for
+the poor mother by bribing her Indian father with a
+bottle of rum. So far as I am aware, this was the best
+use to which a bottle of rum was put during the Revolutionary
+War. But back to Buffalo Creek the unhappy
+mother had to come. Her release was finally obtained
+by artifice. Being allowed to visit Fort Niagara,
+where she had some needlework to do for the
+white people, she feigned sickness, and by one excuse
+and another the Indians were put off until she could be
+shipped away to Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Gilbert family and those taken with them by
+Montour, only the old man died in captivity. The
+adventures of each one would make a long story, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+may not be entered upon here. By the close of '82
+they were all released from the Indians, and after a
+detention at Montreal, reached their friends in Pennsylvania
+and set about the re&euml;stablishment of homes.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond question, Elizabeth Peart and Rebecca Gilbert
+were the first white women ever on the site of the
+present city of Buffalo. They were brave, patient,
+patriotic girls; no truer Daughters of the American
+Revolution are known to history. It would seem
+fitting that their memory should be preserved and their
+story known&mdash;much fuller than I have here sketched
+it&mdash;by the patriotic Daughters of the Revolution of
+our own day, who give heed to American beginnings
+in this region.</p>
+
+<p>I have dwelt at length on the Gilbert captivity, not
+more because of its own importance than to illustrate
+the responsibilities which constantly rested on the commandant
+at Niagara, at this period. We now turn to
+other phases of the service which engaged the attention
+and taxed the endurance of Col. Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>From the time of the conquest of Canada in 1760
+down to the opening of the Revolution, there had been
+a slow but steady growth of shipping on the lakes,
+especially on Lake Ontario. On this lake, as early as
+1767, there were four brigs of from forty to seventy
+tons, and sixteen armed deck-cutters. Besides the
+"King's ships" there were still much travel and traffic
+by means of canoes and batteaux. One of the first
+effects of the war with the American colonies was to
+beget active ship-building operations by the British;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+for Lake Ontario, at Oswegatchie, Oswego and Niagara;
+and for Lake Erie, at Navy Island, Detroit and
+Pine River. An official return made in July, 1778,
+the summer after Col. Bolton assumed command at
+Niagara, enumerates twelve sailing craft built for
+Lake Ontario since the British gained control of that
+lake in 1759, and sixteen for Lake Erie; seven of the
+Lake Ontario boats had been cast away, two were laid
+up and decayed; so that at this time&mdash;midsummer of
+'78&mdash;there were still in service only the snow Haldimand,
+eighteen guns, built at Oswegatchie in 1771;
+the snow Seneca, eighteen guns, built in 1777; and the
+sloop Caldwell, two guns, built in 1774. A memorandum
+records that Capt. Andrews, in the spring of
+1778, sought permission to build another vessel at
+Niagara, to take the place of the Haldimand, which, he
+was informed, could not last more than another year.
+The vessel built, in accordance with this recommendation,
+was a schooner; her construction was entrusted to
+Capt. Shank, at Niagara, across the river from the fort.
+We may be sure that Col. Bolton visited the yard from
+time to time to note the progress of the work. There
+was discussion over her lines. "Capt. Shank was told
+that he was making her too flat-bottomed, and that she
+would upset." The builder laughed at his critics and
+stuck to his model. She was launched, named the
+Ontario, and was hastened forward to completion, for the
+King's service had urgent need of her.</p>
+
+<p>Col. Bolton had long been in bad health, wearied
+with the cares and perplexities of his position and eager<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+to get away from Fort Niagara. One source of constant
+annoyance to his military mind was the traders'
+supplies, which turned the fort into a warehouse and
+laid distasteful duties upon its commandant. His letters
+contain many allusions to the "incredible plague and
+trouble caused by merchants' goods frequently sent
+without a single person to care for them." "Last
+year," so he wrote in May, '78, "every place in this
+fort was lumbered with them, and vessels were obliged
+to navigate the lakes until Nov. 30th." The vessels
+were primarily for the King's service, but when unemployed
+were allowed to be used in transporting
+merchants' goods, under certain regulations. The
+next statement in the same letter gives some idea of the
+magnitude of the transactions involved in the various
+departments in this region at the period: "I have
+drawn a bill of &pound;14,760-9-5"&mdash;nearly $74,000&mdash;"on
+acct. of sundries furnished Indians by Maj.
+Butler, also another on acct. of Naval Dept. at Detroit
+for &pound;4,070-18-9. Between us I am heartily sick of
+bills and accounts and if the other posts are as expensive
+to Government as this has been I think Old
+England had done much better in letting the savages
+take possession of them than to have put herself to half
+the enormous sum she has been at in keeping them.
+Neither does the climate agree with my constitution,
+which has already suffered by being employed many
+years in the West Indies and Florida, for I have been
+extremely ill the two winters I have spent here with
+rheumatism and a disorder in my breast."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One source of annoyance to Bolton was a detachment
+of Hessians which was sent to augment the garrison at
+Fort Niagara. Col. Bolton did not find them to his
+liking, nor was life at a backwoods post at all congenial
+to these mercenaries, fighting England's battles to pay
+their monarch's debts. They refused to work on the
+fortifications at Niagara; whereupon, in November,
+1779, Col. Bolton packed them off down to Carleton
+Island. Alexander Fraser, in charge of that post,
+wrote to Gen. Haldimand that he had ordered the
+"jagers" to be replaced by a company of the 34th.
+"Capt. Count Wittgenstein," he added, "fears bad
+consequences should the Jagers be ordered to return."
+Nowhere in America does the British employment of
+Hessian troops appear to have been less satisfactory
+than on this frontier. At Carleton Island, as at Niagara,
+they refused to work, many of them were accused
+of selling their necessaries for rum, and the Count de
+Wittgenstein himself was reprimanded.</p>
+
+<p>There were difficulties, too, with the lake service.
+Desertion and discontent followed an attempt to shorten
+the seamen's rations. In the summer of '78, the
+sailors on board the snow Seneca, at Niagara, asked to
+be discharged, alleging that their time had expired the
+preceding November, and the yet more remarkable
+reason that they objected to the service because they
+had been brought up on shore and life on the rolling
+deep of Lake Ontario afforded "no opportunity of
+exercising our Religion, neither does confinement
+agree with our healths." Like many lake sailors at this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+period they were probably French Canadian Catholics,
+with loyalty none too strong to the British cause.</p>
+
+<p>Bolton stuck to his post throughout that season, the
+year of alarm that followed, and the succeeding period
+of distress. The most frequent entries in his letters
+record the arrival of war parties, and his anxiety over
+the enormous expense incurred for the Indians by Maj.
+Butler. "Scalps and prisoners are coming in every
+day, which is all the news this place affords," he writes
+in June, '78; and again, the same month: "Ninety
+savages are just arrived with thirteen scalps and two
+prisoners, and forty more with two scalps are expected.
+All of these gentry, I am informed, must be clothed."<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
+While there does not seem ever to have been an open
+break between Bolton and Butler, yet the former
+looked with dismay, if not disapproval, upon the endless
+expenditure incurred for the Indians. In August,
+1778, he wrote: "Maj. Butler, chief of the Indian
+Department, gives orders to the merchants to supply
+the savages with everything to answer their demands,
+of which undoubtedly he is the best judge and only
+person who can satisfy them or keep them in temper.
+He also signs a certificate that the goods and cash
+issued and paid by his order were indispensably necessary
+for the government of His Majesty's service. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+commanding officer of this post is thus obliged to draw
+bills for the amount of all these accounts, of which it is
+impossible he can be a judge or know anything about....
+I only mention these things to show Yr
+Excellency the disagreeable part that falls to my lot as
+commanding officer; besides this is such a complicated
+command that even an officer of much superior abilities
+than I am master of, would find himself sometimes not
+a little embarrassed at this Post."</p>
+
+<p>Bolton was seriously ill during the winter of '79-'80,
+as indeed were many of his garrison. In April, 1780, he
+reports his wretched health to Gen. Haldimand. All
+through the succeeding summer he stuck to his post;
+but on September 13th, worn out and discouraged, he
+asked to be allowed to retire from the command of the
+upper posts and lakes. September 30th he again wrote,
+begging for leave of absence. Some weeks later the
+desired permission was sent, and Bolton determined to
+stay no longer. Late in October the new Ontario,
+which Capt. Shank had built across the river from the
+fort, was finished and rigged; she carried sixteen guns,
+and was declared ready for service. She was ordered
+to convey a company of the 34th down to Carleton
+Island. It was a notable departure. The season was
+so late, no other opportunity for crossing Lake Ontario
+might be afforded until spring. Lieut. Royce, with
+thirty men of the 34th, embarked, under orders; so
+did Lieut. Colleton of the Royal Artillery. Capt. Andrews,
+superintendent of naval construction, at whose
+solicitations the Ontario had been built, being at Fort<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+Niagara at the time, also took passage. There was the
+full complement of officers and crew. Several passengers&mdash;licensed
+Indian traders and fur merchants,
+probably&mdash;crowded aboard; and among those who
+sailed away from Fort Niagara that last October day,
+was Col. Bolton. It was the Ontario's first voyage;
+and we may be sure that there was no lack of speculation
+and wise opinion in the throng of spectators who
+watched her round the bar at the mouth of the river
+and take her course down the lake. The old criticism
+about her flat bottom and lack of draught was sure to
+be recalled. But the Ontario, with her notable passenger
+list, had sailed, and the only port she ever
+reached was the bottom of the lake. It is supposed
+she foundered, some forty miles east of Niagara, near
+a place called Golden Hill. On the beach there, some
+days after, a few articles were found, supposed to have
+come ashore; but no other sign, no word of the Ontario
+or of any of the throng that sailed in her has been had
+from that day to this. In due time news of the loss
+reached Quebec. Sincere but short were the expressions
+of sorrow in the correspondence that followed.
+"The loss of so many good officers and men," wrote
+Haldimand, "particularly at this period, and the disappointment
+of forwarding provisions for the great consumption
+at the upper posts, will be severely felt."<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+was the fortune of war, and already the thought turned
+to those who had depended upon a return cargo of
+provisions by the Ontario. And so passes Mason
+Bolton out of the history of Fort Niagara.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>What Befel David Ogden.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+<h2>WHAT BEFEL DAVID OGDEN.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It was my privilege, in the summer of 1896, to
+share in the exercises which marked the Centennial
+of the delivery of Fort Niagara by Great Britain
+to the United States. As I stood in that old stronghold
+on the bank above the blue lake, strolled across
+the ancient parade ground, or passed from one historic
+building to another, I found myself constantly forgetting
+the actual day and hour, and slipping back a century
+or two. There was a great crowd at Fort Niagara
+on this August day; thousands of people&mdash;citizens,
+officials, soldiers and pleasure-seekers; but
+with them came and went, to my retrospective vision,
+many more thousands yet: missionary priests, French
+adventurers, traders, soldiers of the scarlet, and
+of the buff and blue. I saw Butler's Rangers
+in their green suits; and I saw a horde of savages,
+now begging for rations from the King's stores, now
+coming in from their forays, famished but exultant,
+displaying the scalps they had taken, or leading their
+ragged and woebegone captives. It was upon these
+captives, whose romantic misfortunes make a long
+and dramatic chapter in the history of Fort Niagara,
+that my regard was prone to center. Their stories
+have nowhere been told, so far as I am aware, as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+part of the history of the place; many of them never
+can be told; but of others some details may be
+recorded.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the whole period of the Revolutionary
+War, Fort Niagara was a garrisoned British post, of
+varying strength. It was the supply depot for all arms
+and provisions which were destined for the upper posts
+of Detroit and Michillimackinac; it was the rendezvous
+of the Senecas, who worked the Government for
+all the blankets and guns, trinkets and provisions which
+they could get; it was the headquarters of Col. Guy
+Johnson, Indian Superintendent; and it was the resting-place
+and base of operations of They-en-dan-e-gey-ah&mdash;in
+English, Joseph Brant; of Butler and his
+rangers, and of numerous other less famous but more
+cruel Indians, British and Tory leaders. No American
+troops reached Fort Niagara to attack it. Only once
+was it even threatened. Yet throughout the whole
+period of the war parties sallied forth from Fort Niagara
+to plunder, capture or kill the rebel settlers wherever
+they could be reached.</p>
+
+<p>Sixty years ago Judge Samuel De Veaux wrote of
+this phase of the history of Fort Niagara:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>This old fort is as much noted for enormity and crime, as for
+any good ever derived from it by the nation in occupation....
+During the American Revolution it was the headquarters of all
+that was barbarous, unrelenting and cruel. There, were congregated
+the leaders and chiefs of those bands of murderers and miscreants,
+that carried death and destruction into the remote American
+settlements. There, civilized Europe revelled with savage
+America; and ladies of education and refinement mingled in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+society of those whose only distinction was to wield the bloody
+tomahawk and scalping-knife. There, the squaws of the forest
+were raised to eminence, and the most unholy unions between
+them and officers of the highest rank, smiled upon and countenanced.
+There, in their strong hold, like a nest of vultures,
+securely, for seven years, they sallied forth and preyed upon the
+distant settlements of the Mohawks and Susquehannahs. It was
+the depot of their plunder; there they planned their forays, and
+there they returned to feast, until the hour of action came again.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p></div>
+
+<p>This striking passage, which the worthy author did
+not substantiate by a single fact, may stand as the present
+text. I have undertaken to trace some of the
+flights of the birds of prey from this nest, and to bring
+together the details relating to the captives who were
+brought hither. From many sources I have traced out
+the narratives of thirty-two persons who were brought
+to Fort Niagara captive by the Indians, during the
+years 1778 to 1783. Among them is my boy hero
+Davy Ogden, whose adventures I undertake to tell
+with some minuteness. Just how many American
+prisoners were brought into Fort Niagara during this
+period I am unable to say, though it is possible that
+from the official correspondence of the time figures
+could be had on which a very close estimate could
+be based. My examination of the subject warrants
+the assertion that several hundred were brought in by
+the war parties under Indian, British and Tory leaders.
+In this correspondence, very little of which has ever been
+published, one may find such entries as the following:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Guy Johnson wrote from Fort Niagara, June 30, 1781:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In my last letter of the 24th inst. I had just time to enclose a
+copy of Lieut. Nelles's letter with an account of his success,
+since which he arrived at this place with more particular information
+by which I find that he killed thirteen and took seven (the
+Indians not having reckoned two of the persons whom they left
+unscalped)....</p></div>
+
+<p>Again:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I have the honor to transmit to Your Excellency a general
+letter containing the state of the garrison and of my Department
+to the 1st inst., and a return, at the foot, of the war parties that
+have been on service this year, ... by which it will appear
+that they have killed and taken during the season already 150
+persons, including those last brought in....</p></div>
+
+<p>Again he reports, August 30, 1781:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The party with Capt. Caldwell and some of the Indians with
+Capt. Lottridge are returning, having destroyed several settlements
+in Ulster County, and about 100 of the Indians are gone
+against other parts of the frontiers, and I have some large parties
+under good leaders still on service as well as scouts towards Fort
+Pitt....</p></div>
+
+<p>Not only are there many returns of this sort, but
+also tabulated statements, giving the number of prisoners
+sent down from Fort Niagara to Montreal on given
+dates, with their names, ages, names of their captors,
+and the places where they were taken. There were
+many shipments during the summer of '83, and the
+latest return of this sort which I have found in the
+archives is dated August 1st of that year, when eleven
+prisoners were sent from the fort to Montreal. It was
+probably not far from this time that the last American<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+prisoner of the Revolution was released from Fort
+Niagara. But let the reader beware of forming hasty
+conclusions as to the cruelty or brutality of the British
+at Fort Niagara. In the first place, remember that
+harshness or kindness in the treatment of the helpless
+depends in good degree&mdash;and always has depended&mdash;upon
+the temperament and mood of the individual
+custodian. There were those in command at Fort
+Niagara who appear to have been capable of almost
+any iniquity. Others gave frequent and conspicuous
+proofs of their humanity. Remember, secondly, that
+the prisoners primarily belonged to the Indians who
+captured them. The Indian custom of adoption&mdash;the
+taking into the family circle of a prisoner in place
+of a son or husband who had been killed by the enemy&mdash;was
+an Iroquois custom, dating back much further
+than their acquaintance with the English. Many of
+the Americans who were detained in this fashion by
+their Indian captors, probably never were given over
+to the British. Some, as we know, like Mary Jemison,
+the White Woman of the Genesee, adopted the
+Indian mode of life and refused to leave it. Others
+died in captivity, some escaped. Horatio Jones and
+Jasper Parrish were first prisoners, then utilized as
+interpreters, but remained among the Indians.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> And<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+in many cases, especially of women and children, we
+know that they were got away from the Indians by the
+British officers at Fort Niagara, only after considerable
+trouble and expense. In these cases the British were
+the real benefactors of the Americans, and the kindness
+in the act cannot always be put aside on the mere
+ground of military exchange, prisoner for prisoner.
+Gen. Haldimand is quoted to the effect that he "does
+not intend to enter into an exchange of prisoners, but
+he will not add to the distresses attending the present
+war, by detaining helpless women and children from
+their families."<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>I have spoken of Mrs. Campbell, who was held some
+months at Kanadasaga. The letter just cited further
+illustrates the point I would make:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A former application had been made in behalf of Col. Campbell
+to procure the exchange of his family for that of Col. Butler, and
+the officer commanding the upper posts collected Mr. Campbell's
+and the family of a Mr. Moore, and procured their release from
+the Indians upon the above mentioned condition with infinite trouble
+and a very heavy expense. They are now at Fort Niagara where
+the best care that circumstances will admit of, is taken of them,
+and I am to acquaint you that Mrs. Campbell &amp; any other
+women or children that shall be specified shall be safely conducted
+to Fort Schuyler, or to any other place that shall be
+thought most convenient, provided Mrs. Butler &amp; her family
+consisting of a like number shall in the same manner have safe<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+conduct to my advance post upon Lake Champlain in order that
+she may cross the lake before the ice breaks up.</p></div>
+
+<p>The official correspondence carried on during the
+years 1779 to '83, between Gen. Haldimand and the
+commanding officers at Fort Niagara shows in more
+than one instance that American prisoners were a
+burden and a trouble at that post. Sometimes, as in
+the case of Mrs. Campbell, who was finally exchanged
+for Mrs. Butler and her children, they were detained
+as hostages. More often, they were received from the
+Indians in exchange for presents, the British being
+obliged to humor the Indians and thus retain their
+invaluable services. Thus, under date of Oct. 2,
+1779, we find Col. Bolton writing from Fort Niagara to
+Gen. Haldimand: "I should be glad to know what
+to do with the prisoners sent here by Capt. Lernault.
+Some of them I forwarded to Carleton Island, and
+Maj. Nairne has applied for leave to send them to
+Montreal. I have also many here belonging to the
+Indians, who have not as yet agreed to deliver them
+up."<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+<p>I could multiply at great length these citations from
+the official correspondence, but enough has been given
+to show that the wholesale condemnation of the British,
+into whose hands American prisoners fell, is not warranted
+by the facts. But there is no plainer fact in it
+all than that the British organized and aided the Indian
+raids, and were, therefore, joint culprits in general.</p>
+
+<p>And this brings us to the subject of scalps. For
+many years Fort Niagara was called a scalp-market.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+The statement is frequent in early writers that the British
+officers offered about eight dollars for every American's
+scalp, and that it was this offer, more than anything
+else, which fired the Indians to their most horrible
+deeds. Many scalps were brought into Fort Niagara,
+but I have failed, as yet, to find any report, or figure,
+or allusion, in the British archives pointing to the payment
+of anything whatever. Further search may discover
+something to settle this not unimportant matter;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+for we may readily believe that if such payments were
+made the matter would be passed over as unobtrusively
+as possible, especially in the reports to the Ministry.
+The facts appear to be that warriors who brought scalps
+into Fort Niagara gave them to the Superintendent of
+Indian Affairs, or his deputy, and then received presents
+from him. Probably these presents were proportioned
+to the success on the warpath.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+<p>These facts and reflections are offered to assist the
+reader's ready understanding and imagination in following
+in detail the adventures of one out of the many
+prisoners whose paths we have glanced at; for of all
+these unfortunate patriots who were thus brought to
+the "vultures' nest" none has laid hold of my interest
+and my imagination more strongly than has David
+Ogden. He was born in a troublous time, and the
+hazards of border life were his sole heritage, save alone
+a sturdy intrepidity of character which chiefly commends
+him to me as the typical hero of all the heroic
+souls, men, women, and children, who came through
+great bereavements and hardships, into old Fort Niagara
+as prisoners of war. Davy was born at Fishkill,
+Dutchess Co., New York, in 1764. His parents made
+one remove after another, in the restless American
+fashion, for some years taking such chances of betterment
+as new settlements afforded; first at Waterford,
+Saratoga Co.; then in the wilderness on the head-waters
+of the Susquehanna near the present village of Huntsville;
+then up the river to the settlement known in those
+days as Newtown Martin, now Middlefield; and later,
+for safety, to Cherry Valley. Here David's mother and
+her four boys were at the time of the famous massacre
+of November, 1778. When the alarm was given Mrs.
+Ogden snatched a blanket, and with her little ones
+began a flight through the woods towards the Mohawk.
+With them also fled Col. Campbell, of the patriot
+militia. Coming to a deserted cabin whose owner had
+fled, they did not scruple to help themselves to a loaf<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+of bread, which Col. Campbell cut up with his sword.
+After another flight of some hours through a storm of
+mingled snow and rain, they came to the house of one
+Lyons, a Tory, who was absent, presumably because
+busied in the black work at Cherry Valley. Mrs.
+Lyons, who seems to have shared her husband's sentiments,
+refused the refugees anything to eat, but finally
+let the mother and children spend the night on the
+floor. Col. Campbell left the Ogdens here and pushed
+on alone towards Canajoharie; while Mrs. Odgen and
+her hungry little ones went on by themselves through
+the snow. That day they came to a more hospitable
+house, where the keen suffering of that adventure
+ended; and some days later, on the Mohawk, the father
+rejoined the family, he also having escaped the massacre
+at Cherry Valley.</p>
+
+<p>This incident may be reckoned the mere prelude of
+our Davy's adventures; for the next spring, having
+reached the mature age of fourteen, he volunteered in
+the service of his country, entered upon the regular
+life of a soldier, and began to have adventures on his
+own account. The year that followed was spent in
+arduous but not particularly romantic service. He
+was marched from one point to another on the Mohawk
+and the Hudson; saw Andr&eacute; hanged at Tappan, and
+finally was sent to the frontier again, where at Fort
+Stanwix,<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> in the spring of 1781, what we may regard as
+the real adventures of Davy Ogden began.</p>
+
+<p>A party of eleven wood-choppers were at work in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+the heavy timber about two miles from the fort, and
+every day an armed guard was sent out from the garrison
+to protect them. On March 2d, Corporal Samuel
+Betts and six soldiers, Davy among them, were detailed
+on this service. I conceive of my hero at this
+time as a sturdy, well-seasoned lad, to whom woodcraft
+and pioneer soldiering had become second nature.
+I would like to see him among city boys of his own
+age to-day. Most things that they know, and think
+of, would be quite out of his range. But there is a
+common ground on which all healthy, high-minded
+boys, of whatever time or station in life, stand on a
+level. I do not know that he had ever been to school,
+or that he could read, though I think his mother must
+have looked to that. But I do know that he was well
+educated. He was innocent of the bicycle, but I'll
+warrant he could skate. I know he could swim like
+an otter&mdash;as I shall presently record&mdash;and when it
+came to running, he would have been a champion of
+the cinder-path, to-day. He knew the ways of poverty
+and of self-denial; knew the signs of the forest, of
+wild animal and Indian; and best of all, I am sure he
+knew just why he was carrying a heavy flint-lock in
+the ragged, hungry ranks of the American "rebels." It
+must be admitted, I linger somewhat over my hero;
+but I like the lad, and would have the reader come
+into sympathy with him. I can see him now as he
+followed the corporal out of the fort that March morning.
+He wore the three-cornered cocked-up hat of
+the prescribed uniform, and his powder-horn was slung<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+at his side. The whole guard very likely wore snowshoes,
+for the snow lay three feet deep in the woods,
+and a thaw had weakened the crust.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the afternoon, soldiers and wood-choppers
+were startled by the yells of Indians and Tories, who
+had gained a hill between them and the fort. Brant
+had achieved another of his surprises, and there was
+no escape from his party, which seemed to fill the
+woods. His evident intent was to make captives and
+not to kill, though his men had orders to shoot or
+tomahawk any who fired in self-defense. Two of
+Davy's companions were wounded by the enemy.
+One of them, Timothy Runnels, was shot in the
+mouth, "the ball coming through his cheek; and yet
+not a tooth was disturbed, a pretty good evidence, in
+the opinion of his comrades, that his mouth was wide
+open when the ball went in." It fared more seriously
+with the other wounded soldier. This man, whose
+name was Morfat, had his thigh broken by a bullet.
+The Indians rushed upon him as he fell at Davy's side,
+tomahawked him, scalped him, stripped him and left
+him naked upon the snow, thus visiting a special vengeance
+upon one who was said to be a deserter from
+the British. It is further chronicled that Morfat did
+not immediately die, but lived until he was found,
+hours after, by a party from the fort, finally expiring as
+his comrades bore him through the gate of Fort Stanwix.</p>
+
+<p>Davy Ogden had seen this dreadful thing, but with
+no sign of fear or sickness. He had already mastered
+that scorn of suffering and death which always com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>mended
+the brave to their Indian captors. He was
+ranged up with the other prisoners, and Brant asked of
+each his name. When Davy gave his, the great chief
+exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"What, a son of Ogden the beaver-hunter, that old
+scouter? Ugh! I wish it were he instead of you!
+But we will take care of his boy or he may become a
+scouter too!"</p>
+
+<p>Thus began David's captivity, as the prisoner, and
+perhaps receiving some of the special regard, of Brant
+himself. There could have been little doubt in Davy's
+mind, from the moment of his capture, that he was to
+be carried to Fort Niagara; yet the first move of the
+party was characteristic of Indian strategy; for instead
+of taking the trail westward, they all marched off to
+the eastward, coming upon the Mohawk some miles below
+Fort Stanwix. They forded the river twice, the
+icy water coming above their waists. On emerging
+upon the road between Fort Stanwix and Fort Herkimer,
+Brant halted his sixteen prisoners and caused the
+buckles to be cut from their shoes. These he placed
+in a row in the road, where the first passing American
+would be sure to see them. There was something of
+a taunt in the act, and a good deal of humor; and we
+may be sure that Joseph Brant, who was educated
+enough, and of great nature enough, to enjoy a joke,
+had many a laugh on his way back to Niagara as he
+thought of those thirty-two buckles in a row.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners tied up their shoes with deerskin
+strings, and trudged along through the night until the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+gleam of fires ahead and a chorus of yells turned their
+thoughts towards the stake and an ignominious martyrdom.
+But their fate was easier to meet. In a volley
+of sixteen distinct yells for the prisoners and one
+for the scalp, the party&mdash;said to number 100 Indians
+and fifty Tories&mdash;entered the first camp, where
+squaws were boiling huge kettles of samp&mdash;pounded
+corn&mdash;eaten without salt. All fared equally well, and
+all slept on the ground in the snow, Davy and his fellows
+being guarded by British soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>The next day's march brought them to Oneida Castle,
+often the headquarters of Brant in his expeditions.
+Here the Indians dug up from the snow a store of unhusked
+corn, and shelled and pounded a quantity for
+their long march. Here, too, Davy's three-cornered
+Revolutionary hat was taken from him, and in its place
+was given him a raccoon skin. All of the captives except
+the corporal were similarly treated and the Indians
+showed them how to tie the head and tail together.
+On some the legs stuck up and on others the
+legs hung down. I do not know how Davy wore his&mdash;with
+a touch of taste and an air of gaiety, no
+doubt; and we may be sure it made a better head-covering
+for a march of 250 miles at that season than would
+the stiff hat he had lost. Corporal Betts alone was
+permitted to keep his hat, as insignia of rank, and it is
+to be hoped he got some comfort out of it.</p>
+
+<p>It would take too long to give all the dismal details
+of Davy's dreary tramp across the State. Other
+captivities which I have spoken of had incidents of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+more dire misery and greater horror than befel the
+party to which Ogden belonged; and this is one
+reason why I have chosen to dwell upon his adventures,
+because my aim is, by a personal narrative, to illustrate
+the average experience of the time.</p>
+
+<p>There were hundreds of American prisoners brought
+to Fort Niagara during the period we are studying, but
+it would be far from just to their captors, and would
+throw our historical perspective out of focus, to take
+the extreme cases as types for the whole.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, put it mildly as we can, the experience persists
+in being serious. At Oneida Castle Brant, evidently
+fearing pursuit, roused his party in the middle
+of the night, and a forced march was begun through
+the heavy timber and up and down the long hills to the
+westward. When the moon went down they halted,
+but at the first streak of daylight they pushed on, not
+waiting even to boil their samp. An occasional handful
+of parched corn, pounded fine and taken with a
+swallow of water, was all the food any of the party had
+that day.</p>
+
+<p>The next encampment was on the Onondaga River,
+south of the lake; and here occurred an incident as
+characteristic of Indian character as was the row of
+shoe-buckles in the road. Some Indians found a
+small cannon, which had probably been abandoned by
+one of the detachments sent out by Sullivan on his
+retreat from the Genesee in '79. Brant, who had
+plenty of powder, ordered his American prisoners to
+load and fire this gun a number of times, the Indians<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+meanwhile yelling in delight and the Tories and British
+enjoying the chagrin of the helpless Americans. Then
+the march was resumed; over the watershed to Cayuga
+Lake, which they crossed on the ice near the outlet, a
+long train, each man far from his fellow, for the ice
+was rotten and full of air-holes; then along the old
+trail to Seneca River, which they forded; thence the
+route was west by north, one camp being somewhere
+between the present villages of Waterloo and Lyons.
+Brant on this expedition appears to have kept to the
+north of Kanadasaga.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> A day later they came to the
+outlet of Canandaigua Lake, where the Indians, finding
+a human head which they said was the head of a
+Yankee, had an improvised game of football with it,
+with taunts and threats for the edification of their prisoners.
+The next day they crossed the Genesee River,
+at or near the old Genesee Castle. And still, as
+throughout all this march, unsalted, often uncooked,
+samp was their only food.</p>
+
+<p>On the march Davy and each of his fellows had worn
+about their necks a rope of some fourteen or sixteen
+feet in length. In the daytime these ropes were wound
+about their necks and tied. At night they were
+unwound, each prisoner placed between two captors, and
+one end of the rope was fastened to each of the double
+guard. Under the circumstances it is no reflection upon
+our hero's courage that he had not made his escape.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>West of the Genesee, and beyond the country which
+had been ravaged by Sullivan, signs of Indian occupancy
+multiplied; but as yet there was no other food than
+corn to be had for their ill-conditioned bodies. As
+they filed along the trail, through the snow and mud
+of March, they met another large party just setting out
+from Niagara on a foray for prisoners and scalps. There
+were noisy greetings and many exultant yells; and as
+the outbound savages passed the prisoners, they snatched
+from each one's head the raccoon-skin cap; so that for
+the rest of the journey Davy and his companions met
+the weather bare-headed&mdash;all save Corporal Betts, to
+whom again was still spared the old three-cornered hat.
+The incident bespeaks either the lack of control or the
+negligent good nature of Brant, for fifteen raccoon-skins
+at Fort Niagara would surely have been worth at
+least fifteen quarts of rum. Corporal Betts, however,
+must have got little comfort out of his hat; for seeing
+him look so soldierly in it, the whim seized upon
+Brant to compel the unlucky corporal to review his
+woebegone troops.</p>
+
+<p>"Drill your men," said the fun-loving chief, "and
+let us see if these Yankees can go through the tactics of
+Baron Steuben."</p>
+
+<p>And so poor Betts, but with a broken spirit, mustered
+his forlorn guard, dressed them in a straight line,
+and put them through the manual according to Steuben.
+I doubt if the history of Western New York can show
+a stranger military function than this reluctant muster
+of patriot prisoners under compulsion of a playful tiger<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+of an Indian, jeered at meanwhile by British soldiers
+from Fort Niagara. When these latter went too far in
+their ridicule Brant stopped them. "The Yankees,"
+he said angrily, "do it a damned sight better than you
+can."</p>
+
+<p>This affair took place, as nearly as I can make out,
+somewhere between Batavia and Lockport; probably
+not far from the old Indian village of Tonawanda.</p>
+
+<p>Being now in the valley of the Tonawanda, Brant
+seems to have sent ahead a runner to announce his approach;
+for the second or third day after crossing the
+Genesee they were met by a party from the fort, bringing
+pork and flour, whereupon there was a camp and a
+feast; with the not strange result that many of them
+had to return to the astringent parched corn as a
+corrective.</p>
+
+<p>From this point on Davy and his friends were subjected
+to a new experience; for, as they passed through
+the Indian villages, the old women and children exercised
+their accustomed privilege of beating and abusing
+the prisoners. On one occasion, as Davy was
+plodding along the path, a squaw ran up to him, and,
+all unawares, hit him a terrific blow on the side of the
+head, whereupon the boy came near getting into trouble
+by making a vigorous effort to kick the lady. At
+another time, as David marched near Brant, he saw a
+young Indian raise a pole, intending to give the prisoner
+a whack over the head. Davy dodged, and the
+blow fell on Brant's back. The chief, though undoubtedly
+hurt, paid no attention to the Indian lad,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+but advised Davy to run, and Davy, knowing perfectly
+well that to run away meant torture and death, wisely
+ran towards the fort, which was but a few miles
+distant. A companion named Hawkins, who had
+marched with him, ran by his side. And, as they ran,
+they came upon still another village of the Senecas,
+from which two young savages took after them. Believing
+that their pursuers would tomahawk them,
+the boys let out a link or two of their speed, and
+coming to a creek where logs made a bridge, Hawkins
+hid under the bridge, while Davy ran behind a great
+buttonwood tree. The young Indians, however, had
+seen them, and on coming up, one of them promptly
+went under the bridge, and the other around the tree
+for Davy. This Indian held out his hand in friendship,
+and said: "Brother, stop." And the boys,
+seeing that the Indians had no tomahawks and could
+do them no harm, were reassured, and they all went on
+together toward Fort Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>Soon they met a detail of soldiers from the fort, who
+detained them until the rest of the party came up,
+when Davy saw that some of his friends had been so
+badly wounded by the assaults of these village Indians
+that they were now being carried. As the party went
+on together, the path was continually lined with Indians,
+whose camps were on the open plains about the fort;
+and the clubbing and beating of the prisoners became
+incessant. This was all a regular part of a triumphal
+return to Fort Niagara of a party of British and Indians
+with American prisoners, and was the mild pre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>liminary
+of that dread ordeal known as running the
+gauntlet.</p>
+
+<p>When Davy, well to the front of the procession, had
+been marched some distance farther through the wood,
+he looked out upon a clearing, across which extended
+a long line of fallen trees, which lay piled
+with the butts inward, so that the sharpened points
+of the forked branches all pointed outwards, making a
+<i>chevaux-de-frise</i> upon which one might impale himself,
+but which could scarcely be scaled. Beyond this barrier,
+as Davy looked, he saw, first, the wagon road
+which ran between this <i>chevaux-de-frise</i> and the palisades
+or pickets of the fort beyond. Within the
+palisades he could see the outlines of the fortification,
+the upper part of the old castle which still stands
+there, and other buildings, and over all the red flag of
+Great Britain. But while he noted these things, his
+chief regard must have fallen upon the great crowd of
+Indians who were ranged along on either side of the
+road between the outwork of fallen trees and the palisades&mdash;two
+close ranks of painted savages in front,
+and behind them on either side a dense mass of yelling,
+gesticulating bucks, squaws, old men and children,
+impatient for the passing of the prisoners. Beyond,
+the British sentries, officers and other inmates
+of the fort, awaited the sport, like spectators at a
+play.</p>
+
+<p>Davy knew the gravity and the chances of the situation.
+He knew the Indian custom, which does not
+seem to have been at all interfered with by the officers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+in command at Niagara,<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> which allowed the spectator
+to assault or wound the prisoner who should run between
+the ranks, in any way which his ingenuity could
+suggest, except with hatchets and knives; these could
+be used only on prisoners whose faces were painted
+black, by which sign wretches doomed to death were
+known; yet any prisoner, even the black-painted ones,
+who lived through the gauntlet and gained the gate of
+the fort, was safe from Indian judgment, and could rest
+his case upon the mercies of the British.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know whether or not Davy's heart stood
+still for a second, but I am bound to say there was not
+a drop of craven blood in his veins. He was not
+exactly in training, as we would say of a sprinter today&mdash;his
+diet, the reader will remember, had been somewhat
+deficient. But if he hesitated or trembled it was
+not for long. We can see him as he stands between
+the soldiers from the fort&mdash;bareheaded, ragged,
+dirty; a blanket pinned about his shoulders and still
+with the rope about his neck by which he was secured
+at night. And now, as his guards look back to see the
+others come up, Davy tightens the leather strap at his
+waist, takes a deep breath, bends low, darts forward,
+and is half way down the line before the waiting
+Indians know he is coming.</p>
+
+<p>How he does run! And how the yells and execrations
+follow! There is a flight of stones and clubs, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+not one touches the boy. One huge savage steps forward,
+to throw the runner backward&mdash;he clutches only
+the blanket, which is left in his hands, and Davy runs
+freer than before. The twenty rods of this race for life
+are passed, and as the boy dashes upon the bridge by
+which the road into the fort crosses the outer ditch, he
+is confronted by an evil-looking squaw, who aims a blow
+with her fist square at his face. Davy knocks up her arm
+with such force that she sprawls heavily to the ground,
+striking her head on one of the great spikes that held
+the planking. And straight on runs Davy, not down
+the road along the wall to the place set for prisoners,
+but through the inner gate, under the guard-house; and
+so, panting and spent, out upon the old parade-ground.</p>
+
+<p>Thus came the boy-soldier of the Revolution, David
+Ogden, to Fort Niagara, 118 years ago.</p>
+
+<p>The sentries hailed him with laughter and jeers, and
+asked him what he was doing there. "Go back,"
+they said, "under the guard-house and down the road
+outside the wall, to the bottom."</p>
+
+<p>This was where Guy Johnson's house stood, and
+there the prisoners were to report. But when Davy
+looked forth he concluded that discretion was the better
+part of valor, for the angry Indians had closed upon
+his fellows who followed, and were clubbing them,
+knocking them down and kicking them; so that of the
+whole party taken prisoners near Fort Stanwix, Davy
+Ogden was the only one who reached Fort Niagara
+without serious harm. Turning back upon the parade
+ground he flatly refused to go out again, whereupon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+the officer of the guard was called, who questioned
+him, took pity on him, and sheltered him in his own
+quarters for three days.</p>
+
+<p>Now, if this were a mere story, we would expect,
+right here, a happy turn in Davy's fortunes. As matter
+of fact, the most dismal days in Davy's life were
+just to begin. He had hoped that the worst would be
+detention at the fort, and a speedy shipment down the
+lake to Montreal, for exchange. But after some days
+he was summoned to Guy Johnson's house, where were
+many Indians, and here he was handed over to a squaw
+to be her son, in place of one she had lost in the war.
+David was powerless; and after what, many years later,
+he described as a powwow had been held over him, he
+was led away by the squaw and her husband. A British
+soldier, named Hank Haff, added to his grief by
+telling him that he was adopted by the Indians and
+would have to live with them forever; and, as he was
+led off across the plain, away from his friends and even
+from communication with the British, who were at
+least of his own blood, it was small consolation to
+know that his adopted father's name was Skun-nun-do,
+that the hideous old hag, his mother, was Gunna-go-let,
+that there was a daughter in the wigwam named
+Au-lee-zer-quot, or that his own name was henceforth
+to be Chee-chee-le-coo, or "Chipping-bird"&mdash;a good
+deal, I submit, for a soldier of the Revolution to bear,
+even if he were only a boy.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+<p>David lived with this fine family for over two years,
+being virtually their slave, and always under circumstances
+which made escape impossible. He dressed in
+Indian fashion, and learned their language, their yells
+and signal whoops. During the first months of his
+adoption, their wigwam was about four miles from the
+fort&mdash;presumably east or southeast of it; and one of
+David's first duties was to go with Gunna-go-let out on
+to the treeless plain overlooking Lake Ontario, where
+the old squaw had found a prize in the shape of a horse
+which had died of starvation. David helped her cut
+up the carcass and "tote" it home&mdash;and he was glad
+to eat of the soup which she made of it. They were
+always hungry. Skun-nun-do being a warrior, the burden
+of providing for the family fell upon Gunna-go-let.
+Her principal recourse was to cut faggots in the
+woods and carry them to the fort. Many a time did
+she and Davy Ogden carry their loads of firewood
+on their backs up to the fort, glad to receive in
+exchange cast-off meat, stale bread or rum. So much
+of this work did Davy do during the two years that he
+was kept with these Indians that his back became sore,
+then calloused.</p>
+
+<p>When he had lived with Gunna-go-let three months,
+she packed up and moved her wigwam to the carrying-place,
+now Lewiston. Here there was cleared land,
+and some 200 huts or wigwams were pitched, while
+the Indians planted, hoed and gathered a crop of corn.
+Davy was kept hard at work in the field, or in carrying
+brooms, baskets and other things to the fort for sale.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When he had been at the carrying-place about a
+year and a half, he saw a large party of captives
+brought in from the settlements. Among them was
+a young woman who had been at Fort Stanwix when
+Ogden was on duty there. As she sat in the camp,
+Davy being present, she began to observe him carefully.
+Although our hero was dressed as an Indian&mdash;Indian
+gaiters, a short frock belted at the waist, and
+with his hair cut close to the scalp over the whole head
+except a long tuft on the crown&mdash;yet this poor girl
+saw his real condition and soon learned who he was.
+There was no chance for confidences. What little they
+said had to be spoken freely, without feeling, as if
+casually between strangers indifferent to each other.
+She told David that she was gathering cowslip greens in
+a field, when an Indian rushed upon her and carried
+her away. What she endured while being brought to
+the Niagara I leave to the imagination. Davy saw
+her carried away by her captors across the river into
+Canada; and thus vanishes Hannah Armstrong, for I
+find no mention of her except in this reminiscence of
+her drawn from Ogden's own lips.</p>
+
+<p>About this time David was taken to the fort, old
+Gunna-go-let having heard that the British would give
+her a present for the lad. Davy trudged the nine miles
+from their hut to the fort with a good heart, for to him
+the news meant a chance of exchange. At Guy Johnson's
+house he and his mother sat expectant on the
+steps. Presently out came Capt. Powell, who had
+married Jane Moore&mdash;who had herself been brought<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+to the fort a captive from Cherry Valley. This fine
+couple, from whom the lad had some right to expect
+kindness, paraded up and down the "stoop" or
+verandah of the house for a while, the wife hanging on
+her captain's arm and both ignoring the boy. At
+length they paused, and Capt. Powell said:</p>
+
+<p>"You are one of the squaw boys? Do you want to
+quit the Indians?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Davy, heart in mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"What for?" quizzed the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"To be exchanged&mdash;to get back home, to my own
+country."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Powell, "if you really want to get
+free from the Indians come up and enlist in Butler's
+Rangers. Then we can ransom you from this old
+squaw&mdash;will you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I won't!" blazed Davy, fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>Capt. Powell turned on his heel. "Go back with
+the Indians again and be damned!" and with that he
+vanished into the house; and we have no means of
+knowing whether Jane, his wife, had by this time become
+so "Tory" that she made no protest; but it is
+pleasanter to think of her as remembering her own
+captivity, and, still loyal at heart, as interceding for
+the boy.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> But that was the end of it for this time, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+back Davy went, with an angry squaw, to continue his
+ignoble servitude until the next spring. Then word
+spread all through the region that the prisoners must be
+brought into Fort Niagara, and this time Davy was not
+disappointed, for with many others he was hurried on
+board the schooner Seneca and carried to Oswego.
+Obviously the news of the preparations for a peace had
+reached Niagara. Although the Treaty of Paris was
+not signed until September 3d of that year (1783), yet
+the preliminary articles had been agreed upon in January.
+The order from the British Ministry to cease
+hostilities reached Sir Guy Carleton about the 1st of
+April, and a week or so would suffice for its transmission
+to Niagara. Captives who had been detained and claimed
+by the Indians continued to be brought in during that
+summer, but we hear no more of returning war parties
+arriving with new prisoners. The War of the Revolution
+was over, even at remote Niagara, although for
+one pretext and another&mdash;and for some good reasons&mdash;the
+British held on to Fort Niagara and kept up its
+garrison for thirteen years more.</p>
+
+<p>With the sailing of the Seneca the connection of
+Davy Ogden with Fort Niagara ended; but no one who
+has followed his fortunes thus far can wish to drop him,
+as it were, in the middle of Lake Ontario. That is
+where Davy came near going, for a gale came up which
+not only made him and the throng of others who were
+fastened below decks desperately sick, but came near
+wrecking the schooner. She was compelled to put in
+at Buck's Island, and after some days reached Oswego,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+then strongly garrisoned. Here Davy stayed, still a
+prisoner, but living with the British Indians, through
+the winter. In the spring, with a companion named
+Danforth, who stole a loaf of bread for their sustenance,
+he made his escape. He ran through the woods,
+twenty-four miles in four hours; swam the Oswego
+River, and on reaching the far side, and fearing pursuit,
+did not stop to dress, but ran on naked through
+the woods until he and his companion hoped they had
+distanced their pursuers. A party had been sent after
+them from the fort, but on reaching the point where
+the boys had plunged into the river, gave up the chase.
+Ogden and Danforth pressed on, around Oneida Lake&mdash;having
+an adventure with a bear by the way, and
+another with rattlesnakes&mdash;and finally, following old
+trails, reached Fort Herkimer, having finished their
+loaf of bread and run seventy miles on the last day of
+their flight. Here Davy was among friends. The officers
+promptly clothed him, gave him passports, and in
+a few days he found his parents at Warrensburg, in
+Schoharie County.</p>
+
+<p>When the War of 1812 broke out, David took his gun
+again. He fought at the Battle of Queenston, where
+forty men in his own company were killed or wounded.
+Two bullets passed through his clothes, but he was unharmed.
+We can imagine the interest with which he
+viewed the Lewiston plateau where he had lived with
+Gunna-go-let more than thirty years before. After the
+war he returned East, and in 1840 was living in the
+town of Franklin, Delaware Co., being then seventy-six<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+years old. The story of his adventures was gathered
+from his own lips, but I do not think it has ever been
+told before as a part of the history of the Niagara
+frontier.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>A Fort Niagara Centennial.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+<h2>A FORT NIAGARA CENTENNIAL.</h2>
+
+<p><i>With Especial Reference to the British Retention of that Post for
+Thirteen Years after the Treaty of 1783.</i><a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
+
+
+<p>The part assigned to me in these exercises is to
+review the history of Fort Niagara; to summon
+from the shades and rehabilitate the figures
+whose ambitions or whose patriotism are web and woof
+of the fabric which Time has woven here. It is a
+long procession, led by the disciples of St. Francis and
+Loyola&mdash;first the Cross, then the scalping-knife, the
+sword and musket. These came with adventurers of
+France, under sanction of Louis the Magnificent, who
+first builded our Fort Niagara and with varying fortunes
+kept here a feeble footing for four score years, until,
+one July day, Great Britain's wave of continental conquest
+passed up the Niagara; and here, as on all the
+frontier from Duquesne to Quebec,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The lilies withered where the Lion trod."<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The fragile emblem of France vanished from these
+shores, and the triple cross waved over Fort Niagara
+until, 100 years ago to-day, it gave way to a fairer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+flag. This is the event we celebrate, this, with the
+succeeding years, the period we review: a period embracing
+three great wars between three great nations;
+covering our Nation's birth, growth, assertion and
+maintenance of independence. The story of Fort
+Niagara is peculiarly the story of the fur trade and the
+strife for commercial monopoly; and it is, too, in considerable
+measure, the story of our neighbor, the magnificent
+colony of Canada, herself worthy of full
+sisterhood among the nations. It is a story replete
+with incident of battle and siege, of Indian cruelty,
+of patriot captivity, of white man's duplicity, of famine,
+disease and death,&mdash;of all the varied forms of
+misery and wretchedness of a frontier post, which we in
+days of ease are wont to call picturesque and romantic.
+It is a story without a dull page, and it is two and a
+half centuries long.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously something must be here omitted, for your
+committee have allotted me fifteen minutes in which
+to tell it!</p>
+
+<p>Let us note, then, in briefest way, the essential data
+of the spot where we stand.</p>
+
+<p>A French exploratory expedition headed by Robert
+Cavelier, called La Salle, attempted the first fortification
+here in 1679.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> There was a temporary Indian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+village on the west side of the river, but no settlement
+here, neither were there trees on this point.
+Here, under the direction of La Motte de Lussiere,
+were built two timber redoubts, joined by a palisade.
+This structure, called Fort Conty, burned the same
+year, and the site of Fort Niagara was unfortified until
+the summer of 1687, when the Marquis de Denonville,
+Governor General of Canada, after his expedition
+against the Senecas, made rendezvous on this point,
+and (metaphorically) shaking his fist at his rival Dongan,
+the Governor of the English Colony of New
+York, built here a fort which was called Fort Denonville.
+It was a timber stockade, of four bastions; was
+built in three days, occupied for eleven months by a
+garrison which dwindled from 100 men to a dozen, and
+would no doubt entirely have succumbed to the scurvy
+and the besieging Iroquois but for the timely arrival
+of friendly Miamis. It was finally abandoned September
+15, 1688, the palisades being torn down, but
+the little huts which had sheltered the garrison left
+standing. How long they endured is not recorded.
+All traces of them had evidently vanished by 1721,
+when in May of that year Charlevoix rounded yonder
+point in his canoe and came up the Niagara. His
+Journal gives no account of any structure here. Four
+years more elapsed before the French ventured to take<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+decided stand on this ground. In 1725 Governor De
+Vaudreuil deputed the General De Longueil to erect a
+fort here. The work was entrusted to the royal engineer
+Chaussegros de L&eacute;ry&mdash;the elder of the two
+distinguished engineers bearing that name. He came
+to this spot, got his stone from Lewiston Heights and
+his timber from the forest west of the river, and built
+the "castle." Some of the cut stone was apparently
+brought from the vicinity of Fort Frontenac, now
+Kingston, across the lake. The oldest part of this
+familiar pile, and more or less of the superstructure, is
+therefore 171 years old.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> There is, however, probably
+but little suggestion of the original building in the
+present construction, which has been several times
+altered and enlarged. But from 1725 to the present
+hour Fort Niagara has existed and, with one brief interim,
+has been continuously and successively garrisoned
+by the troops of France, England, and the United States.</p>
+
+<p>By 1727 De L&eacute;ry had completed the fortification of
+the "castle," and the French held the post until
+1759, when it surrendered to the English under Sir
+William Johnson. It was in its last defence by the
+French that the famous Capt. Pouchot first established
+the fortification to the eastward, with two bastions and
+a curtain-wall, apparently on about the same lines as
+those since maintained. The story of the siege, the
+battle, and the surrender is an eventful one; it is also
+one of the most familiar episodes in the history of the
+place, and may not be dwelt upon here.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>July 25, 1759, marks the end of the French period
+in the history of Fort Niagara. The real significance
+of that period was even less in its military than in its
+commercial aspect. During the first century and more
+of our story the possession of the Niagara was coveted
+for the sake of the fur trade which it controlled. I
+cannot better tell the story of that hundred years in
+less than a hundred words, than to symbolize Fort
+Niagara as a beaver skin, held by an Indian, a Frenchman,
+an Englishman and a Dutchman, each of the last
+three trying to pull it away from the others (the poor
+Dutchman being early bowled over in the scuffle), and
+each European equally eager to placate the Indian with
+fine words, with prayers or with brandy, or to stick a
+knife into his white brother's back.</p>
+
+<p>This vicinity also has peculiar precedence in the
+religious records of our State. It was near here<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> that
+Father Melithon Watteaux, the first Catholic priest to
+minister to whites in what is now New York State, set
+up his altar.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> It has been claimed, too, by eminent
+authority, that on this bank of the Niagara, was
+acquired by the Catholic Church its first title to
+property in this State<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>; and here at Fort Niagara, under<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+the French <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, ministered Fathers Lamberville and
+Milet, Crespel and others of shining memory. But
+the capture of Fort Niagara by Sir William Johnson
+overthrew the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>The first period of British possession of this point
+extends from 1759 to 1796. This includes the Revolutionary
+period, with sixteen years before war was
+begun, and thirteen years after peace was declared.
+When yielded up by the French, most of the buildings
+were of wood. Exceptions were the castle, the old
+barracks and magazine, the two latter, probably, dating
+from 1756, when the French engineer, Capt. Pouchot,
+practically rebuilt the fort. The southwest blockhouse
+may also be of French construction. A tablet on the
+wall of yonder bake-house says it was erected in 1762.
+There were constant repairs and alterations under the
+English, and several periods of important construction.
+They rebuilt the bastions and waged constant warfare
+against the encroaching lake. In 1789 Capt. Gother
+Mann, Royal Engineer, made report on the needs of
+the place, and his recommendations were followed the
+succeeding year. In his report for 1790 he enumerates
+various works which have been accomplished on
+the fortifications, and says: "The blockhouse [has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+been] moved to the gorge of the ravelin so as to form
+a guard-house for the same, and to flank the line of
+picketts.... A blockhouse has been built on
+the lake side." This obviously refers to the solid old
+structure still standing there.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
+
+<p>The real life of the place during the pre-Revolutionary
+days can only be hinted at here. It was the
+scene of Sir William Johnson's activities, the rendezvous
+and recruiting post for Western expeditions.
+Here was held the great treaty of 1764; and here
+England made that alliance with the tribes which turned
+their tomahawks against the "American rebels." It
+may not be too much to say that the greatest horrors
+of the Revolutionary War had their source in this spot.
+Without Fort Niagara there would have been no massacre
+of Wyoming,<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> no Cherry Valley and Bowman's
+Creek outrages. Here it was that the cunning of
+Montour and of Brant joined with the zeal of the But<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>lers
+and Guy Johnson, and all were directed and
+sanctioned by the able and merciless Haldimand, then
+Governor General of Canada. When Sullivan, the
+avenger, approached in 1779, Fort Niagara trembled;
+had he but known the weakness of the garrison then,
+one page of our history would have been altered. The
+British breathed easier when he turned back, but another
+avenger was in the camp; for the 5,000 inflocking
+Indians created a scarcity of provisions; and
+starvation, disease and death, as had been the case
+more than once before on this point, became the real
+commanders of the garrison at Fort Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>I hurry over the Revolutionary period in order to
+dwell, briefly, on the time following the treaty of 1783.
+By that treaty Great Britain acknowledged the independence
+of this country. When it was signed the
+British held the posts of Point au Fer and Dutchmen's
+Point on Lake Champlain, Oswegatchie on the St.
+Lawrence, Oswego, Niagara, Detroit and Mackinac.
+The last three were important depots for the fur trade
+and were remote from the settled sections of the
+country. The British alleged that they held on to
+these posts because of the non-fulfillment of certain
+clauses in the treaty by the American Government.
+But Congress was impotent; it could only recommend
+action on the part of the States, and the impoverished
+States were at loggerheads with each other. England
+waited to see the new Nation succumb to its own domestic
+difficulties. It is exceedingly interesting to
+note at this juncture the attitude of Gov. Haldimand.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+In November, 1784, more than a year after the signing
+of the treaty, he wrote to Brig. Gen. St. Leger:
+"Different attempts having been made by the American
+States to get possession of the posts in the Upper
+Country, I have thought it my duty uniformly to oppose
+the same until His Majesty's orders for that purpose
+shall be received, and my conduct upon that
+occasion having been approved, as you will see by enclosed
+extract of a letter from His Majesty's Minister
+of State, I have only to recommend to you a strict
+attention to the same, which will be more than ever
+necessary as uncommon returns of furs from the Upper
+Country this year have increased the anxiety of the
+Americans to become masters of it, and have prompted
+them to make sacrifices to the Indians for that purpose";
+and he adds, after more in this vein, that
+should evacuation be ordered, "on no account whatever
+are any stores or provisions to be left in the forts"
+for the use of the Americans.</p>
+
+<p>Not only did Haldimand, during the years immediately
+following the treaty, refuse to consider any
+overtures made by the Americans looking to a transfer
+of the posts, but he was especially solicitous in maintaining
+the garrisons, keeping them provisioned, and
+the fortifications in good repair. There were over
+2,000, troops, Loyalists and Indians, at Fort Niagara,
+October 1, 1783. A year later it was much the best-equipped
+post west of Montreal; and ten years later it
+was not only well garrisoned and armed, mounting twelve
+24-pounders, ten 12-pounders, two howitzers and five<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+mortars, with large store of shell and powder, but it had
+become such an important depot of supply to the impoverished
+Loyalists that a great scandal had arisen
+over the matter of feeding them with King's stores; and
+the last spring of the Britishers' sojourn here was
+enlivened by the proceedings of a court of inquiry,
+with a possible court-martial in prospect, over a wholesale
+embezzlement of the King's flour.</p>
+
+<p>Haldimand prized Niagara at its true value. In
+October, 1782, several months before peace was declared,
+with admirable forethought and diplomacy, he
+wrote to the Minister: "In case a peace or truce
+should take place during the winter ... great
+care should be taken that Niagara and Oswego should
+be annexed to Canada, or comprehended in the general
+words, that each of the contending parties in
+North America should retain what they possessed at
+the time. The possession of these two forts is essentially
+necessary to the security as well as trade of the
+country."<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> He ordered the commandant at Fort Niagara
+to be very much on his guard against surprise by the wily
+Americans, and at the same time to "be very industrious
+in giving every satisfaction to our Indian allies."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p>
+<p>On the 2d of May, 1783, an express messenger from
+Gen. Washington arrived at Fort Niagara, bringing the
+terms of the treaty. The news gave great uneasiness
+to Indian-Supt. Butler. "Strict attention to the Indians,"
+he wrote next day to Capt. Mathews, "has
+hitherto kept them in good humor, but now I am fearful
+of a sudden and disagreeable change in their conduct.
+The Indians, finding that their lands are ceded
+to the Americans, will greatly sour their tempers and
+make them very troublesome." The British, with
+good reason, were constantly considering the effect of
+evacuation upon the Indians.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans made an ineffectual effort to get
+early possession of the posts. New York State made a
+proposition for garrisoning Oswego and Niagara, but
+Congress did not accede. On January 21, 1784, Gov.
+Clinton advised the New York State Senate and Assembly
+on the subject. The British commander [Haldimand],
+he said, had treated the Provisional Articles as
+a suspension of hostilities only, "declined to withdraw
+his garrison and refused us even to visit those
+posts."<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> The Legislature agreed with the Governor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+that nothing could be done until spring.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> Spring found
+them equally impotent. In March Gov. Clinton sent
+a copy of the proclamation announcing the ratification
+of the treaty to Gen. Haldimand: "Having no doubt
+that Your Excellency will, as soon as the season admits,
+withdraw the British garrisons under your command
+from the places they now hold in the United States,
+agreeable to the 7th Article of the Treaty, it becomes a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+part of my duty to make the necessary provisions for
+receiving the Post of Niagara and the other posts
+within the limits of this State, and it is for this purpose
+I have now to request that Your Excellency would
+give me every possible information of the time when
+these posts are to be delivered up."</p>
+
+<p>Lieut.-Col. Fish, who carried Gov. Clinton's letter
+to Quebec, received no satisfaction. Gen. Haldimand
+evaded anything like a direct reply, saying that he
+would obey the instructions of His Majesty's Ministers&mdash;whom
+he was meanwhile urging to hold on to
+the posts&mdash;but he gave the American officer the gratuitous
+information that in his [Haldimand's] private
+opinion "the posts should not be evacuated until such
+time as the American States should carry into execution
+the articles of the treaty in favor of the Loyalists;
+that in conformity to that article [I quote from Haldimand's
+report of the interview to Lord North], I had
+given liberty to many of the unhappy people to go
+into the States in order to solicit the recovery of their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+estates and effects, but that they were glad to return,
+without effecting anything after having been insulted
+in the grossest manner; that although in compliance
+with His Majesty's order, and [to] shun everything
+which might tend to prevent a reconciliation between
+the two countries, I had make no public representation
+on that head. I could not be insensible to the sufferings
+of those who had a right to look up to me for protection,
+and that such conduct towards the Loyalists
+was not a likely means to engage Great Britain to
+evacuate the posts; for in all my transactions," he
+adds, "I never used the words either of my 'delivering'
+or their 'receiving' the posts, for reasons mentioned
+in one of my former letters to Your Lordship."
+And with this poor satisfaction Col. Fish was sent back
+to Gov. Clinton.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+
+<p>In June, Maj.-Gen. Knox, Secretary of War, sent
+Lieut.-Col. Hull to Quebec on the same errand. In a
+most courteous letter he asked to be notified of the
+time of evacuation, and proposed, "as a matter of mutual
+convenience, an exchange of certain cannon and
+stores now at these posts for others to be delivered at
+West Point upon Hudson's River, New York, or some
+other convenient place," and he added that Lieut.-Col.
+Hull was fully authorized to make final arrangements,
+"so that there may remain no impediment to
+the march of the American troops destined for this ser<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>vice."
+Holdfast Haldimand sent him back with no
+satisfaction whatever, and again exulted, in his report
+to Lord Sydney, over his success in withstanding the
+Americans.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> It was with great reluctance that in the
+summer of 1784 he reduced the number of British vessels
+by one on each of the lakes Erie and Ontario.
+"It appears to be an object of National advantage," he
+wrote to an official of the British Treasury, "to prevent
+the fur trade from being diverted to the American
+States, and no measure is so likely to have effect as
+the disallowing, as long as it shall be in our power, the
+navigation of the lakes by vessels or small crafts of any
+kind belonging to individuals; hence I was the more
+inclined to indulge the merchants, though in opposition
+to the plan of economy which I had laid down."<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+
+<p>In October, 1784, Congress ordered 700 men to be
+raised for garrisoning the posts; but the season was
+late, the States impotent or indifferent, and nothing
+came of the order. Congress faithfully exercised all
+the power it possessed in the matter. In 1783, and
+again in 1787, it unanimously recommended to the
+States (and the British commissioner was aware, when
+the treaty was made, that Congress could do no more
+than recommend) to comply speedily and exactly with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+that portion of the treaty that concerned creditors and
+Royalists. The States were unable to act in concert,
+and alleged infractions of the compact by the British,
+as, indeed, there were. There was a sporadic show of
+indignation in various quarters over the continued
+retention of the posts; but in view of more vital
+matters, and consciousness that the British claim of
+unfulfilled conditions was not wholly unfounded, the
+agitation slumbered for long periods, and matters remained
+<i>in statu quo</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment of the Federal Constitution in
+1789 gave the States a new and firmer union; and the
+success of Wayne's expedition materially loosened the
+British hold on the Indians and the trade of the lake
+region; so that Great Britain readily agreed to the
+express stipulation in the commercial treaty of 1794,
+that the posts should be evacuated "on or before the
+1st of June, 1796." This treaty, commonly called
+Jay's, was signed in London, November 19, 1794, but
+not ratified until October 28, 1795. No transfer of
+troops was then reasonably to be expected during the
+winter. Indeed, it was not until April 25, 1796, that
+Lord Dorchester officially informed his council at
+Castle St. Louis that he had received a copy of the
+treaty. Even then the transfer was postponed until
+assurances could be had that English traders among the
+Indians should not be unduly dealt with.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> There was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+much highly-interesting correspondence between Lord
+Dorchester and the commandant at Niagara on this
+point; with James McHenry, our Secretary of War;
+with Robert Liston, the British Minister at Philadelphia;
+and, of course, with the Duke of Portland and
+others of the Ministry. Capt. Lewis, representing the
+United States, was sent to Quebec for definite information
+of British intention. He fared better than the
+American emissaries had twelve years before. He was
+cordially received and supplied with a copy of the
+official order commanding evacuation of the posts.
+Whereupon, having received the assurance which his
+Government had so long sought, he immediately requested
+that the posts should not be evacuated until the
+troops of the United States should be at hand to pro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>tect
+the works and public buildings. "Being desirous,"
+wrote Lord Dorchester, "to meet the wishes of
+the President, I have qualified my orders in a manner
+that I think will answer this purpose."<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> Thus it happened
+that the evacuation occurred at several different
+dates. It not being thought necessary to await the
+coming of American forces at the small posts on Lake
+Champlain and at Oswegatchie, the British withdrew
+from those points without ceremony about July 1st.
+Detroit followed, July 11th; then Oswego, July 15th.
+Most of the garrison appears to have left Fort Niagara
+early in July, but an officer's guard remained until
+August 11th,<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> when American troops arrived from
+Oswego, and the Stars and Stripes went to the masthead.</p>
+
+<p>I have dwelt upon this period in the history of Fort
+Niagara at some length, partly because it is the exact
+period marked by our celebration today, partly because
+most of the data just related are gleaned from unpublished
+official MSS., of which but scant use appears
+to have been made by writers on the subject.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+<p>Of Fort Niagara under the American flag I shall be
+very brief. No loyal American can take pride in telling
+of its surrender to the British, December 19, 1813.
+There was neither a gallant defense nor a generous
+enemy. Cowardice on the one hand and retaliation
+on the other sum up the episode. The place was
+restored to the United States March 27, 1815, and with
+the exception of one brief interim has been maintained
+as a garrison to this day. The Morgan affair of 1826
+need only be alluded to. The last defensive work of
+consequence&mdash;the brick facing of the bastions, fronting
+east&mdash;dates from 1861.</p>
+
+<p>In the continental view, Fort Niagara was never of
+paramount importance. Before the British conquest,
+Niagara was the key to the inner door, but Quebec was
+the master-lock. The French Niagara need never
+have been attacked; after the fall of Quebec it would
+inevitably have become Great Britain's without a blow.
+In English hands its importance was great, its expense
+enormous. Without it, Detroit and Mackinac could
+not have existed; yet England's struggle with the
+rebellious colonies would have been inevitable, and
+would have terminated exactly as it did, had she never
+possessed a post in the lake region. And of Fort Niagara
+as an American possession, the American historian
+can say nothing more true than this: that it is a striking
+exemplification of the fact that his beloved country
+is ill prepared upon her frontiers for anything save a
+state of international amity and undisturbed peace.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>The Journals and Journeys of an<br />
+Early Buffalo Merchant.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE JOURNALS AND JOURNEYS OF
+AN EARLY BUFFALO MERCHANT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>On the frosty morning of February 5, 1822, a
+strange equipage turned out of Erie Street into
+Willink Avenue, Buffalo, drove down that
+steep and ungraded highway for a short distance, then
+crossed to Onondaga Street, and turning into Crow,
+was soon lost to sight among the snowdrifts that lined
+the road running round the south shore of Lake Erie.
+At least, such I take to have been the route, through
+streets now familiar as Main, Washington and Exchange,
+which a traveler would choose who was bound
+up the south shore of Lake Erie.</p>
+
+<p>The equipage, as I have said, was a strange one, and
+a good many people came out to see it; not so much
+to look at the vehicle as to bid good-bye to its solitary
+passenger. The conveyance itself was nothing more
+nor less than a good-sized crockery-crate, set upon
+runners. Thills were attached, in which was harnessed
+a well-conditioned horse. The baggage, snugly
+stowed, included a saddle and saddle-bags, and a sack
+of oats for the horse. Sitting among his effects, the
+passenger, though raised but a few inches above the
+snow, looked snug and comfortable. With a chorus
+of well-wishes following him, he left the village and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+by nightfall had traveled many miles to the westward,
+taking his course on the ice that covered Lake
+Erie.</p>
+
+<p>This was John Lay, a merchant of the early Buffalo,
+whom even yet it is only necessary to introduce to the
+young people and to new-comers. The older generation
+remembers well the enterprising and successful
+merchant who shared fortunes with Buffalo in her most
+romantic days. Before going after him, up the ice-covered
+lake, let us make his closer acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lay, who was of good New-England stock,
+came to Buffalo in 1810 to clerk in the general store of
+his brother-in-law, Eli Hart. Mr. Hart had built his
+store on Main near the corner of Erie Street, the site
+now occupied by the American Express Co.'s building.
+His dwelling was on Erie Street, adjoining, and
+between the house and store was an ample garden.
+The space now occupied by St. Paul's Church and the
+Erie County Savings Bank was a rough common;
+native timber still stood thick along the east side of
+Main, above South Division Street; the town had been
+laid out in streets and lots for four years, and the
+population, exceeding at that time 400, was rapidly
+increasing. There was a turnpike road to the eastward,
+with a stage route. Buffalo Creek flowed lazily
+into the lake; no harbor had been begun; and on
+quiet days in summer the bees could still be heard
+humming among the basswoods by its waters.</p>
+
+<p>This was the Buffalo to which young Lay had come.
+Looking back to those times, even more novel than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+the condition of the frontier village, was the character
+of the frontier trade carried on by Mr. Hart. The
+trade of the villagers was less important than that
+which was held with the Canadians or English who
+were in office under the Government. To them they
+sold India goods, silks and muslins. Side by side with
+these the shelves were stocked with hardware, crockery,
+cottonades, jeans and flannels, Indian supplies,
+groceries and liquors. The young New Englander
+soon found that with such customers as Red Jacket and
+other representative red-men his usefulness was impaired
+unless he could speak Indian. With characteristic
+energy he set himself at the task, and in three
+months had mastered the Seneca. New goods came
+from the East by the old Mohawk River and Lewiston
+route, were poled up the Niagara from Schlosser's,
+above the falls, on flatboats, and were stored in a log
+house at the foot of Main Street.</p>
+
+<p>Up to 1810 the growth of Buffalo had been exceedingly
+slow, even for a remote frontier point. But
+about the time Mr. Lay came here new life was shown.
+Ohio and Michigan were filling up, and the tide of
+migration strengthened. Mr. Hart's market extended
+yearly farther west and southwest, and for a time the
+firm did a profitable business.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the war, paralysis of trade, and destruction
+of property. Mr. Lay was enrolled as a private in
+Butts's Company, for defense. The night the village
+was burned he with his brother-in-law, Eli Hart, were
+in their store. The people were in terror, fearing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+massacre by the Indians, hesitating to fly, not knowing
+in which direction safety lay.</p>
+
+<p>"John," said Mr. Hart, "there's all that liquor in
+the cellar&mdash;the redskins mustn't get at that."</p>
+
+<p>Together they went down and knocked in the heads
+of all the casks until, as Mr. Lay said afterwards, they
+stood up to their knees in liquor. As he was coming
+up from the work he encountered a villainous-looking
+Onondaga chief, who was knocking off the iron shutters
+from the store windows. They had been none too
+quick in letting the whisky run into the ground. Mr.
+Lay said to the Indian:</p>
+
+<p>"You no hurt friend?"</p>
+
+<p>Just then a soldier jumped from his horse before the
+door. Mr. Lay caught up a pair of saddle-bags, filled
+with silver and valuable papers, threw them across the
+horse, and cried out to his brother-in-law:</p>
+
+<p>"Here, jump on and strike out for the woods."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hart took this advice and started. The horse
+was shot from under him, but the rider fell unharmed,
+and, catching up the saddle-bags, made his way on foot
+to the house of another brother-in-law, Mr. Comstock.
+Later that day they came back to the town, and with
+others they picked up thirty dead bodies and put them
+into Rees's blacksmith shop, where the next day they
+were burned with the shop.</p>
+
+<p>After starting his relatives toward safety, Mr. Lay
+thought of himself. The Onondaga had disappeared,
+and Mr. Lay went into the house, took a long surtout
+that hung on the wall and put it on. As he stepped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+out of the door he was taken prisoner, and that night,
+with many others, soldiers and civilians, was carried
+across the river to Canada.</p>
+
+<p>And here begins an episode over which I am
+tempted to linger; for the details of his captivity, as
+they were related to me by his widow, the late Mrs.
+Frances Lay, are worthy of consideration. I will only
+rehearse, as briefly as possible, the chief events of this
+captivity in Canada, which, although not recorded in
+Mr. Lay's journals, resulted in one of his most arduous
+and adventurous journeys.</p>
+
+<p>The night of December 30, 1813, was bitterly cold.
+The captured and the captors made a hard march from
+Fort Erie to Newark&mdash;or, as we know it now,
+Niagara, Ont., on Lake Ontario. The town was full
+of Indians, and many of the Indians were full of
+whisky. Under the escort of a body-guard Mr. Lay
+was allowed to go to the house of a Mrs. Secord, whom
+he knew. While there, the enemy surrounded the
+house and demanded Lay, but Mrs. Secord hid him in
+a closet, and kept him concealed until Mr. Hart, who
+had followed with a flag of truce, had learned of his
+safety. Then came the long, hard march through
+Canadian snows to Montreal. The prisoners were put
+on short rations, were grudgingly given water to drink,
+and were treated with such unnecessary harshness that
+Mr. Lay boldly told the officer in charge of the expedition
+that on reaching Montreal he should report him to
+the Government for violating the laws of civilized warfare.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In March he was exchanged at Greenbush, opposite
+Albany. There he got some bounty and footed it
+across the country to Oneida, where his father lived.
+As he walked through the village he saw his father's
+sleigh in front of the postoffice, where his parents had
+gone, hoping for news from him. They burned his
+war-rags, and he rested for a time at his father's home,
+sick of the horrors of war and fearful lest his constitution
+had been wrecked by the hardships he had undergone.
+It will be noted that this enforced journey from
+Buffalo through Canada to Montreal and thence south
+and west to Oneida had been made in the dead of
+winter and chiefly, if not wholly, on foot. Instead of
+killing him, as his anxious parents feared it might, the
+experience seems to have taught him the pleasures of
+pedestrianism, for it is on foot and alone that we are to
+see him undertaking some of his most extended journeys.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot even pause to call attention to the slow
+recovery of Buffalo from her absolute prostration. The
+first house rebuilt here after the burning was that of
+Mrs. Mary Atkins, a young widow, whose husband,
+Lieut. Asael Atkins, had died of an epidemic only ten
+days before the village was destroyed. The young
+widow had fled with the rest, finding shelter at
+Williamsville, until her new house was raised on the
+foundation of the old. It stood on the corner of Church
+and Pearl streets, where the Stafford Building now is.</p>
+
+<p>The reader is perhaps wondering what all this has to
+do with John Lay. Merely this: that when, at Mr.
+Hart's solicitation, Mr. Lay once more returned to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+Buffalo, he boarded across the common from the rebuilt
+store, with the Widow Atkins, and later on married her
+daughter Frances, who, many years his junior, long survived
+him, and to whose vigorous memory and kind graciousness
+we are indebted for these pictures of the past.</p>
+
+<p>The years that followed the War of 1812 were devoted
+by Messrs. Hart &amp; Lay to a new upbuilding of
+their business. Mr. Hart, who had ample capital,
+went to New York to do the buying for the firm, and
+continued to reside there, establishing as many as five
+general stores in different parts of Western New York.
+He had discerned in his young relative a rare combination
+of business talents, made him a partner, and
+entrusted him with the entire conduct of the business
+at Buffalo. After peace was declared the commercial
+opportunities of a well-equipped firm here were great.
+Each season brought in larger demands from the
+western country. Much of the money that accrued
+from the sale of lands of the Holland Purchase flowed
+in the course of trade into their hands. The pioneer
+families of towns to the west of Buffalo came hither
+to trade, and personal friendships were cemented
+among residents scattered through a large section. I
+find no period of our local history so full of activities.
+From Western New York to Illinois it was a time of
+foundation-laying. Let me quote a few paragraphs
+from memoranda which Mrs. Lay made relating to this
+period:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The war had brought men of strong character, able to cope
+with pioneer life; among others, professional men, surgeons,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+doctors and lawyers: Trowbridge, Marshall, Johnson, and many
+others. Elliot of Erie was a young lawyer, of whom Mr. Lay had
+often said, "His word is as good as his bond." Another friend
+was Hamot of Erie, who had married Mr. Hart's niece. He
+made frequent visits to his countryman, Louis Le Couteulx. [At
+whose house, by the way, John Lay and Frances Atkins were
+married, Red Jacket being among the guests.] At Erie, then a
+naval station, were the families of Dickinson, Brown, Kelso, Reed,
+Col. Christy, and many others, all numbered among Mr. Lay's
+patrons. Albert H. Tracy came here about that time; he brought
+a letter from his brother Phineas, who had married Mr. Lay's
+sister. He requested Mr. Lay to do for him what he could in the
+way of business. Mr. Lay gave him a room over his store,
+and candles and wood for five years. Even in those days
+Mr. Tracy used to declare that he should make public life his
+business.</p>
+
+<p>Hart &amp; Lay became consignees for the Astors in the fur business.
+I well remember that one vessel-load of furs from the West
+got wet. To dry them Mr. Lay spread them on the grass, filling
+the green where the churches now are. The wet skins tainted the
+air so strongly that Mr. Lay was threatened with indictment&mdash;but
+he saved the Astors a large sum of money.</p></div>
+
+<p>Hart &amp; Lay acquired tracts of land in Canada,
+Ohio and Michigan. To look after these and other
+interests Mr. Lay made several adventurous journeys to
+the West&mdash;such journeys as deserve to be chronicled
+with minutest details, which are not known to have
+been preserved. On one occasion, to look after
+Detroit interests, he went up the lake on the ice with
+Maj. Barton and his wife; the party slept in the wigwams
+of Indians, and Mr. Lay has left on record his
+admiration of Mrs. Barton's ability to make even such
+rough traveling agreeable.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A still wilder journey took him to Chicago. He
+went alone, save for his Indian guides, and somewhere
+in the Western wilderness they came to him and told
+him they had lost the trail. Before it was regained
+their provisions were exhausted, and they lived for a
+time on a few kernels of corn, a little mutton tallow,
+and a sip of whisky. Fort Dearborn&mdash;or Chicago&mdash;at
+that date had but one house, a fur-trading post.
+When Mr. Lay and his guides reached there they were
+so near starvation that the people dared give them
+only a teaspoonful of pigeon soup at a time. Nor had
+starvation been the only peril on this journey. An
+attempt to rob him, if not to murder him, lent a grim
+spice to the experience. Mr. Lay discovered that he
+was followed, and kept his big horse-pistols in readiness.
+One night, as he lay in a log-house, he suddenly felt a
+hand moving along the belt which he wore at his waist.
+Instantly he raised his pistol and fired. The robber
+dashed through the window, and he was molested no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>Such adventurous journeyings as these formed no
+inconsiderable part of the work of this pushing Buffalo
+merchant during the half dozen years that followed
+the burning of the town. Business grew so that half a
+dozen clerks were employed, and there were frequently
+crowds of people waiting to be served. The store
+became a favorite rendezvous of prominent men of the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>Many a war episode was told over there. Albert
+Gallatin and Henry Clay, Jackson and the United<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+States banks&mdash;the great men and measures of the day&mdash;were
+hotly discussed there; and many a time did
+the group listen as Mr. Lay read from <i>Niles' Register</i>,
+of which he was a constant subscriber. There
+were sometimes lively scrimmages there, as the following
+incident, narrated by Mrs. Lay, will illustrate:</p>
+
+<p>There was a family in New York City whose son
+was about to form a misalliance. His friends put him
+under Mr. Hart's care, and he brought the youth to
+Buffalo. Here, however, an undreamed-of difficulty
+was encountered. A young Seneca squaw, well known
+in town as Suse, saw the youth from New York and fell
+desperately in love with him. Mr. Lay, not caring to
+take the responsibility of such a match-making, shipped
+the young man back to New York. The forest maiden
+was disconsolate; but, unlike <i>Viola</i>, she told her love,
+nor "let concealment, like the worm i' the bud, feed
+on her damask cheek." Not a bit of it. On the contrary,
+whenever Suse saw Mr. Lay she would ask him
+where her friend was. One day she went into the
+store, and, going up to the counter behind which Mr.
+Lay was busy, drew a club from under her blanket and
+"let him have it" over the shoulders. The attack
+was sudden, but just as suddenly did he jump over the
+counter and tackle her. Suse was a love-lorn maid,
+but she was strong as a wildcat and as savage. Albert
+H. Tracy, who was in the store, afterwards described
+the trouble to Mrs. Lay.</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw a fight," he said, "where both par<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>ties
+came so near being killed; but Lay got the better
+of her, and yanked her out into the street with her
+clothes torn off from her."</p>
+
+<p>"I should think you would have helped John," said
+the gentle lady, as Mr. Tracy told her this.</p>
+
+<p>By the close of the year 1821, although still a young
+man, the subject of this sketch had made a considerable
+fortune. Feeling the need of rest, and anxious to
+extend his horizon beyond the frontier scenes to which
+he was accustomed, he decided to go to Europe.
+Telling Mr. Hart to get another partner, the business
+was temporarily left in other hands; and on February
+5, 1822, as narrated at the opening of this paper, Mr.
+Lay drove out of town in a crockery-crate, and took
+his course up the ice-covered lake, bound for Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Recall, if you please, something of the conditions
+of those times. No modern journeyings that we can
+conceive of, short of actual exploration in unknown
+regions, are quite comparable to such an undertaking
+as Mr. Lay proposed. Partly, perhaps, because it was
+a truly extraordinary thing for a frontier merchant to
+stop work and set off for an indefinite period of sight-seeing;
+and partly, too, because he was a man whose
+love for the accumulation of knowledge was regulated
+by precise habits, we are now able to follow him in
+the closely-written, faded pages of half a dozen fat
+journals, written by his own hand day by day during
+the two years of his wanderings. No portion of these
+journals has ever been published; yet they are full of
+interesting pictures of the past, and show Mr. Lay to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+have been a close observer and a receptive student of
+nature and of men.</p>
+
+<p>The reason for his crockery-crate outfit may have
+been divined. He wanted a sleigh which he could
+leave behind without loss when the snow disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Business took him first to Cleveland, which he
+reached in six days, driving much of the distance on the
+lake. Returning, at Erie he headed south and followed
+the old French Creek route to the Allegheny.
+Presently the snow disappeared. The crockery-crate
+sleigh was abandoned, and the journey lightly continued
+in the saddle; among the few <i>impedimenta</i> which
+were carried in the saddle-bags being "a fine picture
+of Niagara Falls, painted on satin, and many Indian
+curiosities to present to friends on the other side."</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg was reached March 2d; and, after a delay
+of four days, during which he sold his horse for $30, we
+find our traveler embarked on the new steamer Gen.
+Neville, carrying $120,000 worth of freight and fifty
+passengers.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the palmy days of river travel. There
+were no railroads to cut freight rates, or to divert the
+passenger traffic. The steamers were the great transporters
+of the middle West. The Ohio country was
+just emerging from the famous period which made the
+name "river-man" synonymous with all that was disreputable.
+It was still the day of poor taverns, poor
+food, much bad liquor, fighting, and every manifestation
+of the early American vulgarity, ignorance and
+boastfulness which amazed every foreigner who ven<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>tured
+to travel in that part of the United States,
+and sent him home to magnify his bad impressions in
+a book. But with all its discomforts, the great Southern
+river route of 1822 proved infinitely enjoyable to
+our Buffalonian. At Louisville, where the falls intercepted
+travel, he re&euml;mbarked on the boat Frankfort
+for a fourteen-days' journey to New Orleans.
+Her cargo included barrels of whisky, hogsheads of
+tobacco, some flour and cotton, packs of furs, and two
+barrels of bear's oil&mdash;how many years, I wonder,
+since that last item has been found in a bill of lading
+on an Ohio steamer!</p>
+
+<p>I must hurry our traveler on to New Orleans, where,
+on a Sunday, he witnessed a Congo dance, attended
+by 5,000 people, and at a theater saw "The Battle of
+Chippewa" enacted. There are antiquarians of the
+Niagara Frontier today who would start for New
+Orleans by first train if they thought they could see
+that play.</p>
+
+<p>April 27th, Mr. Lay sailed from New Orleans, the
+only passenger on the ship Triton, 310 tons, cotton-laden,
+for Liverpool. It was ten days before they
+passed the bar of the Mississippi and entered the Gulf,
+and it was not until June 28th that they anchored in
+the Mersey. The chronicle of this sixty days' voyage,
+as is apt to be the case with journals kept at sea, is exceedingly
+minute in detail. Day after day it is
+recorded that "we sailed thirty miles to-day," "sailed
+forty miles to-day," etc. There's travel for you&mdash;thirty
+miles on long tacks, in twenty-four hours! The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+ocean greyhound was as yet unborn. The chief diversion
+of the passage was a gale which blew them along
+195 miles in twenty-four hours; and an encounter
+with a whaleship that had not heard a word from the
+United States in three years. "I tossed into their
+boat," Mr. Lay writes, "a package of newspapers.
+The captain clutched them with the avidity of a starving
+man."</p>
+
+<p>Ashore in Liverpool, the first sight he saw was a
+cripple being carried through the streets&mdash;the only
+survivor from the wreck of the President, just lost on
+the Irish coast.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>He hastened to London just too late to witness the
+coronation of George IV., but followed the multitude
+to Scotland, where, as he writes, "the outlay of attentions
+to this bad man was beyond belief. Many of
+the nobility were nearly ruined thereby." He was in
+Edinburgh on the night of August 15, 1822, when that
+city paid homage to the new King; saw the whole
+coast of Fife illuminated "with bonfires composed of
+thirty tons of coal and nearly 1,000 gallons of tar and
+other combustibles"; and the next day, wearing a
+badge of Edinburgh University, was thereby enabled
+to gain a good place to view the guests as they passed
+on their way to a royal levee. To the nobility our
+Buffalonian gave little heed; but when Sir Walter
+Scott's carriage drove slowly by he gazed his fill. "He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+has gray thin hair and a thoughtful look," Mr. Lay
+wrote. "The Heart of Midlothian" had just been
+published, and Mr. Lay went on foot over all the
+ground mentioned in that historical romance. He
+stayed in pleasant private lodgings in Edinburgh for six
+months, making pedestrian excursions to various parts
+of Scotland. In twenty-eight days of these wanderings
+he walked 260 miles.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of following him closely in these rambles,
+my readers are asked to recall, for a moment, the time
+of this visit. Great Britain was as yet, to all intents
+and purposes, in the eighteenth century. She had few
+canals and no railroads, no applied uses of steam and
+electricity. True, Stephenson had experimented on
+the Killingworth Railway in 1814; but Parliament had
+passed the first railway act only a few months before
+Mr. Lay reached England, and the railway era did not
+actually set in until eight years later. There is no
+reference in the Lay journals to steam locomotives or
+railways. Liverpool, which was built up by the African
+slave trade, was still carrying it on; the Reform Bill
+was not born in Parliament; it was still the old <i>r&eacute;gime</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Our traveler was much struck by the general bad
+opinion which prevailed regarding America. On
+meeting him, people often could not conceal their surprise
+that so intelligent and well-read a man should be
+an American, and a frontier tradesman at that. They
+quizzed him about the workings of popular government.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I told them [writes this true-hearted democrat] that as long as
+we demanded from our public men honesty and upright dealings,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+our institutions would be safe, but when men could be bought or
+sold I feared the influence would operate ruinously, as all former
+republics had failed for lack of integrity and honesty.</p></div>
+
+<p>His political talks brought to him these definitions,
+which I copy from his journal:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Tory was originally a name given to the wild Irish robbers who
+favored the massacre of the Protestants in 1641. It was afterward
+applied to all highflyers of the Church. Whig was a name
+first given to the country field-elevation meetings, their ordinary
+drink being whig, or whey, or coagulated sour milk. Those
+against the Court interest during the reigns of Charles II. and
+James II. and for the Court in the reigns of William and George
+I. were called Whigs. A Yankee is thus defined by an Englishman,
+who gives me what is most likely the correct derivation of
+the epithet: The Cherokee word eanker [?] signifies coward or
+slave. The Virginians gave the New Englanders this name for
+not assisting in a war with the Cherokees in the early settlement
+of their country, but after the affair of Bunker Hill the New Englanders
+gloried in the name, and in retaliation called the Virginians
+Buckskins, in allusion to their ancestors being hunters, and selling
+as well as wearing buckskins in place of cloth.</p></div>
+
+<p>In Edinburgh he saw and heard much of some of
+Scotia's chief literary folk. Burns had been dead
+twenty-six years, but he was still much spoken of,
+much read, and admired far more than when he lived.
+With Mr. Stenhouse, who for years was an intimate
+of Burns, Mr. Lay formed a close acquaintance:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Stenhouse has in his possession [says the journal] the mss.
+of all of Burns's writings. I have had the pleasure of perusing
+them, which I think a great treat. In the last of Burns's letters
+which I read he speaks of his approaching dissolution with sorrow,
+of the last events in his life in the most touching and delicate
+language.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The journal relates some original Burns anecdotes,
+which Mr. Lay had from the former companions of the
+bard, but which have probably never been made public,
+possibly because&mdash;in characteristic contrast to the
+letter referred to above&mdash;they are touching but <i>not</i>
+delicate.</p>
+
+<p>Our Buffalonian encountered numerous literary lions,
+and writes entertainingly of them. He speaks often of
+Scott, who he says "is quite the theme. He is constantly
+writing&mdash;something from his pen is shortly
+expected. I saw him walking on the day of the grand
+procession. He is very lame, has been lame from his
+youth, a fact I did not know before." James Hogg,
+author of the "Winter Evening Tales," lived near
+Edinburgh. Mr. Lay described him as "a singular
+rustic sort of a genius, but withal clever&mdash;very little
+is said about him."</p>
+
+<p>I have touched upon Mr. Lay's achievements in
+pedestrianism, a mode of travel which he doubtless
+adopted partly because of the vigorous pleasure it afforded,
+partly because it was the only way in which to visit
+some sections of the country. A man who had walked
+from Fort Erie to Montreal, to say nothing of hundreds
+of miles done under pleasanter circumstances,
+would naturally take an interest in the pedestrian
+achievements of others. Whoever cares for this
+"sport" will find in the Lay journals unexpected
+revelations on the diversions and contests of three-quarters
+of a century ago. Have we not regarded the
+walking-match as a modern mania, certainly not ante<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>dating
+Weston's achievements? Yet listen to this page
+of the old journal, dated Edinburgh, Aug. 27, 1822:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I went to see a pedestrian named Russell, from the north of
+England, who had undertaken to walk 102 miles in twenty-four
+successive hours. He commenced his task yesterday at 1.15
+o'clock. The spot chosen was in the vale between the Mound
+and the North Bridge, which gave an opportunity for a great
+number of spectators to see him to advantage; yet the numbers
+were so great and so much interested that there were persons constantly
+employed to clear his way. The ground he walked over
+measured one eighth of a mile. I saw him walk the last mile,
+which he did in twelve minutes. He finished his task with eleven
+minutes to spare, and was raised on the shoulders of men and
+borne away to be put into a carriage from which the horses were
+taken. The multitude then drew him through many principal
+streets of the city in triumph. The Earl of Fyfe agreed to give
+him &pound;30 if he finished his work within the given time. He
+also got donations from others. Large bets were depending, one
+of 500 guineas. He carried a small blue flag toward the last and
+was loudly cheered by the spectators at intervals.</p></div>
+
+<p>Nor was the "sport" confined to Scotland. August
+4, 1823, being in London, Mr. Lay writes:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>To-day a girl of eight years of age undertook to walk thirty
+miles in eight consecutive hours. She accomplished her task in
+seven hours and forty-nine minutes without being distressed. A
+wager of 100 sovereigns was laid. This great pedestrian feat took
+place at Chelsea.</p></div>
+
+<p>A few weeks later he writes again:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>This is truly the age of pedestrianism. A man has just accomplished
+1,250 miles in twenty successive days. He is now to
+walk backward forty miles a day for three successive days. Mr.
+Irvine, the pedestrian, who attempted to walk from London to
+York and back, 394 miles, in five days and eight hours, accomplished
+it in five days seven and one-half hours.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With men walking backwards and eight-years-old
+girls on the track, these Britons of three-quarters of a
+century ago still deserve the palm. But Mr. Lay's
+own achievements are not to be lightly passed over.
+Before leaving London he wrote: "The whole length
+of my perambulations in London and vicinity exceeds
+1,200 miles."</p>
+
+<p>The journals, especially during the months of his
+residence in Scotland, abound in descriptions of people
+and of customs now pleasant to recall because for the
+most part obsolete. He heard much rugged theology
+from Scotland's greatest preachers; had an encounter
+with robbers in the dark and poorly-policed streets of
+Edinburgh; had his pockets picked while watching the
+King; and saw a boy hanged in public for house-breaking.
+With friends he went to a Scotch wedding,
+the description of which is so long that I can only give
+parts of it:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>About forty had assembled. The priest, a Protestant, united
+them with much ceremony, giving them a long lecture, after
+which dinner was served up and whisky toddy. At six, dancing
+commenced and was kept up with spirit until eleven, when we had
+tea, after which dancing continued until three in the morning.
+The Scotch dances differ from the American, and the dancers hold
+out longer. The girls particularly do not tire so early as ours at
+home. We retired to the house where the bride and groom were
+to be bedded. The females of the party first put the bride to bed,
+and the bridegroom was then led in by the men. After both were
+in bed liquor was served. The groom threw his left-leg hose.
+Whoever it lights upon is next to be married. The stocking
+lighted on my head, which caused a universal shout. We reached
+home at half past six in the morning, on foot.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have been much too long in getting Mr. Lay to
+London, to go about much with him there. And yet
+the temptation is great, for to an American of Mr.
+Lay's intelligence and inquiring mind the great city
+was beyond doubt the most diverting spot on earth.
+One of the first sights he saw&mdash;a May-day procession
+of chimney-sweeps, their clothes covered with gilt
+paper&mdash;belonged more to the seventeenth century
+than to the nineteenth. Peel and Wilberforce,
+Brougham and Lord Gower, were celebrities whom he
+lost no time in seeing. On the Thames he saw the
+grand annual rowing match for the Othello wherry
+prize, given by Edmund Kean in commemoration of
+Garrick's last public appearance on June 10, 1776.
+Mr. Lay's description of the race, and of Kean himself,
+who "witnessed the whole in an eight-oared cutter,"
+is full of color and appreciative spirit. He saw a man
+brought before the Lord Mayor who "on a wager had
+eaten two pounds of candles and drank seven glasses of
+rum," and who at another time had eaten at one meal
+"nine pounds of ox hearts and taken drink proportionately";
+and he went to Bartholomew's Fair, that
+most audacious of English orgies, against which even
+the public sentiment of that loose day was beginning
+to protest. As American visitors at Quebec feel to-day
+a flush of patriotic resentment when the orderly in the
+citadel shows them the little cannon captured at Bunker
+Hill, so our loyal friend, with more interest than
+pleasure, saw in the chapel at Whitehall, "on each side
+and over the altar eight or ten eagles, taken from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+French, and flags of different nations; the eagle of the
+United States is among them, two taken at New Orleans,
+one at Fort Niagara, one at Queenston, and three at
+Detroit"; but like the American at Quebec, who, the
+familiar story has it, on being taunted with the captured
+Bunker Hill trophy, promptly replied, "Yes, you got
+the cannon, but we kept the hill," Mr. Lay, we may
+be sure, found consolation in the thought that though
+we lost a few eagle-crested standards, we kept the Bird
+o' Freedom's nest.</p>
+
+<p>On July 5, 1823, he crossed London Bridge on foot,
+and set out on an exploration of rural England; tourings
+in which I can not take space to follow him.
+When he first went abroad he had contemplated a trip
+on the continent. This, however, he found it advisable
+to abandon, and on October 5, 1823, on board
+the Galatea, he was beating down the channel, bound
+for Boston. The journey homeward was full of grim
+adventure. A tempest attended them across the
+Atlantic. In one night of terror, "which I can never
+forget," he writes, "the ship went twice entirely
+around the compass, and in very short space, with continual
+seas breaking over her." The sailors mutinied
+and tried to throw the first mate into the sea. Swords,
+pistols and muskets were made ready by the captain.
+Mr. Lay armed himself and helped put down the
+rebellion. When the captain was once more sure of
+his command, "Jack, a Swede, was taken from his
+confinement, lashed up, and whipped with a cat-o'-nine-tails,
+then sent to duty." The dose of cat was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+afterwards administered to the others. It is no wonder
+that the traveler's heart was cheered when, on November
+13th, the storm-tossed Galatea passed under the
+guns of Forts Warren and Independence and he stepped
+ashore at Boston.</p>
+
+<p>He did not hurry away, but explored that city and
+vicinity thoroughly, going everywhere on foot, as he
+had, for the most part, in England. He visited the
+theaters and saw the celebrities of the day, both of
+the stage and the pulpit. At the old Boston Theater,
+Cooper was playing <i>Marc Antony</i>, with Mr. Finn as
+<i>Brutus</i>, and Mr. Barrett as <i>Cassius</i>.</p>
+
+<p>On November 20th he pictures a New-England
+Thanksgiving:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>This is Thanksgiving Day throughout the State of Massachusetts.
+It is most strictly observed in this city; no business
+whatever is transacted&mdash;all shops remained shut throughout the
+day. All the churches in the city were open, divine service performed,
+and everything wore the appearance of Sunday. Great
+dinners are prepared and eaten on this occasion, and in the evening
+the theaters and ball-rooms tremble with delight and carriages
+fill the streets.... A drunken, riotous gang of fellows got
+under our windows yelping and making a great tumult.</p></div>
+
+<p>A week later, sending his baggage ahead by stage-coach,
+he passed over Cambridge Bridge, on foot for
+Buffalo, by way of New York, Philadelphia, Washington,
+Pittsburg and Erie.</p>
+
+<p>Once more I must regret that reasonable demands
+on the reader's patience will not let me dwell with much
+detail on the incidents and observations of this unusual
+journey. No man could take such a grand walk and fail<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+to see and learn much of interest. But here was a practical,
+shrewd, observant gentleman who, just returned
+from two years in Great Britain, was studying his own
+countrymen and weighing their condition and ideas
+by most intelligent standards. The result is that the
+pages of the journals reflect with unaccustomed fidelity
+the spirit of those days, and form a series of historical
+pictures not unworthy our careful attention. Just a
+glimpse or two by the way, and I am through.</p>
+
+<p>The long-settled towns of Massachusetts and Connecticut
+appeared to him in the main thrifty and growing.
+Hartford he found a place of 7,000 inhabitants,
+"completely but irregularly built, the streets crooked
+and dirty, with sidewalks but no pavements." He
+passed through Wethersfield, "famous for its quantities
+of onions. A church was built here, and its bell purchased,"
+he records, "with this vegetable." New
+Haven struck him as "elegant, but not very flourishing,
+with 300 students in Yale." Walking from
+twenty-five to thirty-five miles a day, he reached Rye,
+just over the New York State line, on the ninth day
+from Boston, and found people burning turf or peat for
+fuel, the first of this that he had noticed in the United
+States.</p>
+
+<p>At Harlem Bridge, which crosses to New York
+Island, he found some fine houses, "the summer residences
+of opulent New Yorkers"; and the next day
+"set out for New York, seven miles distant, over a
+perfectly straight and broad road, through a rough,
+rocky and unpleasing region." In New York, where<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+he rested a few days, he reviewed his New England
+walk of 212 miles:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The general aspect of the country is pleasing; inns are provided
+with the best, the people are kind and attentive. I think I have
+never seen tables better spread. I passed through thirty-six
+towns on the journey, which are of no mean appearance. I never
+had a more pleasant or satisfactory excursion. There are a great
+number of coaches for public conveyance plying on this great
+road. The fare is $12 for the whole distance. Formerly it was
+254 miles between Boston and New York, but the roads are now
+straightened, which has shortened the distance to 212 miles.</p></div>
+
+<p>He had experienced a Boston Thanksgiving. In
+New York, on Thursday, December 18th, he had another
+one. Thanksgiving then was a matter of State proclamation,
+as now, but the day had not been given its
+National character, and in many of the States was not
+observed at all. We have seen what it was like in
+Boston. In New York, "business appears as brisk as
+on any other laboring day." The churches, however,
+were open for service, and our traveler went to hear
+the Rev. Mr. Cummings in Vanderventer Street, and to
+contribute to a collection in behalf of the Greeks.</p>
+
+<p>Four days before Christmas he crossed to Hoboken,
+and trudged his way through New Jersey snow and
+mud to Philadelphia, which he reached on Christmas.
+At the theater that night he attended&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>a benefit for Mr. Booth of Covent Garden, London, and was filled
+with admiration for Mr. Booth, but the dancing by Miss Hathwell
+was shocking in the extreme. The house was for a long time in
+great uproar, and nothing would quiet them but an assurance
+from the manager of Mr. Booth's reappearance.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This of course was Junius Brutus Booth. Here is Mr.
+Lay's pen-picture of Philadelphia seventy-six years ago:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The streets of Philadelphia cross at right angles; are perfectly
+straight, well-paved but miserably lighted. The sidewalks break
+with wooden bars on which various things are suspended, and in
+the lower streets these bars are appropriated for drying the washwomen's
+clothes. Carpets are shaken in the streets at all hours,
+and to the annoyance of the passer-by. Mr. Peale of the old
+Philadelphia Museum was lecturing three nights a week on galvanism,
+and entertaining the populace with a magic lantern.</p></div>
+
+<p>It is much the same Philadelphia yet.</p>
+
+<p>January 8th, Mr. Lay took his way south to Baltimore,
+making slow progress because of muddy roads;
+but he had set out to walk, and so he pushed ahead
+on to Washington, although there were eight coaches
+daily for the conveyance of passengers between the
+two cities, the fare being $4. The road for part of
+the way lay through a wilderness. "The inns generally
+were bad and the attention to travelers indifferent."</p>
+
+<p>In Washington, which he reached on January 14th, he
+lost no time in going to the House of Representatives,
+where he was soon greeted by Albert H. Tracy, whose
+career in Congress I assume to be familiar to the reader.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>On the day named, the House was crowded to excess with
+spectators, a great number of whom were ladies, in consequence
+of Mr. Clay's taking the floor. He spoke for two hours
+on the subject of internal improvements, and the next day the
+question of erecting a statue to Washington somewhere about
+the Capitol, was debated warmly.</p></div>
+
+<p>On his return North, in passing through Baltimore, he
+called on Henry Niles, who as editor of <i>Niles' Weekly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+Register</i>, was to thousands of Americans of that day
+what Horace Greeley became later on&mdash;an oracle;
+and on January 18th struck out over a fine turnpike
+road for Pittsburg.</p>
+
+<p>The Pittsburg pike was then the greatest highway to
+the West. The Erie Canal was nearing completion,
+and the stage-routes across New York State saw much
+traffic. Yet the South-Pennsylvania route led more
+directly to the Ohio region, and it had more traffic
+from the West to the East than the more northern
+highways had for years to come. In the eastern part
+of the State it extends through one of the most fertile
+and best-settled parts of the United States. Farther
+west it climbs a forest-clad mountain, winds
+through picturesque valleys, and from one end of the
+great State to the other is yet a pleasant path for the
+modern tourist. The great Conestoga wagons in endless
+trains, which our pedestrian seldom lost sight of,
+have now disappeared. The wayside inns are gone or
+have lost their early character, and the locomotive has
+everywhere set a new pace for progress.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Lay entered the Blue Ridge section, beyond
+Chambersburg, he found Dutch almost the only
+language spoken. The season was at first mild, and as
+he tramped along the Juniata, it seemed to him like
+May. "Land," he notes, "is to be had at from $1
+to $3 per acre." It took him seventeen days to walk
+to Pittsburg. Of the journey as a whole he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>At Chambersburg the great stage route from Philadelphia
+unites with the Baltimore road. Taverns on these roads are fre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>quent
+and nearly in sight of each other. The gates for the collection
+of tolls differ in distance&mdash;some five, others ten, and others
+twenty-five miles asunder. Notwithstanding the travel is great
+the stock yields no profit, but, on the contrary, it is a sinking concern
+on some parts, and several of the companies are in debt for
+opening the road. About $100 per mile are annually expended in
+repairs. It cost a great sum to open the road, particularly that
+portion leading over the mountains and across the valleys.</p>
+
+<p>Taverns are very cheap in their charges; meals are a fourth of
+a dollar, beds 6&frac14; cents, liquors remarkably cheap. Their tables
+are loaded with food in variety, well prepared and cleanly served
+up with the kindest attention and smiling cheerfulness. The
+women are foremost in kind abilities. Beer is made at Chambersburg
+of an excellent quality and at other places. A good deal
+of this beverage is used and becoming quite common; it is found
+at most of the good taverns. Whisky is universally drank and it
+is most prevalent. Places for divine service are rarely to be met
+with immediately on the road. The inhabitants, however, are
+provided with them not far distant in the back settlements, for
+almost the whole distance. The weather has been so cold that
+for the two last days before reaching Pittsburg I could not keep
+myself comfortable in walking; indeed, I thought several times I
+might perish.</p></div>
+
+<p>In Pittsburg he lodged at the old Spread Eagle
+Tavern, and afterwards at Conrad Upperman's inn on
+Front Street at $2 a week. He found the city dull
+and depressed:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The streets are almost deserted, a great number of the houses
+not tenanted, shops shut, merchants and mechanics failed; the
+rivers are both banked by ice, and many other things wearing the
+aspect of decayed trade and stagnation of commerce. Money I
+find purchases things very low. Flour from this city is sent over
+the mountains to Philadelphia for $1 per barrel, which will little
+more than half pay the wagoner's expenses for the 280 miles.
+Superfine flour was $4.12&frac12; in Philadelphia, and coal three cents<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+per bushel. Coal for cooking is getting in use in this city&mdash;probably
+two-thirds the cooking is with coal.</p></div>
+
+<p>He had had no trouble up to this point in sending
+his baggage ahead. It was some days before the stage
+left for Erie. All was at length dispatched, however,
+and on February 14th he crossed over to Allegheny&mdash;I
+think there was no bridge there then&mdash;and marched
+along, day after day, through Harmony, Mercer and
+Meadville, his progress much impeded by heavy snow;
+at Waterford he met his old friend G. A. Elliott, and
+went to a country dance; and, finally, on February 20th
+found himself at Mr. Hamot's dinner-table in Erie,
+surrounded by old friends. They held him for two
+days; then, in spite of heavy snow, he set out on foot
+for Buffalo. Even the faded pages of the old journal
+which hold the record of these last few days bespeak
+the eager nervousness which one long absent feels as
+his wanderings bring him near home. With undaunted
+spirit, our walker pushed on eastward to the house of
+Col. N. Bird, two miles beyond Westfield; and the
+next day, with Col. Bird, drove through a violent snow-storm
+to Mayville to visit Mr. William Peacock&mdash;the
+first ride he had taken since landing in Boston in
+November of the previous year. But he was known
+throughout the neighborhood, and his friends seem to
+have taken possession of him. From Mr. Bird's he
+went in a stage-sleigh to Fredonia to visit the Burtons.
+Snow two feet deep detained him in Hanover town,
+where friends showed him "some tea-seed bought of a
+New-England peddler, who left written directions for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+its cultivation." "It's all an imposition," is Mr.
+Lay's comment&mdash;but what a horde of smooth-tongued
+tricksters New England has to answer for!</p>
+
+<p>The stage made its way through the drifts with difficulty
+to the Cattaraugus, where Mr. Lay left it, and
+stoutly set out on foot once more. For the closing
+stages of this great journey let me quote direct from
+the journal:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I proceeded over banks of drifted snow until I reached James
+Marks's, who served breakfast. The stage wagon came up again,
+when we went on through the Four-mile woods, stopping to see
+friends and spending the night with Russell Goodrich. On February
+29th [two years and twenty-four days from the date of setting
+out] I drove into Buffalo on Goodrich's sleigh and went
+straight to Rathbun's, where I met a great number of friends,
+and was invited to take a ride in Rathbun's fine sleigh with four
+beautiful greys. We drove down the Niagara as far as Mrs.
+Seely's and upset once.</p></div>
+
+<p>What happier climax could there have been for this
+happy home-coming!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>Misadventures of Robert Marsh.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+<h2>MISADVENTURES OF ROBERT MARSH.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Robert Marsh claimed American citizenship,
+but the eventful year of 1837 found him on the
+Canadian side of the Niagara River. His
+brother was a baker at Chippewa, and Robert drove a
+cart, laden with the bakery products, back and forth
+between the neighboring villages. From St. Catharines
+to Fort Erie he dispensed bread and crackers and
+the other perhaps not wholly harmless ammunition that
+was moulded in that Chippewa bakery; and he naturally
+absorbed the ideas and the sentiments of the men
+he met. The Niagara district was at fever heat.
+Mackenzie had sown his Patriot literature broadcast,
+and what with real and imaginary wrongs the
+majority of the community sentiment seemed ripe for
+rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy enough now, as one reads the story of that
+uprising, to see that the rebels never had a ghost of a
+chance. The grip of the Government never was in
+real danger of being thrown off in the upper province;
+but a very little rebellion looks great in the eyes of
+the rebel who hazards his neck thereby; and it is no
+wonder that Robert Marsh came to the conclusion that
+the colonial government of Canada was about to be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+overthrown, or that he decided to cast in his lot with
+those who should win glory in the cause of freedom.
+As an American citizen he had a right to do this.
+History was full of high precedents. Did not Byron
+espouse the cause of the Greeks? Did not Lafayette
+make his name immortal in the ranks of American
+rebels? One part of America had lately thrown off
+the hated yoke of Great Britain; why should not
+another part? So our cracker peddler reasoned; and
+reasoning thus, began the train of adventures for the
+narration of which I draw in brief upon his own obscure
+narrative. It is a story that leads us over some
+strange old trails, and its value lies chiefly in the fact
+that it illustrates, by means of a personal experience, a
+well-defined period in the history of the Niagara
+region. Robert Marsh is hardly an ideal hero, but
+he is a fair type of a class who contrived greatly to
+delude themselves, and to pay roundly for their
+experience. He thought as many others thought;
+what he adventured was also adventured by many
+other men of spirit; and what he endured before he
+got through with it was the unhappy lot of many of
+his fellows.</p>
+
+<p>It was a time of great discontent and discouragement
+on both sides of the border. Throughout the
+Holland Purchase the difficulties over land titles had
+reached a climax, and the sheriff and his deputies enforced
+the law at the risk of their lives. This year of
+1837 also brought the financial panic which is still a
+high-water mark of hard times in our history. Buffalo<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+suffered keenly, and it is not strange that such of her
+young men as had a drop of adventurous blood in their
+veins were ready to turn "Patriot" for the time being;
+though as a matter of sober fact it must be recorded
+that the enthusiasm of the majority did not blind their
+judgment to the hopelessness of the rebellion. On
+the Canadian side the case was different. Unlike their
+American brethren, many of the residents there felt
+that they had not a representative government. It is
+not necessary now, nor is it essential to our story, to
+rehearse the grievances which the Canadian Patriots
+undertook to correct by taking up arms against the
+established authority. They are presented with great
+elaboration in many histories; they are detailed with
+curious ardor in the Declaration of Rights, a document
+ostentatiously patterned after the Declaration of
+Independence. William Lyon Mackenzie was a long
+way from being a Thomas Jefferson; yet he and his
+associates undertook a reform which&mdash;taking it at
+their valuation&mdash;was as truly in behalf of liberty as
+was the work of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.
+They made the same appeal to justice;
+argued from the same point of view for man's inalienable
+rights; they were temperate, too, in their demands,
+and sought liberty without bloodshed. Yet
+while the American patriots were enabled to persist
+and win their cause, though after two bitter and exhausting
+wars, their Canadian imitators were ignominiously
+obliterated in a few weeks. In the one case the
+cause of Liberty won her brightest star. In the other,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+there is complete defeat, without a monument save the
+derision of posterity.</p>
+
+<p>It was in November of this year of rebellion 1837
+that Marsh, being at Chippewa, decided to cast in his
+lot with the Patriots. "I began to think," he says,
+"that I must soon become an actor on one side or the
+other." He saw the Government troops patrolling
+every inch of the Canadian bank of the Niagara, and
+concentrating in the vicinity of Chippewa. "Boats of
+every description were brought from different parts; at
+the same time they were mustering all their cannon
+and mortars intending to drive them [the Patriots] off;
+one would think by their talk, that they would not
+only kill them all, but with their cannon mow down
+all the trees, and what the balls failed in hitting the
+trees would fall upon, and thus demolish the whole
+Patriot army." Our hero's observations have this peculiar
+value: they are on the common level. He heard
+the boasts and braggadocio of the common soldier;
+the diplomatic or guarded speech of officers and officials
+he did not record. He heard all about the plot
+to seize the Caroline, and could not believe it at first.
+But, he says, "when I beheld the men get in the boats
+and shove off and the beacon lights kindled on the
+shore, that they might the more safely find the way
+back, my eyes were on the stretch, towards where the
+ill-fated boat lay." When he saw the party return
+and heard them boast of what they had done, he
+thought it high time for him to leave the place.
+"Judge my feelings," he says, "on beholding this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+boat on fire, perhaps some on board, within two short
+miles of the Falls of Niagara, going at the rate of
+twelve miles an hour."<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Caroline was burned on the 29th of December.
+On the next day our hero and a friend set out to join
+the Patriots. Let me quote in condensed fashion from
+his narrative, which is a tolerably graphic contribution
+to the history of this famous episode:</p>
+
+<p>"We succeeded in reaching the river six miles above
+Chippewa about 11 o'clock in the evening, after a
+tedious and dangerous journey through an extensive
+swamp. There is a small settlement in a part of this
+swamp which has been called Sodom. There were
+many Indians prowling about. We managed to evade
+them but with much difficulty. There were sentinels
+every few rods along the line." A friendly woman at a
+farmhouse let them take a boat. They offered her
+$5 for its use, but she declined; "she said she would
+not take anything ... as she knew our situation
+and felt anxious to do all in her power to help us across
+the river; she also told us that her husband had taken
+Mackenzie across a few nights previous. 'Leave the
+boat in the mouth of the creek,' said she, pointing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+across the river towards Grand Island, ... 'there
+is a man there that will fetch it back, you have only
+to fasten it, say nothing and go your way.' We were
+convinced that we were not the only ones assisted by
+this patriotic lady."</p>
+
+<p>Marsh and his companion, whose surname was
+Thomas, launched the boat with much difficulty, and
+with muffled oars they rowed across to Grand Island.
+"It was about 1 o'clock in the morning and we had to
+go eight or nine miles through the woods and no road.
+There had been a light fall of snow, and in places
+[was] ice that would bear a man, but oftener would
+not; once or twice in crossing streams the ice gave
+way and we found ourselves nearly to the middle in
+water." Our patriot's path, the reader will note, was
+hard from the outset, but he kept on, expecting to be
+with his friends again in a few days, and little dreaming
+of what lay ahead of him. "We at near daylight
+succeeded in reaching White Haven, a small village,
+where we were hailed by one of our militia sentinels:
+'Who comes there?' 'Friends.' 'Advance and give
+the countersign.' Of course we advanced, but we
+could not give the countersign; a guard was immediately
+dispatched with us to headquarters, where we
+underwent a strict examination."</p>
+
+<p>He was sent across to Tonawanda, where he took
+the cars for Schlosser. There the blood-stains on the
+dock where Durfee had been killed sealed his resolution;
+he crossed to Navy Island and presented himself
+at the headquarters of William Lyon Mackenzie, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+peppery little Scotchman who was the prime organizer
+of the Provisional Government, and of General Van
+Rensselaer, commander-in-chief of the Patriot Army.
+"The General produced the list and asked me the
+length of time I wished to enlist. I was so confident
+of success that I unhesitatingly replied, 'Seven years
+or during the war.' The General remarked, 'I wish
+I had 2,000 such men, we have about 1,000 already,<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
+and I think this Caroline affair will soon swell our force
+to 2,000, and then I shall make an attack at some
+point where they least expect, ... and as you are
+well acquainted there I want you to be by my side.'"
+Here was preferment indeed, for Marsh believed that
+Van Rensselaer was brave and able; history has a
+different verdict; but we must assume that our hero
+entered upon the campaign with high hopes and who
+knows what visions of glory.</p>
+
+<p>Now, at the risk of tiresomeness, I venture to dwell
+a little longer on this occupancy of Navy Island; I
+promise to get over ground faster farther along in the
+story. It is assumed that the reader knows the principal
+facts of this familiar episode; but in Marsh's journal
+I find graphic details of the affair not elsewhere
+given, to my knowledge. Let me quote from his
+obscure record:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>After my informing the General of their preparations and intention
+of attacking the Island, breastworks were hastily thrown up,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+and all necessary arrangements made to give them a warm reception.
+There were twenty-five cannon, mostly well mounted,
+which could easily be concentrated at any point required; and
+manned by men that knew how to handle them. Besides other
+preparations, tops of trees and underbrush were thrown over the
+bank at different places to prevent them landing. I know there
+were various opinions respecting the strength of the Island, but
+from close observation, during these days of my enlistment, it is
+my candid opinion that if they had attacked the Island, as was
+expected, they would mostly or all have found a watery grave.
+The tories were fearful of this, for when the attempt was made
+men could not be found to hazard their lives in so rash an
+attempt....</p>
+
+<p>It was hoped and much regretted by all on the Island that the
+attempt was not made; for if they had done so it would have
+thinned their ranks and made it the more easy for us to have entered
+Canada at that place. They finally concluded to bring all
+their artillery to bear upon us, and thus exterminate all within
+their reach. They were accordingly arranged in martial pomp,
+opposite the Island, the distance of about three-quarters of a mile.
+Now the work of destruction commences; the balls and bombs
+fly in all directions. The tops of the trees appear to be a great
+eye-sore to them. I suppose they thought by commencing an
+attack upon them, their falling would aid materially in the destruction
+of lives below.</p></div>
+
+<p>Robert, the reader will have observed, had a fine
+gift of sarcasm. The thundering of artillery was
+heard, by times, he says, for twenty and thirty miles
+around, for a week, "[the enemy] being obliged to
+cease firing at times for her cannons to cool. They
+were very lavish with Her Gracious Majesty's powder
+and balls." He continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I recollect a man standing behind the breastwork where were
+four of us sitting as the balls were whistling through the trees.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+"Well," says he, "if this is the way to kill the timber on this
+island, it certainly is a very expensive way as well as somewhat
+comical; I should think it would be cheaper to come over with
+axes, and if they are not in too big a hurry, girdle the trees and
+they will die the sooner." I remarked: "They did not know
+how to use an axe, but understood girdling in a different way."
+An old gentleman from Canada taking the hint quickly responded,
+"Yes. Canada can testify to the fact of their having other ways
+of girdling besides with the axe, and unless there is a speedy stop
+put to it, there will not be a green tree left." There was another
+gentleman about to say something of their manner of swindling
+in other parts of the world, he had just commenced about Ireland
+when I felt a sudden jar at my back, and the other three that set
+near me did the same; we rose up and discovered that a cannon
+ball had found its way through our breastwork, but was kind
+enough to stop after just stirring the dirt at our backs. I had
+only moved about an inch of dirt when I picked up a six-pound
+ball.</p>
+
+<p>As it happened, our gun was a six-pounder. We concluded,
+as that was the only ball that had as yet been willing to pay us a
+visit, we would send it back as quick as it come. We immediately
+put it into our gun and wheeled around the corner of the breastwork.
+"Hold," said I, "there is Queen Ann's Pocket Piece, as
+it is called, it will soon be opposite, and then we'll show them
+what we can do." It was not mounted, but swung under the ex
+[axle] of a cart, such as are used for drawing saw-logs, with very
+large wheels. I had seen it previous to my leaving Chippewa.
+I think there was six horses attached to the cart, for it was very
+heavy, it being a twenty-four-pounder. I suppose it was their
+intention to split the Island in two with it, hoping by so doing it
+might loosen at the roots and move off with the current and go
+over the falls, and thus accomplish their great work of destruction
+at once. As they were opposite, the words "ready, fire," were
+given; we had the satisfaction of seeing the horses leave the
+battleground with all possible speed. The gun was forsaken in
+no time, and in less than five minutes there was scarcely a man to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+be seen. The ball had gone about three feet further to the left
+than had been intended; it was intended to lop the wheels, but it
+severed the tongue from the ex and the horses took the liberty to
+move off as fast as possible.</p>
+
+<p>We were about to give them another shot, when the officer of
+the day came up and told us the orders from headquarters were
+not to fire unless it was absolutely necessary, that we must be
+saving of our ammunition. I told him that it was their own ball
+that we had just sent back. When he saw the execution it had
+done he smiled and went on, remarking, "They begin to fire a
+little lower." "Yes," said I, "and as that was the first, we
+thought we would send it back and let them know we did not
+want it, that we had balls of our own."</p></div>
+
+<p>This incident was the beginning of more active operations.
+For the next nine days and nights there was a
+great deal of firing, with one killed and three wounded.
+The Patriot army held on to its absurd stronghold for
+four weeks, causing, as Marsh quaintly puts it, "much
+noise and confusion on both sides"; and he at least
+was keenly disappointed when it was evacuated, Jan.
+12, 1838. The handful of Patriots scattered and
+Chippewa composed herself to the repose which, but
+for one ripple of disturbance in 1866, continues to the
+present day.</p>
+
+<p>Up to the end of this abortive campaign Robert
+Marsh's chief misadventure had been to cut himself off,
+practically, from a safe return to the community where
+his best interests lay. But he had a stout heart if a
+perverse head. "I was born of Patriot parentage,"
+he boasted; "I am not a Patriot today and tomorrow
+the reverse"; and being fairly identified with the
+rebels, he determined to woo the fortunes of war wher<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>ever
+opportunity offered. His ardor must have been
+considerable, for he made his way in the dead of winter
+from Buffalo to Detroit; just how I do not know;
+but he speaks of arriving at Sandusky "after a tedious
+walk of five days." Here he joined a party for an
+attack on Malden, but the Patriots were themselves
+attacked by some 300 Canadian troops who came across
+the lake in sleighs; there was a lively fight on the ice,
+with some loss of life, when each party was glad to
+retire. Next he tried it with a band of rebels on
+Fighting Island, below Detroit; treachery and "the
+power of British gold" seem to have kept Canada from
+falling into their hands; and presently, "being sick of
+island fighting," as he puts it, he made his way to
+Detroit, where, all through that troubled summer of
+'38, he appears to have been one of the most active
+and ardent of the plotters. Certain it is that he was
+promptly to the front for the battle of Windsor, and
+was with the invaders on Dec. 4, 1838, when a band
+of 164 misguided men crossed the Detroit River to take
+Canada. He was "Lieutenant" Marsh on this expedition,
+but it was the emptiest of honors. At four in the
+morning they attacked the barracks on the river banks
+above Windsor, and, as often happens with the most
+fatuous enterprises, met at the outset with success.
+They burned the barracks and took thirty-eight prisoners
+(whom they could not hold), looking meanwhile
+across the river for help which never came. "We
+were about planting our standard," wrote Marsh afterward;
+"the flag was a splendid one, with two stars for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+Upper and Lower Canada. We had just succeeded in
+getting a long spar and was in the act of raising it, as
+the cry was heard,&mdash;'There comes the Red-coats!
+There are the dragoons!'" Our Patriot, it will be observed,
+made no nice distinctions between British and
+Canadian troops; that distinction will not fail to be
+made for him, in a province which has always claimed
+the honor&mdash;to which it is fully entitled&mdash;of putting
+down this troublesome uprising without having to call
+for help upon the British regulars. But the invaders
+did not raise nice points then. They hastily formed
+and withstood the attack for a little; but it was a hopeless
+stand, for numbers and discipline were all on the
+other side. According to Marsh, the regulars numbered
+600. There was sharp firing, eleven Patriots and
+forty-four Canadians were killed; and seeing this, and
+learning, later than his friends across the river, that
+discretion is the better part of valor, he did the only
+thing that remained to do&mdash;he took to the woods.</p>
+
+<p>The woods were full just then of discreet Patriots,
+and several of them held a breathless council of war.
+Here is Marsh's account of it:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It was finally concluded for every man to do the best he could
+for himself. We accordingly separated and I found myself pursued
+by a man hollowing at the top of his voice, "Stop there,
+stop, you damned rebel, or I'll shoot you! stop, stop!" I was
+near a fence at that time crossing a field. I proceeded to the
+fence, dropped on one knee, put my rifle through the fence, took
+deliberate aim. He had a gun and was gaining on me. I had a
+cannister of powder, pouch of balls, two pistols and an overcoat
+on, which prevented me from attempting to run. I saw all hopes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+of escape was useless; I discharged my rifle, but cannot say
+whether it hit the mark or not, for I did not look, but immediately
+rose and walked off. At any rate I heard no more "Stop there,
+you damned rebel."</p></div>
+
+<p>Marsh's narrative is too diffuse, not to mention
+other faults, for me to follow it <i>verbatim et (il-)literatim</i>.
+I give the events of the next few days as simply as possible.
+After he fired his gun through the fence at the
+red-coat who followed no more&mdash;his last shot, be it
+remarked, for the relief of Canada&mdash;he found that he
+was very tired. It was late in the day of the battle and
+he had eaten nothing for nearly forty-eight hours.
+Pushing on through the woods he came to a barn, but
+had scarcely entered when it was surrounded by ten or
+twelve "dragoons," as he calls them. He scrambled
+up a ladder to the hay-mow, dug a hole in the hay,
+crawled in and smoothed it over himself, and, he says,
+"had just got a pistol in each hand as the door flew
+open; in they rushed, crying, 'Come out, you damned
+rebel, we'll shoot you, we'll not take you before the
+Colonel to be shot, come out, come out, we'll hang
+you.' Said another, 'We'll quarter you and feed you
+to the hogs as we've just served one!' They thrust
+their swords into the hay, and threatened to burn the
+barn; but as it belonged to one of their sort, they
+thought better of it and went off. They soon came
+back, and saying they would place a sentry, disappeared
+again." Marsh tore up certain papers which he feared
+would be troublesome if found on him and then slept.
+It was dark when he awoke. He crept out of the barn<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+and wandered through the woods until daylight, narrowly
+escaping some Indians. He applied at the
+house of a French settler for something to eat; frankly
+admitting, what it obviously was folly to deny, that
+he was a fugitive. Three "large bony Frenchmen"
+came to the door, made him their prisoner and marched
+him off through the woods to Sandwich, where he was
+stripped of his valuables and locked up with several
+others, his captors cheerfully assuring them that they
+would have a fine shooting-match tomorrow. Marsh
+stoutly maintained that, as he owed the Queen no
+allegiance, he was not a rebel; but his protests did him
+no good. He was not shot on the morrow, although
+others of the captives were summarily executed, without
+a pretext of trial or even a chance to say their prayers.</p>
+
+<p>And now begins an imprisonment of ten months full
+of such distress and atrocity that I should not please,
+however much I might edify, by its recital. We read
+today of the horrors of Spanish and Turkish massacres
+or of Siberian prisons, and every page of history has
+its record of inhumanity&mdash;its Black Hole, its Dartmoor,
+its Andersonville. In this dishonor roll of
+official outrages surely may be included the backwoods
+prisons of Upper Canada in 1838 and '39. Our misadventurer
+was shifted from one to another. At Fort
+Malden, on the shore of Lake Erie, he was kept for
+seven weeks in a small room with twenty-eight other
+men. It was the dead of winter, but they had no
+warmth save from their emaciated and vermin-infested
+bodies. They were ironed two and two, day and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+night. They were so crowded that there was not floor-room
+for all to sleep at once. According to Marsh,
+who afterwards wrote a minute record of this imprisonment,
+their feeding and care would have been fatal to
+a herd of hogs. The acme of the miseries of the prison
+at Fort Malden I cannot even hint at with propriety.
+When transferred from Sandwich to Malden, and later
+from Malden to London, Marsh, like many of his fellow
+sufferers, had his feet frozen; and when his limbs
+swelled so that life itself was threatened, it was not the
+surgeon but a clumsy blacksmith who cut off the irons
+and supplied new ones.</p>
+
+<p>In London the treatment of Malden was repeated.
+Here the trials began. The gallows was erected close
+to the jail wall; day by day the doomed ones walked
+out of a door in the second story to the death platform;
+and day by day Marsh and the other wretches in the
+cells heard the drop as it swung, in falling, against the
+jail wall. Marsh lived in hourly expectation of the
+summons, but before his turn came there was a stay in
+the work which had been going on under the warrants
+signed by Sir George Arthur&mdash;as great a tyrant, probably,
+as ever held power on the American continent.
+A far more philosophic writer than Robert Marsh has
+called him the Robespierre of Canada. Whatever
+may be held as to the illegality of the trials which sent
+some twenty-five men to the gallows at this time, certain
+it is that the hangings stopped before our hero's
+neck was stretched. Fate still had her quiver full of
+evil days for him; and fortune, like a gleam of sun<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+between clouds, moved him on to the prison at Toronto,
+where his mother came to see him.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the early spring of 1839 that he was transferred
+to Toronto. In June following, with a boatload
+of companions, he was shipped down to Fort
+Henry at Kingston. Here, for three months, he was
+deluded with the constant expectation of release; but
+he must have had some foreshadowings of his fate
+when, after three months of wretched existence at Fort
+Henry, he was again sent on, down the river to Quebec;
+and there, on September 28, 1839, he and 137 companions
+in irons were put aboard the British prison-ship
+Buffalo, commanded by Capt. Wood. They were
+stowed on the third deck, below the water line; 140
+sailors were placed over them; and the Buffalo took
+her course down the widening gulf. The dismal
+departure was lightened by a touch of human nature.
+There were several of the convicts who, like Marsh,
+claimed American citizenship, and American blood
+will show itself.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> As the prisoners were marched down
+with clanking chains from Fort Henry for the shipment
+to Quebec, many of them thought that it was their
+last shift before release. "There were three or four<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+very good singers amongst us," says Marsh, "which
+made the fort ring with the 'American Star,' 'Hunters
+of Kentucky' and other similar songs, which caused
+many to flock to our windows. Some of them remarked,
+'You will not feel like singing in Botany
+Bay.' 'Give us "Botany Bay,"' said one, and it was
+done in good style."</p>
+
+<p>If the reader will permit the digression, it may
+afford a little entertainment to consider for a moment
+these old songs. The literature of every war includes
+its patriotic songs&mdash;seldom the work of great poets,
+and most popular when they appeal to the quick sympathies
+and sense of humor of the common people.
+Every people has such songs, sometimes cherished and
+sung for generations. England has them without
+number, Canada has hers, the United States has hers;
+and among the most popular for many years, strange as
+it now may seem, were "The American Star" and
+"The Hunters of Kentucky," which were sung by
+these none-too-worthy representatives of the United
+States, through Canadian prison bars, this autumn
+morning sixty years ago. Both songs had their origin,
+I believe, at the time of the War of 1812. That such
+barren and bombastic lines as "The American Star"
+should have remained popular a quarter of a century
+seems incredible, and appears to indicate that the youth
+of the country were very hard up for patriotic songs
+worth singing. Here follows "The American Star":</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come, strike the bold anthem, the war dogs are howling,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Already they eagerly snuff up their prey,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The red clouds of war o'er our forests are scowling,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The infants, affrighted, cling close to their mothers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The youths grasp their swords, for the combat prepare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers and brothers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who rush to display the American Star.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come blow the shrill bugle, the loud drum awaken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The dread rifle seize, let the cannon deep roar;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No heart with pale fear, or faint doubtings be shaken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No slave's hostile foot leave a print on our shore.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall mothers, wives, daughters and sisters left weeping,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Insulted by ruffians, be dragged to despair!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh no! from her hills the proud eagle comes sweeping<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And waves to the brave the American Star.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The spirits of Washington, Warren, Montgomery,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Look down from the clouds with bright aspect serene;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Come, soldiers, a tear and a toast to their memory,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Rejoicing they'll see us as they once have been.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To us the high boon by the gods has been granted,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To speed the glad tidings of liberty far;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let millions invade us, we'll meet them undaunted,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And vanquish them by the American Star.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Your hands, then, dear comrades, round Liberty's altar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">United we swear by the souls of the brave<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not one from the strong resolution shall falter,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To live independent, or sink to the grave!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then, freemen, fill up&mdash;Lo, the striped banner's flying,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The high bird of liberty screams through the air;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beneath her oppression and tyranny dying&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Success to the beaming American Star.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Every one of its turgid and wordy lines bespeaks the
+struggling infancy of a National literature. "The
+Hunters of Kentucky" is a little better, because it has
+humor&mdash;though of the primitive backwoods type&mdash;in it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+If the reader has not heard it lately, perhaps he can
+stand a little of it. It was inspired by the battle of
+New Orleans:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ye gentlemen and ladies fair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who grace this famous city,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Just listen, if you've time to spare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">While I rehearse a ditty;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And for the opportunity<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Conceive yourselves quite lucky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For 'tis not often that you see<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A hunter from Kentucky;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O! Kentucky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The hunters of Kentucky.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We are a hardy free-born race,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Each man to fear a stranger;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whate'er the game, we join in chase,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Despising toil and danger;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And if a daring foe annoys,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Whate'er his strength or force is,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We'll show him that Kentucky boys<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Are alligators,&mdash;horses:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I s'pose you've read it in the prints,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">How Packenham attempted<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To make Old Hickory Jackson wince,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But soon his schemes repented;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For we, with rifles ready cock'd,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thought such occasion lucky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And soon around the general flock'd<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The hunters of Kentucky:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I s'pose you've heard how New Orleans<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Is famed for wealth and beauty;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There's gals of every hue, it seems,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From snowy white to sooty:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So, Packenham he made his brags<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">If he in fight was lucky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He'd have their gals and cotton bags,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In spite of Old Kentucky:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But Jackson he was wide awake,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And wasn't scared at trifles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For well he knew what aim we take<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With our Kentucky rifles;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So, he led us down to Cypress Swamp,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The ground was low and mucky;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There stood John Bull in martial pomp&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But here was Old Kentucky:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We raised a bank to hide our breasts,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Not that we thought of dying,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But then we always like to rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Unless the game is flying;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Behind it stood our little force&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">None wish'd it to be greater,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For every man was half a horse<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And half an alligator:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">They didn't let our patience tire<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Before they show'd their faces;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We didn't choose to waste our fire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But snugly kept our places;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And when so near we saw them wink,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We thought it time to stop 'em,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It would have done you good, I think,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To see Kentuckians drop 'em:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">They found, at length, 'twas vain to fight,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When lead was all their booty,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And so, they wisely took to flight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And left us all the beauty.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now, if danger e'er annoys,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Remember what our trade is;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Just send for us Kentucky boys,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And we'll protect you, ladies:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">O! Kentucky, etc.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>At least it has a gallant ending, which was not altogether
+apposite to the situation of Marsh and his fellow-prisoners
+at Kingston. "Botany Bay" was more in
+their line just then; but, at any rate, it was just as
+philosophic to go into exile singing as mourning or
+cursing.</p>
+
+<p>Were I a Herman Melville or a Clark Russell I
+should be tempted to dwell on this dreary voyage of
+the prison-ship Buffalo. Even Marsh's humble chronicle
+of it is graphic with unstudied incidents. They
+ran into rough weather at once; so that to the wretchedness
+of their imprisonment was added the misery of
+seasickness. No one had told them of their destination,
+and many of them, like Marsh, stoutly maintained
+from first to last that they were transported without a
+sentence. Their daily life in this dark and crowded
+'tween-decks, practically the hold of a staggering old
+sailer, could not be detailed without offense; and if it
+could be, I have no desire to heap up the horrors. In
+mid-voyage there was an attempted mutiny; the convicts
+tried to seize the ship; but the only result was
+heavier irons, closer confinement, and a stricter guard.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+After two months of the stormy Atlantic the Buffalo
+put into Rio Janeiro, where she lay three tantalizing
+days. "It happened to be the Emperor's birthday,"
+says Marsh, "and although we were not allowed to go
+on shore, we could discover through a skylight the flags
+on the pinnacles of houses and hills apparently reaching
+to the clouds." A little fruit was had aboard to
+allay the scurvy which was making havoc, and the
+Buffalo lumbered away again and ran straight into a
+savage gale, in which she sprung a bad leak. She was
+an old ship, and had formerly been a man-of-war, but
+for some years now had been employed as a convict
+transport between England and New South Wales.
+From Rio around the Cape of Good Hope the log kept
+by Robert Marsh is a story of sickness and death.
+Those who had had their limbs frozen in Canada now
+found the skin and flesh coming away and the sea
+water on their bare feet gave them excruciating agony.
+The shotted sack slid into the shark-patrolled waters of
+the Indian Ocean, and the wretches who still lived were
+envious of the dead. And on the 13th of February,
+1840, four months and a half from Quebec, the Buffalo
+anchored in Hobart Town harbor, Van Dieman's Land.</p>
+
+<p>And now a word about this antipodean land on
+which our unlucky hero looked out from the prison-ship.
+We are wont to regard it, perhaps, as a new
+and well-nigh unknown part of the world; possibly
+some of us would have to think twice if asked off-hand,
+Where is Van Dieman's Land? Of course we
+remember, when we glance at the map, that it is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+good-sized island just south of Australia. From extreme
+north to extreme south it is about as far as from
+Buffalo to Philadelphia, and east and west not quite
+so far as from Buffalo to Albany. And here is a
+coincidence: Hobart Town, in the harbor of which
+the prison-ship Buffalo dropped anchor with her load of
+misery, is exactly as far south of the equator as Buffalo
+is north of it. Other parallel data may perhaps be
+helpful: It was in 1642 that the navigator Tasman
+discovered the island, naming it after his Dutch patron,
+Van Dieman. The explorer's name has now been
+substituted, as it should be, and Tasmania, not Van
+Dieman's Land, appears on modern maps. The history
+of that land dates from 1642. It was in 1641 that
+those adventurous missioners, Br&eacute;beuf and Chaumonot,
+first carried their portable altar across the Niagara; and
+from the Relations of their order for that year the
+world gained the first actual glimpse of the Niagara
+region. In the world's annals, therefore, this far-away
+island and our own Niagara and lake region are of the
+same age. One other parallel may be ventured. The
+first permanent settlement in Van Dieman's Land was
+made in 1803. In 1804 Buffalo had fifteen actual
+settlers and a few squatters. But here our parallels
+end, for when, on that February morning of 1840, the
+unhappy Marsh was put ashore, he found a community
+unlike any that has ever existed in this happier part
+of the world. For over thirty years England had been
+sending thither her worst criminals. Shipload after
+shipload, year after year, of the most depraved and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+vicious of mankind, had been sent out. England had
+made of it and of Botany Bay a dumping-ground for
+whatever manner of evil men and women she could
+scrape from her London slums. There was some free
+colonization, but it went on slowly. Honest men
+hesitated to go where society was so handicapped.
+The treatment of the convicts varied according to the
+Governors, but for years before Marsh arrived it seems
+to have been as harsh and brutalizing as imperiousness
+and cruelty could devise. In 1836 Sir John Franklin
+was sent out to the station. He was an exceptionally
+humane and generous man, according to most accounts.
+Marsh does not complain of any severity from him,
+but calls him an old granny, a glutton and a temporizer
+in his promises to convicts. It is something foreign to
+our purpose to dwell upon this point, nor is it a
+gracious thing to seek any imputation against a character
+which history delights to hold as the embodiment
+of the gallant and heroic. We must remember that
+Robert Marsh's point of view was not likely to bring
+him to favorable estimates of those in authority
+over him and through whom his very real oppression
+came. Years after, when the great explorer's bones
+lay whitening in the unknown North, this far-away colony
+raised to his memory a noble bronze statue, which
+stands to-day in Franklin Square, Hobart, not far from
+the old Government House, the scene of his uncongenial
+administration.</p>
+
+<p>And now behold our hero marched ashore with his
+fellows; reeling like a drunken man, the strange effect<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+of firm earth under foot after months of heaving seaway;
+examined, ticketed and numbered, clad in Her
+Majesty's livery, and sent to a near-by country station,
+where he is put to work under savage overseers at carrying
+stone for road-building; and thus began five
+years of unmitigated suffering for Robert Marsh in that
+detestable land. There were about 43,000 convicts on
+the island at the time, 25,000 of whom were driven to
+daily work in chain gangs, on the roads, in the wet
+mines or the forest. The rest were ex-convicts; had
+served their sentences and counted themselves among
+the free population, which all told did not then exceed
+60,000. Conceive of a free community, nearly one half
+of whom, men and women, were former convicts, but
+not regenerate. For years the brothels of London,
+Glasgow, Edinburgh, were emptied into Van Dieman's
+Land. A reputable writer has said that at this time
+female virtue was unknown in the island. The wealthy
+land-owners, under government patronage, were autocrats
+in their own domain. The whipping-post, the
+triangle&mdash;a refinement of cruelty&mdash;and the gallows
+were familiar sights. The slightest failure at his daily
+task sent the convict to the whipping-post or to solitary
+confinement.</p>
+
+<p>Official iniquity flourished under Sir George Arthur's
+reign of eleven years. He was Franklin's predecessor,
+and his minions were still in control when Marsh came
+under their power. He was shifted from station to
+station; fed like a dog, lodged in the meanest huts
+and worked well nigh to death. The worst characters<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+were his overseers, and the day began with the lash.
+A convict's strength would give out under his load;
+he would lag behind, or stop to rest. At once he
+would be taken to the station, stripped to the waist&mdash;if
+he chanced to have anything on&mdash;strung up to the
+post or triangle, and flogged. As an additional measure
+of reform, brine was thrown into the gashes which
+the lash had made. These were the milder forms of
+daily punishment. Sir George Arthur's prouder record
+comes from the executions. Travelers to-day tell us that
+Tasmania is really a second England; in its settled
+portions it is a land of pleasant vales and gentle rivers,
+rich in harvests of the temperate zone. "Appleland,"
+some have called it, from its fruitful orchards; but no
+tree transplanted from Merrie England ever flourished
+more than the black stock from Tyburn Hill. Sir
+George hanged 1,500 during his stay. Marsh tells of
+a compassionate clergyman who was watching with interest
+the erection of a gallows. "Yes," he said, "I
+suppose it will do, but it is not as large as we need. I
+think ten will hang comfortable, but twelve will be
+rather crowded."</p>
+
+<p>It is small wonder that our hero tried to escape. He
+took to the bush&mdash;which means the unexplored and
+inhospitable forest&mdash;with a band of friends; was captured,
+punished, and thereafter dressed in magpie&mdash;trousers
+and frock one half black, one half yellow; and
+in this garb, which advertised to all that he had been a
+bush-ranger, he worked on until the spring of 1842,
+when Sir John Franklin made him a ticket-of-leave<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+man. This relieved him from the overseers, and gave
+him permission to work, for whatever wages he could
+get, in an assigned district.</p>
+
+<p>And now again, of this new phase of his misadventures,
+a long story could be made. At that time
+the best circumstanced ticket-of-leave men got about
+a shilling a day and boarded themselves. But there
+was little work and many seekers. They roamed over
+the country, turned away from plantation after plantation,
+and in many cases became the boldest of outlaws.
+Escape from the island was well nigh impossible; but
+after many hardships, utterly unable to get honest
+work, Marsh was one of a party that determined to try
+it. Making their way eighty miles to the seashore,
+they hid in the woods, where for a week or so they
+gathered firewood, buried potatoes and snared kangaroo.
+One of their number reached a settlement and returned
+with the word that an American whaler was coming to
+take them off. After six days more of waiting the
+vessel hove in sight. As she tried to draw near and
+send boats ashore a storm came up and she narrowly
+escaped the breakers. At this critical moment a British
+armed patrol schooner rounded a point down the coast
+and the American made her escape with great difficulty,
+leaving the score of runaway convicts at their precarious
+lookout, hopeless and despondent.</p>
+
+<p>They were soon arrested, Marsh among them. He
+was tried for breaking his patrol, and sent to an inland
+district, 100 miles through the bush and swamps. "It
+was all punishment," he says pathetically, in describ<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>ing
+this journey on which he nearly perished. So
+down-hearted and distressed were they, so appalled
+by the war of nature and man against them, that one
+of Marsh's companions, with fagged-out brain, came
+to the conclusion that they were really in hell and that
+the devil himself was in charge of them. But there is
+always a turn to the tide. They trapped a kangaroo
+and did not starve. Marsh reached his district and
+this time found work, which had to be light, for he
+was weak, emaciated and troubled day and night with
+a pain in his chest. And finally the glad word came
+that he was gazetted for pardon and could go to
+Hobart. There, on January 27, 1845, after ten
+months in Canada prisons, four and a half months in a
+transport ship, and five years in a convict colony, he
+went on board the American whaler Steiglitz of Sag
+Harbor, Selah Young, master, a free man.</p>
+
+<p>The Steiglitz was bound out on a whaling voyage.
+No matter, she would take Marsh away from that hell.
+She cruised for whale off New Zealand, then made
+north, and in April anchored off Honolulu. King
+Hamehameha III., on hearing the story of the convict
+Americans, welcomed them ashore, and there
+Marsh stayed for four months, exploring the islands
+and waiting for a chance to get home. At last it came
+in the welcome shape of the whaler Samuel Robertson,
+Capt. Warner, bound for New Bedford. She touched at
+the Society Islands and Pernambuco, and on March 13,
+1846, after seven years four and a half months absence,
+Marsh stepped ashore in his own country again. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+people of New Bedford helped him and a few others as
+far as Utica. There one of his comrades in exile left
+him for his home in Watertown, and others went their
+several ways. Marsh was helped as far as Canandaigua,
+where his brother met him and took him to his home
+in Avon; and after a time of recuperation there, they
+came on to Buffalo, where he met his father, his
+mother and sister. He soon crossed the river, visited
+Toronto, and probably looked over the scenes of his
+early cracker-peddling and subsequent campaigning, up
+and down the Niagara. He had traveled 77,000 miles,
+but here his journey ended; and here the Patriot exile
+told his story, which I have drawn on in an imperfect
+way, for this true chronicle of old trails.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>Underground Trails.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span></p>
+<h2>UNDERGROUND TRAILS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It was Dame Nature who decreed that the Niagara
+region should be peculiarly a place of trails.
+When she set the great cataract midway between
+two lakes, she thereby ordained that in days to come
+the Indian should go around the falls, on foot. The
+Indian trail was a footpath; nothing more. Here it
+followed the margin of a stream; there, well nigh
+indiscernable, it crossed a rocky plateau; again, worn
+deep in yielding loam, it led through thick woods,
+twisting and turning around trees and boulders, with
+detours for swamps or bad ground, and long stretches
+along favorable slopes or sightly ridges. Who can
+hazard a guess as to the time when, or by what manner
+of men, these trails were first established in our region?
+Immemorial in their source&mdash;akin in natural origins
+to the path the deer makes in going to the salt-lick or
+to drink&mdash;they were old, established, when our history
+begins. And when the white man came he followed
+the old trails. Traveling like the Indian, by water when
+he could; when lakes and rivers did not serve, he found
+the footpaths ready made for him in the forest. Armies
+came, cutting military roads. Settlers followed
+to banish forests, drain swamps, and make new highways.
+And yet the horseman, the military train, the
+wagon of the pioneer, the early stage-coach, the rail<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>road,
+each in its day, along many of the most direct
+and important thoroughfares, has but followed the
+ancient ways. The thing is axiomatic. Nature for
+the most part decrees where men shall walk. Her
+lakes and rivers and her hills may be strewn by whim;
+but there are plain reasons enough for our road-building.
+We go where we can, with safety and expedition.
+So ran the red man. We still follow the old trails.</p>
+
+<p>Other aspects of our frontier are worthy of a
+thought. Two nations look across the Niagara, so
+that, even though its flow were placid from lake to
+lake, it would still be a political barrier, a halting-place.
+This fact has filled it full of trails in history.
+Again, as the gateway of the West, the paths of immigration
+and of commerce for a century have here converged.
+The early settlers of Michigan and Wisconsin
+went by the old Lewiston ferry. From Buffalo by
+boat, and from old Suspension Bridge by rail, who
+can estimate the thousands who have gone on to create
+the New West? From the earliest Iroquois raid upon
+the Neuters, down to yesterday's excursion, the Niagara
+frontier has been peculiarly a region of passing,
+of coming and going, along old trails.</p>
+
+<p>Now of all the paths that have led hitherward, none
+has greater significance in American history than that
+known as the Underground Railroad. Other paths,
+touching here, have led to war, to wealth, to pleasure;
+but this led to Liberty. Thousands of negro slaves, gaining
+after infinite hardships these shores of the lake or
+river, have looked across the smiling expanse to such an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+elysium as only a slave can dream of. Once the passage
+made, no matter how poor the passenger, freedom
+became his possession and the heritage of his children.
+The chattel became a man. I can never sail upon the
+blue lake, or down the pleasant river, without seeing
+in fancy this throng of famished, frightened, blindly
+hopeful blacks, for whom these waters were the gateway
+to new life. The most vital part of the Underground
+Railroad was the over-water ferry. Bark canoe and
+great steamer alike leave no lasting trail; but to him
+who reads the history of our region, this fair waterway
+at our door is thronged as a street; and every secret
+traveler thereby is worthy of his attention. Much has
+been recorded of these refugees, who came, singly or
+in small parties, for more than thirty years preceding
+the Civil War. Indeed, runaway slaves passed this way
+to Canada soon after the War of 1812. The tales of
+soldiers returning to Kentucky from the Niagara frontier
+and other campaigns of that war, first planted in
+the minds of Southern slaves the idea that Canada was
+a land of freedom. By 1830 many earnest people who
+disapproved of slavery, the Quakers prominent among
+them, were giving organized aid to the escaping blacks.
+In many secret ways the refugees were passed on from
+one friend to another. Hiding-places were established,
+and routes which were found advantageous were regularly
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>It is no part of my present plan to enter upon a
+general sketch of the Underground Railroad. That
+task has already been admirably performed, at volumi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>nous
+length, by careful students. My aim in this paper
+is to bring together a number of incidents and narratives,
+particularly illustrative of its work at the eastern
+end of Lake Erie and along the Niagara frontier, in
+order that the student may the better appreciate how
+vital this phase of the slavery issue was, even in this
+region, for more than a generation preceding the
+Civil War. There were established routes for the passage
+of fugitive slaves: From the seaboard States to the
+North, by water from Newberne, S. C, and Portsmouth,
+Va.; or by land routes from Washington and Philadelphia,
+to and through New England and so into Quebec.
+There was "John Brown's route" through Eastern
+Kansas and Nebraska; and there were many routes
+through Iowa and Illinois, most of them leading to
+Chicago and other Lake Michigan ports, whence the
+refugees came by boat to Canadian points, chiefly
+along the north shore of Lake Erie; or even, in some
+cases, by water to Collingwood on Georgian Bay, where
+a considerable number of runaway slaves were carried
+prior to the Civil War. But the travel by these extreme
+East and West routes was insignificant as compared
+with the number that came through Western Pennsylvania,
+Ohio and Indiana, to points on the south shore
+of Lake Erie and the Detroit and Niagara rivers at
+either end. The region bounded by the Ohio, the
+Allegheny, and the western border of Indiana was a
+vast plexus of Underground routes. The negroes were
+taken across to Canada in great numbers from Detroit
+and other points on that river; from Sandusky to Point<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+Pelee; from Ashtabula to Port Stanley; from Conneaut
+to Port Burwell; from Erie to Long Point; and from
+all south-shore points on Lake Erie they were brought
+by steamer to Buffalo. Often, the vessel captains would
+put the refugees ashore between Long Point and
+Buffalo. At other times, the fugitives were sent to
+stations at Black Rock or Niagara Falls, whence they
+were soon set across the river and were free. There
+were some long routes across New York State, the chief
+one being up the Hudson and Mohawk valleys to Lake
+Ontario ports. There was some crossing to Kingston,
+and some from Rochester to Port Dalhousie or
+Toronto. Another route led from Harrisburg up the
+Susquehanna to Williamsport, thence to Elmira, and
+northwesterly, avoiding large towns, to Niagara Falls.
+But the most active part in the Underground Railroad
+operations in New York State was borne by the western
+counties. There were numerous routes through
+Allegany, Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties, along
+which the negroes were helped; all converging at
+Buffalo or on the Niagara. In the old towns of this
+section are still many houses and other buildings which
+are pointed out to the visitor as having been former
+stations on the Underground. The Pettit house at
+Fredonia is a distinguished example.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to state even approximately the number
+of refugee negroes who crossed by these routes to
+Upper Canada, now Ontario. In 1844 the number
+was estimated at 40,000;<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> in 1852 the Anti-Slavery<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+Society of Canada stated in its annual report that there
+were about 30,000 blacks in Canada West; in 1858 the
+number was estimated as high as 75,000.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> This figure is
+probably excessive; but since the negroes continued to
+come, up to the hour of the Emancipation Proclamation,
+it is probably within the fact to say that more
+than 50,000 crossed to Upper Canada, nearly all from
+points on Lake Erie, the Detroit and Niagara rivers.</p>
+
+<p>Runaway slaves appeared in Buffalo at least as early
+as the '30's. "Professor Edward Orton recalls that in
+1838, soon after his father moved to Buffalo, two
+sleigh-loads of negroes from the Western Reserve were
+brought to the house in the night-time; and Mr.
+Frederick Nicholson of Warsaw, N. Y., states that the
+Underground work in his vicinity began in 1840. From
+this time on there was apparently no cessation of migrations
+of fugitives into Canada at Black Rock, Buffalo
+and other points."<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> Those too were the days of much
+passenger travel on Lake Erie, and certain boats came
+to be known as friendly to the Underground cause.
+One boat which ran between Cleveland and Buffalo
+gave employment to the fugitive William Wells Brown.
+It became known at Cleveland that Brown would take
+escaped slaves under his protection without charge,
+hence he rarely failed to find a little company ready to
+sail when he started out from Cleveland. "In the
+year 1842," he says, "I conveyed from the 1st of
+May to the 1st of December, sixty-nine fugitives over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+Lake Erie to Canada."<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> Many anecdotes are told of
+the search for runaways on the lake steamers. Lake
+travel in the <i>ante-bellum</i> days was ever liable to be
+enlivened by an exciting episode in a "nigger-chase";
+but usually, it would seem, the negroes could rely upon
+the friendliness of the captains for concealment or
+other assistance.</p>
+
+<p>There are chronicled, too, many little histories of
+flights which brought the fugitive to Buffalo. I pass
+over those which are readily accessible elsewhere to
+the student of this phase of our home history.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> It is
+well, however, to devote a paragraph or two to one
+famous affair which most if not all American writers on
+the Underground Railroad appear to have overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>One day in 1836 an intelligent negro, riding a
+thoroughbred but jaded horse, appeared on the streets
+of Buffalo. His appearance must have advertised him
+to all as a runaway slave. I do not know that he made
+any attempt to conceal the fact. His chief concern
+was to sell the horse as quickly as possible, and get
+across to Canada. And there, presently, we find him,
+settled at historic old Niagara, near the mouth of the
+river. Here, even at that date, so many negroes had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+made their way from the South, that more than 400
+occupied a quarter known as Negro Town. The newcomer,
+whose name was Moseby, admitted that he had
+run away from a plantation in Kentucky, and had used
+a horse that formerly belonged to his master to make
+his way North. A Kentucky grand jury soon found a
+true bill against him for horse-stealing, and civil officers
+traced him to Niagara, and made requisition for his
+arrest and extradition. The year before, Sir Francis
+Bond Head had succeeded Sir John Colborne as Governor
+of Canada West, and before him the case was laid.
+Sir Francis regarded the charge as lawful, notwithstanding
+the avowal of Moseby's owners that if they
+could get him back to Kentucky they would "make
+an example of him"; in plainer words, would whip
+him to death as a warning to all slaves who dared to
+dream of seeking freedom in Canada.</p>
+
+<p>Moseby was arrested and locked up in the Niagara
+jail; whereupon great excitement arose, the blacks and
+many sympathizing whites declaring that he should
+never be carried back South. The Governor, Sir Francis,
+was petitioned not to surrender Moseby; he replied
+that his duty was to give him up as a felon, "although
+he would have armed the province to protect a slave."
+For more than a week crowds of negroes, men and
+women, camped before the jail, day and night. Under
+the leadership of a mulatto schoolmaster named
+Holmes, and of Mrs. Carter, a negress with a gift for
+making fiery speeches, the mob were kept worked up
+to a high pitch of excitement, although, as a contem<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>porary
+writer avers, they were unarmed, showed "good
+sense, forbearance and resolution," and declared their
+intention not to commit any violence against the English
+law. They even agreed that Moseby should
+remain in jail until they could raise the price of the
+horse, but threatened, "if any attempt were made to
+take him from the prison, and send him across to
+Lewiston, they would resist it at the hazard of their
+lives." The order, however, came for Moseby's delivery
+to the slave-hunters, and the sheriff and a party
+of constables attempted to execute it. Moseby was
+brought out from the jail, handcuffed and placed in a
+cart; whereupon the mob attacked the officers. The
+military was called out to help the civil force and
+ordered to fire on the assailants. Two negroes were
+killed, two or three wounded, and Moseby ran off and
+was not pursued. The negro women played a curiously-prominent
+part in the affair. "They had been
+most active in the fray, throwing themselves fearlessly
+between the black men and the whites, who, of course,
+shrank from injuring them. One woman had seized
+the sheriff, and held him pinioned in her arms; another,
+on one of the artillery-men presenting his piece,
+and swearing that he would shoot her if she did not
+get out of his way, gave him only one glance of unutterable
+contempt, and with one hand knocking up
+his piece, and collaring him with the other, held him
+in such a manner as to prevent his firing."<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+<p>Soon after, in the same year, the Governor of
+Kentucky made requisition on the Governor of the province
+of Canada West for the surrender of Jesse Happy,
+another runaway slave, also on a charge of horse-stealing.
+Sir Francis held him in confinement in Hamilton
+jail, but refused to deliver him up until he had laid
+the case before the Home Government. In a most
+interesting report to the Colonial Secretary, under
+date of Toronto, Oct. 8, 1837, he asked for instructions
+"as a matter of general policy," and reviewed
+the Moseby case in a fair and broad spirit, highly
+creditable to him alike as an administrator and a friend
+of the oppressed. "I am by no means desirous," he
+wrote, "that this province should become an asylum
+for the guilty of any color; at the same time the
+documents submitted with this dispatch will I conceive
+show that the subject of giving up fugitive slaves to the
+authorities of the adjoining republican States is one
+respecting which it is highly desirable I should receive
+from Her Majesty's Government specific instructions.... It
+may be argued that the slave escaping
+from bondage on his master's horse is a vicious struggle
+between two guilty parties, of which the slave-owner
+is not only the aggressor, but the blackest criminal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+of the two. It is a case of the dealer in human flesh
+<i>versus</i> the stealer of horse-flesh; and it may be argued
+that, if the British Government does not feel itself
+authorized to pass judgment on the plaintiff, neither
+should it on the defendant." Sir Francis continues in
+this ingenious strain, observing that "it is as much a
+theft in the slave walking from slavery to liberty in
+his master's shoes as riding on his master's horse."
+To give up a slave for trial to the American laws, he
+argued, was in fact giving him back to his former
+master; and he held that, until the State authorities
+could separate trial from unjust punishment, however
+willing the Government of Canada might be to deliver
+up a man for trial, it was justified in refusing to deliver
+him up for punishment, "unless sufficient security be
+entered into in this province, that the person delivered
+up for trial shall be brought back to Upper Canada as
+soon as his trial or the punishment awarded by it shall
+be concluded." And he added this final argument,
+begging that instructions should be sent to him at once:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is argued, that the republican states have no right, under the
+pretext of any human treaty, to claim from the British Government,
+which does not recognize slavery, beings who by slave-law
+are not recognized as <i>men</i> and who actually existed as brute beasts
+in moral darkness, until on reaching British soil they suddenly
+heard, for the first time in their lives, the sacred words, "Let
+there be light; and there was light!" From that moment it is
+argued they were created <i>men</i>, and if this be true, it is said they
+cannot be held responsible for conduct prior to their existence.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Sir Francis left the Home Government in no doubt
+as to his own feelings in the matter; and although I
+have seen no further report regarding Jesse Happy,
+neither do I know of any case in which a refugee in
+Canada for whom requisition was thus made was permitted
+to go back to slavery. It did sometimes happen,
+however, that refugees were enticed across the river on
+one pretext or another, or grew careless and took their
+chances on the American side, only to fall into the
+clutches of the ever-watchful slave-hunters.</p>
+
+<p>British love of fair play could be counted on to stand
+up for the rights of the negro on British soil; but that
+by no means implies that this inpouring of ignorant
+blacks, unfitted for many kinds of pioneer work and
+ill able to withstand the climate, was welcomed by the
+communities in which they settled. At best, they
+were tolerated. Very different from the spirit shown
+in Sir Francis Bond Head's plea, is the tone of much
+tourist comment, especially during the later years of
+the Abolition movement. Thus, in 1854, the Hon.
+Amelia M. Murray wrote, just after her Niagara visit:</p>
+
+<p>"One of the evils consequent upon Southern Slavery,
+is the ignorant and miserable set of coloured people
+who throw themselves into Canada.... I must
+regret that the well-meant enthusiasm of the Abolitionists
+has been without judgment."<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> Another particularly
+unamiable critic, W. Howard Russell, a much-exploited
+English war correspondent who wrote volum<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>inously
+of the United States during the Civil War, and
+who showed less good will to this country than any
+other man who ever wrote so much, came to Niagara in
+the winter of 1862, and in sourly recording his unpleasant
+impressions wrote: "There are too many free
+negroes and too many Irish located in the immediate
+neighborhood of the American town, to cause the doctrines
+of the Abolitionists to be received with much
+favor by the American population; and the Irish of
+course are opposed to free negroes, where they are
+attracted by paper mills, hotel service, bricklaying,
+plastering, housebuilding, and the like&mdash;the Americans
+monopolizing the higher branches of labor and
+money-making, including the guide business."<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> A few
+pages farther on, however, describing his sight-seeing
+on the Canadian side, he speaks of "our guide, a
+strapping specimen of negro or mulatto." Quotations
+of like purport from English writers during the years
+immediately preceding the Civil War, might be multiplied.
+One rarely will find any opinion at all favorable
+to the refugee black, and never any expression of sympathy
+with the Abolitionists by English tourists who
+wrote books, or endorsal of the work accomplished by
+the Underground Railroad.</p>
+
+<p>From its importance as a terminal of the Underground,
+one would look to Buffalo for a wealth of
+reminiscence on this subject. On the contrary, comparatively
+little seems to have been gathered up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+regarding Buffalo stations and workers. The Buffalo
+of <i>ante-bellum</i> days was not a large place, and many
+"personally-escorted" refugees were taken direct
+from country stations to the river ferries, without
+having to be hid away in the city. Certain houses
+there were, however, which served as stations. One of
+these, on Ferry Street near Niagara, long since disappeared.
+When the "Morris Butler house," at the
+corner of Utica Street and Linwood Avenue, built
+about 1857, was taken down a few years ago, hiding-places
+were found on either side of the front door,
+accessible only from the cellar. Old residents then
+recalled that Mr. Butler was reputed to keep the last
+station on the Underground route to Canada.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+
+<p>Many years before Mr. Butler's time runaway slaves
+used to appear in Buffalo, eagerly asking the way to
+Canada. Those days were recalled by the death, on
+Aug. 2, 1899, in the Kent County House of Refuge,
+Chatham, Ont., of "Mammy" Chadwick, reputed to
+be over 100 years old. She was born a slave in
+Virginia; was many times sold, once at auction in New
+Orleans, and later taken to Kentucky. She escaped
+and made her way by the Underground to Buffalo in
+1837. She always fixed her arrival at Fort Erie as
+"in de year dat de Queen was crowned." She mar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>ried
+in Fort Erie, but after a few years went to
+Chatham, in the midst of a district full of refugee
+blacks, and there she lived for sixty years, rejoicing in the
+distinction of having nursed in their infancy many who
+became Chatham's oldest and most prominent citizens.</p>
+
+<p>There still lives at Fort Erie an active old woman
+who came to Buffalo, a refugee from slavery, some
+time prior to 1837; she herself says, "a good while
+before the Canadian Rebellion," and her memory is so
+clear and vigorous in general that there appears no
+warrant for mistrusting it on this point. This interesting
+woman is Mrs. Betsy Robinson, known throughout
+the neighborhood as "Aunt Betsy." She lately told
+her story to me at length. Robbed of all the picturesque
+detail with which she invested it, the bare facts
+are here recorded. Her father, mother, and their seven
+children were slaves on a plantation in Rockingham
+County, Virginia. There came a change of ownership,
+and Baker (her father) heard he was to be sold
+to New Orleans&mdash;the fate which the Virginia slave
+most dreaded; "and yet," says Aunt Betsy, "I've seen
+dem slaves, in gangs bein' sent off to New Orleans,
+singin' and playin' on jewsharps, lettin' on to be that
+careless an' happy." But not so Baker. He made
+ready to escape. For a week beforehand his wife hid
+food in the woods. On a dark night the whole family
+stole away from the plantation, crossed a river, probably
+the north fork of the Shenandoah, and pushed
+northward. The father had procured three "passes,"
+which commended them for assistance to friends<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+along the way. According to Aunt Betsy, there were
+a good many white people in the South in those
+days who helped the runaway. She was a little girl
+then, and she now recalls the child's vivid impressions
+of the weeks they spent traveling and hiding in the
+mountains, which she says were full of rattlesnakes,
+wolves and deer. It was a wild country that they
+crossed, for they came out near Washington, Pa. Here
+the Quakers helped them; and her father and brothers
+worked in the coal mines for a time. Then they came
+on to Pittsburg. From that city north there was no
+lack of help. "We walked all the way," she says.
+"There was no railroads in them days, an' I don't remember's
+we got any wagon-rides. You see, we was so
+many, nine in all. I remember we went to Erie, and
+came through Fredonia. We walked through Buffalo&mdash;it
+was little then, you know&mdash;and down the river road.
+My father missed the Black Rock ferry an' we went
+away down where the bridge is now. I remember we
+had to walk back up the river, and then we got brought
+across to Fort Erie. That was a good while before the
+Canadian Rebellion."<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
+
+<p>Samuel Murray, a free-born negro, came to Buffalo
+from Reading, Pa., in 1852. For a time he was
+employed at the American Hotel, and went to work<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+very early in the morning. It was, he has said, a
+common occurrence to meet strange negroes, who
+would ask him the way to Canada. "Many a time,"
+said Murray, "I have gone into the hotel and taken
+food for them. Then I would walk out Niagara Street
+to the ferry and see them on the boat bound for Canada."
+Mr. Murray has related the following incidents:</p>
+
+<p>"There was a free black man living in Buffalo in
+the '50's who made a business of going to the South
+after the wives of former slaves who had found comfortable
+homes, either in the Northern States or in
+Canada. They paid him well for his work, and he
+rarely failed to accomplish his mission.</p>
+
+<p>"While connected with the Underground Railroad
+in Buffalo word was sent us that a colored man from
+Detroit, a traitor to his color, was coming to Buffalo.
+This man made a business of informing Southerners of
+the whereabouts of their slaves, and was paid a good
+sum per head for those that they recovered. When we
+heard that he was coming a meeting was held and a
+committee appointed to arrange for his reception.
+After being here a few days, not thinking that he was
+known, he was met by the committee and taken out in
+the woods where the Parade House now stands. Here
+he was tied to a tree, stripped and cow-hided until he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+was almost dead. He lay for a time insensible in a
+pool of his own blood. Finally regaining consciousness,
+he made his way back into Buffalo and as soon as
+he was able complained to the city authorities. His
+assailants were identified, arrested, and locked up in
+the old jail to await the result of his injuries. After a
+time the excitement caused by the affair subsided and
+the men were let out one day without having been
+tried." The sympathy of the sheriff, and probably that
+of the community as a whole, was plainly not with the
+renegade who got flogged.</p>
+
+<p>Another celebrated Underground case was the arrest
+at Niagara Falls of a slave named Sneedon, on a charge
+of murder, undoubtedly trumped up to procure his
+return South. Sneedon is described as a fine-looking
+man, with a complexion almost white. He was
+brought to trial in Buffalo, when Eli Cook pleaded his
+case so successfully that he was acquitted. No sooner
+was he released than he was spirited away <i>via</i> the
+Underground Railroad.</p>
+
+<p>Niagara Falls, far more than Buffalo, was the scene
+of interesting episodes in the Underground days. Not
+only did many refugee negroes find employment in the
+vicinity, especially on the Canada side, but many
+Southern planters used to visit there, bringing their
+retinue of blacks. Many a time the trusted body-servant,
+or slave-girl, would leave master or mistress in
+the discharge of some errand, and never come back.
+Instances are related, too, of sudden meetings, at the
+Falls hotels, between negro waiters and the former<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+masters they had run away from. It is recorded that
+when Gen. Peter B. Porter brought his Kentucky wife
+home with him to Niagara Falls, she was attended by a
+numerous retinue of negro servants, but that one by
+one they "scented freedom in the air" and ran away,
+though probably not to any immediate betterment of
+their condition.</p>
+
+<p>Henry Clay visited Buffalo in September, 1849.
+When he left for Cleveland his black servant Levi was
+missing, but whether he had gone voluntarily or against
+his wishes Mr. Clay was uncertain. "There are circumstances
+having a tendency both ways," he wrote to
+Lewis L. Hodges of Buffalo, in his effort to trace the
+lost property. "If voluntarily, I will take no trouble
+about him, as it is probable that in a reversal of our
+conditions I would have done the same thing."<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> The
+absentee had merely been left in Buffalo&mdash;probably he
+missed the boat&mdash;and reported in due time to his master
+at Ashland. The incident, however, suggests the
+hazards of Northern travel which in those years awaited
+wealthy Southerners, who were fond of making long sojourns
+at Niagara Falls, accompanied by many servants.</p>
+
+<p>An "old resident of Buffalo" is to be credited
+with the following reminiscence:</p>
+
+<p>"I remember one attempt that was made to capture
+a runaway slave. It was right up here on Niagara
+Street. The negro ventured out in daytime and was
+seized by a couple of men who had been on the watch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+for him. The slave was a muscular fellow, and fought
+desperately for his liberty; but his captors began beating
+him over the head with their whips, and he would
+have been overpowered and carried off if his cries had
+not attracted the attention of two Abolitionists, who
+ran up and joined in the scuffle. It was just above
+Ferry Street, and they pulled and hauled at that slave
+and pounded him and each other until it looked as
+though somebody would be killed. At last, however,
+the slave, with the help of his friends, got away and ran
+for his life, and the slave-chasers and the Abolitionists
+dropped from blows to high words, the former threatening
+prosecutions and vengeance, but I presume
+nothing came of it."<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
+
+<p>Nowhere were the friends of the fugitive more
+active or more successful than in the towns along
+the south shore of Lake Erie, from Erie to Buffalo.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
+Some years ago it was my good fortune to become
+acquainted with Mr. Frank Henry of Erie, who
+had been a very active "conductor" on the Underground.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
+From him I had the facts of the following<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+experiences, which he had not in earlier years thought
+it prudent to make public. These I now submit, partly
+in Mr. Henry's own language, as fairly-illustrative episodes
+in the history of Underground trails at the eastern
+end of Lake Erie.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1841 Capt. David Porter Dobbins, afterwards
+Superintendent of Life Saving Stations in the
+Ninth U. S. District, including Lakes Erie and Ontario,
+was a citizen of Erie. In politics he was one
+of the sturdy, old-time Democrats, not a few of whom,
+in marked contrast to their "Copperhead" neighbors,
+secretly sympathized with and aided the runaway slaves.
+Capt. Dobbins had in his employ a black man named
+William Mason, his surname being taken, as was the
+usual, but not invariable, custom among slaves, from
+that of his first master. Now Mason, some time before
+he came into the employ of Capt. Dobbins, had
+apparently become tired of getting only the blows and
+abuse of an overseer in return for his toil; so one night
+he quietly left his "old Kentucky home," determined
+to gain his freedom or die in the attempt. In good
+time he succeeded in getting to Detroit, then a small
+town; and there he found work, took unto himself a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+wife, and essayed to settle down. Instead, however,
+of settling, he soon found himself more badly stirred
+up than ever before, for his wife proved to be a
+veritable she-devil in petticoats, with a tongue keener
+than his master's lash. They parted, and the unfaithful
+wife informed against him to the slave-hunters.
+Mason fled, made his way to Erie, and was given work
+by Capt. Dobbins. He was a stalwart negro, intelligent
+above the average, altogether too fine a prize to
+let slip easily, and the professional slave-hunters lost
+no time in hunting him out.</p>
+
+<p>For many years prior to the Civil War a large class
+of men made their living by ferreting out and recapturing
+fugitive slaves and returning them to their old
+masters; or, as was often the case, selling them into
+slavery again. Free black men, peaceful citizens of
+the Northern States, were sometimes seized, to be sold
+to unscrupulous men who stood ever ready to buy
+them. There was but little hope for the negro who
+found himself carried south of Mason and Dixon's line
+in the clutches of these hard men, who were generally
+provided with a minute description of runaways from
+the border States, and received a large commission for
+capturing and returning them into bondage.</p>
+
+<p>One day, as Mason was cutting up a quarter of
+beef in Capt. Dobbins's house, two men came in,
+making plausible excuses. Mason saw they were
+watching him closely, and his suspicions were at once
+aroused.</p>
+
+<p>"Is your name William?" one of them asked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mason curtly, pretending to be busy
+with his beef.</p>
+
+<p>Then they told him to take off his shoe and let them
+see if there was a scar on his foot. On his refusing to
+do so, they produced handcuffs and called on him to
+surrender. Livid with desperation and fear, Mason
+rushed upon them with his huge butcher-knive, and
+the fellows took to their heels to save their heads.
+They lost no time in getting a warrant from a magistrate
+on some pretext or other, and placed it in the
+hands of an officer for execution.</p>
+
+<p>While the little by-play with the butcher-knife was
+going on, Capt. Dobbins had entered the house, and
+to him Mason rushed in appeal. Swearing "by de
+hosts of heaben" that he would never be captured, he
+piteously begged for help and the protection of his employer.
+And in Capt. Dobbins he had a friend who
+was equal to any emergency. Calling Mason from the
+room his employer hurried with him to Josiah Kellogg's
+house, then one of the finest places in Erie, with a
+commanding view from its high bank over lake and
+bay.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> To this house Mason was hurried, and Mrs.
+Kellogg comprehended the situation at a glance. The
+fugitive was soon so carefully hidden that, to use the
+Captain's expression, "The Devil himself couldn't
+have found him, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>Expeditious as they were, they had been none too
+quick. Capt. Dobbins had scarcely regained his own<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+door, when the two slave-hunters came back with the
+sheriff and demanded Mason.</p>
+
+<p>"Search the premises at your pleasure," was the response.</p>
+
+<p>The house was ransacked from cellar to garret, but,
+needless to say, Mason was not to be found.</p>
+
+<p>There was living in Erie at that time a big burly
+negro, Lemuel Gates by name, whose strength was
+only surpassed by his good nature. He was willing
+enough to lend himself to the cause of humanity. The
+Captain owned a very fast horse, and while the officer
+and his disappointed and suspicious companions were
+still lurking around, just at nightfall, he harnessed
+his horse into the buggy and seated the Hercules by
+his side. All this was quietly done in the barn with
+closed doors. At a given signal, the servant-girl threw
+open the doors, the Captain cracked his whip, and out
+they dashed at full speed. He took good care to be
+seen and recognized by the spies on watch, and then
+laid his course for Hamlin Russell's house at Belle
+Valley. Mr. Russell was a noted Abolitionist, and
+lived on a cross-road between the Wattsburg and Lake
+Pleasant roads. Just beyond Marvintown, at Davison's,
+the Lake Pleasant road forks off from the Wattsburg
+road to the right. The travelers took the Lake road.
+When Mr. Russell's house was reached, the Captain
+slipped a half-eagle into the hand of his grinning companion,
+with the needless advice that it would be well
+to make tracks for home as fast as possible. Mr. Russell
+was told of the clever ruse, and then Capt. Dobbins<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+drove leisurely homeward. At the junction of the two
+roads he met the officer and his comrades in hot pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Mason?" they demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Find out," was the Captain's only answer, as he
+drove quietly along, chuckling to himself over the success
+of his strategy; while the slave-hunters worked
+themselves into a passion over a fruitless search of Mr.
+Russell's innocent premises.</p>
+
+<p>Early one morning a few days afterward, as Capt.
+Dobbins was on the bank of the lake, he saw a vessel
+round the point of the Peninsula, sail up the channel,
+and cast anchor in Misery Bay, then, and for many
+years afterwards, a favorite anchorage for wind-bound
+vessels. Soon a yawl was seen to put off for the
+shore with the master of the vessel aboard. Capt.
+Dobbins contrived to see him during the day, and
+was delighted to find him an old and formerly
+intimate shipmate. The ship-master heartily entered
+into the Captain's plans, and it was agreed to put
+Mason aboard of the vessel at two o'clock the next
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of which we write, the steamer docks and
+lumber-yards which later were built along the shore at
+that point, were yet undreamed of, and the waters of
+the bay broke unhindered at the foot of the high bank
+on which stood Mrs. Kellogg's house, where Mason
+was hid. It would not do openly to borrow a boat,
+and Capt. Dobbins had no small difficulty in getting
+a craft for the conveyance of his <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i> to the vessel.
+At last, late at night, a little, leaky old skiff was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+temporarily confiscated. By this time a strong breeze
+had sprung up, and it was difficult to approach the
+shore. A tree had fallen over the bank with its top in
+the water, and the Captain found precarious anchorage
+for his leaky tub by clinging to its branches. With a
+cry like the call of the whip-poor-will the runaway was
+summoned. In his hurry to get down the bank he
+slipped and fell headlong into the fallen treetop;
+while a small avalanche of stones and earth came crashing
+after and nearly swamped the boat. When the
+boat had been lightened of its unexpected cargo, the
+voyage across the bay began. The poor darky, however,
+was no sooner sure that his neck was not broken
+by the tumble, than he was nearly dead with the fear
+of drowning. Their boat, a little skiff just big enough
+for one person, leaked like a sieve, and soon became
+water-logged in the seaway. Mason's hat was a stiff
+"plug," a former gift of charity. It had suffered
+sorely by the plunge down the bank, but its ruin was
+made complete by the Captain ordering its owner to
+fall to and bail out the boat with it. The brim soon
+vanished, but the upper part did very well as a bucket;
+and the owner consoled himself that in thus sacrificing
+his hat he saved his life. It was a close call for safety.
+The Captain tugged away at the oars as never before,
+and the shivering negro scooped away for dear life to
+keep the boat afloat. In after years Capt. Dobbins
+experienced shipwreck more than once, but he used
+to say that never had he been in greater peril than
+when making that memorable trip across Presque Isle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+Bay in the wild darkness and storm of midnight. The
+vessel was at length reached. She was loaded with
+staves, and a great hole was made in the deck load,
+within which Mason was snugly stowed away, while
+the staves were piled over him again. Capt. Dobbins
+reached the mainland in safety before daylight, and
+during the morning had the satisfaction of seeing the
+wind haul around off land, when the vessel weighed
+anchor and sailed away.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing that pursuit was impossible (there were
+no steam tugs on the bay in those days), Capt. Dobbins
+quietly told the officer that he was tired of being
+watched, and that if he would come along, he would
+show him where Mason was. The Captain had notified
+some of his friends, and when the bank of the lake
+was reached, a crowd had gathered, for the affair had
+created quite a stir in the village.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see that sail?" said the Captain, pointing
+to the retreating vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" was the impatient answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Mason is aboard of her," was the quiet reply.
+The befooled magistrate of the law, who had taken great
+care to bring handcuffs for his expected prisoner,
+acknowledged himself beaten; while the "nigger-chasers"
+were glad to sneak off, followed by the shouts
+and jeers of the crowd. "Pretty well done&mdash;for a
+Democrat," said Mr. Russell to the Captain a few days
+afterwards. "After your conversion to our principles
+you will make a good Abolitionist."</p>
+
+<p>Some years after the event above narrated, as Capt.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+Dobbins<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> was in the cabin of his vessel as she lay at
+Buffalo, a respectably-dressed black man was shown
+into the cabin. It was Mason, who had come to repay
+his benefactor with thanks and even with proffered
+money. He had settled somewhere back of Kingston,
+Ontario, on land which the Canadian Government at
+that time gave to actual settlers. He had married an
+amiable woman, and was prosperous and happy.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I give the following incident substantially as it was
+set down for me by Mr. Frank Henry:</p>
+
+<p>In the summer of 1858 Mr. Jehiel Towner (now
+deceased) sent me a note from the city of Erie, asking
+me to call on him that evening. When night came I
+rode into town from my home in Harborcreek, and saw
+Mr. Towner. "There are three 'passengers' hidden
+in town, Henry," said he, "and we must land them
+somewhere on the Canada shore. You are just the
+man for this work; will you undertake to get them
+across?"</p>
+
+<p>You must remember that we never had anything to
+do with "runaway niggers" in those days, nor even
+with "fugitive slaves"; we simply "assisted passengers."
+I knew well enough that there was a
+big risk in the present case, but I promised to do
+my part, and so after talking over matters a little I
+drove home.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The next night just about dusk a wagon was driven
+into my yard. The driver, one Hamilton Waters,
+was a free mulatto, known to everybody around Erie.
+He had brought a little boy with him as guide, for he
+was almost as blind as a bat. In his wagon were three
+of the strangest-looking "passengers" I ever saw; I can
+remember how oddly they looked as they clambered out
+of the wagon. There was a man they called Sam, a
+great strapping negro, who might have been forty years
+old. He was a loose-jointed fellow, with a head like
+a pumpkin, and a mouth like a cavern, its vast circumference
+always stretched in a glorious grin; for no
+matter how badly Sam might feel, or how frightened,
+the grin had so grown into his black cheeks that it
+never vanished. I remember how, a few nights after,
+when the poor fellow was scared just about out of his
+wits, his grin, though a little ghastly, was as broad
+as ever. Sam was one of the queerest characters I ever
+met. His long arms seemed all wrists, his legs all
+ankles; and when he walked, his nether limbs had a
+flail-like flop that made him look like a runaway windmill.
+The bases upon which rested this fearfully-
+and wonderfully-made superstructure were abundantly
+ample. On one foot he wore an old shoe&mdash;at least
+number twelve in size&mdash;and on the other a heavy
+boot; and his trousers-legs, by a grim fatality, were
+similarly unbalanced, for while the one was tucked
+into the boot-top, its fellow, from the knee down, had
+wholly vanished. Sam wore a weather-beaten and
+brimless "tile" on his head, and in his hand carried<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+an old-fashioned long-barreled rifle. He set great
+store by his "ole smooth bo'," though he handled it in
+a gingerly sort of way, that suggested a greater fear of
+its kicks than confidence in its aim. Sam's companions
+were an intelligent-looking negro about twenty-five
+years old, named Martin, and his wife, a pretty
+quadroon girl, with thin lips and a pleasant voice, for
+all the world like <i>Eliza</i> in "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+She carried a plump little piccaninny against her
+breast, over which a thin shawl was tightly drawn.
+She was an uncommonly attractive young woman, and I
+made up my mind then and there that she shouldn't
+be carried back to slavery if I had any say in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>The only persons besides myself who knew of their
+arrival were William P. Trimble and Maj. F. L. Fitch.
+The party was conducted to the old Methodist church
+in Wesleyville, which had served for a long time as a
+place of rendezvous and concealment. Except for the
+regular Sunday services, and a Thursday-night prayer-meeting,
+the church was never opened, unless for an
+occasional funeral, and so it was as safe a place as could
+well have been found. In case of unexpected intruders,
+the fugitives could crawl up into the attic and remain
+as safe as if in Liberia.</p>
+
+<p>It was my plan to take the "passengers" from the
+mouth of Four-Mile Creek across the lake to Long
+Point light-house, on the Canada shore, but the wind
+hung in a bad quarter for the next two or three days,
+and our party had to keep in the dark. One rainy
+night, however&mdash;it was a miserable, drizzling rain,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+and dark as Egypt&mdash;I was suddenly notified that a
+sailboat was in readiness off the mouth of Four-Mile
+Creek. At first I was at a loss what to do. I didn't
+dare go home for provisions, for I had good reason to
+believe that my house was nightly watched by a
+cowardly wretch, whose only concern was to secure the
+$500 offered by Sam's former master for the capture of
+the slaves. In the vicinity lived a well-to-do farmer,
+a devoted pro-slavery Democrat. Notwithstanding his
+politics, I knew the man was the soul of honor, and
+possessed a great generous heart. So I marshaled my
+black brigade out of the church, and marched them
+off, through the rain, single file, to his house. In
+answer to our knock, our friend threw open the door;
+then, with a thousand interrogation points frozen into
+his face, he stood for a minute, one hand holding a
+candle above his head, the other shading his eyes, as
+he stared at the wet and shivering group of darkies,
+the very picture of dumfounded astonishment. In less
+time than it takes to tell it, however, he grasped the
+situation, hustled us all into the house and shut the
+door with a most expressive slam.</p>
+
+<p>"What in &mdash;&mdash; does all this mean?" was his pious
+ejaculation.</p>
+
+<p>He saw what it meant, and it needed but few words
+of explanation on my part. "They are a party of
+fugitives from slavery," said I, calling our friend by
+name. "We are about to cross the lake to Canada;
+the party are destitute and closely pursued; their only
+crime is a desire for freedom. This young woman and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+mother has been sold from her husband and child to a
+dealer in the far South, and if captured, she will be
+consigned to a life of shame." The story was all too
+common in those days, and needed no fine words.
+The young girl's eyes pleaded more forcibly than any
+words I could have spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;what do you want of me?" demanded our
+host, trying hard to look fierce and angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Clothing and provisions," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here," said he, in his gruffest voice,
+"this is a bad job&mdash;bad job." Then, turning to the
+negroes: "Better go back. Canada is full of runaway
+niggers now. They're freezin' and starvin' by
+thousands. Was over in Canada t'other day. Saw six
+niggers by the roadside, with their heads cut off.
+Bones of niggers danglin' in the trees. Crows pickin'
+their eyes out. <i>You</i> better go back, d'ye <i>hear</i>?"
+he added, turning suddenly towards Sam.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Sam shook in his shoes, and his eyes rolled in
+terror. He fingered his cherished smooth-bore as
+though uncertain whether to shoot his entertainer, or
+save all his ammunition for Canada crows, while he
+cast a helpless look of appeal upon his companions.
+The young woman, however, with her keener insight,
+had seen through the sham brusqueness of their host;
+and although she was evidently appalled by the horrible
+picture of what lay before them across the lake, her
+heart told her it was immeasurably to be preferred to a
+return to the only fate which awaited her in the South.
+Her thoughts lay in her face, and our friend read them;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+and not having a stone in his broad bosom, but a big,
+warm, thumping old heart, was moved to pity and to
+aid. He set about getting a basket of provisions.
+Then he skirmished around and found a blanket and
+hood for the woman; all the time declaring that <i>he</i>
+never would help runaway niggers, no sir! and drawing
+(for Sam's especial delectation) the most horrible
+pictures of Canadian hospitality that he could conjure
+up. "You'll find 'em on shore waitin' for ye," said
+he; "they'll catch ye and kill ye and string ye up for
+a scare-crow." Seeing that Sam was coatless, he
+stripped off his own coat and bundled it upon the
+astonished darky with the consoling remark: "When
+they get hold of <i>you</i> they'll tan your black hide,
+stretch it for drum-heads, and beat 'God Save the
+Queen' out of ye every day in the year."</p>
+
+<p>All being in readiness, our benefactor plunged his
+hand into his pocket, and pulling it out full of small
+change thrust it into the woman's hands, still urging
+them to go back to the old life. At the door Sam
+turned back and spoke for the first time:</p>
+
+<p>"Look 'e hyar, Massa, you's good to we uns an' 'fo'
+de Lo'd I tank yer. Ef enny No'then gemmen hankah
+fur my chances in de Souf, I' zign in dair favo'. 'Fo'
+de good Lo'd I tank ye, Massa, I does, <i>shuah</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Here Sam's feelings got the better of him, and we
+were hurrying off, when our entertainer said:</p>
+
+<p>"See here, now, Henry, remember you were never
+at my house with a lot of damned niggers in the night.
+Do you understand?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"All right, sir. You are the last man who would
+ever be charged with Abolitionism, and that's the
+reason why we came here tonight. Mum is the word."</p>
+
+<p>The rain had stopped and the stars were shining in a
+cheerful way as we all trudged down the wet road to
+the lake shore. Our boat was found close in shore,
+and Martin and his wife had waded out to it, while
+Sam and I stood talking in low tones on the beach.
+Suddenly a crash like the breaking of fence-boards was
+heard on the bank near by, and to the westward of us.
+We looked up quickly and saw the form of a man climb
+over the fence and then crouch down in the shadow.
+Up came Sam's rifle, and with a hurried aim he fired
+at the moving object. His old gun was trusty and his
+aim true, and had it not been for a lucky blow from my
+hand, which knocked the gun upwards just as he fired,
+and sent the ball whistling harmlessly over the bank,
+there'd have been one less mean man in the world, and
+we should have had a corpse to dispose of. I scrambled
+up the bank, with my heart in my mouth, I'll confess,
+just in time to see the sneak scurry along in the direction
+of the highway. I watched a long time at the
+creek after the boat left, and seeing no one astir started
+for home. By the time I reached the Lake road the
+moon had come up, and a fresh carriage-track could be
+plainly seen. I followed it down the road a short distance,
+when it turned, ran across the sod, and ended
+at the fence, which had been freshly gnawed by horses.
+It then turned back into the highway, followed up the
+crossroad to Wesleyville, and thence came to the city.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fugitives reached the promised land in safety,
+and I heard from them several times thereafter. The
+man Sam subsequently made two or three successful
+trips back to the old home, once for a wife and afterwards
+for other friends. He made some money in the
+Canada oil fields, and some time after sent me $100,
+$50 for myself to invest in books, and $50 for the fishermen
+who carried them safely across to Long Point
+and liberty.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Of all the places which have sheltered the fugitive
+slave there is none better known, along the southeastern
+shore of Lake Erie, than the old Methodist church
+at Wesleyville, Erie Co., Pennsylvania. It stands
+today much as it stood a half century since; though
+repairs have been made from time to time, and of late
+years modern coal stoves have replaced the capacious
+but fervid old wood-eaters known as box-stoves. Dedicated
+to God, it has been doubly hallowed by being
+devoted to the cause of humanity. To more than
+one wretch, worn out with the toils of a long flight, it
+has proved a glorious house of refuge; and if safety
+lay not within the shadow of its sacred altar, it surely
+did amidst the shadowy gloom of its dingy garret.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1856 there lived in Caldwell County,
+in western Kentucky, a well-to-do farmer named Wilson.
+He owned a large and well-stocked farm, which
+he had inherited, with several slaves, from his father.
+Mr. Wilson was an easy-going and indulgent master,
+and reaped a greater reward of affection from his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+"people" than he did of pecuniary gain from his
+plantation. In the autumn of the above-named year
+he died, and his servants were divided among the
+heirs, who lived in Daviess County, in the same State.
+Two of the slaves, Jack and Nannie, a young man and
+his sister, fell to the lot of a hard master named Watson.
+The housekeeper dying, Nannie was taken from
+the field to fill her place. Nothing could have been
+worse for the poor girl. She was handsome, her young
+master a brute. Because she defended her honor she
+was cruelly punished and locked up for many hours.
+Her brother succeeded in freeing her, and together
+they fled, only to be recaptured. They were whipped
+so terribly that the girl Nannie died. Jack survived,
+heart-broken, quiet for a time, but with a growing resolve
+in his heart. One night his master came home
+from a debauch, and ordered Jack to perform some unreasonable
+and impossible task. Because the poor boy
+failed, the master flew at him with an open knife. It
+was death for one of them. The image of poor Nan,
+beaten to an awful death, rose before Jack's eyes. In
+a moment he became a tiger. Seizing a cart-stake, he
+dealt his master a blow that killed him. The blood of
+his sister was avenged.</p>
+
+<p>Once more Jack fled. The murder of the master
+had aroused the neighborhood. Blood-hounds, both
+brute and human, scoured the woods and swamps;
+flaming handbills offered great rewards for Jack Watson,
+dead or alive. With incredible cunning, and
+grown wary as a wild animal, Jack lurked in the vicin<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>ity
+a long time. When the excitement had somewhat
+abated, he found his way to Salem, Ohio, and was for
+a time in the employ of a worthy Quaker named Bonsell,
+whose descendants still live in that locality. It
+was then a neighborhood of Friends, and Jack's life
+among them brought him great good. He learned to
+read and write, and became in heart and conduct a
+changed man. His life, however, was haunted by two
+ghastly forms; and as often as the image of his murdered
+master rose before him, that of Nan came also
+to justify the deed. These apparitions wore upon him,
+and made his life unnatural and highly sensitive. On
+one occasion, while in Pittsburg, he saw what he took
+to be the ghost of his murdered master coming toward
+him in the street. He turned and fled in abject terror,
+much to the astonishment of all passers-by. Long
+afterward he learned that the supposed apparition was
+a half-brother of his former master.</p>
+
+<p>Jack now determined to devote his life to freeing his
+countrymen from bondage. In due time he found his
+way to the house of Mr. John Young, a noted Abolitionist
+of Wilmington township, in Mercer County,
+Pennsylvania. Mr. Young was one of the first men in
+Mercer County to proclaim his political convictions to
+the world, and to stand by them, bravely and consistently,
+and through many a dangerous hour, until slavery
+was a thing of the past. No man ever asked brave
+John Young for help and was refused. His house was
+known among Abolitionists far and wide as a safe station
+for the Underground Road.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While Jack was at Mr. Young's he fell in with a
+young minister, himself a former fugitive from Kentucky,
+and who was at the time an earnest Baptist
+preacher in Syracuse, N. Y. This friend, named Jarm
+W. Loguen, promised Jack shelter if he could but
+reach Syracuse, and so Jack was "forwarded" along
+the road.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached Erie, the late Mr. Thomas Elliott,
+of Harborcreek, carried him to Wesleyville. His
+pursuers were incidentally heard of as being in the
+vicinity of Meadville, and it was necessary to proceed
+with great caution; so Jack was hidden away for a few
+days beneath the shelter of the old church roof.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened that at this time a protracted meeting
+was in progress in the church. It was a great awakening,
+well remembered yet in the neighborhood. There
+were meetings every night, though the church was
+shut up during the day. During the evening meetings
+Jack would stay quietly concealed in the garret; but
+after the congregation dispersed and the key was
+turned in the door, he would descend, stir up a rousing
+fire, and make himself as comfortable as possible until
+the meeting-hour came round again. It is related that
+Mr. David Chambers generously kept the house supplied
+with fuel; and his boys, to whose lot fell the
+manipulation of the wood-pile, were in constant wonder
+at the disappearance of the wood. "I shan't be
+very sorry when this revival winds up," said one of them
+confidentially to the other; "it takes an awful lot of
+wood to run a red-hot revival." The meanwhile black<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+Jack toasted his shins by the revival fire, and found, no
+doubt, a deal of comfort in the sacred atmosphere of
+the sheltering church.</p>
+
+<p>The meetings grew in interest with every night.
+Scores were gathered into the fold of the church, and
+the whole community, young and old, were touched by
+the mysterious power. The meetings were conducted
+by the Rev. John McLean, afterwards a venerable
+superannuate of the East Ohio Conference, yet living (at
+least a few years ago) in Canfield, Mahoning County,
+Ohio; by the Rev. B. Marsteller, and others. The
+interest came to a climax one Sunday night. A most
+thrilling sermon had been preached. Every heart was
+on fire with the sacred excitement, and it seemed as if
+the Holy Spirit were almost tangible in their very midst.
+The church was full, even to the gallery that surrounds
+three sides of the interior. Methodists are not&mdash;at
+least were not in those days&mdash;afraid to shout; and
+Jack, hidden above the ceiling, had long been a rapt
+listener to the earnest exhortations. His murder, his
+people in bondage, all the sorrows and sins of his
+eventful life, rose before his eyes. Overcome with
+contrition, he knelt upon the rickety old boards, and
+poured out his troubles in prayer. Meanwhile, down
+below, the excitement grew. The Rev. James Sullivan
+made an impassioned exhortation, and when he finished,
+the altar was crowded with penitents. The service resolved
+itself into a general prayer-meeting. Men
+embraced each other in the aisles, or knelt in tearful
+prayer together; while shouts of victory and groans<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+of repentance filled the church. God bless the good
+old-fashioned shouting Methodists, who shouted all
+the louder as the Lord drew near! Some of the old
+revival hymns, sent rolling across winter fields, and
+throbbing and ringing through the midnight air, would
+set the very universe rejoicing, and scatter the legions
+of Satan in dismay. Alas that the religion of lungs&mdash;the
+shouting, noisy, devout, glorious old worship, is passing
+away! The whispers of the Devil too often drown
+the modulations of modern prayer, and instead of glorified
+visions of angels and the saints, the eyes of modern
+worshipers rest weariedly upon the things of the world.</p>
+
+<p>As the tide of excitement swelled higher and wilder
+that night, it caught poor Jack, up in the garret.
+Through narrow cracks he could see the emotions and
+devotions of the audience; and in his enthusiasm he
+wholly forgot that he was in concealment and his
+presence known to only two or three of the worshipers.</p>
+
+<p>"Come up, sinners, come up to the Throne of
+Grace and cast your heavy burdens down," called the
+pastor, his face aglow with exercise and emotion, and
+his heart throbbing with exultation. "Praise be to
+God on High for this glorious harvest of souls."</p>
+
+<p>"Glory, glory, amen!" rose from all parts of the
+church.</p>
+
+<p>"Glory, glory, amen!" came back a voice from
+the unknown above.</p>
+
+<p>The hubbub was at such a pitch down stairs that
+Jack's unconscious response was scarcely heard; but
+to those in the gallery it was plainly audible.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Lord God of Sabbaoth," prayed the minister,
+"come down upon us tonight. Send Thy Spirit into
+our midst!"</p>
+
+<p>"Amen! glory! hallelujah!" shouted Jack in the
+garret.</p>
+
+<p>The people in the gallery were in holy fear. "It is
+Gabriel," they said.</p>
+
+<p>"We come to Thee, Lord! We come, we come!"
+cried the repentent sinners down stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"I come, I come, glory to God, hallelujah, amen!"
+shouted back the Gabriel in the garret, clapping his
+hands in the fervor of his ecstacy.</p>
+
+<p>All at once his Abolition friends below heard him.
+They were struck with consternation and looked at
+each other in dismay. If Jack was discovered, there
+would be trouble; they must quiet him at any hazard.
+"The idea of that nigger getting the power in the
+garret! A stop must be put to that at once. A
+revival in full blast is an unusual treat for an Underground
+Railroad traveler; he should take with gratitude
+what he could hear, and keep still for the safety
+of his skin." So thought his frightened friends, who
+at once cast about for means to quiet him.</p>
+
+<p>Now it so happened&mdash;how fortunate that there is
+always a way out of a dilemma!&mdash;that the old stove-pipe,
+which connected with the chimney in the attic,
+frequently became disconnected; and on more than
+one occasion incipient fires had started among the dry
+boards of the garret floor. The people were used to
+seeing the boys go aloft to look after the safety of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+house; so, when Dempster M. Chambers, a son of Mr.
+Stewart Chambers, inspired by a happy thought, scrambled
+up the ladder and crawled through the trap-door
+into the gloom, those who noticed it thought only that
+the old stove-pipe had slipped out, and continued to
+throw their sins as fuel into the general religious
+blaze; or thinking of the fires of hell, gave little heed
+to lesser flames. Jack was soon quieted, and the meeting,
+having consumed itself with its own fervor, broke
+up without further incident. There is no doubt, however,
+that certain worthy people who were seated in the
+gallery have ever stoutly maintained that the Angel
+Gabriel actually replied to the prayers of that memorable
+night.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p>
+
+<p>In due time Jack Watson reached the home of his
+friend, the Rev. Jarm W. Loguen; and during the dark
+days of the War he rendered valuable aid to the Union
+cause along the Kentucky and Virginia borders, and in
+one guerrilla skirmish he lost his left arm. A few
+years since he was still living on a pre&euml;mpted land-claim
+in Rice County, Kansas.</p>
+
+<p>The following incident, connected with Watson's
+career, will not be out of place in closing this sketch:</p>
+
+<p>Some years since the Rev. Glezen Fillmore, a
+famous pioneer of the Methodist Episcopal Church in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+Buffalo, and for more than half a century an honored
+member of the Genesee Conference, was engaged in
+raising funds for the Freedmen's Aid Society. One
+day his cousin, the late ex-President Millard Fillmore,
+rode out from Buffalo to visit him. During the conversation
+the venerable preacher related the story of
+Watson's escape, as Watson himself had told it while
+at Fillmore's Underground Railroad depot. The
+former President was strongly touched by the story,
+and at its close he drew a check for fifty dollars for the
+Freedmen. "Thank you, thank you," said the good
+old parson. "I was praying that the Lord would open
+your heart to give ten dollars, and here are fifty."</p>
+
+<p>No study of Underground Railroad work in this
+region, even though, like the present paper, it aims to
+be chiefly anecdotal, can neglect recognition of the
+fact that it was a Buffalo man in the Presidential chair
+who, by signing the Fugitive Slave act of 1850, brought
+upon his head the maledictions of the Abolitionists,
+who were so stimulated thereby in their humanitarian
+law-breaking, that the most active period in Underground
+Railroad work dates from the stroke of Millard
+Fillmore's pen which sought to put a stop to it. No
+passage in American history displays more acrimony
+than this. Wherever the friends of the negro were at
+work on Underground lines, Mr. Fillmore was denounced
+in the most intemperate terms. In his home
+city of Buffalo, some who had hitherto prided themselves
+upon his distinguished acquaintance, estranged
+themselves from him, and on his return to Buffalo he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+found cold and formal treatment from people whom he
+had formerly greeted as friends. Insults were offered
+him; and the changed demeanor of many of his townsmen
+showed itself even in the church which he
+attended. Certain ardent souls there were who refused
+any longer to worship where he did.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> Mr. Fillmore
+met all these hostile demonstrations, as he sustained
+the angry protests and denunciations of the Abolitionists
+in general, in dignified impurturbability, resting
+his case upon the constitutionality of his conduct.
+The act of 1850 reaffirmed the act of 1793, and both
+rested upon the explicit provision in the Constitution
+which declares that "no person held to service or
+labor in one State under the laws thereof, escaping into
+another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation
+therein, be discharged from such service or labor; but
+shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such
+service or labor may be due." Obviously, so far as this
+section was concerned, many people of the North were
+in rebellion against the Constitution of the United
+States for many years before the Civil War. That the
+work of the Underground Railroad was justifiable in
+the humanitarian aspect needs no argument now. But
+the student of that period cannot overcome the legal
+stand taken by Mr. Fillmore, his advisers and sym<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>pathizers,
+unless he asserts, as Mr. Seward asserted,
+that the provision of the Constitution relating to the
+rendition of slaves was of no binding force. "The law
+of nations," he declared, "disavows such compacts&mdash;the
+law of nature written on the hearts and consciences
+of men repudiates them."<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> This was met by the
+plausible assertion that "the hostility which was
+directed against the law of 1850 would have been
+equally violent against any law which effectually carried
+out the provision of the Constitution."<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> During
+the years that followed, efforts were made to recover
+fugitive slaves under this law. Special officers were
+appointed to execute it, but in most Northern communities
+they were regarded with odium, and every
+possible obstacle put in the way of the discharge of
+their offensive duties. Many tragic affairs occurred;
+but the organization of the Underground Railroad was
+too thorough, its operation was in the hands of men too
+discreet and determined, to be seriously disturbed by a
+law which found so little moral support in the communities
+through which its devious trails ran. Thus the
+work went on, through civil contention and bloody
+war, until the Emancipator came to loose all shackles,
+to put an end to property in slaves, and to stop all
+work, because abolishing all need, of the Underground
+Railroad.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<h1>Niagara and the Poets.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 85%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+<h2>NIAGARA AND THE POETS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>On a day in July, 1804, a ruddy-faced, handsome
+young Irishman, whose appearance must
+have commanded unusual attention in wild
+frontier surroundings, came out of the woods that
+overlooked Lake Erie, picking his way among the
+still-standing stumps, and trudged down the Indian
+trail, which had not long been made passable for
+wagons. Presently he came into the better part of the
+road, named Willink Avenue, passed a dozen scattered
+houses, and finally stopped at John Crow's log tavern,
+the principal inn of the infant Buffalo. He was dusty,
+tired, and disgusted with the fortune that had brought
+an accident some distance back in the woods, compelling
+him to finish this stage of his journey, not merely
+on foot, but disabled. Here, surrounded by more
+Indians than whites, he lodged for a day or so before
+continuing his journey to Niagara Falls; and here,
+according to his own testimony, he wrote a long poem,
+which was not only, in all probability, the first poem
+ever composed in Buffalo, and one of the bitterest
+tirades against America and American institutions to
+be found in literature; but which contained, so far as
+I have been able to discover, the first allusion to Niagara
+Falls, written by one who actually traveled
+thither, in the poetry of any language.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The poetry of Niagara Falls is contemporary with
+the first knowledge of the cataract among civilized
+men. One may make this statement with positiveness,
+inasmuch as the first book printed in Europe which
+mentions Niagara Falls contains a poem in which allusion
+is made to that wonder. This work is the excessively
+rare "Des Sauvages" of Champlain (Paris,
+1604),<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> in which, after the dedication, is a sonnet,
+inscribed "Le Sievr de la Franchise av discovrs Dv
+Sievr Champlain." It seems proper, in quoting this
+first of all Niagara poems, to follow as closely as may
+be in modern type the archaic spelling of the original:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mvses, si vous chantez, vrayment ie vous conseille<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Que vous lou&euml;z Champlain, pour estre courageux:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sans crainte des hasards, il a veu tant de lieux,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Que ses relations nous contentent l'oreille.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Il a veu le Perou,<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> Mexique &amp; la Merueille<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Du Vulcan infernal qui vomit tant de feux,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et les saults Mocosans,<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> qui offensent les yeux<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">De ceux qui osent voir leur cheute nonpareille.<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span><span class="i0">Il nous promet encor de passer plus auant,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Reduire les Gentils, &amp; trouuer le Leuant,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Par le Nort, ou le Su, pour aller &agrave; la Chine.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">C'est charitablement tout pour l'amour de Dieu.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fy des lasches poltrons qui ne bougent d'vn lieu!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Leur vie, sans mentir, me paroist trop mesquine.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I regret that some research has failed to discover
+any further information regarding the poet De la Franchise.
+Obviously, he took rather more than the permissible
+measure of poet's license in saying that Champlain
+had seen Peru, a country far beyond the known
+range of Champlain's travels. But in the phrase "<i>les
+saults Mocosans</i>," the falls of Mocosa, we have the
+ancient name of the undefined territory afterwards
+labeled "Virginia." The intent of the allusion is
+made plainer by Marc Lescarbot, who in 1610 wrote a
+poem in which he speaks of "great falls which the
+Indians say they encounter in ascending the St. Lawrence
+as far as the neighborhood of Virginia."<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> The
+allusion can only be to Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>It is gratifying to find our incomparable cataract a
+theme for song, even though known only by aboriginal
+report, thus at the very dawn of exploration in this
+part of America. It is fitting, too, that the French
+should be the first to sing of what they discovered.
+More than a century after De la Franchise and Lescarbot,
+a Frenchman who really saw the falls introduced
+them to the muse, though only by a quotation. This<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+was Father Charlevoix, who, writing "From the Fall
+of Niagara, May 14, 1721," to the Duchess of Lesdiguieres,
+was moved to aid his description by quoting
+poetry. "Ovid," the priest wrote to the duchess,
+"gives us the description of such another cataract,
+situated according to him in the delightful valley of
+Tempe. I will not pretend that the country of Niagara
+is as fine as that, though I believe its cataract much
+the noblest of the two," and he thereupon quotes these
+lines from the "Metamorphoses":</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Est nemus H&aelig;moni&aelig;, pr&aelig;rupta quod undique claudit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sylva; vocant Tempe, per qu&aelig; Peneus ab imo<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Effusus Pindo spumosis volvitur undis,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dejectisque gravi tenues agitantia fumos<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nubila conducit, summisque aspergine sylvas,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Impluit, et sonitu plusquam vicina fatigat.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It would be strange if there were not other impressionable
+Frenchmen who composed or quoted verses
+expressive of Niagara's grandeur, during the eighty-one
+years that elapsed between the French discovery
+of Niagara Falls and the English Conquest&mdash;a period
+of over three-quarters of a century during which
+earth's most magnificent cataract belonged to France.
+But if priest or soldier, coureur-de-bois or verse-maker
+at the court of Louis said aught in meter of Niagara in
+all that time, I have not found it.</p>
+
+<p>A little thunder by Sir William Johnson's guns at
+Fort Niagara, a little blood on the Plains of Abraham,
+and Niagara Falls was handed over to Great Britain.
+Four years after the Conquest English poetry made its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+first claim to our cataract. In 1764 appeared that
+ever-delightful work, "The Traveller, or, a Prospect
+of Society," wherein we read:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Have we not seen at pleasure's lordly call<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The smiling long-frequented village fall?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Behold the duteous son, the sire decayed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The modest matron or the blushing maid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forced from their homes, a melancholy train,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To traverse climes beyond the western main;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where wild Oswego spreads her swamps around<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Niagara<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> stuns with thundering sound.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Even now, perhaps, as there some pilgrim strays<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through tangled forests and through dangerous ways,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where beasts with man divided empire claim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the brown Indian marks with murderous aim;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There, while above the giddy tempest flies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all around distressful yells arise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The pensive exile, bending with his woe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To stop too fearful and too faint to go,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Casts a long look where England's glories shine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And bids his bosom sympathize with mine.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Obviously, Oliver Goldsmith's "Traveller," in its
+American allusions, reflected the current literature of
+those years when Englishmen heard more of Oswego<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+than they ever have since. Niagara and Oswego were
+uttermost points told of in the dispatches, during that
+long war, reached and held by England's "far-flung
+battle line"; but if Britain's poets found any inspiration
+in Niagara's mighty fount for a half century after
+Goldsmith, I know it not.</p>
+
+<p>And this brings us again to our first visiting poet,
+Tom Moore, whose approach to Niagara by way of
+Buffalo in 1804 has been described. Penning an
+epistle in rhyme from "Buffalo, on Lake Erie," to
+the Hon. W. R. Spencer&mdash;writing, we are warranted
+in fancying, after a supper of poor bacon and tea, or
+an evening among the loutish Indians who hung about
+Crow's log-tavern&mdash;he recorded his emotions in no
+amiable mood:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Even now, as wandering upon Erie's shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I hear Niagara's distant cataract roar,<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I sigh for home&mdash;alas! these weary feet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have many a mile to journey, ere we meet.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Niagara in 1804 was most easily approached from
+the East by schooner on Lake Ontario from Oswego,
+though the overland trail through the woods was beginning
+to be used. Moore came by the land route. The
+record of the journey is to be found in the preface to
+his American Poems, and in his letters to his mother,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+published for the first time in his "Memoirs, Journal
+and Correspondence," edited by Earl Russell and
+issued in London and Boston in 1853-'56. The
+letters narrating his adventures in the region are
+dated "Geneva, Genessee County, July 17, 1804";
+"Chippewa, Upper Canada, July 22d"; "Niagara,
+July 24th";&mdash;in which he copies a description of the
+falls from his journal, not elsewhere published&mdash;and
+"Chippewa, July 25th," signed "Tom." There is
+no mention in these letters of Buffalo, but in the prefatory
+narrative above alluded to we have this interesting
+account of the visit:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is but too true, of all grand objects, whether in nature or
+art, that facility of access to them much diminishes the feeling of
+reverence they ought to inspire. Of this fault, however, the
+route to Niagara, at this period&mdash;at least the portion of it which
+led through the Genesee country&mdash;could not justly be accused.
+The latter part of the journey, which lay chiefly through yet but
+half-cleared woods, we were obliged to perform on foot; and a
+slight accident I met with in the course of our rugged walk laid
+me up for some days at Buffalo.</p></div>
+
+<p>And so laid up&mdash;perhaps with a blistered heel&mdash;he
+sought relief by driving his quill into the heart of
+democracy. His friend, he lamented, had often told
+him of happy hours passed amid the classic associations
+and art treasures of Italy:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But here alas, by Erie's stormy lake,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As far from such bright haunts my course I take,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No proud remembrance o'er the fancy plays,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No classic dream, no star of other days<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span><span class="i0">Hath left the visionary light behind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That lingering radiance of immortal mind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which gilds and hallows even the rudest scene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The humblest shed where Genius once had been.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He views, not merely his immediate surroundings in
+the pioneer village by Lake Erie, but the general character
+of the whole land:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">All that creation's varying mass assumes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of grand or lovely, here aspires and blooms.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bold rise the mountains, rich the gardens glow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bright lakes expand and conquering rivers flow;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But mind, immortal mind, without whose ray<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This world's a wilderness and man but clay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mind, mind alone, in barren still repose,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor blooms, nor rises, nor expands, nor flows.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Take Christians, Mohawks, democrats and all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the rude wigwam to the Congress Hall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From man the savage, whether slaved or free,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To man the civilized, less tame than he,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Tis one dull chaos, one unfertile strife<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Betwixt half-polished and half-barbarous life;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where every ill the ancient world could brew<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is mixed with every grossness of the new;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where all corrupts, though little can entice,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And naught is known of luxury, but its vice!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is this the region then, is this the clime<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For soaring fancies? for those dreams sublime,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which all their miracles of light reveal<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To heads that meditate and hearts that feel?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alas! not so!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And after much more of proud protest against Columbia
+and "the mob mania that imbrutes her now,"
+our disapproving poet turned in to make the best, let<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+us hope, of Landlord Crow's poor quarters, and to
+prepare for Niagara. Years afterwards he admitted
+that there was some soul for song among the men of
+the Far West of that day. Very complacently he tells
+us that "Even then, on the shores of those far lakes, the
+title of 'Poet'&mdash;however in that instance unworthily
+bestowed&mdash;bespoke a kind and distinguished welcome
+for its wearer. The captain who commanded the
+packet in which I crossed Lake Ontario, in addition to
+other marks of courtesy, begged, on parting with me,
+to be allowed to decline payment for my passage." I
+cannot do better than to quote further from his account
+of the visit to the falls:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>When we arrived at length at the inn, in the neighborhood of
+the Falls, it was too late to think of visiting them that evening;
+and I lay awake almost the whole night with the sound of the
+cataract in my ears. The day following I consider as a sort of
+era in my life; and the first glimpse I caught of that wonderful
+cataract gave me a feeling which nothing in this world can ever
+awaken again. It was through an opening among the trees, as we
+approached the spot where the full view of the Falls was to burst
+upon us, that I caught this glimpse of the mighty mass of waters
+falling smoothly over the edge of the precipice; and so overwhelming
+was the notion it gave me of the awful spectacle I was approaching,
+that during the short interval that followed, imagination
+had far outrun the reality&mdash;and vast and wonderful as
+was the scene that then opened upon me, my first feeling
+was that of disappointment. It would have been impossible,
+indeed, for anything real to come up to the vision I had, in
+these few seconds, formed of it, and those awful scriptural
+words, 'The fountains of the great deep were broken up,'
+can alone give any notion of the vague wonders for which I
+was prepared.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But, in spite of the start thus got by imagination, the triumph
+of reality was, in the end, but the greater; for the gradual glory of
+the scene that opened upon me soon took possession of my whole
+mind; presenting from day to day, some new beauty or wonder,
+and like all that is most sublime in nature or art, awakening sad as
+well as elevating thoughts. I retain in my memory but one other
+dream&mdash;for such do events so long past appear&mdash;which can by
+any respect be associated with the grand vision I have just been
+describing; and however different the nature of their appeals to
+the imagination, I should find it difficult to say on which occasion I
+felt most deeply affected, when looking at the Falls of Niagara,
+or when standing by moonlight among the ruins of the Coliseum.</p></div>
+
+<p>It was the tranquillity and unapproachableness of the
+great fall, in the midst of so much turmoil, which most
+impressed him. He tried to express this in a Song of
+the Spirit of the region:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There amid the island sedge,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Just upon the cataract's edge,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where the foot of living man<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Never trod since time began,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lone I sit at close of day,<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> ...<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The poem as a whole, however, is not a strong one,
+even for Tom Moore.</p>
+
+<p>As the Irish bard sailed back to England, another
+pedestrian poet was making ready for a tour to Niagara.
+This was the Paisley weaver, rhymster and roamer,
+Alexander Wilson, whose fame as an ornithologist outshines
+his reputation as a poet. Yet in him America
+has&mdash;by adoption&mdash;her Oliver Goldsmith. In 1794,
+being then twenty-eight years old, he arrived in Phila<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>delphia.
+For eight years he taught school, or botanized,
+roamed the woods with his gun, worked at the
+loom, and peddled his verses among the inhabitants of
+New Jersey. In October, 1804, accompanied by his
+nephew and another friend, he set out on a walking
+expedition to Niagara, which he satisfactorily accomplished.
+His companions left him, but he persevered,
+and reached home after an absence of fifty-nine days and
+a walk of 1,260 miles. It is very pleasant, especially
+for one who has himself toured afoot over a considerable
+part of this same route, to follow our naturalist poet and
+his friends on their long walk through the wilderness, in
+the pages of Wilson's descriptive poem, "The Foresters."
+Its first edition, it is believed, is a quaint
+little volume of 106 pages, published at Newtown,
+Penn., in 1818.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> The route led through Bucks and
+Northumberland counties, over the mountains and up
+the valley of the Susquehanna; past Newtown, N. Y.,
+now Elmira, and so on to the Indian village of Catherine,
+near the head of Seneca Lake. Here, a quarter
+of a century before, Sullivan and his raiders had brought
+desolation, traces of which stirred our singer to some
+of his loftiest flights. In that romantic wilderness of
+rocky glen and marsh and lake, the region where Montour
+Falls and Watkins now are, Wilson lingered to shoot
+wild fowl. Thence the route lay through that interval
+of long ascents&mdash;so long that the trudging poet thought</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To Heaven's own gates the mountain seemed to rise<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
+<p class="noin">&mdash;and equally long descents, from Seneca Lake to Cayuga.
+Here, after a night's rest, under a pioneer's roof:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our boat now ready and our baggage stored,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Provisions, mast and oars and sails aboard,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With three loud cheers that echoed from the steep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We launched our skiff "Niagara" to the deep.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Down to old Cayuga bridge they sailed and through
+the outlet, passed the salt marshes and so on to Fort
+Oswego. That post had been abandoned on the 28th
+of October, about a week before Wilson arrived there.
+A desolate, woebegone place he found it:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Those struggling huts that on the left appear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where fence, or field, or cultured garden green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or blessed plough, or spade were never seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is old Oswego; once renowned in trade,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where numerous tribes their annual visits paid.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From distant wilds, the beaver's rich retreat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For one whole moon they trudged with weary feet;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Piled their rich furs within the crowded store,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Replaced their packs and plodded back for more.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But time and war have banished all their trains<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And naught but potash, salt and rum remains.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The boisterous boatman, drunk but twice a day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Begs of the landlord; but forgets to pay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pledges his salt, a cask for every quart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pleased thus for poison with his pay to part.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From morn to night here noise and riot reign;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From night to morn 'tis noise and roar again.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Not a flattering picture, truly, and yet no doubt a
+trustworthy one, of this period in Oswego's history.</p>
+
+<p>But we must hurry along with the poet to his destination,
+although the temptation to linger with him in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+this part of the journey is great. Indeed, "The
+Foresters" is a historic chronicle of no slight value.
+There is no doubting the fidelity of its pictures of the
+state of nature and of man along this storied route as
+seen by its author at the beginning of the century;
+while his poetic philosophizing is now shrewd, now
+absurd, but always ardently American in tone.</p>
+
+<p>Our foresters undertook to coast along the Ontario
+shore in their frail "Niagara"; narrowly escaped
+swamping, and were picked up by</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A friendly sloop for Queenstown Harbor bound,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">where they arrived safely, after being gloriously seasick.
+It was the season of autumn gales. A few days
+before a British packet called the Speedy, with some
+twenty or thirty persons on board, including a judge
+advocate, other judges, witnesses and an Indian prisoner,
+had foundered and every soul perished. No part of
+the Speedy was afterwards found but the pump, which
+Wilson says his captain picked up and carried to
+Queenston.</p>
+
+<p>Wilson had moralized, philosophized and rhapsodized
+all the way from the Schuylkill. His verse, as he
+approaches the Mecca of his wanderings, fairly palpitates
+with expectation and excitement. He was not a
+bard to sing in a majestic strain, but his description of
+the falls and their environment is vivid and of historic
+value. As they tramped through the forest,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Heavy and slow, increasing on the ear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deep through the woods a rising storm we hear.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Th' approaching gust still loud and louder grows,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As when the strong northeast resistless blows,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or black tornado, rushing through the wood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alarms th' affrighted swains with uproar rude.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet the blue heavens displayed their clearest sky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And dead below the silent forests lie;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And not a breath the lightest leaf assailed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But all around tranquillity prevailed.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"What noise is that?" we ask with anxious mien,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A dull salt-driver passing with his team.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Noise? noise?&mdash;why, nothing that I hear or see<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But Nagra Falls&mdash;Pray, whereabouts live ye?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This touch of realism ushers in a long and over-wrought
+description of the whole scene. The "crashing
+roar," he says,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&mdash;&mdash; bade us kneel and Time's great God adore.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been his emotions, his adjectives
+are sadly inadequate, and his verse devoid of true
+poetic fervor. More than one of his descriptive
+passages, however, give us those glimpses of conditions
+past and gone, which the historian values. For instance,
+this:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">High o'er the wat'ry uproar, silent seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sailing sedate, in majesty serene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now midst the pillared spray sublimely lost,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Swept the gray eagles, gazing calm and slow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On all the horrors of the gulf below;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Intent, alone, to sate themselves with blood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the torn victims of the raging flood.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Wilson was not the man to mistake a bird; and
+many other early travelers have testified to the former
+presence of eagles in considerable numbers, haunting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+the gorge below the falls in quest of the remains of
+animals that had been carried down stream.</p>
+
+<p>Moore, as we have seen, denounced the country for
+its lack of</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">That lingering radiance of immortal mind<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">which so inspires the poet in older lands. He was
+right in his fact, but absurd in his fault-finding. It
+has somewhere been said of him, that Niagara Falls
+was the only thing he found in America which overcame
+his self-importance; but we must remember his
+youth, the flatteries on which he had fed at home and the
+crudities of American life at that time. For a quarter
+of a century after Tom Moore's visit there was much
+in the crass assertiveness of American democracy which
+was as ridiculous in its way as the Old-World ideas of
+class and social distinctions were in their way&mdash;and
+vastly more vulgar and offensive. Read, in evidence,
+Mrs. Trollope and Capt. Basil Hall, two of America's
+severest and sincerest critics. It should be put down
+to Tom Moore's credit, too, that before he died he admitted
+to Washington Irving and to others that his writings
+on America were the greatest sin of his early life.<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p>
+<p>Like Moore, Alexander Wilson felt America's lack
+of a poet; and, like Barlow and Humphreys and
+Freneau and others of forgotten fame, he undertook&mdash;like
+them again, unsuccessfully&mdash;to supply the lack.
+There is something pathetic&mdash;or grotesque, as we look
+at it&mdash;in the patriotic efforts of these commonplace
+men to be great for their country's sake.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To Europe's shores renowned in deathless song,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">asks Wilson,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Must all the honors of the bard belong?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And rural Poetry's enchanting strain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Be only heard beyond th' Atlantic main?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet Nature's charms that bloom so lovely here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unhailed arrive, unheeded disappear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While bare black heaths and brooks of half a mile<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Can rouse the thousand bards of Britain's Isle.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There, scarce a stream creeps down its narrow bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There scarce a hillock lifts its little head,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or humble hamlet peeps their glades among<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But lives and murmurs in immortal song.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our Western world, with all its matchless floods,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our vast transparent lakes and boundless woods,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stamped with the traits of majesty sublime,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unhonored weep the silent lapse of time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Spread their wild grandeur to the unconscious sky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In sweetest seasons pass unheeded by;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While scarce one Muse returns the songs they gave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or seeks to snatch their glories from the grave.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+<p>This solicitude by the early American writers, lest
+the poetic themes of their country should go unsung,
+contrasts amusingly, as does Moore's ill-natured complaining,
+with the prophetic assurance of Bishop Berkeley's
+famous lines, written half a century or so before,
+in allusion to America:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The muse, disgusted at an age and clime<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Barren of every glorious theme,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In distant lands now waits a better time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Producing subjects worthy fame.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Westward the course of empire takes its way, ...<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I have found no other pilgrim poets making Niagara
+their theme, until the War of 1812 came to create
+heroes and leave ruin along the frontier, and stir a few
+patriotic singers to hurl back defiance to the British
+hordes. Iambic defiance, unless kindled by a grand
+genius, is a poor sort of fireworks, even when it undertakes
+to combine patriotism and natural grandeur.
+Certainly something might be expected of a poet who
+sandwiches Niagara Falls in between bloody battles,
+and gives us the magnificent in nature, the gallant in
+warfare and the loftiest patriotism in purpose, the three
+strains woven in a triple p&aelig;an of passion, ninety-four
+duodecimo pages in length. Such a work was offered
+to the world at Baltimore in 1818, with this title-page:
+"Battle of Niagara, a Poem Without Notes, and Goldau,
+or the Maniac Harper. Eagles and Stars and
+Rainbows. By Jehu O' Cataract, author of 'Keep
+Cool.'" I have never seen "Keep Cool," but it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+must be very different from the "Battle of Niagara,"
+or it belies its name. The fiery Jehu O' Cataract was
+John Neal.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
+
+<p>The "Battle of Niagara," he informs the reader,
+was written when he was a prisoner; when he "felt
+the victories of his countrymen." "I have attempted,"
+he says, "to do justice to American scenery and American
+character, not to versify minuti&aelig; of battles."
+The poem has a metrical introduction and four cantos,
+in which is told, none too lucidly, the story of the
+battle of Niagara; with such flights of eagles, scintillation
+of stars and breaking of rainbows, that no brief
+quotation can do it justice. In style it is now Miltonic,
+now reminiscent of Walter Scott. The opening
+canto is mainly an apostrophe to the Bird, and a vision
+of glittering horsemen. Canto two is a dissertation on
+Lake Ontario, with word-pictures of the primitive Indian.
+The rest of the poem is devoted to the battle
+near the great cataract&mdash;and throughout all are
+sprinkled the eagles, stars and rainbows. Do not infer
+from this characterization that the production is wholly
+bad; it is merely a good specimen of that early Ameri<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>can
+poetry which was just bad enough to escape being
+good.</p>
+
+<p>A brief passage or two will sufficiently illustrate the
+author's trait of painting in high colors. He is a word-impressionist
+whose brush, with indiscreet dashes,
+mars the composition. I select two passages descriptive
+of the battle:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The drum is rolled again. The bugle sings<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And far upon the wind the cross flag flings<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A radiant challenge to its starry foe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That floats&mdash;a sheet of light!&mdash;away below,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where troops are forming&mdash;slowly in the night<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of mighty waters; where an angry light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bounds from the cataract, and fills the skies<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With visions&mdash;rainbows&mdash;and the foamy dyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That one may see at morn in youthful poets' eyes.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Niagara! Niagara! I hear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy tumbling waters. And I see thee rear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy thundering sceptre to the clouded skies:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see it wave&mdash;I hear the ocean rise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And roll obedient to thy call. I hear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tempest-hymning of thy floods in fear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The quaking mountains and the nodding trees&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The reeling birds and the careering breeze&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tottering hills, unsteadied in thy roar;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Niagara! as thy dark waters pour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One everlasting earthquake rocks thy lofty shore!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cavalcade went by. The day hath gone;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And yet the soldier lives; his cheerful tone<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rises in boisterous song; while slowly calls<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The monarch spirit of the mighty falls:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Soldier, be firm! and mind your watchfires well;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sleep not to-night!<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span></div></div>
+
+<p>The following picture of the camp at sunset, as the
+reveille rings over the field, and Niagara's muffled
+drums vibrate through the dusk, presents many of the
+elements of true poetry:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Low stooping from his arch, the glorious sun<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hath left the storm with which his course begun;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now in rolling clouds goes calmly home<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In heavenly pomp adown the far blue dome.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In sweet-toned minstrelsy is heard the cry,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All clear and smooth, along the echoing sky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of many a fresh-blown bugle full and strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The soldier's instrument! the soldier's song!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Niagara, too, is heard; his thunder comes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like far-off battle&mdash;hosts of rolling drums.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All o'er the western heaven the flaming clouds<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Detach themselves and float like hovering shrouds.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loosely unwoven, and afar unfurled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A sunset canopy enwraps the world.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Vesper hymn grows soft. In parting day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wings flit about. The warblings die away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The shores are dizzy and the hills look dim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cataract falls deeper and the landscapes swim.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Jehu O' Cataract does not always hold his fancy with
+so steady a rein as this. He is prone to eccentric
+flights, to bathos and absurdities. His apostrophe to
+Lake Ontario, several hundred lines in length, has many
+fine fancies, but his luxuriant imagination continually
+wrecks itself on extravagancies which break down the
+effect. This I think the following lines illustrate:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">... He had fought with savages, whose breath<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He felt upon his cheek like mildew till his death.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So stood the battle. Bravely it was fought,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lions and Eagles met. That hill was bought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sold in desperate combat. Wrapped in flame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Died these idolaters of bannered fame.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three times that meteor hill was bravely lost&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three times 'twas bravely won, while madly tost,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Encountering red plumes in the dusky air;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While Slaughter shouted in her bloody lair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And spectres blew their horns and shook their whistling hair.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There are allusions to Niagara in some of the ballads
+of the War of 1812, one of the finest of which, "Sea
+and Land Victories," beginning</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">With half the western world at stake<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">See Perry on the midland lake,&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">appeared in the Naval Songster of 1815, and was a
+great favorite half a century or more ago. So far,
+however, as the last War with Great Britain has added
+to our store of poetry by turning the attention of the
+poets to the Niagara region as a strikingly picturesque
+scene of war, there is little worthy of attention. One
+ambitious work is remembered, when remembered at
+all, as a curio of literature. This is "The Fredoniad,
+or Independence Preserved," an epic poem by Richard
+Emmons, a Kentuckian, afterwards a physician of Philadelphia.
+He worked on it for ten years, finally
+printed it in 1826, and in 1830 got it through a second
+edition, ostentatiously dedicated to Lafayette. "The
+Fredoniad" is a history in verse of the War of 1812;
+it was published in four volumes; it has forty cantos,
+filling 1,404 duodecimo pages, or a total length of about
+42,000 lines. The first and second cantos are devoted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+to Hell, the third to Heaven, and the fourth to Detroit.
+About one-third of the whole work is occupied with
+military operations on the Niagara frontier. Nothing
+from Fort Erie to Fort Niagara escapes this meter-machine.
+The Doctor's poetic feet stretch out to
+miles and leagues, but not a single verse do I find that
+prompts to quotation; though, I am free to confess, I
+have not read them all, and much doubt if any one save
+the infatuated author, and perhaps his proof-reader,
+ever did read the whole of "The Fredoniad."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>No sooner was the frontier at peace, and the pathways
+of travel multiplied and smoothed, than there set
+in the first great era of tourist travel to Niagara. From
+1825, when the opening of the Erie Canal first made
+the falls easily accessible to the East, the tide of visitors
+steadily swelled. In that year came one other
+poetizing pilgrim, from York, now Toronto, who,
+returning home, published in his own city a duodecimo
+of forty-six pages, entitled "Wonders of the West, or
+a Day at the Falls of Niagara in 1825. A Poem. By
+a Canadian." The author was J. S. Alexander, said
+to have been a Toronto school-teacher. It is a great
+curio, though of not the least value as poetry; in fact,
+as verse it is ridiculously bad. The author does not
+narrate his own adventures at Niagara, but makes his
+descriptive and historical passages incidental to the
+story of a hero named <i>St. Julian</i>. Never was the name
+of this beloved patron saint of travelers more unhappily
+bestowed, for this <i>St. Julian</i> is a lugubrious, crack<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>-brained
+individual who mourns the supposed death of
+a lady-love, <i>Eleanor St. Fleur</i>. Other characters are
+introduced; all French except a remarkable driver
+named <i>Wogee</i>, who tells legends and historic incidents
+in as good verse, apparently, as the author was able to
+produce. <i>St. Julian</i> is twice on the point of committing
+suicide; once on Queenston Heights, and again at
+the falls. Just as he is about to throw himself into the
+river he hears his <i>Ellen's</i> voice&mdash;the lady, it seems,
+had come from France by a different route&mdash;all the
+mysteries are cleared up, and the reunited lovers and
+their friends decide to "hasten hence,"</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Again to our dear native France,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where we shall talk of all we saw,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At thy dread falls, Niagara.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>From about this date the personal adventures of individuals
+bound for Niagara cease to be told in verse,
+and if they were they would cease to be of much historic
+interest. The relation of the poets to Niagara
+no longer concerns us because of its historic aspect.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>There remains, however, an even more important
+division of the subject. The review must be less narrative
+than critical, to satisfy the natural inquiry,
+What impress upon the poetry of our literature has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+this greatest of cataracts made during the three-quarters
+of a century that it has been easily accessible to
+the world? What of the supreme in poetry has been
+prompted by this mighty example of the supreme in
+nature? The proposition at once suggests subtleties
+of analysis which must not be entered upon in this
+brief survey. The answer to the question is attempted
+chiefly by the historical method. A few selected examples
+of the verse which relates to Niagara will, by
+their very nature, indicate the logical answer to the
+fundamental inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>There is much significance in the fact, that what has
+been called the best poem on Niagara was written by
+one who never saw the falls. Chronologically, so far
+as I have ascertained, it is the work which should next
+be considered, for it appeared in the columns of a
+New-England newspaper, about the time when the
+newly-opened highway to the West robbed Niagara
+forever of her majestic solitude, and filled the world
+with her praise. They may have been travelers' tales
+that prompted, but it was the spiritual vision of the true
+poet that inspired the lines printed in the <i>Connecticut
+Mirror</i> at Hartford, about 1825, by the delicate,
+gentle youth, John G. C. Brainard. It is a poem
+much quoted, of a character fairly indicated by these
+lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i12">It would seem<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if God formed thee from his "hollow hand"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hung his bow upon thine awful front;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And spoke in that loud voice, which seemed to him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who dwelt in Patmos for his Savior's sake,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"The sound of many waters"; and bade<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy flood to chronicle the ages back,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And notch his centuries in the eternal rocks.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Measured by the strength of an Emerson or a Lowell,
+this is but feeble blank verse, approaching the
+bombastic; but as compared with what had gone
+before, and much that was to follow, on the Niagara
+theme, it is a not unwelcome variation.</p>
+
+<p>The soul's vision, through imagination's magic glass,
+receives more of Poesy's divine light than is shed upon
+all the rapt gazers at the veritable cliff and falling flood.</p>
+
+<p>During the formative years of what we now regard
+as an established literary taste, but which later generations
+will modify in turn, most American poetry was
+imitative of English models. Later, as has been
+shown, there was an assertively patriotic era; and later
+still, one of great laudation of America's newly-discovered
+wonders, which in the case of Niagara took
+the form of apostrophe and devotion. To the patriotic
+literature of Niagara, besides examples already cited,
+belongs Joseph Rodman Drake's "Niagara," printed
+with "The Culprit Fay, and Other Poems" in 1835.<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a>
+It is a poem which would strike the critical ear of
+today, I think, as artificial; its sentiment, however, is
+not to be impeached. The poet sings of the love of
+freedom which distinguishes the Swiss mountaineer;
+of the sailor's daring and bravery; of the soldier's hero<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>ism,
+even to death. Niagara, like the alp, the sea, and
+the battle, symbolizes freedom, triumph and glory:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then pour thy broad wave like a flood from the heavens,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Each son that thou rearest, in the battle's wild shock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the death-speaking note of the trumpet is given,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Will charge like thy torrent or stand like thy rock.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Let his roof be the cloud and the rock be his pillow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Let him stride the rough mountain or toss on the foam,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let him strike fast and well on the field or the billow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In triumph and glory for God and his home!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Nine years after Drake came Mrs. Sigourney, who,
+notwithstanding her genuine love of nature and of
+mankind, her sincerity and occasional genius, was
+hopelessly of the sentimental school. Like Frances
+S. Osgood, N. P. Willis and others now lost in even
+deeper oblivion, she found great favor with her day
+and generation. Few things from her ever-productive
+pen had a warmer welcome than the lines beginning:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Up to the table-rock, where the great flood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Reveals its fullest glory,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">and her "Farewell to Niagara," concluding</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">... it were sweet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To linger here, and be thy worshipper,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Until death's footstep broke this dream of life.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Supremely devout in tone, her Niagara poems are
+commonplace in imagination. Her fancy rarely reaches
+higher than the perfectly obvious. I confess that I
+cannot read her lines without a vision of the lady herself
+standing in rapt attitude on the edge of Table
+Rock, with note-book in hand and pencil uplifted to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+catch the purest inspiration from the scene before her.
+She is the type of a considerable train of writers whose
+Niagara effusions leave on the reader's mind little impression
+beyond an iterated "Oh, thou great Niagara,
+Oh!" Such a one was Richard Kelsey, whose
+"Niagara and Other Poems," printed in London in
+1848, is likely to be encountered in old London bookshops.
+I have read Mr. Kelsey's "Niagara" several
+times. Once when I first secured the handsome gilt-edged
+volume; again, later on, to discover why I failed
+to remember any word or thought of it; and again, in
+the preparation of this paper, that I might justly characterize
+it. But I am free to confess that beyond a
+general impression of Parnassian attitudinizing and
+extravagant apostrophe I get nothing out of its pages.
+Decidedly better are the lines "On Visiting the Falls
+of Niagara," by Lord Morpeth, the Earl of Carlisle,
+who visited Niagara in 1841.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> He, too, begins with
+the inevitable apostrophe:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There's nothing great or bright, thou glorious fall!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou mayst not to the fancy's sense recall&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">but he saves himself with a fairly creditable sentiment:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh! may the wars that madden in thy deeps<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There spend their rage nor climb the encircling steeps,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And till the conflict of thy surges cease<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The nations on thy bank repose in peace.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A British poet who should perhaps have mention in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+this connection is Thomas Campbell, whose poem,
+"The Emigrant," contains an allusion to Niagara. It
+was published anonymously in 1823 in the <i>New Monthly
+Magazine</i>, which Campbell then edited.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
+
+<p>No poem on Niagara that I know of is more entitled
+to our respectful consideration than the elaborate work
+which was published in 1848 by the Rev. C. H. A.
+Bulkley of Mt. Morris, N. Y. It is a serious attempt to
+produce a great poem with Niagara Falls as its theme.
+Its length&mdash;about 3,600 lines&mdash;secures to Western
+New York the palm for elaborate treatment of the cataract
+in verse. "Much," says the author, "has been
+written hitherto upon Niagara in fugitive verse, but no
+attempt like this has been made to present its united
+wonders as the theme of a single poem. It seems a bold
+adventure and one too hazardous, because of the greatness
+of the subject and the obscurity of the bard; but
+his countrymen are called upon to judge it with impartiality,
+and pronounce its life or its death. The
+author would not shrink from criticism.... His
+object has been, not so much to describe at length
+the scenery of Niagara in order to excite emotions in
+the reader similar to those of the beholder, for this
+would be a vain endeavor, as to give a transcript of
+what passes through the mind of one who is supposed
+to witness so grand an achievement of nature. The
+difficulty," he adds, "with those who visit this wonderful
+cataract is to give utterance to those feelings and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+thoughts that crowd within and often, because thus pent
+up, produce what may be termed the pain of delight."</p>
+
+<p>Of a poem which fills 132 duodecimo pages it is
+difficult to give a fair idea in a few words. There is an
+introductory apostrophe, followed by a specific apostrophe
+to the falls as a vast form of life. Farther on the
+cataract is apostrophized as a destroyer, as an historian,
+a warning prophet, an oracle of truth, a tireless laborer.
+There are many passages descriptive of the islands, the
+gorge, the whirlpool, etc. Then come more apostrophes
+to the fall respecting its origin and early life.
+It is viewed as the presence-chamber of God, and as a
+proof of Deity. Finally, we have the cataract's hymn
+to the Creator, and the flood's death-dirge.</p>
+
+<p>No long poem is without its commonplace intervals.
+Mr. Bulkley's "Niagara" has them to excess, yet as a
+whole it is the work of a refined and scholarly mind, its
+imagination hampered by its religious habit, but now
+and than quickened to lofty flights, and strikingly sustained
+and noble in its diction. Only a true poet takes
+such cognizance of initial impulses and relations in nature
+as this:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In thy hoarse strains is heard the desolate wail<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of streams unnumbered wandering far away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From mountain homes where, 'neath the shady rocks<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their parent springs gave them a peaceful birth.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It presents many of the elements of a great poem,
+reaching the climax in the cataract's hymn to the
+Creator, beginning</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh mighty Architect of Nature's home!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span></p>
+<p>At about this period&mdash;to be exact, in 1848&mdash;there
+was published in New York City, as a pamphlet or
+thin booklet, a poem entitled "Niagara," by "A
+Member of the Ohio Bar," of whose identity I know
+nothing. It is a composition of some merit, chiefly
+interesting by reason of its concluding lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i10">... Then so live,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That when in the last fearful mortal hour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy wave, borne on at unexpected speed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O'erhangs the yawning chasm, soon to fall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou start not back affrighted, like a youth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That wakes from sleep to find his feeble bark<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Suspended o'er Niagara, and with shrieks<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And unavailing cries alarms the air,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tossing his hands in frenzied fear a moment,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then borne away forever! But with gaze<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Calm and serene look through the eddying mists,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On Faith's unclouded bow, and take thy plunge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As one whose Father's arms are stretched beneath,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who falls into the bosom of his God!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The close parallelism of these lines with the exalted
+conclusion of "Thanatopsis" is of course obvious;
+but they embody a symbolism which is one of the best
+that has been suggested by Niagara.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>From the sublime to the ridiculous was never a
+shorter descent than in this matter of Niagara poetry.
+At about the time Mr. Bulkley wrote, and for some
+years after, it was the pernicious custom to keep public
+albums at the Table Rock and other points at the
+falls, for the record of "impressions." Needless to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+say, these albums filled up with rubbish. To bad taste
+was added the iniquity of publication, so that future
+generations may be acquainted with one of the least
+creditable of native American literary whims. The
+editor of one of these albums, issued in 1856, lamented
+that "the innumerable host of visitors who have perpetrated
+composition in the volumes of manuscript
+now before us, should have added so little to the general
+stock of legitimate and permanent literature";
+and he adds&mdash;by way seemingly of adequate excuse&mdash;that
+"the actual amount of frivolous nonsense which
+constitutes so large a portion of the contents ...
+is not all to be calculated by the specimens now and
+then exhibited. We have given the best," he says,
+"always taking care that decency shall not be outraged,
+nor delicacy shocked; and in this respect, however
+improbable it may seem, precaution has been by no
+means unnecessary." What a commentary on the sublime
+in nature, as reflected on man in the mass!</p>
+
+<p>These Table-Rock Albums contain some true poetry;
+much would-be fine verse which falls below mediocre;
+much of horse-play or puerility; and now and then a
+gleam of wit. Here first appeared the lines which
+I remember to have conned years ago in a school-rhetoric,
+and for which, I believe, N. P. Willis was
+responsible:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To view Niagara Falls one day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A parson and a tailor took their way;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The parson cried, whilst wrapped in wonder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And listening to the cataract's thunder,<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span><span class="i0">"Lord! how thy works amaze our eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And fill our hearts with vast surprise";&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tailor merely made his note:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Lord! what a place to sponge a coat!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There has been many a visitor at Niagara Falls who
+shares the sentiments of one disciple of the realistic
+school:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Loud roars the waters, O,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loud roars the waters, O,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When I come to the Falls again<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I hope they will not spatter so.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another writes:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">My thoughts are strange, sublime and deep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As I look up to thee&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What a glorious place for washing sheep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Niagara would be!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Examples of such doggerel could be multiplied by
+scores, but without profit. There was sense if not
+poetry in the wight who wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I have been to "Termination Rock"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where many have been before;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But as I can't describe the scene<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I wont say any more.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Infinitely better than this are the light but pleasing
+verses written in a child's album, years ago, by the late
+Col. Peter A. Porter of Niagara Falls. He pictured
+the discovery of the falls by La Salle and Hennepin
+and ponders upon the changes that have followed:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">What troops of tourists have encamped upon the river's brink;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What poets shed from countless quills Niagaras of ink;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What artist armies tried to fix the evanescent bow<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And stately inns feed scores of guests from well-replenished larder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hackmen drive their horses hard, but drive a bargain harder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And screaming locomotives rush in anger to and fro;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the waters fall as once they fell two hundred years ago.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And brides of every age and clime frequent the islands' bower,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And gaze from off the stone-built perch&mdash;hence called the Bridal Tower&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And many a lunar belle goes forth to meet a lunar beau,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Towards the close of the long poem the author takes
+a more serious tone, but throughout he keeps up a
+happy cleverness, agreeably in contrast to the prevailing
+high gush on one hand and balderdash on the other.</p>
+
+<p>Among the writers of serious and sometimes creditable
+verse whose names appear in the Table-Rock
+Albums were Henry D. O'Reilly, C. R. Rowland,
+Sarah Pratt, Maria del Occidente, George Menzies,
+Henry Lindsay, the Rev. John Dowling, J. S. Buckingham,
+the Hon. C. N. Vivian, Douglas Stuart, A. S.
+Ridgely of Baltimore, H. W. Parker, and Josef
+Leopold Stiger. Several of these names are not unknown
+in literature. Prof. Buckingham is remembered
+as an earlier Bryce, whose elaborate three-volume
+work on America is still of value. Vivian was a distinguished
+traveler who wrote books; and Josef Leopold
+Stiger's stanzas beginning</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Sei mir gegr&uuml;sst, des jungen Weltreichs Stolz und Zierde!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">are by no means the worst of Niagara poems.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I cannot conceive of Niagara Falls as a scene promotive
+of humor, or suggestive of wit. Others may
+see both in John G. Saxe's verses, of which the first
+stanza will suffice to quote:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">See Niagara's torrent pour over the height,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">How rapid the stream! how majestic the flood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rolls on, and descends in the strength of his might,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As a monstrous great frog leaps into the mud!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "poem" contains six more stanzas of the same
+stamp.</p>
+
+<p>The writing of jingles and doggerel having Niagara
+as a theme did not cease when the Albums were no
+longer kept up. If there is no humor or grotesqueness
+in Niagara, there is much of both in the human accessories
+with which the spot is constantly supplied, and
+these will never cease to stimulate the wits. I believe
+that a study of this field&mdash;not in a restricted, but a
+general survey&mdash;would discover a decided improvement,
+in taste if not in native wit, as compared with
+the compositions which found favor half a century ago.
+Without entering that field, however, it will suffice to
+submit in evidence one "poem" from a recent publication,
+which shows that the making of these American
+<i>genre</i> sketches, with Niagara in the background, is not
+yet a lost art:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Before Niagara Falls they stood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He raised aloft his head,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For he was in poetic mood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And this is what he said:<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh, work sublime! Oh, wondrous law<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That rules thy presence here!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How filled I am with boundless awe<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To view thy waters clear!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"What myriad rainbow colors float<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">About thee like a veil,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in what countless streams remote<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thy life has left its trail!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Yes, George," the maiden cried in haste,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">"Such shades I've never seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I'm going to have my next new waist<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The color of that green."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>From about 1850 down to the present hour there is
+a striking dearth of verse, worthy to be called poetry,
+with Niagara for its theme. Newspapers and magazines
+would no doubt yield a store if they could be gleaned;
+perchance the one Niagara pearl of poetry is thus
+overlooked; but it is reasonably safe to assume that
+few really great poems sink utterly from sight. There
+is, or was, a self-styled Bard of Niagara, whose verses,
+printed at Montreal in 1872, need not detain us. The
+only long work on the subject of real merit that I know
+of, which has appeared in recent years, is George
+Houghton's "Niagara," published in 1882. Like Mr.
+Bulkley, he has a true poet's grasp of the material
+aspect of his subject:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Formed when the oceans were fashioned, when all the world was a workshop;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loud roared the furnace fires and tall leapt the smoke from volcanoes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Scooped were round bowls for lakes and grooves for the sliding of rivers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whilst with a cunning hand, the mountains were linked together.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then through the day-dawn, lurid with cloud, and rent by forked lightning,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stricken by earthquake beneath, above by the rattle of thunder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sudden the clamor was pierced by a voice, deep-lunged and portentous&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thine, O Niagara, crying, "Now is creation completed!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He sees in imagination the million sources of the
+streams in forest and prairie, which ultimately pour
+their gathered "tribute of silver" from the rich
+Western land into the lap of Niagara. He makes
+skillful use of the Indian legendry associated with the
+river; he listens to Niagara's "dolorous fugue," and
+resolves it into many contributory cries. In exquisite
+fancy he listens to the incantation of the siren rapids:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thus, in some midnight obscure, bent down by the storm of temptation<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pine trees, thrusting their way and trampling down one another,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Curious, lean and listen, replying in sobs and in whispers;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till of the secret possessed, which brings sure blight to the hearer<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Faltering, they stagger brinkward&mdash;clutch at the roots of the grasses,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cry&mdash;a pitiful cry of remorse&mdash;and plunge down in the darkness.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The cataract in its varied aspects is considered with
+a thought for those who</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Sin, and with wine-cup deadened, scoff at the dread of hereafter,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, because all seems lost, besiege Death's door-way with gladness.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+<p>The master-stroke of the poem is in two lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">That alone is august which is gazed upon by the noble,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That alone is gladsome which eyes full of gladness discover.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Herein lies the rebuking judgment upon Niagara's detractors,
+not all of whom have perpetrated album rhymes.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Houghton, as the reader will note, recognizes
+the tragic aspect of Niagara. Considering the insistence
+with which accident and suicide attend, making
+here an unappeased altar to the weaknesses and woes of
+mankind, this aspect of Niagara has been singularly
+neglected by the poets. We have it, however, exquisitely
+expressed, in the best of all recent Niagara verse&mdash;a
+sonnet entitled "At Niagara," by Richard Watson
+Gilder.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> The following lines illustrate our point:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There at the chasm's edge behold her lean<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Trembling, as, 'neath the charm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A wild bird lifts no wing to 'scape from harm;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her very soul drawn to the glittering, green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Smooth, lustrous, awful, lovely curve of peril;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While far below the bending sea of beryl<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thunder and tumult&mdash;whence a billowy spray<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Enclouds the day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>There is a considerable amount of recent verse commonly
+called "fugitive" that has Niagara for its theme,
+but I find little that calls for special attention. A few
+Buffalo writers, the Rev. John C. Lord, Judge Jesse
+Walker, David Gray, Jas. W. Ward, Henry Chandler,
+and the Rev. Benjamin Copeland among them, have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+found inspiration in the lake and river for some of the
+best lines that adorn the purely local literature of the
+Niagara region. Indeed, I know of no allusion to Niagara
+more exquisitely poetical than the lines in David
+Gray's historical poem, "The Last of the Kah-Kwahs,"
+in which he compares the Indian villages
+sleeping in ever-threatened peace to</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">... the isle<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That, locked in wild Niagara's fierce embrace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Still wears a smile of summer on its face&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Love in the clasp of Madness.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>With this beautiful imagery in mind, recall the lines
+of Byron:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">On the verge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An Iris sits amidst the infernal surge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Resembling, 'mid the tortures of the scene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Love watching Madness with unalterable mien.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Byron did not write of Niagara, but these stanzas
+beginning</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The roar of waters ...<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">often have been applied to our cataract. Mr. Gray
+may or may not have been familiar with them. In any
+event he improved on the earlier poet's figure.</p>
+
+<p>Merely as a matter of chronicle, it is well to record
+here the names of several writers, some of them of
+considerable reputation, who have contributed to
+the poetry of Niagara. Alfred B. Street's well-known
+narrative poem, "Frontenac," contains Niagara
+passages. So does Levi Bishop's metrical volume<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+"Teuchsa Grondie" ("Whip-poor-will"), the Niagara
+portion dedicated to the Hon. Augustus S. Porter.
+Ever since Chateaubriand wrote "Atala," authors
+have been prompted to associate Indian legends with
+Niagara, but none has done this more happily than
+William Trumbull, whose poem, "The Legend of the
+White Canoe," illustrated by F. V. Du Mond, is one of
+the most artistic works in all the literature of Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. William Ellery Channing, the Rev. Joseph
+H. Clinch, the Rev. Joseph Cook, Christopher P.
+Cranch, Oliver I. Taylor, Grenville Mellen, Prof.
+Moffat, John Savage, Augustus N. Lowry, Claude James
+Baxley of Virginia, Abraham Coles, M. D., Henry
+Howard Brownell, the Rev. Roswell Park, Willis
+Gaylord Clark, Mary J. Wines, M. E. Wood, E. H.
+Dewart, G. W. Cutter, J. N. McJilton, and the
+Chicago writer, Harriet Monroe, are, most of them,
+minor poets (some, perhaps, but poets by courtesy),
+whose tributes to our cataract are contained in their
+collected volumes of verse. In E. G. Holland's
+"Niagara and Other Poems" (1861), is a poem on
+Niagara thirty-one pages long, with several pages of
+notes, "composed for the most part by the Drachenfels,
+one of the Seven Mountains of the Rhine, in the
+vicinity of Bonn, September, 1856, and delivered as
+a part of an address on American Scenery the day
+following." Among the Canadian poets who have
+attempted the theme, besides several already named,
+may be recorded John Breakenridge, a volume of
+whose verse was printed at Kingston in 1846; Charles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+Sangster, James Breckenridge, John Imrie, and William
+Rice, the last three of Toronto. The French-Canadian
+poet, Louis Fr&eacute;chette, has written an excellent
+poem, "Le Niagara." Wm. Sharpe, M. D.,
+"of Ireland," wrote at length in verse on "Niagara
+and Nature Worship." Charles Pelham Mulvaney
+touches the region in his poem, "South Africa
+Remembered at Niagara." One of the most striking
+effusions on the subject comes from the successful
+Australian writer, Douglas Sladen. It is entitled "To
+the American Fall at Niagara," and is dated "Niagara,
+Oct. 18, 1899":</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Niagara, national emblem! Cataract<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Born of the maddened rapids, sweeping down<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Direct, resistless from the abyss's crown<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Into the deep, fierce pool with vast impact<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Scarce broken by the giant boulders, stacked<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To meet thine onslaught, threatening to drown<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Each tillaged plain, each level-loving town<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twixt thee and ocean. Lo! the type exact!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">America Niagarized the world.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Europe, a hundred years agone, beheld<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An avalanche, like pent-up Erie, hurled<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Through barriers, to which the rocks of eld<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Seemed toy things&mdash;leaping into godlike space<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A sign and wonder to the human race.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Friedrich Bodenstedt and Wilhelm Meister of
+Germany, J. B. Scandella and the Rev. Santo Santelli
+of Italy ("Cascada di Niagara," 1841), have place<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+among our Niagara poets. So, conspicuously, has
+Juan Antonio Perez Bonalde, whose illustrated volume,
+"El Poema del Niagara," dedicated to Emilio Castelar,
+with a prose introduction of twenty-five pages by
+the Cuban martyr Jos&eacute; Mart&iacute;, was published in New
+York, reaching at least a second edition, in 1883.
+Several Mexican poets have addressed themselves to
+Niagara. "&Aacute; la Catarata del Ni&aacute;gara" is a sonnet by
+Don Manuel Carpio, whose collected works have been
+issued at Vera Cruz, Paris, and perhaps elsewhere. In
+the dramatic works of Don Vincente Riva Palacio
+and Don Juan A. Mateos is found "La Catarata del
+Ni&aacute;gara," a three-act drama in verse; the first two
+acts occur in Mexico, in the house of <i>Dona Rosa</i>, the
+third act is at Niagara Falls, the time being 1847.<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>
+The Spanish poet Antonio Vinageras, nearly fifty years
+ago, wrote a long ode on Niagara, dedicating it to
+"la c&eacute;lebre poetisa, Do&ntilde;a Gertrudis Gomez de
+Avellaneda." In no language is there a nobler poem
+on Niagara than the familiar work by Maria Jos&eacute;
+Heredosia, translated from the Spanish by William
+Cullen Bryant. The Comte de Fleury, who visited
+Niagara a few years ago, left a somewhat poetical
+souvenir in French verse. Fredrika Bremer, whose
+prose is often unmetered poetry even after translation,
+wrote of Niagara in a brief poem. The following is
+a close paraphrase of the Swedish original:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Niagara is the betrothal of Earth's life<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With the Heavenly life.<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span><span class="i0">That has Niagara told me to-day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now can I leave Niagara. She has<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Told me her word of primeval being.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another Scandinavian poet, John Nyborn, has written
+a meritorious poem on Niagara Falls, an adaptation
+of which, in English, was published some years since
+by Dr. Albin Bernays.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It is a striking fact that Niagara's stimulus to the
+poetic mind has been quite as often through the ear as
+through the eye. The best passages of the best poems
+are prompted by the sound of the falling waters, rather
+than by the expanse of the flood, the height of cliffs,
+or the play of light. In Mr. Bulkley's work, which
+indeed exhausts the whole store of simile and comparison,
+we perpetually hear the voice of the falls, the
+myriad voices of nature, the awful voice of God.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Minstrel of the Floods,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noin">he cries:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">What p&aelig;ans full of triumph dost thou hymn!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">However varied is the rhythm sweet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of thine unceasing song! The ripple oft<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Astray along thy banks a lyric is<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of love; the cool drops trickling down thy sides<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are gentle sonnets; and thy lesser falls<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are strains elegiac, that sadly sound<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A monody of grief; thy whirlpool fierce,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A shrill-toned battle-song; thy river's rush<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A strain heroic with its couplet rhymes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><b>. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; . &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; .</b><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While the full sweep of thy close-crowded tide<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Resounds supreme o'er all, an epic grand.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
+<p>Of this class, too, is the "Apostrophe to Niagara,"
+by one B. Frank Palmer, in 1855. It is said to have
+been "written with the pencil in a few minutes, the
+author seated on the bank, drenched, from the mighty
+bath at Termination Rock, and still listening to the
+roar and feeling the eternal jar of the cataract." The
+Rev. T. Starr King, upon reading it in 1855, said:
+"The apostrophe has the music of Niagara in it."
+As a typical example of the devotional apostrophe it
+is perhaps well to give it in full:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">This is Jehovah's fullest organ strain!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I hear the liquid music rolling, breaking.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the gigantic pipes the great refrain<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Bursts on my ravished ear, high thoughts awaking!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The low sub-bass, uprising from the deep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Swells the great p&aelig;an as it rolls supernal&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Anon, I hear, at one majestic sweep<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The diapason of the keys eternal!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Standing beneath Niagara's angry flood&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The thundering cataract above me bounding&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I hear the echo: "Man, there is a God!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From the great arches of the gorge resounding!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Behold, O man! nor shrink aghast in fear!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Survey the vortex boiling deep before thee!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Hand that ope'd the liquid gateway here<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Hath set the beauteous bow of promise o'er thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Here, in the hollow of that Mighty Hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Which holds the basin of the tidal ocean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let not the jarring of the spray-washed strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Disturb the orisons of pure devotion.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Roll on, Niagara! great River King!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Beneath thy sceptre all earth's rulers, mortal,<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span><span class="i0">Bow reverently; and bards shall ever sing<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The matchless grandeur of thy peerless portal!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I hear, Niagara, in this grand strain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His voice, who speaks in flood, in flame and thunder&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forever mayst thou, singing, roll and reign&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Earth's grand, sublime, supreme, supernal wonder.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Such lines as these&mdash;which might be many times
+multiplied&mdash;recall Eugene Thayer's ingenious and
+highly poetic paper on "The Music of Niagara."<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a>
+Indeed, many of the prose writers, as well as the versifiers,
+have found their best tribute to Niagara inspired
+by the mere sound of falling waters.</p>
+
+<p>That Niagara's supreme appeal to the emotions is not
+through the eye but through the ear, finds a striking
+illustration in "Thoughts on Niagara," a poem of
+about eighty lines written prior to 1854 by Michael
+McGuire, a blind man.<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> Here was one whose only
+impressions of the cataract came through senses other
+than that of sight. As is usual with the blind, he uses
+phrases that imply consciousness of light; yet to him,
+as to other poets whose devotional natures respond to
+this exhibition of natural laws, all the phenomena
+merge in "the voice of God":</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I stood where swift Niagara pours its flood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Into the darksome caverns where it falls,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And heard its voice, as voice of God, proclaim<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The power of Him, who let it on its course<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Commence, with the green earth's first creation;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And I was where the atmosphere shed tears,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As giving back the drops the waters wept,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On reaching that great sepulchre of floods,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or bringing from above the bow of God,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To plant its beauties in the pearly spray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And as I stood and heard, <i>though seeing nought</i>,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sad thoughts took deep possession of my mind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And rude imagination venturing forth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Did toil to pencil, though in vain, that scene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which, in its every feature, spoke of God.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The poem, which as a whole is far above commonplace,
+develops a pathetic prayer for sight; and employs
+much exalted imagery attuned to the central idea
+that here Omnipotence speaks without ceasing; here is</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A temple, where Jehovah is felt most.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But for the most part, the world's strong singers have
+passed Niagara by; nor has Niagara's newest aspect,
+that of a vast engine of energy to be used for the good
+of man, yet found worthy recognition by any poet of
+potentials.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This survey, though incomplete, is yet sufficiently
+comprehensive to warrant a few conclusions. More
+than half of all the verse on the subject which I have
+examined was written during the second quarter of this
+century. The first quarter, as has been shown, was
+the age of Niagara's literary discovery, and produced
+a few chronicles of curious interest. During the last
+half of the century&mdash;the time in which practically the
+whole brilliant and substantial fabric of American liter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>ature
+has been created&mdash;Niagara well-nigh has been
+ignored by the poets. In all our list, Goldsmith and
+Moore are the British writers of chief eminence who
+have touched the subject in verse, though many British
+poets, from Edwin Arnold to Oscar Wilde, have written
+poetic prose about Niagara. Of native Americans, I
+have found no names in the list of Niagara singers
+greater than those of Drake and Mrs. Sigourney.
+Emerson nor Lowell, Whittier nor Longfellow, Holmes
+nor Stedman, has given our Niagara wonder the dowry
+of a single line. Whitman, indeed, alludes to Niagara
+in his poem "By Blue Ontario's Shore," but
+his poetic vision makes no pause at the falls; nor
+does that of Joseph O'Connor, who in his stirring and
+exalted Columbian poem, "The Philosophy of America,"
+finds a touch of color for his continental cosmorama
+by letting his sweeping glance fall for a
+moment,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To where, 'twixt Erie and Ontario,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Leaps green Niagara with a giant roar.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But in such a symphony as his, Niagara is a subservient
+element, not the dominating theme. Most of the
+Niagara poets have been of local repute, unknown to
+fame.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, must we conclude? Shall we say with
+Martin Farquhar Tupper&mdash;who has contributed to the
+alleged poetry of the place&mdash;that there is nothing sublime
+about Niagara? The many poetic and impassioned
+passages in prose descriptions are against such a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+view. If dimensions, volume, exhibition of power, are
+elements of sublimity, Niagara Falls are sublime. But
+it cannot be said that superlative exhibitions of nature,
+some essentially universal phenomena, like those of
+the sea and sky, excepted, have been made the specific
+subject of verse, with a high degree of success. The
+reason is not far to seek, and lies in the inherent nature
+of poetry. It is a chief essential of poetry that it express,
+in imaginative form, the insight of the human
+soul. The feeble poets who have addressed themselves
+to Niagara have stopped, for the most part, with purely
+objective utterance. In some few instances, as we have
+seen, a truly subjective regard has given us noble lines.</p>
+
+<p>The poetic in nature is essentially independent of the
+detail of natural phenomena. A waterfall 150 feet high
+is not intrinsically any more poetic than one but half
+that height; or a thunder-peal than the tinkle of a rill.
+True poetry must be self-expression, as well as interpretive
+of truths which are manifested through physical
+phenomena. Hence it is in the nature of things that a
+nameless brook shall have its Tennyson, or a Niagara
+flow unsung.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Often spelled "Daillon" or "d'Allion," the latter form suggesting
+origin from the name of a place, as is common in the French. Charlevoix
+sometimes wrongly has it "de Dallion." I follow the spelling as given in
+the priest's own signature to a letter to a friend in Paris, dated at "Tonachain
+[Toanchain], Huron village, this 18th July, 1627," and signed
+"Joseph De La Roche Dallion." The student of seventeenth-century
+history need not be reminded that little uniformity in the spelling of proper
+names can be looked for, either in printed books or manuscripts. In
+French, as in English, men spelled their names in different ways&mdash;Shakespeare,
+it is said, achieving thirty-nine variations. The matter bears on
+our present study because the diversity of spelling may involve the young
+student in perplexity. Thus, the name of the priests Lalemant (there
+were three of them) is given by Le Clercq as "Lallemant," by Charlevoix
+(a much later historian) as "Lallemant" or "Lalemant," but in the contemporary
+"Relations" of 1641-'42 as "Lallemant," "Lalemant" or
+"L'allemant." Many other names are equally variable, changes due to
+elision being sometimes, but not always, indicated by accents, as "Brusl&eacute;,"
+"Br&ucirc;l&eacute;." Thus we have "Jolliet" or "Joliet," "De Gallin&eacute;e" or "De
+Galin&eacute;e," "Du Lu," "Du Luth," "Duluth," etc. When we turn to
+modern English, the confusion is much&mdash;and needlessly&mdash;increased. Dr.
+Shea, the learned translator and editor of Le Clercq, apparently aimed to
+put all the names into English, without accents. Parkman, or his publishers,
+have been guilty of many inconsistencies, now speaking of "Br&eacute;beuf,"
+now of "Brebeuf," and changing "Le Clercq" to "Le Clerc." The
+"Historical Writings" of Buffalo's pre-eminent student in this field,
+Orsamus H. Marshall, share with many less valuable works&mdash;the present,
+no doubt, among them&mdash;these inconsistencies of style in the use of proper
+names.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Mr. Consul W. Butterfield, whose "History of Br&ucirc;l&eacute;'s Discoveries and
+Explorations, 1610-1626," has appeared since the above was written, is of
+opinion that Br&ucirc;l&eacute; did not visit the falls, nor gain any particular knowledge
+of Lake Erie, as that lake is not shown on Champlain's map of 1632;
+but that he and his Indian escort crossed the Niagara near Lake Ontario,
+"into what is now Western New York, in the present county of Niagara,"
+and that "the journey was doubtless pursued through what are now the
+counties of Erie, Genesee, Wyoming, Livingston, Steuben and Chemung
+into Tioga," and thence down the Susquehanna. It is probable that
+Br&ucirc;l&eacute;'s party would follow existing trails, and one of the best defined
+trails, at a later period when the Senecas occupied the country as far west
+as the Niagara, followed this easterly course; but there were other trails,
+one of which lay along the east bank of the Niagara. So long as we have
+no other original source of information except Champlain, Sagard and Le
+Caron, none of whom has left any explicit record of Br&ucirc;l&eacute;'s journeyings
+hereabouts, so long must his exact path in the Niagara region remain
+untraced.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> "Brehan de Gallin&eacute;e," in Margry. Shea has it "Brehaut de Galin&eacute;e."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Why Joliet left the Lake Erie route on his way east, for one much more
+difficult, has been a matter of some discussion. According to the Abb&eacute;
+Galin&eacute;e, he was induced to turn aside by an Iroquois Indian who had been
+a prisoner among the Ottawas. Joliet persuaded the Ottawas to let this
+prisoner return with him. As they drew near the Niagara the Iroquois
+became afraid lest he should fall into the hands of the ancient enemies of
+the Iroquois, the Andastes, although the habitat of that people is usually
+given as from about the site of Buffalo to the west and southwest. At
+any rate it was the representations of this Iroquois prisoner and guide
+which apparently turned Joliet into the Grand River and kept him away
+from the Niagara. The paragraph in de Galin&eacute;e bearing on the matter is
+as follows:
+</p><p>
+"Ce fut cet Iroquois qui montra &agrave; M. Jolliet un nouveau chemin que les
+Fran&ccedil;ois n'avoient point sceu jusques alors pour revenir des Outaouacs dans
+le pays des Iroquois. Cependant la crainte que ce sauvage eut de retomber
+entre les mains des Antastoes luy fit dire &agrave; M. Jolliet qu'il falloit qu'il quittast
+son canot et marchast par terre plustost qu'il n'eust fallu, et mesme sans
+cette terreur du sauvage, M. Jolliet eust pu venir par eau jusques dans le
+lac Ontario, en faisant un portage de demi-lieue pour &eacute;viter le grand sault
+dont j'ay d&eacute;j&agrave; parl&eacute;, mais entin il fut oblig&eacute; par son guide de faire
+cinquante lieues par terre, et abandonner son canot sur lebord du lac Eri&eacute;."
+</p><p>
+It is singular that so important a relation in the history of our region
+has never been published in English. De Galin&eacute;e's original MS. Journal is
+preserved in the Biblioth&egrave;que Nationale, in Paris. It was first printed in
+French by M. Pierre Margry in 1879; but five years prior to that date Mr.
+O. H. Marshall of Buffalo, having been granted access to M. Margry's
+MS. copy, made extracts, which were printed in English in 1874. These
+were only a small portion of the Abb&eacute;'s valuable record. The Ontario
+Historical Society has for some time contemplated the translation and
+publication of the complete Journal&mdash;a work which students of the early
+history of the lake region will hope soon to see accomplished.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Probably that now known as Patterson's Creek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> A minot is an old French measure; about three bushels.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Evidently at Four or Six Mile Creek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Probably what the English call scurvy-grass.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Otherwise Fort Frontenac, now Kingston, Ont.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Sullivan to Jay, Teaogo (Tioga), Sept. 30, 1779.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> I first struck the trail in London, among the Colonial Papers preserved
+in the Public Records Office. Subsequently, in the Archives Department
+at Ottawa, I found that trail broaden into a fair highway. Something
+has been gleaned at Albany; more, no doubt, is to be looked for at
+Washington; but it is an amazing fact that our Government is far less
+liberal in granting access for students to its official records than is either
+England or Canada. But the Niagara region was British during the Revolution,
+and its history is chiefly to be sought in British archives. Especially
+in the Haldimand Papers, preserved in the British Museum, but of
+which verified copies are readily accessible in the Archives at Ottawa, is
+the Revolutionary history of the Niagara to be found. Besides the 232
+great volumes in which these papers are gathered, there are thousands of
+other MSS. of value to an inquirer seeking the history of this region; especially
+the correspondence, during all that term of years, between the commandants
+at Fort Niagara and other upper lake posts, and the Commander in
+Chief of the British forces in America; between that general and the Ministry
+in London, and between the commandants at the posts and the Indian
+agents, fur traders and many classes and conditions of men. For the
+incidents here recorded I have drawn, almost exclusively, on these unpublished
+sources.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> A snow is a three-masted craft, the smallest mast abaft the mainmast
+being rigged with a try-sail. Possibly, on the lakes where shipyards were
+primitive, this type was not always adhered to; but the correspondence
+and orders of the period under notice carefully discriminate between
+snows and schooners.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> See "What Befel David Ogden," in this volume.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> "A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Benjamin Gilbert and
+his Family; Who were surprised by the Indians, and taken from their
+Farms, on the Frontiers of Pennsylvania, in the Spring, 1780. Philadelphia:
+Printed and sold by Joseph Crukshank, in Market-street, between
+Second and Third-streets. M DCC LXXXIV." 12mo, pp. iv-96.
+It was reprinted in London (12mo, pp. 123) in 1785, and again (12mo, pp.
+124, "Reprinted and sold by James Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard
+street") in 1790. A "third edition, revised and enlarged," 16mo, pp. 240,
+bears date Philadelphia, 1848. Of a later edition (8vo, pp. 38, Lancaster,
+Pa., 1890) privately printed, only 150 copies were issued. The work was
+written by William Walton, to whom the facts were told by the Gilberts
+after their return. (Field.) Ketchum made some use of the "Narrative"
+in his "Buffalo and the Senecas," as has Wm. Clement Bryant and
+perhaps other local writers. See also "Account of Benjamin Gilbert,"
+Vol. III., Register of Pennsylvania. A reissue of the original work,
+carefully edited, would not only be a useful book for students of the
+history of Buffalo and the Niagara region, but would offer much in the
+way of extraordinary adventure for the edification of "the general
+reader."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Ketchum says he could not have done so. ("History of Buffalo," Vol.
+I., p. 328.) But Ketchum was misled, as many writers have been in ascribing
+the leadership to Brant. My assertion rests on the evidence of
+contemporary documents in the Archives at Ottawa, especially the MS.
+"Anecdotes of Capt. Joseph Brant, Niagara, 1778," in the handwriting of
+Col. Daniel Claus. Wm. Clement Bryant published a part of it in his
+"Captain Brant and the Old King,"<i> q. v.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> What became of all the scalps brought in to Fort Niagara during these
+years, and delivered up to the British officers, if not for pay, certainly
+for presents? The human scalp, properly dried, is not readily perishable,
+if cared for. Very many of them&mdash;from youthful heads or those white
+with age, the long tresses of women and the soft ringlets of children&mdash;became
+the property of officers at this post. Little is said on this subject
+in the correspondence; we do not see them with flags and other trophies
+in the cathedrals and museums of England. What became of them?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> In another letter to Lord George Germaine, dated Nov. 20, 1780, we
+have a few additional particulars. It is probably the fullest account of
+this calamity in existence. "It is with great concern," wrote Haldimand,
+"I acquaint your Lordship of a most unfortunate event which is just
+reported to me to have happened upon Lake Ontario about the 1st.
+[Nov., 1780.] A very fine snow [schooner] carrying 16 guns, which was
+built last winter, sailed the 31st ultimo from Niagara and was seen several
+times the same day near the north shore. The next day it blew very hard,
+and the vessel's boats, binnacle, gratings, some hats, etc., were found upon
+the opposite shore, the wind having changed suddenly, by Lt. Col. Butler
+about forty miles from Niagara, on his way from Oswego, so there cannot
+be a doubt that she is totally lost and her crew, consisting of forty seamen,
+perished, together with Lt. Col. Bolton of the King's Regiment, whom I
+had permitted to leave Niagara on account of his bad state of health, Lt.
+Colleton of the Royal Artillery, Lt. Royce and thirty men of the 34th Regiment,
+who were crossing the lake to reinforce Carleton Island. Capt.
+Andrews who commanded the vessel and the naval armament upon that
+lake was a most zealous, active, intelligent officer. The loss of so many
+good officers and men is much aggravated by the consequences that will
+follow this misfortune in the disappointment of conveying provisions
+across the lake for the garrison of Niagara and Detroit, which are not
+near completed for the winter consumption, and there is not a possibility
+of affording them much assistance with the vessels that remain, it being
+dangerous to navigate the lake later than the 20th inst., particularly as the
+large vessels are almost worn out. The master builder and carpenters are
+sent off to repair this evil."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> "The Falls of Niagara, or Tourist's Guide," etc., by S. De Veaux.
+Buffalo, 1839.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Capt. Parrish became Indian agent, but Capt. Jones held the office of
+interpreter for many years. "Their councils [with the Indians] were held
+at a council house belonging to the Senecas situated a few rods east of the
+bend in the road just this side of the red bridge across Buffalo Creek on
+the Aurora Plank Road, then little more than an Indian trail; but much of
+their business was transacted at the store of Hart &amp; Lay, situated on the
+west side of Main Street, midway between Swan and Erie streets, and on
+the common opposite, then known as Ellicott Square."&mdash;MS. narrative
+of Capt. Jones's captivity, by Orlando Allen, in possession of William L.
+Bryant of Buffalo. Horatio Jones was captured about 1777 near Bedford,
+Pa., being aged 14; was taken to a town on the Genesee River, where he
+ran the gauntlet, was adopted, and lived with the Indians until liberated
+by the Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1784. The MS. narrative above quoted
+is Orlando Allen's chronicle of facts given to him by Capts. Jones and
+Parrish, and is of exceptional value.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Brig. Powell to Col. van Schaick, Feb. 13, 1780; Haldimand Papers,
+"Correspondence relating to exchange of prisoners," etc., B. 175.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> I cannot better show the real state of affairs at Fort Niagara, towards
+the close of the Revolutionary War, than by submitting the following
+"Review of Col. Johnson's Transactions," which I copy from the Canadian
+Archives. [Series B, Vol. 106, p. 123, <i>et seq.</i>] I do not know that it has ever
+been printed. Obviously written at the instigation of Col. Johnson, it is
+perhaps colored to justify his administrative conduct; but in any event it
+is a most useful picture of conditions at the time. Except for some slight
+changes in punctuation in order to make the meaning more readily
+apparent, the statement is given verbatim:
+</p><p class="ralign">
+<span class="smcap">Montreal</span>, 24th March, 1782.
+</p><p>
+Before Colonel Johnson arrived at Niagara in 1779 the Six Nations lived
+in their original possession the nearest of which was about 100 and the
+farthest about 300 miles from that post. Their warriors were called upon
+as the service required parties, which in 1776 amounted to about 70 men,
+and the expenses attending them and a few occasional meetings ought to
+have been and he presumes were a mere Trifle when compared with what
+must attend their situation when all [were] driven to Niagara, exposed to
+every want, to every temptation and with every claim which their distinguished
+sacrifices and the tenor of Soloman [solemn] Treaties had entitled
+them to from Government. The years 1777 &amp; 1778 exhibited only a
+larger number occasionally employed and for their fidelity and attachment
+to Government they were invaded in 1779 by a rebel army reported to be
+from 5 to 600 men with a train of Artillery who forced them to retire to
+Niagara leaving behind them very fine plantations of corn and vegetables,
+with their cloathing, arms, silver works, Wampum Kettles and Implements
+of Husbandry, the collection of ages of which were distroyed in a deliberate
+manner and march of the rebels. Two villages only escaped that
+were out of their route.
+</p><p>
+The Indians having always apprehended that their distinguished Loyalty
+might draw some such calamity towards them had stipulated that under
+such circumstances they effected [expected] to have their losses made up
+as well as a liberal continuation of favors and to be supported at the expence
+of Government till they could be reinstated in their former possessions.
+They were accordingly advised to form camps around Niagara
+which they were beginning to do at the time of Colonel Johnson's arrival
+who found them much chagrined and prepared to reconcile them to their
+disaster which he foresaw would be a work of time requiring great judgement
+and address in effecting which he was afterwards successful beyond
+his most sanguine expectations, and this was the state of the Indians at
+Colonel Johnson's arrival. As to the state and regulation of Colonel Johnson's
+offices and department at that period he found the duties performed
+by 2 or three persons the rest little acquainted with them and considered as
+less capable of learning them, and the whole number inadequate to that of
+the Indians, and the then requisite calls of the service, and that it was
+necessary after refusing the present wants of the Indians to keep their
+minds occupied by constant military employment, all which he laid before
+the Commander in Chief who frequently honoured his conduct with particular
+approbation.
+</p><p>
+By His Instructions he was to apply to Lieut. Colonel Bolton, more
+especially regarding the modes of this place and the public accounts &amp;c
+from whom he received no further information, than that they were kept,
+and made up by the established house at that post, and consider of goods,
+orders and all contingencies and disbursements for Indians, ranging
+parties, Prisoners, &amp;c. That they were generally arranged half yearly as
+well as the nature of them and of the changeable people they had to deal
+with would permit; that he believed many demands were therefore outstanding
+and that he was glad to have done with passing [i. e., granting of
+passes] as it was impossible for him or any person that had other duties to
+discharge to give them much attention. At which Colonel Johnson expressed
+his concern but was told that the house was established in the
+business and thro' the impossibility of having proper circulating cash in
+another channell they advanced all monies and settled all accounts and
+that that mode had been found most eligable. Colonel Johnson thereupon
+issued the best orders he could devise for the preventing abuses and the
+better regulation of matters relating to goods payment of expenses, and
+proceeding to the discharge of the principal objects of his duty, he, accordingly
+to a plan long since proposed, formed the Indians into Companies
+and by degrees taught them to feel the convenience of having officers set
+apart to each, which they were soon not only reconciled to but highly
+pleased with, by which means he gave some degree of method and form to
+the most Independent race of the Indians, greatly facilitated all business
+with them and by a prudent arrangement of his officers those who were
+before uninformed became in a little time some of the most approved and
+usefull persons in his department, being constantly quartered at such
+places or sent on some services as tended most to their improvement and
+the public advantage, whilst by spiriting up and employing the Indians
+with constant party's along the frontiers from Fort Stanwix to Fort Pitt
+he so harrassed the back settlements, as finally to drive numbers of them
+from their plantation destroying their houses, mills, graneries, &amp;c, frequently
+defeating their scouting parties killing and captivating many of
+their people amounting in the whole to near 900 and all this with few or
+no instances of savage cruelty exclusive of what they performed when
+assisted by His Majesty's Troops as will appear from his returns. By these
+means he presented [? preserved] the spirit of the Indians and kept their
+minds so occupied as to prevent their being disgusted at the want of Military
+aid, which had been long their Topic and which could then be afforded
+according to their requisitions; neither did he admit any point of negociation
+during this period of peculiar hurry, for knowing the importance the
+Oneidas &amp;c., were off [of] to the rebels and the obstruction they gave to
+all means of intelligence from that quarter, he sent a private Belt and
+message on pretence of former Friendship for them, in consequence of
+which he was shortly joined by 430 of them of [whom] 130 were men who
+have since on all occasions peculiarly distinguished themselves, and after
+defeating the rebel Invitation to the Indians he by the renewal of the great
+covenant chain and war Belt which he sent thro' all the nations animation
+to the most western Indians.
+</p><p>
+Soon after with intention to reduce the vast consumption of provisions,
+he with much difficulty prevailed on part of the Indians to begin
+some new plantation, that they might supply themselves with grain, &amp;c;
+but this being an object of the most serious and National concern, and
+urged in the strongest terms by the commander-in-chief, Col. Johnson,
+during the winter 1780, took indefatigable pains to persuade the whole
+to remove and settle the ensuing season on advantageous terms. He had
+himself visited for that purpose but finding that their treaties with and
+expectations from Government, combined with their natural Indulgence
+to render it a matter of infinite difficulty which would encrease by
+delay and probably become unsurmountable he procured some grain from
+Detroit and liberally rewarded the families of Influence at additional expence
+to sett the example to the rest and assisted their beginning to prevent
+a disappointment by which means he has enabled before the end of May
+last to settle the whole about 3500 souls exclusive of those who had joined
+the 2 farms that had not been distroyed by the rebels and thereby with a
+little future assistance, and good management to create a saving of
+&pound;100,000 pr annum N. York currency at the rate of provision is worth there
+to Government, together with a reduction of rum and of all Indian Expenses,
+as will appear from the reduced accounts since these settlements
+were made. The peculiar circumstances above mentioned and the constant
+disappointment of goods from the Crown at the times they were
+most wanted will easily account for the occasional expence. The house
+which conducted the Business at Niagara was perpetually thronged
+by Indians and others. Lieut. Colonel Bolton often sent verbal orders
+for articles as did some other secretaries and sometimes necessity required
+it and often they were charged and others substituted of equal
+value with other irregularities, the consequence of a crew of Indians
+before unknown, of an encrease of duties, and the necessity for sending
+them to plant well satisfied.
+</p><p>
+The number of prisoners thrown upon Colonel Johnson from time to
+time and of Indian Chiefs and their families about his quarters was attended
+with vast trouble and an Expense which it was impossible to ascertain
+with exactness and when he directed the moiety of certain articles of
+consumption to be placed to the account of the Crown, he soon found
+himself lower. The merchants have since been accused of fraud by a
+clerk who lived some time with them, the investigation of which he was
+called suddenly to attend and he now finds that many articles undoubtedly
+issued have been placed to his account instead of their [the] Crown,
+and many false and malicious insinuations circulated to the prejudice of his
+character and his influence with the Indians which is rendered the more
+injurious by his abrupt departure from the shortness of the time, which
+did not permit his calling and explaining to the chiefs the reasons for his
+leaving them as [he] undoubtedly should have done, and therefore, and
+on every public account, his presence is not only effected [expected], but
+is become more necessary among them than ever. This brief summary is
+candidly prepared and is capable of sufficient proof and Illustration.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Site of Rome, N. Y.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Perhaps more correctly, according to eminent authority (Lewis H.
+Morgan), "Ga-nun-da-sa-ga." It was one of the most important of the
+Seneca towns, situated near the site of the present town of Geneva. Gen.
+Sullivan destroyed it in September, 1779, and no attempt was ever made to
+rebuild it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Except perhaps in the case of Capt. Alexander Harper and his party,
+for whom the ordeal was made light, most of the Indians having been
+enticed away from the vicinity of the fort; but this was apparently due to
+Brant, rather than to the British.&mdash;<i>See</i> Ketchum's "History of Buffalo,"
+Vol. I., pp. 374, 375.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> I have followed the old narrative in the spelling of these Indian
+names, which, no doubt, students of Indian linguistics will discover are
+not wholly in accord with the genius of the Seneca tongue.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Ketchum gives Capt. Powell a better character than this incident
+would indicate; and says that he "visited the prisoners among the
+Senecas, at Buffalo Creek, several times during the time they remained
+there, not only to encourage them by his counsel and sympathy, but to administer
+to their necessities, and to procure their release; which was ultimately
+accomplished, mainly through his efforts, assisted by other officers
+at the fort, which [<i>sic</i>] the example and interest of Jane Moore, the Cherry
+Valley captive had influenced to co&ouml;perate in this work of mercy." ["History
+of Buffalo," Vol. I., p. 376.] I have adhered to the spirit and in part,
+to the language, of Ogden's own narrative.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Address delivered at Fort Niagara, N. Y., at the celebration of the
+centennial of British evacuation, August 11, 1896. Amplification on some
+points, not possible in the brief time allotted for the spoken address on that
+occasion, is here made in foot-notes.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> See Oliver Wendell Holmes's beautiful poem, "Francis Parkman,"
+read at the meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society in memory of
+the historian, who died November 8, 1893.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> The first official step towards such fortification was taken by Frontenac.
+On Nov. 14, 1674, he wrote to the Minister, Colbert: "Sieur Joliet
+... has returned three months ago, and discovered some very fine
+Countries, and a navigation so easy through the beautiful rivers he has
+found, that a person can go from Lake Ontario and Fort Frontenac in a
+bark to the Gulf of Mexico, there being only one carrying place, half a
+league in length, where Lake Ontario communicates with Lake Erie. A
+settlement would be made at this point and another bark built on Lake Erie.
+These are projects which it will be possible to effect when Peace will be
+firmly established, and whenever it will please the King to prosecute these
+discoveries." [Paris Docs. I., N. Y. Colonial MSS.] Joliet, it must be
+remembered, was never on the Niagara; whatever representations he
+made to Frontenac regarding it were based on hearsay, very likely on
+reports made to him by La Salle at their meeting in 1669; so that priority in
+promoting the Niagara route reverts after all to that gallant adventurer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> In 1896.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> In the palisaded cabin on the site of Lewiston.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Father Watteaux (also spelled "Watteau," "Vatteaux," etc.) was
+first only in the sense of being assigned to a located mission. "Father
+Gabriel [de la Ribourde] was named Superior.... Father Melithon
+was to remain at Niagara and make it his mission." (Le Clercq, Shea's
+translation, Vol. I., p. 112.) "Father Melithon remained in the house at
+Niagara with some laborers and clerks." (<i>Ib.</i>, p. 113.) This was in the
+summer of 1679; but six months earlier mass had been celebrated on the
+New York side of the Niagara by Father Hennepin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> This statement, which I have elsewhere accepted (<i>See</i> "The Cross-Bearers,"
+p. 28 of this volume), is on the usually unimpeachable authority
+of Dr. John Gilmary Shea, the historian of the Catholic Church in America.
+(<i>See</i> "The Catholic Church in Colonial Days," p. 322.) I find, however,
+on referring to the authorities on which Dr. Shea rests his statement
+that the particular grant made on the date named&mdash;May 27, 1679&mdash;was
+not at Niagara but at Fort Frontenac. (Hennepin, "Nouvelle D&eacute;couverte,"
+p. 108.) At Frontenac La Salle had seigniorial rights, and could
+pass title as he wished; but on the Niagara he had no right to confer
+title, for he held no delegated power beyond the letters patent from the
+King, which permitted him to explore and build forts, under certain
+restrictions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> This would seem to fix the date of the northeast blockhouse at 1790;
+but on examination of other sources of information I discover strong evidence
+that the original construction was earlier. The Duke de la Rochefoucault
+Liancourt, who visited Fort Niagara in June, 1795, wrote: "All
+the buildings, within the precincts of the fort, are of stone, and were built
+by the French." ("Travels," etc., London ed., 1799, Vol. I., p. 257.)
+This would make them antedate July, 1759, which is not true of the
+bakehouse. The Duke may therefore have erred regarding other buildings,
+the northeast blockhouse among them; yet had it been but four or
+five years old, he would not be likely to attribute it to the French.
+Pouchot's plan of the fort (1759) does not show it. I have seen the original
+sketch of a plan in the British Museum, dated Niagara, 1773, which shows,
+with several buildings long since destroyed, two constructions where the
+blockhouses now stand, with this note: "Two stone redoubts built in 1770
+and 1771." An accompanying sketch of the southwest redoubt shows a
+striking similarity to the southwest blockhouse as it now stands, although
+a roadway ran through it and a gun was mounted on top. These redoubts
+may have been remodeled by Gother Mann.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Although I am aware that some American writers, and probably all
+Canadian writers who touch the subject, are offering evidence that there
+was no "massacre" at Wyoming, I still find in the details of that affair
+what I regard as abundant warrant for the designation of "massacre."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Haldimand to T. Townshend, October 25, 1782.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Haldimand to Lord North, June 2, 1782. In the same letter he wrote
+"I have lately received a letter from Brig.-Gen. Maclean who commands
+at Niagara.... Affairs with the Indians are in a very critical state.
+I have ordered and insisted upon Sir John Johnson's immediate departure
+for Niagara in hopes that his influence may be of use in preventing the
+bad consequences which may be apprehended. I have been assured by
+the officers who brought me the accounts of the cessation of arms, via
+New York, that Gen. Schuyler and the American officers made no secret
+of their hostile intentions against the Indians and such Royalists as had
+served amongst them. It is to be hoped that the American Congress will
+adopt a line of conduct more consonant to humanity as well as Policy."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> The full story of the efforts of the United States Government to obtain
+possession of Fort Niagara and the other posts on the northern frontier
+would make a long chapter. I have barely touched a few features of it.
+One episode was the mission of the Baron Steuben to Haldimand, to claim
+the delivery of the posts. Washington selected Steuben because of his
+appreciation of that general's tact and soundness of judgment in military
+matters. The President's instructions under date of July 12, 1783, were
+characteristically precise and judicious. Steuben was to procure from
+General Haldimand, if possible, immediate cession of the posts; failing in
+that, he was to get a pledge of an early cession; "but if this cannot be
+done," wrote Washington, "you will endeavor to procure from him positive
+and definite assurances, that he will as soon as possible give information
+of the time that shall be fixed on for the evacuation of these posts, and
+that the troops of his Britannic Majesty shall not be drawn therefrom until
+sufficient previous notice shall be given of that event; that the troops of
+the United States may be ready to occupy the fortresses as soon as they
+shall be abandoned by those of his Britannic Majesty." An exchange of
+artillery and stores was also to be proposed. Having made these arrangements
+with Haldimand, Steuben was to go to Oswego, thence to Niagara,
+and after viewing the situation, and noting the strength and all the military
+and strategic conditions, was to pass on to Detroit. Armed with these instructions
+from the Commander-in-Chief, Steuben went to Canada, and on the
+8th of August met Gen. Haldimand at Sorel. For once, the man who had
+disciplined the American Army met his match. His report to Washington
+indicates an uncommonly positive reception.
+</p><p>
+"To the first proposition which I had in charge to make," he wrote to
+Washington, Aug. 23, 1783 ["Correspondence of the Revolution," IV.,
+41, 42], "Gen. Haldimand replied that he had not received any orders for
+making the least arrangement for the evacuation of a single post; that he
+had only received orders to cease hostilities; those he had strictly complied
+with, not only by restraining the British troops, but also the savages,
+from committing the least hostile act; but that, until he should receive
+positive orders for that purpose, he would not evacuate an inch of ground.
+I informed him that I was not instructed to insist on an immediate evacuation
+of the posts in question, but that I was ordered to demand a safe conduct
+to, and a liberty of visiting the posts on our frontiers, and now
+occupied by the British, that I might judge of the arrangements necessary
+to be made for securing the interests of the United States. To this he
+answered that the precaution was premature; that the peace was not yet
+signed; that he was only authorized to cease hostilities; and that, in this
+point of view, he could not permit that I should visit a single post occupied
+by the British. Neither would he agree that any kind of negotiation
+should take place between the United States and the Indians, if in his
+power to prevent it, and that the door of communication should, on his
+part, be shut, until he received positive orders from his court to open it.
+My last proposal was that he should enter into an agreement to advise
+Congress of the evacuation of the posts, three months previous to their
+abandonment. This, for the reason before mentioned, he refused, declaring
+that until the definite treaty should be signed, he would not enter into
+any kind of agreement or negotiation whatever."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> The inability of the New York State Government to accomplish anything
+in the matter at this time is illustrated by the following extract from
+Gov. Clinton's speech to the Senate and Assembly, January 21, 1784: "You
+will perceive from the communication which relates to the subject that I
+have not been inattentive to the circumstances of the western posts within
+this State. They are undoubtedly of great importance for the protection
+of our trade and frontier settlements, and it was with concern I learnt
+that the propositions made by the State for governing those posts were
+not acceded to by Congress. It affords me, however, some satisfaction
+to find that the Commander-in-Chief was in pursuit of measures for that
+purpose, but my expostulations proved fruitless. The British commander
+in that Department treating the Provisional Articles as a suspension of
+hostilities only, declined to withdraw his garrisons and refused us even
+to visit these posts. It is necessary for me to add that it will now be impracticable
+to take possession of them until spring, and that I have no
+reason to believe that Congress have, or are likely to make any provision
+for the expense which will necessarily occur, it therefore remains for you
+to take this interesting subject into your further consideration."
+</p><p>
+To this the Senate made answer: "The circumstances of our western
+posts excite our anxiety. We shall make no comment on the conduct of
+the British officer in Canada as explained by your Excellency's communication.
+It would be in vain. Convinced that our frontier settlements,
+slowly emerging from the utter ruin with which they were so lately overwhelmed,
+and our fur trade which constitutes a valuable branch in our
+remittances, will be protected by these posts, we shall adopt the best
+measures in our power for their re&euml;stablishment."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> "Lt.-Col. Fish," the Governor General's report continues, "gave me
+the strongest assurances that the proceedings against the Loyalists were
+disapproved by the leading men in the different States, and gave me a
+recent instance of Gov. Clinton having [? saving] Capt. Moore [?] of the
+53d Regiment from the insolence of the mob in New York."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> "Lt.-Col. Hull in the American service, arrived here on the 10th inst.
+with a letter from Major Gen. Knox, dated New York the 13th June....
+I did not think myself, from the tenor of Yr Lordship's letter of the 8th of
+April, authorized to give publicly, any reason for delaying the evacuation
+of the Posts, tho' perhaps it might have had some effect in quickening the
+efforts of Congress to produce the execution of the Article of the Difinitive
+Treaty in favor of the Royalists, tho' I held the same private conversation
+to Lt.-Col. Hull as I had to Lt.-Col. Fish."&mdash;Haldimand to Lord Sydney
+Quebec, July 16, 1784.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Haldimand to Thos. Steile, Esq., of the Treasury; Quebec, Sept. 1, 1784.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> At the risk of overloading my pages with citations from this old correspondence,
+I venture to give the following letter from Lord Dorchester to
+Lt.-Gov. Simcoe, so admirably does it illustrate the British apprehensions
+at the time. It is dated Quebec, Apr. 3, 1796:
+</p><p>
+"Circumstances have arisen, which will probably, for a time, delay the
+evacuation of the Upper Posts, among which some relating to the interests
+of the Indians do not appear the least important. By the 8th article of the
+treaty entered into the 3d August last, between Mr. Wayne and them,
+it is stipulated that no person shall be allowed to reside among or to trade
+with these Indian tribes, unless they be furnished with a license from the
+Government of the United States, and that every person so trading shall
+be delivered up by the Indians to an American Superintendent, to be dealt
+with according to law, which is inconsistent with the third article of the
+Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation, previously concluded between
+His Majesty and the United States by which it is agreed that 'it
+shall at all times be free to His Majesty's subjects and to the citizens of the
+United States and also to the Indians, dwelling on either side of the Boundary
+Line, freely to <i>pass and repass</i>, by land or inland navigation, into the
+respective territories and countries of the two parties on the Continent of
+America (the country within the limits of the Hudson Bay Co. only excepted),
+and to navigate the lakes, rivers and waters thereof, and freely to
+carry on trade and commerce <i>with each other</i>.'
+</p><p>
+"Previously therefore to the actual execution of the treaty on our part,
+it is requisite that we should be convinced that the stipulations entered into
+by the United States will also be fulfilled by them; and on a point so
+interesting to His Majesty's subjects and more especially to the Indians,
+it is indispensably necessary that all doubts and misconceptions should
+be removed. His Majesty's Minister at Philadelphia is accordingly instructed
+to require an explanation on this subject. Till therefore the same
+shall be satisfactorily terminated I shall delay the surrender of the Posts.
+These matters you will be pleased to explain to the Indians, pointing out to
+them at the same time the benevolent care and regard always manifested
+towards them by the King their Father, and particularly the attention that
+has been shown to their interests on the present occasion."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Dorchester to Robert Liston (British Minister at Philadelphia), June
+6, 1796.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Under date of Niagara, August 6, 1796, Peter Russell wrote to the
+Duke of Portland: "All the posts we held on the American side of the
+line in the vicinity of this province, are given up to the United States
+agreeable to the treaty, excepting that of Niagara, which remains occupied
+by a small detachment from the 5th Regiment, until the garrison they have
+ordered thither may arrive from Oswego. And I understand that they
+have not yet taken possession of Michillimackinac from the want of provisions.
+I have directed the officers commanding his Majesty's troops in
+this Province to make me a return of the effective number that may remain
+after the departure of the 5th and 24th Regiments, and of their distribution."
+On August 20th he wrote: "The Fort of Niagara was delivered
+up to a detachment of troops belonging to the United States of America
+on the 11th inst. and the guard left in it by the 5th Regiment has sailed for
+Lower Canada." Mackinac, the last of the posts to be surrendered,
+did not pass into the hands of the Americans until the following October.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> This must not be confounded with the wreck of the steamer President,
+which was never heard from after the storm of March 13, 1841. The
+President of which Mr. Lay wrote was obviously a bark, ship, or other
+sailing craft.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> In one Canadian work, John Charles Dent's "Story of the Upper Canadian
+Rebellion," statements are printed to show that the Caroline did not
+go over the falls, but that her hull sank in shallow water not far below the
+Schlosser landing. There is however a mass of evidence to other effect.
+It is striking that so sensational an episode, happening within the memory
+of many men yet living, should be thus befogged. The contemporary
+accounts which were published in American newspapers were wildly
+exaggerated, one report making the loss of life exceed ninety. (There
+was but one man killed.) Mackenzie himself is said to have spread these
+extravagant reports. He had a gift for the sort of journalism which in
+this later day is called "yellow," a chief iniquity of which is its wanton
+perversion of contemporary record, and the ultimate confusion of history.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> By the end of December, 1837, about 600 men had resorted to Navy
+Island in the guise of "Patriots." Although this number was later
+somewhat increased, the entire "army" at that point probably never
+numbered 1,000.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> There were about 150 Patriots, claiming to be citizens of the United
+States, who were taken prisoners in Upper Canada, and transported to
+Van Dieman's Land. Among those taken near Windsor, besides Marsh,
+were Ezra Horton, Joseph Horton and John Simons of Buffalo, John W.
+Simmons and Truman Woodbury of Lockport. Taken at Windmill Point,
+near Prescott, was Asa M. Richardson of Buffalo. Taken at Short Hills,
+Welland Co., was Linus W. Miller of Chautauqua Co., who afterwards
+wrote a book on the rebellion and his exile; and Benjamin Waite, whose
+"Letters from Van Dieman's Land" were published in Buffalo in 1843.
+Waite died at Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 9, 1895, aged eighty-two. It is
+not unlikely that some Americans who underwent that exile are still living.
+I have seen no list of Americans captured during the outbreak in
+Lower Canada.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> <i>See</i> "Reminiscences of Levi Coffin," p. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> <i>See</i> "John Brown and His Men," p. 171.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> <i>See</i> Siebert's "The Underground Railroad," pp. 35, 36.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> "Narrative of William W. Brown," 1848, pp. 107, 108. Quoted by
+Siebert.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> There is a considerable literature on the specific subject of the Underground
+Railroad, and a great deal more relating to it is to be found in
+works dealing more broadly with slavery, and the political history of our
+country. Of especial local interest is Eber M. Pettit's "Sketches in the
+History of the Underground Railroad," etc., Fredonia, 1879. The author,
+"for many years a conductor on the Underground Railroad line from
+slavery to freedom," has recorded many episodes in which the fugitives
+were brought to Buffalo, Black Rock, or Niagara Falls, and gives valuable
+and interesting data regarding the routes and men who operated them in
+Western New York and Western Pennsylvania.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> I have drawn these facts from Mrs. Jameson's "Winter Studies and
+Summer Rambles in Canada," published in London in 1838. Mrs. Jameson
+was at Niagara in 1837, apparently during or soon after the riot. She
+called on one of the negro women who had been foremost in the fray.
+This woman was "apparently about five-and-twenty," had been a slave in
+Virginia, but had run away at sixteen. This would indicate that she may
+have come a refugee to the Niagara as early as 1828. William Kirby, in
+his "Annals of Niagara," has told Moseby's story, with more detail than
+Mrs. Jameson; he reports only one as killed in the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>&mdash;the schoolmaster
+Holmes&mdash;and adds that "Moseby lived quietly the rest of his life in
+St. Catharines and Niagara." Sir Francis Bond Head's official communication
+to the Home Government regarding the matter reports two as
+killed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> <i>See</i> "A Narrative," by Sir Francis Bond Head, Bart., 2d ed., London,
+1839, pp. 200-204.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> "Letters from the United States, Cuba and Canada," London, 1856,
+p. 118.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> "Canada, Its Defences, Condition and Resources," by W. Howard
+Russell, LL. D., London, 1865, pp. 33, 34.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Mr. Butler's name does not appear in Siebert's history, "The Underground
+Railroad." The "operators" for Erie County named therein
+(p. 414) are Gideon Barker, the Hon. Wm. Haywood, Geo. W. Johnson,
+Deacon Henry Moore, and Messrs. Aldrich and Williams. For Niagara
+County he names Thomas Binmore, W. H. Childs, M. C. Richardson,
+Lyman Spaulding. Chautauqua and Wyoming counties present longer
+lists, and thirty-six are named for Monroe County. As appears from my
+text, the Erie County list could be extended.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> No doubt an investigator could find a number of former slaves, rich in
+reminiscences of Underground days, still living in the villages and towns
+of the Niagara Peninsula, though they would not be very numerous, for,
+as Aunt Betsy says, "the old heads are 'bout all gone now." Between
+Fort Erie and Ridgeway lives Daniel Woods, a former slave, who came by
+the Underground. Harriet Black, a sister-in-law of Mrs. Robinson, still
+living near Ridgeway, was also a "passenger." Probably others live at
+St. Catharines, Niagara and other points of former negro settlement, who
+could tell thrilling tales of their escape from the South. There are many
+survivors on the Canada side of the Niagara, of another class; men or
+women who were born in slavery but were "freed by the bayonet," and
+came North with no fear of the slave-catchers. Of this class at Fort Erie
+are Melford Harris and Thomas Banks. Mr. Banks was sold from Virginia
+to go "down the river"; got his freedom at Natchez, joined the 102d
+Michigan Infantry, and fought for the Union until the end of the war.
+His case is probably typical of many, but does not belong to the records
+of the Underground Railroad.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> H. Clay to Lewis L. Hodges; original letter in possession of the Buffalo
+Historical Society.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Anonymous reminiscences published in the Buffalo Courier, about 1887.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Apparently the greatest travel, at least over these particular routes,
+was during 1840-41. It was a justifiable boast of the "conductors" that a
+"passenger" was never lost. In a journal of notes, which was annually
+kept for many years by one of the zealous anti-slavery men of that day,
+I find the following entry in 1841: "Nov. 1.&mdash;The week has been cold;
+some hard freezing and snow; now warm; assisted six fugitives from
+oppression, from this land of equal rights to the despotic government of
+Great Britain, where they can enjoy their liberty. Last night put them on
+board a steamboat and paid their passage to Buffalo."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> When I knew Frank Henry, he was light-house keeper at Erie. He
+died in October, 1889, and his funeral was a memorable one. After the
+body had been viewed by his friends, while it lay in state in the parlor of
+his old home in Wesleyville, the casket was lifted to the shoulders of the
+pall-bearers, who carried it through the streets of the little village to the
+church, all the friends, which included all the villagers and many from the
+city and the country round about, following in procession on foot. The
+little church could not hold the assemblage, but the overflow waited until
+the service was over, content, if near enough the windows or the open
+door, to hear but a portion of the eulogies his beloved pastor pronounced.
+Then they all proceeded to the graveyard behind the historic church and
+laid him away. He was a man of an exceptionally frank and lovable
+character. Prof. Wilbur H. Siebert mentions him in his history, "The
+Underground Railroad from Slavery to Freedom"; but nowhere else, I
+believe, is as much recorded of the work which he did for the refugee
+slaves as in the incidents told in the following pages; and these, we may
+be assured, are but examples of the service in which he was engaged
+for a good many years.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Afterwards long known as the Lowry Mansion, on Second Street,
+between French and Holland streets. It is still standing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Capt. D. P. Dobbins was for many years a distinguished resident of
+Buffalo. As vessel master, Government official, and especially as inventor
+of the Dobbins life-boat, he acquired a wide reputation; but little has been
+told of his Underground Railroad work. He died in 1892.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> I had the facts of this experience from Mr. Frank Henry, and first
+wrote them out and printed them in the Erie Gazette in 1880. (Ah, Time,
+why hasten so!) In 1894 H. U. Johnson of Orwell, O., published a
+book entitled "From Dixie to Canada, Romances and Realities of the
+Underground Railroad," in which a chapter is devoted to Jack Watson,
+and this experience at the Wesleyville church is narrated, considerably
+embellished, but in parts with striking similarity to the version for which
+Frank Henry and I were responsible. Mr. Johnson gives no credit for his
+facts to any source.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Such an one was the anti-slavery worker, Sallie Holley, who had formerly
+taken great pleasure in the sermons of Mr. Fillmore's pastor, the
+Rev. Dr. Hosmer of the Unitarian Church. When Mr. Fillmore returned
+to Buffalo and was seen again in his accustomed seat, Miss Holley refused
+to attend there. "I cannot consent," she wrote, "that my name shall
+stand on the books of a church that will countenance voting for any pro-slavery
+presidential candidate. Think of a woman-whipper and a baby-stealer
+being countenanced as a Christian!"&mdash;<i>See</i> "A Life for Liberty,"
+edited by John White Chadwick, pp. 60, 69.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> <i>See</i> Seward's "Works," Vol. I., p. 65, <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> <i>See</i> Chamberlain's "Biography of Millard Fillmore," p. 136.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> For the knowledge that the first mention of Niagara Falls is in Champlain's
+"Des Sauvages," we are indebted to the Hon. Peter A. Porter of
+Niagara Falls, who recently discovered, by comparison of early texts,
+that the allusions to the falls in Marc Lescarbot's "Histoire de la Nouvelle
+France" (1609), heretofore attributed to Jacques Cartier, are really quotations
+from "Des Sauvages," published some five years before. There is,
+apparently, no warrant for the oft-repeated statement that Cartier, in 1535,
+was the first white man to hear of the falls. That distinction passes to
+Champlain, who heard of them in 1603, and whose first book, printed at
+the end of that year or early in 1604, gave to the world its first knowledge
+of the great cataract.&mdash;<i>See</i> "Champlain not Cartier," by Peter A. Porter,
+Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1899.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Champlain a bien &eacute;t&eacute; jusqu'&agrave; Mexico, comme on peut le voir dans son
+voyage aux Indes Occidentales; mais il ne s'est pas rendu au P&eacute;rou, que
+nous sachions.&mdash;<i>Note in Quebec reprint, 1870.</i> Nor had he been to
+Niagara.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Mocosa est le nom ancien de la Virginie. Cette expression, <i>saults
+Mocosans</i>, semble donner &agrave; entendre que, d&egrave;s 1603 au moins, l'on avait
+quelque connaissance de la grande chute de Niagara.&mdash;<i>Note in Quebec
+reprint, 1870.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> "Lescarbot &eacute;crit, en 1610, une pi&egrave;ce de vers dans laquelle il parle des
+grands sauts que les sauvages disent rencontrer en remontant le Saint-Laurent
+jusqu'au voisinage de la Virginie."&mdash;<i>Benj. Sulte, "M&eacute;langes
+D'Histoire et de Litterature" p. 425.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> The pronunciation of "Niagara" here, the reader will remark, is necessarily
+with the primary accent on the third syllable; the correct pronunciation,
+as eminent authorities maintain; and, as I hold, the more musical.
+"Ni-ag'-a-ra" gives us one hard syllable; "Ni [or better, -nee]-a-ga'-ra"
+makes each syllable end in a vowel, and softens the word to the ear.
+"Ni-ag'-a-ra" would have been impossible to the Iroquois tongue. But
+the word is now too fixed in its perverted usage to make reform likely, and
+we may expect to hear the harsh "Ni-ag'-a-ra" to the end of the chapter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Dr. Samuel Johnson, as is well known, was responsible for a number of
+lines in "The Traveller." In the verses above quoted the line
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="i0">"To stop too fearful and too faint to go"<br /></span>
+</div>
+<p class="noin">is attributed to him. Thus near does the mighty Johnson, the "Great
+Cham of Literature," come to legitimate inclusion among the poets of
+Niagara!</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> This is not necessarily hyperbole, by any means. Before the Niagara
+region was much settled, filled with the din of towns, the roar of trains,
+screech of whistles and all manner of ear-offending sounds, Niagara's voice
+could be heard for many miles. Many early travelers testify to the same
+effect as Moore. An early resident of Buffalo, the late Hon. Lewis F.
+Allen, has told me that many a time, seated on the veranda of his house on
+Niagara Street near Ferry, in the calm of a summer evening, he has
+heard the roar of Niagara Falls.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Introduced in the Epistle to Lady Charlotte Rawdon. In Moore's day
+there was a tiny islet, called Gull Island, near the edge of the Horseshoe
+Fall. It long since disappeared.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> It had prior publication, serially, with illustrations, in the "Portfolio"
+of Philadelphia, 1809-'10.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Tom Moore's infantile criticisms of American institutions have often
+been quoted with approbation by persons sharing his supposed hostile views.
+What his maturer judgment was may be gathered from the following
+extract from a letter which he wrote, July 12, 1818, to J. E. Hall, editor of
+the "Portfolio," Philadelphia. I am not aware that it ever has been published.
+I quote from the original manuscript, in my possession:
+</p><p>
+"You are mistaken in thinking that my present views of politics are a
+<i>change</i> from those I formerly entertained. They are but a <i>return</i> to those
+of my school &amp; college days&mdash;to principles, of which I may say what
+Propertius said of his mistress: <i>Cynthia prima fuit, Cynthia finis erit</i>.
+The only thing that has ever made them <i>librate</i> in their <i>orbit</i> was that
+foolish disgust I took at what I thought the <i>consequences</i> of democratic
+principles in America&mdash;but I judged by the <i>abuse</i>, not the <i>use</i>&mdash;and the
+little information I took the trouble of seeking came to me through twisted
+and tainted channels&mdash;and, in short, I was a rash boy &amp; made a fool of
+myself. But, thank Heaven, I soon righted again, and I trust it was the
+only deviation from the path of pure public feeling I ever shall have to reproach
+myself with. I mean to take some opportunity (most probably in
+the Life of Sheridan I am preparing) of telling the few to whom my
+opinions can be of any importance, how much I regret &amp; how sincerely
+I retract every syllable, injurious to the great cause of Liberty, which my
+hasty view of America &amp; her society provoked me into uttering....
+</p><p>
+"Always faithfully &amp; cordially Yours,
+</p><p class="ralign">
+"THOMAS MOORE."
+</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> John Neal, or "Yankee Neal," as he was called, is a figure in early
+American letters which should not be forgotten. He was of Quaker
+descent, but was read out of the Society of Friends in his youth, as he
+says, "for knocking a man head over heels, for writing a tragedy, for paying
+a militia fine and for desiring to be turned out whether or no." He was
+a pioneer in American literature, and won success at home and abroad
+several years before Cooper became known. He was the first American
+contributor to English and Scotch quarterlies, and compelled attention to
+American topics at a time when English literature was regarded as the
+monopoly of Great Britain. His career was exceedingly varied and picturesque.
+He was an artist, lawyer, traveler, journalist and athlete. He
+is said to have established the first gymnasium in this country, on foreign
+models, and was the first to advocate, in 1838, in a Fourth-of-July oration,
+the right of woman suffrage. His writings are many, varied, and for
+the most part hard to find nowadays.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Those interested in scarce Americana may care to know that this
+"Wonders of the West" is said by some authorities to be the second book&mdash;certain
+almanacs and small prints excluded&mdash;that was published in Canada
+West, now Ontario. Of its only predecessor, "St. Ursula's Convent,
+or the Nuns of Canada," Kingston, 1824, no copy is believed to exist.
+Of the York school-master's Niagara poem, I know of but two copies,
+one owned by M. Phileas Gagnon, the Quebec bibliophile; the other in
+my own possession. It is at least of interest to observe that Ontario's
+native poetry began with a tribute to her greatest natural wonder, though
+it could be wished with a more creditable example.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> It is a striking fact that "The Culprit Fay," which appeared in 1819,
+was the outgrowth of a conversation between Drake, Halleck and Cooper,
+concerning the unsung poetry of American rivers.&mdash;<i>See</i> Richardson's
+"American Literature," Vol. II., p. 24.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Lord Morpeth made three visits to Niagara. He was the friend and
+guest, during his American travels, of Mr. Wadsworth at the Geneseo
+Homestead; and was also entertained by ex-President Van Buren and
+other distinguished men. His writings reveal a poetic, reflective temperament,
+but rarely rise above the commonplace in thought or expression.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> The lines are not included in ordinary editions of Campbell's poems.
+The original MS. is in the possession of the Buffalo Public Library.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> <i>See</i> "Five Books of Song," by R. W. Gilder, 1894.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Dedicatory sonnet in "Younger American Poets, 1830-1890," edited by
+Douglas Sladen and G. B. Roberts.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> The only edition I have seen was printed in the City of Mexico in 1871.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> <i>See</i> Scribner's Monthly, Feb., 1881.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> <i>See</i> "Beauties and Achievements of the Blind," by Wm. Artman and
+L. V. Hall, Dansville, N. Y., 1854.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by
+Frank H. Severance
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+Project Gutenberg's Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by Frank H. Severance
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier
+
+Author: Frank H. Severance
+
+Release Date: August 5, 2011 [EBook #36974]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD TRAILS ON THE NIAGARA FRONTIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLD TRAILS
+ ON THE
+ NIAGARA FRONTIER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: THE VISION OF BREBEUF.
+ _Drawn by H. H. Green._ _See Page 15._]
+
+
+
+ OLD TRAILS
+ ON THE
+ NIAGARA FRONTIER
+
+ BY FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+ BUFFALO N Y
+ MDCCCXCIX
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT 1899
+ BY FRANK H. SEVERANCE
+
+ THE MATTHEWS-NORTHRUP CO.,
+ COMPLETE ART-PRINTING WORKS,
+ BUFFALO, N. Y.
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE SCHOOLS
+ OF BUFFALO,
+
+ MANY OF WHOM, ON SUNDRY PLEASANT OCCASIONS, HAVE ACCOMPANIED ME, IN
+ SCHOOL-ROOM TALKS, OVER SOME OF THE OLD TRAILS WHICH RUN IN AND OUT
+ OF OUR HOME REGION, THESE STUDIES OF NIAGARA FRONTIER HISTORY ARE
+ CORDIALLY INSCRIBED.
+ F. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ DEDICATION, v
+ PREFACE, ix
+ THE CROSS BEARERS, 1
+ THE PASCHAL OF THE GREAT PINCH, 43
+ WITH BOLTON AT FORT NIAGARA, 63
+ WHAT BEFEL DAVID OGDEN, 107
+ A FORT NIAGARA CENTENNIAL, 141
+ THE JOURNALS AND JOURNEYS OF AN EARLY BUFFALO MERCHANT, 163
+ MISADVENTURES OF ROBERT MARSH, 195
+ UNDERGROUND TRAILS, 227
+ NIAGARA AND THE POETS, 275
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The essays herein contained have been written at "odd moments," and
+for divers purposes. Their chief value lies in the fact that they
+illustrate, several of them by means of individual experiences, certain
+typical and well-defined periods in the history of the Niagara region.
+By "Niagara region," a phrase which no doubt occurs pretty often in the
+following pages, I mean to designate in a historic, not a scenic, sense
+the frontier territory of the Niagara from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. It
+is a region which has a concrete but as yet for the most part unwritten
+history of its own. The value of its past to the student, as is ever the
+case with "local history" in its worthy aspect, depends upon the
+importance of its relation to the general history of our country. That
+the Niagara region has played an important part in that history, is an
+assurance wholly superfluous for even the most casual student of
+American development. All that the following studies undertake is to
+give a glimpse, with such fidelity as may be, of events and conditions
+hereabouts existing, at periods which may fairly be termed typical.
+
+"The Cross Bearers," a paper originally prepared as a lecture for a
+class that was studying the history of the Catholic Church in America,
+is, so far as I am aware, the first attempt to review in a single
+narrative all of the French missions in this immediate vicinity, and the
+work of the English-speaking missionary priests who said mass in the
+Niagara region prior to its full organization under ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction. The data are drawn from the original sources--the Jesuit
+Relations, Champlain, Le Clercq, Hennepin, Charlevoix, Crespel and other
+early writers whose works, in any edition, are often inaccessible to the
+student. For data relating to Bishop Burke, and for other valuable
+assistance, I am indebted to my friend the Very Rev. Wm. R. Harris, Dean
+of St. Catharines.
+
+"The Paschal of the Great Pinch" is an attempt to picture, in narrative
+form, conditions conceived to exist at Fort Niagara in 1687-'8, when the
+Marquis de Denonville made his abortive attempt to occupy that point.
+Lest any reader shall be in doubt as to the genuineness of the memoirs
+of the Chevalier De Tregay, I beg to assure him that Lieut. De Tregay is
+no myth. His name, and practically all the facts on which my sketch is
+based, will be found in the Paris Documents (IV.), "Documentary History
+of the State of New York," Vol. I. This paper stands for the French
+period on the Niagara; the two next following, for the British period.
+
+"With Bolton at Fort Niagara" is almost wholly drawn from unpublished
+records, chiefly the Haldimand Papers, the originals of which are in the
+British Museum, but certified copies of which are readily accessible to
+the student in the Archives at Ottawa. I have made but a slight study of
+the great mass of material from which practically the history of the
+Niagara region during the Revolution is to be written; yet it is
+probable that this slight study makes known for the first time, to
+students of our home history, such facts as the employment of Hessians
+on the Niagara during the Revolution, the first bringing hither of the
+American flag, possibly even the work and fate of Lieut. Col. Bolton
+himself.
+
+The next paper, "What Befel David Ogden," is drawn from a widely
+different, though scarcely less known source. The personal narrative is
+based on an obscure pamphlet by Josiah Priest, published at
+Lansingburgh, N. Y., in 1840. I am aware that Priest is not altogether
+trustworthy as a historian. Dr. Thos. W. Field calls him a "prolific,
+needy and unscrupulous author" [_See_ "An Essay Toward an Indian
+Bibliography"]; yet he concedes to his works "a large amount of historic
+material obtained at some pains from sources more or less authentic." My
+judgment is, that Priest is least trustworthy in his more ambitious
+work; whereas his unpretentious pamphlets, wretchedly printed at a
+country press sixty years ago, contain true narratives of individual
+undertakings in the Revolution, Indian captivities and other pioneer
+experiences, gathered by the writer direct from the hero whose
+adventures he wrote down, without literary skill it is true, but also
+without apparent perversion or exaggeration. The very circumstantiality
+with which David Ogden's experiences are narrated is evidence of their
+genuineness. Corroborative evidence is also furnished by the
+lately-published muster-rolls of New York regiments during the
+Revolution. In the Third Regiment of Tryon County militia, among the
+enlisted men, appears the name of David Ogden ["New York in the
+Revolution," 2d ed., p. 181], and there was but one David Ogden, not
+merely in the Tryon County militia, but so far as these records show, in
+the entire soldiery of New York State. In the same regiment there was
+also a "Daniel" Ogden, Sr., possibly David's father. The name Daniel
+Ogden also occurs in the list of Tryon County Rangers ["New York in the
+Revolution," 2d ed., p. 186], a service in which we would naturally
+expect to find one whom the Indian Brant called "the beaver hunter, that
+old scouter." In short, I think we may accept David as altogether
+genuine, and in his adventures--never told before, I believe, as a part
+of Niagara history--may find an example of patriotic suffering and
+endurance wholly typical of what many another underwent at that time and
+in this region.
+
+The "Fort Niagara Centennial Address" is here included because its most
+important part relates to that period in our history immediately
+following the Revolution, the "hold-over period," during which, for
+thirteen years after the Treaty of 1783, the British continued to occupy
+Fort Niagara and other lake posts. What I say on the negotiations
+leading to the final relinquishment of Fort Niagara is based on
+information gleaned from the manuscript records in London and Ottawa.
+
+"The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant" is also a
+contribution to local annals from an unpublished source, being drawn
+from the MS. journals of John Lay, very kindly placed in my hands by
+members of his family. They afford a picture of conditions hereabouts
+and elsewhere, during the years 1810-'23, which I have thought worthy of
+preservation.
+
+In the "Misadventures of Robert Marsh" I have endeavored by means of a
+personal narrative to illustrate another period in our history. The
+misguided Marsh fairly stands for many of the so-called Patriots whose
+uprising on this border is known as Mackenzie's Rebellion of 1837-'8.
+The considerable literature on this subject includes a number of
+personal narratives, for the most part published in small editions and
+now hard to find; but the scarcest of all, so far as my experience has
+discovered, is that from which I have drawn the story of Robert Marsh:
+"Seven Years of My Life, or Narrative of a Patriot Exile, who together
+with eighty-two American Citizens were illegally tried for rebellion in
+Upper Canada and transported to Van Dieman's Land," etc., etc. It is an
+exceedingly prolix and pretentious title, after the fashion of the time,
+prefacing a badly-written, poorly-printed volume of 207 pages, turned
+out by the press of Faxon & Stevens, Buffalo, 1848. In view of the fact
+that neither in Sabin nor any other bibliography have I found any
+mention of this book, and the further fact that in fifteen years of
+somewhat diligent book-hunting I have discovered but one copy, it is no
+exaggeration to call Marsh's "Narrative" "scarce," if not "rare."
+
+The incidents related in "Underground Trails" are illustrative of many
+an episode at the eastern end of Lake Erie in the days preceding the
+Civil War. I had the facts of the principal adventures some years ago
+from the late Mr. Frank Henry of Erie, Pa., who had himself been a
+participant in more than one worthy enterprise of the Underground
+Railroad. Sketches based on information supplied by Mr. Henry, and
+originally written out for the Erie Gazette, are the latter part of the
+paper as it now stands.
+
+The last essay, "Niagara and the Poets," is a following of "Old Trails"
+chiefly in a literary sense, but it is thought its inclusion here will
+not be found inappropriate to the general character of the collection.
+
+I must add a word of grateful acknowledgment for help received from
+Douglas Brymner, Dominion Archivist, at Ottawa; from the Hon. Peter A.
+Porter of Niagara Falls, N. Y., Charles W. Dobbins of New York City, and
+John Miller, Erie, Pa. F. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+The Cross Bearers.
+
+
+
+
+THE CROSS BEARERS.
+
+
+I invite you to consider briefly with me the beginnings of known history
+in our home region. Of the general character of that history, as a part
+of the exploration and settlement of the lake region, you are already
+familiar. What I undertake is to direct special attention to a few of
+the individuals who made that history--for history, in the ultimate
+analysis, is merely the record of the result of personal character and
+influence; and it is striking to note how relatively few and individual
+are the dominating minds.
+
+Remembering this, when we turn to trace the story of the Niagara, we
+find the initial impulses strikingly different from those which lie at
+the base of history in many places. Often the first chapter in the story
+is a record of war for war's sake--the aim being conquest, acquisition
+of territory, or the search for gold. Not so here. The first invasion of
+white men in this mid-lake region was a mission of peace and good will.
+Our history begins in a sweet and heroic obedience to commands passed
+down direct from the Founder of Christianity Himself. Into these wilds,
+long before the banner of any earthly kingdom was planted here, was
+borne the cross of Christ. Here the crucifix preceded the sword; the
+altar was built before the hearth.
+
+Now, I care not what the faith of the student be, he cannot escape the
+facts. The cross is stamped upon the first page of our home history--of
+this Buffalo and the banks of the Niagara; and whoever would know
+something of that history must follow the footsteps of those who first
+brought the cross to these shores. It is, therefore, a brief following
+of the personal experiences of these early cross bearers that we
+undertake; but first, a word may be permitted by way of reminder as to
+the conditions here existing when our recorded history begins.
+
+From remote days unrecorded, the territory bordering the Niagara,
+between Lakes Erie and Ontario, was occupied by a nation of Indians
+called the Neuters. A few of their villages were on the east side of the
+river, the easternmost being supposed to have stood near the present
+site of Lockport. The greater part of the Niagara peninsula of Ontario
+and the north shore of Lake Erie was their territory. To the east of
+them, in the Genesee valley and beyond, dwelt the Senecas, the
+westernmost of the Iroquois tribes. To the north of them, on Lake Huron
+and the Georgian Bay, dwelt the Hurons. About 1650 the Iroquois overran
+the Neuter territory, destroyed the nation and made the region east of
+the Niagara a part of their own territory; though more than a century
+elapsed, after their conquest of the Neuters, before the Senecas made
+permanent villages on Buffalo Creek and near the Niagara. It is
+necessary to bear this fact in mind, in considering the visits of white
+men to this region during that period; it had become territory of the
+Senecas, but they only occupied it at intervals, on hunting or fishing
+expeditions.
+
+During the latter years of Neuter possession of our region, missionaries
+began to approach the Niagara from two directions; but long before any
+brave soul had neared it through what is now New York State,--then the
+heart of the fierce Iroquois country,--others, more successful, had come
+down from the early-established missions among the Hurons, had sojourned
+among the Neuters and had offered Christian prayers among the savages
+east of the Niagara.
+
+Note, therefore, that the first white man known to have visited the
+Niagara region was a Catholic priest. Moreover, so far as is
+ascertained, he was the first man, coming from what is now Canada, to
+bring the Christian faith into the present territory of the United
+States. This man was Joseph de la Roche Dallion.[1] The date of his
+visit is 1626.
+
+Father Dallion was a Franciscan of the Recollect reform, who had been
+for a time at the mission among the Hurons, then carried on jointly by
+priests and lay brothers of the Recollects and also by Fathers of the
+Society of Jesus. On October 18th of this year (1626), he left his
+companions, resolved to carry the cross among the people of the Neuter
+nation. An interpreter, Brusle, had "told wonders" of these people.
+Brusle, it would seem, therefore, had been among them; and although, as
+I have said, Father Dallion was the first white man known to have
+reached the Niagara, yet it is just to consider the probabilities in the
+case of this all but unknown interpreter. There are plausible grounds
+for belief, but no proof, that Etienne Brusle was the first white man
+who ever saw Niagara Falls. No adventurer in our region had a more
+remarkable career than his, yet but little of it is known to us. He was
+with Champlain on his journey to the Huron country. He left that
+explorer in September, 1615, at the outlet of Lake Simcoe, and went on a
+most perilous mission into the country of the Andastes, allies of the
+Hurons, to enlist them against the Iroquois. The Andastes lived on the
+head-waters of the Susquehanna, and along the south shore of Lake Erie,
+the present site of Buffalo being generally included within the bounds
+of their territory. Champlain saw nothing more of Brusle for three
+years, but in the summer of 1618 met him at Saut St. Louis. Brusle had
+had wonderful adventures, had even been bound to the stake and burned so
+severely that he must have been frightfully scarred. The name by which
+we know him may have been given him on this account. He was saved from
+death by what the Indians regarded as an exhibition of wrath on the part
+of the Great Spirit. I find no trace of him between 1618 and 1626, when
+Father Dallion appears to have taken counsel of him regarding the
+Neuters. Brusle was murdered by the Hurons near Penetanguishene in 1632.
+What is known of him is learned from Champlain's narrative of the voyage
+of 1618 (edition of 1627). Sagard also speaks of him, and says he made
+an exploration of the upper lakes--a claim not generally credited.
+Parkman, drawing from these sources and the "Relations," tells his story
+in "The Pioneers of France in the New World," admiringly calls him "That
+Pioneer of Pioneers," and says that he seems to have visited the Eries
+in 1615.
+
+The interesting thing about him in connection with our present study is
+the fact that he appears to have been the forerunner of Dallion among
+the savages of the Niagara. There is no white man named in history who
+may be even conjectured, with any plausibility, to have visited the
+Niagara earlier than Brusle.[2]
+
+Stimulated by this interpreter's reports, by the encouragement of his
+companions and the promptings of his own zeal, Father Dallion set out
+for the unknown regions. Two Frenchmen, Grenole and Lavallee,
+accompanied him. They tramped the trail for six days through the woods,
+apparently rounding the western end of Lake Ontario, and coming eastward
+through the Niagara Peninsula. They were well received at the villages,
+given venison, squashes and parched corn to eat, and were shown no sign
+of hostility. "All were astonished to see me dressed as I was," writes
+the father, "and to see that I desired nothing of theirs, except that I
+invited them by signs to lift their eyes to heaven, make the sign of the
+cross and receive the faith of Jesus Christ." The good priest, however,
+had another object, somewhat unusual to the men of his calling. At the
+sixth village, where he had been advised to remain, a council was held.
+"There I told them, as well as I could, that I came on behalf of the
+French to contract alliance and friendship with them, and to invite them
+to come to trade. I also begged them to allow me to remain in their
+country, to be able to instruct them in the law of our God, which is the
+only means of going to paradise." The Neuters accepted the priest's
+offers, and the first recorded trade in the Niagara region was made when
+he presented them "little knives and other trifles." They adopted him
+into the tribe, and gave him a father, the chief Souharissen.
+
+After this cordial welcome, Grenole and Lavallee returned to the Hurons,
+leaving Father Joseph "the happiest man in the world, hoping to do
+something there to advance God's glory, or at least to discover the
+means, which would be no small thing, and to endeavor to discover the
+mouth of the river of Hiroquois, in order to bring them to trade." After
+speaking of the people and his efforts to teach them, he continues: "I
+have always seen them constant in their resolution to go with at least
+four canoes to the trade, if I would guide them, the whole difficulty
+being that we did not know the way. Yroquet, an Indian known in those
+countries, who had come there with twenty of his men hunting for beaver,
+and who took fully 500, would never give us any mark to know the mouth
+of the river. He and several Hurons assured us that it was only ten
+days' journey to the trading place; but we were afraid of taking one
+river for another, and losing our way or dying of hunger on the land."
+So excellent an authority as Dr. John Gilmary Shea says: "This was
+evidently the Niagara River, and the route through Lake Ontario. He
+(Dallion) apparently crossed the river, as he was on the Iroquois
+frontier." The great conquest of the Neuters by the Iroquois was not
+until 1648 or 1650. Just what the "Iroquois frontier" was in 1627 is
+uncertain. It appears to have been about midway between the Niagara and
+the Genesee, the easternmost Neuter village being some thirty miles east
+of the Niagara. The Recollect appears therefore as the first man to
+write of the Niagara, from personal knowledge, and of its mouth as a
+place of trade. The above quotations are from the letter Father Dallion
+wrote to one of his friends in France July 18, 1627, he having then
+returned to Toanchain, a Huron village. I have followed the text as
+given by Sagard. It is significant that Le Clercq, in his "Premier
+Etablissement de la Foy," etc., gives a portion of Dallion's account of
+his visit to the Neuters, but omits nearly everything he says about
+trade.
+
+Father Dallion sojourned three winter months with the Neuters, but the
+latter part of the stay was far from agreeable. The Hurons, he says,
+having discovered that he talked of leading the Neuters to trade, at
+once spread false and evil reports of him. They said he was a great
+magician; that he was a poisoner, that he tainted the air of the country
+where he tarried, and that if the Neuters did not kill him, he would
+burn their villages and kill their children. The priest was at a
+disadvantage in not having much command of the Neuter dialect, and it is
+not strange, after the evil report had once been started, that he should
+have seemed to engage in some devilish incantation whenever he held the
+cross before them or sought to baptize the children. When one reflects
+upon the dense wall of ignorance and superstition against which his
+every effort at moral or spiritual teaching was impotent, the admiration
+for the martyr spirit which animated the effort is tempered by amazement
+that an acute and sagacious man should have thought it well to "labor"
+in such an obviously ineffective way. But history is full of instances
+of ardent devotion to aims which the "practical" man would denounce at
+once as unattainable. That Father Dallion was animated by the spirit of
+the martyrs is attested in his own account of what befel him. A
+treacherous band of ten came to him and tried to pick a quarrel. "One
+knocked me down with a blow of his fist, another took an ax and tried to
+split my head. God averted his hand; the blow fell on a post near me. I
+also received much other ill-treatment; but that is what we came to seek
+in this country." His assailants robbed him of many of his possessions,
+including his breviary and compass. These precious things, which were no
+doubt "big medicine" in the eyes of his ungracious hosts, were
+afterwards returned. The news of his maltreatment reached the ears of
+Fathers Brebeuf and De la Noue at the Huron mission. They sent the
+messenger, Grenole, to bring him back, if found alive. Father Dallion
+returned with Grenole early in the year 1627; and so ended the first
+recorded visit of white man to the Niagara region.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For fourteen years succeeding, I find no allusion to our district. Then
+comes an episode which is so adventurous and so heroic, so endowed with
+beauty and devotion, that it should be familiar to all who give any
+heed to what has happened in the vicinity of the Niagara.
+
+Jean de Brebeuf was a missionary priest of the Jesuits. That implies
+much; but in his case even such a general imputation of exalted
+qualities falls short of justice. His is a superb figure, a splendid
+acquisition to the line of heroic figures that pass in shadowy
+procession along the horizon of our home history. Trace the narrative of
+his life as sedulously as we may, examine his character and conduct in
+whatever critical light we may choose to study them, and still the noble
+figure of Father Brebeuf is seen without a flaw. There were those of his
+order whose acts were at times open to two constructions. Some of them
+were charged, by men of other faith and hostile allegiance, with using
+their priestly privileges as a cloak for worldly objects. No such charge
+was ever brought against Father Brebeuf. The guilelessness and heroism
+of his life are unassailable.
+
+He was of a noble Normandy family, and when he comes upon the scene, on
+the banks of the Niagara, he was forty-seven years old. He had come out
+to Quebec fifteen years before and had been assigned to the Huron
+mission. In 1628 he was called back to Quebec, but five years later he
+was allowed to return to his charge in the remote wilderness. The record
+of his work and sufferings there is not a part of our present story.
+Those who seek a marvelous exemplification of human endurance and
+devotion, may find it in the ancient Relations of the order. He lived
+amid threats and plots against his life, he endured what seems
+unendurable, and his zeal throve on the experience. In November, 1640,
+he and a companion, the priest Joseph Chaumonot, resolved to carry the
+cross to the Neuter nation. They no doubt knew of Father Dallion's
+dismal experience; and were spurred on thereby. Like him, they sought
+martyrdom. Their route from the Huron country to the Niagara has been
+traced with skill and probable accuracy by the Very Rev. Wm. R. Harris,
+Dean of St. Catharines. At this time the Neuter nation lived to the
+north of Lake Erie throughout what we know as the Niagara Peninsula, and
+on both sides of the Niagara, their most eastern village being near the
+present site of Lockport. From an uncertain boundary, thereabouts, they
+confronted the possessions of the Senecas, who a few years later were to
+wipe them off the face of the earth and occupy all their territory east
+of the lake and river.
+
+Fathers Brebeuf and Chaumonot set out on their hazardous mission
+November 2d, in the year named, from a Huron town in the present
+township of Medonte, Ontario. (Near Penetanguishene, on Georgian Bay.)
+Their probable path was through the present towns of Beeton,
+Orangeville, Georgetown, Hamilton and St. Catharines. They came out upon
+the Niagara just north of the Queenston escarpment. The journey thus far
+had been a succession of hardships. The interpreters whom they had
+engaged to act as guides deserted them at the outset. Ahead of them went
+the reputation which the Hurons spread abroad, that they were magicians
+and carried all manner of evils with them. Father Brebeuf was a man of
+extraordinary physical strength. Many a time, in years gone by, he had
+astonished the Indians by his endurance at the paddle, and in carrying
+great loads over the portages. His companion, Chaumonot, was smaller and
+weaker, but was equally sustained by faith in Divine guidance. On their
+way through the forests, Father Brebeuf was cheered by a vision of
+angels, beckoning him on; but when he and his companion finally stood on
+the banks of the Niagara, under the leaden sky of late November, there
+was little of the beatific in the prospect. They crossed the swirling
+stream--by what means must be left to conjecture, the probability being
+in favor of a light bark canoe--and on the eastern bank found themselves
+in the hostile village of Onguiara--the first-mentioned settlement on
+the banks of our river.
+
+Here the half-famished priests were charged with having come to ruin the
+people. They were refused shelter and food, but finally found
+opportunity to step into a wigwam, where Indian custom, augmented by
+fear, permitted them to remain. The braves gathered around, and proposed
+to put them to death. "I am tired," cried one, "eating the dark flesh of
+our enemies, and I want to taste the white flesh of the Frenchman." So
+at least is the record in the Relation. Another drew bow to pierce the
+heart of Chaumonot; but all fell back in awe when the stalwart Brebeuf
+stepped forth into their midst, without weapon and without fear, and
+raising his hand exclaimed: "We have not come here for any other purpose
+than to do you a friendly service. We wish to teach you to worship the
+Master of Life, so that you may be happy in this world and in the
+other."
+
+Whether or not any of the spiritual import of his speech was
+comprehended cannot be said; but the temper of the crowd changed, so
+that, instead of threatening immediate death, they began to take a
+curious, childish interest in the two "black-gowns"; examining the
+priests' clothes, and appropriating their hats and other loose articles.
+The travelers completely mystified them by reading a written message,
+and thus getting at another's thoughts without a spoken word. The
+Relation is rich in details of this sort, and of the wretchedness of the
+life which the missionaries led. They visited other "towns," as the
+collections of bark wigwams are called; but everywhere they were looked
+upon as necromancers, and their lives were spared only through fear.
+
+Far into the winter the priests endured all manner of hardship. Food was
+sometimes thrown to them as to a worthless dog, sometimes denied
+altogether, and then they had to make shift with such roots and barks or
+chance game as their poor woodcraft enabled them to procure, or the
+meager winter woods afforded. On one occasion, when a chief frankly told
+them that his people would have killed them long before, but for fear
+that the spirits of the priests would in vengeance destroy them,
+Brebeuf began to assure him that his mission was only to do good;
+whereupon the savage replied by spitting in the priest's face; and the
+priest thanked God that he was worthy of the same indignity which had
+been put upon Jesus Christ. When one faces his foes in such a spirit,
+there is absolutely nothing to fear. And yet, after four months of these
+experiences, there seems not to have been the slightest sign of any good
+result. The savages were as invulnerable to any moral or spiritual
+teachings as the chill earth itself. Dumb brutes would have shown more
+return for kindness than they. The saying of Chateaubriand, that man
+without religion is the most dangerous animal that walks the earth,
+found full justification in these savages. Finally, Brebeuf and his
+associate determined to withdraw from the absolutely fruitless field,
+and began to retrace their steps towards Huronia.
+
+It was near the middle of February, 1641, when they began their retreat
+from the land of the Neuters. The story of that retreat, as indeed of
+the whole mission, has been most beautifully told, with a sympathetic
+fervency impossible for one not richly endowed with faith to simulate,
+by Dean Harris. Let his account of what happened stand here:
+
+"The snow was falling when they left the village Onguiara, crossed the
+Niagara River near Queenston, ascended its banks and disappeared in the
+shadowy forest. The path, which led through an unbroken wilderness, lay
+buried in snow. The cold pierced them through and through. The cords on
+Fr. Chaumonot's snow-shoe broke, and his stiffened fingers could
+scarcely tie the knot. Innumerable flakes of snow were falling from
+innumerable branches. Their only food was a pittance of Indian corn
+mixed with melted snow; their only guide, a compass. Worn and spent with
+hardships, these saintly men, carrying in sacks their portable altar,
+were returning to announce to their priestly companions on the Wye the
+dismal news of their melancholy failure and defeat. There was not a
+hungry wolf that passed them but looked back and half forgave their
+being human. There was not a tree but looked down upon them with pity
+and commiseration. Night was closing in when, spent with fatigue, they
+saw smoke rising at a distance. Soon they reached a clearing and
+descried before them a cluster of bark lodges. Here these Christian
+soldiers of the cross bivouacked for the night.
+
+"Early that evening while Chaumonot, worn with traveling and overcome
+with sleep, threw himself to rest on a bed that was not made up since
+the creation of the world, Father Brebeuf, to escape for a time the
+acrid and pungent smoke that filled the cabin, went out to commune with
+God alone in prayer.... He moved toward the margin of the woods, when
+presently he stopped as if transfixed. Far away to the southeast, high
+in the air and boldly outlined, a huge cross floated suspended in
+mid-heaven. Was it stationary? No, it moved toward him from the land of
+the Iroquois. The saintly face lighted with unwonted splendor, for he
+saw in the vision the presage of the martyr's crown. Tree and hillside,
+lodge and village, faded away, and while the cross was still slowly
+approaching, the soul of the great priest went out in ecstasy, in loving
+adoration to his Lord and his God.... Overcome with emotion, he
+exclaimed, 'Who will separate me from the love of my Lord? Shall
+tribulation, nakedness, peril, distress, or famine, or the sword?'
+Emparadised in ecstatic vision, he again cries out with enthusiastic
+loyalty, '_Sentio me vehementer impelli ad moriendum pro Christo_'--'I
+feel within me a mighty impulse to die for Christ'--and flinging himself
+upon his knees as a victim for the sacrifice or a holocaust for sin, he
+registered his wondrous vow to meet martyrdom, when it came to him, with
+the joy and resignation befitting a disciple of his Lord.
+
+"When he returned to himself the cross had faded away, innumerable stars
+were brightly shining, the cold was wrapping him in icy mantle, and he
+retraced his footsteps to the smoky cabin. He flung himself beside his
+weary brother and laid him down to rest. When morning broke they began
+anew their toilsome journey, holding friendly converse.
+
+"'Was the cross large?' asked Father Chaumonot.
+
+"'Large,' spoke back the other, 'yes, large enough to crucify us all.'"
+
+It is idle to insist on judgments by the ordinary standards in a case
+like this. As Parkman says, it belongs not to history, but to
+psychology. Brebeuf saw the luminous cross in the heavens above the
+Niagara; not the material, out-reaching arms of Niagara's spray, rising
+columnar from the chasm, then resting, with crosslike extensions on the
+quiet air, white and pallid under the winter moon. Such phenomena are
+not unusual above the cataract, but may not be offered in explanation of
+the priest's vision. He was in the neighborhood of Grimsby, full twenty
+miles from the falls, when he saw the cross; much too far away to catch
+the gleam of frosted spray. Nor is it a gracious spirit which seeks a
+material explanation for his vision. The cross truly presaged his
+martyrdom; and although the feet of Father Brebeuf never again sought
+the ungrateful land of the Neuters, yet his visit and his vision were
+not wholly without fruit. They endow local history with an example of
+pure devotion to the betterment of others, unsurpassed in all the annals
+of the holy orders. To Brebeuf the miraculous cross foretold martyrdom,
+and thereby was it a sign of conquest and of victory to this heroic
+Constantine of the Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Brebeuf and Chaumonot had turned their backs on the Neuters, the
+Niagara region was apparently unvisited by white men for more than a
+quarter of a century. These were not, however, years of peaceful hunting
+and still more placid corn and pumpkin-growing, such as some romantic
+writers have been fond of ascribing to the red men when they were
+unmolested by the whites. As a matter of fact, and as Fathers Dallion,
+Brebeuf and Chaumonot had discovered, the people who claimed the banks
+of the lower reaches of the Niagara as within their territory, were the
+embodiment of all that was vile and barbarous. There is no record that
+they had a village at the angle of lake and river, where now stands old
+Fort Niagara. It would have been strange, however, if they did not
+occasionally occupy that sightly plateau with their wigwams or huts,
+while they were laying in a supply of fish. If trees ever covered the
+spot they were killed by early camp-fires, probably long before the
+coming of the whites. Among the earliest allusions to the point is one
+which speaks of the difficulty of getting wood there; and such a
+treeless tract, in this part of the country, could usually be attributed
+to the denudation consequent on Indian occupancy.
+
+A decade or so after the retreat of the missionaries came that fierce
+Indian strife which annihilated the Neuters and gave Niagara's banks
+into the keeping of the fiercer but somewhat nobler Iroquois. The story
+of this Indian war has been told with all possible illumination from the
+few meager records that are known; and it only concerns the present
+chronicle to note that about 1650 the site of Fort Niagara passed under
+Seneca domination. The Senecas had no permanent town in the vicinity,
+but undoubtedly made it a rendezvous for war parties, and for hunting
+and fishing expeditions.
+
+Meanwhile, the Jesuits in their Relations, and after them the
+cartographers in Europe, were making hearsay allusions to the Niagara or
+locating it, with much inaccuracy, on their now grotesque maps. In 1648
+the Jesuit Ragueneau, writing to the Superior at Paris, mentions
+Niagara, which he had never seen or approached, as "a cataract of
+frightful height." L'Allemant in the Relation published in 1642, had
+alluded to the river, but not to the fall. Sanson, in 1656, put
+"Ongiara" on his famous map; and four years later the map of Creuxius,
+published with his great "Historiae Canadensis," gave our river and fall
+the Latin dignity of "Ongiara Catarractes." One map-maker copied from
+another, so that even by the middle of the seventeenth century, the
+reading and student world--small and ecclesiastical as it mostly
+was--began to have some inkling of the main features and continental
+position of the mid-lake region for the possession of which, a little
+later, several Forts Niagara were to be projected. It is not, however,
+until 1669 that we come to another definite episode in the history of
+the region.
+
+In that year came hither the Sulpitian missionaries, Francois Dollier de
+Casson and Rene de Brehant[3] de Galinee. They were bent on carrying the
+cross to nations hitherto unreached, on Western rivers. With them was
+the young Robert Cavelier, known as La Salle, who was less interested in
+carrying the cross than in exploring the country. Their expedition left
+Montreal July 6th, nine canoes in all. They made their way up the St.
+Lawrence, skirted the south shore of Lake Ontario, and on Aug. 10th were
+at Irondequoit Bay. They made a most eventful visit to the Seneca
+villages south of the bay. Thence they continued westward, apparently by
+Indian trails overland, and not by canoe. De Galinee, who was the
+historian of the expedition, says that they came to a river "one eighth
+of a league broad and extremely rapid, forming the outlet or
+communication from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario," and he continues with a
+somewhat detailed account of Niagara Falls, which, although he passed
+near them, he did not turn aside to see. The Sulpitians and La Salle
+crossed the river, apparently below Lewiston. They may indeed have come
+to the river at its mouth, skirting the lake shore. One may infer either
+course from the narrative of de Galinee, which goes on to say that five
+days after passing the river they "arrived at the extremity of Lake
+Ontario, where there is a fine, large sandy bay ... and where we
+unloaded our canoes."
+
+Pushing on westward, late in September, on the trail between Burlington
+Bay and the Grand River, they met Joliet, returning from his expedition
+in search of copper mines on Lake Superior. This meeting in the
+wilderness is a suggestive and picturesque subject, but we may not dwell
+on it here. Joliet, though he had thus preceded LaSalle and the
+Sulpitians in the exploration of the lakes, had gone west by the old
+northern route along the Ottawa, Lake Nipissing and the French River. He
+was never on the Niagara, for after his meeting with LaSalle, he
+continued eastward by way of the Grand River valley and Lake Ontario.
+Fear of the savages deterred him from coming by way of the Niagara, and
+thereby, it is not unlikely, becoming the white discoverer of Niagara
+Falls.[4] He was the first white man, so far as records relate, to come
+eastward through the Detroit River and Lake Erie. Our lake was therefore
+"discovered" from the west--a fact perhaps without parallel in the
+history of American exploration.
+
+After the meeting with Joliet, La Salle left the missionaries, who,
+taking advantage of information had from Joliet, followed the Grand
+River down to Lake Erie. Subsequently they passed through Lake Erie to
+the westward, the first of white men to explore the lake in that
+direction. De Galinee's map (1669) is the first that gives us the north
+shore of Lake Erie with approximate accuracy. On October 15th this
+devout man and his companion reached Lake Erie, which they described as
+"a vast sea, tossed by tempestuous winds." Deterred by the lateness of
+the season from attempting further travel by this course, they
+determined to winter where they were, and built a cabin for their
+shelter.
+
+Occasionally they were visited in their hut by Iroquois beaver hunters.
+For five months and eleven days they remained in their winter quarters
+and on the 23d of March, 1670, being Passion Sunday, they erected a
+cross as a memorial of their long sojourn. The official record of the
+act is as follows:
+
+ "We the undersigned certify that we have seen affixed on the lands
+ of the lake called Erie the arms of the King of France with this
+ inscription: 'The year of salvation 1669, Clement IX. being seated
+ in St. Peter's chair, Louis XIV. reigning in France, M. de
+ Courcelle being Governor of New France, and M. Talon being
+ intendant therein for the King, there arrived in this place two
+ missionaries from Montreal accompanied by seven other Frenchmen,
+ who, the first of all European peoples, have wintered on this lake,
+ of which, as of a territory not occupied, they have taken
+ possession in the name of their King by the apposition of his arms,
+ which they have attached to the foot of this cross. In witness
+ whereof we have signed the present certificate.'
+
+ "FRANCOIS DOLLIER,
+ "Priest of the Diocese of Nantes in Brittany.
+ "DE GALINEE,
+ "Deacon of the Diocese of Rennes in Brittany."
+
+The winter was exceedingly mild, but the stream[5] was still frozen on
+the 26th of March, when they portaged their canoes and goods to the lake
+to resume their westward journey. Unfortunately losing one of their
+canoes in a gale they were obliged to divide their party, four men with
+the luggage going in the two remaining canoes; while the rest, including
+the missionaries, undertook the wearisome journey on foot all the way
+from Long Point to the mouth of the Kettle Creek. De Galinee grows
+enthusiastic in his admiration for the immense quantities of game and
+fruits opposite Long Point and calls the country the terrestrial
+Paradise of Canada. "The grapes were as large and as sweet as the finest
+in France. The wine made from them was as good as _vin de Grave_." He
+admires the profusion of walnuts, chestnuts, wild apples and plums.
+Bears were fatter and better to the palate than the most "savory" pigs
+in France. Deer wandered in herds of fifty to an hundred. Sometimes even
+two hundred would be seen feeding together. Before arriving at the sand
+beach which then connected Long Point with the mainland they had to
+cross two streams. To cross the first stream they were forced to walk
+four leagues inland before they found a satisfactory place to cross. One
+whole day was spent in constructing a raft to cross Big Creek, and after
+another delay caused by a severe snow-storm, they successfully effected
+a crossing and found on the west side a marshy meadow two hundred paces
+wide into which they sank to their girdles in mud and slush. Beset by
+dangers and retarded by inclement weather, they at last arrived at
+Kettle Creek, where they expected to find the canoe in which Joliet had
+come down Lake Huron and the Detroit and which he had told them was
+hidden there. Great was their disappointment to find that the Indians
+had taken it. However, later in the day, while gathering some wood for a
+fire, they found the canoe between two logs and joyfully bore it to the
+lake. In the vicinity of their encampment the hunters failed to secure
+any game, and for four or five days the party subsisted on boiled maize.
+The whole party then paddled up the lake to a place where game was
+plentiful and the hunters saw more than two hundred deer in one herd,
+but missed their aim. Disheartened at their failure and craving meat,
+they shot and skinned a miserable wolf and had it ready for the kettle
+when one of the men saw some thirty deer on the other side of the small
+lake they were on. The party succeeded in surrounding the deer and,
+forcing them into the water, killed ten of them. Now well supplied with
+both fresh and smoked meat, they continued their journey, traveled
+nearly fifty miles in one day and came to a beautiful sand beach (Point
+Pelee), where they drew up their canoes and camped for the night. During
+the night a terrific gale came up from the northeast. Awakened by the
+storm they made all shift to save their canoes and cargoes. Dollier's
+and de Galinee's canoes were saved, but the other one was swept away
+with its contents of provisions, goods for barter, ammunition, and,
+worst of all, the altar service, with which they intended establishing
+their mission among the Pottawatamies.
+
+The loss of their altar service caused them to abandon the mission and
+they set out to return to Montreal, but strangely enough chose the long,
+roundabout journey by way of the Detroit, Lake Huron and the French
+River, in preference to the route by which they had come, or by the
+outlet of Lake Erie, which they had crossed the autumn before. Thus de
+Galinee and Dollier de Casson, like Joliet,--not to revert to Champlain
+half a century earlier,--missed the opportunity, which seemed to wait
+for them, of exploring the eastern end of Lake Erie, of correctly
+mapping the Niagara and observing and describing its incomparable
+cataract. Obviously the Niagara region was shunned less on account of
+its real difficulties, which were not then known, than through terror of
+the Iroquois. Our two Sulpitians reached Montreal June 18, 1670, which
+date marks the close of the third missionary visitation in the history
+of the Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now I approach the point at which many writers of our local history
+have chosen to begin their story--the famous expedition of La Salle and
+his companions in 1678-'79. For the purpose of the present study we may
+omit the more familiar aspects of that adventure, and limit our regard
+to the acts of the holy men who continue the interrupted chain of
+missionary work on the Niagara. On December 6th, St. Nicholas Day, 1678,
+with an advance party under La Motte de Lussiere, came the Flemish
+Recollect, Louis Hennepin. As the bark in which they had crossed stormy
+Lake Ontario at length entered the Niagara, they chanted the Ambrosian
+hymn, "Te Deum Laudamus," and there is no gainsaying the sincerity of
+that thank-offering for perils escaped. Five days later, being encamped
+on the present site of Niagara, Ont., Father Hennepin celebrated the
+first mass ever said in the vicinity. A few days later, on the site of
+Lewiston, he had completed a bark chapel, in which was held the first
+Christian service which had been held on the eastern side of the Niagara
+since the visit of Brebeuf thirty-eight years before. Father Hennepin
+has left abundant chronicles of his activities on the Niagara. As soon
+as the construction of the Griffon was begun above the falls a chapel
+was established there, near the mouth of Cayuga Creek. Having blessed
+this pioneer vessel of the upper lakes, when she was launched, he set
+out for Fort Frontenac in the interests of the enterprise, and was
+accompanied to the Niagara, on his return, by the Superior of the
+mission, Father Gabriel de la Ribourde, and Fathers Zenobius Membre and
+Melithon Watteaux. All through that summer these devoted priests shared
+the varied labors of the camp. Hennepin tells us how he and his
+companions toiled back and forth over the portage around the falls,
+sometimes with their portable altar, sometimes with provisions, rigging
+or other equipment for the ship. "Father Gabriel," he says, "though of
+sixty-five years of age, bore with great vigor the fatigue of that
+journey, and went thrice up and down those three mountains, which are
+pretty high and steep." This glimpse of the saintly old priest is a
+reminiscence to cherish in our local annals. He was the last of a noble
+family in Burgundy who gave up worldly wealth and station to enter the
+Order of St. Francis. He came to Canada in 1670, and was the first
+Superior of the restored Recollect mission in that country. There is a
+discrepancy between Hennepin and Le Clercq as to his age; the former
+says he was sixty-five years old in 1679, when he was on the Niagara;
+the later speaks of him as being in his seventieth year in 1680. Of the
+three missionaries who with La Salle sailed up the Niagara in August,
+1679, and with prayers and hymns boldly faced the dangers of the unknown
+lake, the venerable Father Gabriel was first of all to receive the
+martyr's crown. A year later, September 9, 1680, while engaged at his
+devotions, he was basely murdered by three Indians. To Father Membre
+there were allotted five years of missionary labor before he, too, was
+to fall a victim to the savage. Father Hennepin lived many years, and
+his chronicles stand to-day as in some respects the foundation of our
+local history. But cherish as we may the memory of this trio of
+missionaries, the imagination turns with a yet fonder regard back to the
+devoted priest who was not permitted to voyage westward from the Niagara
+with the gallant La Salle. When the Griffon sailed, Father Melithon
+Watteaux was left behind in the little palisaded house at Niagara as
+chaplain. He takes his place in our history as the first Catholic priest
+appointed to minister to whites in New York State. On May 27, 1679, La
+Salle had made a grant of land at Niagara to these Recollect Fathers,
+for a residence and cemetery, and this was the first property in the
+present State of New York to which the Catholic Church held title. Who
+can say what were the experiences of the priest during the succeeding
+winter in the loneliness and dangers of the savage-infested wilderness?
+Nowhere have I as yet found any detailed account of his sojourn. We
+know, however, that it was not long. During the succeeding years there
+was some passing to and fro. In 1680 La Salle, returning east, passed
+the site of his ruined and abandoned fort. He was again on the Niagara
+in 1681 with a considerable party bound for the Miami. Father Membre,
+who was with him, returned east in October, 1682, by the Niagara route;
+and La Salle himself passed down the river again in 1683--his last visit
+to the Niagara. His blockhouse, within which was Father Melithon's
+chapel, had been burned by the Senecas.
+
+From this time on for over half a century the missionary work in our
+region centered at Fort Niagara, which still stands, a manifold reminder
+of the romantic past, at the mouth of the river. Four years after La
+Salle's last passage through the Niagara--in 1687--the Marquis de
+Denonville led his famous expedition against the Senecas. With him in
+this campaign was a band of Western Indians, who were attended by the
+Jesuit Father Enjalran. He was wounded in the battle with the Senecas
+near Boughton Hill, but appears to have accompanied de Denonville to his
+rendezvous on the site of Fort Niagara. Here he undoubtedly exercised
+his sacred office; and since the construction of Fort Niagara began at
+this time his name may head the list of priests officiating at that
+stronghold. He was soon after dispatched on a peace mission to the West,
+which was the special scene of his labors. His part, for some years to
+come, was to be an important one as Superior of the Jesuit Mission at
+Michillimackinac.
+
+As soon as Fort Niagara was garrisoned, Father Jean de Lamberville was
+sent thither as chaplain. For the student, it would be profitable to
+dwell at length upon the ministrations of this devoted priest. He was of
+the Society of Jesus, had come out to Canada in 1668, and labored in the
+Onondaga mission from 1671 to 1687. His work is indelibly written on the
+history of missions in our State. He was the innocent cause of a party
+of Iroquois falling into the hands of the French, who sent them to
+France, where they toiled in the king's galleys. When de Denonville, in
+1687, left at Fort Niagara a garrison of one hundred men under the
+Chevalier de la Mothe, Father Lamberville came to minister to them. The
+hostile Iroquois had been dealt a heavy blow, but a more insidious and
+dreadful enemy soon appeared within the gates. The provisions which had
+been left for the men proved utterly unfit for food, so that disease,
+with astounding swiftness, swept away most of the garrison, including
+the commander. Father Lamberville, himself, was soon stricken down with
+the scurvy. Every man in the fort would no doubt have perished but for
+the timely arrival of a party of friendly Miami Indians, through whose
+good offices the few survivors, Father Lamberville among them, were
+enabled to make their way to Catarouquoi--now Kingston, Ont. There he
+recovered; and he continued in the Canadian missions until 1698, when he
+returned to France.
+
+Not willing to see his ambitious fort on the Niagara so soon abandoned,
+de Denonville sent out a new garrison and with them came Father Pierre
+Milet. He had labored, with rich results, among the Onondagas and
+Oneidas. No sooner was he among his countrymen, in this remote and
+forlorn corner of the earth, than he took up his spiritual work with
+characteristic zeal. On Good Friday of that year, 1688, in the center of
+the square within the palisades, he caused to be erected a great cross.
+It was of wood, eighteen feet high, hewn from the forest trees and
+neatly framed. On the arms of it was carved in abbreviated words the
+sacred legend, "_Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus_," and in the midst of
+it was engraven the Sacred Heart. Surrounded by the officers of the
+garrison,--gallant men of France, with shining records, some of them
+were,--by the soldiers, laborers and friendly Indians, Father Milet
+solemnly blessed it. Can you not see the little band, kneeling about
+that symbol of conquest? Around them were the humble cabins and quarters
+of the soldiers. One of them, holding the altar, was consecrated to
+worship. Beyond ran the palisades and earthworks--feeble fortifications
+between the feeble garrison and the limitless, foe-infested wilderness.
+On one hand smiled the blue Ontario, and at their feet ran the gleaming
+Niagara, already a synonym of hardship and suffering in the annals of
+three of the religious orders. What wonder that the sense of isolation
+and feebleness was borne in upon the little band, or that they devoutly
+bowed before the cross which was the visible emblem of their strength
+and consolation in the wilderness. Where is the artist who shall paint
+us this scene, unique in the annals of any people?
+
+And yet, but a few months later--September 15th of that year--the
+garrison was recalled, the post abandoned, the palisades broken down,
+the cabins left rifled and empty; and when priest and soldiers had
+sailed away, and only the prowling wolf or the stealthy Indian ventured
+near the spot, Father Milet's great cross still loomed amid the
+solitude, a silent witness of the faith which knows no vanquishing.
+
+There followed an interim in the occupancy of the Niagara when neither
+sword nor altar held sway here; nor was the altar reestablished in our
+region until the permanent rebuilding of Fort Niagara in 1726. True,
+Father Charlevoix passed up the river in 1721, and has left an
+interesting account of his journey, his view of the falls, and his brief
+tarrying at the carrying-place--now Lewiston. This spot was the
+principal rendezvous of the region for many years; and here, at the
+cabin of the interpreter Joncaire, where Father Charlevoix was received,
+we may be sure that spiritual ministrations were not omitted. A somewhat
+similar incident, twenty-eight years later, was the coming to these
+shores of the Jesuit Father Bonnecamps. He was not only the spiritual
+leader but appears to have acted as pilot and guide to De Celoron's
+expedition--an abortive attempt on the part of Louis XV. to reesablish
+the claims of France to the inland regions of America. The expedition
+came up the St. Lawrence and through Lake Ontario, reaching Fort Niagara
+on July 6, 1749. It passed up the river, across to the south shore of
+Lake Erie and by way of Chautauqua Lake and the Allegheny down the Ohio.
+Returning from its utterly futile adventure, we find the party resting
+at Fort Niagara for three days, October 19-21. Who the resident chaplain
+was at the post at that date I have not been able to ascertain; but we
+may be sure that he had a glad greeting for Father Bonnecamps. From
+1726, when, as already mentioned, the fort was rebuilt, until its
+surrender to Sir Wm. Johnson in 1759, a garrison was continually
+maintained, and without doubt was constantly attended by a chaplain. The
+register of the post during these years has never been found--the
+presumption being that it was destroyed by the English--so that the
+complete list of priests who ministered there is not known.
+
+Only here and there from other sources do we glean a name by which to
+continue the succession. Father Crespel was stationed at Fort Niagara
+for about three years from 1729, interrupting his ministrations there
+with a journey to Detroit, where his order--the Society of Jesus--had
+established a mission. Of Fort Niagara at this time he says: "I found
+the place very agreeable; hunting and fishing were very productive; the
+woods in their greatest beauty, and full of walnut and chestnut trees,
+oaks, elms and some others, far superior to any we see in France." But
+not even the banks of the Niagara were to prove an earthly paradise.
+"The fever," he continues, "soon destroyed the pleasures we began to
+find, and much incommoded us, until the beginning of autumn, which
+season dispelled the unwholesome air. We passed the winter very quietly,
+and would have passed it very agreeably, if the vessel which was to have
+brought us refreshments had not encountered a storm on the lake, and
+been obliged to put back to Frontenac, which laid us under the necessity
+of drinking nothing but water. As the winter advanced, she dared not
+proceed, and we did not receive our stores till May."
+
+Remember the utter isolation of this post and mission at the period we
+are considering. To be sure, it was a link in the chain of French posts,
+which included Quebec, Montreal, Kingston, Niagara, Detroit,
+Michillimackinac; but in winter the water route for transport was
+closed, and Niagara, like the upper posts, was thrown on its own
+resources for existence. There is no place in our domain to-day which
+fairly may be compared to it for isolation and remoteness. The upper
+reaches of Alaskan rivers are scarcely less known to the world than was
+the Niagara at the beginning of the last century. A little fringe of
+settlement--hostile settlement at that--stretched up the Hudson from New
+York. Even the Mohawk Valley was still unsettled. From the Hudson to
+the remotest West the wilderness stretched as a sea, and Fort Niagara
+was buried in its midst. Although a full century had gone by since
+Father Dallion first reached its shores, there was now no trace of white
+men on the banks of the Niagara save at the fort at its mouth, where
+Father Crespel ministered, and at the carrying-place, where Joncaire the
+interpreter lived with the Indians. Not even the first Indian villages
+on Buffalo Creek were to be established for half a century to come.
+
+After Father Crespel's return from Detroit, he remained two years longer
+at Fort Niagara, caring for the spiritual life of the little garrison,
+and learning the Iroquois and Ottawah languages well enough to converse
+with the Indians. "This enabled me," he writes, "to enjoy their company
+when I took a walk in the environs of our post." The ability to converse
+with the Indians afterwards saved his life. When his three years of
+residence at Niagara expired he was relieved, according to the custom of
+his order, and he passed a season in the convent at Quebec. While he was
+undoubtedly immediately succeeded at Niagara by another chaplain, I have
+been unable to learn his name or aught of his ministrations. Indeed,
+there are but few glimpses of the post to be had from 1733 to 1759, when
+it fell into the hands of the English. One of the most interesting of
+these is of the visit of the Sulpitian missionary, the Abbe Piquet, who
+in 1751 came to Fort Niagara from his successful mission at La
+Presentation--now Ogdensburg. It is recorded of him that while here he
+exhorted the Senecas to beware of the white man's brandy; his name may
+perhaps stand as that of the first avowed temperance worker in the
+Niagara region.
+
+But the end of the French _regime_ was at hand. For more than a century
+our home region had been claimed by France; for the last thirty-three
+years the lily-strewn standard of Louis had flaunted defiance to the
+English from the banks of the Niagara. Now on a scorching July day the
+little fort found itself surrounded, with Sir Wm. Johnson's cannon
+roaring from the wilderness. There was a gallant defense, a baptism of
+fire and blood, an honorable capitulation. But in that fierce conflict
+at least one of the consecrated soldiers of the cross--Father Claude
+Virot--fell before British bullets; and when the triple cross of Britain
+floated over Fort Niagara, the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara river had been overthrown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On this eventful day in 1759, when seemingly the opportunities for the
+Catholic Church to continue its work on the Niagara were at an end,
+there was, in the poor parish of Maryborough, county Kildare, Ireland, a
+little lad of six whose mission it was to be to bring hither again the
+blessed offices of his faith. This was Edmund Burke, afterwards Bishop
+of Zion, and first Vicar-Apostolic of Nova Scotia, but whose name shines
+not less in the annals of his church because of his zeal as missionary
+in Upper Canada. Having come to Quebec in 1786, he was, in 1794,
+commissioned Vicar-General for the whole of Upper Canada--the province
+having then been established two years. In that year we find him at
+Niagara, where he was the first English-speaking priest to hold Catholic
+service. True, there was at the post that year a French missionary named
+Le Dru, who could speak English; but he had been ordered out of the
+province for cause. The field was ripe for a man of Father Burke's
+character and energy. His early mission was near Detroit; he was the
+first English-speaking priest in Ohio, and it is worthy of note that he
+was at Niagara on his way east, July 22, 1796--only three weeks before
+the British finally evacuated Fort Niagara and the Americans took
+possession. Through his efforts in that year, the Church procured a
+large lot at Niagara, Ont., where he proposed a missionary
+establishment. There had probably never been a time, since the English
+conquest, when there had not been Catholics among the troops quartered
+on the Niagara; but under a British and Protestant commandant no
+suitable provision for their worship had been made. In 1798--two years
+after the British had relinquished the fort on the east side of the
+river to the Americans--Father Burke, being at the British garrison on
+the Canadian side, wrote to Monseigneur Plessis:
+
+ Here I am at Niagara, instead of having carried out my original
+ design of going on to Detroit, thence returning to Kingston to pass
+ the winter. The commander of the garrison, annoyed by the continual
+ complaints of the civic officials against the Catholic soldiers,
+ who used to frequent the taverns during the hours of service on
+ Sunday, gave orders that officers and men should attend the
+ Protestant service. They had attended for three consecutive Sundays
+ when I represented to the commander the iniquity of this order. He
+ replied that he would send them to mass if the chaplain was there,
+ and he thought it very extraordinary that whilst a chaplain was
+ paid by the king for the battalion, instead of attending to his
+ duty he should be in charge of a mission, his men were without
+ religious services, and his sick were dying without the sacraments.
+ You see, therefore, that I have reason for stopping short at
+ Niagara; for we must not permit four companies, of whom three
+ fourths both of officers and men are Catholics, to frequent the
+ Protestant church.
+
+The name of the priest against whom the charge of neglect appears to
+lie, was Duval; but it is not clear that he had ever attended the troops
+to the Niagara station. But after Father Burke came Father Desjardines
+and an unbroken succession, with the district fully organized in
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now, although our story of mission work in the Niagara region has
+been long--has reviewed the visitations of two centuries--the reader may
+have remarked the striking fact that every priest who came into our
+territory, up to the opening of the nineteenth century, came from
+Canada. This fact is the more remarkable when we recall the
+long-continued and vigorous missions of the Jesuits in what is now New
+York State, extending west nearly to the Genesee River. But the fact
+stands that no priest from those early establishments made his way
+westward to the present site of Buffalo. Fathers Lamberville and Milet
+had been stationed among the Onondagas and Oneidas before coming into
+our region at Fort Niagara; but they came thither from Canada, by way of
+Lake Ontario, and not through the wilderness of Western New York. The
+westernmost mission among the Iroquois was that of Fathers Carheil and
+Garnier at Cayuga, where they were at work ten years before La Salle
+built the Griffon on the Niagara. It is interesting to note that this
+mission, which was established nearest to our own region, was "dedicated
+to God under the invocation of St. Joseph," and that, two hundred years
+after, the first Bishop of Buffalo obtained from his Holiness, Pope Pius
+IX., permission that St. Joseph should be the principal patron saint of
+this diocese.
+
+The earliest episcopal jurisdiction of the territory now embraced in the
+city of Buffalo, dating from the first visit of Dallion to the land of
+the Neuters, was directly vested in the diocese of Rouen--for it was the
+rule that regions new-visited belonged to the government of the bishop
+from a port in whose diocese the expedition bearing the missionary had
+sailed; and this stood until a local ecclesiastical government was
+formed; the first ecclesiastical association of our region, on the New
+York side, therefore, is with that grand old city, Rouen, the home of La
+Salle, scene of the martyrdom of the Maid of Orleans, and the center,
+through many centuries, of mighty impulses affecting the New World. From
+1657 to 1670 our region was embraced in the jurisdiction of the Vicar
+Apostolic of New France; and from 1670 to the Conquest in the diocese of
+Quebec. There are involved here, of course, all the questions which grew
+out of the strife for possession of the Niagara region by the French,
+English and Dutch. Into these questions we may not enter now further
+than to note that from 1684 the English claimed jurisdiction of all the
+region on the east bank of the Niagara and the present site of Buffalo.
+This claim was in part based on the Treaty of Albany at which the
+Senecas had signified their allegiance to King Charles; and by that
+acquiescence nominally put the east side of the Niagara under British
+rule. The next year, when the Duke of York came to the throne, he
+decreed that the Archbishop of Canterbury should hold ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction over the whole Colony of New York. It is very doubtful,
+however, if the Archbishop of Canterbury had ever heard of the
+Niagara--the first English translation of Hennepin did not appear for
+fourteen years after this date; and nothing is more unlikely than that
+the Senecas who visited the Niagara at this period, or even the Dutch
+and English traders who gave them rum for beaver-skins, had ever heard
+of the Archbishop of Canterbury, or cared a copper for his
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction, either on the Niagara or even in the
+settlements on the Hudson. In the New York Colony, and afterward State,
+the legal discrimination against Catholics continued down to 1784, when
+the law which condemned Catholic priests to imprisonment or even death
+was repealed. At the date of its repeal there was not a Catholic
+congregation in the State. Those Catholics who were among the pioneer
+settlers of Western New York had to go as far east as Albany to perform
+their religious duties or get their children baptized. Four years
+later--in 1788--our region was included in the newly-formed diocese of
+Baltimore. In 1808 we came into the new diocese of New York. Not until
+1821 do we find record of the visit of a priest to Buffalo. In 1829 the
+Church acquired its first property here--through its benefactor whose
+name and memory are preserved by one of our noblest institutions--Louis
+Le Couteulx--and the first Buffalo parish was established under the Rev.
+Nicholas Mertz.
+
+We are coming very close to the present; and yet still later, in 1847,
+when the diocese of Buffalo was formed, there were but sixteen priests
+in the sixteen great counties which constituted it. It is superfluous to
+contrast that time with the present. There is nothing more striking, to
+the student of the history and development of our region during the last
+half century, than the increase of the Catholic Church--in parishes and
+schools, in means of propaganda, in material wealth with its vast
+resources and power for good, and especially in that personal zeal and
+unflagging devotion which know no limit and no exhaustion, and are drawn
+from the same source of strength that inspired and sustained Brebeuf and
+Chaumonot and their fellow-heroes of the cross on the banks of the
+Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+The Paschal of the Great Pinch.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASCHAL OF THE GREAT PINCH.
+
+ _An Episode in the History of Fort Niagara; being an Extract from
+ the hitherto unknown Memoirs of the Chevalier De Tregay, Lieutenant
+ under the Sieur de Troyes, commanding at Fort Denonville (now
+ called Niagara), in the Year of Starvation 1687; with Captain
+ Desbergeres at that remote fortress from the joyfull Easter of 1688
+ till its abandonment; Soldier of His Excellency the Sr. de Brissay,
+ Marquis de Denonville, Governor and Lieutenant General in New
+ France; and humble Servitor of His Serene Majesty Louis XIV._
+
+
+It has been my lot to suffer in many far parts of the earth; to bleed a
+little and go hungry for the King; to lie freezing for fame and
+France--and gain nothing thereby but a distemper; but so it is to be a
+soldier.
+
+And I have seen trouble in my day. I have fought in Flanders on an empty
+stomach, and have burned my brain among the Spaniards so that I could
+neither fight nor run away; but of all the heavy employment I ever knew,
+naught can compare with what befel in the remote parts of New France,
+where I was with the troops that the Marquis de Denonville took through
+the wilderness into the cantons of the Iroquois, and afterwards employed
+to build a stockade and cabins at the mouth of the Strait of Niagara, on
+the east side, in the way where they go a beaver-hunting. "Fort
+Denonville," the Sieur de Brissay decreed it should be called, for he
+held great hopes of the service which it should do him against both the
+Iroquois and the English; but now that he has fallen into the disfavor
+that has ever been the reward of faithful service in this accursed land,
+his name is no more given even to that unhappy spot, but rather it is
+called Fort Niagara.
+
+There were some hundreds of us all told that reached that fair plateau,
+after we left the river of the Senecas. It was mid-summer of the year of
+grace 1687, and we made at first a pleasant camp, somewhat overlooking
+the great lake, while to the west side of the point the great river made
+good haven for our batteaux and canoes. There was fine stir of air at
+night, so that we slept wholesomely, and the wounded began to mend at a
+great rate. And of a truth, tho' I have adventured in many lands, I have
+seen no spot which in all its demesne offered a fairer prospect to a man
+of taste. On the north of us, like the great sea itself, lay the Lake
+Ontario, which on a summer morning, when touched by a little wind, with
+the sun aslant, was like the lapis lazuli I have seen in the King's
+palace--very blue, yet all bright with white and gold. The river behind
+the camp ran mightily strong, yet for the most part glassy and green
+like the precious green-stone the lapidaries call verd-antique. Behind
+us to the south lay the forest, and four leagues away rose the triple
+mountains wherein is the great fall; but these are not such mountains as
+we have in Italy and Spain, being more of the nature of a great
+table-land, making an exceeding hard portage to reach the Strait of
+Erie above the great fall.
+
+It was truly a most fit place for a fort, and the Marquis de Denonville
+let none in his command rest day or night until we had made a
+fortification, in part of earth, surmounted by palisades which the
+soldiers cut in the woods. There was much of hazard and fatigue in this
+work, for the whole plain about the fort had no trees; so that some of
+us went into the forest along the shore to the eastward and some cut
+their sticks on the west side of the river. It was hard work, getting
+them up the high bank; but so pressed were we, somewhat by fear of an
+attack, and even more by the zeal of our commander, that in three days
+we had built there a pretty good fort with four bastions, where we put
+two great guns and some pattareras; and we had begun to build some
+cabins on the four sides of the square in the middle of it. And as we
+worked, our number was constantly diminished; for the Sieurs Du Luth and
+Durantaye, with that one-handed Chevalier de Tonty of whom they tell so
+much, and our allies the savages who had come from the Illinois to join
+the Governor in his assault upon the Iroquois, as soon as their wounded
+were able to be moved, took themselves off up the Niagara and over the
+mountain portage I have spoken of; for they kept a post and place of
+trade at the Detroit, and at Michillimackinac. And then presently the
+Marquis himself and all whom he would let go sailed away around the
+great lake for Montreal. But he ordered that an hundred, officers and
+men, stay behind to hold this new Fort Denonville. He had placed in
+command over us the Sieur de Troyes, of whom it would not become me to
+speak in any wise ill.
+
+There were sour looks and sad, as the main force marched to the
+batteaux. But the Marquis did not choose to heed anything of that. We
+were put on parade for the embarkation--though we made a sorry show of
+it, for there were even then more rags than lace or good leather--and
+His Excellency spoke a farewell word in the hearing of us all.
+
+"You are to complete your quarters with all convenient expediency," he
+said to De Troyes, who stood attentive, before us. "There will be no
+lack of provision sent. You have here in these waters the finest fish in
+the world. There is naught to fear from these Iroquois wasps--have we
+not just torn to pieces their nests?"
+
+He said this with a fine bravado, though methought he lacked somewhat of
+sincerity; for surely scattered wasps might prove troublesome enough to
+those of us who stayed behind. But De Troyes made no reply, and saluted
+gravely. And so, with a jaunty word about the pleasant spot where we
+were to abide, and a light promise to send fresh troops in the spring,
+the General took himself off, and we were left behind to look out for
+the wasps. As the boats passed the sandbar and turned to skirt the lake
+shore to the westward, we gave them a salvo of musketry; but De Troyes
+raised his hand--although the great Marquis was yet in sight and almost
+in hailing distance--and forbade another discharge.
+
+"Save your powder," was all he said; and the very brevity of it seemed
+to mean more than many words, and put us into a low mood for that whole
+day.
+
+Now for a time that followed there was work enough to keep each man
+busy, which is best for all who are in this trade of war, especially in
+the wilderness. It was on the third of August that M. de Brissay left
+us, he having sent off some of the militia ahead of him; and he bade M.
+de Vaudreuil stay behind for a space, to help the Sieur de Troyes
+complete the fort and cabins, and this he did right ably, for as all
+Canada and the King himself know, M. de Vaudreuil was a man of exceeding
+great energy and resources in these matters. There was a vast deal of
+fetching and carrying, of hewing and sawing and framing. And
+notwithstanding that the sun of that climate was desperately hot the men
+worked with good hearts, so that there was soon finished an excellent
+lodgment for the commandant; with a chimney of sticks and clay, and
+boards arranged into a sort of bedstead; and this M. de Troyes shared
+with M. de Vaudreuil, until such time as the latter gentleman quit us.
+There were three other cabins built, with chimneys, doors and little
+windows. We also constructed a baking-house with a large oven and
+chimney, partly covered with boards and the remainder with hurdles and
+clay. We also built an extensive framed building without chimney, and a
+large store-house with pillars eight feet high, and made from time to
+time yet other constructions for the men and goods--though, _Dieu
+defend_! we had spare room for both, soon enough. In the square in the
+midst of the buildings we digged a well; and although the water was
+sweet enough, yet from the first, for lack of proper curbing and
+protection, it was ever much roiled and impure when we drew it, a
+detriment alike to health and cookery.
+
+M. de Vaudreuil seeing us at last well roofed, and having directed for a
+little the getting of a store of firewood, made his adieux. Even then,
+in those fine August days, a spirit of discontent was among us, and more
+than one spark of a soldier, who at the first camp had been hot upon
+staying on the Niagara, sought now to be taken in M. de Vaudreuil's
+escort. But that gentleman replied, that he wished to make a good report
+of us all to the Governor, and that, for his part, he hoped he might
+come to us early in the spring, with the promised detachment of troops.
+And so we parted.
+
+Now the spring before, when we had all followed the Marquis de
+Denonville across Lake Ontario to harass the cantons of the Iroquois,
+this establishment of a post on the Niagara was assuredly a part of that
+gentleman's plan. It is not for me, who am but a mere lieutenant of
+marines, to show how a great commander should conduct his expeditions;
+yet I do declare that while there was no lack of provision made for
+killing such of the savages as would permit it, there was next to none
+for maintaining troops who were to be left penned up in the savages'
+country. We who were left at Fort Denonville had but few mattocks or
+even axes. Of ammunition there was none too much. In the Senecas'
+country we had destroyed thousands of minots[6] of corn, but had brought
+along scarce a week's rations of it to this corner. We had none of us
+gone a-soldiering with our pockets full of seed, and even if we had
+brought ample store of corn and pumpkin seed, of lentils and salad
+plants, the season was too late to have done much in gardening. We made
+some feeble attempts at it; but no rain fell, the earth baked under the
+sun so hard that great cracks came in it; and what few shoots of corn
+and pumpkin thrust upward through this parched soil, withered away
+before any strengthening juices came in them. To hunt far from the fort
+we durst not, save in considerable parties; so that if we made ourselves
+safe from the savages, we also made every other living thing safe
+against us. To fish was well nigh our only recourse; but although many
+of our men labored diligently at it, they met with but indifferent
+return.
+
+Thus it was that our most ardent hopes, our very life itself, hung upon
+the coming of the promised supplies. There was joy at the fort when at
+length the sail of the little bark was seen; even De Troyes, who had
+grown exceeding grave and melancholy, took on again something of his
+wonted spirit. But we were not quite yet to be succored, for it was the
+season of the most light and trifling airs, so that the bark for two
+days hung idly on the shining lake, some leagues away from the mouth of
+the river, while we idled and fretted like children, impatient for her
+coming. When once we had her within the bar, there was no time lost in
+unlading. It was a poor soldier indeed who could not work to secure the
+comfort of his own belly; and the store was so ample that we felt secure
+for the winter, come what might. The bark that fetched these things had
+been so delayed by the calms, that she weighed and sailed with the first
+favoring breeze; and it was not until her sail had fall'n below the
+horizon that we fairly had sight or smell of what she had brought.
+
+From the first the stores proved bad; still, we made shift to use the
+best, eked out with what the near-by forest and river afforded. For many
+weeks we saw no foes. There was little work to do, and the men idled
+through the days, with no word on their lips but to complain of the food
+and wish for spring. When the frosts began to fall we had a more
+vigorous spell of it; but now for the first time appeared the Iroquois
+wasps. One of our parties, which had gone toward the great fall of the
+Niagara, lost two men; those who returned reported that their comrades
+were taken all unawares by the savages. Another party, seeking game to
+the eastward where a stream cuts through the high bank on its way to the
+lake,[7] never came back at all. Here we found their bodies and buried
+them; but their scalps, after the manner of these people, had been
+taken.
+
+Christmas drew on, but never was a sorrier season kept by soldiers of
+France. De Troyes had fallen ill. Naught ailed him that we could see
+save low spirits and a thinning of the blood, which made him too weak to
+walk. The Father Jean de Lamberville, who had stayed with us, and who
+would have been our hope and consolation in those days, very early fell
+desperate ill of a distemper, so that the men had not the help of his
+ministrations and holy example. Others there were who either from
+feebleness or lack of discipline openly refused their daily duty and
+went unpunished. We had fair store of brandy; and on Christmas eve those
+of us who still held some soul for sport essayed to lighten the hour. We
+brewed a comfortable draught, built the blaze high, for the frosts were
+getting exceeding sharp, gathered as many as could be had of officers
+and worthy men into our cabin, and made brave to sing the songs of
+France. And now here was a strange thing: that while the hardiest and
+soundest amongst us had made good show of cheer, had eaten the vile food
+and tried to speak lightly of our ills, no sooner did we hear our own
+voices in the songs that carried us back to the pleasantries of our
+native land, than we fell a-sobbing and weeping like children; which
+weakness I attribute to the distemper that was already in our blood.
+
+For the days that followed I have no heart to set down much. We never
+went without the palisades except well guarded to fetch firewood. This
+duty indeed made the burden of every day. A prodigious store of wood was
+needed, for the cold surpassed anything I had ever known. The snow fell
+heavily, and there were storms when for days the gale drave straight
+across our bleak plateau. There was no blood in us to withstand the icy
+blasts. Do what we would the chill of the tomb was in the cabins where
+the men lay. The wood-choppers one day, facing such a storm, fell in the
+deep drifts just outside the gate. None durst go out to them. The second
+day the wolves found them--and we saw it all!
+
+There was not a charge of powder left in the fort. There was not a
+mouthful of fit food. The biscuits had from the first been full of worms
+and weevils. The salted meat, either from the admixture of sea-water
+through leaky casks, or from other cause, was rotten beyond the power
+even of a starving man to hold.
+
+_Le scorbut_ broke out. I had seen it on shipboard, and knew the signs.
+De Troyes now seldom left his cabin; and when, in the way of duty, I
+made my devoirs, and he asked after the men, I made shift to hide the
+truth. But it could not be for long.
+
+"My poor fellows," he sighed one day, as he turned feebly on his couch
+of planks, "it must be with all as it is with me--see, look here, De
+Tregay, do you know the sign?" and he bared his shrunken arm and side.
+
+Indeed I knew the signs--the dry, pallid skin, with the purple blotches
+and indurations. He saw I was at a loss for words.
+
+"_Sang de Dieu!_" he cried, "Is this what soldiers of France must come
+to, for the glory of"----. He stopped short, as if lacking spirit to go
+on. "Now I bethink me," he added, in a melancholy voice, "it _is_ what
+soldiers must come to." Then, after a while he asked:
+
+"How many dead today, De Tregay?"
+
+How many dead! From a garrison of gallant men-at-arms we had become a
+charnel-house. In six weeks we had lost sixty men. From a hundred at the
+beginning of autumn, we were now scarce forty, and February was not
+gone. A few of us, perhaps with stouter stomachs than the rest, did all
+the duty of the post. We brought the firewood and we buried the
+dead--picking the frozen clods with infinite toil, that we might lay the
+bones of our comrades beyond the reach of wolves. Sometimes it was the
+scurvy, sometimes it was the cold, sometimes, methinks, it was naught
+but a weak will--or as we say, the broken heart; but it mattered not,
+the end was the same. More than twenty died in March; and although we
+were now but a handful of skeletons and accustomed to death, I had no
+thought of sorrow or of grief, so dulled had my spirit become, until one
+morning I found the brave De Troyes drawing with frightful pains his
+dying breath. With the name of a maid he loved upon his lips, the light
+went out; and with heavy heart I buried him in that crowded ground, and
+fain would have lain down with him.
+
+And now with our commander under the snow, what little spirit still
+burned in the best of us seemed to die down. I too bore the signs of the
+distemper, yet to no great extent, for of all the garrison I had labored
+by exercise to keep myself wholesome, and in the woods I had tasted of
+barks and buds and roots of little herbs, hoping to find something akin
+in its juices to the _herbe de scorbut_[8] which I have known to cure
+sick sailors. But now I gave over these last efforts for life; for,
+thought I, spring is tardy in these latitudes. Many weeks must yet pass
+before the noble Marquis at Montreal (where comforts are) will care to
+send the promised troop. And the Western savages, our allies the
+Illinois, the Ottawais, the Miamis, were they not coming to succor us
+here and to raid the Iroquois cantons? But of what account is the
+savage's word!
+
+So I thought, and I turned myself on my pallet. I listened. There was no
+sound in all the place save the beating of a sleet. "It is appointed," I
+said within me. "Let the end come." And presently, being numb with the
+cold, I thought I was on a sunny hillside in Anjou. It was the time of
+the grape-harvest, and the smell of the vines, laughter and sunshine
+filled the air. Young lads and maids, playmates of my boyhood days, came
+and took me by the hand....
+
+A twinge of pain made the vision pass. I opened my eyes upon a huge
+savage, painted and bedaubed, after their fashion. It was the grip of
+his vast fist that had brought me back from Anjou.
+
+"The Iroquois, then," I thought, "have learned of our extremity, and
+have broken in, to finish all. So much the better," and I was for
+sinking back upon the boards, when the savage took from a little pouch a
+handful of the parched corn which they carry on their expeditions.
+"Eat," he said, in the language of the Miamis. And then I knew that
+relief had come--and I knew no more for a space.
+
+Now this was Michitonka himself, who had led his war party from beyond
+Lake Erie, where the Chevalier de Tonty and Du Luth were, to see how we
+fared at Fort Denonville, and to make an expedition against the
+Senecas--of whom we saw no more, from the time the Miamis arrived. There
+were of all our garrison but twelve not dead, and among those who threw
+off the distemper was the Father de Lamberville. His recovery gave us
+the greatest joy. He lay for many weeks at the very verge of the grave,
+and it was marvelous to all to see his skin, which had been so empurpled
+and full of malignant humors, come wholesome and fair again. I have
+often remarked, in this hard country, that of all Europeans the Fathers
+of the Holy Orders may be brought nearest to death, and yet regain their
+wonted health. They have the same prejudice for life that the wildest
+savage has. But as for the rest of us, who are neither savage nor holy,
+it is by a slim chance that we live at all.
+
+Now the Father, and two or three of the others who had the strength to
+risk it, set out with a part of Michitonka's people to Cataracouy[9] and
+Montreal, to carry the news of our extremity. And on a soft April day as
+we looked over lake, we saw a sail; and we knew that we had kept the
+fort until the relief company was sent as had been commanded. But it had
+been a great pinch.
+
+Now I am come to that which after all I chiefly set out to write down;
+for I have ever held that great woes should be passed over with few
+words, but it is meet to dwell upon the hour of gladness. And this hour
+was now arrived, when we saw approach the new commandant, the Sieur
+Desbergeres, captain of one of the companies of the Detachment of the
+Marine, and with him the Father Milet, of the Society of Jesus. There
+was a goodly company, whose names are well writ on the history of this
+New France: the Sieurs De la Mothe, La Rabelle, Demuratre de Clerin and
+de Gemerais, and others, besides a host of fine fellows of the common
+rank; with fresh food that meant life to us.
+
+Of all who came that April day, it was the Father Milet who did the
+most. The very morning that he landed, we knelt about him at mass; and
+scarce had he rested in his cabin than he marked a spot in the midst of
+the square, where a cross should stand, and bade as many as could, get
+about the hewing of it; and although I was yet feeble and might rest as
+I liked, I chose to share in the work, for so I found my pleasure. A
+fair straight oak was felled and well hewn, and with infinite toil the
+timber was taken within the palisades and further dressed; and while the
+carpenters toiled to mortise the cross-piece and fasten it with pins,
+Father Milet himself traced upon the arms the symbols for the legend:
+
+ Regnat, Vincit, Imperat Christus.
+
+And these letters were well cut into the wood, in the midst of them
+being the sign of the Sacred Heart. We had it well made, and a place dug
+for it, on a Thursday; and on the next morning, which was Good Friday,
+the reverend Father placed his little portable altar in the midst of the
+square, where we all, officers and men, and even some of the Miamis who
+were yet with us, assembled for the mass. Then we raised the great cross
+and planted it firmly in the midst of the little square. The service of
+the blessing of it lay hold of my mind mightily, for my fancy was that
+this great sign of victory had sprung from the midst of the graves where
+De Troyes and four score of my comrades lay; and being in this tender
+mood (for I was still weak in body) the words which the Father read from
+his breviary seemed to rest the more clearly in my mind.
+
+"_Adjutorium nostrum in nomine Domini._" Father Milet had a good voice,
+with a sort of tenderness in it, so that we were every one disposed to
+such silence and attention, that I could even hear the little waves
+lapping the shore below the fort. And when he began with the
+"_Oramus_"--"_Rogamus te Domine sancte Pater omnipotens_,"--I was that
+moved, by the joy of it, and my own memories, that I wept--and I a
+soldier!
+
+It may be believed that the Sunday which followed, which was the
+Paschal, was kept by us with such worship and rejoicing as had never yet
+been known in those remote parts. Holy men had been on that river
+before, it is true; but none had abode there for long, nor had any set
+up so great a cross, nor had there ever such new life come to men as we
+knew at Fort Denonville that Easter.
+
+For a space, all things went well. What with the season (for spring ever
+inspires men to new undertakings) and the bitter lessons learned in the
+great pinch of the past winter, we were no more an idle set, but kept
+all at work, and well. Yet the Iroquois pestered us vastly, being set on
+thereto by the English, who claimed this spot. And in September there
+came that pilot Maheut, bringing his bark La General over the shoal at
+the river's mouth all unexpected; and she was scarce anchored in the
+little roadstead than Desbergeres knew he was to abandon all. It was
+cause of chagrin to the great Marquis, I make no doubt, thus to drop the
+prize he had so tried to hold; but some of us in the fort had no stomach
+for another winter on the Niagara, and we made haste to execute the
+orders which the Marquis de Denonville had sent. We put the guns on
+board La General. We set the gate open, and tore down the rows of pales
+on the south and east sides of the square. Indeed the wind had long ago
+begun this work, so that towards the lake the pales (being but little
+set in the earth) had fallen or leaned over, so they could readily have
+been scaled, or broken through. But as the order was, we left the cabins
+and quarters standing, with doors ajar, to welcome who might come,
+Iroquois or wolf, for there was naught within. But Father Milet took
+down from above the door of his cabin the little sun dial. "The shadow
+of the great cross falls divers ways," was his saying.
+
+Early the next morning, being the 15th of September, of the year 1688,
+being ready for the embarkation, Father Milet summoned us to the last
+mass he might say in the place. It was a sad morning, for the clouds
+hung heavy; the lake was of a somber and forbidding cast, and the very
+touch in the air forebode autumnal gales. As we knelt around the cross
+for the last time, the ensign brought the standards which Desbergeres
+had kept, and holding the staves, knelt also. Certain Miamis, too, who
+were about to make the Niagara portage, stayed to see what the priest
+might do. And at the end of the office Father Milet did an uncommon
+thing, for he was mightily moved. He turned from us toward the cross,
+and throwing wide his arms spoke the last word--"Amen."
+
+There were both gladness and sorrow in our hearts as we embarked. Lake
+and sky took on the hue of lead, foreboding storm. We durst carry but
+little sail, and at the sunset hour were scarce a league off shore. As
+it chanced, Father Milet and I stood together on the deck and gazed
+through the gloom toward that dark coast. While we thus stood, there
+came a rift betwixt the banked clouds to the west, so that the sun, just
+as it slipped from sight, lighted those Niagara shores, and we saw but
+for an instant, above the blackness and the desolation, the great cross
+as in fire or blood gleam red.
+
+
+
+
+With Bolton at Fort Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+WITH BOLTON AT FORT NIAGARA.
+
+
+One pleasant September day in 1897 it was my good fortune, under expert
+guidance, to follow for a little the one solitary trail made by the
+American patriots in Western New York during the Revolutionary War, the
+one expedition of our colonial forces approaching this region during
+that period. This was the famous "raid" led by Gen. John Sullivan in the
+summer of 1779. Our quest took us up the long hill slope west of Conesus
+Lake, in what is now the town of Groveland, Livingston Co., to a
+spot--among the most memorable in the annals of Western New York, yet
+unmarked and known to but a few--where a detachment of Sullivan's army,
+under Lieut. Boyd, were waylaid and massacred by the Indians. It was on
+the 13th of September that this tragedy occurred. Two days later Gen.
+Sullivan, having accomplished the main purpose of his raid--the
+destruction of Indian villages and crops--turned back towards
+Pennsylvania, returning to Easton, whence the expedition had started. He
+had come within about eighty miles of the Niagara. "Though I had it not
+in command," wrote Gen. Sullivan in his report to the Secretary of War,
+"I should have ventured to have paid [Fort] Niagara a visit, had I been
+supplied with fifteen days' provisions in addition to what I had, which
+I am persuaded from the bravery and ardor of our troops would have
+fallen into our hands."[10] This was the nearest approach to any attempt
+made by the Americans to enter this region during that war.
+
+The events of Sullivan's expedition are well known. Few episodes of the
+Revolution are more fully recorded. But what is the reverse of the
+picture? What lay at the other side of this Western New York wilderness
+which Sullivan failed to penetrate? What was going on, up and down the
+Niagara, and on Buffalo Creek, during those momentous years? We know
+that the region was British, that old Fort Niagara was its garrison, the
+principal rendezvous of the Indians and the base from which scalping
+parties set out to harry the frontier settlements. The most dreadful
+frontier tragedies of the war--Wyoming, Cherry Valley, and others--were
+planned here and carried out with British cooeperation. But who were the
+men and what were the incidents of the time, upon our Niagara frontier?
+So far as I am aware, that period is for the most part a blank in our
+histories. One may search the books in vain for any adequate
+narrative--indeed for any but the most meager data--of the history of
+the Niagara region during the Revolution. The materials are not lacking,
+they are in fact abundant. In this paper I undertake only to give an
+inkling of the character of events in this region during that grave
+period in our nation's history.[11]
+
+In 1778, Colonel Haldimand, afterward Sir Frederick, succeeded Gen. Guy
+Carleton in the command of the British forces in Canada. He was
+Commander in Chief, and Governor of Canada, until his recall in 1784.
+Lord North was England's Prime Minister, Lord George Germaine in charge
+of American affairs in the Cabinet. Haldimand took up his residence at
+Quebec, and therefrom, for a decade, administered the affairs of the
+Canadian frontier with zeal and adroitness. He was a thorough soldier,
+as his letters show. He was also an adept in the treatment of matters
+which, like the retention by the British of the frontier posts for
+thirteen years after they had been ceded to the Americans by treaty,
+called for dogged determination, veiled behind diplomatic courtesies.
+The troops which he commanded were scattered from the mouth of the St.
+Lawrence to Lake Michigan; but to no part of this long line of
+wilderness defense--a line which was substantially the enemy's
+frontier--did he pay more constant attention than to Fort Niagara. There
+were good reasons for this. Fort Niagara was not only the key to the
+upper lakes, the base of supplies for Detroit, Michillimackinac and
+minor posts, but it had long been an important trading post and the
+principal rendezvous of the Six Nations, upon whose peculiarly efficient
+services against the American frontiers Sir Frederick relied scarcely
+less than he did upon the British troops themselves. It was, therefore,
+with no ordinary solicitude that he made his appointments for Niagara.
+
+I cannot state positively the names of all officers in command at Fort
+Niagara from the time war was begun, down to 1777. Lieut. Lernault,
+afterwards at Detroit, was here for a time; but about the spring of '77
+we find Fort Niagara put under the command of Lieut. Col. Mason Bolton,
+of the 34th Royal Artillery. He had then seen some years of service in
+America; had campaigned in Florida and the West Indies; had been sent to
+Mackinac and as far west as the Illinois; and it was no slight tribute
+to his ability and fidelity, when Haldimand put the Niagara frontier
+into his hands. Here, for over three years, he was the chief in command.
+In military rank, even if in nothing else, he was the principal man in
+this region during the crucial period of the Revolution. He commanded
+the garrison at Fort Niagara, and its dependencies at Schlosser and Fort
+Erie. Buffalo was then unthought of--it was merely Te-hos-e-ro-ron, the
+place of the basswoods; but at the Indian villages farther up Buffalo
+Creek, which came into existence in 1780, the name of Col. Bolton stood
+for the highest military authority of the region. And yet, incredible as
+it may seem, after all these years in which--to adapt Carlyle's
+phrase--the Torch of History has been so assiduously brandished about, I
+do not know of any printed book which offers any information about Col.
+Mason Bolton or the life he led here. Indeed, with one or two
+exceptions, in which he is barely alluded to, I think all printed
+literature may be searched in vain for so much as a mention of his name.
+
+Other chief men of this frontier, at the period we are considering, were
+Col. Guy Johnson, Superintendent of Indian Affairs; Sir John Johnson,
+son of the Sir William who captured Fort Niagara from the French in
+1759; Col. John Butler, of the Queen's Rangers; his son Walter;
+Sayenqueraghta, the King of the Senecas; Rowland Montour, his half-breed
+son-in-law; and Brant, the Mohawk hero, who, equipped with a New England
+schooling and enlightened by a trip to England, here returned to lead
+out scalping parties in the British interests.
+
+Col. Bolton had been for some time without authentic news of the enemy,
+when on the morning of December 14, 1777, the little garrison was thrown
+into unwonted activity by the arrival of Capt. La Mothe, who reported
+that Gen. Howe had taken Philadelphia, and that the rebels had
+"sustained an incredible loss." By a forced march of Howe, La Mothe
+averred, Gen. Washington had been defeated, "with 11,000 rebels killed,
+wounded and prisoners." Two days later the excitement was increased by
+the arrival at the fort of some Delaware Indians, who brought the great
+news that Washington was killed and his army totally routed. "I had a
+meeting of the chiefs of the Six Nations," wrote Bolton to Gen.
+Carleton, "about an hour after the express arrived and told them the
+news. They seemed extremely pleased and have been in good temper ever
+since their arrival." Oddly enough, this news was confirmed by a soldier
+of the 7th Regiment, who had been taken prisoner by the Americans, but
+had escaped and made his way to Niagara. He further embellished the
+report by declaring that 9,000 men under Lord Percy defeated 13,000
+rebels at Bear's Hill on December 20th, under Washington, that Gates was
+sent for to take the command when Washington was killed, and that 7,000
+volunteers from Ireland had joined Howe's army. Washington at this time,
+the reader will remember, had gone into winter quarters with his army at
+Valley Forge.
+
+There were 2,300 Indians at Fort Niagara at this period, all making
+perpetual demands for beef, flour and rum. The license of the jubilee
+over Washington's death probably was limited only by the scantiness of
+provisions and the impossibility of adding to the store. Cold weather
+shut down on the establishment, the vessels were laid up, and all winter
+long Col. Bolton and his men had no word contradicting the report of
+Washington's death. As late as April 8th, the following spring, he wrote
+to Gen. Carleton that "all accounts confirm Washington being killed and
+his army defeated in December last, and that Gates was sent for to take
+the command."
+
+The British early were apprised of Sullivan's intended raid, and
+although powerless to prevent it, kept well posted as to its progress.
+The various parties which Sullivan encountered, were directed from Fort
+Niagara. "Since the rebels visit the Indian country," wrote Gen.
+Haldimand to Sir John Johnson, September 14, 1779, "I am happy they are
+advancing so far. They can never reach Niagara and their difficulties
+and danger of retreat will, in proportion as they advance, increase."
+Again he wrote twelve days later: "You will be able to make your way to
+Niagara, and if the rebels should be encouraged to advance as far as
+that place, I am convinced that few of them will escape from famine or
+the sword. All in my power to do for you is to push up provisions, which
+shall be done with the utmost vigor, while the river and lake remain
+navigable, although it may throw me into great distress in this part of
+the province, should anything happen to prevent the arrival of the fall
+victuallers." There was however genuine alarm at Fort Niagara, and even
+Sir Frederick himself, though he wrote so confidently to Bolton, in his
+letters to the Ministry expressed grave apprehensions of what might
+happen.
+
+What did happen was bad enough for British interests, for though the
+Americans turned back, the raid had driven in upon Bolton a horde of
+frightened, hungry and irresponsible Indians, who had to be fed at the
+King's expense and were a source of unmeasured concern to the overworked
+commandant, notwithstanding the independent organization of the Indian
+Department which was effected.
+
+To arrive at a just idea of conditions hereabouts at this period, we
+must keep in mind the relation of the fluctuating population, Indians
+and whites, to the uncertain and often inadequate food supply.
+
+Fort Niagara at this time--the fall of '78--was a fortification 1,100
+yards in circumference, with five bastions and two blockhouses. Capt.
+John Johnson thought 1,000 men were needed to defend it; "the present
+strength," he wrote, "amounting to no more than 200 rank and file,
+including fifteen men of the Royal Artillery and the sick, a number
+barely sufficient to defend the outworks (if they were in a state of
+defense) and return the necessary sentries, should the place be infested
+by a considerable force.... With a garrison of 500 or a less number, it
+is impregnable against all the savages in America, but if a strong body
+of troops with artillery should move this way, I believe no engineer who
+has ever seen these works will say it can hold out any considerable
+time."
+
+On May 1st, 1778, there had been in the garrison at Fort Niagara 311
+men. Half a dozen more were stationed at Fort Schlosser, and thirty-two
+at Fort Erie, a total of 349, of whom 255 were reported as fit for duty.
+At this time Maj. Butler's Rangers, numbering 106, had gone on "an
+expedition with the Indians towards the settlements of Pennsylvania or
+New York, whichever he finds most practicable and advantageous to the
+King's service." These raids from Fort Niagara were far more frequent
+than one would infer from the histories--even from the American
+histories whose authors are not to be suspected of purposely minimizing
+either their number or effect. But it appears from the records that not
+infrequently the expeditions accomplished nothing of more consequence
+than to steal stock. Horses, cattle and sheep were in more than one
+instance driven away from settlements far down on the Mohawk or
+Susquehanna, and brought back alive or dead along the old trails, to
+Fort Niagara.
+
+To illustrate the methods of the time: In a report to Brig. Gen. Powell,
+Maj. Butler wrote: "In the spring of 1778 I found it absolutely
+requisite for the good of His Majesty's service, with the consent and
+approbation of Lt. Col. Bolton, and on the application of the chiefs and
+warriors of the five united nations ..., to proceed to the frontiers of
+the colonies in rebellion, with as many officers and men of my corps as
+were then raised, in order to protect the Indian settlements and to
+annoy the enemy." At this time many of his men were new recruits from
+the colonies, sons or heads of Loyalist--or as we used to say, on this
+side the border, of Tory--families. As they approached American frontier
+settlements, the loyalty to King George of some of his men became
+suspicious, so that Butler issued a proclamation that all deserters, if
+apprehended, were to be shot. In the letter just quoted from he reports
+that this order had a good effect. Many curious circumstances arose at
+the time, due to the British or American allegiance of men who before
+the war had been friendly neighbors, but who now met as hostiles, as
+captor and captive, sometimes as victor and victim. There was a constant
+flight, by one route and another, of Loyalist refugees to Fort Niagara.
+Thus, by a return of Feb. 12, 1779, 1,346 people were drawing rations
+from the stores of that place, of whom sixty-four were "distressed
+families," that is, Tories who had fled from the colonies (mostly from
+the Mohawk Valley); and 445 Indians. The war parties left early in the
+spring, and during the summer the supply boats could get up from the
+lower stations. Then came that march of destruction up the Genesee
+Valley; winter shut down on lake and river communication, and the most
+distressed period the frontier had known under British rule set in. In
+October, immediately after the invasion, Col. Bolton wrote (I quote
+briefly from a very full report): "Joseph Brant ... assures me that if
+500 men had joined the Rangers in time, there is no doubt that instead
+of 300, at least 1,000 warriors would have turned out, and with that
+force he is convinced that Mr. Sullivan would have had some reason to
+repent of his expedition; but the Indians not being supported as they
+expected, thought of nothing more than carrying off their families, and
+we had at this Post the 21st of last month 5,036 to supply with
+provisions, and notwithstanding a number of parties have been sent out
+since, we have still on the ground 3,678 to maintain. I am convinced
+your Excellency will not be surprised, if I am extremely alarmed, for to
+support such a multitude I think will be absolutely impossible. I have
+requested of Major Butler to try his utmost to prevail on the Indians
+whose villages have been destroyed to go down to Montreal for the
+winter, where, I have assured him, they would be well taken care of; and
+to inform all the rest who have not suffered by the enemy that they must
+return home and take care of their corn."
+
+Neither plan worked as hoped for. It was difficult to get the Indians to
+consent to go down the river, or even to Carleton Island; and as
+Sullivan had destroyed every village save two, few of the Senecas could
+be induced to return into the Genesee country. Bolton's urgent appeals
+for extra provisions were also doomed to disappointment, owing to the
+lateness of the season or the lack of transports.
+
+The winter after Sullivan's raid, Guy Johnson distributed clothing to
+more than 3,000 Indians at Fort Niagara. But the cost of clothing them
+was trifling compared with the cost of feeding them. Expeditions against
+the distant American settlements were planned, not more through the
+desire for retaliation, than from the necessity of reducing the number
+of dependents on Fort Niagara. When the inroads on provisions grew
+serious, the Indians were encouraged to go on the war-path. But so
+exceedingly severe was the winter, so deep was the snow on the trails,
+that not until the middle of February could any parties be induced to
+set out. The number camped around the fort, consuming the King's pork,
+beef, flour and rum, rose as we have seen, to more than 5,000. Many
+starved and many froze.
+
+Much could be said regarding the British policy of dealing with the
+Indians at Fort Niagara, but I may only touch upon the subject at this
+time. Haldimand, and behind him the British Ministry, placed great
+reliance upon them. The uniform instruction was that the Indians should
+be maintained as allies. On April 10, 1778, Lord George Germaine wrote
+to Gen. Haldimand that the designs of the rebels against Niagara and
+Detroit were not likely to be successful as long as the Six Nations
+continued faithful. Presents, honors, and the full license of the
+tomahawk and scalping-knife were allowed them. With a view to promoting
+their fidelity, Joseph Brant was made a colonel. Significant, too, was
+the settling of a generous allowance for life upon Brant's sister, Sir
+William Johnson's consort; which act was approved, about this time, by
+the august council at Whitehall.
+
+The British watched the state of the Indian mind as the sailor watches
+his barometer at the coming of a storm. And the Indian mind, though
+always cunning, was sometimes childlike in the directness and simplicity
+of its conclusions. The constant flight to Fort Niagara of refugee
+Tories was remarked by the savages, and in turn noted and reported to
+Gen. Haldimand. "The frequent passing of white people to Niagara," wrote
+Capt. John Johnson to Gen. Carleton, October 6, 1778, "is much taken
+note of by the Indians, who say they are running away and that they (the
+Tories) have begun the quarrel and leave them (the Indians) to defend
+it." However, Johnson counted on being able to change their minds, for
+he added: "I hope in my next to inform you of giving the rebels an
+eternal thrashing."
+
+The usual British good sense--the national tradesman's instinct--seems
+to have been temporarily suspended, held in abeyance, at the demands of
+these Indians. In his report of May 12, '78, Col. Bolton writes that he
+has approved bills for nearly L18,000 "for sundries furnished savages
+which Maj. Butler thought absolutely necessary, notwithstanding all the
+presents sent to their posts last year; 2,700 being assembled at a time
+when I little expected such a number, obliged me to send to Detroit for
+a supply of provisions, and to buy up all the cattle, etc., that could
+possibly be procured, otherwise this garrison must have been distressed
+or the savages offended, and of course, I suppose, would have joined the
+rebels. Even after all that was done for them they scarce seemed
+satisfied." In June he writes that only eight out of twenty puncheons of
+rum ordered for Fort Niagara had been received, and that "much wine has
+been given to the savages that was intended for this post."
+
+One reads in this old correspondence, with mingled amusement and
+amazement, of the marvelous attentions paid these wily savages.
+Childlike, whatever they saw in the cargoes of the merchants, they
+wanted, and England humored and pampered them, lest they transfer their
+affections. We have Guy Johnson's word for it, under date of Niagara,
+July 3, 1780, that "many of the Indians will no longer wear tinsel lace,
+and are become good judges of gold and silver. They frequently demand
+and have received wine, tea, coffee, candles and many such articles, and
+they are frequently nice in the choice of the finest black and other
+cloth for blankets, and the best linnen and cambrick with other things
+needless to enumerate.... The Six Nations are not so fond of gaudy
+colors as of good and substantial things, but they are passionately fond
+of silver ornaments and neat arrows." Elsewhere in these letters a
+requisition for port wine is explained on the ground that it was
+demanded by the chiefs when they were sick--dainty treatment, truly, for
+stalwart savages whose more accustomed diet was cornmeal and water, and
+who could feast, when fortune favored, on the reeking entrails of a dead
+horse.
+
+Now and then, it is true, advantages were taken of the Indians in ways
+which, presumably, it was thought they would not detect; all, we must
+grant, in the interest of economy. One was in the matter of powder. The
+Indians were furnished with a grade inferior to the garrison powder.
+This was shown by a series of tests made at Fort Niagara by order of
+Brig. Gen. Powell--Col. Bolton's successor--on July 10, 1782. We may
+suppose it to have been an agreeable summer day, that there was leisure
+at the fort to indulge in experiments, and that there were no astute
+Indians on hand to be unduly edified by the result. At Gen. Powell's
+order an eight-inch mortar was elevated to forty-five degrees, and six
+rounds fired, to find out how far one half a pound of powder would throw
+a forty-six pound shell. The first trial, with the garrison powder, sent
+the shell 239 yards. For rounds two and three Indian Department powder
+was used; the fine-glazed kind sent the shell eighty-two yards, the
+coarser grain carried it but seventy-nine yards. Once more the garrison
+powder was used; the shell flew 243 yards, while a second trial of the
+two sorts of Indian Department powder sent it but eighty-four and
+seventy-six yards, or about three to one in favor of the white man. With
+the garrison powder, a musket and carbine ball went through a two and
+one-quarter-inch oak plank, at the distance of fifty yards, and lodged
+in one six inches behind it; but with the Indian powder these balls
+would not go through the first plank.
+
+This seems like taking a base advantage of the trustful Indian ally,
+especially since he was to use his powder against the common foe, the
+American rebel; in reality, however, the Indians were wasteful and
+irresponsible, and squandered their ammunition on the little birds of
+the forest and even in harmless but expensive salvos into the empty air.
+
+Another economy was practiced in the Indian Department: when the stock
+ran low the rum was watered. Sometimes the precious contents of the
+casks were augmented one third, sometimes even two thirds, with the more
+abundant beverage from Niagara River, so that the garrison rum, like
+the garrison powder, "carried" two or three times as well as did that of
+the Indian Department; but whether this had a salutary effect upon the
+thirsty recipients is a problem the solution of which lies outside the
+range of the exact historian.
+
+Difficult as it was to hold the allegiance of the savage, it was harder
+yet--nay, it was impossible--to make him fight according to the rules of
+civilized warfare. The British Government from the Ministry down stand
+in history in an equivocal position in this matter. Over and over again
+in the correspondence which I have examined, one finds vigorous
+condemnation of the Indian method of slaughter of women and children,
+and the torture of captives. Over and over again the officers are urged
+not to allow it; and over and over again they report, after a raid, that
+they deplore the acts of wantonness which were committed, and which they
+were unable to prevent. But nowhere do I find any suggestion that the
+services of the Indians be dispensed with. Throughout the Revolution,
+the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas and Delawares--for the last, also, were
+often at Fort Niagara--were sent against the Americans, by the British.
+The Oneidas, as is well known, were divided and vacillating in their
+allegiance. In August, 1780, 132 of them who hitherto had been
+ostensibly friendly to the Americans, were induced to go to Niagara and
+give their pledges to the British. When they arrived Guy Johnson put on
+a severe front and censured them for their lack of steadfastness to the
+King. According to him, some 500 Oneidas in all came to the fort that
+year and declared themselves ready to fight the Americans. The last
+party that arrived delivered up to the Superintendent a commission
+which, he says, "the Rebels had issued with a view to form the Oneidas
+into a corps, ... they also delivered up to me the Rebel flag."
+
+So far as I am aware this is the first mention of the Stars and Stripes
+on the banks of the Niagara. By resolution of June 14, 1777, the
+American Congress had decreed "That the flag of the thirteen United
+States be thirteen stripes alternate red and white; that the union be
+thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new
+constellation." A little over three years had passed since John Paul
+Jones had first flung to the breeze, at the mast of his ship Ranger,
+this bright banner of the new nation. It was not to appear in a British
+port for two and a half years to come; sixteen years were to pass before
+it could fly triumphant over the old walls of Fort Niagara; but France
+had saluted it, Americans were fighting for it, and although it is first
+found here in hostile hands, yet I like to reckon from that August day
+in 1780, the beginning, if in prophecy only, of the reign of that new
+constellation over the Niagara region.
+
+Col. Bolton's life at Fort Niagara was one of infinite care. Besides the
+routine of the garrison, he was constantly harrassed by the demands of
+the Indians, whom the British did not wish to feed, but whom they dared
+not offend. The old fort, which now sleeps so quietly at the mouth of
+the river, was a busy place in those days. There was constant coming and
+going. Schooners, snows[12] and batteaux with provisions from Quebec, or
+with munitions of war or detachments of troops for Detroit or
+Michillimackinac, were constantly arriving. I question if the lower
+Niagara were not busier in that period than it is now. The transfer of
+supplies around the falls--the "great portage"--was hard and tedious
+work. Not Quebec, but Great Britain, was the real base of supplies.
+There were many detentions, and constant interruption in shipment, at
+every stage of the way. Sometimes a cargo of salt pork from Ireland or
+flour from London would reach Quebec too late in the summer to admit of
+transfer to the posts until spring. Sometimes, in crossing Lake Ontario,
+the provisions would be damaged so as to be unfit for use; sometimes
+they would be lost. Then not only the garrison at Niagara had to face
+starvation, but Col. Bolton soon had his ears ringing with messages and
+maledictions from Detroit and Mackinac, buried still farther in the
+wilderness, and all looking to Niagara for food and clothing. At such
+times of distress the upper posts questioned whether goods intended for
+them were not irregularly held at Niagara; the meanwhile, Col. Bolton
+would be straining every effort to get provisions enough to keep his own
+command from starvation. Indian supplies and traders' goods, too, were
+liable to loss and detention; and on very slight provocation, the
+demands of the Indians grew insolent.
+
+There were constant desertions, too, among the troops. Indeed, there
+seems never to have been a time at Fort Niagara when desertions were not
+frequent, and, more than once, so numerous as to threaten the very
+existence of the garrison. This, however, not in Bolton's time. As the
+correspondence shows, he enjoyed the utmost confidence of his superiors,
+and there is nothing to indicate that his men were not as devoted to him
+as any officer could expect at a frontier post where service meant hard
+work and possible starvation.
+
+Frequent as had been the raids against the settlements before the
+expedition of Sullivan, they became thereafter even more frequent; and,
+if less disastrous, they were so merely because the American frontier
+settlements had already paid their utmost tribute to Butler and Brant.
+The expeditions, along certain much-worn trails, had to go farther and
+farther in order to find foes to attack or cattle to steal. This was
+especially so in the valleys of the Mohawk and Susquehanna; yet in one
+quarter and another this border warfare went on, and there is no lack of
+evidence, in the official correspondence, of its effectiveness. Thus,
+writing from Fort Niagara, August 24, 1780, Guy Johnson reports: "I have
+the pleasure to inform your excellency that the partys who subdivided
+after Capt. Brant's success at the Cleysburg"--an expedition which he
+had previously reported--"have all been successful; that Capt. Brant
+has destroyed twenty houses in Schoharie and taken and killed twelve
+persons, besides releasing several women and children. Among the
+prisoners is Lieut. Vrooman, the settlement of that name being that
+which was destroyed. The other divisions of that party have been also
+successful, particularly Capt. David's party, and the number of killed
+and taken by them within that time, so far as it has come to my hands,
+is, killed, thirty-five, taken, forty-six, released, forty.... The
+remaining inhabitants on the frontiers are drawing in so as to deprive
+the rebels of any useful resources from them. I have at present on
+service, several partys that set out within one and the same week, and I
+apprehend that falling on the frontiers in different places at the same
+time will have a good effect." September 18th he writes, telling of the
+destruction of "Kleysberg," "containing a church, 100 houses and as many
+barnes, besides mills and 500 cattle and horses." In the same letter he
+wrote: "I have now 405 warriors out in different parties and quarters,
+exclusive of some marched from Kadaragawas.... The greater part of the
+rest are at their planting grounds, and many sick here, as fevers and
+fluxes have for some time prevailed at this Post." October 1st he
+reports the number of men in the war parties sent out from Fort Niagara
+as 892. A return, dated June 30, 1781, shows that the war parties "have
+killed and taken during the season already 150 persons." September 30th
+he reports an expedition under Walter Johnson and Montour, in which
+about "twenty rebels" were killed; and on that day Capt. Nelles arrived
+with eleven prisoners taken in Pennsylvania. A postscript to this letter
+says: "Since writing, I have received the disagreeable news of the death
+of the gallant Montour, who died of the wounds he received in the action
+before related. He was a chief of the greatest spirit and readiness, and
+his death is a loss." We can well believe that; for Montour, who, from
+the American view-point, had the reputation of being a fiend incarnate,
+had indeed shown "spirit and readiness" in stealing cattle, burning log
+cabins, killing and scalping their occupants or bringing them captive to
+Fort Niagara.
+
+In another paper[13] I have stated that I have traced out the individual
+experiences in captivity of thirty-two of these Americans, who were
+taken by the Indians and British and brought as prisoners to Fort
+Niagara. How much might be done on this line may be judged from a review
+of Col. Johnson's transactions, furnished by that officer at Montreal,
+March 24, 1782, in which it is stated that the number of Americans
+killed and taken captive by parties from Fort Niagara, amounted at that
+time to near 900. The time was rife with like experiences. For instance,
+there was the famous raid on Cherry Valley, from which Mrs. Jane
+Campbell and her four children, after a long detention among the
+Indians, were brought to Fort Niagara. There was Jane Moore, who was
+also taken at Cherry Valley, and who subsequently was married to Capt.
+Powell of the Niagara garrison in the winter of 1779--the ceremony, by
+the Church of England service, so impressing Joseph Brant that he
+immediately led up to the minister the squaw with whom he had been
+living for a long time, and insisted on being married over again, white
+man's fashion. There was Lieut. Col. Stacia, another prisoner from
+Cherry Valley, whose head Molly Brant wanted for a football. Some of the
+stories of these captives, like that of Alexander Harper, who ran the
+gauntlet at Fort Niagara (the ordeal apparently being made light in his
+case), are familiar to readers of our history; others, I venture to say,
+are unknown. For instance, there were John and Robert Brice, two little
+boys, who were taken in 1779 near Rensselaerville by a scouting party,
+and brought, with other prisoners and eight scalps, to Fort Niagara. But
+they did not come together. Robert, who was but eleven years old, was
+taken to Fort Erie and sold to a lake sailor for the sum of L3. This
+little Son of the Revolution was kept on the upper lakes until 1783,
+when he was summoned to Fort Niagara where he met his brother John, from
+whom he had parted near the mouth of the Unadilla River some four years
+before. They were sent to Montreal with nearly 200 liberated captives,
+and ultimately the boys reached Albany and their friends. Then there is
+the story of Nancy Bundy, who, her husband and children being killed,
+was brought to Fort Niagara and sold into servitude for $8. There was
+the famous Indian fighter, Moses Van Campen, whose adventures and
+captivity in our region are the subject of a whole book. There were
+Horatio Jones and Jasper Parrish, who passed from Indian captives into
+the useful role of interpreters for the whites.
+
+Thus I might go on, naming by the score the heroes and heroines of
+Indian captivities whose sufferings and whose adventures make up the
+most romantic chapter in our home annals, as yet for the most part
+unwritten. But I take time now to dwell, briefly as possible, upon but
+one of these captivities--one of the notable incidents during Col.
+Bolton's time at Fort Niagara. This was the capture of the Gilbert
+family. It made so great a stir, even in those days accustomed to war
+and Indian raids, that in 1784 a little book was published in
+Philadelphia giving the history of it. The original edition[14] has long
+since been one of the scarcest of Americana. But in the unpublished
+correspondence between Gen. Haldimand and the officers at Fort Niagara,
+I find sundry allusions to "the Quaker's family," and statements which
+go to show that the British at least were disposed to treat them well,
+and to effect their exchange as soon as possible. Notwithstanding, it
+was a long and cruel captivity, and presents some features of peculiar
+significance in our local history.
+
+About sunrise on the morning of April 25, 1780, a party of eleven
+painted Indians suddenly issued from the woods bordering Mahoning Creek,
+in Northampton County, Penn. They had come from Fort Niagara, and were
+one of those scalping parties for the success of which so many
+encouraging messages had passed from Whitehall to Quebec, and from
+Quebec to the frontier, and to stimulate which Guy Johnson had been so
+lavish with the fine linen, silver ornaments and port wine. The party
+was commanded by Rowland Montour, John Montour being second in command.
+Undiscovered, they surrounded the log house of the old Quaker miller,
+Benjamin Gilbert. With tomahawk raised and flint-locks cocked they
+suddenly appeared at door and windows. The old Quaker offered his hand
+as a brother. It was refused. Partly from the Quaker habit of
+non-resistance, partly from the obvious certainty that to attempt to
+escape meant death, the whole household submitted to be bound, while
+their home was plundered and burned. Loading three of Gilbert's horses
+with booty, and placing heavy packs on the back of each prisoner old
+enough to bear them, the expedition took the trail for Fort Niagara,
+more than 200 miles away. This was "war" in "the good old days."
+
+There were twelve prisoners in the party, of whom but five were men.
+The patriarch of the household, Benjamin, was sixty-nine years old;
+Elizabeth, his wife, was fifty-five; Joseph, Benjamin's son by a former
+wife, aged forty-one; another son, Jesse, aged nineteen, and his wife
+Sarah, the same age. There were three younger children, Rebecca, Abner
+and Elizabeth, respectively sixteen, fourteen and twelve; Thomas Peart,
+son to Benjamin Gilbert's wife by a former husband, aged twenty-three; a
+nephew, Benjamin Gilbert, aged eleven; a hired man, Andrew Harrigar,
+twenty-six; and Abigail Dodson, the fourteen-year-old daughter of a
+neighbor; she had had the ill-luck to come to Gilbert's mill that
+morning for grist, and was taken with the rest. Half a mile distant
+lived Mrs. Gilbert's oldest son, Benjamin Peart, aged twenty-seven, his
+wife Elizabeth, who was but twenty, and their nine-months-old child.
+Montour added these to his party, making fifteen prisoners in all,
+burned their house and urged all along the trail, their first stop being
+near "Mochunk." (Mauch Chunk.)
+
+I must omit most of the details of their march northward. On the evening
+of the first day Benjamin Peart fainted from fatigue and Rowland Montour
+was with difficulty restrained from tomahawking him. At night the men
+prisoners were secured in a way which was usual on these raids,
+throughout Western New York and Pennsylvania, during those dismal years.
+The Indians cut down a sapling five or six inches in diameter, and cut
+notches in it large enough to receive the ankles of the prisoners. After
+fixing their legs in these notches, they placed another pole over the
+first, and thus secured them as in stocks. This upper pole was then
+crossed at each end by stakes driven into the ground. The prisoners thus
+lay on the ground, on their backs. Straps or ropes around their necks
+were made fast to near-by trees. Sometimes a blanket was granted them
+for covering, sometimes not. What rest might be had, preparatory to
+another day's forced march, I leave to the imagination.
+
+During the early stages of this march the old couple were constantly
+threatened with death, because unable to keep up. On the fourth day four
+negroes who claimed that they were loyal to the King, that they had
+escaped from the Americans and had set out for Fort Niagara, were taken
+up by Montour from a camp where he had left them on his way down the
+valley. These negroes frequently whipped and tortured the prisoners for
+sport, Montour making no objection. On the 4th of May, the Indians
+separated into two companies; one taking the westward path, and with
+this party went Thomas Peart, Joseph Gilbert, Benjamin Gilbert--the
+little boy of eleven--and Sarah, wife of Jesse. The others kept on the
+northerly course. Andrew Harrigar, terrified by the Indian boast that
+those who had gone with the other party "were killed and scalped, and
+you may expect the same fate tonight," took a kettle, under pretence of
+bringing water, but ran away under cover of darkness. After incredible
+hardships he regained the settlements. His escape so angered Rowland
+Montour that he threw Jesse Gilbert down, and lifted his tomahawk for
+the fatal blow; Elizabeth, Jesse's mother, knelt over him, pressed her
+head to her son's brow and begged the captain to spare his life. Montour
+kicked her over and tied them both by their necks to a tree; after a
+time, his passion cooling, he loosed them, bade them pack up and take
+the trail. This is but a sample incident. I pass over many.
+
+None suffered more on the march than Elizabeth Peart, the girl mother.
+The Indians would not let her husband relieve her by carrying her child,
+and she was ever the victim of the whimsical moods of her captors. At
+one time they would let her ride one of the horses; at another, would
+compel her to walk, carrying the child, and would beat her if she lagged
+behind. By the 14th of May Elizabeth Gilbert had become so weak that she
+could only keep the trail when led and supported by her children. On
+this day the main party was rejoined by a portion of the party that had
+branched off to westward; with them were two of the four captives,
+Benjamin Gilbert, Jr., and Sarah, wife of Jesse. On this day old
+Benjamin was painted black, the custom of the Indians with prisoners
+whom they intended to kill. Later on they were joined by British
+soldiers, who took away the four negroes and did something to alleviate
+the sufferings of the white prisoners. The expedition had exhausted its
+provisions and all that had been taken from the Gilberts. A chance
+hedgehog, and roots dug in the woods, sustained them for some days. May
+the 17th they ferried across the Genesee River on a log raft.
+Provisions were brought from Fort Niagara, an Indian having been sent
+ahead, on the best horse; and on the morning of the 21st of May they
+heard, faintly booming beyond the intervening forest, the morning gun at
+Fort Niagara. An incident of that day's march was a meeting with
+Montour's wife. She was the daughter of the great Seneca Sayenqueraghta,
+the man who led the Indians at Wyoming,[15] and whose influence was
+greater in this region, at the time we are studying, than even that of
+Brant himself. He was the Old King of the Senecas, called Old Smoke by
+the whites. Smoke's Creek, the well-known stream which empties into Lake
+Erie just beyond the southwest limit of Buffalo, between South Park and
+Woodlawn Beach, preserves his name to our day. It was there that he
+lived in his last years; and somewhere on its margin, in a now unknown
+grave, he was buried. His daughter the "Princess," was, next to Molly
+Brant, the grandest Indian woman of the time on the Niagara. As she met
+the wretched Gilberts, "she was dressed altogether in the Indian
+costume, and was shining with gold lace and silver baubles." To her
+Rowland Montour presented the girl Rebecca, as a daughter. The princess
+took a silver ring from her finger and put it on Rebecca's, which act
+completed the adoption of this little Quaker maid of sixteen into one
+of the most famous--possibly the most infamous--family of the Niagara
+region during the Revolutionary period.
+
+At a village not far from Fort Niagara, apparently near the present
+Tuscarora village on the heights east of Lewiston, Montour painted
+Jesse, Abner, Rebecca and Elizabeth Gilbert, Jr., as Indians are
+painted, and gave each a belt of wampum; but while these marks of favor
+were shown to the young people, the mother, because of her feebleness,
+was continually the victim of the displeasure and the blows of the
+Indians. On May 23d, being at the Landing--what is now Lewiston--they
+were visited by Captains Powell and Dace from the fort, and the next
+day, just one month from the time of their capture, they trudged down
+the trail which is now the pleasant river road, towards the old fort,
+protected with difficulty from the blows of the Indians along the way.
+
+Now followed the dispersion of this unhappy family. After the Indian
+custom, the young and active prisoners were sought by the Indians for
+adoption. Many brave American boys went out to live, in the most menial
+servitude, among the Senecas and other tribes who during the later years
+of the Revolution lived on the Genesee, the Tonawanda, Buffalo,
+Cazenove, Smoke's, and Cattaraugus creeks. The old man and his wife and
+their son Jesse were surrendered to Col. Johnson. Benjamin Peart, Mrs.
+Gilbert's son, was carried off to the Genesee. The other members of the
+party were held in captivity in various places; but I may only stay now
+to note what befel the little Rebecca and her sister-in-law, Elizabeth
+Peart.
+
+As already stated, Rebecca had been adopted by Rowland Montour's wife.
+In the general allotment of prisoners, her cousin, Benjamin Gilbert, the
+lad of eleven, also fell to this daughter of Sayenqueraghta. She took
+the children to a cabin where her father's family, eleven in number,
+were assembled. After the usual grand lamentation for the dead, whose
+places were supposed now to be filled by the white prisoners, this royal
+household departed by easy stages for their summer's corn-planting. They
+tarried at the Landing, while clothing was had from the fort. The little
+Quaker girl was dressed after the Indian fashion, "with short-clothes,
+leggins and a gold-laced hat"; while Benjamin, "as a badge of his
+dignity, wore a silver medal hanging from his neck." They moved up to
+Fort Schlosser (just above the falls, near where the present power-house
+stands), thence by canoe to Fort Erie; then "four miles further, up
+Buffalo Creek, where they pitched their tent for a settlement." Here the
+women planted corn; but the little Rebecca, not being strong, was
+allowed to look after the cooking. The whole household, queen, princess
+and slave, had to work. The men of course were exempt; but the chief
+advantage of Sayenqueraghta's high rank was that he could procure more
+provisions from the King's stores at Fort Niagara than could the humbler
+members of the tribe. The boy Ben had an easy time of it. He roamed at
+will with the Indian boys over the territory that is now Buffalo;
+fished in the lake, hunted or idled without constraint, and it is
+recorded that he was so pleased with the Indian mode of life, that but
+for his sister's constant admonition he would have dropped all thought
+of return to civilization, and cheerfully have become as good an Indian
+as the best of them. At eleven years of age savagery takes easy hold.
+
+These children lived with Montour's Indian relatives for over two years;
+sharing in the feasts when there was plenty, going pinched with hunger
+on the frequent occasions when improvidence had exhausted the supply.
+There were numerous expeditions, afoot and by canoe, to Fort Niagara. On
+one occasion Rebecca, with her Indian family, were entertained by
+British officers at Fort Erie, when Old Smoke drank so much wine that
+when he came to paddle his canoe homeward, across the river, he narrowly
+escaped an upset on the rocky reef, just outside the entrance to Buffalo
+Creek. On every visit to Fort Niagara Rebecca would look for release;
+but although the officers were kind to her, they did not choose to
+interfere with so powerful a family as Montour's. It was shortly after
+one of these disappointments that she heard of her father's death. For
+some months she was sick; then came news of the death of her Indian
+father, Rowland Montour, who succumbed to wounds received in the attack
+already noted. There was great mourning in the lodge on Buffalo Creek,
+and Rebecca had to make a feint of sorrow, weeping aloud with the rest.
+
+In the winter of '81-'82 a scheme was devised by friends at the fort
+for abducting her from the Indians, but it was not undertaken. In the
+spring of '82 peremptory orders came from Gen. Haldimand that all the
+remaining members of the Gilbert family who were still in captivity
+should be taken from the Indians; but after a council fire had been
+lighted, Old Smoke, Montour's widow, and the rest of the family, Rebecca
+and Ben included, moved six miles up the lake shore--apparently to
+Smoke's Creek--where they stayed several weeks making maple sugar. Then,
+a great pigeon roost being reported, men and boys went off to it, some
+fifty miles, and the delighted young Ben went too. Of all the Gilbert
+captives he alone seems to have had experiences too full of wholesome
+adventure and easy living to warrant the expenditure of the least bit of
+sympathy upon him. But sooner or later the wily Indians had to heed Sir
+Frederick's command, and on the 1st of June, 1782, after upwards of two
+years of captivity, Rebecca and her cousin were released at Fort
+Niagara, and two days later, with others, embarked for Montreal.
+
+Far more cheerless were the experiences of Elizabeth Peart. She was
+parted from her husband, adopted by a Seneca family, and was also
+brought to raise corn on Buffalo Creek. Early in her servitude among the
+Indians her babe was taken from her and carried across to Canada. She
+was but twenty years old herself; the family that had taken her came by
+canoe to Buffalo Creek, where they settled for the corn-planting. This
+was in the spring of 1780. All manner of drudgery and burdens were put
+upon her. Her work was to cultivate the corn. Falling sick, the Indians
+built a hut for her by the side of the cornfield, and then utterly
+neglected her. Here she remained through the summer, regaining strength
+enough to care for and gather the corn; when this was done, her Indian
+father permitted her to come and live again in the family lodge. At one
+time a drunken Indian attacked her, knocked her down, and dragged her
+about, beating her. At another, all provision failing, she tramped with
+others four days through the snow to Fort Niagara. Here Capt. Powell's
+wife--who had been a prisoner herself--interceded in Elizabeth's behalf,
+but to no avail. She was however given an opportunity to see her babe,
+which was being cared for by an Indian family on the Canadian side of
+the river, opposite Fort Niagara. This privilege was gained for the poor
+mother by bribing her Indian father with a bottle of rum. So far as I am
+aware, this was the best use to which a bottle of rum was put during the
+Revolutionary War. But back to Buffalo Creek the unhappy mother had to
+come. Her release was finally obtained by artifice. Being allowed to
+visit Fort Niagara, where she had some needlework to do for the white
+people, she feigned sickness, and by one excuse and another the Indians
+were put off until she could be shipped away to Montreal.
+
+Of the Gilbert family and those taken with them by Montour, only the old
+man died in captivity. The adventures of each one would make a long
+story, but may not be entered upon here. By the close of '82 they were
+all released from the Indians, and after a detention at Montreal,
+reached their friends in Pennsylvania and set about the reestablishment
+of homes.
+
+Beyond question, Elizabeth Peart and Rebecca Gilbert were the first
+white women ever on the site of the present city of Buffalo. They were
+brave, patient, patriotic girls; no truer Daughters of the American
+Revolution are known to history. It would seem fitting that their memory
+should be preserved and their story known--much fuller than I have here
+sketched it--by the patriotic Daughters of the Revolution of our own
+day, who give heed to American beginnings in this region.
+
+I have dwelt at length on the Gilbert captivity, not more because of its
+own importance than to illustrate the responsibilities which constantly
+rested on the commandant at Niagara, at this period. We now turn to
+other phases of the service which engaged the attention and taxed the
+endurance of Col. Bolton.
+
+From the time of the conquest of Canada in 1760 down to the opening of
+the Revolution, there had been a slow but steady growth of shipping on
+the lakes, especially on Lake Ontario. On this lake, as early as 1767,
+there were four brigs of from forty to seventy tons, and sixteen armed
+deck-cutters. Besides the "King's ships" there were still much travel
+and traffic by means of canoes and batteaux. One of the first effects of
+the war with the American colonies was to beget active ship-building
+operations by the British; for Lake Ontario, at Oswegatchie, Oswego and
+Niagara; and for Lake Erie, at Navy Island, Detroit and Pine River. An
+official return made in July, 1778, the summer after Col. Bolton assumed
+command at Niagara, enumerates twelve sailing craft built for Lake
+Ontario since the British gained control of that lake in 1759, and
+sixteen for Lake Erie; seven of the Lake Ontario boats had been cast
+away, two were laid up and decayed; so that at this time--midsummer of
+'78--there were still in service only the snow Haldimand, eighteen guns,
+built at Oswegatchie in 1771; the snow Seneca, eighteen guns, built in
+1777; and the sloop Caldwell, two guns, built in 1774. A memorandum
+records that Capt. Andrews, in the spring of 1778, sought permission to
+build another vessel at Niagara, to take the place of the Haldimand,
+which, he was informed, could not last more than another year. The
+vessel built, in accordance with this recommendation, was a schooner;
+her construction was entrusted to Capt. Shank, at Niagara, across the
+river from the fort. We may be sure that Col. Bolton visited the yard
+from time to time to note the progress of the work. There was discussion
+over her lines. "Capt. Shank was told that he was making her too
+flat-bottomed, and that she would upset." The builder laughed at his
+critics and stuck to his model. She was launched, named the Ontario, and
+was hastened forward to completion, for the King's service had urgent
+need of her.
+
+Col. Bolton had long been in bad health, wearied with the cares and
+perplexities of his position and eager to get away from Fort Niagara.
+One source of constant annoyance to his military mind was the traders'
+supplies, which turned the fort into a warehouse and laid distasteful
+duties upon its commandant. His letters contain many allusions to the
+"incredible plague and trouble caused by merchants' goods frequently
+sent without a single person to care for them." "Last year," so he wrote
+in May, '78, "every place in this fort was lumbered with them, and
+vessels were obliged to navigate the lakes until Nov. 30th." The vessels
+were primarily for the King's service, but when unemployed were allowed
+to be used in transporting merchants' goods, under certain regulations.
+The next statement in the same letter gives some idea of the magnitude
+of the transactions involved in the various departments in this region
+at the period: "I have drawn a bill of L14,760-9-5"--nearly $74,000--"on
+acct. of sundries furnished Indians by Maj. Butler, also another on
+acct. of Naval Dept. at Detroit for L4,070-18-9. Between us I am
+heartily sick of bills and accounts and if the other posts are as
+expensive to Government as this has been I think Old England had done
+much better in letting the savages take possession of them than to have
+put herself to half the enormous sum she has been at in keeping them.
+Neither does the climate agree with my constitution, which has already
+suffered by being employed many years in the West Indies and Florida,
+for I have been extremely ill the two winters I have spent here with
+rheumatism and a disorder in my breast."
+
+One source of annoyance to Bolton was a detachment of Hessians which was
+sent to augment the garrison at Fort Niagara. Col. Bolton did not find
+them to his liking, nor was life at a backwoods post at all congenial to
+these mercenaries, fighting England's battles to pay their monarch's
+debts. They refused to work on the fortifications at Niagara; whereupon,
+in November, 1779, Col. Bolton packed them off down to Carleton Island.
+Alexander Fraser, in charge of that post, wrote to Gen. Haldimand that
+he had ordered the "jagers" to be replaced by a company of the 34th.
+"Capt. Count Wittgenstein," he added, "fears bad consequences should the
+Jagers be ordered to return." Nowhere in America does the British
+employment of Hessian troops appear to have been less satisfactory than
+on this frontier. At Carleton Island, as at Niagara, they refused to
+work, many of them were accused of selling their necessaries for rum,
+and the Count de Wittgenstein himself was reprimanded.
+
+There were difficulties, too, with the lake service. Desertion and
+discontent followed an attempt to shorten the seamen's rations. In the
+summer of '78, the sailors on board the snow Seneca, at Niagara, asked
+to be discharged, alleging that their time had expired the preceding
+November, and the yet more remarkable reason that they objected to the
+service because they had been brought up on shore and life on the
+rolling deep of Lake Ontario afforded "no opportunity of exercising our
+Religion, neither does confinement agree with our healths." Like many
+lake sailors at this period they were probably French Canadian
+Catholics, with loyalty none too strong to the British cause.
+
+Bolton stuck to his post throughout that season, the year of alarm that
+followed, and the succeeding period of distress. The most frequent
+entries in his letters record the arrival of war parties, and his
+anxiety over the enormous expense incurred for the Indians by Maj.
+Butler. "Scalps and prisoners are coming in every day, which is all the
+news this place affords," he writes in June, '78; and again, the same
+month: "Ninety savages are just arrived with thirteen scalps and two
+prisoners, and forty more with two scalps are expected. All of these
+gentry, I am informed, must be clothed."[16] While there does not seem
+ever to have been an open break between Bolton and Butler, yet the
+former looked with dismay, if not disapproval, upon the endless
+expenditure incurred for the Indians. In August, 1778, he wrote: "Maj.
+Butler, chief of the Indian Department, gives orders to the merchants to
+supply the savages with everything to answer their demands, of which
+undoubtedly he is the best judge and only person who can satisfy them or
+keep them in temper. He also signs a certificate that the goods and cash
+issued and paid by his order were indispensably necessary for the
+government of His Majesty's service. The commanding officer of this
+post is thus obliged to draw bills for the amount of all these accounts,
+of which it is impossible he can be a judge or know anything about.... I
+only mention these things to show Yr Excellency the disagreeable part
+that falls to my lot as commanding officer; besides this is such a
+complicated command that even an officer of much superior abilities than
+I am master of, would find himself sometimes not a little embarrassed at
+this Post."
+
+Bolton was seriously ill during the winter of '79-'80, as indeed were
+many of his garrison. In April, 1780, he reports his wretched health to
+Gen. Haldimand. All through the succeeding summer he stuck to his post;
+but on September 13th, worn out and discouraged, he asked to be allowed
+to retire from the command of the upper posts and lakes. September 30th
+he again wrote, begging for leave of absence. Some weeks later the
+desired permission was sent, and Bolton determined to stay no longer.
+Late in October the new Ontario, which Capt. Shank had built across the
+river from the fort, was finished and rigged; she carried sixteen guns,
+and was declared ready for service. She was ordered to convey a company
+of the 34th down to Carleton Island. It was a notable departure. The
+season was so late, no other opportunity for crossing Lake Ontario might
+be afforded until spring. Lieut. Royce, with thirty men of the 34th,
+embarked, under orders; so did Lieut. Colleton of the Royal Artillery.
+Capt. Andrews, superintendent of naval construction, at whose
+solicitations the Ontario had been built, being at Fort Niagara at the
+time, also took passage. There was the full complement of officers and
+crew. Several passengers--licensed Indian traders and fur merchants,
+probably--crowded aboard; and among those who sailed away from Fort
+Niagara that last October day, was Col. Bolton. It was the Ontario's
+first voyage; and we may be sure that there was no lack of speculation
+and wise opinion in the throng of spectators who watched her round the
+bar at the mouth of the river and take her course down the lake. The old
+criticism about her flat bottom and lack of draught was sure to be
+recalled. But the Ontario, with her notable passenger list, had sailed,
+and the only port she ever reached was the bottom of the lake. It is
+supposed she foundered, some forty miles east of Niagara, near a place
+called Golden Hill. On the beach there, some days after, a few articles
+were found, supposed to have come ashore; but no other sign, no word of
+the Ontario or of any of the throng that sailed in her has been had from
+that day to this. In due time news of the loss reached Quebec. Sincere
+but short were the expressions of sorrow in the correspondence that
+followed. "The loss of so many good officers and men," wrote Haldimand,
+"particularly at this period, and the disappointment of forwarding
+provisions for the great consumption at the upper posts, will be
+severely felt."[17] It was the fortune of war, and already the thought
+turned to those who had depended upon a return cargo of provisions by
+the Ontario. And so passes Mason Bolton out of the history of Fort
+Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+
+What Befel David Ogden.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT BEFEL DAVID OGDEN.
+
+
+It was my privilege, in the summer of 1896, to share in the exercises
+which marked the Centennial of the delivery of Fort Niagara by Great
+Britain to the United States. As I stood in that old stronghold on the
+bank above the blue lake, strolled across the ancient parade ground, or
+passed from one historic building to another, I found myself constantly
+forgetting the actual day and hour, and slipping back a century or two.
+There was a great crowd at Fort Niagara on this August day; thousands of
+people--citizens, officials, soldiers and pleasure-seekers; but with
+them came and went, to my retrospective vision, many more thousands yet:
+missionary priests, French adventurers, traders, soldiers of the
+scarlet, and of the buff and blue. I saw Butler's Rangers in their green
+suits; and I saw a horde of savages, now begging for rations from the
+King's stores, now coming in from their forays, famished but exultant,
+displaying the scalps they had taken, or leading their ragged and
+woebegone captives. It was upon these captives, whose romantic
+misfortunes make a long and dramatic chapter in the history of Fort
+Niagara, that my regard was prone to center. Their stories have nowhere
+been told, so far as I am aware, as a part of the history of the place;
+many of them never can be told; but of others some details may be
+recorded.
+
+Throughout the whole period of the Revolutionary War, Fort Niagara was a
+garrisoned British post, of varying strength. It was the supply depot
+for all arms and provisions which were destined for the upper posts of
+Detroit and Michillimackinac; it was the rendezvous of the Senecas, who
+worked the Government for all the blankets and guns, trinkets and
+provisions which they could get; it was the headquarters of Col. Guy
+Johnson, Indian Superintendent; and it was the resting-place and base of
+operations of They-en-dan-e-gey-ah--in English, Joseph Brant; of Butler
+and his rangers, and of numerous other less famous but more cruel
+Indians, British and Tory leaders. No American troops reached Fort
+Niagara to attack it. Only once was it even threatened. Yet throughout
+the whole period of the war parties sallied forth from Fort Niagara to
+plunder, capture or kill the rebel settlers wherever they could be
+reached.
+
+Sixty years ago Judge Samuel De Veaux wrote of this phase of the history
+of Fort Niagara:
+
+ This old fort is as much noted for enormity and crime, as for any
+ good ever derived from it by the nation in occupation.... During
+ the American Revolution it was the headquarters of all that was
+ barbarous, unrelenting and cruel. There, were congregated the
+ leaders and chiefs of those bands of murderers and miscreants, that
+ carried death and destruction into the remote American settlements.
+ There, civilized Europe revelled with savage America; and ladies of
+ education and refinement mingled in the society of those whose
+ only distinction was to wield the bloody tomahawk and
+ scalping-knife. There, the squaws of the forest were raised to
+ eminence, and the most unholy unions between them and officers of
+ the highest rank, smiled upon and countenanced. There, in their
+ strong hold, like a nest of vultures, securely, for seven years,
+ they sallied forth and preyed upon the distant settlements of the
+ Mohawks and Susquehannahs. It was the depot of their plunder; there
+ they planned their forays, and there they returned to feast, until
+ the hour of action came again.[18]
+
+This striking passage, which the worthy author did not substantiate by a
+single fact, may stand as the present text. I have undertaken to trace
+some of the flights of the birds of prey from this nest, and to bring
+together the details relating to the captives who were brought hither.
+From many sources I have traced out the narratives of thirty-two persons
+who were brought to Fort Niagara captive by the Indians, during the
+years 1778 to 1783. Among them is my boy hero Davy Ogden, whose
+adventures I undertake to tell with some minuteness. Just how many
+American prisoners were brought into Fort Niagara during this period I
+am unable to say, though it is possible that from the official
+correspondence of the time figures could be had on which a very close
+estimate could be based. My examination of the subject warrants the
+assertion that several hundred were brought in by the war parties under
+Indian, British and Tory leaders. In this correspondence, very little of
+which has ever been published, one may find such entries as the
+following:
+
+Guy Johnson wrote from Fort Niagara, June 30, 1781:
+
+ In my last letter of the 24th inst. I had just time to enclose a
+ copy of Lieut. Nelles's letter with an account of his success,
+ since which he arrived at this place with more particular
+ information by which I find that he killed thirteen and took seven
+ (the Indians not having reckoned two of the persons whom they left
+ unscalped)....
+
+Again:
+
+ I have the honor to transmit to Your Excellency a general letter
+ containing the state of the garrison and of my Department to the
+ 1st inst., and a return, at the foot, of the war parties that have
+ been on service this year, ... by which it will appear that they
+ have killed and taken during the season already 150 persons,
+ including those last brought in....
+
+Again he reports, August 30, 1781:
+
+ The party with Capt. Caldwell and some of the Indians with Capt.
+ Lottridge are returning, having destroyed several settlements in
+ Ulster County, and about 100 of the Indians are gone against other
+ parts of the frontiers, and I have some large parties under good
+ leaders still on service as well as scouts towards Fort Pitt....
+
+Not only are there many returns of this sort, but also tabulated
+statements, giving the number of prisoners sent down from Fort Niagara
+to Montreal on given dates, with their names, ages, names of their
+captors, and the places where they were taken. There were many shipments
+during the summer of '83, and the latest return of this sort which I
+have found in the archives is dated August 1st of that year, when eleven
+prisoners were sent from the fort to Montreal. It was probably not far
+from this time that the last American prisoner of the Revolution was
+released from Fort Niagara. But let the reader beware of forming hasty
+conclusions as to the cruelty or brutality of the British at Fort
+Niagara. In the first place, remember that harshness or kindness in the
+treatment of the helpless depends in good degree--and always has
+depended--upon the temperament and mood of the individual custodian.
+There were those in command at Fort Niagara who appear to have been
+capable of almost any iniquity. Others gave frequent and conspicuous
+proofs of their humanity. Remember, secondly, that the prisoners
+primarily belonged to the Indians who captured them. The Indian custom
+of adoption--the taking into the family circle of a prisoner in place of
+a son or husband who had been killed by the enemy--was an Iroquois
+custom, dating back much further than their acquaintance with the
+English. Many of the Americans who were detained in this fashion by
+their Indian captors, probably never were given over to the British.
+Some, as we know, like Mary Jemison, the White Woman of the Genesee,
+adopted the Indian mode of life and refused to leave it. Others died in
+captivity, some escaped. Horatio Jones and Jasper Parrish were first
+prisoners, then utilized as interpreters, but remained among the
+Indians.[19] And in many cases, especially of women and children, we
+know that they were got away from the Indians by the British officers at
+Fort Niagara, only after considerable trouble and expense. In these
+cases the British were the real benefactors of the Americans, and the
+kindness in the act cannot always be put aside on the mere ground of
+military exchange, prisoner for prisoner. Gen. Haldimand is quoted to
+the effect that he "does not intend to enter into an exchange of
+prisoners, but he will not add to the distresses attending the present
+war, by detaining helpless women and children from their families."[20]
+
+I have spoken of Mrs. Campbell, who was held some months at Kanadasaga.
+The letter just cited further illustrates the point I would make:
+
+ A former application had been made in behalf of Col. Campbell to
+ procure the exchange of his family for that of Col. Butler, and the
+ officer commanding the upper posts collected Mr. Campbell's and the
+ family of a Mr. Moore, and procured their release from the Indians
+ upon the above mentioned condition with infinite trouble and a very
+ heavy expense. They are now at Fort Niagara where the best care
+ that circumstances will admit of, is taken of them, and I am to
+ acquaint you that Mrs. Campbell & any other women or children that
+ shall be specified shall be safely conducted to Fort Schuyler, or
+ to any other place that shall be thought most convenient, provided
+ Mrs. Butler & her family consisting of a like number shall in the
+ same manner have safe conduct to my advance post upon Lake
+ Champlain in order that she may cross the lake before the ice
+ breaks up.
+
+The official correspondence carried on during the years 1779 to '83,
+between Gen. Haldimand and the commanding officers at Fort Niagara shows
+in more than one instance that American prisoners were a burden and a
+trouble at that post. Sometimes, as in the case of Mrs. Campbell, who
+was finally exchanged for Mrs. Butler and her children, they were
+detained as hostages. More often, they were received from the Indians in
+exchange for presents, the British being obliged to humor the Indians
+and thus retain their invaluable services. Thus, under date of Oct. 2,
+1779, we find Col. Bolton writing from Fort Niagara to Gen. Haldimand:
+"I should be glad to know what to do with the prisoners sent here by
+Capt. Lernault. Some of them I forwarded to Carleton Island, and Maj.
+Nairne has applied for leave to send them to Montreal. I have also many
+here belonging to the Indians, who have not as yet agreed to deliver
+them up."[21]
+
+I could multiply at great length these citations from the official
+correspondence, but enough has been given to show that the wholesale
+condemnation of the British, into whose hands American prisoners fell,
+is not warranted by the facts. But there is no plainer fact in it all
+than that the British organized and aided the Indian raids, and were,
+therefore, joint culprits in general.
+
+And this brings us to the subject of scalps. For many years Fort Niagara
+was called a scalp-market. The statement is frequent in early writers
+that the British officers offered about eight dollars for every
+American's scalp, and that it was this offer, more than anything else,
+which fired the Indians to their most horrible deeds. Many scalps were
+brought into Fort Niagara, but I have failed, as yet, to find any
+report, or figure, or allusion, in the British archives pointing to the
+payment of anything whatever. Further search may discover something to
+settle this not unimportant matter; for we may readily believe that if
+such payments were made the matter would be passed over as unobtrusively
+as possible, especially in the reports to the Ministry. The facts appear
+to be that warriors who brought scalps into Fort Niagara gave them to
+the Superintendent of Indian Affairs, or his deputy, and then received
+presents from him. Probably these presents were proportioned to the
+success on the warpath.
+
+These facts and reflections are offered to assist the reader's ready
+understanding and imagination in following in detail the adventures of
+one out of the many prisoners whose paths we have glanced at; for of all
+these unfortunate patriots who were thus brought to the "vultures' nest"
+none has laid hold of my interest and my imagination more strongly than
+has David Ogden. He was born in a troublous time, and the hazards of
+border life were his sole heritage, save alone a sturdy intrepidity of
+character which chiefly commends him to me as the typical hero of all
+the heroic souls, men, women, and children, who came through great
+bereavements and hardships, into old Fort Niagara as prisoners of war.
+Davy was born at Fishkill, Dutchess Co., New York, in 1764. His parents
+made one remove after another, in the restless American fashion, for
+some years taking such chances of betterment as new settlements
+afforded; first at Waterford, Saratoga Co.; then in the wilderness on
+the head-waters of the Susquehanna near the present village of
+Huntsville; then up the river to the settlement known in those days as
+Newtown Martin, now Middlefield; and later, for safety, to Cherry
+Valley. Here David's mother and her four boys were at the time of the
+famous massacre of November, 1778. When the alarm was given Mrs. Ogden
+snatched a blanket, and with her little ones began a flight through the
+woods towards the Mohawk. With them also fled Col. Campbell, of the
+patriot militia. Coming to a deserted cabin whose owner had fled, they
+did not scruple to help themselves to a loaf of bread, which Col.
+Campbell cut up with his sword. After another flight of some hours
+through a storm of mingled snow and rain, they came to the house of one
+Lyons, a Tory, who was absent, presumably because busied in the black
+work at Cherry Valley. Mrs. Lyons, who seems to have shared her
+husband's sentiments, refused the refugees anything to eat, but finally
+let the mother and children spend the night on the floor. Col. Campbell
+left the Ogdens here and pushed on alone towards Canajoharie; while Mrs.
+Odgen and her hungry little ones went on by themselves through the snow.
+That day they came to a more hospitable house, where the keen suffering
+of that adventure ended; and some days later, on the Mohawk, the father
+rejoined the family, he also having escaped the massacre at Cherry
+Valley.
+
+This incident may be reckoned the mere prelude of our Davy's adventures;
+for the next spring, having reached the mature age of fourteen, he
+volunteered in the service of his country, entered upon the regular life
+of a soldier, and began to have adventures on his own account. The year
+that followed was spent in arduous but not particularly romantic
+service. He was marched from one point to another on the Mohawk and the
+Hudson; saw Andre hanged at Tappan, and finally was sent to the frontier
+again, where at Fort Stanwix,[22] in the spring of 1781, what we may
+regard as the real adventures of Davy Ogden began.
+
+A party of eleven wood-choppers were at work in the heavy timber about
+two miles from the fort, and every day an armed guard was sent out from
+the garrison to protect them. On March 2d, Corporal Samuel Betts and six
+soldiers, Davy among them, were detailed on this service. I conceive of
+my hero at this time as a sturdy, well-seasoned lad, to whom woodcraft
+and pioneer soldiering had become second nature. I would like to see him
+among city boys of his own age to-day. Most things that they know, and
+think of, would be quite out of his range. But there is a common ground
+on which all healthy, high-minded boys, of whatever time or station in
+life, stand on a level. I do not know that he had ever been to school,
+or that he could read, though I think his mother must have looked to
+that. But I do know that he was well educated. He was innocent of the
+bicycle, but I'll warrant he could skate. I know he could swim like an
+otter--as I shall presently record--and when it came to running, he
+would have been a champion of the cinder-path, to-day. He knew the ways
+of poverty and of self-denial; knew the signs of the forest, of wild
+animal and Indian; and best of all, I am sure he knew just why he was
+carrying a heavy flint-lock in the ragged, hungry ranks of the American
+"rebels." It must be admitted, I linger somewhat over my hero; but I
+like the lad, and would have the reader come into sympathy with him. I
+can see him now as he followed the corporal out of the fort that March
+morning. He wore the three-cornered cocked-up hat of the prescribed
+uniform, and his powder-horn was slung at his side. The whole guard
+very likely wore snowshoes, for the snow lay three feet deep in the
+woods, and a thaw had weakened the crust.
+
+Late in the afternoon, soldiers and wood-choppers were startled by the
+yells of Indians and Tories, who had gained a hill between them and the
+fort. Brant had achieved another of his surprises, and there was no
+escape from his party, which seemed to fill the woods. His evident
+intent was to make captives and not to kill, though his men had orders
+to shoot or tomahawk any who fired in self-defense. Two of Davy's
+companions were wounded by the enemy. One of them, Timothy Runnels, was
+shot in the mouth, "the ball coming through his cheek; and yet not a
+tooth was disturbed, a pretty good evidence, in the opinion of his
+comrades, that his mouth was wide open when the ball went in." It fared
+more seriously with the other wounded soldier. This man, whose name was
+Morfat, had his thigh broken by a bullet. The Indians rushed upon him as
+he fell at Davy's side, tomahawked him, scalped him, stripped him and
+left him naked upon the snow, thus visiting a special vengeance upon one
+who was said to be a deserter from the British. It is further chronicled
+that Morfat did not immediately die, but lived until he was found, hours
+after, by a party from the fort, finally expiring as his comrades bore
+him through the gate of Fort Stanwix.
+
+Davy Ogden had seen this dreadful thing, but with no sign of fear or
+sickness. He had already mastered that scorn of suffering and death
+which always commended the brave to their Indian captors. He was ranged
+up with the other prisoners, and Brant asked of each his name. When Davy
+gave his, the great chief exclaimed:
+
+"What, a son of Ogden the beaver-hunter, that old scouter? Ugh! I wish
+it were he instead of you! But we will take care of his boy or he may
+become a scouter too!"
+
+Thus began David's captivity, as the prisoner, and perhaps receiving
+some of the special regard, of Brant himself. There could have been
+little doubt in Davy's mind, from the moment of his capture, that he was
+to be carried to Fort Niagara; yet the first move of the party was
+characteristic of Indian strategy; for instead of taking the trail
+westward, they all marched off to the eastward, coming upon the Mohawk
+some miles below Fort Stanwix. They forded the river twice, the icy
+water coming above their waists. On emerging upon the road between Fort
+Stanwix and Fort Herkimer, Brant halted his sixteen prisoners and caused
+the buckles to be cut from their shoes. These he placed in a row in the
+road, where the first passing American would be sure to see them. There
+was something of a taunt in the act, and a good deal of humor; and we
+may be sure that Joseph Brant, who was educated enough, and of great
+nature enough, to enjoy a joke, had many a laugh on his way back to
+Niagara as he thought of those thirty-two buckles in a row.
+
+The prisoners tied up their shoes with deerskin strings, and trudged
+along through the night until the gleam of fires ahead and a chorus of
+yells turned their thoughts towards the stake and an ignominious
+martyrdom. But their fate was easier to meet. In a volley of sixteen
+distinct yells for the prisoners and one for the scalp, the party--said
+to number 100 Indians and fifty Tories--entered the first camp, where
+squaws were boiling huge kettles of samp--pounded corn--eaten without
+salt. All fared equally well, and all slept on the ground in the snow,
+Davy and his fellows being guarded by British soldiers.
+
+The next day's march brought them to Oneida Castle, often the
+headquarters of Brant in his expeditions. Here the Indians dug up from
+the snow a store of unhusked corn, and shelled and pounded a quantity
+for their long march. Here, too, Davy's three-cornered Revolutionary hat
+was taken from him, and in its place was given him a raccoon skin. All
+of the captives except the corporal were similarly treated and the
+Indians showed them how to tie the head and tail together. On some the
+legs stuck up and on others the legs hung down. I do not know how Davy
+wore his--with a touch of taste and an air of gaiety, no doubt; and we
+may be sure it made a better head-covering for a march of 250 miles at
+that season than would the stiff hat he had lost. Corporal Betts alone
+was permitted to keep his hat, as insignia of rank, and it is to be
+hoped he got some comfort out of it.
+
+It would take too long to give all the dismal details of Davy's dreary
+tramp across the State. Other captivities which I have spoken of had
+incidents of more dire misery and greater horror than befel the party
+to which Ogden belonged; and this is one reason why I have chosen to
+dwell upon his adventures, because my aim is, by a personal narrative,
+to illustrate the average experience of the time.
+
+There were hundreds of American prisoners brought to Fort Niagara during
+the period we are studying, but it would be far from just to their
+captors, and would throw our historical perspective out of focus, to
+take the extreme cases as types for the whole.
+
+Yet, put it mildly as we can, the experience persists in being serious.
+At Oneida Castle Brant, evidently fearing pursuit, roused his party in
+the middle of the night, and a forced march was begun through the heavy
+timber and up and down the long hills to the westward. When the moon
+went down they halted, but at the first streak of daylight they pushed
+on, not waiting even to boil their samp. An occasional handful of
+parched corn, pounded fine and taken with a swallow of water, was all
+the food any of the party had that day.
+
+The next encampment was on the Onondaga River, south of the lake; and
+here occurred an incident as characteristic of Indian character as was
+the row of shoe-buckles in the road. Some Indians found a small cannon,
+which had probably been abandoned by one of the detachments sent out by
+Sullivan on his retreat from the Genesee in '79. Brant, who had plenty
+of powder, ordered his American prisoners to load and fire this gun a
+number of times, the Indians meanwhile yelling in delight and the
+Tories and British enjoying the chagrin of the helpless Americans. Then
+the march was resumed; over the watershed to Cayuga Lake, which they
+crossed on the ice near the outlet, a long train, each man far from his
+fellow, for the ice was rotten and full of air-holes; then along the old
+trail to Seneca River, which they forded; thence the route was west by
+north, one camp being somewhere between the present villages of Waterloo
+and Lyons. Brant on this expedition appears to have kept to the north of
+Kanadasaga.[23] A day later they came to the outlet of Canandaigua Lake,
+where the Indians, finding a human head which they said was the head of
+a Yankee, had an improvised game of football with it, with taunts and
+threats for the edification of their prisoners. The next day they
+crossed the Genesee River, at or near the old Genesee Castle. And still,
+as throughout all this march, unsalted, often uncooked, samp was their
+only food.
+
+On the march Davy and each of his fellows had worn about their necks a
+rope of some fourteen or sixteen feet in length. In the daytime these
+ropes were wound about their necks and tied. At night they were unwound,
+each prisoner placed between two captors, and one end of the rope was
+fastened to each of the double guard. Under the circumstances it is no
+reflection upon our hero's courage that he had not made his escape.
+
+West of the Genesee, and beyond the country which had been ravaged by
+Sullivan, signs of Indian occupancy multiplied; but as yet there was no
+other food than corn to be had for their ill-conditioned bodies. As they
+filed along the trail, through the snow and mud of March, they met
+another large party just setting out from Niagara on a foray for
+prisoners and scalps. There were noisy greetings and many exultant
+yells; and as the outbound savages passed the prisoners, they snatched
+from each one's head the raccoon-skin cap; so that for the rest of the
+journey Davy and his companions met the weather bare-headed--all save
+Corporal Betts, to whom again was still spared the old three-cornered
+hat. The incident bespeaks either the lack of control or the negligent
+good nature of Brant, for fifteen raccoon-skins at Fort Niagara would
+surely have been worth at least fifteen quarts of rum. Corporal Betts,
+however, must have got little comfort out of his hat; for seeing him
+look so soldierly in it, the whim seized upon Brant to compel the
+unlucky corporal to review his woebegone troops.
+
+"Drill your men," said the fun-loving chief, "and let us see if these
+Yankees can go through the tactics of Baron Steuben."
+
+And so poor Betts, but with a broken spirit, mustered his forlorn guard,
+dressed them in a straight line, and put them through the manual
+according to Steuben. I doubt if the history of Western New York can
+show a stranger military function than this reluctant muster of patriot
+prisoners under compulsion of a playful tiger of an Indian, jeered at
+meanwhile by British soldiers from Fort Niagara. When these latter went
+too far in their ridicule Brant stopped them. "The Yankees," he said
+angrily, "do it a damned sight better than you can."
+
+This affair took place, as nearly as I can make out, somewhere between
+Batavia and Lockport; probably not far from the old Indian village of
+Tonawanda.
+
+Being now in the valley of the Tonawanda, Brant seems to have sent ahead
+a runner to announce his approach; for the second or third day after
+crossing the Genesee they were met by a party from the fort, bringing
+pork and flour, whereupon there was a camp and a feast; with the not
+strange result that many of them had to return to the astringent parched
+corn as a corrective.
+
+From this point on Davy and his friends were subjected to a new
+experience; for, as they passed through the Indian villages, the old
+women and children exercised their accustomed privilege of beating and
+abusing the prisoners. On one occasion, as Davy was plodding along the
+path, a squaw ran up to him, and, all unawares, hit him a terrific blow
+on the side of the head, whereupon the boy came near getting into
+trouble by making a vigorous effort to kick the lady. At another time,
+as David marched near Brant, he saw a young Indian raise a pole,
+intending to give the prisoner a whack over the head. Davy dodged, and
+the blow fell on Brant's back. The chief, though undoubtedly hurt, paid
+no attention to the Indian lad, but advised Davy to run, and Davy,
+knowing perfectly well that to run away meant torture and death, wisely
+ran towards the fort, which was but a few miles distant. A companion
+named Hawkins, who had marched with him, ran by his side. And, as they
+ran, they came upon still another village of the Senecas, from which two
+young savages took after them. Believing that their pursuers would
+tomahawk them, the boys let out a link or two of their speed, and coming
+to a creek where logs made a bridge, Hawkins hid under the bridge, while
+Davy ran behind a great buttonwood tree. The young Indians, however, had
+seen them, and on coming up, one of them promptly went under the bridge,
+and the other around the tree for Davy. This Indian held out his hand in
+friendship, and said: "Brother, stop." And the boys, seeing that the
+Indians had no tomahawks and could do them no harm, were reassured, and
+they all went on together toward Fort Niagara.
+
+Soon they met a detail of soldiers from the fort, who detained them
+until the rest of the party came up, when Davy saw that some of his
+friends had been so badly wounded by the assaults of these village
+Indians that they were now being carried. As the party went on together,
+the path was continually lined with Indians, whose camps were on the
+open plains about the fort; and the clubbing and beating of the
+prisoners became incessant. This was all a regular part of a triumphal
+return to Fort Niagara of a party of British and Indians with American
+prisoners, and was the mild preliminary of that dread ordeal known as
+running the gauntlet.
+
+When Davy, well to the front of the procession, had been marched some
+distance farther through the wood, he looked out upon a clearing, across
+which extended a long line of fallen trees, which lay piled with the
+butts inward, so that the sharpened points of the forked branches all
+pointed outwards, making a _chevaux-de-frise_ upon which one might
+impale himself, but which could scarcely be scaled. Beyond this barrier,
+as Davy looked, he saw, first, the wagon road which ran between this
+_chevaux-de-frise_ and the palisades or pickets of the fort beyond.
+Within the palisades he could see the outlines of the fortification, the
+upper part of the old castle which still stands there, and other
+buildings, and over all the red flag of Great Britain. But while he
+noted these things, his chief regard must have fallen upon the great
+crowd of Indians who were ranged along on either side of the road
+between the outwork of fallen trees and the palisades--two close ranks
+of painted savages in front, and behind them on either side a dense mass
+of yelling, gesticulating bucks, squaws, old men and children, impatient
+for the passing of the prisoners. Beyond, the British sentries, officers
+and other inmates of the fort, awaited the sport, like spectators at a
+play.
+
+Davy knew the gravity and the chances of the situation. He knew the
+Indian custom, which does not seem to have been at all interfered with
+by the officers in command at Niagara,[24] which allowed the spectator
+to assault or wound the prisoner who should run between the ranks, in
+any way which his ingenuity could suggest, except with hatchets and
+knives; these could be used only on prisoners whose faces were painted
+black, by which sign wretches doomed to death were known; yet any
+prisoner, even the black-painted ones, who lived through the gauntlet
+and gained the gate of the fort, was safe from Indian judgment, and
+could rest his case upon the mercies of the British.
+
+I do not know whether or not Davy's heart stood still for a second, but
+I am bound to say there was not a drop of craven blood in his veins. He
+was not exactly in training, as we would say of a sprinter today--his
+diet, the reader will remember, had been somewhat deficient. But if he
+hesitated or trembled it was not for long. We can see him as he stands
+between the soldiers from the fort--bareheaded, ragged, dirty; a blanket
+pinned about his shoulders and still with the rope about his neck by
+which he was secured at night. And now, as his guards look back to see
+the others come up, Davy tightens the leather strap at his waist, takes
+a deep breath, bends low, darts forward, and is half way down the line
+before the waiting Indians know he is coming.
+
+How he does run! And how the yells and execrations follow! There is a
+flight of stones and clubs, but not one touches the boy. One huge
+savage steps forward, to throw the runner backward--he clutches only the
+blanket, which is left in his hands, and Davy runs freer than before.
+The twenty rods of this race for life are passed, and as the boy dashes
+upon the bridge by which the road into the fort crosses the outer ditch,
+he is confronted by an evil-looking squaw, who aims a blow with her fist
+square at his face. Davy knocks up her arm with such force that she
+sprawls heavily to the ground, striking her head on one of the great
+spikes that held the planking. And straight on runs Davy, not down the
+road along the wall to the place set for prisoners, but through the
+inner gate, under the guard-house; and so, panting and spent, out upon
+the old parade-ground.
+
+Thus came the boy-soldier of the Revolution, David Ogden, to Fort
+Niagara, 118 years ago.
+
+The sentries hailed him with laughter and jeers, and asked him what he
+was doing there. "Go back," they said, "under the guard-house and down
+the road outside the wall, to the bottom."
+
+This was where Guy Johnson's house stood, and there the prisoners were
+to report. But when Davy looked forth he concluded that discretion was
+the better part of valor, for the angry Indians had closed upon his
+fellows who followed, and were clubbing them, knocking them down and
+kicking them; so that of the whole party taken prisoners near Fort
+Stanwix, Davy Ogden was the only one who reached Fort Niagara without
+serious harm. Turning back upon the parade ground he flatly refused to
+go out again, whereupon the officer of the guard was called, who
+questioned him, took pity on him, and sheltered him in his own quarters
+for three days.
+
+Now, if this were a mere story, we would expect, right here, a happy
+turn in Davy's fortunes. As matter of fact, the most dismal days in
+Davy's life were just to begin. He had hoped that the worst would be
+detention at the fort, and a speedy shipment down the lake to Montreal,
+for exchange. But after some days he was summoned to Guy Johnson's
+house, where were many Indians, and here he was handed over to a squaw
+to be her son, in place of one she had lost in the war. David was
+powerless; and after what, many years later, he described as a powwow
+had been held over him, he was led away by the squaw and her husband. A
+British soldier, named Hank Haff, added to his grief by telling him that
+he was adopted by the Indians and would have to live with them forever;
+and, as he was led off across the plain, away from his friends and even
+from communication with the British, who were at least of his own blood,
+it was small consolation to know that his adopted father's name was
+Skun-nun-do, that the hideous old hag, his mother, was Gunna-go-let,
+that there was a daughter in the wigwam named Au-lee-zer-quot,
+or that his own name was henceforth to be Chee-chee-le-coo, or
+"Chipping-bird"--a good deal, I submit, for a soldier of the Revolution
+to bear, even if he were only a boy.[25]
+
+David lived with this fine family for over two years, being virtually
+their slave, and always under circumstances which made escape
+impossible. He dressed in Indian fashion, and learned their language,
+their yells and signal whoops. During the first months of his adoption,
+their wigwam was about four miles from the fort--presumably east or
+southeast of it; and one of David's first duties was to go with
+Gunna-go-let out on to the treeless plain overlooking Lake Ontario,
+where the old squaw had found a prize in the shape of a horse which had
+died of starvation. David helped her cut up the carcass and "tote" it
+home--and he was glad to eat of the soup which she made of it. They were
+always hungry. Skun-nun-do being a warrior, the burden of providing for
+the family fell upon Gunna-go-let. Her principal recourse was to cut
+faggots in the woods and carry them to the fort. Many a time did she and
+Davy Ogden carry their loads of firewood on their backs up to the fort,
+glad to receive in exchange cast-off meat, stale bread or rum. So much
+of this work did Davy do during the two years that he was kept with
+these Indians that his back became sore, then calloused.
+
+When he had lived with Gunna-go-let three months, she packed up and
+moved her wigwam to the carrying-place, now Lewiston. Here there was
+cleared land, and some 200 huts or wigwams were pitched, while the
+Indians planted, hoed and gathered a crop of corn. Davy was kept hard at
+work in the field, or in carrying brooms, baskets and other things to
+the fort for sale.
+
+When he had been at the carrying-place about a year and a half, he saw a
+large party of captives brought in from the settlements. Among them was
+a young woman who had been at Fort Stanwix when Ogden was on duty there.
+As she sat in the camp, Davy being present, she began to observe him
+carefully. Although our hero was dressed as an Indian--Indian gaiters, a
+short frock belted at the waist, and with his hair cut close to the
+scalp over the whole head except a long tuft on the crown--yet this poor
+girl saw his real condition and soon learned who he was. There was no
+chance for confidences. What little they said had to be spoken freely,
+without feeling, as if casually between strangers indifferent to each
+other. She told David that she was gathering cowslip greens in a field,
+when an Indian rushed upon her and carried her away. What she endured
+while being brought to the Niagara I leave to the imagination. Davy saw
+her carried away by her captors across the river into Canada; and thus
+vanishes Hannah Armstrong, for I find no mention of her except in this
+reminiscence of her drawn from Ogden's own lips.
+
+About this time David was taken to the fort, old Gunna-go-let having
+heard that the British would give her a present for the lad. Davy
+trudged the nine miles from their hut to the fort with a good heart, for
+to him the news meant a chance of exchange. At Guy Johnson's house he
+and his mother sat expectant on the steps. Presently out came Capt.
+Powell, who had married Jane Moore--who had herself been brought to the
+fort a captive from Cherry Valley. This fine couple, from whom the lad
+had some right to expect kindness, paraded up and down the "stoop" or
+verandah of the house for a while, the wife hanging on her captain's arm
+and both ignoring the boy. At length they paused, and Capt. Powell said:
+
+"You are one of the squaw boys? Do you want to quit the Indians?"
+
+"Yes," said Davy, heart in mouth.
+
+"What for?" quizzed the captain.
+
+"To be exchanged--to get back home, to my own country."
+
+"Well," said Powell, "if you really want to get free from the Indians
+come up and enlist in Butler's Rangers. Then we can ransom you from this
+old squaw--will you do it?"
+
+"No, I won't!" blazed Davy, fiercely.
+
+Capt. Powell turned on his heel. "Go back with the Indians again and be
+damned!" and with that he vanished into the house; and we have no means
+of knowing whether Jane, his wife, had by this time become so "Tory"
+that she made no protest; but it is pleasanter to think of her as
+remembering her own captivity, and, still loyal at heart, as interceding
+for the boy.[26] But that was the end of it for this time, and back
+Davy went, with an angry squaw, to continue his ignoble servitude until
+the next spring. Then word spread all through the region that the
+prisoners must be brought into Fort Niagara, and this time Davy was not
+disappointed, for with many others he was hurried on board the schooner
+Seneca and carried to Oswego. Obviously the news of the preparations for
+a peace had reached Niagara. Although the Treaty of Paris was not signed
+until September 3d of that year (1783), yet the preliminary articles had
+been agreed upon in January. The order from the British Ministry to
+cease hostilities reached Sir Guy Carleton about the 1st of April, and a
+week or so would suffice for its transmission to Niagara. Captives who
+had been detained and claimed by the Indians continued to be brought in
+during that summer, but we hear no more of returning war parties
+arriving with new prisoners. The War of the Revolution was over, even at
+remote Niagara, although for one pretext and another--and for some good
+reasons--the British held on to Fort Niagara and kept up its garrison
+for thirteen years more.
+
+With the sailing of the Seneca the connection of Davy Ogden with Fort
+Niagara ended; but no one who has followed his fortunes thus far can
+wish to drop him, as it were, in the middle of Lake Ontario. That is
+where Davy came near going, for a gale came up which not only made him
+and the throng of others who were fastened below decks desperately sick,
+but came near wrecking the schooner. She was compelled to put in at
+Buck's Island, and after some days reached Oswego, then strongly
+garrisoned. Here Davy stayed, still a prisoner, but living with the
+British Indians, through the winter. In the spring, with a companion
+named Danforth, who stole a loaf of bread for their sustenance, he made
+his escape. He ran through the woods, twenty-four miles in four hours;
+swam the Oswego River, and on reaching the far side, and fearing
+pursuit, did not stop to dress, but ran on naked through the woods until
+he and his companion hoped they had distanced their pursuers. A party
+had been sent after them from the fort, but on reaching the point where
+the boys had plunged into the river, gave up the chase. Ogden and
+Danforth pressed on, around Oneida Lake--having an adventure with a bear
+by the way, and another with rattlesnakes--and finally, following old
+trails, reached Fort Herkimer, having finished their loaf of bread and
+run seventy miles on the last day of their flight. Here Davy was among
+friends. The officers promptly clothed him, gave him passports, and in a
+few days he found his parents at Warrensburg, in Schoharie County.
+
+When the War of 1812 broke out, David took his gun again. He fought at
+the Battle of Queenston, where forty men in his own company were killed
+or wounded. Two bullets passed through his clothes, but he was unharmed.
+We can imagine the interest with which he viewed the Lewiston plateau
+where he had lived with Gunna-go-let more than thirty years before.
+After the war he returned East, and in 1840 was living in the town of
+Franklin, Delaware Co., being then seventy-six years old. The story of
+his adventures was gathered from his own lips, but I do not think it has
+ever been told before as a part of the history of the Niagara frontier.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Fort Niagara Centennial.
+
+
+
+
+A FORT NIAGARA CENTENNIAL.
+
+_With Especial Reference to the British Retention of that Post for
+Thirteen Years after the Treaty of 1783._[27]
+
+
+The part assigned to me in these exercises is to review the history of
+Fort Niagara; to summon from the shades and rehabilitate the figures
+whose ambitions or whose patriotism are web and woof of the fabric which
+Time has woven here. It is a long procession, led by the disciples of
+St. Francis and Loyola--first the Cross, then the scalping-knife, the
+sword and musket. These came with adventurers of France, under sanction
+of Louis the Magnificent, who first builded our Fort Niagara and with
+varying fortunes kept here a feeble footing for four score years, until,
+one July day, Great Britain's wave of continental conquest passed up the
+Niagara; and here, as on all the frontier from Duquesne to Quebec,
+
+ "The lilies withered where the Lion trod."[28]
+
+The fragile emblem of France vanished from these shores, and the triple
+cross waved over Fort Niagara until, 100 years ago to-day, it gave way
+to a fairer flag. This is the event we celebrate, this, with the
+succeeding years, the period we review: a period embracing three great
+wars between three great nations; covering our Nation's birth, growth,
+assertion and maintenance of independence. The story of Fort Niagara is
+peculiarly the story of the fur trade and the strife for commercial
+monopoly; and it is, too, in considerable measure, the story of our
+neighbor, the magnificent colony of Canada, herself worthy of full
+sisterhood among the nations. It is a story replete with incident of
+battle and siege, of Indian cruelty, of patriot captivity, of white
+man's duplicity, of famine, disease and death,--of all the varied forms
+of misery and wretchedness of a frontier post, which we in days of ease
+are wont to call picturesque and romantic. It is a story without a dull
+page, and it is two and a half centuries long.
+
+Obviously something must be here omitted, for your committee have
+allotted me fifteen minutes in which to tell it!
+
+Let us note, then, in briefest way, the essential data of the spot where
+we stand.
+
+A French exploratory expedition headed by Robert Cavelier, called La
+Salle, attempted the first fortification here in 1679.[29] There was a
+temporary Indian village on the west side of the river, but no
+settlement here, neither were there trees on this point. Here, under the
+direction of La Motte de Lussiere, were built two timber redoubts,
+joined by a palisade. This structure, called Fort Conty, burned the same
+year, and the site of Fort Niagara was unfortified until the summer of
+1687, when the Marquis de Denonville, Governor General of Canada, after
+his expedition against the Senecas, made rendezvous on this point, and
+(metaphorically) shaking his fist at his rival Dongan, the Governor of
+the English Colony of New York, built here a fort which was called Fort
+Denonville. It was a timber stockade, of four bastions; was built in
+three days, occupied for eleven months by a garrison which dwindled from
+100 men to a dozen, and would no doubt entirely have succumbed to the
+scurvy and the besieging Iroquois but for the timely arrival of friendly
+Miamis. It was finally abandoned September 15, 1688, the palisades being
+torn down, but the little huts which had sheltered the garrison left
+standing. How long they endured is not recorded. All traces of them had
+evidently vanished by 1721, when in May of that year Charlevoix rounded
+yonder point in his canoe and came up the Niagara. His Journal gives no
+account of any structure here. Four years more elapsed before the French
+ventured to take decided stand on this ground. In 1725 Governor De
+Vaudreuil deputed the General De Longueil to erect a fort here. The work
+was entrusted to the royal engineer Chaussegros de Lery--the elder of
+the two distinguished engineers bearing that name. He came to this spot,
+got his stone from Lewiston Heights and his timber from the forest west
+of the river, and built the "castle." Some of the cut stone was
+apparently brought from the vicinity of Fort Frontenac, now Kingston,
+across the lake. The oldest part of this familiar pile, and more or less
+of the superstructure, is therefore 171 years old.[30] There is,
+however, probably but little suggestion of the original building in the
+present construction, which has been several times altered and enlarged.
+But from 1725 to the present hour Fort Niagara has existed and, with one
+brief interim, has been continuously and successively garrisoned by the
+troops of France, England, and the United States.
+
+By 1727 De Lery had completed the fortification of the "castle," and the
+French held the post until 1759, when it surrendered to the English
+under Sir William Johnson. It was in its last defence by the French that
+the famous Capt. Pouchot first established the fortification to the
+eastward, with two bastions and a curtain-wall, apparently on about the
+same lines as those since maintained. The story of the siege, the
+battle, and the surrender is an eventful one; it is also one of the most
+familiar episodes in the history of the place, and may not be dwelt upon
+here.
+
+July 25, 1759, marks the end of the French period in the history of Fort
+Niagara. The real significance of that period was even less in its
+military than in its commercial aspect. During the first century and
+more of our story the possession of the Niagara was coveted for the sake
+of the fur trade which it controlled. I cannot better tell the story of
+that hundred years in less than a hundred words, than to symbolize Fort
+Niagara as a beaver skin, held by an Indian, a Frenchman, an Englishman
+and a Dutchman, each of the last three trying to pull it away from the
+others (the poor Dutchman being early bowled over in the scuffle), and
+each European equally eager to placate the Indian with fine words, with
+prayers or with brandy, or to stick a knife into his white brother's
+back.
+
+This vicinity also has peculiar precedence in the religious records of
+our State. It was near here[31] that Father Melithon Watteaux, the first
+Catholic priest to minister to whites in what is now New York State, set
+up his altar.[32] It has been claimed, too, by eminent authority, that
+on this bank of the Niagara, was acquired by the Catholic Church its
+first title to property in this State[33]; and here at Fort Niagara,
+under the French _regime_, ministered Fathers Lamberville and Milet,
+Crespel and others of shining memory. But the capture of Fort Niagara by
+Sir William Johnson overthrew the last altar raised by the French on the
+east bank of the Niagara.
+
+The first period of British possession of this point extends from 1759
+to 1796. This includes the Revolutionary period, with sixteen years
+before war was begun, and thirteen years after peace was declared. When
+yielded up by the French, most of the buildings were of wood. Exceptions
+were the castle, the old barracks and magazine, the two latter,
+probably, dating from 1756, when the French engineer, Capt. Pouchot,
+practically rebuilt the fort. The southwest blockhouse may also be of
+French construction. A tablet on the wall of yonder bake-house says it
+was erected in 1762. There were constant repairs and alterations under
+the English, and several periods of important construction. They rebuilt
+the bastions and waged constant warfare against the encroaching lake. In
+1789 Capt. Gother Mann, Royal Engineer, made report on the needs of the
+place, and his recommendations were followed the succeeding year. In his
+report for 1790 he enumerates various works which have been accomplished
+on the fortifications, and says: "The blockhouse [has been] moved to
+the gorge of the ravelin so as to form a guard-house for the same, and
+to flank the line of picketts.... A blockhouse has been built on the
+lake side." This obviously refers to the solid old structure still
+standing there.[34]
+
+The real life of the place during the pre-Revolutionary days can only be
+hinted at here. It was the scene of Sir William Johnson's activities,
+the rendezvous and recruiting post for Western expeditions. Here was
+held the great treaty of 1764; and here England made that alliance with
+the tribes which turned their tomahawks against the "American rebels."
+It may not be too much to say that the greatest horrors of the
+Revolutionary War had their source in this spot. Without Fort Niagara
+there would have been no massacre of Wyoming,[35] no Cherry Valley and
+Bowman's Creek outrages. Here it was that the cunning of Montour and of
+Brant joined with the zeal of the Butlers and Guy Johnson, and all were
+directed and sanctioned by the able and merciless Haldimand, then
+Governor General of Canada. When Sullivan, the avenger, approached in
+1779, Fort Niagara trembled; had he but known the weakness of the
+garrison then, one page of our history would have been altered. The
+British breathed easier when he turned back, but another avenger was in
+the camp; for the 5,000 inflocking Indians created a scarcity of
+provisions; and starvation, disease and death, as had been the case more
+than once before on this point, became the real commanders of the
+garrison at Fort Niagara.
+
+I hurry over the Revolutionary period in order to dwell, briefly, on the
+time following the treaty of 1783. By that treaty Great Britain
+acknowledged the independence of this country. When it was signed the
+British held the posts of Point au Fer and Dutchmen's Point on Lake
+Champlain, Oswegatchie on the St. Lawrence, Oswego, Niagara, Detroit and
+Mackinac. The last three were important depots for the fur trade and
+were remote from the settled sections of the country. The British
+alleged that they held on to these posts because of the non-fulfillment
+of certain clauses in the treaty by the American Government. But
+Congress was impotent; it could only recommend action on the part of the
+States, and the impoverished States were at loggerheads with each other.
+England waited to see the new Nation succumb to its own domestic
+difficulties. It is exceedingly interesting to note at this juncture the
+attitude of Gov. Haldimand. In November, 1784, more than a year after
+the signing of the treaty, he wrote to Brig. Gen. St. Leger: "Different
+attempts having been made by the American States to get possession of
+the posts in the Upper Country, I have thought it my duty uniformly to
+oppose the same until His Majesty's orders for that purpose shall be
+received, and my conduct upon that occasion having been approved, as you
+will see by enclosed extract of a letter from His Majesty's Minister of
+State, I have only to recommend to you a strict attention to the same,
+which will be more than ever necessary as uncommon returns of furs from
+the Upper Country this year have increased the anxiety of the Americans
+to become masters of it, and have prompted them to make sacrifices to
+the Indians for that purpose"; and he adds, after more in this vein,
+that should evacuation be ordered, "on no account whatever are any
+stores or provisions to be left in the forts" for the use of the
+Americans.
+
+Not only did Haldimand, during the years immediately following the
+treaty, refuse to consider any overtures made by the Americans looking
+to a transfer of the posts, but he was especially solicitous in
+maintaining the garrisons, keeping them provisioned, and the
+fortifications in good repair. There were over 2,000, troops, Loyalists
+and Indians, at Fort Niagara, October 1, 1783. A year later it was much
+the best-equipped post west of Montreal; and ten years later it was not
+only well garrisoned and armed, mounting twelve 24-pounders, ten
+12-pounders, two howitzers and five mortars, with large store of shell
+and powder, but it had become such an important depot of supply to the
+impoverished Loyalists that a great scandal had arisen over the matter
+of feeding them with King's stores; and the last spring of the
+Britishers' sojourn here was enlivened by the proceedings of a court of
+inquiry, with a possible court-martial in prospect, over a wholesale
+embezzlement of the King's flour.
+
+Haldimand prized Niagara at its true value. In October, 1782, several
+months before peace was declared, with admirable forethought and
+diplomacy, he wrote to the Minister: "In case a peace or truce should
+take place during the winter ... great care should be taken that Niagara
+and Oswego should be annexed to Canada, or comprehended in the general
+words, that each of the contending parties in North America should
+retain what they possessed at the time. The possession of these two
+forts is essentially necessary to the security as well as trade of the
+country."[36] He ordered the commandant at Fort Niagara to be very much
+on his guard against surprise by the wily Americans, and at the same
+time to "be very industrious in giving every satisfaction to our Indian
+allies."[37]
+
+On the 2d of May, 1783, an express messenger from Gen. Washington
+arrived at Fort Niagara, bringing the terms of the treaty. The news gave
+great uneasiness to Indian-Supt. Butler. "Strict attention to the
+Indians," he wrote next day to Capt. Mathews, "has hitherto kept them in
+good humor, but now I am fearful of a sudden and disagreeable change in
+their conduct. The Indians, finding that their lands are ceded to the
+Americans, will greatly sour their tempers and make them very
+troublesome." The British, with good reason, were constantly considering
+the effect of evacuation upon the Indians.
+
+The Americans made an ineffectual effort to get early possession of the
+posts. New York State made a proposition for garrisoning Oswego and
+Niagara, but Congress did not accede. On January 21, 1784, Gov. Clinton
+advised the New York State Senate and Assembly on the subject. The
+British commander [Haldimand], he said, had treated the Provisional
+Articles as a suspension of hostilities only, "declined to withdraw his
+garrison and refused us even to visit those posts."[38] The Legislature
+agreed with the Governor that nothing could be done until spring.[39]
+Spring found them equally impotent. In March Gov. Clinton sent a copy of
+the proclamation announcing the ratification of the treaty to Gen.
+Haldimand: "Having no doubt that Your Excellency will, as soon as the
+season admits, withdraw the British garrisons under your command from
+the places they now hold in the United States, agreeable to the 7th
+Article of the Treaty, it becomes a part of my duty to make the
+necessary provisions for receiving the Post of Niagara and the other
+posts within the limits of this State, and it is for this purpose I have
+now to request that Your Excellency would give me every possible
+information of the time when these posts are to be delivered up."
+
+Lieut.-Col. Fish, who carried Gov. Clinton's letter to Quebec, received
+no satisfaction. Gen. Haldimand evaded anything like a direct reply,
+saying that he would obey the instructions of His Majesty's
+Ministers--whom he was meanwhile urging to hold on to the posts--but he
+gave the American officer the gratuitous information that in his
+[Haldimand's] private opinion "the posts should not be evacuated until
+such time as the American States should carry into execution the
+articles of the treaty in favor of the Loyalists; that in conformity to
+that article [I quote from Haldimand's report of the interview to Lord
+North], I had given liberty to many of the unhappy people to go into the
+States in order to solicit the recovery of their estates and effects,
+but that they were glad to return, without effecting anything after
+having been insulted in the grossest manner; that although in compliance
+with His Majesty's order, and [to] shun everything which might tend to
+prevent a reconciliation between the two countries, I had make no public
+representation on that head. I could not be insensible to the sufferings
+of those who had a right to look up to me for protection, and that such
+conduct towards the Loyalists was not a likely means to engage Great
+Britain to evacuate the posts; for in all my transactions," he adds, "I
+never used the words either of my 'delivering' or their 'receiving' the
+posts, for reasons mentioned in one of my former letters to Your
+Lordship." And with this poor satisfaction Col. Fish was sent back to
+Gov. Clinton.[40]
+
+In June, Maj.-Gen. Knox, Secretary of War, sent Lieut.-Col. Hull to
+Quebec on the same errand. In a most courteous letter he asked to be
+notified of the time of evacuation, and proposed, "as a matter of mutual
+convenience, an exchange of certain cannon and stores now at these posts
+for others to be delivered at West Point upon Hudson's River, New York,
+or some other convenient place," and he added that Lieut.-Col. Hull was
+fully authorized to make final arrangements, "so that there may remain
+no impediment to the march of the American troops destined for this
+service." Holdfast Haldimand sent him back with no satisfaction
+whatever, and again exulted, in his report to Lord Sydney, over his
+success in withstanding the Americans.[41] It was with great reluctance
+that in the summer of 1784 he reduced the number of British vessels by
+one on each of the lakes Erie and Ontario. "It appears to be an object
+of National advantage," he wrote to an official of the British Treasury,
+"to prevent the fur trade from being diverted to the American States,
+and no measure is so likely to have effect as the disallowing, as long
+as it shall be in our power, the navigation of the lakes by vessels or
+small crafts of any kind belonging to individuals; hence I was the more
+inclined to indulge the merchants, though in opposition to the plan of
+economy which I had laid down."[42]
+
+In October, 1784, Congress ordered 700 men to be raised for garrisoning
+the posts; but the season was late, the States impotent or indifferent,
+and nothing came of the order. Congress faithfully exercised all the
+power it possessed in the matter. In 1783, and again in 1787, it
+unanimously recommended to the States (and the British commissioner was
+aware, when the treaty was made, that Congress could do no more than
+recommend) to comply speedily and exactly with that portion of the
+treaty that concerned creditors and Royalists. The States were unable to
+act in concert, and alleged infractions of the compact by the British,
+as, indeed, there were. There was a sporadic show of indignation in
+various quarters over the continued retention of the posts; but in view
+of more vital matters, and consciousness that the British claim of
+unfulfilled conditions was not wholly unfounded, the agitation slumbered
+for long periods, and matters remained _in statu quo_.
+
+The establishment of the Federal Constitution in 1789 gave the States a
+new and firmer union; and the success of Wayne's expedition materially
+loosened the British hold on the Indians and the trade of the lake
+region; so that Great Britain readily agreed to the express stipulation
+in the commercial treaty of 1794, that the posts should be evacuated "on
+or before the 1st of June, 1796." This treaty, commonly called Jay's,
+was signed in London, November 19, 1794, but not ratified until October
+28, 1795. No transfer of troops was then reasonably to be expected
+during the winter. Indeed, it was not until April 25, 1796, that Lord
+Dorchester officially informed his council at Castle St. Louis that he
+had received a copy of the treaty. Even then the transfer was postponed
+until assurances could be had that English traders among the Indians
+should not be unduly dealt with.[43] There was much highly-interesting
+correspondence between Lord Dorchester and the commandant at Niagara on
+this point; with James McHenry, our Secretary of War; with Robert
+Liston, the British Minister at Philadelphia; and, of course, with the
+Duke of Portland and others of the Ministry. Capt. Lewis, representing
+the United States, was sent to Quebec for definite information of
+British intention. He fared better than the American emissaries had
+twelve years before. He was cordially received and supplied with a copy
+of the official order commanding evacuation of the posts. Whereupon,
+having received the assurance which his Government had so long sought,
+he immediately requested that the posts should not be evacuated until
+the troops of the United States should be at hand to protect the works
+and public buildings. "Being desirous," wrote Lord Dorchester, "to meet
+the wishes of the President, I have qualified my orders in a manner that
+I think will answer this purpose."[44] Thus it happened that the
+evacuation occurred at several different dates. It not being thought
+necessary to await the coming of American forces at the small posts on
+Lake Champlain and at Oswegatchie, the British withdrew from those
+points without ceremony about July 1st. Detroit followed, July 11th;
+then Oswego, July 15th. Most of the garrison appears to have left Fort
+Niagara early in July, but an officer's guard remained until August
+11th,[45] when American troops arrived from Oswego, and the Stars and
+Stripes went to the masthead.
+
+I have dwelt upon this period in the history of Fort Niagara at some
+length, partly because it is the exact period marked by our celebration
+today, partly because most of the data just related are gleaned from
+unpublished official MSS., of which but scant use appears to have been
+made by writers on the subject.
+
+Of Fort Niagara under the American flag I shall be very brief. No loyal
+American can take pride in telling of its surrender to the British,
+December 19, 1813. There was neither a gallant defense nor a generous
+enemy. Cowardice on the one hand and retaliation on the other sum up the
+episode. The place was restored to the United States March 27, 1815,
+and with the exception of one brief interim has been maintained as a
+garrison to this day. The Morgan affair of 1826 need only be alluded
+to. The last defensive work of consequence--the brick facing of the
+bastions, fronting east--dates from 1861.
+
+In the continental view, Fort Niagara was never of paramount importance.
+Before the British conquest, Niagara was the key to the inner door, but
+Quebec was the master-lock. The French Niagara need never have been
+attacked; after the fall of Quebec it would inevitably have become Great
+Britain's without a blow. In English hands its importance was great, its
+expense enormous. Without it, Detroit and Mackinac could not have
+existed; yet England's struggle with the rebellious colonies would have
+been inevitable, and would have terminated exactly as it did, had she
+never possessed a post in the lake region. And of Fort Niagara as an
+American possession, the American historian can say nothing more true
+than this: that it is a striking exemplification of the fact that his
+beloved country is ill prepared upon her frontiers for anything save a
+state of international amity and undisturbed peace.
+
+
+
+
+The Journals and Journeys of an Early Buffalo Merchant.
+
+
+
+
+THE JOURNALS AND JOURNEYS OF AN EARLY BUFFALO MERCHANT.
+
+
+On the frosty morning of February 5, 1822, a strange equipage turned out
+of Erie Street into Willink Avenue, Buffalo, drove down that steep and
+ungraded highway for a short distance, then crossed to Onondaga Street,
+and turning into Crow, was soon lost to sight among the snowdrifts that
+lined the road running round the south shore of Lake Erie. At least,
+such I take to have been the route, through streets now familiar as
+Main, Washington and Exchange, which a traveler would choose who was
+bound up the south shore of Lake Erie.
+
+The equipage, as I have said, was a strange one, and a good many people
+came out to see it; not so much to look at the vehicle as to bid
+good-bye to its solitary passenger. The conveyance itself was nothing
+more nor less than a good-sized crockery-crate, set upon runners. Thills
+were attached, in which was harnessed a well-conditioned horse. The
+baggage, snugly stowed, included a saddle and saddle-bags, and a sack of
+oats for the horse. Sitting among his effects, the passenger, though
+raised but a few inches above the snow, looked snug and comfortable.
+With a chorus of well-wishes following him, he left the village and by
+nightfall had traveled many miles to the westward, taking his course on
+the ice that covered Lake Erie.
+
+This was John Lay, a merchant of the early Buffalo, whom even yet it is
+only necessary to introduce to the young people and to new-comers. The
+older generation remembers well the enterprising and successful merchant
+who shared fortunes with Buffalo in her most romantic days. Before going
+after him, up the ice-covered lake, let us make his closer acquaintance.
+
+Mr. Lay, who was of good New-England stock, came to Buffalo in 1810 to
+clerk in the general store of his brother-in-law, Eli Hart. Mr. Hart had
+built his store on Main near the corner of Erie Street, the site now
+occupied by the American Express Co.'s building. His dwelling was on
+Erie Street, adjoining, and between the house and store was an ample
+garden. The space now occupied by St. Paul's Church and the Erie County
+Savings Bank was a rough common; native timber still stood thick along
+the east side of Main, above South Division Street; the town had been
+laid out in streets and lots for four years, and the population,
+exceeding at that time 400, was rapidly increasing. There was a turnpike
+road to the eastward, with a stage route. Buffalo Creek flowed lazily
+into the lake; no harbor had been begun; and on quiet days in summer the
+bees could still be heard humming among the basswoods by its waters.
+
+This was the Buffalo to which young Lay had come. Looking back to those
+times, even more novel than the condition of the frontier village, was
+the character of the frontier trade carried on by Mr. Hart. The trade of
+the villagers was less important than that which was held with the
+Canadians or English who were in office under the Government. To them
+they sold India goods, silks and muslins. Side by side with these the
+shelves were stocked with hardware, crockery, cottonades, jeans and
+flannels, Indian supplies, groceries and liquors. The young New
+Englander soon found that with such customers as Red Jacket and other
+representative red-men his usefulness was impaired unless he could speak
+Indian. With characteristic energy he set himself at the task, and in
+three months had mastered the Seneca. New goods came from the East by
+the old Mohawk River and Lewiston route, were poled up the Niagara from
+Schlosser's, above the falls, on flatboats, and were stored in a log
+house at the foot of Main Street.
+
+Up to 1810 the growth of Buffalo had been exceedingly slow, even for a
+remote frontier point. But about the time Mr. Lay came here new life was
+shown. Ohio and Michigan were filling up, and the tide of migration
+strengthened. Mr. Hart's market extended yearly farther west and
+southwest, and for a time the firm did a profitable business.
+
+Then came the war, paralysis of trade, and destruction of property. Mr.
+Lay was enrolled as a private in Butts's Company, for defense. The night
+the village was burned he with his brother-in-law, Eli Hart, were in
+their store. The people were in terror, fearing massacre by the
+Indians, hesitating to fly, not knowing in which direction safety lay.
+
+"John," said Mr. Hart, "there's all that liquor in the cellar--the
+redskins mustn't get at that."
+
+Together they went down and knocked in the heads of all the casks until,
+as Mr. Lay said afterwards, they stood up to their knees in liquor. As
+he was coming up from the work he encountered a villainous-looking
+Onondaga chief, who was knocking off the iron shutters from the store
+windows. They had been none too quick in letting the whisky run into the
+ground. Mr. Lay said to the Indian:
+
+"You no hurt friend?"
+
+Just then a soldier jumped from his horse before the door. Mr. Lay
+caught up a pair of saddle-bags, filled with silver and valuable papers,
+threw them across the horse, and cried out to his brother-in-law:
+
+"Here, jump on and strike out for the woods."
+
+Mr. Hart took this advice and started. The horse was shot from under
+him, but the rider fell unharmed, and, catching up the saddle-bags, made
+his way on foot to the house of another brother-in-law, Mr. Comstock.
+Later that day they came back to the town, and with others they picked
+up thirty dead bodies and put them into Rees's blacksmith shop, where
+the next day they were burned with the shop.
+
+After starting his relatives toward safety, Mr. Lay thought of himself.
+The Onondaga had disappeared, and Mr. Lay went into the house, took a
+long surtout that hung on the wall and put it on. As he stepped out of
+the door he was taken prisoner, and that night, with many others,
+soldiers and civilians, was carried across the river to Canada.
+
+And here begins an episode over which I am tempted to linger; for the
+details of his captivity, as they were related to me by his widow, the
+late Mrs. Frances Lay, are worthy of consideration. I will only
+rehearse, as briefly as possible, the chief events of this captivity in
+Canada, which, although not recorded in Mr. Lay's journals, resulted in
+one of his most arduous and adventurous journeys.
+
+The night of December 30, 1813, was bitterly cold. The captured and the
+captors made a hard march from Fort Erie to Newark--or, as we know it
+now, Niagara, Ont., on Lake Ontario. The town was full of Indians, and
+many of the Indians were full of whisky. Under the escort of a
+body-guard Mr. Lay was allowed to go to the house of a Mrs. Secord, whom
+he knew. While there, the enemy surrounded the house and demanded Lay,
+but Mrs. Secord hid him in a closet, and kept him concealed until Mr.
+Hart, who had followed with a flag of truce, had learned of his safety.
+Then came the long, hard march through Canadian snows to Montreal. The
+prisoners were put on short rations, were grudgingly given water to
+drink, and were treated with such unnecessary harshness that Mr. Lay
+boldly told the officer in charge of the expedition that on reaching
+Montreal he should report him to the Government for violating the laws
+of civilized warfare.
+
+In March he was exchanged at Greenbush, opposite Albany. There he got
+some bounty and footed it across the country to Oneida, where his father
+lived. As he walked through the village he saw his father's sleigh in
+front of the postoffice, where his parents had gone, hoping for news
+from him. They burned his war-rags, and he rested for a time at his
+father's home, sick of the horrors of war and fearful lest his
+constitution had been wrecked by the hardships he had undergone. It will
+be noted that this enforced journey from Buffalo through Canada to
+Montreal and thence south and west to Oneida had been made in the dead
+of winter and chiefly, if not wholly, on foot. Instead of killing him,
+as his anxious parents feared it might, the experience seems to have
+taught him the pleasures of pedestrianism, for it is on foot and alone
+that we are to see him undertaking some of his most extended journeys.
+
+I cannot even pause to call attention to the slow recovery of Buffalo
+from her absolute prostration. The first house rebuilt here after the
+burning was that of Mrs. Mary Atkins, a young widow, whose husband,
+Lieut. Asael Atkins, had died of an epidemic only ten days before the
+village was destroyed. The young widow had fled with the rest, finding
+shelter at Williamsville, until her new house was raised on the
+foundation of the old. It stood on the corner of Church and Pearl
+streets, where the Stafford Building now is.
+
+The reader is perhaps wondering what all this has to do with John Lay.
+Merely this: that when, at Mr. Hart's solicitation, Mr. Lay once more
+returned to Buffalo, he boarded across the common from the rebuilt
+store, with the Widow Atkins, and later on married her daughter Frances,
+who, many years his junior, long survived him, and to whose vigorous
+memory and kind graciousness we are indebted for these pictures of the
+past.
+
+The years that followed the War of 1812 were devoted by Messrs. Hart &
+Lay to a new upbuilding of their business. Mr. Hart, who had ample
+capital, went to New York to do the buying for the firm, and continued
+to reside there, establishing as many as five general stores in
+different parts of Western New York. He had discerned in his young
+relative a rare combination of business talents, made him a partner, and
+entrusted him with the entire conduct of the business at Buffalo. After
+peace was declared the commercial opportunities of a well-equipped firm
+here were great. Each season brought in larger demands from the western
+country. Much of the money that accrued from the sale of lands of the
+Holland Purchase flowed in the course of trade into their hands. The
+pioneer families of towns to the west of Buffalo came hither to trade,
+and personal friendships were cemented among residents scattered through
+a large section. I find no period of our local history so full of
+activities. From Western New York to Illinois it was a time of
+foundation-laying. Let me quote a few paragraphs from memoranda which
+Mrs. Lay made relating to this period:
+
+ The war had brought men of strong character, able to cope with
+ pioneer life; among others, professional men, surgeons, doctors
+ and lawyers: Trowbridge, Marshall, Johnson, and many others. Elliot
+ of Erie was a young lawyer, of whom Mr. Lay had often said, "His
+ word is as good as his bond." Another friend was Hamot of Erie, who
+ had married Mr. Hart's niece. He made frequent visits to his
+ countryman, Louis Le Couteulx. [At whose house, by the way, John
+ Lay and Frances Atkins were married, Red Jacket being among the
+ guests.] At Erie, then a naval station, were the families of
+ Dickinson, Brown, Kelso, Reed, Col. Christy, and many others, all
+ numbered among Mr. Lay's patrons. Albert H. Tracy came here about
+ that time; he brought a letter from his brother Phineas, who had
+ married Mr. Lay's sister. He requested Mr. Lay to do for him what
+ he could in the way of business. Mr. Lay gave him a room over his
+ store, and candles and wood for five years. Even in those days Mr.
+ Tracy used to declare that he should make public life his business.
+
+ Hart & Lay became consignees for the Astors in the fur business. I
+ well remember that one vessel-load of furs from the West got wet.
+ To dry them Mr. Lay spread them on the grass, filling the green
+ where the churches now are. The wet skins tainted the air so
+ strongly that Mr. Lay was threatened with indictment--but he saved
+ the Astors a large sum of money.
+
+Hart & Lay acquired tracts of land in Canada, Ohio and Michigan. To look
+after these and other interests Mr. Lay made several adventurous
+journeys to the West--such journeys as deserve to be chronicled with
+minutest details, which are not known to have been preserved. On one
+occasion, to look after Detroit interests, he went up the lake on the
+ice with Maj. Barton and his wife; the party slept in the wigwams of
+Indians, and Mr. Lay has left on record his admiration of Mrs. Barton's
+ability to make even such rough traveling agreeable.
+
+A still wilder journey took him to Chicago. He went alone, save for his
+Indian guides, and somewhere in the Western wilderness they came to him
+and told him they had lost the trail. Before it was regained their
+provisions were exhausted, and they lived for a time on a few kernels of
+corn, a little mutton tallow, and a sip of whisky. Fort Dearborn--or
+Chicago--at that date had but one house, a fur-trading post. When Mr.
+Lay and his guides reached there they were so near starvation that the
+people dared give them only a teaspoonful of pigeon soup at a time. Nor
+had starvation been the only peril on this journey. An attempt to rob
+him, if not to murder him, lent a grim spice to the experience. Mr. Lay
+discovered that he was followed, and kept his big horse-pistols in
+readiness. One night, as he lay in a log-house, he suddenly felt a hand
+moving along the belt which he wore at his waist. Instantly he raised
+his pistol and fired. The robber dashed through the window, and he was
+molested no more.
+
+Such adventurous journeyings as these formed no inconsiderable part of
+the work of this pushing Buffalo merchant during the half dozen years
+that followed the burning of the town. Business grew so that half a
+dozen clerks were employed, and there were frequently crowds of people
+waiting to be served. The store became a favorite rendezvous of
+prominent men of the place.
+
+Many a war episode was told over there. Albert Gallatin and Henry Clay,
+Jackson and the United States banks--the great men and measures of the
+day--were hotly discussed there; and many a time did the group listen as
+Mr. Lay read from _Niles' Register_, of which he was a constant
+subscriber. There were sometimes lively scrimmages there, as the
+following incident, narrated by Mrs. Lay, will illustrate:
+
+There was a family in New York City whose son was about to form a
+misalliance. His friends put him under Mr. Hart's care, and he brought
+the youth to Buffalo. Here, however, an undreamed-of difficulty was
+encountered. A young Seneca squaw, well known in town as Suse, saw the
+youth from New York and fell desperately in love with him. Mr. Lay, not
+caring to take the responsibility of such a match-making, shipped the
+young man back to New York. The forest maiden was disconsolate; but,
+unlike _Viola_, she told her love, nor "let concealment, like the worm
+i' the bud, feed on her damask cheek." Not a bit of it. On the contrary,
+whenever Suse saw Mr. Lay she would ask him where her friend was. One
+day she went into the store, and, going up to the counter behind which
+Mr. Lay was busy, drew a club from under her blanket and "let him have
+it" over the shoulders. The attack was sudden, but just as suddenly did
+he jump over the counter and tackle her. Suse was a love-lorn maid, but
+she was strong as a wildcat and as savage. Albert H. Tracy, who was in
+the store, afterwards described the trouble to Mrs. Lay.
+
+"I never saw a fight," he said, "where both parties came so near being
+killed; but Lay got the better of her, and yanked her out into the
+street with her clothes torn off from her."
+
+"I should think you would have helped John," said the gentle lady, as
+Mr. Tracy told her this.
+
+By the close of the year 1821, although still a young man, the subject
+of this sketch had made a considerable fortune. Feeling the need of
+rest, and anxious to extend his horizon beyond the frontier scenes to
+which he was accustomed, he decided to go to Europe. Telling Mr. Hart to
+get another partner, the business was temporarily left in other hands;
+and on February 5, 1822, as narrated at the opening of this paper, Mr.
+Lay drove out of town in a crockery-crate, and took his course up the
+ice-covered lake, bound for Europe.
+
+Recall, if you please, something of the conditions of those times. No
+modern journeyings that we can conceive of, short of actual exploration
+in unknown regions, are quite comparable to such an undertaking as Mr.
+Lay proposed. Partly, perhaps, because it was a truly extraordinary
+thing for a frontier merchant to stop work and set off for an indefinite
+period of sight-seeing; and partly, too, because he was a man whose love
+for the accumulation of knowledge was regulated by precise habits, we
+are now able to follow him in the closely-written, faded pages of half a
+dozen fat journals, written by his own hand day by day during the two
+years of his wanderings. No portion of these journals has ever been
+published; yet they are full of interesting pictures of the past, and
+show Mr. Lay to have been a close observer and a receptive student of
+nature and of men.
+
+The reason for his crockery-crate outfit may have been divined. He
+wanted a sleigh which he could leave behind without loss when the snow
+disappeared.
+
+Business took him first to Cleveland, which he reached in six days,
+driving much of the distance on the lake. Returning, at Erie he headed
+south and followed the old French Creek route to the Allegheny.
+Presently the snow disappeared. The crockery-crate sleigh was abandoned,
+and the journey lightly continued in the saddle; among the few
+_impedimenta_ which were carried in the saddle-bags being "a fine
+picture of Niagara Falls, painted on satin, and many Indian curiosities
+to present to friends on the other side."
+
+Pittsburg was reached March 2d; and, after a delay of four days, during
+which he sold his horse for $30, we find our traveler embarked on the
+new steamer Gen. Neville, carrying $120,000 worth of freight and fifty
+passengers.
+
+Those were the palmy days of river travel. There were no railroads to
+cut freight rates, or to divert the passenger traffic. The steamers were
+the great transporters of the middle West. The Ohio country was just
+emerging from the famous period which made the name "river-man"
+synonymous with all that was disreputable. It was still the day of poor
+taverns, poor food, much bad liquor, fighting, and every manifestation
+of the early American vulgarity, ignorance and boastfulness which amazed
+every foreigner who ventured to travel in that part of the United
+States, and sent him home to magnify his bad impressions in a book. But
+with all its discomforts, the great Southern river route of 1822 proved
+infinitely enjoyable to our Buffalonian. At Louisville, where the falls
+intercepted travel, he reembarked on the boat Frankfort for a
+fourteen-days' journey to New Orleans. Her cargo included barrels of
+whisky, hogsheads of tobacco, some flour and cotton, packs of furs, and
+two barrels of bear's oil--how many years, I wonder, since that last
+item has been found in a bill of lading on an Ohio steamer!
+
+I must hurry our traveler on to New Orleans, where, on a Sunday, he
+witnessed a Congo dance, attended by 5,000 people, and at a theater saw
+"The Battle of Chippewa" enacted. There are antiquarians of the Niagara
+Frontier today who would start for New Orleans by first train if they
+thought they could see that play.
+
+April 27th, Mr. Lay sailed from New Orleans, the only passenger on the
+ship Triton, 310 tons, cotton-laden, for Liverpool. It was ten days
+before they passed the bar of the Mississippi and entered the Gulf, and
+it was not until June 28th that they anchored in the Mersey. The
+chronicle of this sixty days' voyage, as is apt to be the case with
+journals kept at sea, is exceedingly minute in detail. Day after day it
+is recorded that "we sailed thirty miles to-day," "sailed forty miles
+to-day," etc. There's travel for you--thirty miles on long tacks, in
+twenty-four hours! The ocean greyhound was as yet unborn. The chief
+diversion of the passage was a gale which blew them along 195 miles in
+twenty-four hours; and an encounter with a whaleship that had not heard
+a word from the United States in three years. "I tossed into their
+boat," Mr. Lay writes, "a package of newspapers. The captain clutched
+them with the avidity of a starving man."
+
+Ashore in Liverpool, the first sight he saw was a cripple being carried
+through the streets--the only survivor from the wreck of the President,
+just lost on the Irish coast.[46]
+
+He hastened to London just too late to witness the coronation of George
+IV., but followed the multitude to Scotland, where, as he writes, "the
+outlay of attentions to this bad man was beyond belief. Many of the
+nobility were nearly ruined thereby." He was in Edinburgh on the night
+of August 15, 1822, when that city paid homage to the new King; saw the
+whole coast of Fife illuminated "with bonfires composed of thirty tons
+of coal and nearly 1,000 gallons of tar and other combustibles"; and the
+next day, wearing a badge of Edinburgh University, was thereby enabled
+to gain a good place to view the guests as they passed on their way to a
+royal levee. To the nobility our Buffalonian gave little heed; but when
+Sir Walter Scott's carriage drove slowly by he gazed his fill. "He has
+gray thin hair and a thoughtful look," Mr. Lay wrote. "The Heart of
+Midlothian" had just been published, and Mr. Lay went on foot over all
+the ground mentioned in that historical romance. He stayed in pleasant
+private lodgings in Edinburgh for six months, making pedestrian
+excursions to various parts of Scotland. In twenty-eight days of these
+wanderings he walked 260 miles.
+
+Instead of following him closely in these rambles, my readers are asked
+to recall, for a moment, the time of this visit. Great Britain was as
+yet, to all intents and purposes, in the eighteenth century. She had few
+canals and no railroads, no applied uses of steam and electricity. True,
+Stephenson had experimented on the Killingworth Railway in 1814; but
+Parliament had passed the first railway act only a few months before Mr.
+Lay reached England, and the railway era did not actually set in until
+eight years later. There is no reference in the Lay journals to steam
+locomotives or railways. Liverpool, which was built up by the African
+slave trade, was still carrying it on; the Reform Bill was not born in
+Parliament; it was still the old _regime_.
+
+Our traveler was much struck by the general bad opinion which prevailed
+regarding America. On meeting him, people often could not conceal their
+surprise that so intelligent and well-read a man should be an American,
+and a frontier tradesman at that. They quizzed him about the workings of
+popular government.
+
+ I told them [writes this true-hearted democrat] that as long as we
+ demanded from our public men honesty and upright dealings, our
+ institutions would be safe, but when men could be bought or sold I
+ feared the influence would operate ruinously, as all former
+ republics had failed for lack of integrity and honesty.
+
+His political talks brought to him these definitions, which I copy from
+his journal:
+
+ Tory was originally a name given to the wild Irish robbers who
+ favored the massacre of the Protestants in 1641. It was afterward
+ applied to all highflyers of the Church. Whig was a name first
+ given to the country field-elevation meetings, their ordinary drink
+ being whig, or whey, or coagulated sour milk. Those against the
+ Court interest during the reigns of Charles II. and James II. and
+ for the Court in the reigns of William and George I. were called
+ Whigs. A Yankee is thus defined by an Englishman, who gives me what
+ is most likely the correct derivation of the epithet: The Cherokee
+ word eanker [?] signifies coward or slave. The Virginians gave the
+ New Englanders this name for not assisting in a war with the
+ Cherokees in the early settlement of their country, but after the
+ affair of Bunker Hill the New Englanders gloried in the name, and
+ in retaliation called the Virginians Buckskins, in allusion to
+ their ancestors being hunters, and selling as well as wearing
+ buckskins in place of cloth.
+
+In Edinburgh he saw and heard much of some of Scotia's chief literary
+folk. Burns had been dead twenty-six years, but he was still much spoken
+of, much read, and admired far more than when he lived. With Mr.
+Stenhouse, who for years was an intimate of Burns, Mr. Lay formed a
+close acquaintance:
+
+ Mr. Stenhouse has in his possession [says the journal] the mss. of
+ all of Burns's writings. I have had the pleasure of perusing them,
+ which I think a great treat. In the last of Burns's letters which I
+ read he speaks of his approaching dissolution with sorrow, of the
+ last events in his life in the most touching and delicate language.
+
+The journal relates some original Burns anecdotes, which Mr. Lay had
+from the former companions of the bard, but which have probably never
+been made public, possibly because--in characteristic contrast to the
+letter referred to above--they are touching but _not_ delicate.
+
+Our Buffalonian encountered numerous literary lions, and writes
+entertainingly of them. He speaks often of Scott, who he says "is quite
+the theme. He is constantly writing--something from his pen is shortly
+expected. I saw him walking on the day of the grand procession. He is
+very lame, has been lame from his youth, a fact I did not know before."
+James Hogg, author of the "Winter Evening Tales," lived near Edinburgh.
+Mr. Lay described him as "a singular rustic sort of a genius, but withal
+clever--very little is said about him."
+
+I have touched upon Mr. Lay's achievements in pedestrianism, a mode of
+travel which he doubtless adopted partly because of the vigorous
+pleasure it afforded, partly because it was the only way in which to
+visit some sections of the country. A man who had walked from Fort Erie
+to Montreal, to say nothing of hundreds of miles done under pleasanter
+circumstances, would naturally take an interest in the pedestrian
+achievements of others. Whoever cares for this "sport" will find in the
+Lay journals unexpected revelations on the diversions and contests of
+three-quarters of a century ago. Have we not regarded the walking-match
+as a modern mania, certainly not antedating Weston's achievements? Yet
+listen to this page of the old journal, dated Edinburgh, Aug. 27, 1822:
+
+ I went to see a pedestrian named Russell, from the north of
+ England, who had undertaken to walk 102 miles in twenty-four
+ successive hours. He commenced his task yesterday at 1.15 o'clock.
+ The spot chosen was in the vale between the Mound and the North
+ Bridge, which gave an opportunity for a great number of spectators
+ to see him to advantage; yet the numbers were so great and so much
+ interested that there were persons constantly employed to clear his
+ way. The ground he walked over measured one eighth of a mile. I saw
+ him walk the last mile, which he did in twelve minutes. He finished
+ his task with eleven minutes to spare, and was raised on the
+ shoulders of men and borne away to be put into a carriage from
+ which the horses were taken. The multitude then drew him through
+ many principal streets of the city in triumph. The Earl of Fyfe
+ agreed to give him L30 if he finished his work within the given
+ time. He also got donations from others. Large bets were depending,
+ one of 500 guineas. He carried a small blue flag toward the last
+ and was loudly cheered by the spectators at intervals.
+
+Nor was the "sport" confined to Scotland. August 4, 1823, being in
+London, Mr. Lay writes:
+
+ To-day a girl of eight years of age undertook to walk thirty miles
+ in eight consecutive hours. She accomplished her task in seven
+ hours and forty-nine minutes without being distressed. A wager of
+ 100 sovereigns was laid. This great pedestrian feat took place at
+ Chelsea.
+
+A few weeks later he writes again:
+
+ This is truly the age of pedestrianism. A man has just accomplished
+ 1,250 miles in twenty successive days. He is now to walk backward
+ forty miles a day for three successive days. Mr. Irvine, the
+ pedestrian, who attempted to walk from London to York and back, 394
+ miles, in five days and eight hours, accomplished it in five days
+ seven and one-half hours.
+
+With men walking backwards and eight-years-old girls on the track, these
+Britons of three-quarters of a century ago still deserve the palm. But
+Mr. Lay's own achievements are not to be lightly passed over. Before
+leaving London he wrote: "The whole length of my perambulations in
+London and vicinity exceeds 1,200 miles."
+
+The journals, especially during the months of his residence in Scotland,
+abound in descriptions of people and of customs now pleasant to recall
+because for the most part obsolete. He heard much rugged theology from
+Scotland's greatest preachers; had an encounter with robbers in the dark
+and poorly-policed streets of Edinburgh; had his pockets picked while
+watching the King; and saw a boy hanged in public for house-breaking.
+With friends he went to a Scotch wedding, the description of which is so
+long that I can only give parts of it:
+
+ About forty had assembled. The priest, a Protestant, united them
+ with much ceremony, giving them a long lecture, after which dinner
+ was served up and whisky toddy. At six, dancing commenced and was
+ kept up with spirit until eleven, when we had tea, after which
+ dancing continued until three in the morning. The Scotch dances
+ differ from the American, and the dancers hold out longer. The
+ girls particularly do not tire so early as ours at home. We retired
+ to the house where the bride and groom were to be bedded. The
+ females of the party first put the bride to bed, and the bridegroom
+ was then led in by the men. After both were in bed liquor was
+ served. The groom threw his left-leg hose. Whoever it lights upon
+ is next to be married. The stocking lighted on my head, which
+ caused a universal shout. We reached home at half past six in the
+ morning, on foot.
+
+I have been much too long in getting Mr. Lay to London, to go about much
+with him there. And yet the temptation is great, for to an American of
+Mr. Lay's intelligence and inquiring mind the great city was beyond
+doubt the most diverting spot on earth. One of the first sights he
+saw--a May-day procession of chimney-sweeps, their clothes covered with
+gilt paper--belonged more to the seventeenth century than to the
+nineteenth. Peel and Wilberforce, Brougham and Lord Gower, were
+celebrities whom he lost no time in seeing. On the Thames he saw the
+grand annual rowing match for the Othello wherry prize, given by Edmund
+Kean in commemoration of Garrick's last public appearance on June 10,
+1776. Mr. Lay's description of the race, and of Kean himself, who
+"witnessed the whole in an eight-oared cutter," is full of color and
+appreciative spirit. He saw a man brought before the Lord Mayor who "on
+a wager had eaten two pounds of candles and drank seven glasses of rum,"
+and who at another time had eaten at one meal "nine pounds of ox hearts
+and taken drink proportionately"; and he went to Bartholomew's Fair,
+that most audacious of English orgies, against which even the public
+sentiment of that loose day was beginning to protest. As American
+visitors at Quebec feel to-day a flush of patriotic resentment when the
+orderly in the citadel shows them the little cannon captured at Bunker
+Hill, so our loyal friend, with more interest than pleasure, saw in the
+chapel at Whitehall, "on each side and over the altar eight or ten
+eagles, taken from the French, and flags of different nations; the
+eagle of the United States is among them, two taken at New Orleans, one
+at Fort Niagara, one at Queenston, and three at Detroit"; but like the
+American at Quebec, who, the familiar story has it, on being taunted
+with the captured Bunker Hill trophy, promptly replied, "Yes, you got
+the cannon, but we kept the hill," Mr. Lay, we may be sure, found
+consolation in the thought that though we lost a few eagle-crested
+standards, we kept the Bird o' Freedom's nest.
+
+On July 5, 1823, he crossed London Bridge on foot, and set out on an
+exploration of rural England; tourings in which I can not take space to
+follow him. When he first went abroad he had contemplated a trip on the
+continent. This, however, he found it advisable to abandon, and on
+October 5, 1823, on board the Galatea, he was beating down the channel,
+bound for Boston. The journey homeward was full of grim adventure. A
+tempest attended them across the Atlantic. In one night of terror,
+"which I can never forget," he writes, "the ship went twice entirely
+around the compass, and in very short space, with continual seas
+breaking over her." The sailors mutinied and tried to throw the first
+mate into the sea. Swords, pistols and muskets were made ready by the
+captain. Mr. Lay armed himself and helped put down the rebellion. When
+the captain was once more sure of his command, "Jack, a Swede, was taken
+from his confinement, lashed up, and whipped with a cat-o'-nine-tails,
+then sent to duty." The dose of cat was afterwards administered to the
+others. It is no wonder that the traveler's heart was cheered when, on
+November 13th, the storm-tossed Galatea passed under the guns of Forts
+Warren and Independence and he stepped ashore at Boston.
+
+He did not hurry away, but explored that city and vicinity thoroughly,
+going everywhere on foot, as he had, for the most part, in England. He
+visited the theaters and saw the celebrities of the day, both of the
+stage and the pulpit. At the old Boston Theater, Cooper was playing
+_Marc Antony_, with Mr. Finn as _Brutus_, and Mr. Barrett as _Cassius_.
+
+On November 20th he pictures a New-England Thanksgiving:
+
+ This is Thanksgiving Day throughout the State of Massachusetts. It
+ is most strictly observed in this city; no business whatever is
+ transacted--all shops remained shut throughout the day. All the
+ churches in the city were open, divine service performed, and
+ everything wore the appearance of Sunday. Great dinners are
+ prepared and eaten on this occasion, and in the evening the
+ theaters and ball-rooms tremble with delight and carriages fill
+ the streets.... A drunken, riotous gang of fellows got under our
+ windows yelping and making a great tumult.
+
+A week later, sending his baggage ahead by stage-coach, he passed over
+Cambridge Bridge, on foot for Buffalo, by way of New York, Philadelphia,
+Washington, Pittsburg and Erie.
+
+Once more I must regret that reasonable demands on the reader's patience
+will not let me dwell with much detail on the incidents and observations
+of this unusual journey. No man could take such a grand walk and fail
+to see and learn much of interest. But here was a practical, shrewd,
+observant gentleman who, just returned from two years in Great Britain,
+was studying his own countrymen and weighing their condition and ideas
+by most intelligent standards. The result is that the pages of the
+journals reflect with unaccustomed fidelity the spirit of those days,
+and form a series of historical pictures not unworthy our careful
+attention. Just a glimpse or two by the way, and I am through.
+
+The long-settled towns of Massachusetts and Connecticut appeared to him
+in the main thrifty and growing. Hartford he found a place of 7,000
+inhabitants, "completely but irregularly built, the streets crooked and
+dirty, with sidewalks but no pavements." He passed through Wethersfield,
+"famous for its quantities of onions. A church was built here, and its
+bell purchased," he records, "with this vegetable." New Haven struck him
+as "elegant, but not very flourishing, with 300 students in Yale."
+Walking from twenty-five to thirty-five miles a day, he reached Rye,
+just over the New York State line, on the ninth day from Boston, and
+found people burning turf or peat for fuel, the first of this that he
+had noticed in the United States.
+
+At Harlem Bridge, which crosses to New York Island, he found some fine
+houses, "the summer residences of opulent New Yorkers"; and the next day
+"set out for New York, seven miles distant, over a perfectly straight
+and broad road, through a rough, rocky and unpleasing region." In New
+York, where he rested a few days, he reviewed his New England walk of
+212 miles:
+
+ The general aspect of the country is pleasing; inns are provided
+ with the best, the people are kind and attentive. I think I have
+ never seen tables better spread. I passed through thirty-six towns
+ on the journey, which are of no mean appearance. I never had a more
+ pleasant or satisfactory excursion. There are a great number of
+ coaches for public conveyance plying on this great road. The fare
+ is $12 for the whole distance. Formerly it was 254 miles between
+ Boston and New York, but the roads are now straightened, which has
+ shortened the distance to 212 miles.
+
+He had experienced a Boston Thanksgiving. In New York, on Thursday,
+December 18th, he had another one. Thanksgiving then was a matter of
+State proclamation, as now, but the day had not been given its National
+character, and in many of the States was not observed at all. We have
+seen what it was like in Boston. In New York, "business appears as brisk
+as on any other laboring day." The churches, however, were open for
+service, and our traveler went to hear the Rev. Mr. Cummings in
+Vanderventer Street, and to contribute to a collection in behalf of the
+Greeks.
+
+Four days before Christmas he crossed to Hoboken, and trudged his way
+through New Jersey snow and mud to Philadelphia, which he reached on
+Christmas. At the theater that night he attended--
+
+ a benefit for Mr. Booth of Covent Garden, London, and was filled
+ with admiration for Mr. Booth, but the dancing by Miss Hathwell was
+ shocking in the extreme. The house was for a long time in great
+ uproar, and nothing would quiet them but an assurance from the
+ manager of Mr. Booth's reappearance.
+
+This of course was Junius Brutus Booth. Here is Mr. Lay's pen-picture of
+Philadelphia seventy-six years ago:
+
+ The streets of Philadelphia cross at right angles; are perfectly
+ straight, well-paved but miserably lighted. The sidewalks break
+ with wooden bars on which various things are suspended, and in the
+ lower streets these bars are appropriated for drying the
+ washwomen's clothes. Carpets are shaken in the streets at all
+ hours, and to the annoyance of the passer-by. Mr. Peale of the old
+ Philadelphia Museum was lecturing three nights a week on galvanism,
+ and entertaining the populace with a magic lantern.
+
+It is much the same Philadelphia yet.
+
+January 8th, Mr. Lay took his way south to Baltimore, making slow
+progress because of muddy roads; but he had set out to walk, and so he
+pushed ahead on to Washington, although there were eight coaches daily
+for the conveyance of passengers between the two cities, the fare being
+$4. The road for part of the way lay through a wilderness. "The inns
+generally were bad and the attention to travelers indifferent."
+
+In Washington, which he reached on January 14th, he lost no time in
+going to the House of Representatives, where he was soon greeted by
+Albert H. Tracy, whose career in Congress I assume to be familiar to the
+reader.
+
+ On the day named, the House was crowded to excess with spectators,
+ a great number of whom were ladies, in consequence of Mr. Clay's
+ taking the floor. He spoke for two hours on the subject of internal
+ improvements, and the next day the question of erecting a statue to
+ Washington somewhere about the Capitol, was debated warmly.
+
+On his return North, in passing through Baltimore, he called on Henry
+Niles, who as editor of _Niles' Weekly Register_, was to thousands of
+Americans of that day what Horace Greeley became later on--an oracle;
+and on January 18th struck out over a fine turnpike road for Pittsburg.
+
+The Pittsburg pike was then the greatest highway to the West. The Erie
+Canal was nearing completion, and the stage-routes across New York State
+saw much traffic. Yet the South-Pennsylvania route led more directly to
+the Ohio region, and it had more traffic from the West to the East than
+the more northern highways had for years to come. In the eastern part of
+the State it extends through one of the most fertile and best-settled
+parts of the United States. Farther west it climbs a forest-clad
+mountain, winds through picturesque valleys, and from one end of the
+great State to the other is yet a pleasant path for the modern tourist.
+The great Conestoga wagons in endless trains, which our pedestrian
+seldom lost sight of, have now disappeared. The wayside inns are gone or
+have lost their early character, and the locomotive has everywhere set a
+new pace for progress.
+
+When Mr. Lay entered the Blue Ridge section, beyond Chambersburg, he
+found Dutch almost the only language spoken. The season was at first
+mild, and as he tramped along the Juniata, it seemed to him like May.
+"Land," he notes, "is to be had at from $1 to $3 per acre." It took him
+seventeen days to walk to Pittsburg. Of the journey as a whole he says:
+
+ At Chambersburg the great stage route from Philadelphia unites with
+ the Baltimore road. Taverns on these roads are frequent and nearly
+ in sight of each other. The gates for the collection of tolls
+ differ in distance--some five, others ten, and others twenty-five
+ miles asunder. Notwithstanding the travel is great the stock yields
+ no profit, but, on the contrary, it is a sinking concern on some
+ parts, and several of the companies are in debt for opening the
+ road. About $100 per mile are annually expended in repairs. It cost
+ a great sum to open the road, particularly that portion leading
+ over the mountains and across the valleys.
+
+ Taverns are very cheap in their charges; meals are a fourth of a
+ dollar, beds 61/4 cents, liquors remarkably cheap. Their tables
+ are loaded with food in variety, well prepared and cleanly served
+ up with the kindest attention and smiling cheerfulness. The women
+ are foremost in kind abilities. Beer is made at Chambersburg of an
+ excellent quality and at other places. A good deal of this beverage
+ is used and becoming quite common; it is found at most of the good
+ taverns. Whisky is universally drank and it is most prevalent.
+ Places for divine service are rarely to be met with immediately on
+ the road. The inhabitants, however, are provided with them not far
+ distant in the back settlements, for almost the whole distance. The
+ weather has been so cold that for the two last days before reaching
+ Pittsburg I could not keep myself comfortable in walking; indeed, I
+ thought several times I might perish.
+
+In Pittsburg he lodged at the old Spread Eagle Tavern, and afterwards at
+Conrad Upperman's inn on Front Street at $2 a week. He found the city
+dull and depressed:
+
+ The streets are almost deserted, a great number of the houses not
+ tenanted, shops shut, merchants and mechanics failed; the rivers
+ are both banked by ice, and many other things wearing the aspect of
+ decayed trade and stagnation of commerce. Money I find purchases
+ things very low. Flour from this city is sent over the mountains to
+ Philadelphia for $1 per barrel, which will little more than half
+ pay the wagoner's expenses for the 280 miles. Superfine flour was
+ $4.121/2 in Philadelphia, and coal three cents per bushel. Coal
+ for cooking is getting in use in this city--probably two-thirds the
+ cooking is with coal.
+
+He had had no trouble up to this point in sending his baggage ahead. It
+was some days before the stage left for Erie. All was at length
+dispatched, however, and on February 14th he crossed over to
+Allegheny--I think there was no bridge there then--and marched along,
+day after day, through Harmony, Mercer and Meadville, his progress much
+impeded by heavy snow; at Waterford he met his old friend G. A. Elliott,
+and went to a country dance; and, finally, on February 20th found
+himself at Mr. Hamot's dinner-table in Erie, surrounded by old friends.
+They held him for two days; then, in spite of heavy snow, he set out on
+foot for Buffalo. Even the faded pages of the old journal which hold the
+record of these last few days bespeak the eager nervousness which one
+long absent feels as his wanderings bring him near home. With undaunted
+spirit, our walker pushed on eastward to the house of Col. N. Bird, two
+miles beyond Westfield; and the next day, with Col. Bird, drove through
+a violent snow-storm to Mayville to visit Mr. William Peacock--the first
+ride he had taken since landing in Boston in November of the previous
+year. But he was known throughout the neighborhood, and his friends seem
+to have taken possession of him. From Mr. Bird's he went in a
+stage-sleigh to Fredonia to visit the Burtons. Snow two feet deep
+detained him in Hanover town, where friends showed him "some tea-seed
+bought of a New-England peddler, who left written directions for its
+cultivation." "It's all an imposition," is Mr. Lay's comment--but what a
+horde of smooth-tongued tricksters New England has to answer for!
+
+The stage made its way through the drifts with difficulty to the
+Cattaraugus, where Mr. Lay left it, and stoutly set out on foot once
+more. For the closing stages of this great journey let me quote direct
+from the journal:
+
+ I proceeded over banks of drifted snow until I reached James
+ Marks's, who served breakfast. The stage wagon came up again, when
+ we went on through the Four-mile woods, stopping to see friends and
+ spending the night with Russell Goodrich. On February 29th [two
+ years and twenty-four days from the date of setting out] I drove
+ into Buffalo on Goodrich's sleigh and went straight to Rathbun's,
+ where I met a great number of friends, and was invited to take a
+ ride in Rathbun's fine sleigh with four beautiful greys. We drove
+ down the Niagara as far as Mrs. Seely's and upset once.
+
+What happier climax could there have been for this happy home-coming!
+
+
+
+
+Misadventures of Robert Marsh.
+
+
+
+
+MISADVENTURES OF ROBERT MARSH.
+
+
+Robert Marsh claimed American citizenship, but the eventful year of 1837
+found him on the Canadian side of the Niagara River. His brother was a
+baker at Chippewa, and Robert drove a cart, laden with the bakery
+products, back and forth between the neighboring villages. From St.
+Catharines to Fort Erie he dispensed bread and crackers and the other
+perhaps not wholly harmless ammunition that was moulded in that Chippewa
+bakery; and he naturally absorbed the ideas and the sentiments of the
+men he met. The Niagara district was at fever heat. Mackenzie had sown
+his Patriot literature broadcast, and what with real and imaginary
+wrongs the majority of the community sentiment seemed ripe for
+rebellion.
+
+It is easy enough now, as one reads the story of that uprising, to see
+that the rebels never had a ghost of a chance. The grip of the
+Government never was in real danger of being thrown off in the upper
+province; but a very little rebellion looks great in the eyes of the
+rebel who hazards his neck thereby; and it is no wonder that Robert
+Marsh came to the conclusion that the colonial government of Canada was
+about to be overthrown, or that he decided to cast in his lot with
+those who should win glory in the cause of freedom. As an American
+citizen he had a right to do this. History was full of high precedents.
+Did not Byron espouse the cause of the Greeks? Did not Lafayette make
+his name immortal in the ranks of American rebels? One part of America
+had lately thrown off the hated yoke of Great Britain; why should not
+another part? So our cracker peddler reasoned; and reasoning thus, began
+the train of adventures for the narration of which I draw in brief upon
+his own obscure narrative. It is a story that leads us over some strange
+old trails, and its value lies chiefly in the fact that it illustrates,
+by means of a personal experience, a well-defined period in the history
+of the Niagara region. Robert Marsh is hardly an ideal hero, but he is a
+fair type of a class who contrived greatly to delude themselves, and to
+pay roundly for their experience. He thought as many others thought;
+what he adventured was also adventured by many other men of spirit; and
+what he endured before he got through with it was the unhappy lot of
+many of his fellows.
+
+It was a time of great discontent and discouragement on both sides of
+the border. Throughout the Holland Purchase the difficulties over land
+titles had reached a climax, and the sheriff and his deputies enforced
+the law at the risk of their lives. This year of 1837 also brought the
+financial panic which is still a high-water mark of hard times in our
+history. Buffalo suffered keenly, and it is not strange that such of
+her young men as had a drop of adventurous blood in their veins were
+ready to turn "Patriot" for the time being; though as a matter of sober
+fact it must be recorded that the enthusiasm of the majority did not
+blind their judgment to the hopelessness of the rebellion. On the
+Canadian side the case was different. Unlike their American brethren,
+many of the residents there felt that they had not a representative
+government. It is not necessary now, nor is it essential to our story,
+to rehearse the grievances which the Canadian Patriots undertook to
+correct by taking up arms against the established authority. They are
+presented with great elaboration in many histories; they are detailed
+with curious ardor in the Declaration of Rights, a document
+ostentatiously patterned after the Declaration of Independence. William
+Lyon Mackenzie was a long way from being a Thomas Jefferson; yet he and
+his associates undertook a reform which--taking it at their
+valuation--was as truly in behalf of liberty as was the work of the
+Signers of the Declaration of Independence. They made the same appeal to
+justice; argued from the same point of view for man's inalienable
+rights; they were temperate, too, in their demands, and sought liberty
+without bloodshed. Yet while the American patriots were enabled to
+persist and win their cause, though after two bitter and exhausting
+wars, their Canadian imitators were ignominiously obliterated in a few
+weeks. In the one case the cause of Liberty won her brightest star. In
+the other, there is complete defeat, without a monument save the
+derision of posterity.
+
+It was in November of this year of rebellion 1837 that Marsh, being at
+Chippewa, decided to cast in his lot with the Patriots. "I began to
+think," he says, "that I must soon become an actor on one side or the
+other." He saw the Government troops patrolling every inch of the
+Canadian bank of the Niagara, and concentrating in the vicinity of
+Chippewa. "Boats of every description were brought from different parts;
+at the same time they were mustering all their cannon and mortars
+intending to drive them [the Patriots] off; one would think by their
+talk, that they would not only kill them all, but with their cannon mow
+down all the trees, and what the balls failed in hitting the trees would
+fall upon, and thus demolish the whole Patriot army." Our hero's
+observations have this peculiar value: they are on the common level. He
+heard the boasts and braggadocio of the common soldier; the diplomatic
+or guarded speech of officers and officials he did not record. He heard
+all about the plot to seize the Caroline, and could not believe it at
+first. But, he says, "when I beheld the men get in the boats and shove
+off and the beacon lights kindled on the shore, that they might the more
+safely find the way back, my eyes were on the stretch, towards where the
+ill-fated boat lay." When he saw the party return and heard them boast
+of what they had done, he thought it high time for him to leave the
+place. "Judge my feelings," he says, "on beholding this boat on fire,
+perhaps some on board, within two short miles of the Falls of Niagara,
+going at the rate of twelve miles an hour."[47]
+
+The Caroline was burned on the 29th of December. On the next day our
+hero and a friend set out to join the Patriots. Let me quote in
+condensed fashion from his narrative, which is a tolerably graphic
+contribution to the history of this famous episode:
+
+"We succeeded in reaching the river six miles above Chippewa about 11
+o'clock in the evening, after a tedious and dangerous journey through an
+extensive swamp. There is a small settlement in a part of this swamp
+which has been called Sodom. There were many Indians prowling about. We
+managed to evade them but with much difficulty. There were sentinels
+every few rods along the line." A friendly woman at a farmhouse let them
+take a boat. They offered her $5 for its use, but she declined; "she
+said she would not take anything ... as she knew our situation and felt
+anxious to do all in her power to help us across the river; she also
+told us that her husband had taken Mackenzie across a few nights
+previous. 'Leave the boat in the mouth of the creek,' said she,
+pointing across the river towards Grand Island, ... 'there is a man
+there that will fetch it back, you have only to fasten it, say nothing
+and go your way.' We were convinced that we were not the only ones
+assisted by this patriotic lady."
+
+Marsh and his companion, whose surname was Thomas, launched the boat
+with much difficulty, and with muffled oars they rowed across to Grand
+Island. "It was about 1 o'clock in the morning and we had to go eight or
+nine miles through the woods and no road. There had been a light fall of
+snow, and in places [was] ice that would bear a man, but oftener would
+not; once or twice in crossing streams the ice gave way and we found
+ourselves nearly to the middle in water." Our patriot's path, the reader
+will note, was hard from the outset, but he kept on, expecting to be
+with his friends again in a few days, and little dreaming of what lay
+ahead of him. "We at near daylight succeeded in reaching White Haven, a
+small village, where we were hailed by one of our militia sentinels:
+'Who comes there?' 'Friends.' 'Advance and give the countersign.' Of
+course we advanced, but we could not give the countersign; a guard was
+immediately dispatched with us to headquarters, where we underwent a
+strict examination."
+
+He was sent across to Tonawanda, where he took the cars for Schlosser.
+There the blood-stains on the dock where Durfee had been killed sealed
+his resolution; he crossed to Navy Island and presented himself at the
+headquarters of William Lyon Mackenzie, the peppery little Scotchman
+who was the prime organizer of the Provisional Government, and of
+General Van Rensselaer, commander-in-chief of the Patriot Army. "The
+General produced the list and asked me the length of time I wished to
+enlist. I was so confident of success that I unhesitatingly replied,
+'Seven years or during the war.' The General remarked, 'I wish I had
+2,000 such men, we have about 1,000 already,[48] and I think this
+Caroline affair will soon swell our force to 2,000, and then I shall
+make an attack at some point where they least expect, ... and as you are
+well acquainted there I want you to be by my side.'" Here was preferment
+indeed, for Marsh believed that Van Rensselaer was brave and able;
+history has a different verdict; but we must assume that our hero
+entered upon the campaign with high hopes and who knows what visions of
+glory.
+
+Now, at the risk of tiresomeness, I venture to dwell a little longer on
+this occupancy of Navy Island; I promise to get over ground faster
+farther along in the story. It is assumed that the reader knows the
+principal facts of this familiar episode; but in Marsh's journal I find
+graphic details of the affair not elsewhere given, to my knowledge. Let
+me quote from his obscure record:
+
+ After my informing the General of their preparations and intention
+ of attacking the Island, breastworks were hastily thrown up, and
+ all necessary arrangements made to give them a warm reception.
+ There were twenty-five cannon, mostly well mounted, which could
+ easily be concentrated at any point required; and manned by men
+ that knew how to handle them. Besides other preparations, tops of
+ trees and underbrush were thrown over the bank at different places
+ to prevent them landing. I know there were various opinions
+ respecting the strength of the Island, but from close observation,
+ during these days of my enlistment, it is my candid opinion that if
+ they had attacked the Island, as was expected, they would mostly or
+ all have found a watery grave. The tories were fearful of this, for
+ when the attempt was made men could not be found to hazard their
+ lives in so rash an attempt....
+
+ It was hoped and much regretted by all on the Island that the
+ attempt was not made; for if they had done so it would have thinned
+ their ranks and made it the more easy for us to have entered Canada
+ at that place. They finally concluded to bring all their artillery
+ to bear upon us, and thus exterminate all within their reach. They
+ were accordingly arranged in martial pomp, opposite the Island, the
+ distance of about three-quarters of a mile. Now the work of
+ destruction commences; the balls and bombs fly in all directions.
+ The tops of the trees appear to be a great eye-sore to them. I
+ suppose they thought by commencing an attack upon them, their
+ falling would aid materially in the destruction of lives below.
+
+Robert, the reader will have observed, had a fine gift of sarcasm. The
+thundering of artillery was heard, by times, he says, for twenty and
+thirty miles around, for a week, "[the enemy] being obliged to cease
+firing at times for her cannons to cool. They were very lavish with Her
+Gracious Majesty's powder and balls." He continues:
+
+ I recollect a man standing behind the breastwork where were four of
+ us sitting as the balls were whistling through the trees. "Well,"
+ says he, "if this is the way to kill the timber on this island, it
+ certainly is a very expensive way as well as somewhat comical; I
+ should think it would be cheaper to come over with axes, and if
+ they are not in too big a hurry, girdle the trees and they will die
+ the sooner." I remarked: "They did not know how to use an axe, but
+ understood girdling in a different way." An old gentleman from
+ Canada taking the hint quickly responded, "Yes. Canada can testify
+ to the fact of their having other ways of girdling besides with the
+ axe, and unless there is a speedy stop put to it, there will not be
+ a green tree left." There was another gentleman about to say
+ something of their manner of swindling in other parts of the world,
+ he had just commenced about Ireland when I felt a sudden jar at my
+ back, and the other three that set near me did the same; we rose up
+ and discovered that a cannon ball had found its way through our
+ breastwork, but was kind enough to stop after just stirring the
+ dirt at our backs. I had only moved about an inch of dirt when I
+ picked up a six-pound ball.
+
+ As it happened, our gun was a six-pounder. We concluded, as that
+ was the only ball that had as yet been willing to pay us a visit,
+ we would send it back as quick as it come. We immediately put it
+ into our gun and wheeled around the corner of the breastwork.
+ "Hold," said I, "there is Queen Ann's Pocket Piece, as it is
+ called, it will soon be opposite, and then we'll show them what we
+ can do." It was not mounted, but swung under the ex [axle] of a
+ cart, such as are used for drawing saw-logs, with very large
+ wheels. I had seen it previous to my leaving Chippewa. I think
+ there was six horses attached to the cart, for it was very heavy,
+ it being a twenty-four-pounder. I suppose it was their intention to
+ split the Island in two with it, hoping by so doing it might loosen
+ at the roots and move off with the current and go over the falls,
+ and thus accomplish their great work of destruction at once. As
+ they were opposite, the words "ready, fire," were given; we had the
+ satisfaction of seeing the horses leave the battleground with all
+ possible speed. The gun was forsaken in no time, and in less than
+ five minutes there was scarcely a man to be seen. The ball had
+ gone about three feet further to the left than had been intended;
+ it was intended to lop the wheels, but it severed the tongue from
+ the ex and the horses took the liberty to move off as fast as
+ possible.
+
+ We were about to give them another shot, when the officer of the
+ day came up and told us the orders from headquarters were not to
+ fire unless it was absolutely necessary, that we must be saving of
+ our ammunition. I told him that it was their own ball that we had
+ just sent back. When he saw the execution it had done he smiled and
+ went on, remarking, "They begin to fire a little lower." "Yes,"
+ said I, "and as that was the first, we thought we would send it
+ back and let them know we did not want it, that we had balls of our
+ own."
+
+This incident was the beginning of more active operations. For the next
+nine days and nights there was a great deal of firing, with one killed
+and three wounded. The Patriot army held on to its absurd stronghold for
+four weeks, causing, as Marsh quaintly puts it, "much noise and
+confusion on both sides"; and he at least was keenly disappointed when
+it was evacuated, Jan. 12, 1838. The handful of Patriots scattered and
+Chippewa composed herself to the repose which, but for one ripple of
+disturbance in 1866, continues to the present day.
+
+Up to the end of this abortive campaign Robert Marsh's chief
+misadventure had been to cut himself off, practically, from a safe
+return to the community where his best interests lay. But he had a stout
+heart if a perverse head. "I was born of Patriot parentage," he boasted;
+"I am not a Patriot today and tomorrow the reverse"; and being fairly
+identified with the rebels, he determined to woo the fortunes of war
+wherever opportunity offered. His ardor must have been considerable,
+for he made his way in the dead of winter from Buffalo to Detroit; just
+how I do not know; but he speaks of arriving at Sandusky "after a
+tedious walk of five days." Here he joined a party for an attack on
+Malden, but the Patriots were themselves attacked by some 300 Canadian
+troops who came across the lake in sleighs; there was a lively fight on
+the ice, with some loss of life, when each party was glad to retire.
+Next he tried it with a band of rebels on Fighting Island, below
+Detroit; treachery and "the power of British gold" seem to have kept
+Canada from falling into their hands; and presently, "being sick of
+island fighting," as he puts it, he made his way to Detroit, where, all
+through that troubled summer of '38, he appears to have been one of the
+most active and ardent of the plotters. Certain it is that he was
+promptly to the front for the battle of Windsor, and was with the
+invaders on Dec. 4, 1838, when a band of 164 misguided men crossed the
+Detroit River to take Canada. He was "Lieutenant" Marsh on this
+expedition, but it was the emptiest of honors. At four in the morning
+they attacked the barracks on the river banks above Windsor, and, as
+often happens with the most fatuous enterprises, met at the outset with
+success. They burned the barracks and took thirty-eight prisoners (whom
+they could not hold), looking meanwhile across the river for help which
+never came. "We were about planting our standard," wrote Marsh
+afterward; "the flag was a splendid one, with two stars for Upper and
+Lower Canada. We had just succeeded in getting a long spar and was in
+the act of raising it, as the cry was heard,--'There comes the
+Red-coats! There are the dragoons!'" Our Patriot, it will be observed,
+made no nice distinctions between British and Canadian troops; that
+distinction will not fail to be made for him, in a province which has
+always claimed the honor--to which it is fully entitled--of putting down
+this troublesome uprising without having to call for help upon the
+British regulars. But the invaders did not raise nice points then. They
+hastily formed and withstood the attack for a little; but it was a
+hopeless stand, for numbers and discipline were all on the other side.
+According to Marsh, the regulars numbered 600. There was sharp firing,
+eleven Patriots and forty-four Canadians were killed; and seeing this,
+and learning, later than his friends across the river, that discretion
+is the better part of valor, he did the only thing that remained to
+do--he took to the woods.
+
+The woods were full just then of discreet Patriots, and several of them
+held a breathless council of war. Here is Marsh's account of it:
+
+ It was finally concluded for every man to do the best he could for
+ himself. We accordingly separated and I found myself pursued by a
+ man hollowing at the top of his voice, "Stop there, stop, you
+ damned rebel, or I'll shoot you! stop, stop!" I was near a fence at
+ that time crossing a field. I proceeded to the fence, dropped on
+ one knee, put my rifle through the fence, took deliberate aim. He
+ had a gun and was gaining on me. I had a cannister of powder, pouch
+ of balls, two pistols and an overcoat on, which prevented me from
+ attempting to run. I saw all hopes of escape was useless; I
+ discharged my rifle, but cannot say whether it hit the mark or not,
+ for I did not look, but immediately rose and walked off. At any
+ rate I heard no more "Stop there, you damned rebel."
+
+Marsh's narrative is too diffuse, not to mention other faults, for me to
+follow it _verbatim et (il-)literatim_. I give the events of the next
+few days as simply as possible. After he fired his gun through the fence
+at the red-coat who followed no more--his last shot, be it remarked, for
+the relief of Canada--he found that he was very tired. It was late in
+the day of the battle and he had eaten nothing for nearly forty-eight
+hours. Pushing on through the woods he came to a barn, but had scarcely
+entered when it was surrounded by ten or twelve "dragoons," as he calls
+them. He scrambled up a ladder to the hay-mow, dug a hole in the hay,
+crawled in and smoothed it over himself, and, he says, "had just got a
+pistol in each hand as the door flew open; in they rushed, crying, 'Come
+out, you damned rebel, we'll shoot you, we'll not take you before the
+Colonel to be shot, come out, come out, we'll hang you.' Said another,
+'We'll quarter you and feed you to the hogs as we've just served one!'
+They thrust their swords into the hay, and threatened to burn the barn;
+but as it belonged to one of their sort, they thought better of it and
+went off. They soon came back, and saying they would place a sentry,
+disappeared again." Marsh tore up certain papers which he feared would
+be troublesome if found on him and then slept. It was dark when he
+awoke. He crept out of the barn and wandered through the woods until
+daylight, narrowly escaping some Indians. He applied at the house of a
+French settler for something to eat; frankly admitting, what it
+obviously was folly to deny, that he was a fugitive. Three "large bony
+Frenchmen" came to the door, made him their prisoner and marched him off
+through the woods to Sandwich, where he was stripped of his valuables
+and locked up with several others, his captors cheerfully assuring them
+that they would have a fine shooting-match tomorrow. Marsh stoutly
+maintained that, as he owed the Queen no allegiance, he was not a rebel;
+but his protests did him no good. He was not shot on the morrow,
+although others of the captives were summarily executed, without a
+pretext of trial or even a chance to say their prayers.
+
+And now begins an imprisonment of ten months full of such distress and
+atrocity that I should not please, however much I might edify, by its
+recital. We read today of the horrors of Spanish and Turkish massacres
+or of Siberian prisons, and every page of history has its record of
+inhumanity--its Black Hole, its Dartmoor, its Andersonville. In this
+dishonor roll of official outrages surely may be included the backwoods
+prisons of Upper Canada in 1838 and '39. Our misadventurer was shifted
+from one to another. At Fort Malden, on the shore of Lake Erie, he was
+kept for seven weeks in a small room with twenty-eight other men. It was
+the dead of winter, but they had no warmth save from their emaciated and
+vermin-infested bodies. They were ironed two and two, day and night.
+They were so crowded that there was not floor-room for all to sleep at
+once. According to Marsh, who afterwards wrote a minute record of this
+imprisonment, their feeding and care would have been fatal to a herd of
+hogs. The acme of the miseries of the prison at Fort Malden I cannot
+even hint at with propriety. When transferred from Sandwich to Malden,
+and later from Malden to London, Marsh, like many of his fellow
+sufferers, had his feet frozen; and when his limbs swelled so that life
+itself was threatened, it was not the surgeon but a clumsy blacksmith
+who cut off the irons and supplied new ones.
+
+In London the treatment of Malden was repeated. Here the trials began.
+The gallows was erected close to the jail wall; day by day the doomed
+ones walked out of a door in the second story to the death platform; and
+day by day Marsh and the other wretches in the cells heard the drop as
+it swung, in falling, against the jail wall. Marsh lived in hourly
+expectation of the summons, but before his turn came there was a stay in
+the work which had been going on under the warrants signed by Sir George
+Arthur--as great a tyrant, probably, as ever held power on the American
+continent. A far more philosophic writer than Robert Marsh has called
+him the Robespierre of Canada. Whatever may be held as to the illegality
+of the trials which sent some twenty-five men to the gallows at this
+time, certain it is that the hangings stopped before our hero's neck was
+stretched. Fate still had her quiver full of evil days for him; and
+fortune, like a gleam of sun between clouds, moved him on to the prison
+at Toronto, where his mother came to see him.
+
+It was in the early spring of 1839 that he was transferred to Toronto.
+In June following, with a boatload of companions, he was shipped down to
+Fort Henry at Kingston. Here, for three months, he was deluded with the
+constant expectation of release; but he must have had some
+foreshadowings of his fate when, after three months of wretched
+existence at Fort Henry, he was again sent on, down the river to Quebec;
+and there, on September 28, 1839, he and 137 companions in irons were
+put aboard the British prison-ship Buffalo, commanded by Capt. Wood.
+They were stowed on the third deck, below the water line; 140 sailors
+were placed over them; and the Buffalo took her course down the widening
+gulf. The dismal departure was lightened by a touch of human nature.
+There were several of the convicts who, like Marsh, claimed American
+citizenship, and American blood will show itself.[49] As the prisoners
+were marched down with clanking chains from Fort Henry for the shipment
+to Quebec, many of them thought that it was their last shift before
+release. "There were three or four very good singers amongst us," says
+Marsh, "which made the fort ring with the 'American Star,' 'Hunters of
+Kentucky' and other similar songs, which caused many to flock to our
+windows. Some of them remarked, 'You will not feel like singing in
+Botany Bay.' 'Give us "Botany Bay,"' said one, and it was done in good
+style."
+
+If the reader will permit the digression, it may afford a little
+entertainment to consider for a moment these old songs. The literature
+of every war includes its patriotic songs--seldom the work of great
+poets, and most popular when they appeal to the quick sympathies and
+sense of humor of the common people. Every people has such songs,
+sometimes cherished and sung for generations. England has them without
+number, Canada has hers, the United States has hers; and among the most
+popular for many years, strange as it now may seem, were "The American
+Star" and "The Hunters of Kentucky," which were sung by these
+none-too-worthy representatives of the United States, through Canadian
+prison bars, this autumn morning sixty years ago. Both songs had their
+origin, I believe, at the time of the War of 1812. That such barren and
+bombastic lines as "The American Star" should have remained popular a
+quarter of a century seems incredible, and appears to indicate that the
+youth of the country were very hard up for patriotic songs worth
+singing. Here follows "The American Star":
+
+ Come, strike the bold anthem, the war dogs are howling,
+ Already they eagerly snuff up their prey,
+ The red clouds of war o'er our forests are scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away;
+ The infants, affrighted, cling close to their mothers,
+ The youths grasp their swords, for the combat prepare,
+ While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers and brothers,
+ Who rush to display the American Star.
+
+ Come blow the shrill bugle, the loud drum awaken,
+ The dread rifle seize, let the cannon deep roar;
+ No heart with pale fear, or faint doubtings be shaken,
+ No slave's hostile foot leave a print on our shore.
+ Shall mothers, wives, daughters and sisters left weeping,
+ Insulted by ruffians, be dragged to despair!
+ Oh no! from her hills the proud eagle comes sweeping
+ And waves to the brave the American Star.
+
+ The spirits of Washington, Warren, Montgomery,
+ Look down from the clouds with bright aspect serene;
+ Come, soldiers, a tear and a toast to their memory,
+ Rejoicing they'll see us as they once have been.
+ To us the high boon by the gods has been granted,
+ To speed the glad tidings of liberty far;
+ Let millions invade us, we'll meet them undaunted,
+ And vanquish them by the American Star.
+
+ Your hands, then, dear comrades, round Liberty's altar,
+ United we swear by the souls of the brave
+ Not one from the strong resolution shall falter,
+ To live independent, or sink to the grave!
+ Then, freemen, fill up--Lo, the striped banner's flying,
+ The high bird of liberty screams through the air;
+ Beneath her oppression and tyranny dying--
+ Success to the beaming American Star.
+
+Every one of its turgid and wordy lines bespeaks the struggling infancy
+of a National literature. "The Hunters of Kentucky" is a little better,
+because it has humor--though of the primitive backwoods type--in it. If
+the reader has not heard it lately, perhaps he can stand a little of it.
+It was inspired by the battle of New Orleans:
+
+ Ye gentlemen and ladies fair,
+ Who grace this famous city,
+ Just listen, if you've time to spare,
+ While I rehearse a ditty;
+ And for the opportunity
+ Conceive yourselves quite lucky,
+ For 'tis not often that you see
+ A hunter from Kentucky;
+ O! Kentucky,
+ The hunters of Kentucky.
+
+ We are a hardy free-born race,
+ Each man to fear a stranger;
+ Whate'er the game, we join in chase,
+ Despising toil and danger;
+ And if a daring foe annoys,
+ Whate'er his strength or force is,
+ We'll show him that Kentucky boys
+ Are alligators,--horses:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ I s'pose you've read it in the prints,
+ How Packenham attempted
+ To make Old Hickory Jackson wince,
+ But soon his schemes repented;
+ For we, with rifles ready cock'd,
+ Thought such occasion lucky,
+ And soon around the general flock'd
+ The hunters of Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ I s'pose you've heard how New Orleans
+ Is famed for wealth and beauty;
+ There's gals of every hue, it seems,
+ From snowy white to sooty:
+ So, Packenham he made his brags
+ If he in fight was lucky,
+ He'd have their gals and cotton bags,
+ In spite of Old Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ But Jackson he was wide awake,
+ And wasn't scared at trifles,
+ For well he knew what aim we take
+ With our Kentucky rifles;
+ So, he led us down to Cypress Swamp,
+ The ground was low and mucky;
+ There stood John Bull in martial pomp--
+ But here was Old Kentucky:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ We raised a bank to hide our breasts,
+ Not that we thought of dying,
+ But then we always like to rest,
+ Unless the game is flying;
+ Behind it stood our little force--
+ None wish'd it to be greater,
+ For every man was half a horse
+ And half an alligator:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ They didn't let our patience tire
+ Before they show'd their faces;
+ We didn't choose to waste our fire,
+ But snugly kept our places;
+ And when so near we saw them wink,
+ We thought it time to stop 'em,
+ It would have done you good, I think,
+ To see Kentuckians drop 'em:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+ They found, at length, 'twas vain to fight,
+ When lead was all their booty,
+ And so, they wisely took to flight,
+ And left us all the beauty.
+ And now, if danger e'er annoys,
+ Remember what our trade is;
+ Just send for us Kentucky boys,
+ And we'll protect you, ladies:
+ O! Kentucky, etc.
+
+At least it has a gallant ending, which was not altogether apposite to
+the situation of Marsh and his fellow-prisoners at Kingston. "Botany
+Bay" was more in their line just then; but, at any rate, it was just as
+philosophic to go into exile singing as mourning or cursing.
+
+Were I a Herman Melville or a Clark Russell I should be tempted to dwell
+on this dreary voyage of the prison-ship Buffalo. Even Marsh's humble
+chronicle of it is graphic with unstudied incidents. They ran into rough
+weather at once; so that to the wretchedness of their imprisonment was
+added the misery of seasickness. No one had told them of their
+destination, and many of them, like Marsh, stoutly maintained from first
+to last that they were transported without a sentence. Their daily life
+in this dark and crowded 'tween-decks, practically the hold of a
+staggering old sailer, could not be detailed without offense; and if it
+could be, I have no desire to heap up the horrors. In mid-voyage there
+was an attempted mutiny; the convicts tried to seize the ship; but the
+only result was heavier irons, closer confinement, and a stricter
+guard. After two months of the stormy Atlantic the Buffalo put into Rio
+Janeiro, where she lay three tantalizing days. "It happened to be the
+Emperor's birthday," says Marsh, "and although we were not allowed to go
+on shore, we could discover through a skylight the flags on the
+pinnacles of houses and hills apparently reaching to the clouds." A
+little fruit was had aboard to allay the scurvy which was making havoc,
+and the Buffalo lumbered away again and ran straight into a savage gale,
+in which she sprung a bad leak. She was an old ship, and had formerly
+been a man-of-war, but for some years now had been employed as a convict
+transport between England and New South Wales. From Rio around the Cape
+of Good Hope the log kept by Robert Marsh is a story of sickness and
+death. Those who had had their limbs frozen in Canada now found the skin
+and flesh coming away and the sea water on their bare feet gave them
+excruciating agony. The shotted sack slid into the shark-patrolled
+waters of the Indian Ocean, and the wretches who still lived were
+envious of the dead. And on the 13th of February, 1840, four months and
+a half from Quebec, the Buffalo anchored in Hobart Town harbor, Van
+Dieman's Land.
+
+And now a word about this antipodean land on which our unlucky hero
+looked out from the prison-ship. We are wont to regard it, perhaps, as a
+new and well-nigh unknown part of the world; possibly some of us would
+have to think twice if asked off-hand, Where is Van Dieman's Land? Of
+course we remember, when we glance at the map, that it is a good-sized
+island just south of Australia. From extreme north to extreme south it
+is about as far as from Buffalo to Philadelphia, and east and west not
+quite so far as from Buffalo to Albany. And here is a coincidence:
+Hobart Town, in the harbor of which the prison-ship Buffalo dropped
+anchor with her load of misery, is exactly as far south of the equator
+as Buffalo is north of it. Other parallel data may perhaps be helpful:
+It was in 1642 that the navigator Tasman discovered the island, naming
+it after his Dutch patron, Van Dieman. The explorer's name has now been
+substituted, as it should be, and Tasmania, not Van Dieman's Land,
+appears on modern maps. The history of that land dates from 1642. It was
+in 1641 that those adventurous missioners, Brebeuf and Chaumonot, first
+carried their portable altar across the Niagara; and from the Relations
+of their order for that year the world gained the first actual glimpse
+of the Niagara region. In the world's annals, therefore, this far-away
+island and our own Niagara and lake region are of the same age. One
+other parallel may be ventured. The first permanent settlement in Van
+Dieman's Land was made in 1803. In 1804 Buffalo had fifteen actual
+settlers and a few squatters. But here our parallels end, for when, on
+that February morning of 1840, the unhappy Marsh was put ashore, he
+found a community unlike any that has ever existed in this happier part
+of the world. For over thirty years England had been sending thither her
+worst criminals. Shipload after shipload, year after year, of the most
+depraved and vicious of mankind, had been sent out. England had made of
+it and of Botany Bay a dumping-ground for whatever manner of evil men
+and women she could scrape from her London slums. There was some free
+colonization, but it went on slowly. Honest men hesitated to go where
+society was so handicapped. The treatment of the convicts varied
+according to the Governors, but for years before Marsh arrived it seems
+to have been as harsh and brutalizing as imperiousness and cruelty could
+devise. In 1836 Sir John Franklin was sent out to the station. He was an
+exceptionally humane and generous man, according to most accounts. Marsh
+does not complain of any severity from him, but calls him an old granny,
+a glutton and a temporizer in his promises to convicts. It is something
+foreign to our purpose to dwell upon this point, nor is it a gracious
+thing to seek any imputation against a character which history delights
+to hold as the embodiment of the gallant and heroic. We must remember
+that Robert Marsh's point of view was not likely to bring him to
+favorable estimates of those in authority over him and through whom his
+very real oppression came. Years after, when the great explorer's bones
+lay whitening in the unknown North, this far-away colony raised to his
+memory a noble bronze statue, which stands to-day in Franklin Square,
+Hobart, not far from the old Government House, the scene of his
+uncongenial administration.
+
+And now behold our hero marched ashore with his fellows; reeling like a
+drunken man, the strange effect of firm earth under foot after months
+of heaving seaway; examined, ticketed and numbered, clad in Her
+Majesty's livery, and sent to a near-by country station, where he is put
+to work under savage overseers at carrying stone for road-building; and
+thus began five years of unmitigated suffering for Robert Marsh in that
+detestable land. There were about 43,000 convicts on the island at the
+time, 25,000 of whom were driven to daily work in chain gangs, on the
+roads, in the wet mines or the forest. The rest were ex-convicts; had
+served their sentences and counted themselves among the free population,
+which all told did not then exceed 60,000. Conceive of a free community,
+nearly one half of whom, men and women, were former convicts, but not
+regenerate. For years the brothels of London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, were
+emptied into Van Dieman's Land. A reputable writer has said that at this
+time female virtue was unknown in the island. The wealthy land-owners,
+under government patronage, were autocrats in their own domain. The
+whipping-post, the triangle--a refinement of cruelty--and the gallows
+were familiar sights. The slightest failure at his daily task sent the
+convict to the whipping-post or to solitary confinement.
+
+Official iniquity flourished under Sir George Arthur's reign of eleven
+years. He was Franklin's predecessor, and his minions were still in
+control when Marsh came under their power. He was shifted from station
+to station; fed like a dog, lodged in the meanest huts and worked well
+nigh to death. The worst characters were his overseers, and the day
+began with the lash. A convict's strength would give out under his load;
+he would lag behind, or stop to rest. At once he would be taken to the
+station, stripped to the waist--if he chanced to have anything
+on--strung up to the post or triangle, and flogged. As an additional
+measure of reform, brine was thrown into the gashes which the lash had
+made. These were the milder forms of daily punishment. Sir George
+Arthur's prouder record comes from the executions. Travelers to-day tell
+us that Tasmania is really a second England; in its settled portions it
+is a land of pleasant vales and gentle rivers, rich in harvests of the
+temperate zone. "Appleland," some have called it, from its fruitful
+orchards; but no tree transplanted from Merrie England ever flourished
+more than the black stock from Tyburn Hill. Sir George hanged 1,500
+during his stay. Marsh tells of a compassionate clergyman who was
+watching with interest the erection of a gallows. "Yes," he said, "I
+suppose it will do, but it is not as large as we need. I think ten will
+hang comfortable, but twelve will be rather crowded."
+
+It is small wonder that our hero tried to escape. He took to the
+bush--which means the unexplored and inhospitable forest--with a band of
+friends; was captured, punished, and thereafter dressed in
+magpie--trousers and frock one half black, one half yellow; and in this
+garb, which advertised to all that he had been a bush-ranger, he worked
+on until the spring of 1842, when Sir John Franklin made him a
+ticket-of-leave man. This relieved him from the overseers, and gave him
+permission to work, for whatever wages he could get, in an assigned
+district.
+
+And now again, of this new phase of his misadventures, a long story
+could be made. At that time the best circumstanced ticket-of-leave men
+got about a shilling a day and boarded themselves. But there was little
+work and many seekers. They roamed over the country, turned away from
+plantation after plantation, and in many cases became the boldest of
+outlaws. Escape from the island was well nigh impossible; but after many
+hardships, utterly unable to get honest work, Marsh was one of a party
+that determined to try it. Making their way eighty miles to the
+seashore, they hid in the woods, where for a week or so they gathered
+firewood, buried potatoes and snared kangaroo. One of their number
+reached a settlement and returned with the word that an American whaler
+was coming to take them off. After six days more of waiting the vessel
+hove in sight. As she tried to draw near and send boats ashore a storm
+came up and she narrowly escaped the breakers. At this critical moment a
+British armed patrol schooner rounded a point down the coast and the
+American made her escape with great difficulty, leaving the score of
+runaway convicts at their precarious lookout, hopeless and despondent.
+
+They were soon arrested, Marsh among them. He was tried for breaking his
+patrol, and sent to an inland district, 100 miles through the bush and
+swamps. "It was all punishment," he says pathetically, in describing
+this journey on which he nearly perished. So down-hearted and distressed
+were they, so appalled by the war of nature and man against them, that
+one of Marsh's companions, with fagged-out brain, came to the conclusion
+that they were really in hell and that the devil himself was in charge
+of them. But there is always a turn to the tide. They trapped a kangaroo
+and did not starve. Marsh reached his district and this time found work,
+which had to be light, for he was weak, emaciated and troubled day and
+night with a pain in his chest. And finally the glad word came that he
+was gazetted for pardon and could go to Hobart. There, on January 27,
+1845, after ten months in Canada prisons, four and a half months in a
+transport ship, and five years in a convict colony, he went on board the
+American whaler Steiglitz of Sag Harbor, Selah Young, master, a free
+man.
+
+The Steiglitz was bound out on a whaling voyage. No matter, she would
+take Marsh away from that hell. She cruised for whale off New Zealand,
+then made north, and in April anchored off Honolulu. King Hamehameha
+III., on hearing the story of the convict Americans, welcomed them
+ashore, and there Marsh stayed for four months, exploring the islands
+and waiting for a chance to get home. At last it came in the welcome
+shape of the whaler Samuel Robertson, Capt. Warner, bound for New
+Bedford. She touched at the Society Islands and Pernambuco, and on March
+13, 1846, after seven years four and a half months absence, Marsh
+stepped ashore in his own country again. The people of New Bedford
+helped him and a few others as far as Utica. There one of his comrades
+in exile left him for his home in Watertown, and others went their
+several ways. Marsh was helped as far as Canandaigua, where his brother
+met him and took him to his home in Avon; and after a time of
+recuperation there, they came on to Buffalo, where he met his father,
+his mother and sister. He soon crossed the river, visited Toronto, and
+probably looked over the scenes of his early cracker-peddling and
+subsequent campaigning, up and down the Niagara. He had traveled 77,000
+miles, but here his journey ended; and here the Patriot exile told his
+story, which I have drawn on in an imperfect way, for this true
+chronicle of old trails.
+
+
+
+
+Underground Trails.
+
+
+
+
+UNDERGROUND TRAILS.
+
+
+It was Dame Nature who decreed that the Niagara region should be
+peculiarly a place of trails. When she set the great cataract midway
+between two lakes, she thereby ordained that in days to come the Indian
+should go around the falls, on foot. The Indian trail was a footpath;
+nothing more. Here it followed the margin of a stream; there, well nigh
+indiscernable, it crossed a rocky plateau; again, worn deep in yielding
+loam, it led through thick woods, twisting and turning around trees and
+boulders, with detours for swamps or bad ground, and long stretches
+along favorable slopes or sightly ridges. Who can hazard a guess as to
+the time when, or by what manner of men, these trails were first
+established in our region? Immemorial in their source--akin in natural
+origins to the path the deer makes in going to the salt-lick or to
+drink--they were old, established, when our history begins. And when the
+white man came he followed the old trails. Traveling like the Indian, by
+water when he could; when lakes and rivers did not serve, he found the
+footpaths ready made for him in the forest. Armies came, cutting
+military roads. Settlers followed to banish forests, drain swamps, and
+make new highways. And yet the horseman, the military train, the wagon
+of the pioneer, the early stage-coach, the railroad, each in its day,
+along many of the most direct and important thoroughfares, has but
+followed the ancient ways. The thing is axiomatic. Nature for the most
+part decrees where men shall walk. Her lakes and rivers and her hills
+may be strewn by whim; but there are plain reasons enough for our
+road-building. We go where we can, with safety and expedition. So ran
+the red man. We still follow the old trails.
+
+Other aspects of our frontier are worthy of a thought. Two nations look
+across the Niagara, so that, even though its flow were placid from lake
+to lake, it would still be a political barrier, a halting-place. This
+fact has filled it full of trails in history. Again, as the gateway of
+the West, the paths of immigration and of commerce for a century have
+here converged. The early settlers of Michigan and Wisconsin went by the
+old Lewiston ferry. From Buffalo by boat, and from old Suspension Bridge
+by rail, who can estimate the thousands who have gone on to create the
+New West? From the earliest Iroquois raid upon the Neuters, down to
+yesterday's excursion, the Niagara frontier has been peculiarly a region
+of passing, of coming and going, along old trails.
+
+Now of all the paths that have led hitherward, none has greater
+significance in American history than that known as the Underground
+Railroad. Other paths, touching here, have led to war, to wealth, to
+pleasure; but this led to Liberty. Thousands of negro slaves, gaining
+after infinite hardships these shores of the lake or river, have looked
+across the smiling expanse to such an elysium as only a slave can dream
+of. Once the passage made, no matter how poor the passenger, freedom
+became his possession and the heritage of his children. The chattel
+became a man. I can never sail upon the blue lake, or down the pleasant
+river, without seeing in fancy this throng of famished, frightened,
+blindly hopeful blacks, for whom these waters were the gateway to new
+life. The most vital part of the Underground Railroad was the over-water
+ferry. Bark canoe and great steamer alike leave no lasting trail; but to
+him who reads the history of our region, this fair waterway at our door
+is thronged as a street; and every secret traveler thereby is worthy of
+his attention. Much has been recorded of these refugees, who came,
+singly or in small parties, for more than thirty years preceding the
+Civil War. Indeed, runaway slaves passed this way to Canada soon after
+the War of 1812. The tales of soldiers returning to Kentucky from the
+Niagara frontier and other campaigns of that war, first planted in the
+minds of Southern slaves the idea that Canada was a land of freedom. By
+1830 many earnest people who disapproved of slavery, the Quakers
+prominent among them, were giving organized aid to the escaping blacks.
+In many secret ways the refugees were passed on from one friend to
+another. Hiding-places were established, and routes which were found
+advantageous were regularly followed.
+
+It is no part of my present plan to enter upon a general sketch of the
+Underground Railroad. That task has already been admirably performed, at
+voluminous length, by careful students. My aim in this paper is to
+bring together a number of incidents and narratives, particularly
+illustrative of its work at the eastern end of Lake Erie and along the
+Niagara frontier, in order that the student may the better appreciate
+how vital this phase of the slavery issue was, even in this region, for
+more than a generation preceding the Civil War. There were established
+routes for the passage of fugitive slaves: From the seaboard States to
+the North, by water from Newberne, S. C, and Portsmouth, Va.; or by land
+routes from Washington and Philadelphia, to and through New England and
+so into Quebec. There was "John Brown's route" through Eastern Kansas
+and Nebraska; and there were many routes through Iowa and Illinois, most
+of them leading to Chicago and other Lake Michigan ports, whence the
+refugees came by boat to Canadian points, chiefly along the north shore
+of Lake Erie; or even, in some cases, by water to Collingwood on
+Georgian Bay, where a considerable number of runaway slaves were carried
+prior to the Civil War. But the travel by these extreme East and West
+routes was insignificant as compared with the number that came through
+Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, to points on the south shore of
+Lake Erie and the Detroit and Niagara rivers at either end. The region
+bounded by the Ohio, the Allegheny, and the western border of Indiana
+was a vast plexus of Underground routes. The negroes were taken across
+to Canada in great numbers from Detroit and other points on that river;
+from Sandusky to Point Pelee; from Ashtabula to Port Stanley; from
+Conneaut to Port Burwell; from Erie to Long Point; and from all
+south-shore points on Lake Erie they were brought by steamer to Buffalo.
+Often, the vessel captains would put the refugees ashore between Long
+Point and Buffalo. At other times, the fugitives were sent to stations
+at Black Rock or Niagara Falls, whence they were soon set across the
+river and were free. There were some long routes across New York State,
+the chief one being up the Hudson and Mohawk valleys to Lake Ontario
+ports. There was some crossing to Kingston, and some from Rochester to
+Port Dalhousie or Toronto. Another route led from Harrisburg up the
+Susquehanna to Williamsport, thence to Elmira, and northwesterly,
+avoiding large towns, to Niagara Falls. But the most active part in the
+Underground Railroad operations in New York State was borne by the
+western counties. There were numerous routes through Allegany,
+Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties, along which the negroes were
+helped; all converging at Buffalo or on the Niagara. In the old towns of
+this section are still many houses and other buildings which are pointed
+out to the visitor as having been former stations on the Underground.
+The Pettit house at Fredonia is a distinguished example.
+
+It is impossible to state even approximately the number of refugee
+negroes who crossed by these routes to Upper Canada, now Ontario. In
+1844 the number was estimated at 40,000;[50] in 1852 the Anti-Slavery
+Society of Canada stated in its annual report that there were about
+30,000 blacks in Canada West; in 1858 the number was estimated as high
+as 75,000.[51] This figure is probably excessive; but since the negroes
+continued to come, up to the hour of the Emancipation Proclamation, it
+is probably within the fact to say that more than 50,000 crossed to
+Upper Canada, nearly all from points on Lake Erie, the Detroit and
+Niagara rivers.
+
+Runaway slaves appeared in Buffalo at least as early as the '30's.
+"Professor Edward Orton recalls that in 1838, soon after his father
+moved to Buffalo, two sleigh-loads of negroes from the Western Reserve
+were brought to the house in the night-time; and Mr. Frederick Nicholson
+of Warsaw, N. Y., states that the Underground work in his vicinity began
+in 1840. From this time on there was apparently no cessation of
+migrations of fugitives into Canada at Black Rock, Buffalo and other
+points."[52] Those too were the days of much passenger travel on Lake
+Erie, and certain boats came to be known as friendly to the Underground
+cause. One boat which ran between Cleveland and Buffalo gave employment
+to the fugitive William Wells Brown. It became known at Cleveland that
+Brown would take escaped slaves under his protection without charge,
+hence he rarely failed to find a little company ready to sail when he
+started out from Cleveland. "In the year 1842," he says, "I conveyed
+from the 1st of May to the 1st of December, sixty-nine fugitives over
+Lake Erie to Canada."[53] Many anecdotes are told of the search for
+runaways on the lake steamers. Lake travel in the _ante-bellum_ days was
+ever liable to be enlivened by an exciting episode in a "nigger-chase";
+but usually, it would seem, the negroes could rely upon the friendliness
+of the captains for concealment or other assistance.
+
+There are chronicled, too, many little histories of flights which
+brought the fugitive to Buffalo. I pass over those which are readily
+accessible elsewhere to the student of this phase of our home
+history.[54] It is well, however, to devote a paragraph or two to one
+famous affair which most if not all American writers on the Underground
+Railroad appear to have overlooked.
+
+One day in 1836 an intelligent negro, riding a thoroughbred but jaded
+horse, appeared on the streets of Buffalo. His appearance must have
+advertised him to all as a runaway slave. I do not know that he made any
+attempt to conceal the fact. His chief concern was to sell the horse as
+quickly as possible, and get across to Canada. And there, presently, we
+find him, settled at historic old Niagara, near the mouth of the river.
+Here, even at that date, so many negroes had made their way from the
+South, that more than 400 occupied a quarter known as Negro Town. The
+newcomer, whose name was Moseby, admitted that he had run away from a
+plantation in Kentucky, and had used a horse that formerly belonged to
+his master to make his way North. A Kentucky grand jury soon found a
+true bill against him for horse-stealing, and civil officers traced him
+to Niagara, and made requisition for his arrest and extradition. The
+year before, Sir Francis Bond Head had succeeded Sir John Colborne as
+Governor of Canada West, and before him the case was laid. Sir Francis
+regarded the charge as lawful, notwithstanding the avowal of Moseby's
+owners that if they could get him back to Kentucky they would "make an
+example of him"; in plainer words, would whip him to death as a warning
+to all slaves who dared to dream of seeking freedom in Canada.
+
+Moseby was arrested and locked up in the Niagara jail; whereupon great
+excitement arose, the blacks and many sympathizing whites declaring that
+he should never be carried back South. The Governor, Sir Francis, was
+petitioned not to surrender Moseby; he replied that his duty was to give
+him up as a felon, "although he would have armed the province to protect
+a slave." For more than a week crowds of negroes, men and women, camped
+before the jail, day and night. Under the leadership of a mulatto
+schoolmaster named Holmes, and of Mrs. Carter, a negress with a gift for
+making fiery speeches, the mob were kept worked up to a high pitch of
+excitement, although, as a contemporary writer avers, they were
+unarmed, showed "good sense, forbearance and resolution," and declared
+their intention not to commit any violence against the English law. They
+even agreed that Moseby should remain in jail until they could raise the
+price of the horse, but threatened, "if any attempt were made to take
+him from the prison, and send him across to Lewiston, they would resist
+it at the hazard of their lives." The order, however, came for Moseby's
+delivery to the slave-hunters, and the sheriff and a party of constables
+attempted to execute it. Moseby was brought out from the jail,
+handcuffed and placed in a cart; whereupon the mob attacked the
+officers. The military was called out to help the civil force and
+ordered to fire on the assailants. Two negroes were killed, two or three
+wounded, and Moseby ran off and was not pursued. The negro women played
+a curiously-prominent part in the affair. "They had been most active in
+the fray, throwing themselves fearlessly between the black men and the
+whites, who, of course, shrank from injuring them. One woman had seized
+the sheriff, and held him pinioned in her arms; another, on one of the
+artillery-men presenting his piece, and swearing that he would shoot her
+if she did not get out of his way, gave him only one glance of
+unutterable contempt, and with one hand knocking up his piece, and
+collaring him with the other, held him in such a manner as to prevent
+his firing."[55]
+
+Soon after, in the same year, the Governor of Kentucky made requisition
+on the Governor of the province of Canada West for the surrender of
+Jesse Happy, another runaway slave, also on a charge of horse-stealing.
+Sir Francis held him in confinement in Hamilton jail, but refused to
+deliver him up until he had laid the case before the Home Government. In
+a most interesting report to the Colonial Secretary, under date of
+Toronto, Oct. 8, 1837, he asked for instructions "as a matter of general
+policy," and reviewed the Moseby case in a fair and broad spirit, highly
+creditable to him alike as an administrator and a friend of the
+oppressed. "I am by no means desirous," he wrote, "that this province
+should become an asylum for the guilty of any color; at the same time
+the documents submitted with this dispatch will I conceive show that the
+subject of giving up fugitive slaves to the authorities of the adjoining
+republican States is one respecting which it is highly desirable I
+should receive from Her Majesty's Government specific instructions....
+It may be argued that the slave escaping from bondage on his master's
+horse is a vicious struggle between two guilty parties, of which the
+slave-owner is not only the aggressor, but the blackest criminal of the
+two. It is a case of the dealer in human flesh _versus_ the stealer of
+horse-flesh; and it may be argued that, if the British Government does
+not feel itself authorized to pass judgment on the plaintiff, neither
+should it on the defendant." Sir Francis continues in this ingenious
+strain, observing that "it is as much a theft in the slave walking from
+slavery to liberty in his master's shoes as riding on his master's
+horse." To give up a slave for trial to the American laws, he argued,
+was in fact giving him back to his former master; and he held that,
+until the State authorities could separate trial from unjust punishment,
+however willing the Government of Canada might be to deliver up a man
+for trial, it was justified in refusing to deliver him up for
+punishment, "unless sufficient security be entered into in this
+province, that the person delivered up for trial shall be brought back
+to Upper Canada as soon as his trial or the punishment awarded by it
+shall be concluded." And he added this final argument, begging that
+instructions should be sent to him at once:
+
+ It is argued, that the republican states have no right, under the
+ pretext of any human treaty, to claim from the British Government,
+ which does not recognize slavery, beings who by slave-law are not
+ recognized as _men_ and who actually existed as brute beasts in
+ moral darkness, until on reaching British soil they suddenly heard,
+ for the first time in their lives, the sacred words, "Let there be
+ light; and there was light!" From that moment it is argued they
+ were created _men_, and if this be true, it is said they cannot be
+ held responsible for conduct prior to their existence.[56]
+
+Sir Francis left the Home Government in no doubt as to his own feelings
+in the matter; and although I have seen no further report regarding
+Jesse Happy, neither do I know of any case in which a refugee in Canada
+for whom requisition was thus made was permitted to go back to slavery.
+It did sometimes happen, however, that refugees were enticed across the
+river on one pretext or another, or grew careless and took their chances
+on the American side, only to fall into the clutches of the
+ever-watchful slave-hunters.
+
+British love of fair play could be counted on to stand up for the rights
+of the negro on British soil; but that by no means implies that this
+inpouring of ignorant blacks, unfitted for many kinds of pioneer work
+and ill able to withstand the climate, was welcomed by the communities
+in which they settled. At best, they were tolerated. Very different from
+the spirit shown in Sir Francis Bond Head's plea, is the tone of much
+tourist comment, especially during the later years of the Abolition
+movement. Thus, in 1854, the Hon. Amelia M. Murray wrote, just after her
+Niagara visit:
+
+"One of the evils consequent upon Southern Slavery, is the ignorant and
+miserable set of coloured people who throw themselves into Canada.... I
+must regret that the well-meant enthusiasm of the Abolitionists has been
+without judgment."[57] Another particularly unamiable critic, W. Howard
+Russell, a much-exploited English war correspondent who wrote
+voluminously of the United States during the Civil War, and who showed
+less good will to this country than any other man who ever wrote so
+much, came to Niagara in the winter of 1862, and in sourly recording his
+unpleasant impressions wrote: "There are too many free negroes and too
+many Irish located in the immediate neighborhood of the American town,
+to cause the doctrines of the Abolitionists to be received with much
+favor by the American population; and the Irish of course are opposed to
+free negroes, where they are attracted by paper mills, hotel service,
+bricklaying, plastering, housebuilding, and the like--the Americans
+monopolizing the higher branches of labor and money-making, including
+the guide business."[58] A few pages farther on, however, describing his
+sight-seeing on the Canadian side, he speaks of "our guide, a strapping
+specimen of negro or mulatto." Quotations of like purport from English
+writers during the years immediately preceding the Civil War, might be
+multiplied. One rarely will find any opinion at all favorable to the
+refugee black, and never any expression of sympathy with the
+Abolitionists by English tourists who wrote books, or endorsal of the
+work accomplished by the Underground Railroad.
+
+From its importance as a terminal of the Underground, one would look to
+Buffalo for a wealth of reminiscence on this subject. On the contrary,
+comparatively little seems to have been gathered up regarding Buffalo
+stations and workers. The Buffalo of _ante-bellum_ days was not a large
+place, and many "personally-escorted" refugees were taken direct from
+country stations to the river ferries, without having to be hid away in
+the city. Certain houses there were, however, which served as stations.
+One of these, on Ferry Street near Niagara, long since disappeared. When
+the "Morris Butler house," at the corner of Utica Street and Linwood
+Avenue, built about 1857, was taken down a few years ago, hiding-places
+were found on either side of the front door, accessible only from the
+cellar. Old residents then recalled that Mr. Butler was reputed to keep
+the last station on the Underground route to Canada.[59]
+
+Many years before Mr. Butler's time runaway slaves used to appear in
+Buffalo, eagerly asking the way to Canada. Those days were recalled by
+the death, on Aug. 2, 1899, in the Kent County House of Refuge, Chatham,
+Ont., of "Mammy" Chadwick, reputed to be over 100 years old. She was
+born a slave in Virginia; was many times sold, once at auction in New
+Orleans, and later taken to Kentucky. She escaped and made her way by
+the Underground to Buffalo in 1837. She always fixed her arrival at Fort
+Erie as "in de year dat de Queen was crowned." She married in Fort
+Erie, but after a few years went to Chatham, in the midst of a district
+full of refugee blacks, and there she lived for sixty years, rejoicing
+in the distinction of having nursed in their infancy many who became
+Chatham's oldest and most prominent citizens.
+
+There still lives at Fort Erie an active old woman who came to Buffalo,
+a refugee from slavery, some time prior to 1837; she herself says, "a
+good while before the Canadian Rebellion," and her memory is so clear
+and vigorous in general that there appears no warrant for mistrusting it
+on this point. This interesting woman is Mrs. Betsy Robinson, known
+throughout the neighborhood as "Aunt Betsy." She lately told her story
+to me at length. Robbed of all the picturesque detail with which she
+invested it, the bare facts are here recorded. Her father, mother, and
+their seven children were slaves on a plantation in Rockingham County,
+Virginia. There came a change of ownership, and Baker (her father) heard
+he was to be sold to New Orleans--the fate which the Virginia slave most
+dreaded; "and yet," says Aunt Betsy, "I've seen dem slaves, in gangs
+bein' sent off to New Orleans, singin' and playin' on jewsharps, lettin'
+on to be that careless an' happy." But not so Baker. He made ready to
+escape. For a week beforehand his wife hid food in the woods. On a dark
+night the whole family stole away from the plantation, crossed a river,
+probably the north fork of the Shenandoah, and pushed northward. The
+father had procured three "passes," which commended them for assistance
+to friends along the way. According to Aunt Betsy, there were a good
+many white people in the South in those days who helped the runaway. She
+was a little girl then, and she now recalls the child's vivid
+impressions of the weeks they spent traveling and hiding in the
+mountains, which she says were full of rattlesnakes, wolves and deer. It
+was a wild country that they crossed, for they came out near Washington,
+Pa. Here the Quakers helped them; and her father and brothers worked in
+the coal mines for a time. Then they came on to Pittsburg. From that
+city north there was no lack of help. "We walked all the way," she says.
+"There was no railroads in them days, an' I don't remember's we got any
+wagon-rides. You see, we was so many, nine in all. I remember we went to
+Erie, and came through Fredonia. We walked through Buffalo--it was
+little then, you know--and down the river road. My father missed the
+Black Rock ferry an' we went away down where the bridge is now. I
+remember we had to walk back up the river, and then we got brought
+across to Fort Erie. That was a good while before the Canadian
+Rebellion."[60]
+
+Samuel Murray, a free-born negro, came to Buffalo from Reading, Pa., in
+1852. For a time he was employed at the American Hotel, and went to
+work very early in the morning. It was, he has said, a common
+occurrence to meet strange negroes, who would ask him the way to Canada.
+"Many a time," said Murray, "I have gone into the hotel and taken food
+for them. Then I would walk out Niagara Street to the ferry and see them
+on the boat bound for Canada." Mr. Murray has related the following
+incidents:
+
+"There was a free black man living in Buffalo in the '50's who made a
+business of going to the South after the wives of former slaves who had
+found comfortable homes, either in the Northern States or in Canada.
+They paid him well for his work, and he rarely failed to accomplish his
+mission.
+
+"While connected with the Underground Railroad in Buffalo word was sent
+us that a colored man from Detroit, a traitor to his color, was coming
+to Buffalo. This man made a business of informing Southerners of the
+whereabouts of their slaves, and was paid a good sum per head for those
+that they recovered. When we heard that he was coming a meeting was held
+and a committee appointed to arrange for his reception. After being here
+a few days, not thinking that he was known, he was met by the committee
+and taken out in the woods where the Parade House now stands. Here he
+was tied to a tree, stripped and cow-hided until he was almost dead. He
+lay for a time insensible in a pool of his own blood. Finally regaining
+consciousness, he made his way back into Buffalo and as soon as he was
+able complained to the city authorities. His assailants were identified,
+arrested, and locked up in the old jail to await the result of his
+injuries. After a time the excitement caused by the affair subsided and
+the men were let out one day without having been tried." The sympathy of
+the sheriff, and probably that of the community as a whole, was plainly
+not with the renegade who got flogged.
+
+Another celebrated Underground case was the arrest at Niagara Falls of a
+slave named Sneedon, on a charge of murder, undoubtedly trumped up to
+procure his return South. Sneedon is described as a fine-looking man,
+with a complexion almost white. He was brought to trial in Buffalo, when
+Eli Cook pleaded his case so successfully that he was acquitted. No
+sooner was he released than he was spirited away _via_ the Underground
+Railroad.
+
+Niagara Falls, far more than Buffalo, was the scene of interesting
+episodes in the Underground days. Not only did many refugee negroes find
+employment in the vicinity, especially on the Canada side, but many
+Southern planters used to visit there, bringing their retinue of blacks.
+Many a time the trusted body-servant, or slave-girl, would leave master
+or mistress in the discharge of some errand, and never come back.
+Instances are related, too, of sudden meetings, at the Falls hotels,
+between negro waiters and the former masters they had run away from. It
+is recorded that when Gen. Peter B. Porter brought his Kentucky wife
+home with him to Niagara Falls, she was attended by a numerous retinue
+of negro servants, but that one by one they "scented freedom in the air"
+and ran away, though probably not to any immediate betterment of their
+condition.
+
+Henry Clay visited Buffalo in September, 1849. When he left for
+Cleveland his black servant Levi was missing, but whether he had gone
+voluntarily or against his wishes Mr. Clay was uncertain. "There are
+circumstances having a tendency both ways," he wrote to Lewis L. Hodges
+of Buffalo, in his effort to trace the lost property. "If voluntarily, I
+will take no trouble about him, as it is probable that in a reversal of
+our conditions I would have done the same thing."[61] The absentee had
+merely been left in Buffalo--probably he missed the boat--and reported
+in due time to his master at Ashland. The incident, however, suggests
+the hazards of Northern travel which in those years awaited wealthy
+Southerners, who were fond of making long sojourns at Niagara Falls,
+accompanied by many servants.
+
+An "old resident of Buffalo" is to be credited with the following
+reminiscence:
+
+"I remember one attempt that was made to capture a runaway slave. It was
+right up here on Niagara Street. The negro ventured out in daytime and
+was seized by a couple of men who had been on the watch for him. The
+slave was a muscular fellow, and fought desperately for his liberty; but
+his captors began beating him over the head with their whips, and he
+would have been overpowered and carried off if his cries had not
+attracted the attention of two Abolitionists, who ran up and joined in
+the scuffle. It was just above Ferry Street, and they pulled and hauled
+at that slave and pounded him and each other until it looked as though
+somebody would be killed. At last, however, the slave, with the help of
+his friends, got away and ran for his life, and the slave-chasers and
+the Abolitionists dropped from blows to high words, the former
+threatening prosecutions and vengeance, but I presume nothing came of
+it."[62]
+
+Nowhere were the friends of the fugitive more active or more successful
+than in the towns along the south shore of Lake Erie, from Erie to
+Buffalo.[63] Some years ago it was my good fortune to become acquainted
+with Mr. Frank Henry of Erie, who had been a very active "conductor" on
+the Underground.[64] From him I had the facts of the following
+experiences, which he had not in earlier years thought it prudent to
+make public. These I now submit, partly in Mr. Henry's own language, as
+fairly-illustrative episodes in the history of Underground trails at the
+eastern end of Lake Erie.
+
+In the year 1841 Capt. David Porter Dobbins, afterwards Superintendent
+of Life Saving Stations in the Ninth U. S. District, including Lakes
+Erie and Ontario, was a citizen of Erie. In politics he was one of the
+sturdy, old-time Democrats, not a few of whom, in marked contrast to
+their "Copperhead" neighbors, secretly sympathized with and aided the
+runaway slaves. Capt. Dobbins had in his employ a black man named
+William Mason, his surname being taken, as was the usual, but not
+invariable, custom among slaves, from that of his first master. Now
+Mason, some time before he came into the employ of Capt. Dobbins, had
+apparently become tired of getting only the blows and abuse of an
+overseer in return for his toil; so one night he quietly left his "old
+Kentucky home," determined to gain his freedom or die in the attempt. In
+good time he succeeded in getting to Detroit, then a small town; and
+there he found work, took unto himself a wife, and essayed to settle
+down. Instead, however, of settling, he soon found himself more badly
+stirred up than ever before, for his wife proved to be a veritable
+she-devil in petticoats, with a tongue keener than his master's lash.
+They parted, and the unfaithful wife informed against him to the
+slave-hunters. Mason fled, made his way to Erie, and was given work by
+Capt. Dobbins. He was a stalwart negro, intelligent above the average,
+altogether too fine a prize to let slip easily, and the professional
+slave-hunters lost no time in hunting him out.
+
+For many years prior to the Civil War a large class of men made their
+living by ferreting out and recapturing fugitive slaves and returning
+them to their old masters; or, as was often the case, selling them into
+slavery again. Free black men, peaceful citizens of the Northern States,
+were sometimes seized, to be sold to unscrupulous men who stood ever
+ready to buy them. There was but little hope for the negro who found
+himself carried south of Mason and Dixon's line in the clutches of these
+hard men, who were generally provided with a minute description of
+runaways from the border States, and received a large commission for
+capturing and returning them into bondage.
+
+One day, as Mason was cutting up a quarter of beef in Capt. Dobbins's
+house, two men came in, making plausible excuses. Mason saw they were
+watching him closely, and his suspicions were at once aroused.
+
+"Is your name William?" one of them asked.
+
+"No," said Mason curtly, pretending to be busy with his beef.
+
+Then they told him to take off his shoe and let them see if there was a
+scar on his foot. On his refusing to do so, they produced handcuffs and
+called on him to surrender. Livid with desperation and fear, Mason
+rushed upon them with his huge butcher-knive, and the fellows took to
+their heels to save their heads. They lost no time in getting a warrant
+from a magistrate on some pretext or other, and placed it in the hands
+of an officer for execution.
+
+While the little by-play with the butcher-knife was going on, Capt.
+Dobbins had entered the house, and to him Mason rushed in appeal.
+Swearing "by de hosts of heaben" that he would never be captured, he
+piteously begged for help and the protection of his employer. And in
+Capt. Dobbins he had a friend who was equal to any emergency. Calling
+Mason from the room his employer hurried with him to Josiah Kellogg's
+house, then one of the finest places in Erie, with a commanding view
+from its high bank over lake and bay.[65] To this house Mason was
+hurried, and Mrs. Kellogg comprehended the situation at a glance. The
+fugitive was soon so carefully hidden that, to use the Captain's
+expression, "The Devil himself couldn't have found him, sir!"
+
+Expeditious as they were, they had been none too quick. Capt. Dobbins
+had scarcely regained his own door, when the two slave-hunters came
+back with the sheriff and demanded Mason.
+
+"Search the premises at your pleasure," was the response.
+
+The house was ransacked from cellar to garret, but, needless to say,
+Mason was not to be found.
+
+There was living in Erie at that time a big burly negro, Lemuel Gates by
+name, whose strength was only surpassed by his good nature. He was
+willing enough to lend himself to the cause of humanity. The Captain
+owned a very fast horse, and while the officer and his disappointed and
+suspicious companions were still lurking around, just at nightfall, he
+harnessed his horse into the buggy and seated the Hercules by his side.
+All this was quietly done in the barn with closed doors. At a given
+signal, the servant-girl threw open the doors, the Captain cracked his
+whip, and out they dashed at full speed. He took good care to be seen
+and recognized by the spies on watch, and then laid his course for
+Hamlin Russell's house at Belle Valley. Mr. Russell was a noted
+Abolitionist, and lived on a cross-road between the Wattsburg and Lake
+Pleasant roads. Just beyond Marvintown, at Davison's, the Lake Pleasant
+road forks off from the Wattsburg road to the right. The travelers took
+the Lake road. When Mr. Russell's house was reached, the Captain slipped
+a half-eagle into the hand of his grinning companion, with the needless
+advice that it would be well to make tracks for home as fast as
+possible. Mr. Russell was told of the clever ruse, and then Capt.
+Dobbins drove leisurely homeward. At the junction of the two roads he
+met the officer and his comrades in hot pursuit.
+
+"Where is Mason?" they demanded.
+
+"Find out," was the Captain's only answer, as he drove quietly along,
+chuckling to himself over the success of his strategy; while the
+slave-hunters worked themselves into a passion over a fruitless search
+of Mr. Russell's innocent premises.
+
+Early one morning a few days afterward, as Capt. Dobbins was on the bank
+of the lake, he saw a vessel round the point of the Peninsula, sail up
+the channel, and cast anchor in Misery Bay, then, and for many years
+afterwards, a favorite anchorage for wind-bound vessels. Soon a yawl was
+seen to put off for the shore with the master of the vessel aboard.
+Capt. Dobbins contrived to see him during the day, and was delighted to
+find him an old and formerly intimate shipmate. The ship-master heartily
+entered into the Captain's plans, and it was agreed to put Mason aboard
+of the vessel at two o'clock the next morning.
+
+At the time of which we write, the steamer docks and lumber-yards which
+later were built along the shore at that point, were yet undreamed of,
+and the waters of the bay broke unhindered at the foot of the high bank
+on which stood Mrs. Kellogg's house, where Mason was hid. It would not
+do openly to borrow a boat, and Capt. Dobbins had no small difficulty in
+getting a craft for the conveyance of his _protege_ to the vessel. At
+last, late at night, a little, leaky old skiff was temporarily
+confiscated. By this time a strong breeze had sprung up, and it was
+difficult to approach the shore. A tree had fallen over the bank with
+its top in the water, and the Captain found precarious anchorage for his
+leaky tub by clinging to its branches. With a cry like the call of the
+whip-poor-will the runaway was summoned. In his hurry to get down the
+bank he slipped and fell headlong into the fallen treetop; while a small
+avalanche of stones and earth came crashing after and nearly swamped the
+boat. When the boat had been lightened of its unexpected cargo, the
+voyage across the bay began. The poor darky, however, was no sooner sure
+that his neck was not broken by the tumble, than he was nearly dead with
+the fear of drowning. Their boat, a little skiff just big enough for one
+person, leaked like a sieve, and soon became water-logged in the seaway.
+Mason's hat was a stiff "plug," a former gift of charity. It had
+suffered sorely by the plunge down the bank, but its ruin was made
+complete by the Captain ordering its owner to fall to and bail out the
+boat with it. The brim soon vanished, but the upper part did very well
+as a bucket; and the owner consoled himself that in thus sacrificing his
+hat he saved his life. It was a close call for safety. The Captain
+tugged away at the oars as never before, and the shivering negro scooped
+away for dear life to keep the boat afloat. In after years Capt. Dobbins
+experienced shipwreck more than once, but he used to say that never had
+he been in greater peril than when making that memorable trip across
+Presque Isle Bay in the wild darkness and storm of midnight. The vessel
+was at length reached. She was loaded with staves, and a great hole was
+made in the deck load, within which Mason was snugly stowed away, while
+the staves were piled over him again. Capt. Dobbins reached the mainland
+in safety before daylight, and during the morning had the satisfaction
+of seeing the wind haul around off land, when the vessel weighed anchor
+and sailed away.
+
+Knowing that pursuit was impossible (there were no steam tugs on the bay
+in those days), Capt. Dobbins quietly told the officer that he was tired
+of being watched, and that if he would come along, he would show him
+where Mason was. The Captain had notified some of his friends, and when
+the bank of the lake was reached, a crowd had gathered, for the affair
+had created quite a stir in the village.
+
+"Do you see that sail?" said the Captain, pointing to the retreating
+vessel.
+
+"Well?" was the impatient answer.
+
+"Mason is aboard of her," was the quiet reply. The befooled magistrate
+of the law, who had taken great care to bring handcuffs for his expected
+prisoner, acknowledged himself beaten; while the "nigger-chasers" were
+glad to sneak off, followed by the shouts and jeers of the crowd.
+"Pretty well done--for a Democrat," said Mr. Russell to the Captain a
+few days afterwards. "After your conversion to our principles you will
+make a good Abolitionist."
+
+Some years after the event above narrated, as Capt. Dobbins[66] was in
+the cabin of his vessel as she lay at Buffalo, a respectably-dressed
+black man was shown into the cabin. It was Mason, who had come to repay
+his benefactor with thanks and even with proffered money. He had settled
+somewhere back of Kingston, Ontario, on land which the Canadian
+Government at that time gave to actual settlers. He had married an
+amiable woman, and was prosperous and happy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I give the following incident substantially as it was set down for me by
+Mr. Frank Henry:
+
+In the summer of 1858 Mr. Jehiel Towner (now deceased) sent me a note
+from the city of Erie, asking me to call on him that evening. When night
+came I rode into town from my home in Harborcreek, and saw Mr. Towner.
+"There are three 'passengers' hidden in town, Henry," said he, "and we
+must land them somewhere on the Canada shore. You are just the man for
+this work; will you undertake to get them across?"
+
+You must remember that we never had anything to do with "runaway
+niggers" in those days, nor even with "fugitive slaves"; we simply
+"assisted passengers." I knew well enough that there was a big risk in
+the present case, but I promised to do my part, and so after talking
+over matters a little I drove home.
+
+The next night just about dusk a wagon was driven into my yard. The
+driver, one Hamilton Waters, was a free mulatto, known to everybody
+around Erie. He had brought a little boy with him as guide, for he was
+almost as blind as a bat. In his wagon were three of the
+strangest-looking "passengers" I ever saw; I can remember how oddly they
+looked as they clambered out of the wagon. There was a man they called
+Sam, a great strapping negro, who might have been forty years old. He
+was a loose-jointed fellow, with a head like a pumpkin, and a mouth like
+a cavern, its vast circumference always stretched in a glorious grin;
+for no matter how badly Sam might feel, or how frightened, the grin had
+so grown into his black cheeks that it never vanished. I remember how, a
+few nights after, when the poor fellow was scared just about out of his
+wits, his grin, though a little ghastly, was as broad as ever. Sam was
+one of the queerest characters I ever met. His long arms seemed all
+wrists, his legs all ankles; and when he walked, his nether limbs had a
+flail-like flop that made him look like a runaway windmill. The bases
+upon which rested this fearfully-and wonderfully-made superstructure
+were abundantly ample. On one foot he wore an old shoe--at least number
+twelve in size--and on the other a heavy boot; and his trousers-legs, by
+a grim fatality, were similarly unbalanced, for while the one was tucked
+into the boot-top, its fellow, from the knee down, had wholly vanished.
+Sam wore a weather-beaten and brimless "tile" on his head, and in his
+hand carried an old-fashioned long-barreled rifle. He set great store
+by his "ole smooth bo'," though he handled it in a gingerly sort of way,
+that suggested a greater fear of its kicks than confidence in its aim.
+Sam's companions were an intelligent-looking negro about twenty-five
+years old, named Martin, and his wife, a pretty quadroon girl, with thin
+lips and a pleasant voice, for all the world like _Eliza_ in "Uncle
+Tom's Cabin." She carried a plump little piccaninny against her breast,
+over which a thin shawl was tightly drawn. She was an uncommonly
+attractive young woman, and I made up my mind then and there that she
+shouldn't be carried back to slavery if I had any say in the matter.
+
+The only persons besides myself who knew of their arrival were William
+P. Trimble and Maj. F. L. Fitch. The party was conducted to the old
+Methodist church in Wesleyville, which had served for a long time as a
+place of rendezvous and concealment. Except for the regular Sunday
+services, and a Thursday-night prayer-meeting, the church was never
+opened, unless for an occasional funeral, and so it was as safe a place
+as could well have been found. In case of unexpected intruders, the
+fugitives could crawl up into the attic and remain as safe as if in
+Liberia.
+
+It was my plan to take the "passengers" from the mouth of Four-Mile
+Creek across the lake to Long Point light-house, on the Canada shore,
+but the wind hung in a bad quarter for the next two or three days, and
+our party had to keep in the dark. One rainy night, however--it was a
+miserable, drizzling rain, and dark as Egypt--I was suddenly notified
+that a sailboat was in readiness off the mouth of Four-Mile Creek. At
+first I was at a loss what to do. I didn't dare go home for provisions,
+for I had good reason to believe that my house was nightly watched by a
+cowardly wretch, whose only concern was to secure the $500 offered by
+Sam's former master for the capture of the slaves. In the vicinity lived
+a well-to-do farmer, a devoted pro-slavery Democrat. Notwithstanding his
+politics, I knew the man was the soul of honor, and possessed a great
+generous heart. So I marshaled my black brigade out of the church, and
+marched them off, through the rain, single file, to his house. In answer
+to our knock, our friend threw open the door; then, with a thousand
+interrogation points frozen into his face, he stood for a minute, one
+hand holding a candle above his head, the other shading his eyes, as he
+stared at the wet and shivering group of darkies, the very picture of
+dumfounded astonishment. In less time than it takes to tell it, however,
+he grasped the situation, hustled us all into the house and shut the
+door with a most expressive slam.
+
+"What in ---- does all this mean?" was his pious ejaculation.
+
+He saw what it meant, and it needed but few words of explanation on my
+part. "They are a party of fugitives from slavery," said I, calling our
+friend by name. "We are about to cross the lake to Canada; the party are
+destitute and closely pursued; their only crime is a desire for freedom.
+This young woman and mother has been sold from her husband and child to
+a dealer in the far South, and if captured, she will be consigned to a
+life of shame." The story was all too common in those days, and needed
+no fine words. The young girl's eyes pleaded more forcibly than any
+words I could have spoken.
+
+"Well--what do you want of me?" demanded our host, trying hard to look
+fierce and angry.
+
+"Clothing and provisions," I replied.
+
+"Now look here," said he, in his gruffest voice, "this is a bad job--bad
+job." Then, turning to the negroes: "Better go back. Canada is full of
+runaway niggers now. They're freezin' and starvin' by thousands. Was
+over in Canada t'other day. Saw six niggers by the roadside, with their
+heads cut off. Bones of niggers danglin' in the trees. Crows pickin'
+their eyes out. _You_ better go back, d'ye _hear_?" he added, turning
+suddenly towards Sam.
+
+Poor Sam shook in his shoes, and his eyes rolled in terror. He fingered
+his cherished smooth-bore as though uncertain whether to shoot his
+entertainer, or save all his ammunition for Canada crows, while he cast
+a helpless look of appeal upon his companions. The young woman, however,
+with her keener insight, had seen through the sham brusqueness of their
+host; and although she was evidently appalled by the horrible picture of
+what lay before them across the lake, her heart told her it was
+immeasurably to be preferred to a return to the only fate which awaited
+her in the South. Her thoughts lay in her face, and our friend read
+them; and not having a stone in his broad bosom, but a big, warm,
+thumping old heart, was moved to pity and to aid. He set about getting a
+basket of provisions. Then he skirmished around and found a blanket and
+hood for the woman; all the time declaring that _he_ never would help
+runaway niggers, no sir! and drawing (for Sam's especial delectation)
+the most horrible pictures of Canadian hospitality that he could conjure
+up. "You'll find 'em on shore waitin' for ye," said he; "they'll catch
+ye and kill ye and string ye up for a scare-crow." Seeing that Sam was
+coatless, he stripped off his own coat and bundled it upon the
+astonished darky with the consoling remark: "When they get hold of _you_
+they'll tan your black hide, stretch it for drum-heads, and beat 'God
+Save the Queen' out of ye every day in the year."
+
+All being in readiness, our benefactor plunged his hand into his pocket,
+and pulling it out full of small change thrust it into the woman's
+hands, still urging them to go back to the old life. At the door Sam
+turned back and spoke for the first time:
+
+"Look 'e hyar, Massa, you's good to we uns an' 'fo' de Lo'd I tank yer.
+Ef enny No'then gemmen hankah fur my chances in de Souf, I' zign in dair
+favo'. 'Fo' de good Lo'd I tank ye, Massa, I does, _shuah_!"
+
+Here Sam's feelings got the better of him, and we were hurrying off,
+when our entertainer said:
+
+"See here, now, Henry, remember you were never at my house with a lot of
+damned niggers in the night. Do you understand?"
+
+"All right, sir. You are the last man who would ever be charged with
+Abolitionism, and that's the reason why we came here tonight. Mum is the
+word."
+
+The rain had stopped and the stars were shining in a cheerful way as we
+all trudged down the wet road to the lake shore. Our boat was found
+close in shore, and Martin and his wife had waded out to it, while Sam
+and I stood talking in low tones on the beach. Suddenly a crash like the
+breaking of fence-boards was heard on the bank near by, and to the
+westward of us. We looked up quickly and saw the form of a man climb
+over the fence and then crouch down in the shadow. Up came Sam's rifle,
+and with a hurried aim he fired at the moving object. His old gun was
+trusty and his aim true, and had it not been for a lucky blow from my
+hand, which knocked the gun upwards just as he fired, and sent the ball
+whistling harmlessly over the bank, there'd have been one less mean man
+in the world, and we should have had a corpse to dispose of. I scrambled
+up the bank, with my heart in my mouth, I'll confess, just in time to
+see the sneak scurry along in the direction of the highway. I watched a
+long time at the creek after the boat left, and seeing no one astir
+started for home. By the time I reached the Lake road the moon had come
+up, and a fresh carriage-track could be plainly seen. I followed it down
+the road a short distance, when it turned, ran across the sod, and ended
+at the fence, which had been freshly gnawed by horses. It then turned
+back into the highway, followed up the crossroad to Wesleyville, and
+thence came to the city.
+
+The fugitives reached the promised land in safety, and I heard from them
+several times thereafter. The man Sam subsequently made two or three
+successful trips back to the old home, once for a wife and afterwards
+for other friends. He made some money in the Canada oil fields, and some
+time after sent me $100, $50 for myself to invest in books, and $50 for
+the fishermen who carried them safely across to Long Point and liberty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of all the places which have sheltered the fugitive slave there is none
+better known, along the southeastern shore of Lake Erie, than the old
+Methodist church at Wesleyville, Erie Co., Pennsylvania. It stands today
+much as it stood a half century since; though repairs have been made
+from time to time, and of late years modern coal stoves have replaced
+the capacious but fervid old wood-eaters known as box-stoves. Dedicated
+to God, it has been doubly hallowed by being devoted to the cause of
+humanity. To more than one wretch, worn out with the toils of a long
+flight, it has proved a glorious house of refuge; and if safety lay not
+within the shadow of its sacred altar, it surely did amidst the shadowy
+gloom of its dingy garret.
+
+In the year 1856 there lived in Caldwell County, in western Kentucky, a
+well-to-do farmer named Wilson. He owned a large and well-stocked farm,
+which he had inherited, with several slaves, from his father. Mr. Wilson
+was an easy-going and indulgent master, and reaped a greater reward of
+affection from his "people" than he did of pecuniary gain from his
+plantation. In the autumn of the above-named year he died, and his
+servants were divided among the heirs, who lived in Daviess County, in
+the same State. Two of the slaves, Jack and Nannie, a young man and his
+sister, fell to the lot of a hard master named Watson. The housekeeper
+dying, Nannie was taken from the field to fill her place. Nothing could
+have been worse for the poor girl. She was handsome, her young master a
+brute. Because she defended her honor she was cruelly punished and
+locked up for many hours. Her brother succeeded in freeing her, and
+together they fled, only to be recaptured. They were whipped so terribly
+that the girl Nannie died. Jack survived, heart-broken, quiet for a
+time, but with a growing resolve in his heart. One night his master came
+home from a debauch, and ordered Jack to perform some unreasonable and
+impossible task. Because the poor boy failed, the master flew at him
+with an open knife. It was death for one of them. The image of poor Nan,
+beaten to an awful death, rose before Jack's eyes. In a moment he became
+a tiger. Seizing a cart-stake, he dealt his master a blow that killed
+him. The blood of his sister was avenged.
+
+Once more Jack fled. The murder of the master had aroused the
+neighborhood. Blood-hounds, both brute and human, scoured the woods and
+swamps; flaming handbills offered great rewards for Jack Watson, dead or
+alive. With incredible cunning, and grown wary as a wild animal, Jack
+lurked in the vicinity a long time. When the excitement had somewhat
+abated, he found his way to Salem, Ohio, and was for a time in the
+employ of a worthy Quaker named Bonsell, whose descendants still live in
+that locality. It was then a neighborhood of Friends, and Jack's life
+among them brought him great good. He learned to read and write, and
+became in heart and conduct a changed man. His life, however, was
+haunted by two ghastly forms; and as often as the image of his murdered
+master rose before him, that of Nan came also to justify the deed. These
+apparitions wore upon him, and made his life unnatural and highly
+sensitive. On one occasion, while in Pittsburg, he saw what he took to
+be the ghost of his murdered master coming toward him in the street. He
+turned and fled in abject terror, much to the astonishment of all
+passers-by. Long afterward he learned that the supposed apparition was a
+half-brother of his former master.
+
+Jack now determined to devote his life to freeing his countrymen from
+bondage. In due time he found his way to the house of Mr. John Young, a
+noted Abolitionist of Wilmington township, in Mercer County,
+Pennsylvania. Mr. Young was one of the first men in Mercer County to
+proclaim his political convictions to the world, and to stand by them,
+bravely and consistently, and through many a dangerous hour, until
+slavery was a thing of the past. No man ever asked brave John Young for
+help and was refused. His house was known among Abolitionists far and
+wide as a safe station for the Underground Road.
+
+While Jack was at Mr. Young's he fell in with a young minister, himself
+a former fugitive from Kentucky, and who was at the time an earnest
+Baptist preacher in Syracuse, N. Y. This friend, named Jarm W. Loguen,
+promised Jack shelter if he could but reach Syracuse, and so Jack was
+"forwarded" along the road.
+
+When he reached Erie, the late Mr. Thomas Elliott, of Harborcreek,
+carried him to Wesleyville. His pursuers were incidentally heard of as
+being in the vicinity of Meadville, and it was necessary to proceed with
+great caution; so Jack was hidden away for a few days beneath the
+shelter of the old church roof.
+
+It so happened that at this time a protracted meeting was in progress in
+the church. It was a great awakening, well remembered yet in the
+neighborhood. There were meetings every night, though the church was
+shut up during the day. During the evening meetings Jack would stay
+quietly concealed in the garret; but after the congregation dispersed
+and the key was turned in the door, he would descend, stir up a rousing
+fire, and make himself as comfortable as possible until the meeting-hour
+came round again. It is related that Mr. David Chambers generously kept
+the house supplied with fuel; and his boys, to whose lot fell the
+manipulation of the wood-pile, were in constant wonder at the
+disappearance of the wood. "I shan't be very sorry when this revival
+winds up," said one of them confidentially to the other; "it takes an
+awful lot of wood to run a red-hot revival." The meanwhile black Jack
+toasted his shins by the revival fire, and found, no doubt, a deal of
+comfort in the sacred atmosphere of the sheltering church.
+
+The meetings grew in interest with every night. Scores were gathered
+into the fold of the church, and the whole community, young and old,
+were touched by the mysterious power. The meetings were conducted by the
+Rev. John McLean, afterwards a venerable superannuate of the East Ohio
+Conference, yet living (at least a few years ago) in Canfield, Mahoning
+County, Ohio; by the Rev. B. Marsteller, and others. The interest came
+to a climax one Sunday night. A most thrilling sermon had been preached.
+Every heart was on fire with the sacred excitement, and it seemed as if
+the Holy Spirit were almost tangible in their very midst. The church was
+full, even to the gallery that surrounds three sides of the interior.
+Methodists are not--at least were not in those days--afraid to shout;
+and Jack, hidden above the ceiling, had long been a rapt listener to the
+earnest exhortations. His murder, his people in bondage, all the sorrows
+and sins of his eventful life, rose before his eyes. Overcome with
+contrition, he knelt upon the rickety old boards, and poured out his
+troubles in prayer. Meanwhile, down below, the excitement grew. The Rev.
+James Sullivan made an impassioned exhortation, and when he finished,
+the altar was crowded with penitents. The service resolved itself into a
+general prayer-meeting. Men embraced each other in the aisles, or knelt
+in tearful prayer together; while shouts of victory and groans of
+repentance filled the church. God bless the good old-fashioned shouting
+Methodists, who shouted all the louder as the Lord drew near! Some of
+the old revival hymns, sent rolling across winter fields, and throbbing
+and ringing through the midnight air, would set the very universe
+rejoicing, and scatter the legions of Satan in dismay. Alas that the
+religion of lungs--the shouting, noisy, devout, glorious old worship, is
+passing away! The whispers of the Devil too often drown the modulations
+of modern prayer, and instead of glorified visions of angels and the
+saints, the eyes of modern worshipers rest weariedly upon the things of
+the world.
+
+As the tide of excitement swelled higher and wilder that night, it
+caught poor Jack, up in the garret. Through narrow cracks he could see
+the emotions and devotions of the audience; and in his enthusiasm he
+wholly forgot that he was in concealment and his presence known to only
+two or three of the worshipers.
+
+"Come up, sinners, come up to the Throne of Grace and cast your heavy
+burdens down," called the pastor, his face aglow with exercise and
+emotion, and his heart throbbing with exultation. "Praise be to God on
+High for this glorious harvest of souls."
+
+"Glory, glory, amen!" rose from all parts of the church.
+
+"Glory, glory, amen!" came back a voice from the unknown above.
+
+The hubbub was at such a pitch down stairs that Jack's unconscious
+response was scarcely heard; but to those in the gallery it was plainly
+audible.
+
+"Lord God of Sabbaoth," prayed the minister, "come down upon us tonight.
+Send Thy Spirit into our midst!"
+
+"Amen! glory! hallelujah!" shouted Jack in the garret.
+
+The people in the gallery were in holy fear. "It is Gabriel," they said.
+
+"We come to Thee, Lord! We come, we come!" cried the repentent sinners
+down stairs.
+
+"I come, I come, glory to God, hallelujah, amen!" shouted back the
+Gabriel in the garret, clapping his hands in the fervor of his ecstacy.
+
+All at once his Abolition friends below heard him. They were struck with
+consternation and looked at each other in dismay. If Jack was
+discovered, there would be trouble; they must quiet him at any hazard.
+"The idea of that nigger getting the power in the garret! A stop must be
+put to that at once. A revival in full blast is an unusual treat for an
+Underground Railroad traveler; he should take with gratitude what he
+could hear, and keep still for the safety of his skin." So thought his
+frightened friends, who at once cast about for means to quiet him.
+
+Now it so happened--how fortunate that there is always a way out of a
+dilemma!--that the old stove-pipe, which connected with the chimney in
+the attic, frequently became disconnected; and on more than one occasion
+incipient fires had started among the dry boards of the garret floor.
+The people were used to seeing the boys go aloft to look after the
+safety of the house; so, when Dempster M. Chambers, a son of Mr.
+Stewart Chambers, inspired by a happy thought, scrambled up the ladder
+and crawled through the trap-door into the gloom, those who noticed it
+thought only that the old stove-pipe had slipped out, and continued to
+throw their sins as fuel into the general religious blaze; or thinking
+of the fires of hell, gave little heed to lesser flames. Jack was soon
+quieted, and the meeting, having consumed itself with its own fervor,
+broke up without further incident. There is no doubt, however, that
+certain worthy people who were seated in the gallery have ever stoutly
+maintained that the Angel Gabriel actually replied to the prayers of
+that memorable night.[67]
+
+In due time Jack Watson reached the home of his friend, the Rev. Jarm W.
+Loguen; and during the dark days of the War he rendered valuable aid to
+the Union cause along the Kentucky and Virginia borders, and in one
+guerrilla skirmish he lost his left arm. A few years since he was still
+living on a preempted land-claim in Rice County, Kansas.
+
+The following incident, connected with Watson's career, will not be out
+of place in closing this sketch:
+
+Some years since the Rev. Glezen Fillmore, a famous pioneer of the
+Methodist Episcopal Church in Buffalo, and for more than half a century
+an honored member of the Genesee Conference, was engaged in raising
+funds for the Freedmen's Aid Society. One day his cousin, the late
+ex-President Millard Fillmore, rode out from Buffalo to visit him.
+During the conversation the venerable preacher related the story of
+Watson's escape, as Watson himself had told it while at Fillmore's
+Underground Railroad depot. The former President was strongly touched by
+the story, and at its close he drew a check for fifty dollars for the
+Freedmen. "Thank you, thank you," said the good old parson. "I was
+praying that the Lord would open your heart to give ten dollars, and
+here are fifty."
+
+No study of Underground Railroad work in this region, even though, like
+the present paper, it aims to be chiefly anecdotal, can neglect
+recognition of the fact that it was a Buffalo man in the Presidential
+chair who, by signing the Fugitive Slave act of 1850, brought upon his
+head the maledictions of the Abolitionists, who were so stimulated
+thereby in their humanitarian law-breaking, that the most active period
+in Underground Railroad work dates from the stroke of Millard Fillmore's
+pen which sought to put a stop to it. No passage in American history
+displays more acrimony than this. Wherever the friends of the negro were
+at work on Underground lines, Mr. Fillmore was denounced in the most
+intemperate terms. In his home city of Buffalo, some who had hitherto
+prided themselves upon his distinguished acquaintance, estranged
+themselves from him, and on his return to Buffalo he found cold and
+formal treatment from people whom he had formerly greeted as friends.
+Insults were offered him; and the changed demeanor of many of his
+townsmen showed itself even in the church which he attended. Certain
+ardent souls there were who refused any longer to worship where he
+did.[68] Mr. Fillmore met all these hostile demonstrations, as he
+sustained the angry protests and denunciations of the Abolitionists in
+general, in dignified impurturbability, resting his case upon the
+constitutionality of his conduct. The act of 1850 reaffirmed the act of
+1793, and both rested upon the explicit provision in the Constitution
+which declares that "no person held to service or labor in one State
+under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of
+any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor;
+but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or
+labor may be due." Obviously, so far as this section was concerned, many
+people of the North were in rebellion against the Constitution of the
+United States for many years before the Civil War. That the work of the
+Underground Railroad was justifiable in the humanitarian aspect needs no
+argument now. But the student of that period cannot overcome the legal
+stand taken by Mr. Fillmore, his advisers and sympathizers, unless he
+asserts, as Mr. Seward asserted, that the provision of the Constitution
+relating to the rendition of slaves was of no binding force. "The law of
+nations," he declared, "disavows such compacts--the law of nature
+written on the hearts and consciences of men repudiates them."[69] This
+was met by the plausible assertion that "the hostility which was
+directed against the law of 1850 would have been equally violent against
+any law which effectually carried out the provision of the
+Constitution."[70] During the years that followed, efforts were made to
+recover fugitive slaves under this law. Special officers were appointed
+to execute it, but in most Northern communities they were regarded with
+odium, and every possible obstacle put in the way of the discharge of
+their offensive duties. Many tragic affairs occurred; but the
+organization of the Underground Railroad was too thorough, its operation
+was in the hands of men too discreet and determined, to be seriously
+disturbed by a law which found so little moral support in the
+communities through which its devious trails ran. Thus the work went on,
+through civil contention and bloody war, until the Emancipator came to
+loose all shackles, to put an end to property in slaves, and to stop all
+work, because abolishing all need, of the Underground Railroad.
+
+
+
+
+Niagara and the Poets.
+
+
+
+
+NIAGARA AND THE POETS.
+
+
+On a day in July, 1804, a ruddy-faced, handsome young Irishman, whose
+appearance must have commanded unusual attention in wild frontier
+surroundings, came out of the woods that overlooked Lake Erie, picking
+his way among the still-standing stumps, and trudged down the Indian
+trail, which had not long been made passable for wagons. Presently he
+came into the better part of the road, named Willink Avenue, passed a
+dozen scattered houses, and finally stopped at John Crow's log tavern,
+the principal inn of the infant Buffalo. He was dusty, tired, and
+disgusted with the fortune that had brought an accident some distance
+back in the woods, compelling him to finish this stage of his journey,
+not merely on foot, but disabled. Here, surrounded by more Indians than
+whites, he lodged for a day or so before continuing his journey to
+Niagara Falls; and here, according to his own testimony, he wrote a long
+poem, which was not only, in all probability, the first poem ever
+composed in Buffalo, and one of the bitterest tirades against America
+and American institutions to be found in literature; but which
+contained, so far as I have been able to discover, the first allusion to
+Niagara Falls, written by one who actually traveled thither, in the
+poetry of any language.
+
+The poetry of Niagara Falls is contemporary with the first knowledge of
+the cataract among civilized men. One may make this statement with
+positiveness, inasmuch as the first book printed in Europe which
+mentions Niagara Falls contains a poem in which allusion is made to that
+wonder. This work is the excessively rare "Des Sauvages" of Champlain
+(Paris, 1604),[71] in which, after the dedication, is a sonnet,
+inscribed "Le Sievr de la Franchise av discovrs Dv Sievr Champlain." It
+seems proper, in quoting this first of all Niagara poems, to follow as
+closely as may be in modern type the archaic spelling of the original:
+
+ Mvses, si vous chantez, vrayment ie vous conseille
+ Que vous louez Champlain, pour estre courageux:
+ Sans crainte des hasards, il a veu tant de lieux,
+ Que ses relations nous contentent l'oreille.
+ Il a veu le Perou,[72] Mexique & la Merueille
+ Du Vulcan infernal qui vomit tant de feux,
+ Et les saults Mocosans,[73] qui offensent les yeux
+ De ceux qui osent voir leur cheute nonpareille.
+ Il nous promet encor de passer plus auant,
+ Reduire les Gentils, & trouuer le Leuant,
+ Par le Nort, ou le Su, pour aller a la Chine.
+ C'est charitablement tout pour l'amour de Dieu.
+ Fy des lasches poltrons qui ne bougent d'vn lieu!
+ Leur vie, sans mentir, me paroist trop mesquine.
+
+I regret that some research has failed to discover any further
+information regarding the poet De la Franchise. Obviously, he took
+rather more than the permissible measure of poet's license in saying
+that Champlain had seen Peru, a country far beyond the known range of
+Champlain's travels. But in the phrase "_les saults Mocosans_," the
+falls of Mocosa, we have the ancient name of the undefined territory
+afterwards labeled "Virginia." The intent of the allusion is made
+plainer by Marc Lescarbot, who in 1610 wrote a poem in which he speaks
+of "great falls which the Indians say they encounter in ascending the
+St. Lawrence as far as the neighborhood of Virginia."[74] The allusion
+can only be to Niagara.
+
+It is gratifying to find our incomparable cataract a theme for song,
+even though known only by aboriginal report, thus at the very dawn of
+exploration in this part of America. It is fitting, too, that the French
+should be the first to sing of what they discovered. More than a century
+after De la Franchise and Lescarbot, a Frenchman who really saw the
+falls introduced them to the muse, though only by a quotation. This was
+Father Charlevoix, who, writing "From the Fall of Niagara, May 14,
+1721," to the Duchess of Lesdiguieres, was moved to aid his description
+by quoting poetry. "Ovid," the priest wrote to the duchess, "gives us
+the description of such another cataract, situated according to him in
+the delightful valley of Tempe. I will not pretend that the country of
+Niagara is as fine as that, though I believe its cataract much the
+noblest of the two," and he thereupon quotes these lines from the
+"Metamorphoses":
+
+ Est nemus Haemoniae, praerupta quod undique claudit
+ Sylva; vocant Tempe, per quae Peneus ab imo
+ Effusus Pindo spumosis volvitur undis,
+ Dejectisque gravi tenues agitantia fumos
+ Nubila conducit, summisque aspergine sylvas,
+ Impluit, et sonitu plusquam vicina fatigat.
+
+It would be strange if there were not other impressionable Frenchmen who
+composed or quoted verses expressive of Niagara's grandeur, during the
+eighty-one years that elapsed between the French discovery of Niagara
+Falls and the English Conquest--a period of over three-quarters of a
+century during which earth's most magnificent cataract belonged to
+France. But if priest or soldier, coureur-de-bois or verse-maker at the
+court of Louis said aught in meter of Niagara in all that time, I have
+not found it.
+
+A little thunder by Sir William Johnson's guns at Fort Niagara, a little
+blood on the Plains of Abraham, and Niagara Falls was handed over to
+Great Britain. Four years after the Conquest English poetry made its
+first claim to our cataract. In 1764 appeared that ever-delightful work,
+"The Traveller, or, a Prospect of Society," wherein we read:
+
+ Have we not seen at pleasure's lordly call
+ The smiling long-frequented village fall?
+ Behold the duteous son, the sire decayed,
+ The modest matron or the blushing maid,
+ Forced from their homes, a melancholy train,
+ To traverse climes beyond the western main;
+ Where wild Oswego spreads her swamps around
+ And Niagara[75] stuns with thundering sound.
+ Even now, perhaps, as there some pilgrim strays
+ Through tangled forests and through dangerous ways,
+ Where beasts with man divided empire claim,
+ And the brown Indian marks with murderous aim;
+ There, while above the giddy tempest flies,
+ And all around distressful yells arise,
+ The pensive exile, bending with his woe,
+ To stop too fearful and too faint to go,
+ Casts a long look where England's glories shine,
+ And bids his bosom sympathize with mine.[76]
+
+Obviously, Oliver Goldsmith's "Traveller," in its American allusions,
+reflected the current literature of those years when Englishmen heard
+more of Oswego than they ever have since. Niagara and Oswego were
+uttermost points told of in the dispatches, during that long war,
+reached and held by England's "far-flung battle line"; but if Britain's
+poets found any inspiration in Niagara's mighty fount for a half century
+after Goldsmith, I know it not.
+
+And this brings us again to our first visiting poet, Tom Moore, whose
+approach to Niagara by way of Buffalo in 1804 has been described.
+Penning an epistle in rhyme from "Buffalo, on Lake Erie," to the Hon. W.
+R. Spencer--writing, we are warranted in fancying, after a supper of
+poor bacon and tea, or an evening among the loutish Indians who hung
+about Crow's log-tavern--he recorded his emotions in no amiable mood:
+
+ Even now, as wandering upon Erie's shore
+ I hear Niagara's distant cataract roar,[77]
+ I sigh for home--alas! these weary feet
+ Have many a mile to journey, ere we meet.
+
+Niagara in 1804 was most easily approached from the East by schooner on
+Lake Ontario from Oswego, though the overland trail through the woods
+was beginning to be used. Moore came by the land route. The record of
+the journey is to be found in the preface to his American Poems, and in
+his letters to his mother, published for the first time in his
+"Memoirs, Journal and Correspondence," edited by Earl Russell and issued
+in London and Boston in 1853-'56. The letters narrating his adventures
+in the region are dated "Geneva, Genessee County, July 17, 1804";
+"Chippewa, Upper Canada, July 22d"; "Niagara, July 24th";--in which he
+copies a description of the falls from his journal, not elsewhere
+published--and "Chippewa, July 25th," signed "Tom." There is no mention
+in these letters of Buffalo, but in the prefatory narrative above
+alluded to we have this interesting account of the visit:
+
+ It is but too true, of all grand objects, whether in nature or art,
+ that facility of access to them much diminishes the feeling of
+ reverence they ought to inspire. Of this fault, however, the route
+ to Niagara, at this period--at least the portion of it which led
+ through the Genesee country--could not justly be accused. The
+ latter part of the journey, which lay chiefly through yet but
+ half-cleared woods, we were obliged to perform on foot; and a
+ slight accident I met with in the course of our rugged walk laid me
+ up for some days at Buffalo.
+
+And so laid up--perhaps with a blistered heel--he sought relief by
+driving his quill into the heart of democracy. His friend, he lamented,
+had often told him of happy hours passed amid the classic associations
+and art treasures of Italy:
+
+ But here alas, by Erie's stormy lake,
+ As far from such bright haunts my course I take,
+ No proud remembrance o'er the fancy plays,
+ No classic dream, no star of other days
+ Hath left the visionary light behind,
+ That lingering radiance of immortal mind,
+ Which gilds and hallows even the rudest scene,
+ The humblest shed where Genius once had been.
+
+He views, not merely his immediate surroundings in the pioneer village
+by Lake Erie, but the general character of the whole land:
+
+ All that creation's varying mass assumes,
+ Of grand or lovely, here aspires and blooms.
+ Bold rise the mountains, rich the gardens glow,
+ Bright lakes expand and conquering rivers flow;
+ But mind, immortal mind, without whose ray
+ This world's a wilderness and man but clay,
+ Mind, mind alone, in barren still repose,
+ Nor blooms, nor rises, nor expands, nor flows.
+ Take Christians, Mohawks, democrats and all,
+ From the rude wigwam to the Congress Hall,
+ From man the savage, whether slaved or free,
+ To man the civilized, less tame than he,
+ 'Tis one dull chaos, one unfertile strife
+ Betwixt half-polished and half-barbarous life;
+ Where every ill the ancient world could brew
+ Is mixed with every grossness of the new;
+ Where all corrupts, though little can entice,
+ And naught is known of luxury, but its vice!
+ Is this the region then, is this the clime
+ For soaring fancies? for those dreams sublime,
+ Which all their miracles of light reveal
+ To heads that meditate and hearts that feel?
+ Alas! not so!
+
+And after much more of proud protest against Columbia and "the mob mania
+that imbrutes her now," our disapproving poet turned in to make the
+best, let us hope, of Landlord Crow's poor quarters, and to prepare for
+Niagara. Years afterwards he admitted that there was some soul for song
+among the men of the Far West of that day. Very complacently he tells us
+that "Even then, on the shores of those far lakes, the title of
+'Poet'--however in that instance unworthily bestowed--bespoke a kind and
+distinguished welcome for its wearer. The captain who commanded the
+packet in which I crossed Lake Ontario, in addition to other marks of
+courtesy, begged, on parting with me, to be allowed to decline payment
+for my passage." I cannot do better than to quote further from his
+account of the visit to the falls:
+
+ When we arrived at length at the inn, in the neighborhood of the
+ Falls, it was too late to think of visiting them that evening; and
+ I lay awake almost the whole night with the sound of the cataract
+ in my ears. The day following I consider as a sort of era in my
+ life; and the first glimpse I caught of that wonderful cataract
+ gave me a feeling which nothing in this world can ever awaken
+ again. It was through an opening among the trees, as we approached
+ the spot where the full view of the Falls was to burst upon us,
+ that I caught this glimpse of the mighty mass of waters falling
+ smoothly over the edge of the precipice; and so overwhelming was
+ the notion it gave me of the awful spectacle I was approaching,
+ that during the short interval that followed, imagination had far
+ outrun the reality--and vast and wonderful as was the scene that
+ then opened upon me, my first feeling was that of disappointment.
+ It would have been impossible, indeed, for anything real to come up
+ to the vision I had, in these few seconds, formed of it, and those
+ awful scriptural words, 'The fountains of the great deep were
+ broken up,' can alone give any notion of the vague wonders for
+ which I was prepared.
+
+ But, in spite of the start thus got by imagination, the triumph of
+ reality was, in the end, but the greater; for the gradual glory of
+ the scene that opened upon me soon took possession of my whole
+ mind; presenting from day to day, some new beauty or wonder, and
+ like all that is most sublime in nature or art, awakening sad as
+ well as elevating thoughts. I retain in my memory but one other
+ dream--for such do events so long past appear--which can by any
+ respect be associated with the grand vision I have just been
+ describing; and however different the nature of their appeals to
+ the imagination, I should find it difficult to say on which
+ occasion I felt most deeply affected, when looking at the Falls
+ of Niagara, or when standing by moonlight among the ruins of the
+ Coliseum.
+
+It was the tranquillity and unapproachableness of the great fall, in the
+midst of so much turmoil, which most impressed him. He tried to express
+this in a Song of the Spirit of the region:
+
+ There amid the island sedge,
+ Just upon the cataract's edge,
+ Where the foot of living man
+ Never trod since time began,
+ Lone I sit at close of day,[78] ...
+
+The poem as a whole, however, is not a strong one, even for Tom Moore.
+
+As the Irish bard sailed back to England, another pedestrian poet was
+making ready for a tour to Niagara. This was the Paisley weaver,
+rhymster and roamer, Alexander Wilson, whose fame as an ornithologist
+outshines his reputation as a poet. Yet in him America has--by
+adoption--her Oliver Goldsmith. In 1794, being then twenty-eight years
+old, he arrived in Philadelphia. For eight years he taught school, or
+botanized, roamed the woods with his gun, worked at the loom, and
+peddled his verses among the inhabitants of New Jersey. In October,
+1804, accompanied by his nephew and another friend, he set out on a
+walking expedition to Niagara, which he satisfactorily accomplished. His
+companions left him, but he persevered, and reached home after an
+absence of fifty-nine days and a walk of 1,260 miles. It is very
+pleasant, especially for one who has himself toured afoot over a
+considerable part of this same route, to follow our naturalist poet and
+his friends on their long walk through the wilderness, in the pages of
+Wilson's descriptive poem, "The Foresters." Its first edition, it is
+believed, is a quaint little volume of 106 pages, published at Newtown,
+Penn., in 1818.[79] The route led through Bucks and Northumberland
+counties, over the mountains and up the valley of the Susquehanna; past
+Newtown, N. Y., now Elmira, and so on to the Indian village of
+Catherine, near the head of Seneca Lake. Here, a quarter of a century
+before, Sullivan and his raiders had brought desolation, traces of which
+stirred our singer to some of his loftiest flights. In that romantic
+wilderness of rocky glen and marsh and lake, the region where Montour
+Falls and Watkins now are, Wilson lingered to shoot wild fowl. Thence
+the route lay through that interval of long ascents--so long that the
+trudging poet thought
+
+ To Heaven's own gates the mountain seemed to rise
+
+--and equally long descents, from Seneca Lake to Cayuga. Here, after a
+night's rest, under a pioneer's roof:
+
+ Our boat now ready and our baggage stored,
+ Provisions, mast and oars and sails aboard,
+ With three loud cheers that echoed from the steep,
+ We launched our skiff "Niagara" to the deep.
+
+Down to old Cayuga bridge they sailed and through the outlet, passed the
+salt marshes and so on to Fort Oswego. That post had been abandoned on
+the 28th of October, about a week before Wilson arrived there. A
+desolate, woebegone place he found it:
+
+ Those struggling huts that on the left appear,
+ Where fence, or field, or cultured garden green,
+ Or blessed plough, or spade were never seen,
+ Is old Oswego; once renowned in trade,
+ Where numerous tribes their annual visits paid.
+ From distant wilds, the beaver's rich retreat,
+ For one whole moon they trudged with weary feet;
+ Piled their rich furs within the crowded store,
+ Replaced their packs and plodded back for more.
+ But time and war have banished all their trains
+ And naught but potash, salt and rum remains.
+ The boisterous boatman, drunk but twice a day,
+ Begs of the landlord; but forgets to pay;
+ Pledges his salt, a cask for every quart,
+ Pleased thus for poison with his pay to part.
+ From morn to night here noise and riot reign;
+ From night to morn 'tis noise and roar again.
+
+Not a flattering picture, truly, and yet no doubt a trustworthy one, of
+this period in Oswego's history.
+
+But we must hurry along with the poet to his destination, although the
+temptation to linger with him in this part of the journey is great.
+Indeed, "The Foresters" is a historic chronicle of no slight value.
+There is no doubting the fidelity of its pictures of the state of nature
+and of man along this storied route as seen by its author at the
+beginning of the century; while his poetic philosophizing is now shrewd,
+now absurd, but always ardently American in tone.
+
+Our foresters undertook to coast along the Ontario shore in their frail
+"Niagara"; narrowly escaped swamping, and were picked up by
+
+ A friendly sloop for Queenstown Harbor bound,
+
+where they arrived safely, after being gloriously seasick. It was the
+season of autumn gales. A few days before a British packet called the
+Speedy, with some twenty or thirty persons on board, including a judge
+advocate, other judges, witnesses and an Indian prisoner, had foundered
+and every soul perished. No part of the Speedy was afterwards found but
+the pump, which Wilson says his captain picked up and carried to
+Queenston.
+
+Wilson had moralized, philosophized and rhapsodized all the way from the
+Schuylkill. His verse, as he approaches the Mecca of his wanderings,
+fairly palpitates with expectation and excitement. He was not a bard to
+sing in a majestic strain, but his description of the falls and their
+environment is vivid and of historic value. As they tramped through the
+forest,--
+
+ Heavy and slow, increasing on the ear,
+ Deep through the woods a rising storm we hear.
+ Th' approaching gust still loud and louder grows,
+ As when the strong northeast resistless blows,
+ Or black tornado, rushing through the wood,
+ Alarms th' affrighted swains with uproar rude.
+ Yet the blue heavens displayed their clearest sky,
+ And dead below the silent forests lie;
+ And not a breath the lightest leaf assailed;
+ But all around tranquillity prevailed.
+ "What noise is that?" we ask with anxious mien,
+ A dull salt-driver passing with his team.
+ "Noise? noise?--why, nothing that I hear or see
+ But Nagra Falls--Pray, whereabouts live ye?"
+
+This touch of realism ushers in a long and over-wrought description of
+the whole scene. The "crashing roar," he says,
+
+ ---- bade us kneel and Time's great God adore.
+
+Whatever may have been his emotions, his adjectives are sadly
+inadequate, and his verse devoid of true poetic fervor. More than one of
+his descriptive passages, however, give us those glimpses of conditions
+past and gone, which the historian values. For instance, this:
+
+ High o'er the wat'ry uproar, silent seen,
+ Sailing sedate, in majesty serene,
+ Now midst the pillared spray sublimely lost,
+ Swept the gray eagles, gazing calm and slow,
+ On all the horrors of the gulf below;
+ Intent, alone, to sate themselves with blood,
+ From the torn victims of the raging flood.
+
+Wilson was not the man to mistake a bird; and many other early travelers
+have testified to the former presence of eagles in considerable numbers,
+haunting the gorge below the falls in quest of the remains of animals
+that had been carried down stream.
+
+Moore, as we have seen, denounced the country for its lack of
+
+ That lingering radiance of immortal mind
+
+which so inspires the poet in older lands. He was right in his fact, but
+absurd in his fault-finding. It has somewhere been said of him, that
+Niagara Falls was the only thing he found in America which overcame his
+self-importance; but we must remember his youth, the flatteries on which
+he had fed at home and the crudities of American life at that time. For
+a quarter of a century after Tom Moore's visit there was much in the
+crass assertiveness of American democracy which was as ridiculous in its
+way as the Old-World ideas of class and social distinctions were in
+their way--and vastly more vulgar and offensive. Read, in evidence, Mrs.
+Trollope and Capt. Basil Hall, two of America's severest and sincerest
+critics. It should be put down to Tom Moore's credit, too, that before
+he died he admitted to Washington Irving and to others that his writings
+on America were the greatest sin of his early life.[80]
+
+Like Moore, Alexander Wilson felt America's lack of a poet; and, like
+Barlow and Humphreys and Freneau and others of forgotten fame, he
+undertook--like them again, unsuccessfully--to supply the lack. There is
+something pathetic--or grotesque, as we look at it--in the patriotic
+efforts of these commonplace men to be great for their country's sake.
+
+ To Europe's shores renowned in deathless song,
+
+asks Wilson,
+
+ Must all the honors of the bard belong?
+ And rural Poetry's enchanting strain
+ Be only heard beyond th' Atlantic main?
+ Yet Nature's charms that bloom so lovely here,
+ Unhailed arrive, unheeded disappear;
+ While bare black heaths and brooks of half a mile
+ Can rouse the thousand bards of Britain's Isle.
+ There, scarce a stream creeps down its narrow bed,
+ There scarce a hillock lifts its little head,
+ Or humble hamlet peeps their glades among
+ But lives and murmurs in immortal song.
+ Our Western world, with all its matchless floods,
+ Our vast transparent lakes and boundless woods,
+ Stamped with the traits of majesty sublime,
+ Unhonored weep the silent lapse of time,
+ Spread their wild grandeur to the unconscious sky,
+ In sweetest seasons pass unheeded by;
+ While scarce one Muse returns the songs they gave,
+ Or seeks to snatch their glories from the grave.
+
+This solicitude by the early American writers, lest the poetic themes of
+their country should go unsung, contrasts amusingly, as does Moore's
+ill-natured complaining, with the prophetic assurance of Bishop
+Berkeley's famous lines, written half a century or so before, in
+allusion to America:
+
+ The muse, disgusted at an age and clime
+ Barren of every glorious theme,
+ In distant lands now waits a better time,
+ Producing subjects worthy fame.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ Westward the course of empire takes its way, ...
+
+I have found no other pilgrim poets making Niagara their theme, until
+the War of 1812 came to create heroes and leave ruin along the frontier,
+and stir a few patriotic singers to hurl back defiance to the British
+hordes. Iambic defiance, unless kindled by a grand genius, is a poor
+sort of fireworks, even when it undertakes to combine patriotism and
+natural grandeur. Certainly something might be expected of a poet who
+sandwiches Niagara Falls in between bloody battles, and gives us the
+magnificent in nature, the gallant in warfare and the loftiest
+patriotism in purpose, the three strains woven in a triple paean of
+passion, ninety-four duodecimo pages in length. Such a work was offered
+to the world at Baltimore in 1818, with this title-page: "Battle of
+Niagara, a Poem Without Notes, and Goldau, or the Maniac Harper. Eagles
+and Stars and Rainbows. By Jehu O' Cataract, author of 'Keep Cool.'" I
+have never seen "Keep Cool," but it must be very different from the
+"Battle of Niagara," or it belies its name. The fiery Jehu O' Cataract
+was John Neal.[81]
+
+The "Battle of Niagara," he informs the reader, was written when he was
+a prisoner; when he "felt the victories of his countrymen." "I have
+attempted," he says, "to do justice to American scenery and American
+character, not to versify minutiae of battles." The poem has a metrical
+introduction and four cantos, in which is told, none too lucidly, the
+story of the battle of Niagara; with such flights of eagles,
+scintillation of stars and breaking of rainbows, that no brief quotation
+can do it justice. In style it is now Miltonic, now reminiscent of
+Walter Scott. The opening canto is mainly an apostrophe to the Bird, and
+a vision of glittering horsemen. Canto two is a dissertation on Lake
+Ontario, with word-pictures of the primitive Indian. The rest of the
+poem is devoted to the battle near the great cataract--and throughout
+all are sprinkled the eagles, stars and rainbows. Do not infer from this
+characterization that the production is wholly bad; it is merely a good
+specimen of that early American poetry which was just bad enough to
+escape being good.
+
+A brief passage or two will sufficiently illustrate the author's trait
+of painting in high colors. He is a word-impressionist whose brush, with
+indiscreet dashes, mars the composition. I select two passages
+descriptive of the battle:
+
+ The drum is rolled again. The bugle sings
+ And far upon the wind the cross flag flings
+ A radiant challenge to its starry foe,
+ That floats--a sheet of light!--away below,
+ Where troops are forming--slowly in the night
+ Of mighty waters; where an angry light
+ Bounds from the cataract, and fills the skies
+ With visions--rainbows--and the foamy dyes
+ That one may see at morn in youthful poets' eyes.
+
+ Niagara! Niagara! I hear
+ Thy tumbling waters. And I see thee rear
+ Thy thundering sceptre to the clouded skies:
+ I see it wave--I hear the ocean rise,
+ And roll obedient to thy call. I hear
+ The tempest-hymning of thy floods in fear;
+ The quaking mountains and the nodding trees--
+ The reeling birds and the careering breeze--
+ The tottering hills, unsteadied in thy roar;
+ Niagara! as thy dark waters pour
+ One everlasting earthquake rocks thy lofty shore!
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ The cavalcade went by. The day hath gone;
+ And yet the soldier lives; his cheerful tone
+ Rises in boisterous song; while slowly calls
+ The monarch spirit of the mighty falls:
+ Soldier, be firm! and mind your watchfires well;
+ Sleep not to-night!
+
+The following picture of the camp at sunset, as the reveille rings over
+the field, and Niagara's muffled drums vibrate through the dusk,
+presents many of the elements of true poetry:
+
+ Low stooping from his arch, the glorious sun
+ Hath left the storm with which his course begun;
+ And now in rolling clouds goes calmly home
+ In heavenly pomp adown the far blue dome.
+ In sweet-toned minstrelsy is heard the cry,
+ All clear and smooth, along the echoing sky,
+ Of many a fresh-blown bugle full and strong,
+ The soldier's instrument! the soldier's song!
+ Niagara, too, is heard; his thunder comes
+ Like far-off battle--hosts of rolling drums.
+ All o'er the western heaven the flaming clouds
+ Detach themselves and float like hovering shrouds.
+ Loosely unwoven, and afar unfurled,
+ A sunset canopy enwraps the world.
+ The Vesper hymn grows soft. In parting day
+ Wings flit about. The warblings die away,
+ The shores are dizzy and the hills look dim,
+ The cataract falls deeper and the landscapes swim.
+
+Jehu O' Cataract does not always hold his fancy with so steady a rein as
+this. He is prone to eccentric flights, to bathos and absurdities. His
+apostrophe to Lake Ontario, several hundred lines in length, has many
+fine fancies, but his luxuriant imagination continually wrecks itself on
+extravagancies which break down the effect. This I think the following
+lines illustrate:
+
+ ... He had fought with savages, whose breath
+ He felt upon his cheek like mildew till his death.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ So stood the battle. Bravely it was fought,
+ Lions and Eagles met. That hill was bought
+ And sold in desperate combat. Wrapped in flame,
+ Died these idolaters of bannered fame.
+ Three times that meteor hill was bravely lost--
+ Three times 'twas bravely won, while madly tost,
+ Encountering red plumes in the dusky air;
+ While Slaughter shouted in her bloody lair,
+ And spectres blew their horns and shook their whistling hair.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+There are allusions to Niagara in some of the ballads of the War of
+1812, one of the finest of which, "Sea and Land Victories," beginning
+
+ With half the western world at stake
+ See Perry on the midland lake,--
+
+appeared in the Naval Songster of 1815, and was a great favorite half a
+century or more ago. So far, however, as the last War with Great Britain
+has added to our store of poetry by turning the attention of the poets
+to the Niagara region as a strikingly picturesque scene of war, there is
+little worthy of attention. One ambitious work is remembered, when
+remembered at all, as a curio of literature. This is "The Fredoniad, or
+Independence Preserved," an epic poem by Richard Emmons, a Kentuckian,
+afterwards a physician of Philadelphia. He worked on it for ten years,
+finally printed it in 1826, and in 1830 got it through a second edition,
+ostentatiously dedicated to Lafayette. "The Fredoniad" is a history in
+verse of the War of 1812; it was published in four volumes; it has forty
+cantos, filling 1,404 duodecimo pages, or a total length of about 42,000
+lines. The first and second cantos are devoted to Hell, the third to
+Heaven, and the fourth to Detroit. About one-third of the whole work is
+occupied with military operations on the Niagara frontier. Nothing from
+Fort Erie to Fort Niagara escapes this meter-machine. The Doctor's
+poetic feet stretch out to miles and leagues, but not a single verse do
+I find that prompts to quotation; though, I am free to confess, I have
+not read them all, and much doubt if any one save the infatuated author,
+and perhaps his proof-reader, ever did read the whole of "The
+Fredoniad."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No sooner was the frontier at peace, and the pathways of travel
+multiplied and smoothed, than there set in the first great era of
+tourist travel to Niagara. From 1825, when the opening of the Erie Canal
+first made the falls easily accessible to the East, the tide of visitors
+steadily swelled. In that year came one other poetizing pilgrim, from
+York, now Toronto, who, returning home, published in his own city a
+duodecimo of forty-six pages, entitled "Wonders of the West, or a Day at
+the Falls of Niagara in 1825. A Poem. By a Canadian." The author was J.
+S. Alexander, said to have been a Toronto school-teacher. It is a great
+curio, though of not the least value as poetry; in fact, as verse it is
+ridiculously bad. The author does not narrate his own adventures at
+Niagara, but makes his descriptive and historical passages incidental to
+the story of a hero named _St. Julian_. Never was the name of this
+beloved patron saint of travelers more unhappily bestowed, for this _St.
+Julian_ is a lugubrious, crack-brained individual who mourns the
+supposed death of a lady-love, _Eleanor St. Fleur_. Other characters are
+introduced; all French except a remarkable driver named _Wogee_, who
+tells legends and historic incidents in as good verse, apparently, as
+the author was able to produce. _St. Julian_ is twice on the point of
+committing suicide; once on Queenston Heights, and again at the falls.
+Just as he is about to throw himself into the river he hears his
+_Ellen's_ voice--the lady, it seems, had come from France by a different
+route--all the mysteries are cleared up, and the reunited lovers and
+their friends decide to "hasten hence,"
+
+ Again to our dear native France,
+ Where we shall talk of all we saw,
+ At thy dread falls, Niagara.[82]
+
+From about this date the personal adventures of individuals bound for
+Niagara cease to be told in verse, and if they were they would cease to
+be of much historic interest. The relation of the poets to Niagara no
+longer concerns us because of its historic aspect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There remains, however, an even more important division of the subject.
+The review must be less narrative than critical, to satisfy the natural
+inquiry, What impress upon the poetry of our literature has this
+greatest of cataracts made during the three-quarters of a century that
+it has been easily accessible to the world? What of the supreme in
+poetry has been prompted by this mighty example of the supreme in
+nature? The proposition at once suggests subtleties of analysis which
+must not be entered upon in this brief survey. The answer to the
+question is attempted chiefly by the historical method. A few selected
+examples of the verse which relates to Niagara will, by their very
+nature, indicate the logical answer to the fundamental inquiry.
+
+There is much significance in the fact, that what has been called the
+best poem on Niagara was written by one who never saw the falls.
+Chronologically, so far as I have ascertained, it is the work which
+should next be considered, for it appeared in the columns of a
+New-England newspaper, about the time when the newly-opened highway to
+the West robbed Niagara forever of her majestic solitude, and filled the
+world with her praise. They may have been travelers' tales that
+prompted, but it was the spiritual vision of the true poet that inspired
+the lines printed in the _Connecticut Mirror_ at Hartford, about 1825,
+by the delicate, gentle youth, John G. C. Brainard. It is a poem much
+quoted, of a character fairly indicated by these lines:
+
+ It would seem
+ As if God formed thee from his "hollow hand"
+ And hung his bow upon thine awful front;
+ And spoke in that loud voice, which seemed to him
+ Who dwelt in Patmos for his Savior's sake,
+ "The sound of many waters"; and bade
+ Thy flood to chronicle the ages back,
+ And notch his centuries in the eternal rocks.
+
+Measured by the strength of an Emerson or a Lowell, this is but feeble
+blank verse, approaching the bombastic; but as compared with what had
+gone before, and much that was to follow, on the Niagara theme, it is a
+not unwelcome variation.
+
+The soul's vision, through imagination's magic glass, receives more of
+Poesy's divine light than is shed upon all the rapt gazers at the
+veritable cliff and falling flood.
+
+During the formative years of what we now regard as an established
+literary taste, but which later generations will modify in turn, most
+American poetry was imitative of English models. Later, as has been
+shown, there was an assertively patriotic era; and later still, one of
+great laudation of America's newly-discovered wonders, which in the case
+of Niagara took the form of apostrophe and devotion. To the patriotic
+literature of Niagara, besides examples already cited, belongs Joseph
+Rodman Drake's "Niagara," printed with "The Culprit Fay, and Other
+Poems" in 1835.[83] It is a poem which would strike the critical ear of
+today, I think, as artificial; its sentiment, however, is not to be
+impeached. The poet sings of the love of freedom which distinguishes the
+Swiss mountaineer; of the sailor's daring and bravery; of the soldier's
+heroism, even to death. Niagara, like the alp, the sea, and the battle,
+symbolizes freedom, triumph and glory:
+
+ Then pour thy broad wave like a flood from the heavens,
+ Each son that thou rearest, in the battle's wild shock,
+ When the death-speaking note of the trumpet is given,
+ Will charge like thy torrent or stand like thy rock.
+
+ Let his roof be the cloud and the rock be his pillow,
+ Let him stride the rough mountain or toss on the foam,
+ Let him strike fast and well on the field or the billow,
+ In triumph and glory for God and his home!
+
+Nine years after Drake came Mrs. Sigourney, who, notwithstanding her
+genuine love of nature and of mankind, her sincerity and occasional
+genius, was hopelessly of the sentimental school. Like Frances S.
+Osgood, N. P. Willis and others now lost in even deeper oblivion, she
+found great favor with her day and generation. Few things from her
+ever-productive pen had a warmer welcome than the lines beginning:
+
+ Up to the table-rock, where the great flood
+ Reveals its fullest glory,
+
+and her "Farewell to Niagara," concluding
+
+ ... it were sweet
+ To linger here, and be thy worshipper,
+ Until death's footstep broke this dream of life.
+
+Supremely devout in tone, her Niagara poems are commonplace in
+imagination. Her fancy rarely reaches higher than the perfectly obvious.
+I confess that I cannot read her lines without a vision of the lady
+herself standing in rapt attitude on the edge of Table Rock, with
+note-book in hand and pencil uplifted to catch the purest inspiration
+from the scene before her. She is the type of a considerable train of
+writers whose Niagara effusions leave on the reader's mind little
+impression beyond an iterated "Oh, thou great Niagara, Oh!" Such a one
+was Richard Kelsey, whose "Niagara and Other Poems," printed in London
+in 1848, is likely to be encountered in old London bookshops. I have
+read Mr. Kelsey's "Niagara" several times. Once when I first secured the
+handsome gilt-edged volume; again, later on, to discover why I failed to
+remember any word or thought of it; and again, in the preparation of
+this paper, that I might justly characterize it. But I am free to
+confess that beyond a general impression of Parnassian attitudinizing
+and extravagant apostrophe I get nothing out of its pages. Decidedly
+better are the lines "On Visiting the Falls of Niagara," by Lord
+Morpeth, the Earl of Carlisle, who visited Niagara in 1841.[84] He, too,
+begins with the inevitable apostrophe:
+
+ There's nothing great or bright, thou glorious fall!
+ Thou mayst not to the fancy's sense recall--
+
+but he saves himself with a fairly creditable sentiment:
+
+ Oh! may the wars that madden in thy deeps
+ There spend their rage nor climb the encircling steeps,
+ And till the conflict of thy surges cease
+ The nations on thy bank repose in peace.
+
+A British poet who should perhaps have mention in this connection is
+Thomas Campbell, whose poem, "The Emigrant," contains an allusion to
+Niagara. It was published anonymously in 1823 in the _New Monthly
+Magazine_, which Campbell then edited.[85]
+
+No poem on Niagara that I know of is more entitled to our respectful
+consideration than the elaborate work which was published in 1848 by the
+Rev. C. H. A. Bulkley of Mt. Morris, N. Y. It is a serious attempt to
+produce a great poem with Niagara Falls as its theme. Its length--about
+3,600 lines--secures to Western New York the palm for elaborate
+treatment of the cataract in verse. "Much," says the author, "has been
+written hitherto upon Niagara in fugitive verse, but no attempt like
+this has been made to present its united wonders as the theme of a
+single poem. It seems a bold adventure and one too hazardous, because of
+the greatness of the subject and the obscurity of the bard; but his
+countrymen are called upon to judge it with impartiality, and pronounce
+its life or its death. The author would not shrink from criticism....
+His object has been, not so much to describe at length the scenery of
+Niagara in order to excite emotions in the reader similar to those of
+the beholder, for this would be a vain endeavor, as to give a transcript
+of what passes through the mind of one who is supposed to witness so
+grand an achievement of nature. The difficulty," he adds, "with those
+who visit this wonderful cataract is to give utterance to those feelings
+and thoughts that crowd within and often, because thus pent up, produce
+what may be termed the pain of delight."
+
+Of a poem which fills 132 duodecimo pages it is difficult to give a fair
+idea in a few words. There is an introductory apostrophe, followed by a
+specific apostrophe to the falls as a vast form of life. Farther on the
+cataract is apostrophized as a destroyer, as an historian, a warning
+prophet, an oracle of truth, a tireless laborer. There are many passages
+descriptive of the islands, the gorge, the whirlpool, etc. Then come
+more apostrophes to the fall respecting its origin and early life. It is
+viewed as the presence-chamber of God, and as a proof of Deity. Finally,
+we have the cataract's hymn to the Creator, and the flood's death-dirge.
+
+No long poem is without its commonplace intervals. Mr. Bulkley's
+"Niagara" has them to excess, yet as a whole it is the work of a refined
+and scholarly mind, its imagination hampered by its religious habit, but
+now and than quickened to lofty flights, and strikingly sustained and
+noble in its diction. Only a true poet takes such cognizance of initial
+impulses and relations in nature as this:
+
+ In thy hoarse strains is heard the desolate wail
+ Of streams unnumbered wandering far away,
+ From mountain homes where, 'neath the shady rocks
+ Their parent springs gave them a peaceful birth.
+
+It presents many of the elements of a great poem, reaching the climax in
+the cataract's hymn to the Creator, beginning
+
+ Oh mighty Architect of Nature's home!
+
+At about this period--to be exact, in 1848--there was published in New
+York City, as a pamphlet or thin booklet, a poem entitled "Niagara," by
+"A Member of the Ohio Bar," of whose identity I know nothing. It is a
+composition of some merit, chiefly interesting by reason of its
+concluding lines:
+
+ ... Then so live,
+ That when in the last fearful mortal hour,
+ Thy wave, borne on at unexpected speed,
+ O'erhangs the yawning chasm, soon to fall,
+ Thou start not back affrighted, like a youth
+ That wakes from sleep to find his feeble bark
+ Suspended o'er Niagara, and with shrieks
+ And unavailing cries alarms the air,
+ Tossing his hands in frenzied fear a moment,
+ Then borne away forever! But with gaze
+ Calm and serene look through the eddying mists,
+ On Faith's unclouded bow, and take thy plunge
+ As one whose Father's arms are stretched beneath,
+ Who falls into the bosom of his God!
+
+The close parallelism of these lines with the exalted conclusion of
+"Thanatopsis" is of course obvious; but they embody a symbolism which is
+one of the best that has been suggested by Niagara.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the sublime to the ridiculous was never a shorter descent than in
+this matter of Niagara poetry. At about the time Mr. Bulkley wrote, and
+for some years after, it was the pernicious custom to keep public albums
+at the Table Rock and other points at the falls, for the record of
+"impressions." Needless to say, these albums filled up with rubbish. To
+bad taste was added the iniquity of publication, so that future
+generations may be acquainted with one of the least creditable of native
+American literary whims. The editor of one of these albums, issued in
+1856, lamented that "the innumerable host of visitors who have
+perpetrated composition in the volumes of manuscript now before us,
+should have added so little to the general stock of legitimate and
+permanent literature"; and he adds--by way seemingly of adequate
+excuse--that "the actual amount of frivolous nonsense which constitutes
+so large a portion of the contents ... is not all to be calculated by
+the specimens now and then exhibited. We have given the best," he says,
+"always taking care that decency shall not be outraged, nor delicacy
+shocked; and in this respect, however improbable it may seem, precaution
+has been by no means unnecessary." What a commentary on the sublime in
+nature, as reflected on man in the mass!
+
+These Table-Rock Albums contain some true poetry; much would-be fine
+verse which falls below mediocre; much of horse-play or puerility; and
+now and then a gleam of wit. Here first appeared the lines which I
+remember to have conned years ago in a school-rhetoric, and for which, I
+believe, N. P. Willis was responsible:
+
+ To view Niagara Falls one day,
+ A parson and a tailor took their way;
+ The parson cried, whilst wrapped in wonder,
+ And listening to the cataract's thunder,
+ "Lord! how thy works amaze our eyes,
+ And fill our hearts with vast surprise";--
+ The tailor merely made his note:
+ "Lord! what a place to sponge a coat!"
+
+There has been many a visitor at Niagara Falls who shares the sentiments
+of one disciple of the realistic school:
+
+ Loud roars the waters, O,
+ Loud roars the waters, O,
+ When I come to the Falls again
+ I hope they will not spatter so.
+
+Another writes:
+
+ My thoughts are strange, sublime and deep,
+ As I look up to thee--
+ What a glorious place for washing sheep,
+ Niagara would be!
+
+Examples of such doggerel could be multiplied by scores, but without
+profit. There was sense if not poetry in the wight who wrote:
+
+ I have been to "Termination Rock"
+ Where many have been before;
+ But as I can't describe the scene
+ I wont say any more.
+
+Infinitely better than this are the light but pleasing verses written in
+a child's album, years ago, by the late Col. Peter A. Porter of Niagara
+Falls. He pictured the discovery of the falls by La Salle and Hennepin
+and ponders upon the changes that have followed:
+
+ What troops of tourists have encamped upon the river's brink;
+ What poets shed from countless quills Niagaras of ink;
+ What artist armies tried to fix the evanescent bow
+ Of the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ And stately inns feed scores of guests from well-replenished larder,
+ And hackmen drive their horses hard, but drive a bargain harder,
+ And screaming locomotives rush in anger to and fro;
+ But the waters fall as once they fell two hundred years ago.
+
+ And brides of every age and clime frequent the islands' bower,
+ And gaze from off the stone-built perch--hence called the Bridal
+ Tower--
+ And many a lunar belle goes forth to meet a lunar beau,
+ By the waters falling as they fell two hundred years ago.
+
+Towards the close of the long poem the author takes a more serious tone,
+but throughout he keeps up a happy cleverness, agreeably in contrast to
+the prevailing high gush on one hand and balderdash on the other.
+
+Among the writers of serious and sometimes creditable verse whose names
+appear in the Table-Rock Albums were Henry D. O'Reilly, C. R. Rowland,
+Sarah Pratt, Maria del Occidente, George Menzies, Henry Lindsay, the
+Rev. John Dowling, J. S. Buckingham, the Hon. C. N. Vivian, Douglas
+Stuart, A. S. Ridgely of Baltimore, H. W. Parker, and Josef Leopold
+Stiger. Several of these names are not unknown in literature. Prof.
+Buckingham is remembered as an earlier Bryce, whose elaborate
+three-volume work on America is still of value. Vivian was a
+distinguished traveler who wrote books; and Josef Leopold Stiger's
+stanzas beginning
+
+ Sei mir gegruesst, des jungen Weltreichs Stolz und Zierde!
+
+are by no means the worst of Niagara poems.
+
+I cannot conceive of Niagara Falls as a scene promotive of humor, or
+suggestive of wit. Others may see both in John G. Saxe's verses, of
+which the first stanza will suffice to quote:
+
+ See Niagara's torrent pour over the height,
+ How rapid the stream! how majestic the flood
+ Rolls on, and descends in the strength of his might,
+ As a monstrous great frog leaps into the mud!
+
+The "poem" contains six more stanzas of the same stamp.
+
+The writing of jingles and doggerel having Niagara as a theme did not
+cease when the Albums were no longer kept up. If there is no humor or
+grotesqueness in Niagara, there is much of both in the human accessories
+with which the spot is constantly supplied, and these will never cease
+to stimulate the wits. I believe that a study of this field--not in a
+restricted, but a general survey--would discover a decided improvement,
+in taste if not in native wit, as compared with the compositions which
+found favor half a century ago. Without entering that field, however, it
+will suffice to submit in evidence one "poem" from a recent publication,
+which shows that the making of these American _genre_ sketches, with
+Niagara in the background, is not yet a lost art:
+
+ Before Niagara Falls they stood,
+ He raised aloft his head,
+ For he was in poetic mood,
+ And this is what he said:
+
+ "Oh, work sublime! Oh, wondrous law
+ That rules thy presence here!
+ How filled I am with boundless awe
+ To view thy waters clear!
+
+ "What myriad rainbow colors float
+ About thee like a veil,
+ And in what countless streams remote
+ Thy life has left its trail!"
+
+ "Yes, George," the maiden cried in haste,
+ "Such shades I've never seen,
+ I'm going to have my next new waist
+ The color of that green."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From about 1850 down to the present hour there is a striking dearth
+of verse, worthy to be called poetry, with Niagara for its theme.
+Newspapers and magazines would no doubt yield a store if they could be
+gleaned; perchance the one Niagara pearl of poetry is thus overlooked;
+but it is reasonably safe to assume that few really great poems sink
+utterly from sight. There is, or was, a self-styled Bard of Niagara,
+whose verses, printed at Montreal in 1872, need not detain us. The only
+long work on the subject of real merit that I know of, which has
+appeared in recent years, is George Houghton's "Niagara," published in
+1882. Like Mr. Bulkley, he has a true poet's grasp of the material
+aspect of his subject:
+
+ Formed when the oceans were fashioned, when all the world was
+ a workshop;
+ Loud roared the furnace fires and tall leapt the smoke from
+ volcanoes,
+ Scooped were round bowls for lakes and grooves for the sliding
+ of rivers,
+ Whilst with a cunning hand, the mountains were linked together.
+ Then through the day-dawn, lurid with cloud, and rent by forked
+ lightning,
+ Stricken by earthquake beneath, above by the rattle of thunder,
+ Sudden the clamor was pierced by a voice, deep-lunged and
+ portentous--
+ Thine, O Niagara, crying, "Now is creation completed!"
+
+He sees in imagination the million sources of the streams in forest and
+prairie, which ultimately pour their gathered "tribute of silver" from
+the rich Western land into the lap of Niagara. He makes skillful use of
+the Indian legendry associated with the river; he listens to Niagara's
+"dolorous fugue," and resolves it into many contributory cries. In
+exquisite fancy he listens to the incantation of the siren rapids:
+
+ Thus, in some midnight obscure, bent down by the storm of temptation
+ (So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),
+ Pine trees, thrusting their way and trampling down one another,
+ Curious, lean and listen, replying in sobs and in whispers;
+ Till of the secret possessed, which brings sure blight to the hearer
+ (So hath the wind, in the beechen wood, confided the story),
+ Faltering, they stagger brinkward--clutch at the roots of the grasses,
+ Cry--a pitiful cry of remorse--and plunge down in the darkness.
+
+The cataract in its varied aspects is considered with a thought for
+those who
+
+ Sin, and with wine-cup deadened, scoff at the dread of hereafter,--
+ And, because all seems lost, besiege Death's door-way with gladness.
+
+The master-stroke of the poem is in two lines:
+
+ That alone is august which is gazed upon by the noble,
+ That alone is gladsome which eyes full of gladness discover.
+
+Herein lies the rebuking judgment upon Niagara's detractors, not all of
+whom have perpetrated album rhymes.
+
+Mr. Houghton, as the reader will note, recognizes the tragic aspect of
+Niagara. Considering the insistence with which accident and suicide
+attend, making here an unappeased altar to the weaknesses and woes of
+mankind, this aspect of Niagara has been singularly neglected by the
+poets. We have it, however, exquisitely expressed, in the best of all
+recent Niagara verse--a sonnet entitled "At Niagara," by Richard Watson
+Gilder.[86] The following lines illustrate our point:
+
+ There at the chasm's edge behold her lean
+ Trembling, as, 'neath the charm,
+ A wild bird lifts no wing to 'scape from harm;
+ Her very soul drawn to the glittering, green,
+ Smooth, lustrous, awful, lovely curve of peril;
+ While far below the bending sea of beryl
+ Thunder and tumult--whence a billowy spray
+ Enclouds the day.
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is a considerable amount of recent verse commonly called
+"fugitive" that has Niagara for its theme, but I find little that calls
+for special attention. A few Buffalo writers, the Rev. John C. Lord,
+Judge Jesse Walker, David Gray, Jas. W. Ward, Henry Chandler, and the
+Rev. Benjamin Copeland among them, have found inspiration in the lake
+and river for some of the best lines that adorn the purely local
+literature of the Niagara region. Indeed, I know of no allusion to
+Niagara more exquisitely poetical than the lines in David Gray's
+historical poem, "The Last of the Kah-Kwahs," in which he compares the
+Indian villages sleeping in ever-threatened peace to
+
+ ... the isle
+ That, locked in wild Niagara's fierce embrace,
+ Still wears a smile of summer on its face--
+ Love in the clasp of Madness.
+
+With this beautiful imagery in mind, recall the lines of Byron:
+
+ On the verge
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ An Iris sits amidst the infernal surge
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ Resembling, 'mid the tortures of the scene,
+ Love watching Madness with unalterable mien.
+
+Byron did not write of Niagara, but these stanzas beginning
+
+ The roar of waters ...
+
+often have been applied to our cataract. Mr. Gray may or may not have
+been familiar with them. In any event he improved on the earlier poet's
+figure.
+
+Merely as a matter of chronicle, it is well to record here the names of
+several writers, some of them of considerable reputation, who have
+contributed to the poetry of Niagara. Alfred B. Street's well-known
+narrative poem, "Frontenac," contains Niagara passages. So does Levi
+Bishop's metrical volume "Teuchsa Grondie" ("Whip-poor-will"), the
+Niagara portion dedicated to the Hon. Augustus S. Porter. Ever since
+Chateaubriand wrote "Atala," authors have been prompted to associate
+Indian legends with Niagara, but none has done this more happily than
+William Trumbull, whose poem, "The Legend of the White Canoe,"
+illustrated by F. V. Du Mond, is one of the most artistic works in all
+the literature of Niagara.
+
+The Rev. William Ellery Channing, the Rev. Joseph H. Clinch, the Rev.
+Joseph Cook, Christopher P. Cranch, Oliver I. Taylor, Grenville Mellen,
+Prof. Moffat, John Savage, Augustus N. Lowry, Claude James Baxley of
+Virginia, Abraham Coles, M. D., Henry Howard Brownell, the Rev. Roswell
+Park, Willis Gaylord Clark, Mary J. Wines, M. E. Wood, E. H. Dewart, G.
+W. Cutter, J. N. McJilton, and the Chicago writer, Harriet Monroe, are,
+most of them, minor poets (some, perhaps, but poets by courtesy), whose
+tributes to our cataract are contained in their collected volumes of
+verse. In E. G. Holland's "Niagara and Other Poems" (1861), is a poem on
+Niagara thirty-one pages long, with several pages of notes, "composed
+for the most part by the Drachenfels, one of the Seven Mountains of the
+Rhine, in the vicinity of Bonn, September, 1856, and delivered as a part
+of an address on American Scenery the day following." Among the Canadian
+poets who have attempted the theme, besides several already named, may
+be recorded John Breakenridge, a volume of whose verse was printed at
+Kingston in 1846; Charles Sangster, James Breckenridge, John Imrie, and
+William Rice, the last three of Toronto. The French-Canadian poet, Louis
+Frechette, has written an excellent poem, "Le Niagara." Wm. Sharpe, M.
+D., "of Ireland," wrote at length in verse on "Niagara and Nature
+Worship." Charles Pelham Mulvaney touches the region in his poem, "South
+Africa Remembered at Niagara." One of the most striking effusions on the
+subject comes from the successful Australian writer, Douglas Sladen. It
+is entitled "To the American Fall at Niagara," and is dated "Niagara,
+Oct. 18, 1899":
+
+ Niagara, national emblem! Cataract
+ Born of the maddened rapids, sweeping down
+ Direct, resistless from the abyss's crown
+ Into the deep, fierce pool with vast impact
+ Scarce broken by the giant boulders, stacked
+ To meet thine onslaught, threatening to drown
+ Each tillaged plain, each level-loving town
+ 'Twixt thee and ocean. Lo! the type exact!
+
+ America Niagarized the world.
+ Europe, a hundred years agone, beheld
+ An avalanche, like pent-up Erie, hurled
+ Through barriers, to which the rocks of eld
+ Seemed toy things--leaping into godlike space
+ A sign and wonder to the human race.[87]
+
+Friedrich Bodenstedt and Wilhelm Meister of Germany, J. B. Scandella and
+the Rev. Santo Santelli of Italy ("Cascada di Niagara," 1841), have
+place among our Niagara poets. So, conspicuously, has Juan Antonio
+Perez Bonalde, whose illustrated volume, "El Poema del Niagara,"
+dedicated to Emilio Castelar, with a prose introduction of twenty-five
+pages by the Cuban martyr Jose Marti, was published in New York,
+reaching at least a second edition, in 1883. Several Mexican poets have
+addressed themselves to Niagara. "A la Catarata del Niagara" is a sonnet
+by Don Manuel Carpio, whose collected works have been issued at Vera
+Cruz, Paris, and perhaps elsewhere. In the dramatic works of Don
+Vincente Riva Palacio and Don Juan A. Mateos is found "La Catarata del
+Niagara," a three-act drama in verse; the first two acts occur in
+Mexico, in the house of _Dona Rosa_, the third act is at Niagara Falls,
+the time being 1847.[88] The Spanish poet Antonio Vinageras, nearly
+fifty years ago, wrote a long ode on Niagara, dedicating it to "la
+celebre poetisa, Dona Gertrudis Gomez de Avellaneda." In no language is
+there a nobler poem on Niagara than the familiar work by Maria Jose
+Heredosia, translated from the Spanish by William Cullen Bryant. The
+Comte de Fleury, who visited Niagara a few years ago, left a somewhat
+poetical souvenir in French verse. Fredrika Bremer, whose prose is often
+unmetered poetry even after translation, wrote of Niagara in a brief
+poem. The following is a close paraphrase of the Swedish original:
+
+ Niagara is the betrothal of Earth's life
+ With the Heavenly life.
+ That has Niagara told me to-day.
+ And now can I leave Niagara. She has
+ Told me her word of primeval being.
+
+Another Scandinavian poet, John Nyborn, has written a meritorious poem
+on Niagara Falls, an adaptation of which, in English, was published some
+years since by Dr. Albin Bernays.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is a striking fact that Niagara's stimulus to the poetic mind has
+been quite as often through the ear as through the eye. The best
+passages of the best poems are prompted by the sound of the falling
+waters, rather than by the expanse of the flood, the height of cliffs,
+or the play of light. In Mr. Bulkley's work, which indeed exhausts the
+whole store of simile and comparison, we perpetually hear the voice of
+the falls, the myriad voices of nature, the awful voice of God.
+
+ "Minstrel of the Floods,"
+
+he cries:
+
+ What paeans full of triumph dost thou hymn!
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ However varied is the rhythm sweet
+ Of thine unceasing song! The ripple oft
+ Astray along thy banks a lyric is
+ Of love; the cool drops trickling down thy sides
+ Are gentle sonnets; and thy lesser falls
+ Are strains elegiac, that sadly sound
+ A monody of grief; thy whirlpool fierce,
+ A shrill-toned battle-song; thy river's rush
+ A strain heroic with its couplet rhymes;
+ . . . . . . . . .
+ While the full sweep of thy close-crowded tide
+ Resounds supreme o'er all, an epic grand.
+
+Of this class, too, is the "Apostrophe to Niagara," by one B. Frank
+Palmer, in 1855. It is said to have been "written with the pencil in a
+few minutes, the author seated on the bank, drenched, from the mighty
+bath at Termination Rock, and still listening to the roar and feeling
+the eternal jar of the cataract." The Rev. T. Starr King, upon reading
+it in 1855, said: "The apostrophe has the music of Niagara in it." As a
+typical example of the devotional apostrophe it is perhaps well to give
+it in full:
+
+ This is Jehovah's fullest organ strain!
+ I hear the liquid music rolling, breaking.
+ From the gigantic pipes the great refrain
+ Bursts on my ravished ear, high thoughts awaking!
+
+ The low sub-bass, uprising from the deep,
+ Swells the great paean as it rolls supernal--
+ Anon, I hear, at one majestic sweep
+ The diapason of the keys eternal!
+
+ Standing beneath Niagara's angry flood--
+ The thundering cataract above me bounding--
+ I hear the echo: "Man, there is a God!"
+ From the great arches of the gorge resounding!
+
+ Behold, O man! nor shrink aghast in fear!
+ Survey the vortex boiling deep before thee!
+ The Hand that ope'd the liquid gateway here
+ Hath set the beauteous bow of promise o'er thee!
+
+ Here, in the hollow of that Mighty Hand,
+ Which holds the basin of the tidal ocean,
+ Let not the jarring of the spray-washed strand
+ Disturb the orisons of pure devotion.
+
+ Roll on, Niagara! great River King!
+ Beneath thy sceptre all earth's rulers, mortal,
+ Bow reverently; and bards shall ever sing
+ The matchless grandeur of thy peerless portal!
+
+ I hear, Niagara, in this grand strain,
+ His voice, who speaks in flood, in flame and thunder--
+ Forever mayst thou, singing, roll and reign--
+ Earth's grand, sublime, supreme, supernal wonder.
+
+Such lines as these--which might be many times multiplied--recall Eugene
+Thayer's ingenious and highly poetic paper on "The Music of
+Niagara."[89] Indeed, many of the prose writers, as well as the
+versifiers, have found their best tribute to Niagara inspired by the
+mere sound of falling waters.
+
+That Niagara's supreme appeal to the emotions is not through the eye but
+through the ear, finds a striking illustration in "Thoughts on Niagara,"
+a poem of about eighty lines written prior to 1854 by Michael McGuire, a
+blind man.[90] Here was one whose only impressions of the cataract came
+through senses other than that of sight. As is usual with the blind, he
+uses phrases that imply consciousness of light; yet to him, as to other
+poets whose devotional natures respond to this exhibition of natural
+laws, all the phenomena merge in "the voice of God":
+
+ I stood where swift Niagara pours its flood
+ Into the darksome caverns where it falls,
+ And heard its voice, as voice of God, proclaim
+ The power of Him, who let it on its course
+ Commence, with the green earth's first creation;
+
+ And I was where the atmosphere shed tears,
+ As giving back the drops the waters wept,
+ On reaching that great sepulchre of floods,--
+ Or bringing from above the bow of God,
+ To plant its beauties in the pearly spray.
+
+ And as I stood and heard, _though seeing nought_,
+ Sad thoughts took deep possession of my mind,
+ And rude imagination venturing forth,
+ Did toil to pencil, though in vain, that scene,
+ Which, in its every feature, spoke of God.
+
+The poem, which as a whole is far above commonplace, develops a pathetic
+prayer for sight; and employs much exalted imagery attuned to the
+central idea that here Omnipotence speaks without ceasing; here is
+
+ A temple, where Jehovah is felt most.
+
+But for the most part, the world's strong singers have passed Niagara
+by; nor has Niagara's newest aspect, that of a vast engine of energy to
+be used for the good of man, yet found worthy recognition by any poet of
+potentials.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This survey, though incomplete, is yet sufficiently comprehensive to
+warrant a few conclusions. More than half of all the verse on the
+subject which I have examined was written during the second quarter of
+this century. The first quarter, as has been shown, was the age of
+Niagara's literary discovery, and produced a few chronicles of curious
+interest. During the last half of the century--the time in which
+practically the whole brilliant and substantial fabric of American
+literature has been created--Niagara well-nigh has been ignored by the
+poets. In all our list, Goldsmith and Moore are the British writers of
+chief eminence who have touched the subject in verse, though many
+British poets, from Edwin Arnold to Oscar Wilde, have written poetic
+prose about Niagara. Of native Americans, I have found no names in the
+list of Niagara singers greater than those of Drake and Mrs. Sigourney.
+Emerson nor Lowell, Whittier nor Longfellow, Holmes nor Stedman, has
+given our Niagara wonder the dowry of a single line. Whitman, indeed,
+alludes to Niagara in his poem "By Blue Ontario's Shore," but his poetic
+vision makes no pause at the falls; nor does that of Joseph O'Connor,
+who in his stirring and exalted Columbian poem, "The Philosophy of
+America," finds a touch of color for his continental cosmorama by
+letting his sweeping glance fall for a moment,
+
+ To where, 'twixt Erie and Ontario,
+ Leaps green Niagara with a giant roar.
+
+But in such a symphony as his, Niagara is a subservient element, not the
+dominating theme. Most of the Niagara poets have been of local repute,
+unknown to fame.
+
+What, then, must we conclude? Shall we say with Martin Farquhar
+Tupper--who has contributed to the alleged poetry of the place--that
+there is nothing sublime about Niagara? The many poetic and impassioned
+passages in prose descriptions are against such a view. If dimensions,
+volume, exhibition of power, are elements of sublimity, Niagara Falls
+are sublime. But it cannot be said that superlative exhibitions of
+nature, some essentially universal phenomena, like those of the sea and
+sky, excepted, have been made the specific subject of verse, with a high
+degree of success. The reason is not far to seek, and lies in the
+inherent nature of poetry. It is a chief essential of poetry that it
+express, in imaginative form, the insight of the human soul. The feeble
+poets who have addressed themselves to Niagara have stopped, for the
+most part, with purely objective utterance. In some few instances, as we
+have seen, a truly subjective regard has given us noble lines.
+
+The poetic in nature is essentially independent of the detail of natural
+phenomena. A waterfall 150 feet high is not intrinsically any more
+poetic than one but half that height; or a thunder-peal than the tinkle
+of a rill. True poetry must be self-expression, as well as interpretive
+of truths which are manifested through physical phenomena. Hence it is
+in the nature of things that a nameless brook shall have its Tennyson,
+or a Niagara flow unsung.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[1] Often spelled "Daillon" or "d'Allion," the latter form suggesting
+origin from the name of a place, as is common in the French. Charlevoix
+sometimes wrongly has it "de Dallion." I follow the spelling as given in
+the priest's own signature to a letter to a friend in Paris, dated at
+"Tonachain [Toanchain], Huron village, this 18th July, 1627," and signed
+"Joseph De La Roche Dallion." The student of seventeenth-century history
+need not be reminded that little uniformity in the spelling of proper
+names can be looked for, either in printed books or manuscripts. In
+French, as in English, men spelled their names in different
+ways--Shakespeare, it is said, achieving thirty-nine variations. The
+matter bears on our present study because the diversity of spelling may
+involve the young student in perplexity. Thus, the name of the priests
+Lalemant (there were three of them) is given by Le Clercq as
+"Lallemant," by Charlevoix (a much later historian) as "Lallemant" or
+"Lalemant," but in the contemporary "Relations" of 1641-'42 as
+"Lallemant," "Lalemant" or "L'allemant." Many other names are equally
+variable, changes due to elision being sometimes, but not always,
+indicated by accents, as "Brusle," "Brule." Thus we have "Jolliet" or
+"Joliet," "De Gallinee" or "De Galinee," "Du Lu," "Du Luth," "Duluth,"
+etc. When we turn to modern English, the confusion is much--and
+needlessly--increased. Dr. Shea, the learned translator and editor of Le
+Clercq, apparently aimed to put all the names into English, without
+accents. Parkman, or his publishers, have been guilty of many
+inconsistencies, now speaking of "Brebeuf," now of "Brebeuf," and
+changing "Le Clercq" to "Le Clerc." The "Historical Writings" of
+Buffalo's pre-eminent student in this field, Orsamus H. Marshall, share
+with many less valuable works--the present, no doubt, among them--these
+inconsistencies of style in the use of proper names.
+
+
+[2] Mr. Consul W. Butterfield, whose "History of Brule's Discoveries and
+Explorations, 1610-1626," has appeared since the above was written, is
+of opinion that Brule did not visit the falls, nor gain any particular
+knowledge of Lake Erie, as that lake is not shown on Champlain's map of
+1632; but that he and his Indian escort crossed the Niagara near Lake
+Ontario, "into what is now Western New York, in the present county of
+Niagara," and that "the journey was doubtless pursued through what are
+now the counties of Erie, Genesee, Wyoming, Livingston, Steuben and
+Chemung into Tioga," and thence down the Susquehanna. It is probable
+that Brule's party would follow existing trails, and one of the best
+defined trails, at a later period when the Senecas occupied the country
+as far west as the Niagara, followed this easterly course; but there
+were other trails, one of which lay along the east bank of the Niagara.
+So long as we have no other original source of information except
+Champlain, Sagard and Le Caron, none of whom has left any explicit
+record of Brule's journeyings hereabouts, so long must his exact path in
+the Niagara region remain untraced.
+
+
+[3] "Brehan de Gallinee," in Margry. Shea has it "Brehaut de Galinee."
+
+
+[4] Why Joliet left the Lake Erie route on his way east, for one much
+more difficult, has been a matter of some discussion. According to the
+Abbe Galinee, he was induced to turn aside by an Iroquois Indian who had
+been a prisoner among the Ottawas. Joliet persuaded the Ottawas to let
+this prisoner return with him. As they drew near the Niagara the
+Iroquois became afraid lest he should fall into the hands of the ancient
+enemies of the Iroquois, the Andastes, although the habitat of that
+people is usually given as from about the site of Buffalo to the west
+and southwest. At any rate it was the representations of this Iroquois
+prisoner and guide which apparently turned Joliet into the Grand River
+and kept him away from the Niagara. The paragraph in de Galinee bearing
+on the matter is as follows:
+
+"Ce fut cet Iroquois qui montra a M. Jolliet un nouveau chemin que les
+Francois n'avoient point sceu jusques alors pour revenir des Outaouacs
+dans le pays des Iroquois. Cependant la crainte que ce sauvage eut de
+retomber entre les mains des Antastoes luy fit dire a M. Jolliet qu'il
+falloit qu'il quittast son canot et marchast par terre plustost qu'il
+n'eust fallu, et mesme sans cette terreur du sauvage, M. Jolliet eust pu
+venir par eau jusques dans le lac Ontario, en faisant un portage de
+demi-lieue pour eviter le grand sault dont j'ay deja parle, mais entin
+il fut oblige par son guide de faire cinquante lieues par terre, et
+abandonner son canot sur lebord du lac Erie."
+
+It is singular that so important a relation in the history of our region
+has never been published in English. De Galinee's original MS. Journal
+is preserved in the Bibliotheque Nationale, in Paris. It was first
+printed in French by M. Pierre Margry in 1879; but five years prior to
+that date Mr. O. H. Marshall of Buffalo, having been granted access to
+M. Margry's MS. copy, made extracts, which were printed in English in
+1874. These were only a small portion of the Abbe's valuable record. The
+Ontario Historical Society has for some time contemplated the
+translation and publication of the complete Journal--a work which
+students of the early history of the lake region will hope soon to see
+accomplished.
+
+
+[5] Probably that now known as Patterson's Creek.
+
+
+[6] A minot is an old French measure; about three bushels.
+
+
+[7] Evidently at Four or Six Mile Creek.
+
+
+[8] Probably what the English call scurvy-grass.
+
+
+[9] Otherwise Fort Frontenac, now Kingston, Ont.
+
+
+[10] Sullivan to Jay, Teaogo (Tioga), Sept. 30, 1779.
+
+
+[11] I first struck the trail in London, among the Colonial Papers
+preserved in the Public Records Office. Subsequently, in the Archives
+Department at Ottawa, I found that trail broaden into a fair highway.
+Something has been gleaned at Albany; more, no doubt, is to be looked
+for at Washington; but it is an amazing fact that our Government is far
+less liberal in granting access for students to its official records
+than is either England or Canada. But the Niagara region was British
+during the Revolution, and its history is chiefly to be sought in
+British archives. Especially in the Haldimand Papers, preserved in the
+British Museum, but of which verified copies are readily accessible in
+the Archives at Ottawa, is the Revolutionary history of the Niagara to
+be found. Besides the 232 great volumes in which these papers are
+gathered, there are thousands of other MSS. of value to an inquirer
+seeking the history of this region; especially the correspondence,
+during all that term of years, between the commandants at Fort Niagara
+and other upper lake posts, and the Commander in Chief of the British
+forces in America; between that general and the Ministry in London, and
+between the commandants at the posts and the Indian agents, fur traders
+and many classes and conditions of men. For the incidents here recorded
+I have drawn, almost exclusively, on these unpublished sources.
+
+
+[12] A snow is a three-masted craft, the smallest mast abaft the
+mainmast being rigged with a try-sail. Possibly, on the lakes where
+shipyards were primitive, this type was not always adhered to; but the
+correspondence and orders of the period under notice carefully
+discriminate between snows and schooners.
+
+
+[13] See "What Befel David Ogden," in this volume.
+
+
+[14] "A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Benjamin Gilbert
+and his Family; Who were surprised by the Indians, and taken from their
+Farms, on the Frontiers of Pennsylvania, in the Spring, 1780.
+Philadelphia: Printed and sold by Joseph Crukshank, in Market-street,
+between Second and Third-streets. M DCC LXXXIV." 12mo, pp. iv-96. It was
+reprinted in London (12mo, pp. 123) in 1785, and again (12mo, pp. 124,
+"Reprinted and sold by James Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard street") in
+1790. A "third edition, revised and enlarged," 16mo, pp. 240, bears date
+Philadelphia, 1848. Of a later edition (8vo, pp. 38, Lancaster, Pa.,
+1890) privately printed, only 150 copies were issued. The work was
+written by William Walton, to whom the facts were told by the Gilberts
+after their return. (Field.) Ketchum made some use of the "Narrative" in
+his "Buffalo and the Senecas," as has Wm. Clement Bryant and perhaps
+other local writers. See also "Account of Benjamin Gilbert," Vol. III.,
+Register of Pennsylvania. A reissue of the original work, carefully
+edited, would not only be a useful book for students of the history of
+Buffalo and the Niagara region, but would offer much in the way of
+extraordinary adventure for the edification of "the general reader."
+
+
+[15] Ketchum says he could not have done so. ("History of Buffalo," Vol.
+I., p. 328.) But Ketchum was misled, as many writers have been in
+ascribing the leadership to Brant. My assertion rests on the evidence of
+contemporary documents in the Archives at Ottawa, especially the MS.
+"Anecdotes of Capt. Joseph Brant, Niagara, 1778," in the handwriting of
+Col. Daniel Claus. Wm. Clement Bryant published a part of it in his
+"Captain Brant and the Old King," _q. v._
+
+
+[16] What became of all the scalps brought in to Fort Niagara during
+these years, and delivered up to the British officers, if not for pay,
+certainly for presents? The human scalp, properly dried, is not readily
+perishable, if cared for. Very many of them--from youthful heads or
+those white with age, the long tresses of women and the soft ringlets of
+children--became the property of officers at this post. Little is said
+on this subject in the correspondence; we do not see them with flags and
+other trophies in the cathedrals and museums of England. What became of
+them?
+
+
+[17] In another letter to Lord George Germaine, dated Nov. 20, 1780, we
+have a few additional particulars. It is probably the fullest account of
+this calamity in existence. "It is with great concern," wrote Haldimand,
+"I acquaint your Lordship of a most unfortunate event which is just
+reported to me to have happened upon Lake Ontario about the 1st. [Nov.,
+1780.] A very fine snow [schooner] carrying 16 guns, which was built
+last winter, sailed the 31st ultimo from Niagara and was seen several
+times the same day near the north shore. The next day it blew very hard,
+and the vessel's boats, binnacle, gratings, some hats, etc., were found
+upon the opposite shore, the wind having changed suddenly, by Lt. Col.
+Butler about forty miles from Niagara, on his way from Oswego, so there
+cannot be a doubt that she is totally lost and her crew, consisting of
+forty seamen, perished, together with Lt. Col. Bolton of the King's
+Regiment, whom I had permitted to leave Niagara on account of his bad
+state of health, Lt. Colleton of the Royal Artillery, Lt. Royce and
+thirty men of the 34th Regiment, who were crossing the lake to reinforce
+Carleton Island. Capt. Andrews who commanded the vessel and the naval
+armament upon that lake was a most zealous, active, intelligent officer.
+The loss of so many good officers and men is much aggravated by the
+consequences that will follow this misfortune in the disappointment of
+conveying provisions across the lake for the garrison of Niagara and
+Detroit, which are not near completed for the winter consumption, and
+there is not a possibility of affording them much assistance with the
+vessels that remain, it being dangerous to navigate the lake later than
+the 20th inst., particularly as the large vessels are almost worn out.
+The master builder and carpenters are sent off to repair this evil."
+
+
+[18] "The Falls of Niagara, or Tourist's Guide," etc., by S. De Veaux.
+Buffalo, 1839.
+
+
+[19] Capt. Parrish became Indian agent, but Capt. Jones held the office
+of interpreter for many years. "Their councils [with the Indians] were
+held at a council house belonging to the Senecas situated a few rods
+east of the bend in the road just this side of the red bridge across
+Buffalo Creek on the Aurora Plank Road, then little more than an Indian
+trail; but much of their business was transacted at the store of Hart &
+Lay, situated on the west side of Main Street, midway between Swan and
+Erie streets, and on the common opposite, then known as Ellicott
+Square."--MS. narrative of Capt. Jones's captivity, by Orlando Allen, in
+possession of William L. Bryant of Buffalo. Horatio Jones was captured
+about 1777 near Bedford, Pa., being aged 14; was taken to a town on the
+Genesee River, where he ran the gauntlet, was adopted, and lived with
+the Indians until liberated by the Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1784. The
+MS. narrative above quoted is Orlando Allen's chronicle of facts given
+to him by Capts. Jones and Parrish, and is of exceptional value.
+
+
+[20] Brig. Powell to Col. van Schaick, Feb. 13, 1780; Haldimand Papers,
+"Correspondence relating to exchange of prisoners," etc., B. 175.
+
+
+[21] I cannot better show the real state of affairs at Fort Niagara,
+towards the close of the Revolutionary War, than by submitting the
+following "Review of Col. Johnson's Transactions," which I copy from the
+Canadian Archives. [Series B, Vol. 106, p. 123, _et seq._] I do not know
+that it has ever been printed. Obviously written at the instigation of
+Col. Johnson, it is perhaps colored to justify his administrative
+conduct; but in any event it is a most useful picture of conditions at
+the time. Except for some slight changes in punctuation in order to make
+the meaning more readily apparent, the statement is given verbatim:
+
+ MONTREAL, 24th March, 1782.
+
+Before Colonel Johnson arrived at Niagara in 1779 the Six Nations lived
+in their original possession the nearest of which was about 100 and the
+farthest about 300 miles from that post. Their warriors were called upon
+as the service required parties, which in 1776 amounted to about 70 men,
+and the expenses attending them and a few occasional meetings ought to
+have been and he presumes were a mere Trifle when compared with what
+must attend their situation when all [were] driven to Niagara, exposed
+to every want, to every temptation and with every claim which their
+distinguished sacrifices and the tenor of Soloman [solemn] Treaties had
+entitled them to from Government. The years 1777 & 1778 exhibited only a
+larger number occasionally employed and for their fidelity and
+attachment to Government they were invaded in 1779 by a rebel army
+reported to be from 5 to 600 men with a train of Artillery who forced
+them to retire to Niagara leaving behind them very fine plantations of
+corn and vegetables, with their cloathing, arms, silver works, Wampum
+Kettles and Implements of Husbandry, the collection of ages of which
+were distroyed in a deliberate manner and march of the rebels. Two
+villages only escaped that were out of their route.
+
+The Indians having always apprehended that their distinguished Loyalty
+might draw some such calamity towards them had stipulated that under
+such circumstances they effected [expected] to have their losses made up
+as well as a liberal continuation of favors and to be supported at the
+expence of Government till they could be reinstated in their former
+possessions. They were accordingly advised to form camps around Niagara
+which they were beginning to do at the time of Colonel Johnson's arrival
+who found them much chagrined and prepared to reconcile them to their
+disaster which he foresaw would be a work of time requiring great
+judgement and address in effecting which he was afterwards successful
+beyond his most sanguine expectations, and this was the state of the
+Indians at Colonel Johnson's arrival. As to the state and regulation of
+Colonel Johnson's offices and department at that period he found the
+duties performed by 2 or three persons the rest little acquainted with
+them and considered as less capable of learning them, and the whole
+number inadequate to that of the Indians, and the then requisite calls
+of the service, and that it was necessary after refusing the present
+wants of the Indians to keep their minds occupied by constant military
+employment, all which he laid before the Commander in Chief who
+frequently honoured his conduct with particular approbation.
+
+By His Instructions he was to apply to Lieut. Colonel Bolton, more
+especially regarding the modes of this place and the public accounts &c
+from whom he received no further information, than that they were kept,
+and made up by the established house at that post, and consider of
+goods, orders and all contingencies and disbursements for Indians,
+ranging parties, Prisoners, &c. That they were generally arranged half
+yearly as well as the nature of them and of the changeable people they
+had to deal with would permit; that he believed many demands were
+therefore outstanding and that he was glad to have done with passing
+[i. e., granting of passes] as it was impossible for him or any person
+that had other duties to discharge to give them much attention. At which
+Colonel Johnson expressed his concern but was told that the house was
+established in the business and thro' the impossibility of having proper
+circulating cash in another channell they advanced all monies and
+settled all accounts and that that mode had been found most eligable.
+Colonel Johnson thereupon issued the best orders he could devise for the
+preventing abuses and the better regulation of matters relating to goods
+payment of expenses, and proceeding to the discharge of the principal
+objects of his duty, he, accordingly to a plan long since proposed,
+formed the Indians into Companies and by degrees taught them to feel the
+convenience of having officers set apart to each, which they were soon
+not only reconciled to but highly pleased with, by which means he gave
+some degree of method and form to the most Independent race of the
+Indians, greatly facilitated all business with them and by a prudent
+arrangement of his officers those who were before uninformed became in a
+little time some of the most approved and usefull persons in his
+department, being constantly quartered at such places or sent on some
+services as tended most to their improvement and the public advantage,
+whilst by spiriting up and employing the Indians with constant party's
+along the frontiers from Fort Stanwix to Fort Pitt he so harrassed the
+back settlements, as finally to drive numbers of them from their
+plantation destroying their houses, mills, graneries, &c, frequently
+defeating their scouting parties killing and captivating many of their
+people amounting in the whole to near 900 and all this with few or no
+instances of savage cruelty exclusive of what they performed when
+assisted by His Majesty's Troops as will appear from his returns. By
+these means he presented [? preserved] the spirit of the Indians and
+kept their minds so occupied as to prevent their being disgusted at the
+want of Military aid, which had been long their Topic and which could
+then be afforded according to their requisitions; neither did he admit
+any point of negociation during this period of peculiar hurry, for
+knowing the importance the Oneidas &c., were off [of] to the rebels and
+the obstruction they gave to all means of intelligence from that
+quarter, he sent a private Belt and message on pretence of former
+Friendship for them, in consequence of which he was shortly joined by
+430 of them of [whom] 130 were men who have since on all occasions
+peculiarly distinguished themselves, and after defeating the rebel
+Invitation to the Indians he by the renewal of the great covenant chain
+and war Belt which he sent thro' all the nations animation to the most
+western Indians.
+
+Soon after with intention to reduce the vast consumption of provisions,
+he with much difficulty prevailed on part of the Indians to begin some
+new plantation, that they might supply themselves with grain, &c; but
+this being an object of the most serious and National concern, and urged
+in the strongest terms by the commander-in-chief, Col. Johnson, during
+the winter 1780, took indefatigable pains to persuade the whole to
+remove and settle the ensuing season on advantageous terms. He had
+himself visited for that purpose but finding that their treaties with
+and expectations from Government, combined with their natural Indulgence
+to render it a matter of infinite difficulty which would encrease by
+delay and probably become unsurmountable he procured some grain from
+Detroit and liberally rewarded the families of Influence at additional
+expence to sett the example to the rest and assisted their beginning to
+prevent a disappointment by which means he has enabled before the end of
+May last to settle the whole about 3500 souls exclusive of those who had
+joined the 2 farms that had not been distroyed by the rebels and thereby
+with a little future assistance, and good management to create a saving
+of L100,000 pr annum N. York currency at the rate of provision is worth
+there to Government, together with a reduction of rum and of all Indian
+Expenses, as will appear from the reduced accounts since these
+settlements were made. The peculiar circumstances above mentioned and
+the constant disappointment of goods from the Crown at the times they
+were most wanted will easily account for the occasional expence. The
+house which conducted the Business at Niagara was perpetually thronged
+by Indians and others. Lieut. Colonel Bolton often sent verbal orders
+for articles as did some other secretaries and sometimes necessity
+required it and often they were charged and others substituted of equal
+value with other irregularities, the consequence of a crew of Indians
+before unknown, of an encrease of duties, and the necessity for sending
+them to plant well satisfied.
+
+The number of prisoners thrown upon Colonel Johnson from time to time
+and of Indian Chiefs and their families about his quarters was attended
+with vast trouble and an Expense which it was impossible to ascertain
+with exactness and when he directed the moiety of certain articles of
+consumption to be placed to the account of the Crown, he soon found
+himself lower. The merchants have since been accused of fraud by a clerk
+who lived some time with them, the investigation of which he was called
+suddenly to attend and he now finds that many articles undoubtedly
+issued have been placed to his account instead of their [the] Crown, and
+many false and malicious insinuations circulated to the prejudice of his
+character and his influence with the Indians which is rendered the more
+injurious by his abrupt departure from the shortness of the time, which
+did not permit his calling and explaining to the chiefs the reasons for
+his leaving them as [he] undoubtedly should have done, and therefore,
+and on every public account, his presence is not only effected
+[expected], but is become more necessary among them than ever. This
+brief summary is candidly prepared and is capable of sufficient proof
+and Illustration.
+
+
+[22] Site of Rome, N. Y.
+
+
+[23] Perhaps more correctly, according to eminent authority (Lewis H.
+Morgan), "Ga-nun-da-sa-ga." It was one of the most important of the
+Seneca towns, situated near the site of the present town of Geneva. Gen.
+Sullivan destroyed it in September, 1779, and no attempt was ever made
+to rebuild it.
+
+
+[24] Except perhaps in the case of Capt. Alexander Harper and his party,
+for whom the ordeal was made light, most of the Indians having been
+enticed away from the vicinity of the fort; but this was apparently due
+to Brant, rather than to the British.--_See_ Ketchum's "History of
+Buffalo," Vol. I., pp. 374, 375.
+
+
+[25] I have followed the old narrative in the spelling of these Indian
+names, which, no doubt, students of Indian linguistics will discover are
+not wholly in accord with the genius of the Seneca tongue.
+
+
+[26] Ketchum gives Capt. Powell a better character than this incident
+would indicate; and says that he "visited the prisoners among the
+Senecas, at Buffalo Creek, several times during the time they remained
+there, not only to encourage them by his counsel and sympathy, but to
+administer to their necessities, and to procure their release; which was
+ultimately accomplished, mainly through his efforts, assisted by other
+officers at the fort, which [_sic_] the example and interest of Jane
+Moore, the Cherry Valley captive had influenced to cooeperate in this
+work of mercy." ["History of Buffalo," Vol. I., p. 376.] I have adhered
+to the spirit and in part, to the language, of Ogden's own narrative.
+
+
+[27] Address delivered at Fort Niagara, N. Y., at the celebration of the
+centennial of British evacuation, August 11, 1896. Amplification on some
+points, not possible in the brief time allotted for the spoken address
+on that occasion, is here made in foot-notes.
+
+
+[28] See Oliver Wendell Holmes's beautiful poem, "Francis Parkman," read
+at the meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society in memory of the
+historian, who died November 8, 1893.
+
+
+[29] The first official step towards such fortification was taken by
+Frontenac. On Nov. 14, 1674, he wrote to the Minister, Colbert: "Sieur
+Joliet ... has returned three months ago, and discovered some very fine
+Countries, and a navigation so easy through the beautiful rivers he has
+found, that a person can go from Lake Ontario and Fort Frontenac in a
+bark to the Gulf of Mexico, there being only one carrying place, half a
+league in length, where Lake Ontario communicates with Lake Erie. A
+settlement would be made at this point and another bark built on Lake
+Erie. These are projects which it will be possible to effect when Peace
+will be firmly established, and whenever it will please the King to
+prosecute these discoveries." [Paris Docs. I., N. Y. Colonial MSS.]
+Joliet, it must be remembered, was never on the Niagara; whatever
+representations he made to Frontenac regarding it were based on hearsay,
+very likely on reports made to him by La Salle at their meeting in 1669;
+so that priority in promoting the Niagara route reverts after all to
+that gallant adventurer.
+
+
+[30] In 1896.
+
+
+[31] In the palisaded cabin on the site of Lewiston.
+
+
+[32] Father Watteaux (also spelled "Watteau," "Vatteaux," etc.) was
+first only in the sense of being assigned to a located mission. "Father
+Gabriel [de la Ribourde] was named Superior.... Father Melithon was to
+remain at Niagara and make it his mission." (Le Clercq, Shea's
+translation, Vol. I., p. 112.) "Father Melithon remained in the house at
+Niagara with some laborers and clerks." (_Ib._, p. 113.) This was in the
+summer of 1679; but six months earlier mass had been celebrated on the
+New York side of the Niagara by Father Hennepin.
+
+
+[33] This statement, which I have elsewhere accepted (_See_ "The
+Cross-Bearers," p. 28 of this volume), is on the usually unimpeachable
+authority of Dr. John Gilmary Shea, the historian of the Catholic Church
+in America. (_See_ "The Catholic Church in Colonial Days," p. 322.) I
+find, however, on referring to the authorities on which Dr. Shea rests
+his statement that the particular grant made on the date named--May 27,
+1679--was not at Niagara but at Fort Frontenac. (Hennepin, "Nouvelle
+Decouverte," p. 108.) At Frontenac La Salle had seigniorial rights, and
+could pass title as he wished; but on the Niagara he had no right to
+confer title, for he held no delegated power beyond the letters patent
+from the King, which permitted him to explore and build forts, under
+certain restrictions.
+
+
+[34] This would seem to fix the date of the northeast blockhouse at
+1790; but on examination of other sources of information I discover
+strong evidence that the original construction was earlier. The Duke de
+la Rochefoucault Liancourt, who visited Fort Niagara in June, 1795,
+wrote: "All the buildings, within the precincts of the fort, are of
+stone, and were built by the French." ("Travels," etc., London ed.,
+1799, Vol. I., p. 257.) This would make them antedate July, 1759, which
+is not true of the bakehouse. The Duke may therefore have erred
+regarding other buildings, the northeast blockhouse among them; yet had
+it been but four or five years old, he would not be likely to attribute
+it to the French. Pouchot's plan of the fort (1759) does not show it. I
+have seen the original sketch of a plan in the British Museum, dated
+Niagara, 1773, which shows, with several buildings long since destroyed,
+two constructions where the blockhouses now stand, with this note: "Two
+stone redoubts built in 1770 and 1771." An accompanying sketch of the
+southwest redoubt shows a striking similarity to the southwest
+blockhouse as it now stands, although a roadway ran through it and a gun
+was mounted on top. These redoubts may have been remodeled by Gother
+Mann.
+
+
+[35] Although I am aware that some American writers, and probably all
+Canadian writers who touch the subject, are offering evidence that there
+was no "massacre" at Wyoming, I still find in the details of that affair
+what I regard as abundant warrant for the designation of "massacre."
+
+
+[36] Haldimand to T. Townshend, October 25, 1782.
+
+
+[37] Haldimand to Lord North, June 2, 1782. In the same letter he wrote
+"I have lately received a letter from Brig.-Gen. Maclean who commands at
+Niagara.... Affairs with the Indians are in a very critical state. I
+have ordered and insisted upon Sir John Johnson's immediate departure
+for Niagara in hopes that his influence may be of use in preventing the
+bad consequences which may be apprehended. I have been assured by the
+officers who brought me the accounts of the cessation of arms, via New
+York, that Gen. Schuyler and the American officers made no secret of
+their hostile intentions against the Indians and such Royalists as had
+served amongst them. It is to be hoped that the American Congress will
+adopt a line of conduct more consonant to humanity as well as Policy."
+
+
+[38] The full story of the efforts of the United States Government to
+obtain possession of Fort Niagara and the other posts on the northern
+frontier would make a long chapter. I have barely touched a few features
+of it. One episode was the mission of the Baron Steuben to Haldimand, to
+claim the delivery of the posts. Washington selected Steuben because of
+his appreciation of that general's tact and soundness of judgment in
+military matters. The President's instructions under date of July 12,
+1783, were characteristically precise and judicious. Steuben was to
+procure from General Haldimand, if possible, immediate cession of the
+posts; failing in that, he was to get a pledge of an early cession; "but
+if this cannot be done," wrote Washington, "you will endeavor to procure
+from him positive and definite assurances, that he will as soon as
+possible give information of the time that shall be fixed on for the
+evacuation of these posts, and that the troops of his Britannic Majesty
+shall not be drawn therefrom until sufficient previous notice shall be
+given of that event; that the troops of the United States may be ready
+to occupy the fortresses as soon as they shall be abandoned by those of
+his Britannic Majesty." An exchange of artillery and stores was also to
+be proposed. Having made these arrangements with Haldimand, Steuben was
+to go to Oswego, thence to Niagara, and after viewing the situation, and
+noting the strength and all the military and strategic conditions, was
+to pass on to Detroit. Armed with these instructions from the
+Commander-in-Chief, Steuben went to Canada, and on the 8th of August met
+Gen. Haldimand at Sorel. For once, the man who had disciplined the
+American Army met his match. His report to Washington indicates an
+uncommonly positive reception.
+
+"To the first proposition which I had in charge to make," he wrote to
+Washington, Aug. 23, 1783 ["Correspondence of the Revolution," IV., 41,
+42], "Gen. Haldimand replied that he had not received any orders for
+making the least arrangement for the evacuation of a single post; that
+he had only received orders to cease hostilities; those he had strictly
+complied with, not only by restraining the British troops, but also the
+savages, from committing the least hostile act; but that, until he
+should receive positive orders for that purpose, he would not evacuate
+an inch of ground. I informed him that I was not instructed to insist on
+an immediate evacuation of the posts in question, but that I was ordered
+to demand a safe conduct to, and a liberty of visiting the posts on our
+frontiers, and now occupied by the British, that I might judge of the
+arrangements necessary to be made for securing the interests of the
+United States. To this he answered that the precaution was premature;
+that the peace was not yet signed; that he was only authorized to cease
+hostilities; and that, in this point of view, he could not permit that I
+should visit a single post occupied by the British. Neither would he
+agree that any kind of negotiation should take place between the United
+States and the Indians, if in his power to prevent it, and that the door
+of communication should, on his part, be shut, until he received
+positive orders from his court to open it. My last proposal was that he
+should enter into an agreement to advise Congress of the evacuation of
+the posts, three months previous to their abandonment. This, for the
+reason before mentioned, he refused, declaring that until the definite
+treaty should be signed, he would not enter into any kind of agreement
+or negotiation whatever."
+
+
+[39] The inability of the New York State Government to accomplish
+anything in the matter at this time is illustrated by the following
+extract from Gov. Clinton's speech to the Senate and Assembly, January
+21, 1784: "You will perceive from the communication which relates to the
+subject that I have not been inattentive to the circumstances of the
+western posts within this State. They are undoubtedly of great
+importance for the protection of our trade and frontier settlements, and
+it was with concern I learnt that the propositions made by the State for
+governing those posts were not acceded to by Congress. It affords me,
+however, some satisfaction to find that the Commander-in-Chief was in
+pursuit of measures for that purpose, but my expostulations proved
+fruitless. The British commander in that Department treating the
+Provisional Articles as a suspension of hostilities only, declined to
+withdraw his garrisons and refused us even to visit these posts. It is
+necessary for me to add that it will now be impracticable to take
+possession of them until spring, and that I have no reason to believe
+that Congress have, or are likely to make any provision for the expense
+which will necessarily occur, it therefore remains for you to take this
+interesting subject into your further consideration."
+
+To this the Senate made answer: "The circumstances of our western posts
+excite our anxiety. We shall make no comment on the conduct of the
+British officer in Canada as explained by your Excellency's
+communication. It would be in vain. Convinced that our frontier
+settlements, slowly emerging from the utter ruin with which they were so
+lately overwhelmed, and our fur trade which constitutes a valuable
+branch in our remittances, will be protected by these posts, we shall
+adopt the best measures in our power for their reestablishment."
+
+
+[40] "Lt.-Col. Fish," the Governor General's report continues, "gave me
+the strongest assurances that the proceedings against the Loyalists were
+disapproved by the leading men in the different States, and gave me a
+recent instance of Gov. Clinton having [? saving] Capt. Moore [?] of the
+53d Regiment from the insolence of the mob in New York."
+
+
+[41] "Lt.-Col. Hull in the American service, arrived here on the 10th
+inst. with a letter from Major Gen. Knox, dated New York the 13th
+June.... I did not think myself, from the tenor of Yr Lordship's letter
+of the 8th of April, authorized to give publicly, any reason for
+delaying the evacuation of the Posts, tho' perhaps it might have had
+some effect in quickening the efforts of Congress to produce the
+execution of the Article of the Difinitive Treaty in favor of the
+Royalists, tho' I held the same private conversation to Lt.-Col. Hull as
+I had to Lt.-Col. Fish."--Haldimand to Lord Sydney Quebec, July 16,
+1784.
+
+
+[42] Haldimand to Thos. Steile, Esq., of the Treasury; Quebec, Sept. 1,
+1784.
+
+
+[43] At the risk of overloading my pages with citations from this old
+correspondence, I venture to give the following letter from Lord
+Dorchester to Lt.-Gov. Simcoe, so admirably does it illustrate the
+British apprehensions at the time. It is dated Quebec, Apr. 3, 1796:
+
+"Circumstances have arisen, which will probably, for a time, delay the
+evacuation of the Upper Posts, among which some relating to the
+interests of the Indians do not appear the least important. By the 8th
+article of the treaty entered into the 3d August last, between Mr. Wayne
+and them, it is stipulated that no person shall be allowed to reside
+among or to trade with these Indian tribes, unless they be furnished
+with a license from the Government of the United States, and that every
+person so trading shall be delivered up by the Indians to an American
+Superintendent, to be dealt with according to law, which is inconsistent
+with the third article of the Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation,
+previously concluded between His Majesty and the United States by which
+it is agreed that 'it shall at all times be free to His Majesty's
+subjects and to the citizens of the United States and also to the
+Indians, dwelling on either side of the Boundary Line, freely to _pass
+and repass_, by land or inland navigation, into the respective
+territories and countries of the two parties on the Continent of America
+(the country within the limits of the Hudson Bay Co. only excepted), and
+to navigate the lakes, rivers and waters thereof, and freely to carry on
+trade and commerce _with each other_.'
+
+"Previously therefore to the actual execution of the treaty on our part,
+it is requisite that we should be convinced that the stipulations
+entered into by the United States will also be fulfilled by them; and on
+a point so interesting to His Majesty's subjects and more especially to
+the Indians, it is indispensably necessary that all doubts and
+misconceptions should be removed. His Majesty's Minister at Philadelphia
+is accordingly instructed to require an explanation on this subject.
+Till therefore the same shall be satisfactorily terminated I shall delay
+the surrender of the Posts. These matters you will be pleased to explain
+to the Indians, pointing out to them at the same time the benevolent
+care and regard always manifested towards them by the King their Father,
+and particularly the attention that has been shown to their interests on
+the present occasion."
+
+
+[44] Dorchester to Robert Liston (British Minister at Philadelphia),
+June 6, 1796.
+
+
+[45] Under date of Niagara, August 6, 1796, Peter Russell wrote to the
+Duke of Portland: "All the posts we held on the American side of the
+line in the vicinity of this province, are given up to the United States
+agreeable to the treaty, excepting that of Niagara, which remains
+occupied by a small detachment from the 5th Regiment, until the garrison
+they have ordered thither may arrive from Oswego. And I understand that
+they have not yet taken possession of Michillimackinac from the want of
+provisions. I have directed the officers commanding his Majesty's troops
+in this Province to make me a return of the effective number that may
+remain after the departure of the 5th and 24th Regiments, and of their
+distribution." On August 20th he wrote: "The Fort of Niagara was
+delivered up to a detachment of troops belonging to the United States of
+America on the 11th inst. and the guard left in it by the 5th Regiment
+has sailed for Lower Canada." Mackinac, the last of the posts to be
+surrendered, did not pass into the hands of the Americans until the
+following October.
+
+
+[46] This must not be confounded with the wreck of the steamer
+President, which was never heard from after the storm of March 13, 1841.
+The President of which Mr. Lay wrote was obviously a bark, ship, or
+other sailing craft.
+
+
+[47] In one Canadian work, John Charles Dent's "Story of the Upper
+Canadian Rebellion," statements are printed to show that the Caroline
+did not go over the falls, but that her hull sank in shallow water not
+far below the Schlosser landing. There is however a mass of evidence to
+other effect. It is striking that so sensational an episode, happening
+within the memory of many men yet living, should be thus befogged. The
+contemporary accounts which were published in American newspapers were
+wildly exaggerated, one report making the loss of life exceed ninety.
+(There was but one man killed.) Mackenzie himself is said to have spread
+these extravagant reports. He had a gift for the sort of journalism
+which in this later day is called "yellow," a chief iniquity of which is
+its wanton perversion of contemporary record, and the ultimate confusion
+of history.
+
+
+[48] By the end of December, 1837, about 600 men had resorted to Navy
+Island in the guise of "Patriots." Although this number was later
+somewhat increased, the entire "army" at that point probably never
+numbered 1,000.
+
+
+[49] There were about 150 Patriots, claiming to be citizens of the
+United States, who were taken prisoners in Upper Canada, and transported
+to Van Dieman's Land. Among those taken near Windsor, besides Marsh,
+were Ezra Horton, Joseph Horton and John Simons of Buffalo, John W.
+Simmons and Truman Woodbury of Lockport. Taken at Windmill Point, near
+Prescott, was Asa M. Richardson of Buffalo. Taken at Short Hills,
+Welland Co., was Linus W. Miller of Chautauqua Co., who afterwards wrote
+a book on the rebellion and his exile; and Benjamin Waite, whose
+"Letters from Van Dieman's Land" were published in Buffalo in 1843.
+Waite died at Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 9, 1895, aged eighty-two. It is
+not unlikely that some Americans who underwent that exile are still
+living. I have seen no list of Americans captured during the outbreak in
+Lower Canada.
+
+
+[50] _See_ "Reminiscences of Levi Coffin," p. 253.
+
+
+[51] _See_ "John Brown and His Men," p. 171.
+
+
+[52] _See_ Siebert's "The Underground Railroad," pp. 35, 36.
+
+
+[53] "Narrative of William W. Brown," 1848, pp. 107, 108. Quoted by
+Siebert.
+
+
+[54] There is a considerable literature on the specific subject of the
+Underground Railroad, and a great deal more relating to it is to be
+found in works dealing more broadly with slavery, and the political
+history of our country. Of especial local interest is Eber M. Pettit's
+"Sketches in the History of the Underground Railroad," etc., Fredonia,
+1879. The author, "for many years a conductor on the Underground
+Railroad line from slavery to freedom," has recorded many episodes in
+which the fugitives were brought to Buffalo, Black Rock, or Niagara
+Falls, and gives valuable and interesting data regarding the routes and
+men who operated them in Western New York and Western Pennsylvania.
+
+
+[55] I have drawn these facts from Mrs. Jameson's "Winter Studies and
+Summer Rambles in Canada," published in London in 1838. Mrs. Jameson was
+at Niagara in 1837, apparently during or soon after the riot. She called
+on one of the negro women who had been foremost in the fray. This woman
+was "apparently about five-and-twenty," had been a slave in Virginia,
+but had run away at sixteen. This would indicate that she may have come
+a refugee to the Niagara as early as 1828. William Kirby, in his "Annals
+of Niagara," has told Moseby's story, with more detail than Mrs.
+Jameson; he reports only one as killed in the _melee_--the schoolmaster
+Holmes--and adds that "Moseby lived quietly the rest of his life in St.
+Catharines and Niagara." Sir Francis Bond Head's official communication
+to the Home Government regarding the matter reports two as killed.
+
+
+[56] _See_ "A Narrative," by Sir Francis Bond Head, Bart., 2d ed.,
+London, 1839, pp. 200-204.
+
+
+[57] "Letters from the United States, Cuba and Canada," London, 1856, p.
+118.
+
+
+[58] "Canada, Its Defences, Condition and Resources," by W. Howard
+Russell, LL. D., London, 1865, pp. 33, 34.
+
+
+[59] Mr. Butler's name does not appear in Siebert's history, "The
+Underground Railroad." The "operators" for Erie County named therein (p.
+414) are Gideon Barker, the Hon. Wm. Haywood, Geo. W. Johnson, Deacon
+Henry Moore, and Messrs. Aldrich and Williams. For Niagara County he
+names Thomas Binmore, W. H. Childs, M. C. Richardson, Lyman Spaulding.
+Chautauqua and Wyoming counties present longer lists, and thirty-six are
+named for Monroe County. As appears from my text, the Erie County list
+could be extended.
+
+
+[60] No doubt an investigator could find a number of former slaves, rich
+in reminiscences of Underground days, still living in the villages and
+towns of the Niagara Peninsula, though they would not be very numerous,
+for, as Aunt Betsy says, "the old heads are 'bout all gone now." Between
+Fort Erie and Ridgeway lives Daniel Woods, a former slave, who came by
+the Underground. Harriet Black, a sister-in-law of Mrs. Robinson, still
+living near Ridgeway, was also a "passenger." Probably others live at
+St. Catharines, Niagara and other points of former negro settlement, who
+could tell thrilling tales of their escape from the South. There are
+many survivors on the Canada side of the Niagara, of another class; men
+or women who were born in slavery but were "freed by the bayonet," and
+came North with no fear of the slave-catchers. Of this class at Fort
+Erie are Melford Harris and Thomas Banks. Mr. Banks was sold from
+Virginia to go "down the river"; got his freedom at Natchez, joined the
+102d Michigan Infantry, and fought for the Union until the end of the
+war. His case is probably typical of many, but does not belong to the
+records of the Underground Railroad.
+
+
+[61] H. Clay to Lewis L. Hodges; original letter in possession of the
+Buffalo Historical Society.
+
+
+[62] Anonymous reminiscences published in the Buffalo Courier, about
+1887.
+
+
+[63] Apparently the greatest travel, at least over these particular
+routes, was during 1840-41. It was a justifiable boast of the
+"conductors" that a "passenger" was never lost. In a journal of notes,
+which was annually kept for many years by one of the zealous
+anti-slavery men of that day, I find the following entry in 1841:
+"Nov. 1.--The week has been cold; some hard freezing and snow; now warm;
+assisted six fugitives from oppression, from this land of equal rights
+to the despotic government of Great Britain, where they can enjoy their
+liberty. Last night put them on board a steamboat and paid their passage
+to Buffalo."
+
+
+[64] When I knew Frank Henry, he was light-house keeper at Erie. He died
+in October, 1889, and his funeral was a memorable one. After the body
+had been viewed by his friends, while it lay in state in the parlor of
+his old home in Wesleyville, the casket was lifted to the shoulders of
+the pall-bearers, who carried it through the streets of the little
+village to the church, all the friends, which included all the villagers
+and many from the city and the country round about, following in
+procession on foot. The little church could not hold the assemblage, but
+the overflow waited until the service was over, content, if near enough
+the windows or the open door, to hear but a portion of the eulogies his
+beloved pastor pronounced. Then they all proceeded to the graveyard
+behind the historic church and laid him away. He was a man of an
+exceptionally frank and lovable character. Prof. Wilbur H. Siebert
+mentions him in his history, "The Underground Railroad from Slavery to
+Freedom"; but nowhere else, I believe, is as much recorded of the work
+which he did for the refugee slaves as in the incidents told in the
+following pages; and these, we may be assured, are but examples of the
+service in which he was engaged for a good many years.
+
+
+[65] Afterwards long known as the Lowry Mansion, on Second Street,
+between French and Holland streets. It is still standing.
+
+
+[66] Capt. D. P. Dobbins was for many years a distinguished resident of
+Buffalo. As vessel master, Government official, and especially as
+inventor of the Dobbins life-boat, he acquired a wide reputation; but
+little has been told of his Underground Railroad work. He died in 1892.
+
+
+[67] I had the facts of this experience from Mr. Frank Henry, and first
+wrote them out and printed them in the Erie Gazette in 1880. (Ah, Time,
+why hasten so!) In 1894 H. U. Johnson of Orwell, O., published a book
+entitled "From Dixie to Canada, Romances and Realities of the
+Underground Railroad," in which a chapter is devoted to Jack Watson, and
+this experience at the Wesleyville church is narrated, considerably
+embellished, but in parts with striking similarity to the version for
+which Frank Henry and I were responsible. Mr. Johnson gives no credit
+for his facts to any source.
+
+
+[68] Such an one was the anti-slavery worker, Sallie Holley, who had
+formerly taken great pleasure in the sermons of Mr. Fillmore's pastor,
+the Rev. Dr. Hosmer of the Unitarian Church. When Mr. Fillmore returned
+to Buffalo and was seen again in his accustomed seat, Miss Holley
+refused to attend there. "I cannot consent," she wrote, "that my name
+shall stand on the books of a church that will countenance voting for
+any pro-slavery presidential candidate. Think of a woman-whipper and a
+baby-stealer being countenanced as a Christian!"--_See_ "A Life for
+Liberty," edited by John White Chadwick, pp. 60, 69.
+
+
+[69] _See_ Seward's "Works," Vol. I., p. 65, _et seq._
+
+
+[70] _See_ Chamberlain's "Biography of Millard Fillmore," p. 136.
+
+
+[71] For the knowledge that the first mention of Niagara Falls is in
+Champlain's "Des Sauvages," we are indebted to the Hon. Peter A. Porter
+of Niagara Falls, who recently discovered, by comparison of early texts,
+that the allusions to the falls in Marc Lescarbot's "Histoire de la
+Nouvelle France" (1609), heretofore attributed to Jacques Cartier, are
+really quotations from "Des Sauvages," published some five years before.
+There is, apparently, no warrant for the oft-repeated statement that
+Cartier, in 1535, was the first white man to hear of the falls. That
+distinction passes to Champlain, who heard of them in 1603, and whose
+first book, printed at the end of that year or early in 1604, gave to
+the world its first knowledge of the great cataract.--_See_ "Champlain
+not Cartier," by Peter A. Porter, Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1899.
+
+
+[72] Champlain a bien ete jusqu'a Mexico, comme on peut le voir dans son
+voyage aux Indes Occidentales; mais il ne s'est pas rendu au Perou, que
+nous sachions.--_Note in Quebec reprint, 1870._ Nor had he been to
+Niagara.
+
+
+[73] Mocosa est le nom ancien de la Virginie. Cette expression, _saults
+Mocosans_, semble donner a entendre que, des 1603 au moins, l'on avait
+quelque connaissance de la grande chute de Niagara.--_Note in Quebec
+reprint, 1870._
+
+
+[74] "Lescarbot ecrit, en 1610, une piece de vers dans laquelle il parle
+des grands sauts que les sauvages disent rencontrer en remontant le
+Saint-Laurent jusqu'au voisinage de la Virginie."--_Benj. Sulte,
+"Melanges D'Histoire et de Litterature" p. 425._
+
+
+[75] The pronunciation of "Niagara" here, the reader will remark, is
+necessarily with the primary accent on the third syllable; the correct
+pronunciation, as eminent authorities maintain; and, as I hold, the more
+musical. "Ni-ag'-a-ra" gives us one hard syllable; "Ni [or better,
+-nee]-a-ga'-ra" makes each syllable end in a vowel, and softens the word
+to the ear. "Ni-ag'-a-ra" would have been impossible to the Iroquois
+tongue. But the word is now too fixed in its perverted usage to make
+reform likely, and we may expect to hear the harsh "Ni-ag'-a-ra" to the
+end of the chapter.
+
+
+[76] Dr. Samuel Johnson, as is well known, was responsible for a number
+of lines in "The Traveller." In the verses above quoted the line
+
+ "To stop too fearful and too faint to go"
+
+is attributed to him. Thus near does the mighty Johnson, the "Great Cham
+of Literature," come to legitimate inclusion among the poets of Niagara!
+
+
+[77] This is not necessarily hyperbole, by any means. Before the Niagara
+region was much settled, filled with the din of towns, the roar of
+trains, screech of whistles and all manner of ear-offending sounds,
+Niagara's voice could be heard for many miles. Many early travelers
+testify to the same effect as Moore. An early resident of Buffalo, the
+late Hon. Lewis F. Allen, has told me that many a time, seated on the
+veranda of his house on Niagara Street near Ferry, in the calm of a
+summer evening, he has heard the roar of Niagara Falls.
+
+
+[78] Introduced in the Epistle to Lady Charlotte Rawdon. In Moore's day
+there was a tiny islet, called Gull Island, near the edge of the
+Horseshoe Fall. It long since disappeared.
+
+
+[79] It had prior publication, serially, with illustrations, in the
+"Portfolio" of Philadelphia, 1809-'10.
+
+
+[80] Tom Moore's infantile criticisms of American institutions have
+often been quoted with approbation by persons sharing his supposed
+hostile views. What his maturer judgment was may be gathered from the
+following extract from a letter which he wrote, July 12, 1818, to J. E.
+Hall, editor of the "Portfolio," Philadelphia. I am not aware that it
+ever has been published. I quote from the original manuscript, in my
+possession:
+
+"You are mistaken in thinking that my present views of politics are a
+_change_ from those I formerly entertained. They are but a _return_ to
+those of my school & college days--to principles, of which I may say
+what Propertius said of his mistress: _Cynthia prima fuit, Cynthia finis
+erit_. The only thing that has ever made them _librate_ in their _orbit_
+was that foolish disgust I took at what I thought the _consequences_ of
+democratic principles in America--but I judged by the _abuse_, not the
+_use_--and the little information I took the trouble of seeking came to
+me through twisted and tainted channels--and, in short, I was a rash boy
+& made a fool of myself. But, thank Heaven, I soon righted again, and I
+trust it was the only deviation from the path of pure public feeling I
+ever shall have to reproach myself with. I mean to take some opportunity
+(most probably in the Life of Sheridan I am preparing) of telling the
+few to whom my opinions can be of any importance, how much I regret &
+how sincerely I retract every syllable, injurious to the great cause of
+Liberty, which my hasty view of America & her society provoked me into
+uttering....
+
+"Always faithfully & cordially Yours,
+
+ "THOMAS MOORE."
+
+
+[81] John Neal, or "Yankee Neal," as he was called, is a figure in early
+American letters which should not be forgotten. He was of Quaker
+descent, but was read out of the Society of Friends in his youth, as he
+says, "for knocking a man head over heels, for writing a tragedy, for
+paying a militia fine and for desiring to be turned out whether or no."
+He was a pioneer in American literature, and won success at home and
+abroad several years before Cooper became known. He was the first
+American contributor to English and Scotch quarterlies, and compelled
+attention to American topics at a time when English literature was
+regarded as the monopoly of Great Britain. His career was exceedingly
+varied and picturesque. He was an artist, lawyer, traveler, journalist
+and athlete. He is said to have established the first gymnasium in this
+country, on foreign models, and was the first to advocate, in 1838, in a
+Fourth-of-July oration, the right of woman suffrage. His writings are
+many, varied, and for the most part hard to find nowadays.
+
+
+[82] Those interested in scarce Americana may care to know that this
+"Wonders of the West" is said by some authorities to be the second
+book--certain almanacs and small prints excluded--that was published in
+Canada West, now Ontario. Of its only predecessor, "St. Ursula's
+Convent, or the Nuns of Canada," Kingston, 1824, no copy is believed to
+exist. Of the York school-master's Niagara poem, I know of but two
+copies, one owned by M. Phileas Gagnon, the Quebec bibliophile; the
+other in my own possession. It is at least of interest to observe that
+Ontario's native poetry began with a tribute to her greatest natural
+wonder, though it could be wished with a more creditable example.
+
+
+[83] It is a striking fact that "The Culprit Fay," which appeared in
+1819, was the outgrowth of a conversation between Drake, Halleck and
+Cooper, concerning the unsung poetry of American rivers.--_See_
+Richardson's "American Literature," Vol. II., p. 24.
+
+
+[84] Lord Morpeth made three visits to Niagara. He was the friend and
+guest, during his American travels, of Mr. Wadsworth at the Geneseo
+Homestead; and was also entertained by ex-President Van Buren and other
+distinguished men. His writings reveal a poetic, reflective temperament,
+but rarely rise above the commonplace in thought or expression.
+
+
+[85] The lines are not included in ordinary editions of Campbell's
+poems. The original MS. is in the possession of the Buffalo Public
+Library.
+
+
+[86] _See_ "Five Books of Song," by R. W. Gilder, 1894.
+
+
+[87] Dedicatory sonnet in "Younger American Poets, 1830-1890," edited by
+Douglas Sladen and G. B. Roberts.
+
+
+[88] The only edition I have seen was printed in the City of Mexico in
+1871.
+
+
+[89] _See_ Scribner's Monthly, Feb., 1881.
+
+
+[90] _See_ "Beauties and Achievements of the Blind," by Wm. Artman and
+L. V. Hall, Dansville, N. Y., 1854.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier, by
+Frank H. Severance
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