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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Historic Highways of America (Vol. 6), by
-Archer Butler Hulbert
-
-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: Historic Highways of America (Vol. 6)
- Boone's Wilderness Road
-
-Author: Archer Butler Hulbert
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2012 [EBook #41143]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORIC HIGHWAYS OF AMERICA, VOL 6 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Greg Bergquist and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-HISTORIC HIGHWAYS OF AMERICA
-
-VOLUME 6
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: CUMBERLAND GAP AND BOONE'S WILDERNESS ROAD]
-
-
-
-
- HISTORIC HIGHWAYS OF AMERICA
- VOLUME 6
-
- Boone's Wilderness Road
-
- BY
- ARCHER BUTLER HULBERT
-
- _With Maps and Illustrations_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- THE ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY
- CLEVELAND, OHIO
- 1903
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1903
- BY
- THE ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- PREFACE 11
- I. THE PILGRIMS OF THE WEST 19
- II. THE FIRST EXPLORERS 48
- III. ANNALS OF THE ROAD 78
- IV. KENTUCKY IN THE REVOLUTION 145
- V. AT THE END OF BOONE'S ROAD 175
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- I. CUMBERLAND GAP AND BOONE'S WILDERNESS ROAD _Frontispiece_
- II. PLAT OF BOONESBOROUGH 97
- III. FILSON'S MAP OF KENTUCKY 119
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The naming of our highways is an interesting study. Like roads the world
-over they are usually known by two names--the destinations to which they
-lead. The famous highway through New York state is known as the Genesee
-Road in the eastern half of the state and as the Albany Road in the
-western portion. In a number of cities through which it passes--Utica,
-Syracuse, etc.--it is Genesee Street. This path in the olden time was
-the great road to the famed Genesee country. The old Forbes Road across
-Pennsylvania soon lost its earliest name; but it is preserved at its
-termination, for the Pittsburger of today goes to the Carnegie Library
-on the "Forbes Street" car line. The Maysville Pike--as unknown today as
-it was of national prominence three quarters of a century ago--leading
-across Ohio from Wheeling to Maysville (Limestone) and on to Lexington,
-is known in Kentucky as the Zanesville Pike; from that city in Ohio the
-road branched off from the old National Road. The "Glade Road" was the
-important branch of the Pennsylvania or Pittsburg Road which led through
-the Glades of the Alleghenies to the Youghiogheny. One of the most
-singular names for a road was that of the "Shun Pike" between Watertown
-and Erie, in northwestern Pennsylvania. The large traffic over the old
-"French Road"--Marin's Portage Road--between these points on Lake Erie
-and French Creek necessitated, early in the nineteenth century, a good
-road-bed. Accordingly a road company took hold of the route and improved
-it--placing toll gates on it for recompensation. Those who refused to
-pay toll broke open a parallel route nearby, which was as free as it was
-rough. It became known as the "Shun" Pike because those who traversed it
-shunned the toll road.
-
-Few roads named from their builders, such as Braddock, Forbes, Bouquet,
-Wayne, Ebenezer Zane, Marin, and Boone preserved the oldtime name.
-Indeed nearly all our roads have lost the ancient name, a fact that
-should be sincerely mourned. The Black Swamp has been drained, therefore
-there can be now no "Black Swamp Road." There are now no refugees and
-the "Refugees Road" is lost not only to sight but to the memory of most.
-Perhaps there is but one road in the central West which is commonly
-known and called by the old Indian name; this is the "Tuscarawas Path,"
-a modern highway in Eastern Ohio which was widened and made a white
-man's road by the first white army that ever crossed the Ohio River into
-what is now the State of Ohio.
-
-One roadway--the Wilderness Road to Kentucky from Virginia and
-Tennessee, the longest, blackest, hardest road of pioneer days in
-America--holds the oldtime name with undiminished loyalty and is true
-today to every gloomy description and vile epithet that was ever written
-or spoken of it. It was broken open for white man's use by Daniel Boone
-from the Watauga settlement on the Holston River, Tennessee, to the
-mouth of Otter Creek on the Kentucky River in the month preceding the
-outbreak of open revolution at Lexington and Concord. It was known as
-"Boone's Trail," the "Kentucky Road," the "road to Caintuck," or the
-"Virginia Road," but its common name was the "Wilderness Road." A
-wilderness of laurel thickets lay between the Kentucky settlements and
-Cumberland Gap and was the most desolate country imaginable. The name
-was transferred to the road that passed through it. It seems right that
-the brave frontiersman who opened this route to white men should be
-remembered by this act; and for a title to this volume "Boone's
-Wilderness Road" has been selected.
-
-As in the case of other highways with which this series of monographs is
-dealing, so with Boone's Wilderness Road: the road itself is of little
-consequence. The following pages treat of phases of the story of the
-West suggested by Boone's Road--the first social movement into the lower
-Ohio Valley, Henderson's Transylvania Company, the struggle of the
-Watauga settlement to prevent the southern Indians from cutting Kentucky
-off from the world, the struggle of the Kentucky settlements against
-the British and their Indian allies, the burst of population over
-Boone's Road into Kentucky, and what the early founding of that
-commonwealth meant to the East and to the West.
-
-Boone and Harrod and their compatriots assured the world of the splendid
-lands of Kentucky; Richard Henderson and his associates of the
-Transylvania Company proved the questionable fact that a settlement
-there could be made and be maintained. Boone's Road, opened for the
-Transylvania Company, made a way thither. The result was a marvelous
-westward movement that for timeliness, heroism and ultimate success is
-without a parallel in our annals. When the armies of the Revolutionary
-War are counted, that first army of twenty-five thousand men, women, and
-children which hurried over Boone's little path, through dark Powell's
-Valley, over the "high-swung gateway" of Cumberland Gap, and down
-through the laurel wildernesses to Crab Orchard, Danville, Lexington,
-and Louisville must not be forgotten. No army ever meant so much to the
-West; some did not mean more to the East.
-
-The author is greatly indebted for facts and figures to Thomas Speed's
-invaluable study _The Wilderness Road_, and to other Filson Club
-Publications, and for inspiration and suggestion to Mr. Allen's _The
-Blue Grass Region of Kentucky_.
-
- A. B. H.
-
-Marietta, Ohio, May 20, 1903.
-
-
-
-
-Boone's Wilderness Road
-
-
- _It is impossible to come upon this road without pausing,
- or to write of it without a tribute._
-
- --JAMES LANE ALLEN.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE PILGRIMS OF THE WEST
-
-
-No English colony in America looked upon the central West with such
-jealous eye as Virginia. The beautiful valley of the _Oyo_--the Indian
-exclamation for "Beautiful"--which ran southwesterly through the great
-forests of the continent's interior was early claimed as the sole
-possession of the Virginians. The other colonies were hemmed in by
-prescribed boundary lines, definitely outlined in their royal charters.
-New York was bounded by Lake Erie and the Allegheny and thought little
-of the West. The Pennsylvanian colony was definitely bounded by the line
-which is the western boundary line of that commonwealth today.
-Carolina's extremity stopped at thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes.
-Virginia's western boundary was not defined; hence the West was hers.
-
-England herself was not at all sure of the West until after the fall of
-Quebec; but the Treaty of Paris was soon signed and, so far as the
-French were concerned, the colonies extended to the Mississippi. Then
-Pontiac's bloody war broke out and matters were at a standstill until
-Bouquet hewed his way into "the heart of the enemies' country" and, on
-the Muskingum, brought Pontiac's desperate allies, the Delawares and
-Shawanese, to terms.
-
-But now, when the West was his, the king of England did a wondrous
-thing. He issued a proclamation in the year 1763 which forbade anyone
-securing "patents for any lands beyond the heads or sources of any of
-the rivers which fall into the Atlantic Ocean from the West or
-Northwest!" Thus Lord Hillsborough, British Secretary for the Colonies,
-thought to checkmate what he called the "roving disposition" of the
-colonists, particularly the Virginians. The other colonies were
-restrained by definite boundaries; Virginia, too, should be restrained.
-
-Hillsborough might as well have adopted the plan of the ignoramus who,
-when methods for keeping the Indians from crossing the frontier were
-being discussed, suggested that a strip of land along the entire western
-frontier be cleared of trees and bushes, in the belief that the savages
-would not dare to cross the open! Yet the secretary's agent set to work
-to mark out a western boundary line which should connect the western
-lines of Georgia and New York and so accomplish the limitation of
-Virginia.
-
-But the Virginians also acted. They sent an agent of their own, Thomas
-Walker, to Fort Stanwix (Rome, New York) to treat with the Six Nations
-for some of this very western land that Hillsborough was contriving to
-keep them out of. For the king issued the proclamation in the interest
-of the western Indians (and the annuities he received when the fur trade
-was prosperous) who desired that the West should be preserved to them.
-But what could be said if Virginia purchased the Indian's claim? Could a
-king's proclamation keep the Virginians from a territory to which, for
-value received, the Indians had given a quit-claim deed?
-
-This famous Treaty of Fort Stanwix was held in the fall of 1768. Three
-thousand Indians were present. Presents were lavished upon the
-chieftains. The western boundary line crossed from the west branch of
-the Susquehanna to Kittanning on the Allegheny River; it followed the
-Allegheny and Ohio Rivers southwest to the mouth of the Great Kanawha.
-Here it met Hillsborough's line which came up from Florida and which
-made the Great Kanawha the western boundary of Virginia. Had the Fort
-Stanwix line stopped here the western boundary line of the colonies
-would have been as Lord Hillsborough desired. But Walker did not pause
-here. Sir William Johnson, British Indian Agent for the Northern
-District, who was "thoroughly versed in the methods of making profit by
-his office," allowed Walker to extend the line so as to enclose
-Virginia's prospective purchase; and the Tennessee River was made the
-western boundary instead of the Great Kanawha. Thus Johnson at once
-satisfied the claims of Virginia and the pride of the Six Nations, who
-were still anxious to prove their long-boasted possession over the
-Cumberland region, as well as their sovereignty over the hated Cherokee,
-by thus formally disposing of the land. So everyone was satisfied--but
-Hillsborough. And yet the Crown was compelled, finally, to approve the
-Treaty of Fort Stanwix.
-
-This treaty marks an epoch in the history of the central West, since,
-thereby, nearly half of it became a portion of one of the Thirteen
-Colonies. The other half, north of the Ohio River, remained in the
-possession of the Indians who inhabited it.
-
-It is remarkable how little known that great territory was which now
-became a part of Virginia. This was largely because it was an
-uninhabited country. The territory north of the Ohio River was filled
-with Indian nations, some of whom had reigned there from times
-prehistoric. This was likewise true of the country south, where the
-great southern confederacies had held sway since white men came to this
-continent. But between these inhabited areas lay a pleasant land which
-any tribe would have gladly possessed had there not been so many rivals
-for it. Consequently it became a "dark and bloody" land where a
-thousand unrecorded battles were fought by Indians from both North and
-South who had the temerity to come there to hunt, or by armies who were
-hurrying through it in search of their foes who lived beyond. No Bouquet
-had pierced through to the Cumberland to release prisoners who might
-bring back reports of the land. No missionaries had carried their "great
-and good" words to this battle ground of the Nations and returned with
-tidings of its splendid meadows and their fertility. One or two
-adventuresome explorers had looked there and brought back practically
-all that the world knew of it. But they had never visited the most
-pleasant portions and knew little, if anything, of its real value. And
-all the Indians seemed to know was that it was a bloody border-land
-where no tribe could hunt in peace; where every shadow contained a
-lurking foe; and where every inch of soil was drenched with blood.
-
-Thus to an unknown and unoccupied border-land between the Indians of the
-North and those to the South, Virginia obtained, from one of its alleged
-possessors, a nominal hold. Could she maintain it? The world asked the
-question and awaited the answer, wonderingly.
-
-The principal reason why Virginia was successful was because her
-inhabitants were an agricultural people like their ancestors before them
-in England. Being an agricultural people they had expanded further,
-geographically, than the inhabitants of any of the other colonies. As
-early as 1740, cabins were being built in Bedford County, Virginia, over
-one hundred and fifty miles from the seaboard. There were settlements on
-the New River, a branch of the Great Kanawha, before the French and
-Indian war. Fort Loudoun, over the border, was erected in 1756, and
-Forts Long Island and Chissel in 1758. The Wyoming massacre in New York
-State in the Revolutionary War occurred on what was then the frontier,
-though Wyoming was less than a hundred miles from New York City. And,
-fortunately, this agricultural people was located in the most favorable
-place along the Atlantic for expansion, for a reason already mentioned.
-Back of New York and Pennsylvania roamed the Iroquois, Delawares,
-Shawanese, and other Indian nations. Back of Virginia, whose fine rivers
-rose in the mountains, lay a comparatively uninhabited country; for, the
-moment the Indians became allied with either of the encroaching European
-powers, they ceased contending together in the border-land behind
-Virginia. It was not until Virginians began to occupy it that it became
-anew a "dark and bloody ground." Virginia knew less of Indian warfare
-than some of the neighboring colonies until the era of her expansion
-when her sturdy people began occupying the land obtained at the Treaty
-of Fort Stanwix.
-
-The expansion of Virginia was greatly facilitated by the geographical
-position of the mountains along her western frontier. While the
-mountains of western New York and Pennsylvania obstructed expansion, in
-Virginia the mountain ranges facilitated it. Further north they trended
-directly north and south and even the rivers could find a passage-way
-only by following the most tortuous courses. True, the Hudson and Mohawk
-valleys offered a clear course to the great highland across to the
-Niagara River, but it was not until very late in the eighteenth century
-that the path across this watershed was open to white men. The two
-routes through Pennsylvania crossed the mountains horizontally and
-almost feared to follow the waterways. Braddock's Road crossed the
-waters of one stream three times at right angles in the space of eighty
-miles and did not follow it one hundred yards altogether. In Virginia
-the mountain ranges trend southwesterly, with the rivers between them,
-offering a practicable though roundabout route westward.
-
-But there was another thing Virginia possessed in addition to an
-agricultural people--an uninhabited territory west of her and some plain
-courses into it. She had among her citizens some daring, far-sighted,
-energetic men who might easily be called the first promoters of America.
-They were moneyed men who sought honestly to make money; but they were
-also men of chivalry and intense patriotism--Virginians of Virginians.
-They thought of their pockets, but they also thought of their colony
-and their king; the standing of the Old Dominion was very dear to them:
-its growth in commercial as well as geographical dimensions. They
-desired to be thought well of at home; they desired that Virginia should
-be thought the best of all America.
-
-Of these men the Washingtons were the most prominent, and George
-Washington was a marvelously inspired leader. As early as 1749
-Virginians secured a grant of land south of the Ohio and directly west
-of old Virginia. The enterprise amounted to nothing save by
-precipitating the contest between England and France for the West. The
-example of the younger Washington in fighting for the possession of the
-West, in encouraging the disheartened people of the frontier in the dark
-days of defeat, in aiding in the final victory, in investing heavily in
-western land (for he, it is said, died the richest man in America, and
-half his wealth lay west of the Alleghenies), in encouraging the
-building of the Potomac Canal, in impressing upon the people the
-commercial value of exploiting the entire West from Lake Huron to
-Cumberland Gap, affords perhaps the most remarkable instance in our
-whole national history of one man inspiring a people to greater things.
-A place and a rough way thither was ready for expanding Virginia--and
-such sons as Washington gave the inspiration.
-
-Through the great "trough" between the Allegheny and Blue Ridge ranges
-passes the pioneer route to which we of the central West owe as much as
-to any thoroughfare in America--that rough, long, roundabout road which,
-coming down from Lancaster and Yorktown, crossed the Potomac at Wadkin's
-Ferry, and passed up the Shenandoah valley by Martinsburg, Winchester
-and Staunton; and on to the headwaters of the New River, where it was
-joined by the thoroughfare through central Virginia from Richmond. Here,
-near the meeting of these famous old-time Virginia thoroughfares, stood
-Fort Chissel, erected in 1758 and situated two hundred miles east of
-Cumberland Gap. Beyond Fort Chissel ran the Indian trail toward the Gap
-and, within fifty miles of the Gap, stood Fort Watauga on a branch of
-the Holston. This was the most westerly fort at the time of the Stanwix
-treaty, and about the rude fort was springing up the Watauga settlement.
-Other earlier settlements were made at Draper's Meadows and at Inglis
-Ferry on New River by families bearing those names. For more than a
-century the population of Virginia and North Carolina had been slowly
-sifting up the river valleys toward the West and by the time the king's
-proclamation was issued many cabins were already erected beyond the
-headwaters of streams which fell "into the Atlantic Ocean from the West
-or Northwest." Even the faithful Hillsborough seems to have recognized
-this since his boundary line passed through Chiswell's Mine on the Great
-Kanawha and the mouth of that river--much further west than a strict
-interpretation of the proclamation would allow.
-
-This vanguard which was moving westward was led by explorers and
-hunters. Of two of the former, mention will be particularly made. The
-parties of hunters who now began to press beyond the furthest
-settlements, while they subsisted on game, were also real explorers of
-the West and helped to set in motion and give zest to the great
-immigration which followed the signing of the Stanwix treaty. It was
-only one year after the Stanwix treaty when Daniel Boone came up from
-his home on the Yadkin in North Carolina and led a company of men
-through the Gap into the land whose hero and idol he was ever to be.
-About the same time John Finley and party were trapping on the forbidden
-rivers, and Colonel James Knox and company of nine hunted on the New,
-Clinch, and Holston Rivers, and reaching even to the lower Cumberland in
-1769-70. These parties of men found that a paradise for the husbandman
-was to be speedily revealed to the world at the foothills of the
-Cumberland and Pine mountains on the great plain falling away westward
-to the Mississippi. At first, only the most vague description of the
-rich meadows of the West reached the Virginian settlements, but, meager
-as they were, they started a tide of immigration quite unparalleled in
-American history. One of these descriptions is preserved for us in the
-autobiography of Daniel Boone, and, though couched in language with
-which he was probably less familiar than his amanuensis, still is not
-unlike the stories told in border cabins to eager listening frontiersmen
-who were soon on their rough way to this El Dorado beyond the horrid
-ranges of the Cumberlands:
-
-"We found everywhere abundance of wild beasts of all sorts, through this
-vast forest. The buffalo were more frequent than I have seen cattle in
-the settlements, browsing on the leaves of the cane, or cropping the
-herbage on those extensive plains, fearless, because ignorant of the
-violence of man.... Nature was here a series of wonders and a fund of
-delight. Here she displayed her ingenuity and industry in a variety of
-flowers and fruits, beautifully colored, elegantly shaped and charmingly
-flavored; and we were diverted with innumerable animals presenting
-themselves perpetually to our view.... Just at the close of day the
-gentle gales retired and left the place to the disposal of a profound
-calm. Not a breeze shook the most tremulous leaf. I had gained the
-summit of a commanding ridge, and, looking around with astonishing
-delight, beheld the ample plains, the beauteous tracts below: On the
-other hand had I surveyed the famous Ohio river, that rolled in silent
-dignity, marking the western boundary of Kentucky with inconceivable
-grandeur. At a vast distance I beheld the mountains lift their venerable
-brows, and penetrate the clouds."
-
-Inspired by such descriptions as these, there came in the wake of the
-hunter-explorers crowds of immigrants. Very many came even bringing
-their families, for the novelty of the adventure and because there was
-nothing to keep them where they had had but a tomahawk claim on the
-border. There were thousands who entered the West and became valuable
-citizens (considering the work to be done) who would best be described
-as gypsies. For a larger part of the way across the continent this
-peculiar class of people moved westward between the advanced explorers
-and the swarm of genuine "settlers" whose feet, even at this time, were
-making the middle of our continent tremble. For instance, very many of
-the first settlers in the territory near the Mississippi hailed from a
-portion of the land between their home there and the Allegheny
-mountains, just as many of the first settlers between the Ohio and Lake
-Erie hailed from Virginia's land between the Ohio and Tennessee. The
-phrase "following the immigration" was a common one and covered this
-class of pioneers who moved away from a given district of land when it
-began to fill with settlers. There has appeared a disposition in some
-quarters to attempt to minimize the value of the hosts of so-called
-"squatters" and "tomahawk claimers" who first moved into the West. Our
-pioneer literature is full of discreditable allusions, made by the
-second tide of pioneers who came West, concerning the scattered ranks of
-first comers, their moral character, their ways of thought and living.
-The later blueblood stock had not a little to say concerning the
-pioneers of Western Virginia and Kentucky flavored with the same spice
-that Dickens employed when, a little later, he jotted down his "American
-Notes." It seems as though it were reasonable to remember what these
-first comers did rather than the picture of what they were. But for them
-there could never have been a better West. Who composed the armies of
-McIntosh, Brodhead, Crawford, Harmar, St. Clair, and Wayne but these
-rough, wild-looking men who first entered the West? What is now western
-Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Kentucky gave practically all the
-troops which conquered the land between the Ohio River and the Great
-Lakes. And all of them, save the few who could raise money to buy some
-of it, retired again to their slovenly "claims" south of the Ohio--and a
-flood-tide of newcomers came after them to bring a new era they could
-never have brought, and, incidentally, leave to posterity repulsive
-pictures of them. It hath been said: "Instead of the thorn shall come up
-the fir tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle tree;
-and it shall be to the Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign that
-shall not be cut off." The West was a land of brier and thorn, and men
-as rough as briers and thorns were needed to strike the first swift hard
-blows. The squatter in the West played an important part and should not
-be remembered solely by the pictures drawn of his filth, lawlessness,
-and laziness. The Cleaveland of 1798 was a paradise beside the Cleveland
-of 1810. Was it not Caleb Atwater who said that "not one young man,
-whose family was rich, and of very high standing in the Eastern States,
-has succeeded in Ohio?" A little later in this narrative we shall read
-of one "Abraham hanks" who went, an unknown pioneer, with Daniel Boone
-through Cumberland Gap at the very van of all the western immigration!
-Atwater was not referring to his grandson--the immortal son of Nancy
-Hanks. Theodore Roosevelt in the following words has emphasized the debt
-our country owes to this class of early citizens: "Nevertheless this
-very ferocity was not only inevitable, but it was in a certain sense
-proper; or at least, even if many of its manifestations were blamable,
-the spirit that lay behind them was right. The backwoodsmen were no
-sentimentalists; they were grim, hard, matter-of-fact men, engaged all
-their lives long in an unending struggle with hostile forces, both
-human and natural; men who in this struggle had acquired many unamiable
-qualities, but who had learned likewise to appreciate at their full
-value the inestimable virtues of courage and common-sense. The crisis
-[Revolution] demanded that they should be both strong and good; but,
-above all things, it demanded that they should be strong. Weakness would
-have ruined them. It was needful that justice should stand before mercy;
-and they could no longer have held their homes, had they not put down
-their foes, of every kind with an iron hand."
-
-With these uncouth border families moved another class of men known as
-land speculators. The schemes of these fortune hunters and of the many
-great companies of which they were the representatives would fill a
-moderate volume and can only be hinted at here. As we have noted, a
-company was organized very early to speculate in western lands, called
-the Ohio Company. It received from the king of England a grant of land
-between the Monongahela and Great Kanawha Rivers, but failed to fulfil
-the required conditions and the Charter reverted to the Crown. From that
-day to the breaking out of the Revolutionary War numerous land companies
-secured by one means or another a claim to certain lands and many sought
-such claims but never secured them. It will be necessary to refer to one
-of these companies later in the course of our narrative.
-
-Near the front in this race for the rich meadows between the Ohio and
-Tennessee were bounty-land claimants. One of Virginia's most effective
-pleas for the great territory which had come into her possession was
-that she might reward her soldiers of the French and Indian wars. While
-as a people she had known less of Indian warfare than some of the
-colonies, Virginia had been liberal in sending troops northward to
-defend the frontier. And these Virginians had made a name for themselves
-at Braddock's defeat and elsewhere. Washington was always insistent that
-the claims of these old veterans of the bloody border war be redeemed in
-good lands, and it must be remembered ever with pride that as late as
-1770, only six years before he became commander-in-chief of the armies
-of the United States at Cambridge, and but two years after the signing
-of the Stanwix treaty, he made the difficult journey to the Ohio River
-and down that river in a canoe to Virginia's new empire on the Great
-Kanawha, where surveys of bounty lands for his heroes of Fort Necessity
-were first made. Additional surveys were soon made along the Ohio and
-Licking Rivers.
-
-Explorers, hunters, squatters, speculators, and bounty-land
-claimants--this was the heterogeneous population that was surging
-westward to the land of which Boone wrote. But not all came down the old
-thoroughfare between the Allegheny and Blue Ridge Mountains and through
-Cumberland Gap. Many followed northward the rough trails which descended
-the New and Monongahela Rivers, while many went northwesterly over
-Braddock's overgrown twelve-foot road or along the winding narrow track
-of Forbes's Road through the Pennsylvania Glades to the little frontier
-fortress, Fort Pitt. From the time Bouquet relieved this beleaguered
-garrison until the Stanwix treaty, Pittsburg, as the town was now
-known, had been growing. One year after that treaty (1769) the manor of
-Pittsburg was surveyed, the survey embracing five thousand seven hundred
-and sixty-six acres. Upon the signing of the Stanwix treaty, Pittsburg
-became an important point and was claimed by both Pennsylvania and
-Virginia. About it sprang up villages and from it down the Ohio and up
-the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers settlements spread. What was
-loosely known as the "Monongahela Country"--the territory between the
-Monongahela and Ohio Rivers--became quite populous.
-
-Here, high up along the Ohio River, the Virginians learned how to fight
-the red man, if they had never known before. The decade succeeding
-Pontiac's war, though nominally a peaceful one, was, nevertheless, one
-long and bitter duel between the Indians north of the Ohio and the
-Virginians who were coming "in shoals" to its southern bank. It has been
-estimated that the total loss of life within that decade was as great as
-the total loss in the open war--Dunmore's War--which soon broke out and
-which momentarily threatened the extinction of Virginia's great
-colonial movement into the southern half of this black forest of the
-West.
-
-We have refrained from using the name Kentucky long enough, perhaps, to
-accomplish the purpose of impressing upon the reader's mind the part
-Virginia and the Virginians played in the creation of the earliest
-settlement in the West, first known as the county, then the state, of
-Kentucky. As Professor Shaler has said: "She owes to Virginia the most
-of the people she received during the half century when her society was
-taking shape: her institutions, be they good or evil, her ideals of
-life, her place in the nation's history, are all as immediately derived
-from her great Mother Virginia as are an individual man's from the
-mother who bore him."
-
-The name Kentucky, Kentuckgin, Kantucky, Kentucke, Caintuck, as it was
-variously spelled, may have been derived from an Iroquois word
-_Ken-ta-kee_, which means "among the meadows." When, in the olden days,
-only the long, painted canoes of the Iroquois could be moored in safety
-in the shades of the woodland meadows south of the Oyo, the name
-Ken-ta-kee was first heard--a name which has come down to us so pregnant
-with pride and power. The Catawba River, which gained its name, perhaps,
-from the famous war-path which followed it toward the land of the
-Catawbas in the south, was first known as the Louisa River (named by
-Walker in honor of the wife of the "Bloody Duke" of Cumberland), and
-afterwards as the Kentucky River.
-
-After the treaty at the close of Dunmore's War, Virginia had two
-quit-claim deeds to her western empire: one from the Iroquois, who
-boasted their possession of it, and one from the Shawanese, who had
-disputed the settlement. There was yet another claimant to deal with,
-the Cherokees of the South. In the year following the battle of Point
-Pleasant (1774) a land company headed by Colonel Richard Henderson
-purchased from the Cherokees the land between the Ohio, Kentucky, and
-Cumberland Rivers. This purchase was achieved at Fort Watauga through
-the agency of Daniel Boone. This private purchase from the Indians was
-afterward annulled by both Virginia and North Carolina, but so far as
-the Indian claims to Kentucky were concerned it had passed into the
-possession of the white man. Every inch of soil had been fairly obtained
-from each and every claimant who had made it a "dark and bloody ground"
-through their battles for it, since the earliest period of recorded
-history. But at the time of the Cherokee purchase, an old Indian chief
-said to Boone: "Brother, we have given you a fine land, but I believe
-you will have much trouble in settling it." Perhaps the Cherokees knew
-what Shawanese quit-claim deeds were worth!
-
-After making this purchase for Colonel Henderson, Boone engaged to mark
-out a road through Cumberland Gap to the center of the newly acquired
-territory. Following the old trail through the Gap, Boone's Road ended
-at a new settlement at the mouth of Otter Creek on the Kentucky River
-named Boonesborough, in his honor. Fort Boonesborough was completed July
-14, 1775. Colonel Logan and party came westward through the Gap at the
-same time but diverged from Boone's Road on Rockcastle Creek, and
-opened the more important branch of the road toward Louisville by way of
-Crab Orchard and Danville, and erected Fort Logan one mile west of
-Standford, in what is now Lincoln County, Kentucky. Harrod's, Logan's,
-and Boone's forts were the important early "stations" in the West. To
-them the thousands wended their tedious way over the "Wilderness Road,"
-as both branches (Logan's and Boone's) were fitly called, or down the
-Ohio from Pittsburg. And along these lines of western movement cabins
-and clearings made their rapid appearance despite the era of bloodshed
-which began almost simultaneously with the opening of the Revolutionary
-War in the East.
-
-
-Such were the pilgrims of the West. It is interesting to note that these
-leaders of civilization in the West were true Americans--American born
-and American bred. It is remarkable that the discoverers of the American
-central West were either French or American. For the work of exploring
-this _hinterland_, England scarcely furnished a man; she can write no
-names opposite those of Brule, Cartier, Champlain, Du Lhuth, Hennepin,
-Joliet, Marquette, and La Salle. Nearly all that England knew of the
-interior she learned from the French. Her great explorers were maritime
-explorers and her conquest of New France was effected by water. But
-while the West could not have for its first colonists the counterpart of
-the hardy, irresistible race who first came to the Atlantic seaboard, it
-did have the next best thing--the direct descendants of them. It was a
-race of Americanized Britons who pressed from Virginia into the West.
-Hardly a name among them but was pure Norman or Saxon. Of the
-twenty-five members of the Political Club at Danville, Kentucky, which
-discussed with ability the Federal Constitution, all but two were
-descendants of colonists from Great Britain and Ireland. Of forty-five
-members of the convention which framed Kentucky's first constitution,
-only three could claim European ancestry. Of the seven hundred members
-of the Filson Club, the representative historical society of Kentucky
-today, there are not more than twenty who are not either English,
-Scotch, Welsh, or Irish. The blood of the mother country flowed in purer
-strain in no portion of the continent at the outbreak of the
-Revolutionary War than in the Virginian settlement of Kentucky. That the
-blood was true to its fighting traditions is proved by the Revolutionary
-pension rolls. In 1840 there were nine hundred Revolutionary soldiers
-receiving pensions in Kentucky. This race gave to the West its real
-heroes--the Gists, Walkers, Boones, Clarks, Todds, Shelbys, Kentons,
-Logans, Lewises, Crawfords, Gibsons, and St. Clairs. In frontier cabins
-they were bred to a free life in a free land--worthy successors to
-Washington and his school, worthy men to subdue and rule the empire of
-which they began the conquest before the outbreak of the Revolutionary
-War. In the form of these sturdy colonizers the American republic
-stretched its arm across the Appalachian mountain system and took in its
-grasp the richest river valley in the world at the end of Boone's
-Wilderness Road. That arm was never withdrawn, that grasp never
-relinquished. The leaven of old Virginia leavened the whole lump.
-
-
-Thus may be outlined briefly the era of expansion in which Boone's Road
-played an all-important part. In the succeeding chapters the phases of
-this historic movement are reviewed as the meager data now obtainable
-can permit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE FIRST EXPLORERS
-
-
-The first real explorations of the great territory secured by Virginia
-at the Treaty of Fort Stanwix were made by Dr. Thomas Walker, who later
-so skilfully managed Virginia's part of that treaty, and Christopher
-Gist, in the early years of the second half of the eighteenth century,
-1750 and 1751.
-
-The brief journals[1] written by these men are the sources of our first
-information concerning the vast territory west of the Appalachian
-mountain system--the eastern half of the Mississippi basin south of the
-Ohio River. They are meager records of hard day's pilgrimages, an
-outline of the routes pursued, and a description of the lands which were
-traversed. Both were explorers for two newly-formed land companies.
-Walker represented the Loyal Land Company of London, and Gist was the
-representative of the Ohio Company. The company for which Walker acted
-had secured a grant of eight hundred thousand acres in the territory now
-embraced in Kentucky north of 36 deg. 30'. The Ohio Company had a grant of
-five hundred thousand acres between the Kanawha and Monongahela Rivers.
-These men were sent to search out favorable lands and report on the
-giants and grapes. They found both.
-
-Little suggestion of the romance and daring of these historic journeys
-can be found in either of the journals of them; they make slight books.
-But volumes can be written on what can be read by the most careless
-reader between their few lines. The long climbing over the almost
-pathless mountains, the nights spent in discomfort, the countless
-trials, fears, dangers of which they knew so much and told so
-little--all this should make a story if it never has, that could not by
-any means find an uninterested reader. No youth's history is of moment
-until we know the man and know that he is a man among men. Our nation is
-still a boy. Only with the passing of the years will its boyhood be
-studied and known as it should be known; when that time comes, the brief
-stories of such men as Walker and Gist will appear of priceless value.
-
-"Having, on the 12th of December last, been employed for a certain
-consideration to go to the Westward in order to discover a proper Place
-for a Settlement, I left my house on the Sixth day of March, at 10
-o'clock, 1749-50, in Company with Ambrose Powell, William Tomlinson,
-Colby Chew, Henry Lawless & John Hughs. Each man had a Horse and we had
-two to carry the Baggage. I lodged this night at Col. Joshua Fry's, in
-Albemarle, which County includes the Chief of the head Branches of James
-River on the East side of the Blue Ridge." Thus begins Dr. Walker's
-journal. At this time England and her colonies were dating by the old
-calendar, each new year beginning on the twenty-fifth of March.
-Accordingly they started nineteen days before the beginning of the year
-1750.
-
-It was a brave little company of adventurous men. Walker had attended
-William and Mary College, and then had joined the ranks of that
-distinguished army of representative Virginians who, with saddle-bags
-and surveying instruments, proved to be the vanguard of the army which
-was to achieve the real conquest of the West. His home was Castle Hill,
-near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Virginia, where his companions
-had rendezvoused for the present expedition and from which point they
-began their historic journey. Powell was of the best Virginian stock,
-and has left his name to one of the great valleys through which the
-highway to the West ran. His son became a Revolutionary officer and his
-great-grandson was General A. P. Hill, the famous Confederate leader.
-Chew was from Orange County, Virginia, and belonged to the Maryland
-branch of the Chew family. Two Presidents of the United States, Madison
-and Taylor, could claim him as a relative. Seven years later he served
-in Washington's regiment in Forbes's expedition against Fort Duquesne,
-and was killed in Grant's wild attack on that fort. As the journal
-states, this company spent the first night out with Colonel Joshua Fry.
-Fry too was one of them in spirit, though he did not accompany them
-westward. He was a graduate of Oxford University, joint author with
-Jefferson of Fry and Jefferson's celebrated Map of Virginia, and a
-commissioner for the crown in establishing the boundary line between
-North Carolina and Virginia. He was killed by being thrown from his
-horse while taking command of Washington's expedition against Fort
-Duquesne, four years later. These statistics show plainly that the best
-brain and blood of Virginia was foremost in attempting to realize
-Virginia's dream of conquest and expansion.
-
-But it was a time for brave men to show themselves. Ambitious Virginia
-had been slow to claim the West, where even at this early date Frenchmen
-had gone so far into the wilderness. Celoron, bold emissary of the
-humpbacked Canadian Governor Gallissoniere, was now burying leaden
-plates at the mouths of the rivers which emptied into the Ohio, as a
-sign of French possession of the West. One of these was placed at the
-mouth of the Great Kanawha "at the mouth of the river Chinodahihetha,
-this 18th day of August," claiming for the Bourbon crown the entire
-territory in which the grant of land to the Ohio Company was located.
-There was not a moment to lose if the West was to be saved to England. A
-settlement must be made quickly, and Walker and his band pushed on
-immediately to find a "proper Place for a Settlement."
-
-But all this, seemingly, is neither here nor there--so far as Walker's
-Journal is concerned. There is not one mention of the political crisis
-then at hand; instead of French claims, Walker deals with tired horses
-or broken-legged dogs, and where one might suppose he would mention
-national boundary lines he tells only of cutting names on trees. And at
-the end, where the reader might look for a summary statement of the
-results of his tour he finds this: "I got home about noon. We killed in
-the Journey 13 Buffaloes, 8 Elks, 53 Bears, 20 Deer, 4 Wild Geese, about
-150 Turkeys, besides small game. We might have killed three times as
-much meat, if we had wanted it." Yet, so far as human interest is
-concerned, the record is exceptionally entertaining, and to a student of
-the great thoroughfare from Virginia to Kentucky it is full of meaning;
-because of its many references to the difficulties of traveling at that
-early date, and to the varied experiences of explorers on the earliest
-thoroughfares westward. It is this story of experience in traveling west
-in 1750 that makes Walker's Journal of interest in the present study.
-
-On the day after the party left Colonel Fry's, "We set off about 8,"
-writes Dr. Walker, "but the day proving wet, we only went to Thomas
-Joplin's on Rockfish. This is a pretty River, which might at a small
-expense be made fit for transporting Tobacco; but it has lately been
-stopped by a Mill Dam near the Mouth to the prejudice of the upper
-inhabitants who would at their own expense clear and make it navigable,
-were they permitted." Virginia's great industry evidently flourished
-this far from tidewater even at this early date, though handicapped by
-these dams which were erected by the "Averice of Millers," on which Dr.
-Walker comments again in his next day's record. The record for Sunday,
-the eleventh, is appropriately brief: "11th. The Sabbath." In only one
-or two instances did the party travel on Sunday, and then the journey
-was occasioned by necessity. On the twelfth the party crossed the Upper
-James River above the mouth of the Rivanna, and lodged with one Thomas
-Hunt.
-
-"13th. We went early to William Calloway's and supplied ourselves with
-Rum, Thread, and other necessaries & from thence took the main Waggon
-Road leading to Wood's or the New River. It is not well clear'd or
-beaten yet, but will be a very good one with proper management." Wood's
-River--or New River, as we know it today--was discovered in 1671 by
-Colonel Abraham Wood, who explored along the line which later became the
-boundary line between North Carolina and Virginia. He crossed the
-Alleghenies through "Wood's Gap" (now Flower Gap) and, going down Little
-River, found New River not far from Inglis Ferry, where Walker's party
-crossed three days later. This mention of the road Walker traversed is
-his first reference to the great road westward toward Cumberland Gap; he
-remarks its roughness, but before he returned to Virginia he learned new
-lessons on rough roads. "This night we lodged in Adam Beards low
-grounds. Beard is an ignorant, impudent, brutish fellow, and would have
-taken us up, had it not been for a reason, easily suggested." When thus
-brought in contrast with the hospitality usually tendered Walker's
-party, the deportment of this churlish mountaineer is conspicuous.
-Travelers on these first highways were ever in need--if for nothing more
-than a camping-place. The people who settled beside the frontier roads
-were trained by bitter experience to a generous hospitality. This
-hospitality was particularly marked, throughout the colonies, among
-those who could afford it, especially on the frontiers; and here it was
-often bestowed upon travelers when it could be ill-afforded. The modern
-hotel has in a large measure relieved the general public from the burden
-of continual and promiscuous hospitality, and it has been found that
-where hotels are least known this prime requisite of an expanding
-civilization may still be found. On the frontier, men were dependent on
-those who lived beside the road, not only in time of accident and
-sickness, but at all times--for little food and forage could be carried.
-At times travelers nearly perished when once beyond the frontier line.
-Walker's party, though they killed the large amount of game mentioned,
-were once compelled to kill and eat one of their dogs. Captain Estill,
-who lost his life in Kentucky in the engagement which bears his name, is
-said to have done a great service for emigrants from Virginia by killing
-game and leaving the meat beside the road, in order to "pass on and
-notify incoming trains where they might find a supply of meat."
-
-Instances of vile treatment of travelers are not often cited, but the
-few that exist are the exceptions that prove the rule of generosity
-which was common to the time.
-
-Leaving Beard's, Walker and his men went, on the fourteenth, to Nicholas
-Welch's, "where," the Doctor writes, "we bought corn for our horses, and
-had some Victuals dress'd for Breakfast." From here they climbed the
-Blue Ridge through Buford's Gap, in Bedford County, through which the
-Norfolk and Western Railroad now passes. "The Ascent and Descent is so
-easie," writes Walker, "that a Stranger would not know when he crossed
-the Ridge." On the day after, they reached "the great Lick" near the
-present city of Roanoke, and continued up the trail on the following day
-to near the historic Inglis Ferry, not far from the present village of
-Blacksburg, Montgomery County, Virginia.
-
-From this on, Walker's route is not of importance to our study, as he
-missed the great trail which would have taken him to the pleasant
-meadows of Kentucky--though he struck it again at Cumberland Gap but did
-not follow it--and wandered over a circuitous route thus outlined by
-Daniel Bryan: "They started from low down in Virginia, traveled
-westwardly across Alleghany Mountains to Chissel's Lead Mine, on New
-River; thence into the Holston Valley, thence over Walden's Ridge and
-Powell's Mountain into Powell's Valley.... They then continued down the
-valley, leaving Cumberland Mountain a small distance on their right
-hand, until they came to Cumberland Gap.... At the foot of this mountain
-they fell into an Indian path leading from the Cherokee towns on
-Tennessee River to the Shawnee Indian towns on the Ohio, which path they
-followed down Yellow Creek to the old ford of Cumberland River....
-Thence they went on the path down the river to the Flat Lick, eight
-miles; here they left the river, continued on the path, turning more
-north, crossing some of the head branches of the Kentucky River over a
-poor and hilly country, until they concluded there was no good country
-in the West. They then took an easterly course over the worst mountains
-and laurel thickets in the world.... They crossed the Laurel or
-Cumberland Mountain and fell into the Green brier country, almost
-starved to death ... and reached home with life only to pay for all
-their trouble and suffering."
-
-Regretting that this opinion of the final value of Walker's journey
-cannot be gainsaid, it is yet of interest to follow his footsteps and
-learn what were some of the experiences of such early explorers as
-these.
-
-On the twenty-sixth they "left the Inhabitans," as Dr. Walker called the
-line of civilization, and were at last within the wild land where no
-settlers had yet come. On the night of the twenty-ninth the "Dogs were
-very uneasie," and the next day, on Reedy Creek, a branch of the South
-Fork of the Holston, the tracks of a party of Indians were discovered,
-which explained the restlessness of the dogs. It is probably little
-realized in this day how valuable dogs were to explorers and immigrants.
-They were not only of service in giving warning of the approach of
-strangers, but were well-nigh indispensable in securing game and in
-searching for lost horses. Dr. Walker's love for dogs is a tradition in
-the family, and his care of them on this journey is typical of the
-gentleman and the wise frontiersman. At the junction of Reedy Creek and
-the Holston--an historic spot in Tennessee--Walker found a gigantic elm
-tree, which measured twenty-five feet in circumference at a distance of
-three feet from the ground. Pioneers and explorers considered the study
-of trees a fine art. By this means they always judged the quality of the
-soil, and knew at a glance by the growth that stood on it the character
-of any piece of land. The diaries of all that old school of western
-adventurers contain frequent mention of trees which were an almost
-infallible criterion of the soil beneath. Washington had keen eyes for
-trees--as for everything else--as illustrated in the journal of his trip
-down the Ohio River in 1770. On the fourth of November he found a
-sycamore on the Great Kanawha, in comparison with which this first elm
-of Walker's was insignificant. It measured, three feet from the ground,
-forty-five feet in circumference, and near by stood another measuring
-thirty-one feet around. Upon hearing about this larger tree, some one
-remarked that Washington might have told the truth about the cherry tree
-but he told a "whopper" about the sycamore. But it was not guess-work,
-for the record states clearly that the girth of the larger tree lacked
-two inches of being the complete forty-five feet. Trees along the Ohio
-grew to an immense size; an old Ohio River pilot affirms that in his
-boyhood a burned trunk of a sycamore stood on his father's farm on the
-Little Muskingum, into which he has frequently driven a horse, turned it
-about, and come out again. General Harmar found on the Ohio a
-button-wood tree forty-two feet in circumference, which held forty men
-within its trunk.
-
-On the seventh of April Dr. Walker writes: "It snowed most of the day.
-In the Evening our dogs caught a large He Bear, which before we could
-come up to shoot him had wounded a dog of mine, so that he could not
-Travel, and we carried him on Horseback, till he recovered." On the
-thirteenth the party reached "Cave Gap," which Walker named Cumberland
-Gap in honor of the "bloody Duke," the hero of Culloden. "Just at the
-foot of the Hill is a Laurel Thicket.... On the South side is a plain
-Indian Road. On the top of the Ridge are Laurel Trees marked with
-crosses, others Blazed and several Figures on them.... This Gap may be
-seen at a considerable distance, and there is no other, that I know of,
-except one about two miles to the North of it, which does not appear to
-be so low as the other. The Mountain on the North Side of the Gap is
-very Steep and Rocky, but on the South side it is not So. We called it
-Steep Ridge."
-
-The party crossed the Cumberland River about four miles below the
-present village of Barbourville, Knox County, Kentucky, on the
-twenty-third of April. The river was named by Walker at this time. From
-this spot Walker, with two companions chosen by lot--Powell and
-Chew--went on a tour of exploration alone, leaving the others "to
-provide and salt some Bear, build an house, and plant some Peach Stones
-and Corn."
-
-Walker and his two companions floundered about the neighboring region
-for five days, not getting out of the mountainous country and not
-finding any good land. They crossed the Cumberland again, on the third
-day out, about twenty miles below the first crossing-place, and then
-returned up the river to the main party and found that the work he had
-ordered to be done was completed. "The People I had left had built an
-House 12 by 8, clear'd and broke up some ground, & planted Corn, and
-Peach Stones."
-
-Thus was raised, beside the tumbling Cumberland, on the farm now owned
-by George M. Faulkner four miles below Barbourville, Kentucky, the first
-house now recorded as built by white men in the fine territory between
-the Cumberland Mountains and the Ohio River, now the state of Kentucky.
-It was not an "improver's cabin"--a log pen without roof--but a roofed
-house, and instituted what the English Loyal Land Company could claim to
-be a "settlement" in the territory which they had been granted. This was
-completed by the planting of corn and peach trees. The formality of this
-"settlement" is evinced by the fact that, two days later, the entire
-party moved on for further exploration, never again to return to their
-house or to reap their crops. It was twenty years before a house was
-erected in Kentucky for the permanent dwelling.
-
-From this on, Dr. Walker's journal is a long story of accidents and
-disappointments. One horse became lame, and "another had been bit in the
-Nose by a Snake." "I rub'd the wounds with Bear's oil, and gave him a
-drench of the same and another of the decoction of Rattle Snake root
-some time after." On the same day "Colby Chew and his Horse fell down
-the Bank. I Bled and gave him Volatile drops, & he soon recovered." On
-the first of May they reached Powell's River. This was named from
-Ambrose Powell. During the journey Dr. Walker gave the name of each of
-his companions to rivers he discovered; none were given his name, though
-a mountain range to the north of Fort Chiswell still bears the name of
-Walker's Mountain. On Powell's River the party this day again struck the
-Indian path which later became the great highway to Kentucky. Again he
-was on the route that would have taken him to the famous meadows below
-the foothills of the mountains, and again he left it as he did when he
-chose to explore on the south side of Cumberland Mountain, instead of
-crossing at Pineville and following the trail northward. He did not
-cross Rockcastle River. J. Stoddard Johnson says: "This was the farthest
-western point reached by Doctor Walker. He did not cross the main
-Rockcastle River, and, therefore, was never on the waters of Salt or
-Green rivers, as claimed by some. A day or two's travel to the west or
-northwest would have brought him to the fertile lands of Lincoln or
-Madison County, his description of which would have left no doubt of his
-having passed the watershed between the Rockcastle, the Salt, and the
-rivers to the westward."[2]
-
-Shoes formed an important item in the catalogue of necessaries for the
-early traveler's outfit on the first traveled ways in America. Already
-Walker's party, though they traveled largely by horse, had worn out the
-shoes with which they started, and on the eleventh of May under one of
-the great cliffs near Rockcastle River they set to work to make
-themselves new shoes out of elkskin. "When our Elk's Skin was prepared,"
-writes Dr. Walker on the fourteenth, "we had lost every Awl that we
-brought out, and I made one with the Shank of an old Fishing hook, the
-other People made two of Horse Shoe Nails, and with these we made our
-Shoes and Moccosons."
-
-On the twenty-third the party was on the Kentucky River, where Walker
-found a sycamore which measured forty feet in circumference--almost, it
-will be seen, the size of the tree Washington found on the Great
-Kanawha--upon which he marked his initials, "T. W." On the day after, he
-found another sycamore thirty feet in circumference. These trees, it
-would naturally be inferred, marked the location of fertile soil. On the
-twenty-sixth the "Dogs roused a large Buck Elk, which we followed down
-to a Creek. He killed Ambrose Powell's Dog in the Chase, and we named
-the Run Tumbler's Creek, the Dog being of that Name."
-
-"31st. We crossed 2 Mountains and camped just by a Wolf's Den. They were
-very impudent and after they had twice been shot at, they kept howling
-about the Camp. It rained till Noon this day."
-
-"June ye 1st. We found the Wolf's Den and caught 4 of the young ones."
-It was very common for frontiersmen to invade the dens of wolves without
-any opposition on the part of the old wolves. Wolf cubs have often been
-pulled away from their mothers, who would only snarl and show their
-teeth. Bears, on the other hand, would fight to the death any invader of
-their dens. Notions which commonly prevail today, about the dangers in
-the primeval forests of America from wild animals, undergo a great
-change after a careful reading of pioneer literature.
-
-On the fourth of June "a very black Cloud appearing, we turn'd out our
-Horses, got tent Poles up, and were just stretching a Tent, when it
-began to rain and hail, and was succeeded by a violent Wind which Blew
-down our Tent & a great many Trees about it, several large ones within
-30 yds. of the Tent. We all left the place in confusion and ran
-different ways for shelter. After the Storm was over, we met at the
-Tent, and found all safe."
-
-On the fourteenth the party had gone east as far as the dividing ridge
-between the two forks of the Big Sandy; but within a few days the horses
-were spent, and the whole party floundered onward afoot. On the
-twentieth they reached Flat-top Mountain, Raleigh County, West Virginia.
-This day Dr. Walker's horse was bitten by a snake; "... having no
-Bear's Oil," he wrote, "I rub'd the place with a piece of fat meat,
-which had the desired effect."
-
-Passing the present site of Hinton, West Virginia, the party followed
-about the present line of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. They crossed
-the Allegheny divide July 8, and Hot Springs the ninth. They found "Six
-Invalides there. The Spring Water is very Clear & warmer than new Milk,
-and there is a spring of cold Water within 20 feet of the Warm one. I
-left one of my Company this day." They reached Augusta Court House
-(Staunton, Virginia) on the eleventh, and Castle Hill on the sixteenth,
-having been four months and seven days on the journey.
-
-Walker's hard tour amounted to very little for the plain reason that he
-never got west of the mountains. He found no good land and his report
-was depressing.
-
-
-It remained for another brave frontiersman to go further and bring back
-the welcome news of large areas of splendid land in the Ohio Valley. In
-1748 John Hanbury, London merchant; Thomas Lee, President of the
-Council of Virginia; and a number of prominent Virginians formed the
-Ohio Company, elsewhere mentioned, and received a large grant of land in
-the West. The grant was made March 18, 1749: two hundred thousand acres
-between the Monongahela and Great Kanawha Rivers, and later three
-hundred thousand acres, to be located on the waters of the lower Ohio.
-In 1750 this company employed Christopher Gist, a hardy, well-trained
-frontiersman who lived on the Yadkin in North Carolina, to explore the
-Ohio Valley and make a report upon the land there found. For his arduous
-service he was to receive one hundred and fifty pounds sterling "and
-such further handsome allowance as his service should deserve." His
-instructions read as follows:
-
-"You are to go out as soon as possible to the Westward of the great
-Mountains, and carry with you such a Number of Men as You think
-necessary, in Order to Search out and discover the Lands upon the river
-Ohio & other adjoining Branches of the Mississippi down as low as the
-great Falls thereof: You are particularly to observe the Ways & Passes
-thro all the Mountains you cross, & take an exact Account of the Soil,
-Quality & Product of the Land, and the Wideness and Deepness of the
-Rivers, & the several Falls belonging to them, together with the Courses
-& Bearings of the Rivers & Mountains as near as you conveniently can:
-You are also to observe what Nations of Indians inhabit there, their
-Strength and Numbers, who they trade with, & in what Comodities they
-deal.
-
-"When you find a large quantity of good, level Land, such as you think
-will suit the Company, You are to measure the Breadth of it, in three or
-four different Places, & take the Courses of the River & Mountains on
-which it binds in Order to judge the Quantity: You are to fix the
-Beginning & Bounds in such a Manner that they may be easily found again
-by your Description; the nearer in the Land lies the better, provided it
-be good & level, but we had rather go quite down the Mississippi than
-take mean broken Land. After finding a large Body of good level Land,
-you are not to stop but proceed further, as low as the Falls of the
-Ohio, that we may be informed of that Navigation; And You are to take an
-exact Account of all the large Bodies of good level Land, in the same
-Manner as above directed that the Company may the better judge when it
-will be most convenient for them to take their Land.
-
-"You are to note all the Bodies of good Land as you go along, tho there
-is not a sufficient Quantity for the Company's Grant, but You need not
-be so particular in the Mensuration of that, as in the larger Bodies of
-Land.
-
-"You are to draw as good a plan as you can of the Country You pass thro:
-You are to take an exact and particular Journal of all Your Proceedings,
-and make a true Report thereof to the Ohio Company."
-
-Gist was the man for the business in hand. He came from an enterprising
-family and was well educated. His father was one of the Commissioners
-for laying off the city of Baltimore. "Little is known of his early
-life, but the evidences he has left in his journals, his maps, plats of
-surveys, and correspondence indicate that he enjoyed the advantages of
-an education superior to that of many of his calling in those early
-days. His signature and manuscript are characterized by the neatness and
-uniformity of a copy plate, while his plats and surveys are models in
-their mathematical exactness and precision of drawing. To this evidence
-of scholarly order and professional skill he added the hardy qualities
-of the pioneer and backwoodsman, capable of enduring the exposure of
-long journeys in the most rigorous weather. In him were combined the
-varied talents which made him at once an accomplished surveyor, an
-energetic farmer who felled the forest and tilled the soil, a skilful
-diplomat who understood the Indian character and was influential in
-making treaties, a brave soldier, an upright man, trusted by the highest
-civil and military authorities with implicit faith."[3]
-
-The earlier portion of Gist's journey, which he began in October, 1750,
-is not of importance in the present monograph. He reached the Ohio River
-by way of the Juniata and Kiskiminitas Rivers. Crossing the Ohio he
-worked his way westward on the Great Trail to the "Crossing Place of the
-Muskingum" (Bolivar, Ohio), and from thence he traversed the Indian
-trail to the country of the Shawanese and Miamis.
-
-It was not until Tuesday, the twelfth of March, that Gist again crossed
-the Ohio, and entered what is now the state of Kentucky. His first day's
-experience was typical--in a land so well known for great things and
-strong; for on the day after crossing at the Shawanese Shannoah Town, he
-found two men who had "Two of the Teeth of a large Beast.... The Rib
-Bones of the largest of these Beasts were eleven Feet long, and the
-Skull Bone six Feet wide, across the Forehead, & the other Bones in
-Proportion; and that there were several Teeth there, some of which he
-called Horns, and said they were upwards of five Feet long, and as much
-as a Man could well carry."
-
-Gist was now in Kentucky--the land of which thousands were waiting to
-hear, the home of the race that was to come and conquer and settle and
-hold the West. Of it Gist came to know only a little, but this little
-was the beginning of a revelation.
-
-After crossing the Ohio, Gist journeyed over a hundred miles down the
-southern bank of the river, and on March eighteenth crossed "the lower
-Salt Lick Creek," the Licking River. Reports of Indians at the "Falls"
-and "the footsteps of some Indians plain on the Ground" made him desist
-from visiting that spot, but he took down descriptions of it. On the
-nineteenth he turned southward into the interior. On the twentieth he
-ascended Pilot Knob, near Clay City, Powell County, and writes of the
-view from that height from which he saw, as John Finley wrote later,
-"with pleasure the beautiful level of Kentucky."
-
-With but a glimpse of the good lands of Kentucky, Gist, like Walker
-before him, journeyed into the mountainous country to the southeast. For
-a month he floundered around in the desolate laurel ridges where Walker
-had spent so many distressing days the year before. On Red River Gist
-crossed Walker's route and came on homeward between Walker's outward and
-homeward courses. From Red River he went through Pound Gap and
-eastward, down what is known as Gist's or Guesse's Fork of the Clinch in
-Wise County, Virginia, and then upon Bluestone, a tributary of New
-River. On the thirteenth of May he crossed Walker's route again at
-Inglis Ferry, near Draper's Meadows. On the seventeenth he passed into
-North Carolina through Flower or Wood's Gap toward his home on the
-Yadkin. He reached home on the eighteenth and found that his family had
-removed to Roanoke, thirty-five miles eastward, because of depredations
-of the Indians during the winter.
-
-Gist's journey was far more successful than Walker's. He found the fine
-fertile valleys of the Muskingum, Scioto, and Miami Rivers north of the
-Ohio, and he caught a glimpse of the beautiful meadows of Kentucky. He
-singularly made a complete circle about the land between the Monongahela
-and Kanawha Rivers, where the Ohio Company's grant of land was made. As
-he did not approach it on any side it is probable that he knew that only
-rough land lay there. Had it not been for the sudden breaking out of the
-old French War, the Ohio Company would undoubtedly have settled on
-lands in the Ohio Valley according to Gist's advice. Hostilities on the
-frontier soon drove back the farther settlements, and rendered
-activities in the land Gist had discovered out of the question, either
-on the part of land companies or private individuals.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-ANNALS OF THE ROAD
-
-
-With the close of Pontiac's Rebellion and the passing away of the war
-clouds which had hung so long over the West, ten thousand eyes turned
-longingly across the Alleghenies and Blue Ridge. War with all its
-horrors had yet brought something of good, for never before had the
-belief that a splendidly fertile empire lay to the westward taken such a
-hold upon the people of Virginia. Nothing more was needed but the
-positive assurance of large areas of good land, and a way to reach it.
-It was ten years after the close of Pontiac's war before both of these
-conditions were fulfilled.
-
-First came the definite assurance that the meadows of Kentucky were what
-Gist and others had reported them to be. The Proclamation of 1763,
-forbidding western settlement, did not forbid hunting in the West--and
-the great emigration which started as slow as a glacier was finally put
-into motion by the proof brought back to North Carolina and Virginia by
-the hunters (of whom mention has been made) who went over the mountains
-between 1763 and 1773. In 1766 Colonel James Smith, undaunted by his
-captivity among the Indians, hunted through the southern portion of
-Kentucky. In 1767 John Finley traded with the Indians in northern
-Kentucky, and James Harrod and Michael Stoner were in the southern
-portion of the country. Finally, in 1769 Daniel Boone came into the land
-"a second Adam in another Eden." Boone reached the edge of the beautiful
-Blue Grass Region and returned home in 1771 to tell of what he saw, and
-to bring his family "as soon as possible to live in Kentucky, which I
-esteemed a second paradise, at the risk of my life and fortune." In 1769
-also, the party of stout hunters headed by Colonel James Knox reached
-Kentucky, and hunted on the Green and Lower Cumberland Rivers; they were
-so long absent from home that they were given the name of "The Long
-Hunters." These, too, brought glowing descriptions of the fine meadows
-of _Ken-ta-kee_.
-
-At once the forests were filled with cohorts of surveyors--the vanguard
-of the host under whose feet the continent was soon to tremble. These
-surveyors represented the various land companies and the bounty land
-seekers, who had a claim to the two hundred thousand acres promised the
-Virginian soldiers in the old French war. Scores of cabins were raised
-in 1774 at Harrodsburg, near Danville, on the east fork of Salt River,
-on Dick's River, and on Salt River. Their erection marks the beginning
-of the first settlement of the land one year previous to the breaking
-out of the war of the Revolution.
-
-These first comers found their way to Kentucky by two routes--the
-Warriors' Path through Cumberland Gap, and the Ohio River, which they
-reached either by the Kittanning Path up the Juniata or by Braddock's or
-Forbes's Roads. Each route was dangerous and difficult beyond
-description. It was a terrible road from Cumberland to Pittsburg, and
-the journey down the Ohio was not more inviting. When the river was
-high and afforded safe navigation it was as much a highway for red men
-as for white--and these were treacherous times. When the river was low,
-a thousand natural obstructions tended to daunt even the bravest
-boatmen--and the Virginian backwoodsmen were not educated to contend
-with such a dangerous stream as the Ohio, with its changing currents,
-treacherous eddies, and thousands of sunken trees. One frontiersman who
-made the river trip at an early date, cautioned those who essayed the
-trip against rowing their boats at night; lest the sound of the oars
-should prevent the watchman from hearing the "riffling" of the water
-about the rocks and sunken trees, on which many a boat had been wrecked
-with all its precious freight. The danger of river travel down such a
-stream appealed with tremendous force to the early pioneers, with the
-result that the majority chose the land route.
-
-But what an alternative! A narrow trail in the forests six hundred miles
-in length was the only path. It had been traversed by many even as early
-as 1775, but each traveler had made it worse, and the story of the
-hardships of the journey through "the Wilderness" would make even the
-bravest pause. It is a hard journey today, one which cannot be made
-without taxing even the strongest; what was it before the route was
-dotted with cities and hamlets, before the road had been widened and
-bridged, before the mountains had been graded and the swamps drained,
-before the fierce lurking enemies had been driven away?
-
-Neither Walker nor Gist traversed what became the famed Wilderness Road
-to Kentucky. When the Shawanese raided Draper's Meadows, near Inglis
-Ferry, in 1755, they took their prisoners away on the trail through
-Powell's Valley toward Cumberland Gap; and the rescuing party which
-followed them were perhaps the first white men who traveled what became
-the great pioneer thoroughfare to Kentucky. It was, undoubtedly, the
-route followed by the early hunters who passed through Cumberland Gap
-and found the fertile meadows of which Dr. Walker was ignorant, and of
-which Christopher Gist caught only a faint glimpse. Settlements sprang
-up slowly beyond Inglis Ferry, but by the time of Boone's return in 1771
-a few families were on the upper waters of the Holston, and settlements
-had been made on the Watauga where Fort Watauga was soon to be built,
-and at Wolf Hills, now Abington. These settlements were all one hundred
-miles east of Cumberland Gap, and the little path thither was not yet
-marked for white man's use.
-
-But the brave Boone was as good as his word--and he did attempt to bring
-his family and five other families to Kentucky in the year 1773, over
-what was soon to be known as Boone's Road. This was the beginning of the
-great tide of immigration through Cumberland Gap, a social movement
-which for timeliness and ultimate success ranks as the most important in
-the history of the central West. This initial attempt was not a success,
-for the party was driven back by Indians, with loss, entirely
-discouraged. But from this time on, despite Dunmore's War which now
-broke out, the dream of western immigration could not be forgotten.
-
-But all the western movement was now put at hazard by the outbreak of
-this cruel, bloody war between the "Long Knives"--as the Virginians in
-the Monongahela country came to be called, from the sabres that hung at
-their loins--and the Shawanese north of the Ohio. As suggested, the
-preceding years had been marked by continual bloodshed. It is
-undoubtedly true that those Long Knives on the upper Ohio had been doing
-some dreadful slashing. Perhaps the provocations were as enormous as the
-crimes; surely the Indians to the north were the most bloodthirsty and
-cruel of any on the continent. At the same time it is safe to say that
-many of their white foes on the Ohio were inhuman marauders, whose
-principal occupation was that of shooting game for a living and Indians
-for sport. Even in the statement in Boone's autobiography there is a
-plain suggestion of a guilty conscience on the part of those of whom he
-wrote: "The settlers [in the Monongahela country], now aware that a
-general warfare would be commenced by the Indians, immediately sent an
-express to Williamsburg, the seat of government in Virginia,
-communicating their apprehensions and soliciting protection." How aware?
-Because some of the relatives of the Indian chieftain Logan had been
-basely murdered, while intoxicated, on Yellow Creek?
-
-The Virginian House of Burgesses was quick to answer this appeal of the
-western colonists, and Governor Dunmore's earnestness in arranging the
-campaign resulted in the short wars bearing his name. General Andrew
-Lewis, a hero of Braddock's defeat, was commissioned to raise an army of
-border settlers and march down the Great Kanawha; while Lord Dunmore
-went northward to Pittsburg, where, in the Monogahela country, he would
-recruit another army and descend the Ohio to the mouth of the Great
-Kanawha. Here the armies would unite to pierce the valley of the Scioto
-in which the hell-hound Shawanese dwelt.
-
-Lewis gathered an army of eleven hundred experienced borderers from the
-Watauga settlement and the Greenbriar Valley, and marched swiftly
-northward. But the enemy knew of his approach, and instead of joining
-Dunmore's army at the mouth of the Great Kanawha he met a barricaded
-Indian horde, equal in size to his own army, and the bloody and
-momentous battle of Point Pleasant was fought and won. Arriving at the
-Ohio, Lewis encamped on the point of land between the two rivers. Soon
-two hunters pursuing a deer encountered the Indian vanguard which was
-bearing down on the ill-placed army of whites. One hunter fell dead and
-the other returned with the alarming news. General Lewis, a pupil in
-that school on Braddock's Road, lit his pipe and ordered the assault.
-Two regiments advanced on the Indian line, which now ranged from river
-to river, completely cutting it off from retreat. Both colonels
-commanding were soon killed and their men began to fall back
-disconcerted. Reenforcements drove the redskins back to their
-entrenchments, and renewed confidence. But at last fighting became
-desperate. Among his Virginians, the brave Flemming, twice wounded, kept
-repeating his order, "Advance, outflank the enemy and get between them
-and the river." Among his desperate followers the calm voice of
-Cornstalk was heard all day long: "Be brave, be brave, be brave!" As in
-the battle of Bushy Run, where the hope of the West lay with Bouquet as
-it did now with Lewis, so at Point Pleasant no way of success was left,
-at the close of that October day, save in strategy. The white man did
-not learn to conquer the red until he learned to deal with him on his
-own terms of cunning and deceit.
-
-In desperation Lewis sent three companies up the Great Kanawha under
-cover of the bank to Crooked Creek. Ascending this stream with great
-caution, these heroes of the day rushed from its bed upon the enemy's
-flank, and the tide of the battle was turned. The Indians, though having
-suffered least, fell back across the Ohio to their villages to the
-northward. The proposed junction of the two white armies was achieved,
-but Lewis had already sufficiently awed the Shawanese, who came to
-Dunmore's Camp Charlotte in their valley, and gave their affirmation to
-the Fort Stanwix Treaty, which surrendered to the whites all the
-territory south of the Ohio and north of the Tennessee.
-
-In less than a year Boone went through the Gap alone to the "Falls of
-the Ohio" (Louisville), and returned in safety, more possessed than ever
-with the ambition to take his family to the El Dorado which he had
-discovered, and of which he spoke in the enthusiastic vein which has
-already been quoted. He had found the splendid lands of which Gist had
-guessed; he had found a straight path thither. All that was lacking was
-an impetus to turn a floodtide of Virginians and their neighbors into
-the new land.
-
-This came, too, within a year after the close of Dunmore's War--an
-artificial impetus in the shape of a land company, headed by a brave,
-enterprising man, Colonel Richard Henderson, with whom were associated
-eight other North Carolinians of high social standing. Richard Henderson
-was the son of Samuel Henderson (1700) and Elizabeth Williams (1714). He
-was born in Hanover County, Virginia, on the twentieth of April, 1735.
-His two well-known brothers, Nathaniel and Pleasant, were born in 1736
-and 1756, respectively. The sons were worthy of their good Scotch-Welsh
-ancestry. When Richard was about ten years of age his father moved from
-their home in Virginia to Granville County in the province of North
-Carolina. Here the elder Henderson was afterward appointed sheriff of
-his county, and the young Richard was soon able to assist his father by
-doing the business "of the sherriffltry."[4]
-
-After this practical introduction to the science of law young Richard
-turned to the theoretical study, and read law for a twelve-month with
-his cousin, Judge Williams. In that day a prospective barrister was
-compelled to get a certificate from the chief-justice of his colony;
-this he presented to the governor, who, being satisfied as to the
-candidate's acquirements, gave him a license. Richard Henderson's
-self-confidence and genuine talent are exhibited by the story which his
-brother records, of his attempting to obtain a license to practice law
-after the brief period of study mentioned above.
-
-Procuring a certificate from the chief-justice he presented himself to
-the governor of North Carolina as a candidate for a license.
-
-"How long have you read law and what books have you studied?" asked the
-governor.
-
-"Twelve months," replied young Henderson, naming the books he had used.
-
-The governor replied brusquely that it was wholly unnecessary for him to
-take the time to give an examination, as no one could in that length of
-time and with such books become proficient.
-
-"Sir," replied Richard Henderson not a whit dismayed, "I am an applicant
-for examination; it is your duty to examine me and if found worthy, to
-grant me a license; if otherwise, to refuse one."
-
-It can well be imagined how quickly the governor bristled up and how
-mercilessly he would "quiz" a lad who informed him in such a spirited
-manner what the duties of his office required of him. But the running
-fire of questions did not daunt the candidate more than had the
-governor's indifference--and the young Richard received at the close of
-the interview, not only a license, but what meant more, many encomiums
-from his governor.
-
-Henderson soon acquired a good practice and became a judge on the bench
-of the Superior Court. In 1774 the conflict with the British agent in
-North Carolina was precipitated, and the colonial government was
-abolished. It was at this time that Judge Henderson became interested in
-the desire of the Cherokee Indians to sell land. Henderson's plan was to
-purchase from the Cherokees the great territory lying south of the
-Kentucky River--one-half the present state of Kentucky. This was quite
-against the laws and traditions of the only colony which had any valid
-claim to the territory--Virginia, his native state--but this seemed to
-matter not to Henderson and his associates; these were John Williams,
-under whom Henderson had studied law, Leonard Henley Bullock, James
-Hogg, Nathaniel Thomas, David Hart, John Luttrell, and William
-Johnstone. At the very beginning of the century Virginia had passed an
-act forbidding the private purchase of lands from the Indians. The
-founders of Transylvania evidently doubted Virginia's sweeping claims
-to the entire interior of the continent--at any rate land companies
-seemed to be the only means by which the vast wildernesses beyond the
-mountains could be opened up and settled. Though Virginia soon proved
-the invalidity of the purchase, she at the same time was frank enough to
-admit that Henderson's Company had done a good work in giving an impetus
-to westward expansion, by appropriately recompensing the North
-Carolinians for their expenditure and labors.
-
-Henderson's purchase was gigantic in its proportions, embracing nearly
-twenty million acres. The consideration was ten thousand pounds
-sterling. The purchase was made at the advance settlement at Watauga,
-March 17, 1775--only a month before the outbreak at Lexington and
-Concord. Henderson employed Boone to assist in the transaction, and
-immediately after engaged him to mark out the road through Cumberland
-Gap to a settlement in Kentucky, where the Transylvania Company (as
-Henderson strangely named his organization) was to begin the occupation
-of the empire it had nominally secured. Of this Boone writes modestly
-that he was "solicited by a number of North Carolina gentlemen, that
-were about purchasing the lands lying on the south side of the Kentucky
-River, from the Cherokee Indians, to attend their treaty at Watauga, in
-March, 1775, to negotiate with them, and mention the boundaries of the
-purchase. This I accepted, and at the request of the same gentlemen
-undertook to mark out a road in the best passage from the settlement
-through the wilderness to Kentucky, with such assistance as I thought
-necessary to employ for such an important undertaking."
-
-As in the case of Nemacolin's Path across the Alleghenies, so now a
-second westward Indian pathway was blazed for white man's use; and if
-the Transylvania Colony can in no other respect be said to have been
-successful, it certainly conferred an inestimable good upon Virginia and
-North Carolina and the nation, when it marked out through the hand of
-Boone the Wilderness Road to Kentucky. From Watauga the path led up to
-the Gap, where it joined the great Warrior's Path which came down
-through Kentucky from the Scioto Valley in Ohio. For about fifty miles
-Boone's Road followed this path northward, whereupon, leaving the Indian
-trail, Boone bore to the west, marking his course on a buffalo trace
-toward "Hazel Patch" to the Rockcastle. The buffalo path was followed
-onward up Roundstone Creek, through "Boone's Gap" in Big Hill; through
-the present county of Madison, Kentucky; and down little Otter Creek to
-the Kentucky River. Here Boonesborough was built for the Transylvania
-Colony, which became the temporary center of Kentucky.
-
-Felix Walker, one of Boone's road-making party, made an autobiographical
-statement about 1824 of this brave attempt to cut a white man's path
-into Kentucky. From this statement these quotations from De Bow's
-_Review_ (1854) are pertinent:
-
-"The treaty (at Watauga) being concluded and the purchase made, we
-proceeded on our journey to meet Col. Daniel Boon, with other
-adventurers, bound to the same country; accordingly we met and
-rendezvoused at the Long Island on Holsteen river, united our small
-force with Colonel Boon and his associates, his brother, Squire Boon,
-and Col. Richard Callaway, of Virginia. Our company, when united,
-amounted to 30 persons. We then, by general consent, put ourselves under
-the management and control of Col. Boon, who was to be our pilot and
-conductor through the wilderness, to the promised land.... About the
-10th of March we put off from the Long Island, marked out our track with
-our hatchets, crossed Clinch and Powell's river, over Cumberland
-mountain, and crossed Cumberland river--came to a watercourse called by
-Col.--Rockcastle river; killed a fine bear on our way, camped all night
-and had an excellent supper. On leaving that river, we had to encounter
-and cut our way through a country of about twenty miles, entirely
-covered with dead brash, which we found a difficult and laborious task.
-At the end of which we arrived at the commencement of a cane country,
-traveled about thirty miles through thick cane and reed, and as the cane
-ceased, we began to discover the pleasing and rapturous appearance of
-the plains of Kentucky. A new sky and strange earth seemed to be
-presented to our view.... A sad reverse overtook us two days after, on
-our way to Kentucky river. On the 25th of March, 1775, we were fired on
-by the Indians, in our camp asleep, about an hour before day. Capt.
-Twetty was shot in both knees, and died the third day after. A black
-man, his body servant, killed dead; myself badly wounded; our company
-dispersed. So fatal and tragical an event cast a deep gloom of
-melancholy over all our prospects, and high calculations of long life
-and happy days in our newly-discovered country were prostrated; hope
-vanished from the most of us, and left us suspended in the tumult of
-uncertainty and conjecture. Col. Boon, and a few others, appeared to
-possess firmness and fortitude. In our calamitous situation, a
-circumstance occurred one morning after our misfortunes that proved the
-courage and stability of our few remaining men (for some had gone back).
-One of our men, who had run off at the fire of the Indians on our camp,
-was discovered peeping from behind a tree, by a black woman belonging
-to Colonel Callaway, while gathering some wood. She ran in and gave the
-alarm of Indians. Colonel Boon instantly caught his rifle, ordered the
-men to form, take trees, and give battle, and not to run till they saw
-him fall. They formed agreeably to his directions, and I believe they
-would have fought with equal bravery to any Spartan band ever brought to
-the field of action, when the man behind the tree announced his name and
-came in.... At length I was carried in a litter between two horses,
-twelve miles, to Kentucky river, where we made a station, and called it
-Boonsborough, situated in a plain on the south side of the river,
-wherein was a lick with two sulphur springs strongly impregnated.... In
-the sequel and conclusion of my narrative I must not neglect to give
-honor to whom honor is due. Colonel Boone conducted the company under
-his care through the wilderness, with great propriety, intrepidity and
-courage; and was I to enter an exception to any part of his conduct, it
-would be on the ground that he appeared void of fear and of
-consequence--too little caution for the enterprise. But let me, with
-feeling recollection and lasting gratitude, ever remember the
-unremitting kindness, sympathy, and attention paid to me by Col. Boone
-in my distress. He was my father, my physician, and friend; he attended
-me as his child, cured my wounds by the use of medicines from the woods,
-nursed me with paternal affection until I recovered, without the
-expectation of reward."
-
-[Illustration: PLAT OF BOONESBOROUGH
-[_Based on a copy of the original in possession of John Stevens_]]
-
-It was altogether fitting that among the very first to follow Boone's
-blazed road to Kentucky we should find Judge Henderson and his
-fellow-promoters of the Transylvania Company. Nothing shows more plainly
-the genuineness of their purposes and the heroism of their spirit. They
-were not foisting on their countrymen a hazardous scheme by which they
-should profit, while others bore the brunt of the toil and danger. True,
-Henderson had, purposely or unwittingly, ignored the technicality of
-Virginia's claim to the possession of the West; but, with an honesty
-unparalleled at that day in such matters, they met the representatives
-of the real owners of the lands they desired, and had purchased them
-and paid down the purchase money. There is almost no doubt that they
-could have satisfied Virginia's technicalities at a less cost; and then
-have gone, as so many have done, to fortify their possessions and "fight
-it out" with the genuine owners of the soil, who would eventually get
-nothing and lose everything.
-
-This Judge Henderson did not do; nor did he sit down comfortably at home
-and send others to turn his holdings into money. He arose and
-started--amid dangers that shall not be mentioned lest they be
-minimized--for far-away Kentucky, on the little roadway Boone was
-opening.
-
-Henderson's party left Fort Watauga March 20, 1775, and arrived at the
-infant Boonesborough April 20. The leader of the party fortunately kept
-a record, though meager, of this notable journey. This precious yellow
-diary is preserved by the Wisconsin Historical Society. It reads:
-
- "Monday March 20th 1775
-
-Having finished my Treaty with the Indians, at Wataugah Sett out for
-Louisa & arrived at John Shelbeys in the Evening--Tuesday the 21^{st}
-went to M^r John Seviers in Company of Col^o Williams & Col^o Hart &
-staid that day--Wednesday the 22^d--Mess^{rs} Williams & Hart set off
-Home & I staid with M^r Sevier Thursday 23^d Still at M^r Seviers--N. B.
-because our Horses were lost tho. not uneasiy as Mess^{rs} Hart and
-Letteral made a poor Hand of Traveling--
-
-Friday 24^{th} Sett of in pursuit of M^r Hart & Letteral. Overtook them
-Both & Lodged at Capt Bledsoe's--
-
-Satterday the 25^{th}. came to M^{rs} Callaway's.
-
-Sunday 26^{th} staid there.
-
-Monday 27^{th} Emplied in storeing away Goods.
-
-Tuesday 28^{th}--Sett off for Louisa
-
-Wednesday Continued Journey. N. B. M^r Luttrel not come up.
-
-Thursday 30^{th} Arrived at Cap^t Martins in Powels Valey--
-
-Fryday 31^{st} Imploy'd in makeing house to secure the Waggons as we
-could not possibly clear the road any further. N. B. My Waggon & Sam^l
-Hendersons came up in A.M. W. Luttrel in the Evin^g
-
-Satterday the 1 day of April--Imploy'd in making ready for packing &^c
-M^r Hart came up--
-
-Sunday 2^d Continued at Capt^t Martins Waiting for the Waggon Monday the
-3^d Still continued Waiting for the Waggon--
-
-Tuesday the 4^{th}--Still continued Waiting for the Waggon. The same
-evening the Waggon arrived--tho so Late we cood Not proceed--
-
-Wednesday 5^{th} Started off with our pack Horses ab^t. 3 oClock Traveld
-about 5 Miles to a Large Spring. The Same evening M^r Litteral went out
-a Hunting & has Not yet returned. [Next. Both Henderson and Sa^l Durning
-went in pursuit of him--_erased in diary_.] The same evening Sam^l.
-Hendersons & John Farriers Horses took a Scare with there packs Run away
-with Sams Saddle & Briddle. Farrars Saddle Baggs other things Damaged.
-Next Morning Sam^l Henderson & Farrar went in pursuit of there Horses.
-Saddle &c--the same Evening John Farrar returnd to our Camp with News
-that they had found all there goods. But two of there horses were
-Missing
-
-Thursday 6 sent John Farrar Back with provission to meet & Assist Sam
-Henderson with orders to stay with him, till they overtook Us, as we
-promis'd to wait for them at Cumberland Gap
-
-Fryday the 7^{th}--Sam^l. Henderson & John Farrar Returned to us with
-there Horses Packs & every thing safe.
-
-we having waited at our Camp 10 miles below Martins for them
-
-[Thursday the 6^{th}--_erased_]. Traveled about Six Miles to the last
-Settlement in Powels Valey where we were obliged to stop and kill a Beef
-wait for Sam Henderson & [N. B?] this was done whilst waiting for Sam^l
-Henderson as afo[re mentioned]
-
-Fryday the 7^{th}. About Brake of Day begun to snow, About 11 ^oClock
-received a letter from M^r Littereals camp that were five persons kill'd
-on the road to the Cantuckee by Indians--Cap^t Hart, uppon the receipt
-of this News Retreated back with his Company & determin'd to Settle in
-the Valley to make Corn for the Cantuckey People
-
-The same Day Received a Letter from Da^n. Boone. that his Company was
-fired uppon by Indians Kill'd Two of his men--tho he kept the ground &
-saved the Baggage &c.
-
-Satterday the 8^{th}. Started ab^t. 10 ^oClock Cross'd Cumberland Gap
-about 4 Miles Met about 40 persons Returning from the Cantuckey. on
-Acc^t. of the Late Murder by the Indians could prevail one one [_sic_]
-only to return. Mem^o Several Virginians who were with us returned.
-
-Sunday the 9^{th}. Arrived at Cumberland River where we met Rob^t Wills
-& his son returning &c
-
-Monday 10^{th}. Dispach^d Cap^t Cocke to the Cantukey to Inform Cap^t
-Boone that we were on the road Continued at Camp that day on Acc^t of
-the Badness of the Wether
-
-Tuesday 11^{th} started from Cumberl^d. made a very good days Travel of
-Near 20 Mile Kill'd Beef &c.
-
-Wednesday the 12 Travel'd about 5 Miles, prevented going any further by
-the rains & high water at Richland Creek--
-
-Thursday the 13^{th}. Last Night arrived men [of] our Camp Stewart & ten
-other men, campt within half mile of us on there Return from Lousia
-Campt. that Night at Larrel River--they had well nigh turnd three or
-four of our Virg & us back.
-
-Fryday the 14. Traveld about 12 Miles to a Camp &c
-
-Satterday the 15^{th}. Traveld about 18 Miles & campt on the North side
-of Rock Castle River.--this River's a fork of Cumberland--lost an ax
-this morn at Camp.
-
-Sunday the 16^{th}. About 12 oClock Met Jemes McAfee with 18 other
-persons Returning from Cantuckey Traveld about 22 Miles and Campt on the
-head of Dicks River where Luna from Mc.Afees camp came to us resolved to
-go to the Louisa--
-
-Monday 17^{th} Started about 3 oClock prevented by Rain. Traveld 7 Miles
-
-Tuesday the 18^{th}. Traveld about 16 Miles, met Michael Stoner with
-Pack Horses to assist us. Campt that Night in the Edge of the Rich
-Land--Stoner brought us Excellent Beef in plenty
-
-Wednesday 19^{th}. Traveld about 16 Miles Campt on Oter Creek--a good
-mill place
-
-Thursday the 20^{th}. Arrived at Fort Boone. on the Mouth of Oter Creek
-Cantukey River--where we were Saluted by a running fire of about 25
-Guns; all that was then at Fort--The men appeared in high Spirits &
-much rejoiced on our arrival"[5]
-
-Colonel Henderson (as the leader of the Transylvania Colony is best
-known) arrived at Boonesborough one day after the outbreak of the
-Revolutionary struggle at Lexington and Concord, and on his own fortieth
-birthday.
-
-A clearer glimpse of the fortunes of this company of pilgrims who
-followed in Boone's wake is preserved for us in the journal kept by
-William Calk, who was with Hart's party that Henderson met at Martin's
-cabin on the second of April. The original manuscript is in the
-possession of the family of the late Mr. Thomas Calk, near Mt. Sterling,
-Kentucky.
-
-It reads:
-
-"1775 Mond. 13th--I set out from prince wm. to travel to caintuck on
-tuesday Night our company all got together at Mr. Prises on rapadan
-which was Abraham hanks[6] philip Drake Eaneck Smith Robert Whitledge &
-my Self, thear Abrams Dogs leg got Broke By Drake's Dog.
-
-Wedns. 15th,--We started early from prises made a good Days travel &
-lodge this night at Mr. Cars on North fork James River.
-
-Thurs. 16th,--We started early it raind Chief part of the Day Snowd in
-the Eavening very hard & was very Coald we traveld all Day & got to Mr.
-Blacks at the foot of the Blue Ridge.
-
-fryd. 17th--We start early cross the Ridge the wind Blows very hard &
-cold and lodge at James loyls.
-
-Satrd. 18th--We git this Day to William Andersons at Crows ferrey &
-there we Stay till monday morning.
-
-Mond. 20th--We start early cross the fery and lodge this night at Wm.
-Adamses on the head of Catauby.
-
-tuesd. 21st--We start early and git over pepers ferey on new river &
-lodge at pepers this night.
-
-Wedns 22d--We start early and git to foart Chissel whear we git some
-good loaf Bread & good whiskey.
-
-thurs 23d--we start early & travel till a good while in the Night and
-git to major Cammels on holston River.
-
-fryday 24th--we start early & turn out of the wagon Road to go across
-the mountains to go by Danil Smiths we loose Driver Come to a turabel
-mountain that tired us all almost to death to git over it & we lodge
-this night on the Lawrel fork of holston under agrait mountain & Roast a
-fine fat turkey for our suppers & Eat it without aney Bread.
-
-Satrd 25th--We start early travel over Some more very Bad mountains one
-that is caled Clinch mountain & we git this night to Danil Smiths on
-Clinch and there we staid till thursday morning on tuesday night &
-wednesday morning it snowd Very hard and was very Coald & we hunted a
-good deal there while we staid in Rough mountains and kild three deer &
-one turkey Eanock Abram & I got lost tuesday night & it a snowing &
-Should a lain in the mountains had not I a had a pocket compas By which
-I got in a littel in the night and fired guns and they heard them and
-caim in By the Repoart.
-
-thursd 30th--We set out again & went down to Elk gardin and there suplid
-our Selves With Seed Corn & irish tators then we went on a littel way I
-turnd my hors to drive afore me & he got scard ran away threw Down the
-Saddel Bags and broke three of our powder goards & Abrams beast Burst
-open a walet of corn & lost a good Deal & made a turrabel flustration
-amongst the Reast of the Horses Drakes mair run against a sapling & noct
-it down we cacht them all agin & went on & lodgd at John Duncans.
-
-fryd 31st--We Suployd our Selves at Dunkans with a 108 pounds of Bacon &
-went on again to Brileys mill & suployd our Selves with meal & lodged
-this night on Clinch By a large cainbraike & cuckt our Suppers.
-
-April Satrd first--this morning there is ice at our camp half inch thick
-we start early & travel this Day along a verey Bad hilley way cross one
-creek whear the horses almost got mired some fell in & all wet their
-loads we cross Clinch River & travell till late in the Night & camp on
-Cove creek having two men with us that wair pilates.
-
-Sund 2d--this morning is a very hard frost we Start early travel over
-powels mountain and camp in the head of Powels valey whear there is
-verey good food.
-
-mond 3d We Start early travel down the valey cross powels River go some
-throu the woods without aney track cross some Bad hils git into
-hendersons Road camp on a creek in powels valey.
-
-Tuesday 4th Raney, we Start about 10 oclock and git down to Capt.
-martins in the valey where we over take Coln henderson & his Companey
-Bound for Caintuck & there we camp this Night there they were Broiling &
-Eating Beef without Bread.
-
-Wednesday 5th Breaks away fair & we go on down the valey & camp on
-indian Creek we had this creek to cross maney times & very Bad Banks
-Abrams saddel turnd & the load all fell in we go out this Eavening &
-kill two Deer.
-
-thurs 6th this morning is ahard frost & we wait at Camp for Coln
-henderson & companey to come up they come up about 12 o'clock & we join
-with them and camp there Still this night waiting for some part of the
-companey that had thier horses ran away with their packs.
-
-fryday 7th this morning is a very hard snowey morning we still continue
-at Camp Being in number about 40 men & Some neagros this Eaven--Comes a
-letter from Capt. Boone at caintuck of the indians doing mischief and
-some turns back.
-
-1775
-
-Satrd April 8th--We all pact up and started crost Cumberland gap about
-one oclock this Day We Met a great maney peopel turned Back for fear of
-the indians but our Companey goes on Still with good courage we come to
-a very ugly Creek with steep Banks & have it to cross several times on
-this Creek we camp this night.
-
-Sunday 9th--this morning we wait at camp for the cattle to Be drove up
-to kill a Beef tis late Before they come & peopel makes out alittel
-snack & agree to go on till Night we git to Cumberland River & there we
-camp meet 2 more men turn Back.
-
-Monday 10th--this is alowry morning & very like for Rain & we keep at
-Camp this day and some goes out ahunting. I & two more goes up avery
-large mountain Near the tops we saw the track of two indians & whear
-they had lain unter some Rocks some of the companey went over the River
-a bofelo hunting but found None at night Capt. hart comes up with his
-packs & there they hide some of thier lead to lighten thier packs that
-they may travel faster.
-
-tuesday 11th--this is a very loury morning & like for Rain But we all
-agree to start Early we cross Cumberland River & travel Down it about 10
-miles through Some turrabel cainbrakes as we went down abrams mair ran
-into the River with Her load & Swam over he folowd her & got on her &
-made her Swim Back agin it is a very raney Eavening we take up Camp near
-Richland Creek they kill a beef Mr. Drake Bakes Bread without washing
-his hands we Keep Sentry this Night for fear of the indians.
-
-Wednesday 12th this is a Raney morning But we pack up & go on we come to
-Richland Creek it is high we toat our packs over on a tree & swim our
-horses over & there we meet another Companey going Back they tell such
-News Abram & Drake is afraid to go aney further there we camp this
-night.
-
-thursday 13th this morning the weather Seems to breake & Be fair Abram &
-Drake turn Back we go on & git to loral River we come to a creek Before
-wheare we are able to unload & toate our packs over on a log this day we
-meet about 20 more turning Back we are obligd to toat our packs over
-loral river & swim our horses one hors Ran in with his pack & lost it in
-the River & they got it agin.
-
-fryday 14th--this is a clear morning with a smart frost we go on & have
-a very mire Road and camp this Night on a creek of loral River and are
-surprisd at camp By a wolf.
-
-Satterday 15th clear with a Small frost we start early we meet Some men
-that turns & goes With us we travel this Day through the plais caled the
-Bressh & crofs Rockcass River & camp ther this Night & have fine food
-for our horses.
-
-Sunday 16th--cloudy & warm we start early & go on about 2 mile down the
-River and then turn up a creek that we crost about 50 times Some very
-bad foards with a great Deal of very good land on it in the Eavening we
-git over to the waters of Caintuck & go a littel Down the creek & there
-we camp keep sentry the forepart of the night it Rains very har all
-night.
-
-monday 17th this is a very rany morning But breaks about a 11 oclock &
-we go on and camp this Night in several companeys on Some of the creeks
-of Caintuck.
-
-tuesday 18th fair & cool and we go on about 10 oclock we meet 4 men from
-Boons camp that caim to cunduck us on we camp this night just on the
-Begining of the good land near the Blue lick they kill 2 bofelos this
-Eavening.
-
-Wednesd 19th Smart frost this morning they kill 3 bofelos about 11
-oclock we come to where the indians fired on Boons company & kild 2 men
-& a dog & wounded one man in the thigh we campt this night on oter
-creek.
-
-thursday 20th this morning is clear and cool. We start early and git
-Down to caintuck to Boons foart about 12 o'clock wheare we stop they
-come out to meet us & welcom us in with a voley of guns.
-
-fryday 21st warm this Day they Begin laying off lots in the town and
-prearing for peopel to go to worck to make corn.
-
-Satterday 22nd they finish laying out lots this Eavening I went
-a-fishing and cactht 3 cats they meet in the night to Draw for choise
-of lots but refer it till morning
-
-1775
-
-Sunday April 23d this morning the peopel meets & Draws for chois of
-loots this is a very warm day.
-
-monday 24th We all view our loots & Some Dont like them about 12 oclock
-the Combses come to town & Next morning they make them a bark canew and
-Set off down the River to meet their Companey.
-
-tuesday 25th in the eavening we git us a plaise at the mouth of the
-creek & begin clearing.
-
-Wednesday 26th We Begin Building us a house & a plaise of Defense to
-Keep the indians off this day we Begin to live without Bread.
-
-thursday 27th Raney all Day But We Still keep about our house.
-
-Satterday 29th--We git our house kivered with Bark & move our things
-into it at Night and Begin houskeeping Eanock Smith Robert Whitledge &
-my Self.
-
-May, Monday first I go out to look for my mair and saw 4 bufelos the
-Being the first that I Saw & I shot one of them but did not git him when
-I caim Home Eanock & Robin had found the mair & was gone out a hunting
-& did Not come in for--Days and kild only one Deer.
-
-tuesday 2d I went out in the morning & kild a turkey and come in & got
-some on for my breakfast and then went & Sot in to clearing for
-Corn."[7]
-
-The personal statement of Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas is of interest in this
-connection. She was one of Col. Calloway's company that followed
-Henderson in September 1775. This statement is preserved in the library
-of the Wisconsin Historical Society and reads:
-
-"I was born in Virginia on the 4^{th} day of Sept 1764 In Rockbridge
-county near the Natural Bridge my father moved on the North Fork of
-Holston within 4 or 5 miles of Abbingdon & remained there two or three
-years and in March 1775 we moved down Holstien near the Big Island,
-[Long Island] where we remained until Sept 1775 when Col Calloway and
-his company came along going to Kentucky, when my father William Pogue
-packed up and came with him with our family, Col Boone and with his
-wife and family and Col Hugh Mcgary, Thomas Denton and Richard Hogan
-were on the road before us and when we arrived at Boonesborough the
-latter part of September There was only fur [four] or six cabbins built
-along on the Bank of the Kentucky river but not picketted in being open
-on two sides."[8]
-
-This was the great pathway of early pioneers to Kentucky, and the course
-of the marvelous floodtide of immigration which swept over the mountains
-in the last three decades of the eighteenth century.
-
-[Illustration: FILSON'S MAP OF KENTUCKY (1784)]
-
-The itineraries of early travelers describe the Wilderness Road in
-definite terms. One of the earliest is that given by John Filson, whose
-history of Kentucky was published as early as 1784. It described the
-route from Philadelphia to Louisville (eight hundred and twenty-six
-miles), as follows:
-
- Miles
- From Philadelphia to Lancaster, 66
- To Wright's on the Susquehanna, 10
- To Yorktown, 12
- To Abbotstown, 15
- To Hunterstown, 10
- To mountain at Black's Gap, 3
- To other side of the mountain, 7
- To Stone-house Tavern, 25
- To Wadkin's Ferry on Potomac 14
- To Martinsburg, 13
- To Winchester, 13
- To Newtown, 8
- To Stoverstown, 10
- To Woodstock, 12
- To Shenandoah River, 15
- To North Branch Shenandoah, 29
- To Staunton, 15
- To North Fork James River, 37
- To Botetourt C. H., 12
- To Woods on Catawba River 21
- To Paterson.s. on Roanoke, 9
- To Alleghany Mountain, 8
- To New River, 12
- To Forks of Road, 16
- To Fort Chissel, 12
- To Stone Mill, 11
- To Boyds, 8
- To Head of Holstein, 5
- To Washington C. H., 45
- To the Block-house, 35
- To Powell Mountain, 33
- To Walden's Ridge, 3
- To Valley Station, 4
- To Martin's Cabin, 25
- To Cumberland Mountain, 20
- To Cumberland River, 13
- To Flat Lick, 9
- To Stinking Creek, 2
- To Richland Creek, 7
- Down Richland Creek, 8
- To Racoon Spring, 6
- To Laurel River, 2
- To Hazel Patch, 15
- To Rockcastle River, 10
- To English Station, 25
- To Col. Edward's Crab Orchard, 3
- To Whitley's Station, 5
- To Logan's Station, 5
- To Clark's Station, 7
- To Crow's Station, 4
- To Harrod's Station, 3
- To Harlands', 4
- To Harbisons, 10
- To Bardstown, 25
- To Salt Works, 25
- To Falls of the Ohio, 20
- ---
- 826
-
-Mr. Speed preserves for us the itinerary with "observations and
-occurrences" of William Brown, the father of Judge Alfred M. Brown, of
-Elizabeth town, Kentucky. "It is contained in a small manuscript book,"
-writes Mr. Speed, "which has been preserved in the family. It is
-especially interesting from the fact that immediately upon his arrival
-in Kentucky, by the journey of which he made a complete record, the
-Battle of Blue Licks occurred. He aided in burying the slain, among whom
-was his own brother, James Brown." The itinerary and "observations and
-occurrences" follow:[9]
-
- (1782)
-
- "Hanover to Richmond, Henrico Co., 18
- To Widow Simpson's, Chesterford, 14
- To Powhatan Co. House, 16
- To Joseph Thompson's at the forks of
- the road, 8
- To Long's Ordinary, Buckingham, 9
- To Hoolen's on Willis Creek, 8
- To Mrs. Sanders, Cumberland, 3
- To Widow Thompson's passing Hood's and
- Swiney's, 27
- To Captain Hunter's, 5
- To Thompson's on the Long Mo., Campbell, 5
- To Dupriest, 6
- To New London, 10
- To Liberty Town, 16
- To Yearley's, at Goose Creek, Bedford, 12
- To M. Loland, at the Blue Ridge Gap, 6
- To Big Flat Lick, 10
- To Fort Lewis, Botetourt, 12
- To Hans' Meadows, 20
- To English's Ferry, New River, 12
- To Fort Chiswell, 30
- To Atkins' Ordinary, 19
- To Mid Fork Holstein, --
- To Cross White's, Montgomery, 3
- To Col. Arthur Campbell's, 3
- To 7-mile Ford of Holstein, 6
- To Maj. Dysart's Mill, 12
- To Washington Co. House, 10
- To Head of Reedy Creek, Sullivan Co.,
- North Carolina, 20
- To Block House, 13
- To North Fork Holstein, 2
- To Moccasin Gap, 5
- To Clinch River, 11
- To Ford of Stock Creek, 2
- To Little Flat Lick, 5
- To North Fork of Clinch, 1
- To Powell's Mountain, 1
- To Wallan Ridge, 5
- To Valley Station, 5
- To Powell's River, 2
- To Glade Spring, 4
- To Martin's Station, 19
- To Big Spring, 12
- To Cumberland Mountain Gap, 8
- To Yellow Creek, 2
- To Cumberland River, 13
- To Big Flat Lick, 9
- To Little Richland Creek, 10
- To Big Richland Creek, 1
- To Robinson Creek, 10
- To Raccoon Spring, 1
- To Laurel River, 2
- To Little Laurel River, 5
- To Raccoon Creek, 8
- To Hazel Patch, 4
- To Rockcastle Creek, 6
- To Rockcastle River, 7
- To Scaggs' Creek, 5
- To Head of Dicks River, 15
- To English Station, 8
- To Crab Orchard, 3
- To Logan's Old Fort, 11
- To Doehurty's Station, 8
- To Harrod's Station, 6
- To Harrodsburg, 6
- From Hanover to Harrodsburg is 555 miles.
-
-_Observations and Occurrences_: Set Out from Hanover Monday, 27th May,
-1782; arrived at the Block-house about the first week in July. The road
-from Hanover to this place is generally very good; crossing the Blue
-Ridge is not bad; there is not more than a small hill with some winding
-to go over. Neither is the Alleghany Mountain by any means difficult at
-this gap. There are one or two high hills about New River and Fort
-Chiswell. The ford of New River is rather bad; therefore we thought it
-advisable to cross in the ferry-boat. This is generally a good-watered
-road as far as the Block-house. We waited hereabouts near two weeks for
-company, and then set out for the wilderness with twelve men and ten
-guns, this being Thursday, 18th July. The road from this until you get
-over Wallen's Ridge generally is bad, some part very much so,
-particularly about Stock Creek and Stock Creek Ridge. It is a very
-mountainous country hereabout, but there is some fine land in the
-bottoms, near the watercourses, in narrow slips. It will be but a thin
-settled country whenever it is settled. The fords of Holstein and Clinch
-are both good in dry weather, but in a rainy season you are often
-obliged to raft over. From them along down Powell's Valley until you get
-to Cumberland Gap is pretty good; this valley is formed by Cumberland
-Mountain on the northwest, and Powell Mountain on the southeast, and
-appears to bear from northeast southwestwardly, and is, I suppose, about
-one hundred miles in length, and from ten to twelve miles in breadth.
-The land generally is good, and is an exceeding well-watered country, as
-well as the country on Holstein River, abounding with fine springs and
-little brooks. For about fifty miles, as you travel along the valley,
-Cumberland Mountain appears to be a very high ridge of white rocks,
-inaccessible in most places to either man or beast, and affords a wild,
-romantic prospect. The way through the gap is not very difficult, but
-from its situation travelers may be attacked in some places, crossing
-the mountain, by the enemy to a very great disadvantage. From thence
-until you pass Rockcastle River there is very little good road; this
-tract of country is very mountainous, and badly watered along the trace,
-especially for springs. There is some good land on the water-courses,
-and just on this side Cumberland River appears to be a good tract, and
-within a few years I expect to have a settlement on it. Some parts of
-the road are very miry in rainy weather. The fords of Cumberland and
-Rockcastle are both good unless the waters be too high; after you cross
-Rockcastle there are a few high hills, and the rest of the way tolerable
-good; the land appears to be rather weak, chiefly timbered with oak,
-etc. The first of the Kentucky waters you touch upon is the head of
-Dick's River, just eight miles from English's. Here we arrived Thursday,
-25th inst., which is just seven days since we started from the
-Block-house. Monday, 29th inst., I got to Harrodsburg, and saw brother
-James. The next day we parted, as he was about setting off on a journey
-to Cumberland.
-
-On Monday, August 19th, Colonel John Todd, with a party of one hundred
-and eighty-two of our men, attacked a body of Indians, supposed to
-number six or seven hundred, at the Blue Lick, and was defeated, with
-the loss of sixty-five persons missing and slain.
-
-_Officers lost_: Colonels--John Todd and Stephen Trigg; Majors--Edward
-Bulger and Silas Harlan; Captains--W. McBride, John Gordon, Jos.
-Kincaid, and Clough Overton; Lieutenants--W. Givens, and John Kennedy;
-Ensign--John McMurtry.
-
-In this action brother James fell. On Saturday 24th inst., Colonel
-Logan, with four hundred and seventy men, went on the battle-ground and
-buried the slain; found on the field, slain, forty-three men, missing,
-twenty-two, in all sixty-five.
-
-I traveled but little about the country. From English's to Harrodsburg
-was the farthest west, and from Logan's Fort to the Blue Lick the
-farthest north. Thus far the land was generally good--except near and
-about the Lick it was very poor and badly timbered--generally badly
-watered, but pretty well timbered. At Richmond Ford, on the Kentucky
-River, the bank a little below the ford appears to be largely upward of
-a hundred feet perpendicular of rock.
-
-On my return to Hanover I set off from John Craigs' Monday, 23d
-September, 1782; left English's Tuesday, 1 o'clock, arrived at the
-Block-house the Monday evening following, and kept on the same route
-downward chiefly that I traveled out. Nothing material occurred to me.
-Got to Hanover sometime about the last of October the same year."
-
-Thomas Speed's grandfather gives the following itinerary from "Charlotte
-Court-House to Kentucky" under date of 1790:
-
- Miles
- "From Charlotte Court-House
- to Campbell Court-House, 41
- To New London, 13
- To Colonel James Callaway's, 3
- To Liberty, 13
- To Colonel Flemming's, 28
- To Big Lick, 2
- To Mrs. Kent's, 20
- To English's Ferry, 20
- To Carter's, 13
- To Fort Chissel, 12
- To the Stone-mill, 11
- To Adkins', 16
- To Russell Place, 16
- To Greenaway's, 14
- To Washington Court-House, 6
- To the Block-house, 35
- To Farriss's, 5
- To Clinch River, 12
- To Scott's Station, 12
- To Cox's at Powell River, 10
- To Martin's Station, 2
- To--[manuscript defaced]
- To Cumberland Mountain 3
- To Cumberland River, 15
- To Flat Lick, 9
- To Stinking Creek, 2
- To Richland Creek, 7
- To Raccoon Spring, 14
- To Laurel River, 2
- To Hazel Patch, 15
- To Rockcastle, 10
- To--[manuscript defaced]."
-
-The foregoing itineraries afford us some conception of the settlements
-and "improvements" that sprang up along the winding thoroughfare from
-Virginia to Kentucky. The writer has sought with some care to know more
-of these--of the modes of travel, the entertainment which was afforded
-along the road to men and beasts, and the social relation of the greater
-settlements in Virginia and Kentucky to this thin line of human lives
-across the continent. Very little information has been secured. It is
-plain that the great immigration to Kentucky would have been out of the
-question had there been no means of succor and assistance along the
-road. There were many who gained their livelihood as pioneer innkeepers
-and provisioned along Boone's Road. Among the very few of these of whom
-any record is left, Captain Joseph Martin is perhaps the most prominent
-and most worthy of remembrance. Martin's "cabin" or "station," as it is
-variously termed, occupied a strategic point in far-famed Powell's
-Valley, one hundred and eighty miles west of Inglis Ferry, twenty miles
-east of Cumberland Gap and about one hundred and thirty miles southeast
-of Crab Orchard and Boonesborough. Captain Martin was Virginia Agent
-for Indian affairs, and was the most prominent man in the scattered
-settlements in Powell's Valley, where he was living at the time of the
-founding of Boonesborough. Later he made his headquarters at Long Island
-in North Carolina. It is plain from Colonel Henderson's journal that
-wagons could proceed along Boone's Road in 1775 no further than Martin's
-cabin. Here everything was transferred to the packhorses. Several
-letters from Colonel Henderson to Captain Martin, preserved by the
-Wisconsin Historical Society, give us a glimpse of silent Powell's
-Valley. One of them reads:
-
- "Boonesborough
- 12^{th} June 1775
-
- Dear Sir:
-
- M^r Ralph Williams, David Burnay, and William Mellar will apply to
- you for salt and other things which we left with you and was sent
- for us since we came away--Please to deliver to them, or those they
- may employ what they ask for, and take a receipt--Also write me a
- few lines informing me, what you have sent &c by hem & by whom--I
- long much to hear from you, pray write me at Large, how the matter
- goes with you in the valey, as well as what passes in Virginia--If
- the pack-horsemen should want any thing towards securing my books
- from Damage pack-saddles, provisions, or any thing which you see is
- necessary; please to let them have it on our acc^t.--All things
- goes well hitherto with us, I hope the[y] do with you would have
- sent your Mares but am afraid they are not done horsing They will
- be safely brought by my brother in a few weeks
-
- I am D^r Sir your
- Hble Serv^t
- Rich^d. Henderson
- M^r Joseph Martin in the Valley"[10]
-
-On July 20 he wrote again:
-
-"Am sorry to hear that the People in the valey are distressed for
-provisions and ammunition have given some directions to my brother to
-assist you a little with Powder.
-
-Standly, I suppose has before now delivered your Inglish mare, and the
-other you'l receive by my brother--when we meet will render an acc^t.
-for my behaviour in Keeping them so long--We did not forget you at the
-time of making Laws, your part of the Country is too remote from ours to
-attend our Convention you must have Laws made by an Assembly of your
-own, I have prepared a plan which I hope you'l approve but more of that
-when we meet which I hope will be soon, tho 'til Col. Boone comes cant
-say when--Am extreamly sorry for the affair with the Indians on the 23^d
-of last month. I wish it may not have a bad effect, but will use my
-endeavors to find out who they were & have the matter settled--your
-spirited conduct gives me great Pleasure--Keep your men in heart if
-possible, now is our time, the Indians must not drive us--depend upon it
-that the Chief men and warriors of the Cherokees will not countenance
-what there men attempted and will punish them--Pray my Dear Sir dont let
-any person settle Lower down the valey I am affraid they are now too
-low & must come away I did not want any person to settle yet below
-Cumberland gap--My Brother will [tell] you of the news of these
-parts--in haste D^r Sir...."
-
-In December, John Williams wrote Captain Martin from Boonesborough and
-his letter gives us a closer insight into affairs along Boone's Road:
-
-"... With respect to the complaints of the inhabitants of Powells Valley
-with regard to cattle being lodged there, I should think it altogether
-unjust than [that] non-inhabitants should bring in cattle to destroy and
-eat up the range of the inhabitants' stock; Yet, Sir, I cannot conceive
-that Col. Hart's stopping his stock there, when on their way here, to
-recruit them for their journey, can be the least infringement. Col. Hart
-is a proprietor, & [has] as great a right in the country as any one man.
-In the Valley are many lands yet unentered; and certainly if there be a
-right in letting stock into the range, he has a right equal to any man
-alive. I therefore hope you will endeavor to convince the inhabitants
-thereof, and that it is no indulgence to Col. Hart, but a right he
-claims, and what I think him justly entitled to.
-
-I hope to have the pleasure of seeing you at Boonesborough the 21^{st}
-instant--in the meantime making not the least doubt but that you will
-use every justifiable Method in Keeping up peace and harmony in the
-Valley"[11]
-
-As indicated in the former letter, the emigrants from the colonies were
-encroaching upon the Cherokee lands beyond the Henderson purchase.
-Joseph Martin was under the necessity of protesting to the Assembly of
-North Carolina against settlers from that state pressing beyond the
-Henderson lands and settling in the Cherokee country.[12] It is seen by
-Colonel Henderson's letter that Boone's Road marked the most westerly
-limit to which pioneers could go with safety. Irresponsible Cherokees
-invaded the Henderson purchase, and equally irresponsible (or ignorant)
-whites invaded the Cherokee country. The difficulty probably lay in not
-having a definite, plain boundary line that he who ran might recognize.
-
-The settlement here in Powell's Valley meant everything to the pioneers
-of Kentucky. This is made additionally plain by the attempt of
-interested parties to have Captain Martin's Indian Agency removed from
-Long Island to a point on Boone's Road near Cumberland Gap. In December
-1782 William Christian wrote Governor Harrison from "Great [Long]
-Island," explaining the dependence of the inhabitants (undoubtedly both
-red and white) upon Martin in time of need. "I find," he wrote, "that
-the party here, consisting of fifty odd, are living on Col. Martin's
-corn. Whenever a family begins to be in a starving condition, it is very
-probable they will push for this place & throw themselves upon him for
-bread."[13]
-
-Fourteen days later he wrote from Mahanaim to "Hon. Col. Sampson
-Matthews" of Richmond; protesting against Virginia's Indian Agency being
-kept at Long Island, North Carolina; and urging that it be removed to
-near Cumberland Gap:
-
-"The Gap is near half way betwixt our settlements on Holston and
-Kentucky, and a post there would be a resting place for our poor
-citizens going back and forward, and would be a great means of saving
-the lives of hundreds of them. For it seldom happens that Indians will
-kill people near where they trade; & it is thereabouts the most of the
-mischief on the road has been done.... I view the change I propose as of
-great importance to the frontier of Washington, [County] to our people
-journeying to & from Kentucky, particularly the poor families moving
-out...."[14]
-
-It was, throughout the eighteenth century, exceedingly dangerous to
-travel Boone's Road; and those who journeyed either way joined together
-and traveled in "companies." Indeed there was risk enough for the most
-daring, in any case; but a well-armed "company" of tried pioneers on
-Boone's Road was a dangerous game upon which to prey. It was customary
-to advertise the departure of a company either from Virginia or
-Kentucky, in local papers; in order that any desiring to make the
-journey might know of the intended departure. The principal rendezvous
-in Kentucky was the frontier settlement of Crab Orchard. Certain of
-these advertisements are extremely interesting; the verbal changes are
-significant if closely read:
-
- Notice
-
- is hereby given, that a company will meet at the Crab Orchard, on
- Sunday the 4^{th} day of May, to go through the wilderness, and to
- set out on the 5^{th}. at which time most of the Delegates to the
- state convention will go[15]
-
- A large company will meet at the Crab orchard on sunday the
- 25^{th} of May, in order to make an early start on Monday the
- 26^{th} through the wilderness for the old settlement[16]
-
- A large company will meet at the Crab Orchard on the 15^{th}. day
- of May, in readiness to start on the 16^{th}. through the
- Wilderness for Richmond[17]
-
- Notice
-
- Is hereby given that several gentlemen propose meeting at the
- Crab-orchard on the 4^{th}. of June in perfect readiness to move
- early the next morning through the Wilderness[18]
-
- Notice
-
- A large company will meet at the Crab-Orchard the 19^{th}. of
- November in order to start the next day through the Wilderness. As
- it is very dangerous on account of the Indians, it is hoped each
- person will go well armed[19]
-
-It appears that unarmed persons sometimes attached themselves to
-companies and relied on others to protect them in times of danger. One
-advertisement urged that everyone should go armed and "not to depend on
-others to defend them."[20]
-
-The frequency of the departure of such companies suggests the great
-amount of travel on Boone's Road. As early as 1788 parties were
-advertised to leave Crab Orchard May 5, May 15, May 26, June 4, and June
-16. Nor does it seem that there was much abatement during the more
-inclement (safer?) months; in the fall of the same year companies were
-advertised to depart November 19, December 9, and December 19. Yet at
-this season the Indians were often out waylaying travelers--driven no
-doubt by hunger to deeds of desperation. The sufferings of such
-redskinned marauders have found little place in history; but they are,
-nevertheless, particularly suggestive. One story, which has not perhaps
-been told _ad nauseam_, is to the point; and would be amusing if it were
-not so fatally conclusive. In the winter of 1787-88 a party on Boone's
-Road was attacked by Indians not far from the Kentucky border. Their
-horses were plundered of goods, but the travelers escaped. Hurrying "in"
-to the settlements a company was raised to make a pursuit. By their
-tracks in the snow the Indians were accurately followed. They were
-overtaken at a camp, where they were drying their blankets, &c., before
-a great fire. At the first charge the savages, completely surprised,
-took to their heels--stark naked. Not satisfied with recovering the
-stolen goods the Kentuckians pursued the fugitives into the mountains.
-Along the course they found trees stripped of pieces of bark, with which
-the Indians had attempted to cover their bodies. They were not
-overtaken, though some of their well protected pursuers had their own
-feet frost-bitten. The awful fate of the savages is unquestionable.
-
-Before Richard Henderson arrived in Kentucky Daniel Boone wrote him: "My
-advice to you, sir, is to come or send as soon as possible. Your company
-is desired greatly, for the people are very uneasy, but are willing to
-stay and venture their lives with you, and now is the time to flustrate
-the intentions of the Indians, and keep the country whilst we are in it.
-If we give way to them now, it will ever be the case."
-
-This letter shows plainly how the best informed man in Kentucky regarded
-Henderson's settlement at Boonesborough. Henderson's purchase was
-repudiated by both Virginia and North Carolina; but the Virginia
-Legislature confirmed Henderson's sales of land, in so far as they were
-made to actual settlers, and not to speculators, Henderson and his
-associates were granted land in lieu of that taken from them. The
-Transylvania Company, while looked upon askance by many who preferred to
-risk their tomahawk claim rights to those the Company granted, exerted
-as great a moral influence in the first settlement of Kentucky as Daniel
-Boone affirmed it would--a greater influence than any other company
-before the Revolutionary War.
-
-What it meant to the American colonies to have a brave band of pioneers
-in Kentucky at that crucial epoch, is an important chapter in the
-history of Boone's Road.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-KENTUCKY IN THE REVOLUTION
-
-
-History was fast being made in Kentucky when the Revolutionary struggle
-reached the crisis in 1775 at Concord and Lexington. South of the Ohio
-River Virginia's new empire was filling with the conquerors of the West.
-The Mississippi Valley counted a population of thirteen thousand, three
-thousand being the population of New Orleans. St. Louis, in Spanish
-possession, was carrying on a brisk trade with the Indians on the
-Missouri. Vincennes, the British port on the Wabash, had a population of
-four hundred whites. Detroit, the metropolis of the West, numbered
-fifteen hundred inhabitants, more than double the number in the dashing
-days of Gladwin only a decade before. The British flag also waved at
-Kaskaskia on the Mississippi, and at Sandusky. This fringe of British
-forts on the north was separated from the American metropolis of the
-West, Pittsburg, and from the first fortresses built in Kentucky, by
-leagues of forests, dark as when Bouquet pierced them; and filled with
-sullen Indian nations, awed for the time being by Dunmore's invasion,
-but silently biding their time to avenge themselves for the loss of the
-meadow lands of Ken-ta-kee.
-
-Such was the condition of affairs when, in April 1775, the open struggle
-for independence of the American colonies was roughly precipitated at
-Lexington. It might seem to the casual observer that the colonists, who
-were now hastening by way of Boone's Wilderness Road into the Virginian
-Kentucky, could not feel the intense jealousy for American interests
-which was felt by the patriots in the East. On the contrary, there is
-evidence that these first pioneers into the West had a profound
-knowledge of the situation; and a sympathy for the struggling patriots,
-which was enhanced even by the distance which separated them, and the
-hardships they had endured. Not a few of them, too, had known personally
-of the plundering British officials and the obnoxious taxes. It is the
-proud boast of Kentuckians that in the center of their beautiful Blue
-Grass country was erected the first monument to the first dead of the
-Revolution. A party of pioneers heard the news of the Battle of
-Lexington while sitting about their camp fire. Long into the night the
-rough men told and retold the news, and before morning named the new
-settlement they were to make, Lexington, in honor of New England's dead.
-
-It was not at all evident at first what the war was going to amount to
-in the West. Scarcely more was known in the West of the Revolutionary
-War than had been known two decades before of the French and Indian War.
-But at the outset it was plain that there was to be a tremendous
-struggle on both sides to gain the allegiance, as the British desired,
-of the Indian nations which lay between the Ohio River and the Great
-Lakes. For two years the struggle in the East went on, engrossing the
-entire attention of both parties. During 1776 and 1777 the history of
-the West is merely the continuation of the bloody story of the years
-which led up to Dunmore's campaign, like the savage attack on Wheeling,
-in September, 1777. Slowly the Indians forgot Lewis's crushing victory
-at Point Pleasant, and their solemn pledges at Camp Charlotte; and were
-raiding the feeble Kentucky posts with undiminished relish, or giving
-the Long Knives plenty of provocation for the barbarities of which the
-latter are known to have been guilty.
-
-The opening scene of the Revolutionary War in the West was the most
-important phase of the war in the history of Boone's Wilderness Road;
-for at the very outset the question was decided once for all whether or
-not that thin, long, priceless path to Kentucky through the Watauga
-settlement was to be held or lost. If it could not be held, there was no
-hope left for the brave men who had gone to found that western empire
-beyond the Cumberland Mountains. With their line of retreat cut in two
-by the southern Indians, they were left without hope of succor or
-success: for the success of their enterprise depended upon the
-inspiration their advance gave to those behind them. None would come if
-the Wautauga settlement did not survive.
-
-The British agents among the Southern Indians--the Cherokees, Creeks,
-Choctaws and Chickasaws--precipitated a quick and early struggle along
-this historic pathway by goading the Indians into a murderous attack
-upon the Watauga settlement. The Cherokees who had sold the Transylvania
-Company its lands, were the most easily incited to war, and fifty
-packhorse loads of ammunition scattered through their towns in those
-deep mountain valleys where the two Carolinas and Georgia meet,
-determined an outburst in July, 1776. Straight north from them lay the
-rude beginnings of civilization on the headwaters of the Tennessee, and
-further "in" was the frontier line of Virginia. The headquarters of the
-Watauga settlement may be said to have been Fort Watauga, commanded by
-the heroes Robertson and Sevier; here Boone had made the treaty with the
-Cherokees for Richard Henderson, a trifle over a year ago. Eaton's, Evan
-Shelby's, John Shelby's, Campbell's, and the Wommack forts were the
-important way stations on this path from Virginia to Kentucky. Two
-Indian parties larger than the others made for Fort Watauga and Eaton's
-Station, and the defenders of the latter post, learning from their
-scouts that a formidable array under the notorious Dragging Canoe was
-coming, resolved to give them a hot, unexpected welcome. Accordingly, on
-the morning of July twentieth nearly two hundred brown forms could have
-been seen stealing away from the fort in two thin lines half lost in the
-fog toward the open land known as "the Flats" near the "Long Island" of
-the Holston. In the march an advance party of a score of savages was met
-and put to flight. No other signs of the enemy could be discovered and
-the men started back to their fort at the end of the day.
-
-Dragging Canoe, not less audacious than his foes, awaited his time, and
-when the whites were marching homeward, came down upon them, his savages
-forming a wedge-shaped line of battle. Instantly the borderers fell back
-to the right and left, and with a desperate quietness awaited the
-onslaught. The Indian plan of rushing the whites off their feet by an
-overwhelming charge failed; the borderers settled deeper into the
-ground and met the rush and dashed the savage line into fragments. One
-charge--and all was over. There was no recovering from this form of
-attack for untrained soldiery, and the assaulting band instantly broke
-and fled. This battle of Long Island Flats was the first of the series
-of victories for the Watauga pioneers; its importance can hardly be
-measured today.
-
-Its best fruit was that it brought other victories to the encouraged
-Wataugans. On the same day the other Indian horde invested and assailed
-Fort Watauga at dawn. Only about two score men were at home to defend a
-large number of women and children, but they were fully equal to the
-emergency and with a frightful burst of fire drove back the line of
-savages which could just be seen advancing at that hour when Indians
-invariably made their attacks--the early dawn. Robertson was senior
-officer in command, and Sevier his brave assistant. The latter, having
-learned of the Indian uprising, characteristically wrote a message to
-the people far away on the Virginia border to look well to their
-homes--never even asking that assistance be sent to the much more feeble
-and vastly more endangered Watauga settlement on the Kentucky road.
-
-Elsewhere the border warfare was being waged with varying fortune; a
-small band of Georgian frontiersmen invaded the Cherokee country[20*] in
-the hope of capturing a notorious British agent, Cameron; it suffered
-heavily through the faithlessness of the Cherokees. The whole southern
-frontier was aroused, and plans for dashes into the Cherokee country
-were made but could not be forwarded simultaneously. Yet Cameron and his
-Tories and Indians acted in unison and brought sudden desolation into
-South Carolina. The force of the blow was broken by the brave Colonel
-Andrew Williamson, who, gathering over a thousand volunteers near the
-end of July began the first important invasion of the Cherokee country.
-Near Eseneka, the Cherokee town, the Carolinians found Cameron and won a
-costly victory. After some internal dissensions the little army got on
-its mettle and went steadily forward to wipe out the lower Cherokee
-towns, which was completely accomplished by the middle of August.
-Scarcity of ammunition, only, kept Williamson from attacking the middle
-towns.
-
-This task fell to the lot of the second expedition into the Cherokee
-country. This was a joint campaign waged by North and South Carolina,
-and Virginia, each to furnish two thousand men. The North Carolinians
-under Rutherford were earliest in the field. This officer with
-twenty-four hundred men left the head of the Catawba and opened
-"Rutherford's Trace" leading to Swananoa Gap in the Blue Ridge and on to
-the middle Cherokee towns by way of Warrior's Ford of French Broad and
-Mount Cowee. The middle towns were destroyed, and, uniting with
-Williamson, the two bodies of men swept over the Cherokee valley towns
-until "all the Cherokee settlements west of the Appalachians had been
-destroyed from the face of the earth, neither crops nor cattle being
-left."
-
-While the Carolinians had been sweeping into the lower Cherokee country,
-the Virginia troops had been assembling at the Long Island of the
-Holston under their leader Colonel William Christian. Their campaign
-against the Overhill towns was slowly formed here on the little westward
-pathway, and it was not until the first of October that all the
-contributions of men and arms from the settlements between Fort Watauga
-and the Virginia frontier were received. The advance, by way of Big
-Island of the Holston, was slow but determined--each encampment being
-made absolutely secure against surprise. The Indians, learning of the
-strength of Christian's army, knew better than to resist. They retired
-without a struggle and the borderers reached the heart of the Overhill
-country on the fifth day of November. Here they ravaged, burned, and
-razed to their hearts' content, until a deputation imploring peace came
-from the broken tribes. In this action old Dragging Canoe would have no
-part but stole away with a few followers toward the Chickamauga.
-Christian agreed to a treaty which definitely marked out the boundary
-line between the Indians and the whites, and then returned home leaving
-a garrison near the Kentucky path by the Holston. In the words of
-Roosevelt, who of all writers has done this campaign most justice: "The
-Watauga people and the westerners generally were the real gainers by the
-war. Had the Watauga settlements been destroyed, they would no longer
-have covered the Wilderness Road to Kentucky; and so Kentucky must
-perforce have been abandoned. But the followers of Robertson and Sevier
-stood stoutly for their homes; not one of them fled over the mountains.
-The Cherokees had been so roughly handled that for several years they
-did not again go to war as a body; and this not only gave the settlers a
-breathing time, but also enabled them to make themselves so strong that
-when the struggle was renewed they could easily hold their own. The war
-was thus another and important link in the chain of events by which the
-west was won; and had any link in the chain snapped during these early
-years, the peace of 1783 would probably have seen the trans-Alleghany
-country in the hands of a non-American power." If the holding of this
-pathway was of such moment the value of the pathway is plainly
-understood.
-
-Turning now to the end of Boone's Road, it will be necessary to review
-briefly the Revolutionary War in the "far" West; though in many of the
-campaigns the road itself played no part, in a large and genuine sense
-it was the pilgrims of Boone's Road who fought the most important
-battles of the Revolution in the West.
-
-Early in the struggle in the West, far-sighted ones saw signs of the
-growing despicable alliance of the savages to British interests; and
-before the bloody year of 1778 opened, it was only a question of how
-much England wanted of the savage allies who were crowded about their
-forts along the lakes. It is a terrible blot on the history of British
-rule in America, that when driven to face the same situation, English
-officers in the West used every means of retaliation for the use of
-which they so roundly condemned French officials a quarter of a century
-before. American officers employed Indians as guides and scouts, and
-were guilty of provoking inter-tribal war; but they did not pay Indians
-for bringing in British scalps, or praise them for their murderous
-successes and equip them for further service. As a brave American
-officer said, "Let this reproach remain on them"--and the people of the
-West will never forget the reproach, nor forgive! They remember, and
-always will remember, the burning words of Washington written more than
-ten years after the close of the Revolution: "All the difficulties we
-encounter with the Indians, their hostilities, the murder of helpless
-women and children along all our frontiers, results from the conduct of
-the agents of Great Britain in this country." There are today, in
-hundreds of homes of descendants of the pioneers in Kentucky, memories
-of the inhuman barbarities of British officers during the Revolution;
-these will never be forgotten, and will never fail to prejudice
-generations yet unborn. The reproach will remain on them.
-
-At the outbreak of the war, chiefs of the Indian nations were invited to
-Pittsburg, where the nature of the struggle was explained to them in the
-following parable:
-
-"Suppose a father had a little son whom he loved and indulged while
-young, but growing up to be a youth, began to think of having some help
-from him; and making up a small pack, he bid him carry it for him. The
-boy cheerfully takes this pack up, following his father with it. The
-father finding the boy willing and obedient, continues in this way; and
-as the boy grows stronger, so the father makes the pack in proportion
-larger; yet as long as the boy is able to carry the pack, he does so
-without grumbling. At length, however, the boy having arrived at
-manhood, while the father is making up the pack for him, in comes a
-person of an evil disposition, and, learning who was to be the carrier
-of the pack, advises the father to make it heavier, for surely the son
-is able to carry a larger pack. The father, listening rather to the bad
-adviser than consulting his own judgment and the feelings of tenderness,
-follows the advice of the hard-hearted adviser, and makes up a heavy
-load for his son to carry. The son, now grown up, examining the weight
-of the load he is to carry, addresses the father in these words: 'Dear
-Father, this pack is too heavy for me to carry, do pray lighten it; I
-am willing to do what I can, but am unable to carry this load.' The
-father's heart having by this time become hardened, and the bad adviser
-calling to him, 'Whip him if he disobeys,' and he refusing to carry the
-pack, the father orders his son to take up the pack and carry it off or
-he will whip him, and already takes up a stick to beat him. 'So,' says
-the son, 'am I to be served thus for not doing what I am unable to do?
-Well, if entreaties avail nothing with you, Father, and it is to be
-decided by blows, whether or not I am able to carry a pack so heavy,
-then I have no other choice left me, but that of resisting your
-unreasonable demand by my strength, and thus by striking each other
-learn who is the strongest.'"
-
-The Indians were urged to become neutral in the struggle that was
-opening. Impossible as such a course would have been to men who loved
-war better than peace, certain tribes promised to maintain neutrality.
-In a few months, however, most of the nations were in open or secret
-alliance with British officers. Only the better element of the Delaware
-nation, led by Captain White Eyes, became attached to the American
-cause. England was always handicapped in her use of the American Indian,
-because of the want of men who could successfully exert control over
-him. Even when the forts of the French in the West passed into British
-possession, Frenchmen were retained in control, since no Englishman
-could so well rule the savages who made the forts their rendezvous. The
-beginning of the successful employment of the Indians against the
-growing Virginian empire south of the Ohio, and against the multiplying
-cabins and forts of the Long Knives, may loosely be said to have begun
-in the spring of 1778 when three northern renegades, Simon Girty,
-Matthew Elliott, and Alexander McKee, eluded the continental General
-Hand at Pittsburg and took service under Lieutenant-governor Hamilton at
-Detroit. Bred to border warfare, and well known among the Indians from
-the Susquehanna to the Missouri, these three men were the "most
-effective tools for the purposes of border warfare" that the British
-could have secured. Hamilton immediately began to plan the invasion of
-Pennsylvania and the conquest of Pittsburg. The campaign was condemned
-by his superiors in the East, and was forgotten by its originator--when
-the news of a bold invasion of his own territory by a Virginian army
-suddenly reached his ears.
-
-The Transylvania Company came silently but suddenly to an end when the
-Kentuckians elected George Rogers Clark and Gabriel John Jones members
-of the Virginian assembly, for the assembly erected the county of
-Kentucky out of the land purchased by Henderson at Fort Watauga in 1775.
-Upon bringing this about, Clark, a native of Virginia and a hero of
-Dunmore's War, returned to Kentucky nourishing greater plans. With clear
-eyes he saw that the increasing affiliation of Indian and British
-interests meant that England, even though she might be unsuccessful in
-the East, could keep up an interminable and disastrous warfare "along
-the rear of the colonies," as long as she held forts on the northern
-edge of the Black Forest. Clark sent spies northward, who gained
-information confirming his suspicions; and then he hurried eastward,
-with his bold plan of conquering the "strongholds of British and Indian
-barbarity"--Kaskaskia, Vincennes, and Detroit.
-
-He came at a fortunate time. The colonies were rejoicing over the first
-great victory of the early war, Saratoga. Hope, everywhere, was high.
-From Patrick Henry, Governor of Virginia, Clark received two orders, one
-of which was to attack the British post Kaskaskia. He at once set out
-for Pittsburg to raise, in the West (where both Dunmore and Lewis raised
-their armies), troops for the most brilliant military achievement in
-western history. Descending the Ohio to Kentucky, where he received
-reenforcements, Clark marched silently through the forests--with one
-hundred and thirty-five chosen men--to Kaskaskia, which he took in utter
-surprise July 4, 1778. "Keep on with your merriment," he said to
-revelers whom he surprised at a dance, "but remember you dance under
-Virginia, not Great Britain." Clark brought the news of the alliance
-recently made between France and the United States into the Illinois
-country and used it with telling effect. A French priest at Vincennes
-raised a Virginian flag over that fort, telling the inhabitants and the
-Indians that their "French Father had come to life." In October Virginia
-incorporated the "County of Illinois" within her western empire--the
-first portion of the land north of the Ohio River to come under the
-administration of one of the states of the Union.
-
-Contemporaneously with Clark's stirring conquest, an expedition was
-raised at Pittsburg to march against the Indians in the neighborhood of
-the British fort at Sandusky--possibly to counteract the rumored attempt
-to invade Pennsylvania, by Hamilton at Detroit. Troops and supplies were
-to be assembled at Fort Pitt, where the famous route of Bouquet was to
-be followed toward the lakes. The expedition was put in charge of
-General Lachlan McIntosh. Distressing delays made the half-hearted
-Indians who were to guide the army, chafe; and McIntosh started before
-his stores arrived, fearing that longer delay would alienate his
-friendly Indians, among whom was the Delaware, White Eyes, now turned
-from a neutral course. At the mouth of the Beaver River McIntosh built
-the fort which bears his name--the first fort built by the Americans on
-the northern side of the Ohio. Advancing westward over Bouquet's
-tri-trail track with twelve hundred men, he reached the Muskingum
-(Tuscarawas) River in fourteen days, arriving November 19, 1778, where
-he erected Fort Laurens.
-
-But Lieutenant-governor Hamilton, learning of Clark's seizure of
-Kaskaskia and the treachery of the fickle inhabitants of Vincennes, set
-about to reconquer Illinois. Departing from Detroit on a beautiful
-October day, the expedition descended the Detroit River and entered the
-Maumee. The weather changed and it was seventy-one days before the
-American Captain Helm at Vincennes surrendered his wretched fort and
-became a prisoner of war. Hamilton was unable to push on to Kaskaskia
-because of the lack of provisions, and sat down to watch the winter out
-where he was. Thus the spectacular year 1778 closed--Clark at
-Kaskaskia, watching his antagonist feasting at Vincennes; McIntosh's
-little guard at Fort Laurens undergoing continual harassing and siege.
-In the East the evacuation of Philadelphia, the battle of Monmouth, and
-the terrible Wyoming massacre were the events of the year.
-
-The year 1779 was to see as brilliant an achievement in the West, as the
-East was to see in the capture of Stony Point. This was the recapture of
-Vincennes by Clark. Joined by an experienced adventurer, Colonel Francis
-Vigo, formerly of the Spanish service, Clark was persuaded that he must
-capture Hamilton or Hamilton would capture him. Accordingly, on the
-fifth of February, Clark set out for Vincennes with one hundred and
-seventy trusty men. In twelve days they reached the Embarras River,
-which was crossed on the twenty-first with great bravery, the men wading
-in water to their shoulders. On the twenty-fifth, Hamilton, the most
-surprised man in the world, was compelled to surrender. Within two weeks
-he was on his way to Virginia; where, being found guilty of buying
-Virginian scalps from the Indians, he was imprisoned, but was exchanged
-the year following.
-
-In July, while returning from New Orleans with supplies; Colonel Rogers
-and his party of Kentuckians were overwhelmed by Indians, under Girty
-and Elliott, on the Ohio River. In a terrible running battle sixty
-Kentuckians were killed. The sad news spread quickly through Kentucky
-and a thousand tongues called loudly for revenge. In response Major
-Bowman led three hundred volunteers up the Scioto Valley and attacked
-the Shawanese capital. There was bungling somewhere and a retreat was
-ordered before victory was achieved.
-
-During this summer the conqueror of Illinois expected to complete his
-triumph by the capture of Detroit. A messenger from Thomas Jefferson,
-Governor of Virginia, brought tidings that troops for this expedition
-would be forthcoming from Virginia and Kentucky, and rendezvous at
-Vincennes in July. When the time came, Clark found only a few soldiers
-from Kentucky and none at all from Virginia. The Detroit expedition
-fell through because of Virginia's poverty in money and in men; though
-artillery, ammunition, and tools had been secured for the campaign from
-Fort Pitt, at Washington's command. But with masterly foresight Governor
-Jefferson secured the establishment of a fort on the Mississippi River
-in the Illinois country. During this summer the little garrison which
-General McIntosh left buried in the Black Forest at Fort Laurens fled
-back over the trail to Pittsburg. Nowhere north of the Ohio were the
-scenes frequently enacted in Kentucky reproduced so vividly as at little
-Fort Laurens, on the upper Muskingum. At one time fourteen of the
-garrison were decoyed and slaughtered. At another time an army numbering
-seven hundred warriors invested the little half-forgotten fortress and
-its intrepid defenders. A slight embankment may be seen today near
-Bolivar, Ohio, which marks one side of the first fort erected in what is
-now Ohio, those near the lake shore excepted. Thus closed the year 1779:
-Clark again in possession of Vincennes, as well as Kaskaskia and
-Cahokia, but disappointed in the failure of the Detroit expedition;
-Hamilton languishing in a Virginia dungeon, twelve hundred miles from
-his capital--Fort Detroit; Fort Laurens abandoned, and the Kentucky
-country covered with gloom over Rogers's terrible loss and Bowman's
-inglorious retreat from the valley of the Scioto. On the other hand, the
-East was glorying in Mad Anthony Wayne's capture of Stony Point,
-Sullivan's rebuke to the Indians, and Paul Jones's electrifying victory
-on the sea.
-
-In 1780 four expeditions set forth, all of them singular in character,
-and noteworthy. The year before, 1779, Spain had declared war upon
-England. The new commander at Detroit took immediate occasion to regain
-control of the Mississippi by attacking the Spanish town of St. Louis.
-This expedition, under Captain Sinclair, descended the Mississippi from
-Prairie du Chien. The attack was not successful, but six whites were
-killed and eighteen taken prisoner.
-
-At the time of Bowman's expedition against the Shawanese, in the
-preceding year a British officer, Colonel Bird, had assembled a
-noteworthy array at Sandusky preparatory to the invasion of Kentucky.
-News of the Kentucky raid up the Scioto Valley set Bird's Indians to
-"cooking and counselling" again, instead of acting. This year Bird's
-invasion materialized, and the fate of the Kentucky settlements trembled
-in the balance. The invading army of six hundred Indians and Canadians
-was armed with two pieces of artillery. There is little doubt that this
-army could have battered down every "station" in Kentucky and swept
-victoriously through the new settlements. Ruddles's station on the
-Licking was first menaced, and surrendered quickly. Martin's fort also
-capitulated. But here Bird paused in his conquest and withdrew
-northward, the barbarity of the Indian allies, for once at least,
-shocking a British commander. The real secret of the abrupt retreat lay
-no doubt in the fact that the increasing immigration had brought such
-vast numbers of people into Kentucky that Bird dared not penetrate
-further into the land for fear of a surprise. The gross carelessness of
-the newly arrived inhabitants, in not taking the precaution to build
-proper defenses against the Indians, undoubtedly appeared to the British
-commander as a sign of strength and fortitude which he did not have the
-courage to put to the test. As a matter of fact, he could probably have
-annihilated every settlement between the Ohio River and Cumberland Gap.
-
-In retaliation Kentucky sent an immense army north of the Ohio, a
-thousand men volunteering under Clark, the hero of Vincennes. A large
-Indian army was routed near the Shawanese town Pickaway. Many towns with
-standing crops were burned. A similar expedition from Pittsburg under
-General Brodhead burned crops and villages on the upper Muskingum.
-
-In return for the attack on St. Louis, the Spanish commander at that
-point sent an expedition against the deserted British post of St.
-Joseph. Upon declaring war against England in the previous year, Spain
-had occupied Natchez, Baton Rouge, and Mobile, which, with St. Louis,
-gave her command of the Mississippi. But his Catholic Majesty was
-building other Spanish castles in America. He desired the conquest of
-the British northwest, to offset the British capture of Gibraltar. This
-"capture" of St. Joseph led to an amusing but ominous claim on the part
-of Spain at the Treaty of Paris: when, with it for a pretext, the
-Spanish Crown claimed all lands west of a line drawn from St. Joseph
-southward through what is now Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia,
-Alabama, and Mississippi. The Mississippi River boundary was, however,
-stoutly contended for and obtained by the American commissioners.
-
-In this year the first "gunboat" to ply western waters was built under
-direction of Brigadier-general Clark. It was a galley armed with light
-artillery. This queer-looking craft soon fell into disuse, though it
-became a terror to the Indians who continually infested the lower Ohio.
-It was relished little better by the militia, who disliked service on
-water. But it stands as a typical illustration of the enterprise and
-devotion of the "Father of Kentucky" to the cause for which he had done
-so much.
-
-The year following, 1781, saw the termination of the Revolution in the
-East, when Cornwallis's army marched down the files of French and
-American troops at Yorktown to the melancholy tune "The World's Turned
-Upside Down." The Treaty of Paris was not signed until 1783, and in the
-meantime the bloodiest year of all the war in the West, 1782, was adding
-its horrors to all that had gone before. While the East was rejoicing,
-the central West saw the terrible massacre of Gnadenhutten--the more
-terrible because committed by white men themselves.
-
-In May, 1782, the atrocities of the savages (encouraged by the British)
-along the Pennsylvanian and Virginian border were becoming unbearable,
-and an expedition was raised in the Monongahela country to penetrate to
-the Indian-infested country on the Sandusky River. Volunteers, four
-hundred in number, all mounted, rendezvoused at the Ohio near Mingo
-Bottom; they elected as commander Colonel William Crawford, an
-experienced officer of the Revolutionary War, following Washington
-faithfully through the hard Long Island and Delaware campaigns. Crawford
-struck straight through the forests, even avoiding Indian trails, at
-first, in the hope of taking his foe utterly by surprise. But his wily
-foe completely outwitted him and the Indians and British knew well each
-day's progress. The battle was fought in a prairie land near the
-Sandusky River in what is now Crawford County, Ohio, and though not a
-victory for either side, an American retreat was ordered during the
-night following. Colonel Crawford was captured, among others, and
-suffered a terrible death at the stake, perhaps the saddest single
-atrocity committed by the redman in western history. This gray-haired
-veteran of the Revolution gave his life to appease the Indians for a
-massacre of Christian Indians perpetrated by savage borderers from the
-Monongahela country the year previous.
-
-Kentucky had witnessed minor activities of the savages during the
-spring. In August a grand Indian army assembled on the lower Scioto for
-the purpose of invading Kentucky. The assembly was harangued by Simon
-Girty, and moved southward and invaded Bryant's Station, one of the
-strongest forts in Kentucky. After a terrible day, during which
-re-enforcements kept arriving, only to be compelled to fight their way
-into the fort or flee, Girty attempted to secure capitulation.
-Outwitted, the renegade resorted to a stratagem, as cunningly devised as
-it was terribly successful. In the night the entire Indian army vanished
-as if panic-stricken. Meat was left upon the spits. Garments lay strewn
-about the encampment and along the route of the fugitive army. The more
-experienced of the border army, which was soon in full cry on the trail,
-scented the deception; but the headstrong hurried onward in hope of
-revenge. At the crossing of the Licking, near the lower Blue Licks, the
-Indian ambush received the witless pursuers with a frightful burst of
-flame, and the battle of Blue Licks became a running fire, a headlong
-rout and massacre.
-
-A thousand men joined Clark for a retaliatory invasion of the north, and
-the usual destruction of villages and crops was accomplished. This may
-be considered the last military event in the Revolutionary War in the
-West.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-AT THE END OF BOONE'S ROAD
-
-
-On the nineteenth of April, 1775, the rumble of the running fire at
-Lexington and Concord told that the farmers of New England had at last
-precipitated the struggle which had been impending for a full
-generation. It was a roar that, truly, was "heard round the world."
-
-One day later, April 20, 1775, Colonel Henderson and his fellow-pioneers
-of the Transylvania Company reached Boonesborough; there they were
-joyfully received by a running fire of five and twenty muskets
-discharged by Boone's vanguard, which had preceded them to cut the road.
-If the musket-shot behind the New England stone walls was heard round
-the world, the rattle of that score of muskets in distant Kentucky was
-heard around a continent. The former uttered a hoarse defiance to
-tyrants--a cry to God for liberty; what was the faint roar which echoed
-back a thousand mountain miles from Kentucky but an answer to that cry?
-an assurance that "to him that hath shall be given?" There is something
-divinely significant to me in the coincidence of the opening shock of
-the Revolution, and the arrival in Kentucky of the first considerable
-body of determined, reputable men.
-
-The story of the Revolutionary War in the West has been told in
-preceding pages, as the merest record of fact. It is unnecessary to
-state that it was the most important conflict ever waged there, and it
-is equally trite to observe that the struggle centered around Kentucky.
-Boone's Road had made possible the sudden movement of population
-westward, and this pioneer host immediately drew upon itself the enemies
-that otherwise would have scourged the frontiers of New York,
-Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North Carolina. The first and principal
-portion of the Kentucky pioneers--those who fought the Revolutionary
-battles--entered Kentucky by the Cumberland Gap route. James Lane Allen
-writes: "That area [Kentucky] has somewhat the shape of an enormous
-flat foot, with a disjointed big toe, a roughly hacked-off ankle, and a
-missing heel. The sole of this huge foot rests solidly on Tennessee, the
-Ohio River trickles across the ankle and over the top, the big toe is
-washed entirely off by the Tennessee River, and the long-missing heel is
-to be found in Virginia, never having been ceded by that State. Between
-the Kentucky foot and the Virginia heel is piled up this immense, bony,
-grisly mass of the Cumberland Mountain, extending some three hundred
-miles northeast and southwest. It was through this heel that Kentucky
-had to be peopled. The thin, half-starved, weary line of pioneer
-civilizers had to penetrate it, and climb this obstructing mountain
-wall, as a line of traveling ants might climb the wall of a castle. In
-this case only the strongest of the ants--the strongest in body, the
-strongest in will--succeeded in getting over and establishing their
-colony in the country far beyond. Luckily there was an enormous
-depression in the wall, or they might never have scaled it. During about
-half a century this depression was the difficult, exhausting
-entrance-point through which the State received the largest part of its
-people, the furniture of their homes, and the implements of their
-civilization; so that from the very outset that people represented the
-most striking instance of a survival of the fittest that may be observed
-in the founding of any American commonwealth. The feeblest of the ants
-could not climb the wall; the idlest of them would not."[21] Mr. Speed
-agrees wholly in this opinion: "The settlers came in ... increasing
-numbers.... A very large proportion came over the Wilderness Road."[22]
-In the early days river travel was not practicable. During the
-Revolutionary War and for some time thereafter travel down the Ohio
-River was dangerous, both because of the hostility of the savages and
-because of the condition of the river. In earlier days the journey from
-the Ohio into the populated parts of Kentucky was a great hardship. The
-story of one who emigrated to Kentucky by way of the Ohio shows plainly
-why many preferred the longer land route by way of Cumberland Gap. The
-following is from an autobiographical statement made by Spencer Record,
-preserved by the Wisconsin Historical Society:
-
-"About the Twentieth of November (1783) we embarked on the Monongahela
-in our boat, in company with Kiser, I having with me four head of horses
-and some cattle. We landed at the mouth of Limestone Creek, but there
-was then, no settlement there. We made search for a road, but found
-none. There was indeed a buffalo road, that crossed Limestone Creek a
-few miles above its mouth, and passing May's lick about twelve miles
-from Limestone, went on to the Lower Blue Lick on Licking river, and
-thence to Bryant's station: but as we knew nothing of it, we went on,
-and landed at the mouth of Licking river, on the twenty ninth of the
-month.
-
-"The next day, we loaded periogue, and a canoe, and set off up Licking,
-sometimes wading and pulling our periogue and canoe over the ripples.
-After working hard for four days, we landed, hid our property (which
-was whiskey and our farming utensils) in the woods, and returned to the
-Ohio, which by this time had taken a rapid rise and backed up Licking,
-so that we took Kiser's boat up, as far as we had taken our property and
-unloaded her. We left on the bank of Licking, a new wagon and some
-kettles. Leaving our property to help Kiser, we packed up and set off up
-Licking, and travelled some days; but making poor progress, and snow
-beginning to fall, with no cane in that part of the country, for our
-horses and cattle, we left Kiser and set off to hunt for cane. He sent
-his stock with us, in care of Henry Fry, who had come down in his boat
-with cattle for his father.
-
-"When we came to the fork of Licking we found a wagon road cut out, that
-led up the South fork. This road had been cut by Colonel Bird, a British
-officer, who had ascended Licking in keel boats, with six hundred
-Canadians and Indians. They were several days in cutting out this road
-which led to Riddle's fort, which stood on the east side of Licking,
-three miles below the junction of Hinkston's and Stoner's fork, yet our
-people knew nothing of it, till they were summoned to surrender.... We
-took the road and went on, the snow being about half leg deep. Early in
-the morning, about three miles from Riddle's fort, we came to three
-families encamped. They had landed at Limestone but finding no road,
-they wandered through the woods, crossed Licking, and happening to find
-the road, took it.... We went on to the fort, where we found plenty of
-cane. The next morning, John Finch and myself set off to try to find
-Lexington, and left the horses and cattle ... as there was no road, we
-took up Will creek, and towards the head of it we met some hunters, who
-lived on the south side of Kentucky river who gave us directions how to
-find a hunting trace, that led to Bryant's station.... We went on, found
-the trace, and arrived at Bryant's station."[23]
-
-Adding to the difficulties of land travel the dangers of the river tide,
-the difficulty of securing boats, and their great cost, it is little
-wonder that emigrants from Virginia preferred the long but better-known
-land route, through Powell's Valley and Cumberland Gap to the Braddock
-Road and the Ohio River. At a later date, however, the difficulties of
-river passage were materially decreased and the Ohio became the great
-outward emigrant route.
-
-But for the return traffic from Kentucky to Virginia, there was no
-comparison between the ease of the land route and the water route. Mr.
-Speed affirms that the road through Cumberland Gap "was the only
-practicable route for all return travel."[24] Of course for a long
-period there were no exports from Kentucky, as hardly enough could be
-raised to feed the multitude of immigrants; but when at last Kentucky
-strode to the front with its great harvests of wheat and tobacco, the
-Mississippi and Ohio ports received them.
-
-The East received comparatively little benefit, in a commercial way,
-from Boone's Road; but in the earliest days that slight track furnished
-a moral support that can hardly be exaggerated. The vast population that
-surged westward over it was a mighty barrier which protected the rear of
-the colonies from the savages, until savage warfare was at an end.
-Though the frontiers of New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia suffered
-greatly during the Revolution, it was Kentucky that was the thorn in the
-side of the British; Kentucky drew the fire of both British and Indians
-which otherwise would have desolated the rear of the eastern colonies,
-and necessitated a greater number of men than could possibly have been
-maintained there. It was not at Fort Pitt that the British were
-constantly striking, but at the Kentucky "stations;" it was not up the
-Allegheny or Monongahela that Colonel Burd pushed his keel boats, but up
-the Licking. This fact is splendidly urged by Col. John Floyd, in a
-letter to the governor of Virginia written on the sixth of October,
-1781, in a plea for assistance in maintaining the Kentucky settlements:
-
-"... A great deal more might be said concerning the dangerous situation
-of these counties, but I have not been informed whether Government think
-it absolutely necessary for the advantage of the community at large to
-defend this country [Kentucky] at so considerable expense as must be
-incurred thereby; and I therefore beg leave to offer your Excellency one
-or two reasons why it may be of advantage to defend the Kentucky
-country. It is now beyond a doubt, that the attention of at last [least]
-6000 savage warriors is fixed on this spot, and who will not disturb any
-other part of the Continent as long as we maintain our ground. But, on
-the contrary, as soon as this country is laid waste, they will
-immediately fall upon the inhabitants of Washington, Montgomery,
-Greenbriar, &c--in short, from South Carolina to Pennsylvania. I believe
-all the counties on the west side of the Blue Ridge were kept for many
-years penned up in forts by the Shawanese, Mingoes, Delawares & a few of
-their adherents; if so what will be the consequence when at least
-fifteen powerful Nations are united and combined with those above
-mentioned against about twelve hundred militia dispersed over three
-very extensive counties. Those nations have absolutely been kept off
-your back settlements by the inhabitants of Kentucky. Two or three
-thousand men in this country would be sufficient to defend it, and
-effectually secure the back settlements on New River & its waters, as
-well as those high up James River & Roanoake."[25]
-
-In addition to conferring the inestimable advantage of defending the
-frontiers of the colonies, the early settlement and the holding of
-Kentucky insured American possession of the Middle West; this meant
-everything to the East--for the steady, logical expansion of the nation
-was the one hope of the country when independence was secured. Upon the
-Americanization of the Mississippi Valley depended the safety of the
-eastern colonies, and their commercial and political welfare. It meant
-very much to the East that a strong colony was holding its own on the
-Ohio and Mississippi during the hours when the Revolutionary struggle
-was in progress; and it meant even more to the East that, upon the
-conclusion of that struggle, thousands whose future seemed as black as
-the forests of the West could immediately emigrate thither and begin
-life anew. But for the Virginians and Kentuckians along the Ohio it is
-almost certain that Great Britain would have divided the eastern half of
-this continent with the triumphant revolutionists. For the few posts
-along the lakes that she did hold there was a spirited wrangle for
-twenty years, until they were at last handed over to the United States.
-Boone did not blaze his road one day too soon, and the hand of divine
-Providence is not shown more plainly in our national history than by the
-critical timeliness with which these pioneers were ushered into the
-meadow lands of Ken-ta-kee. The onslaughts of Shawanese and Wyandot did
-not overwhelm them; nor were they daunted by the plotting of desperate
-British officers, who spread ruin and desolation along the flank and
-rear of the fighting colonies.
-
-Again, this earliest population in the immediate valley of the
-Mississippi had a powerful influence on the attitude of the United
-States toward the powers that held the Mississippi. Had it not been for
-a Kentucky in embryo in 1775-82, it is unquestionable that the confused
-story of the possession of that great river valley would have been worse
-confounded. The whirl of politics in Kentucky during the four decades
-after the Revolutionary War daunts even the student of modern Kentucky
-politics; and of one thing we may rest assured--had the State possessed
-a little less of the sober sense that came from Virginia through
-Cumberland Gap, it is certain the story of those wild days would not be
-as readable to modern Kentuckians as it is. It was more than fortunate
-for the young Republic that at the close of the Revolution there was a
-goodly population of expatriated Virginians and North Carolinians on the
-Mississippi, ready to press its claims there.
-
-Thus we may briefly suggest the benefits which the older colonies
-received from the earliest settlers in Kentucky--and but for Boone's
-Road made by the Transylvania Company, it is exceedingly doubtful, as
-Boone wrote, whether the settlement of Kentucky would have been
-successfully inaugurated as early as 1774. At any rate Boone's Road
-brought into Kentucky thousands of pioneers who probably would have
-refused to move westward by the Ohio River route.
-
-As for the benefit Kentucky itself received from Boone's Road, that is
-self-evident. Taking everything into consideration, no distinct movement
-of population in America, before or since, can compare in magnitude with
-the burst of immigration through Cumberland Gap between 1775 and 1790.
-Never on this continent was a population of seventy thousand people
-located, within fifteen years of the day the first cabins were erected,
-at an equal distance from the existing frontier line. It is difficult to
-frame the facts of this remarkable phenomenon in language that will
-convey the full meaning. If the brave pioneers from Connecticut who
-founded the Northwest Territory at Marietta, Ohio, in 1788, had gone on
-to Kentucky, they would have found themselves, within twelve years, in
-as populous a state as that they left in New England. The Stanwix Treaty
-and Boone's Road largely answer the question why Kentucky contained
-more than one-half as many inhabitants as Massachusetts, twenty-five
-years after its first settlement was made; and why it was admitted into
-the Union four years before Tennessee, ten years before Ohio,
-twenty-four years before Indiana, twenty-six years before Illinois
-(bounded by the Ohio and Mississippi and Lake Michigan), and
-twenty-eight years before Maine. Between 1790 and 1800 the population of
-Kentucky jumped from 70,000 to 220,000, only one-third less than proud
-Maryland, and five times that of Ohio. In the census of 1790 Kentucky
-stood fourteenth in a grouping of sixteen states and territories, while
-in 1800 it stood ninth. In 1790 it exceeded the population of Rhode
-Island, Delaware and Tennessee. In 1800 it exceeded New Jersey, New
-Hampshire, Georgia, Vermont, Maine, Tennessee, Rhode Island, and
-Delaware. In this year it had one hundred and sixty thousand more
-inhabitants than Indiana Territory, Mississippi Territory, and Ohio
-Territory combined. In the decade mentioned, New York State increased in
-population two hundred and fifty thousand; far-away Kentucky increased
-one hundred and forty-seven thousand.
-
-But the West as a whole was benefited by Boone's Road. The part played
-by this earliest population of Kentucky in the development of the
-contiguous states--Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri--has never been
-emphasized sufficiently. No Ohio historian has given sufficient
-attention to the part played by Kentuckians in the conquest of that area
-of territory. The struggle between the Kentuckians and the Ohio Indians
-has been outlined. The former fought for and saved to the Union the
-great territory south of the Ohio; and then left their smoking cabins
-and threw themselves ever and anon across the Ohio, upon the Indian
-settlements between that river and the Great Lakes. Where is even the
-Kentucky historian who has done his state justice in telling the story
-of Kentucky's conquest of Ohio and Indiana? Of the brilliant operations
-of Clark in Illinois we know very much, and the part played by the
-Kentuckians on the Mississippi and Illinois has frequently been made
-plain. But a singular misconception of the nature of Indian warfare has
-robbed the heroes of old Kentucky of much honor due them. Judged by
-ordinary military standards, the numerous invasions of Ohio and Indiana
-by Kentuckians amounted to little. Such was not the real case, many
-times. The Indians could ever retreat helter-skelter into the forests,
-avoiding more than a mere skirmish with the advancing pioneers. But they
-could not take their crops--and the destruction of one slight maize crop
-meant more to the invading army than the killing of many savages. The
-killing of the Indians did nothing but aggravate hostilities and long
-delay the end of the conflict. On the other hand, slaying redskins
-became the passion of the whites, and it is probable that many of their
-expeditions seemed failures if blood was not spilt. But their very
-presence in the Indian land and the destruction of the grain fields was
-more to their purpose, could they only have realized it. The Indians
-were then compelled to live largely on game, and as this grew more
-scarce each year the simple problem of obtaining subsistence became
-serious. The hunters were compelled to go further and further into the
-forest, and the tribes followed them. By doing nothing more than burning
-the harvest fields and ruining the important springs, the whites were
-slowly but surely conquering the trans-Ohio country.[26] By such a
-process one river valley after another was deserted, until, when the
-first legalized settlement was made in Ohio--at Marietta, in 1788--the
-Muskingum, Scioto and Miami valleys were practically deserted by
-redskins. Little as the Indians relished the new settlement at Marietta,
-they paid practically no attention to it but kept their eyes on the
-populated valleys of Kentucky, where their enemies of so many years'
-standing had settled, held their own, and then carried fire and sword
-northward. In October 1788 Governor Arthur St. Clair wrote the Hon. Mr.
-Brown of Danville, Kentucky, to give warning of the Indian war that
-seemed imminent; "The stroke, if it falls at all, will probably fall
-upon your country," he wrote.[27] And the Indian War of 1790 was
-precipitated because of Indian marauds along the Kentucky border--not
-because of attacks upon the settlements along the upper Ohio. The
-Kentuckians had played a preeminent part in driving the Indians back to
-the head of the Wabash and the mouth of the Maumee, in the two decades
-preceding the Indian War which opened in 1790, and during that war they
-were to the American armies what the English were to the allies at
-Waterloo. Local histories and local historians have created the
-impression that Ohio was conquered largely by Ohioans. Nothing could be
-more misleading.
-
-Far-reaching as the influence of the little roadway through Cumberland
-Gap has been, its actual history is of little interest or importance.
-Perhaps none of our ancient roads has done so much for society in
-proportion to the attention paid to it. Any adjective ever applied to a
-roadway, if it were of a derogatory character, might have been fitly
-applied to portions of this old track which played an important part in
-giving birth to the first and most important settlement in the West.
-During the few important years of its existence Boone's Road was only
-what Boone made it--a blazed foot-path westward. It was but the merest
-foot-path from 1774 to 1792, while thousands floundered over its
-uncertain track to lay the rude foundations of civilization in the land
-to which it led. "There are roads that make a man lose faith," writes
-Mr. Allen; "It is known that the more pious companies [of pioneers] as
-they traveled along, would now and then give up in despair, sit down,
-raise a hymn, and have prayers said before they could go farther." There
-was probably not a more desperate pioneer road in America than this. The
-mountains to be crossed, the rivers and swamps the traveler encountered,
-were as difficult to overcome as any on Braddock's Road; and Boone's
-Road was very much longer, even if measured from its technical
-starting-point--the Watauga settlement.
-
-As early as 1779 the Virginia Assembly took up the subject of a western
-highway, and commissioners were appointed to explore the region on both
-sides of the mountains, to choose a course for a roadway, clear and
-open the route, and render a report upon the advisability of making a
-wagon road. Yet no improvement followed. The narrow path--rough,
-treacherous, almost impassable--remained the only course. A vivid
-description of what a journey over it meant in this year, 1779, has been
-left us by Chief-justice Robertson in an address given at Camp Madison,
-Franklin County, Kentucky, half a century ago:
-
-"This beneficent enactment [the land law] brought to the country during
-the fall and winter of that year an unexampled tide of emigrants, who,
-exchanging all the comforts of their native society and homes for
-settlements for themselves and their children here, came like pilgrims
-to a wilderness to be made secure by their arms and habitable by the
-toil of their lives. Through privations incredible and perils thick,
-thousands of men, women, and children came in successive caravans,
-forming continuous streams of human beings, horses, cattle, and other
-domestic animals, all moving onward along a lonely and houseless path to
-a wild and cheerless land. Cast your eyes back on that long procession
-of missionaries in the cause of civilization; behold the men on foot
-with their trusty guns on their shoulders, driving stock and leading
-packhorses; and the women, some walking with pails on their heads,
-others riding with children in their laps, and other children swung in
-baskets on horses, fastened to the tails of others going before; see
-them encamped at night expecting to be massacred by Indians; behold them
-in the month of December, in that ever memorable season of unprecedented
-cold called the 'hard winter,' traveling two or three miles a day,
-frequently in danger of being frozen or killed by the falling of horses
-on the icy and almost impassable trace, and subsisting on stinted
-allowances of stale bread and meat; but now lastly look at them at the
-destined fort, perhaps on the eve of merry Christmas, when met by the
-hearty welcome of friends who had come before, and cheered by fresh
-buffalo meat and parched corn, they rejoice at their deliverance, and
-resolve to be contented with their lot.
-
-"This is no vision of the imagination, it is but an imperfect
-description of the pilgrimage of my own father and mother, and of many
-others who settled in Kentucky in December, 1779."
-
-Not until 1792 was the mountain route improved. "In that year," writes
-Mr. Speed, "according to an account-book recently found among the Henry
-Innis Papers, by Colonel John Mason Brown ... a scheme was projected for
-the clearing and improvement of the Wilderness Road, under the direction
-of Colonel John Logan and James Knox. It was a private enterprise
-altogether; the subscribers to it are set down in the book as follows:
-
- Isaac Shelby, L3 0s
- Robert Breckinridge, 2 8
- George Nicholas, 2 8
- Henry Pawling, 1 10
- John Brown, 2 8
- James Brown, 1 16
- Alexander S. Bullitt, 2 8
- Wm. McDowell, 1 10
- Edward S. Thomas, 1 10
- Joseph Crockett, 1 18
- Wm. King, 10
- Wm. Montgomery, jr., 1 10
- John Hawkins, 1 10
- Samuel Woods, 1 4
- Hubbard Taylor, 2 8
- Thomas Todd, 1 10
- Wm. Steele, 1 10
- James Trotter, 1 18
- Joseph Gray, 2 2
- Joshua Hobbs, 1 4
- Robert Todd, 1 10
- Jesse Cravens, 1 10
- David Knox, 1 12
- Thomas Lewis, 1 10
- Samuel Taylor, 1 4
- John McKinney, 1 18
- Nicholas Lewis, 1 4
- Jacob Froman, 3 0
- Richard Young, 1 4
- James Davies, 1 10
- Robert Patterson, 1 10
- Robert Mosby, 1 10
- John Watkins, 1 4
- Matthew Walton, 1 16
- John Jouett, 1 10
- Robert Abel, 12
- John Wilson, 12
- Richard Taylor, 1 10
- Arthur Fox, 1 0
- John Caldwell, 12
- George Thompson, 1 4
- Baker Ewing,
- Abe Buford, 1 8
- Willis Green, 1 10
- Wm. Montgomery, sr., 1 10
- Morgan Forbes, 18
- Daniel Hudgins, 6
- Samuel Grundy, 1 10
- James Hays, 1 10
- James Edwards, 9
- Wm. Campbell, 12
- David Stevenson, 9
- Hugh Logan, 6
- Peter Troutman, 12
- Thomas Montgomery, 6
- John Vauhn, 6
- Elijah Cravens, 6
- Richard Chapman, 6
- James Sutton, 3
- Joseph Lewis, 6
- Wm. Baker, 6
- Richard Jackman, 6
- Jonathan Forbes, 12
- Isaac Hite, 12
- John Blane, 12
- Abraham Hite, 12
- John Caldwell, 1 4
- Peyton Short, 1 10
- George M. Bedinger, 18
- Alex. D. Orr, 1 10
- Philip Caldwell, 1 4
- Cornelius Beatty, 1 16
- Nathaniel Hart, 1 4
- John Grant, 1 10
- Andrew Holmes, 1 16
- Alex. Parker, 1 16
- Robert Barr, 2 8
- James Parker, 1 16
- Thomas Kennedy, 3 0
- Wm. Live, 1 18
- George Teagarden, 18
- George Muter, 1 10
- James Hughes, 1 10
- Buckner Thruston, 1 10
- John Moylan, 1 10
- Samuel McDowell, 1 4
- James Parberry, 3 0
- Joseph Reed, 2 0
- Wm. Perrett, 5
- John Robinson, 2 0
- John Wilkins, 4
- Wm. Whilley, Bacon acct.
- Henry Clark, 6
- Hardy Rawles, 2 0
- James Young, 12
- John Warren, 6
- Peter Sidebottom, 6
- John Willey, 6
- Moses Collier, 12
- Abraham Himberlin, 1 0
- Alex Blane, 12
- John Jones, 18
- Levi Todd, 1 0
- Thomas Ball, 12
-
-"Besides these, it appears from a note in the memorandum book there were
-other subscribers. Among the Innis papers I have found the following
-paper:
-
-'Colonel John Logan and Colonel James Knox, having consented to act as
-commissioners to direct and supervise the making and opening a road from
-the Crab Orchard to Powell's Valley, provided funds to defray the
-necessary expenses shall be procured, we, the subscribers, do therefore
-severally engage to pay the sum annexed to our names to the Hon. Harry
-Innis and Colonel Levi Todd, or to their order, in trust, to be by them
-applied to the payment of the reasonable expenses which the said
-commissioners may incur in carrying the above design into effect, also
-to the payment of such compensation to the said commissioners for their
-services as the said Innis and Todd may deem adequate.'
-
- June 20, 1792.
-
- Thos. Barber, $10
- Wm. Crow, 5
- Green Dorsey, 18
- John Cochran, 4
- David Gillis, 10
- Wm. Petty, 1
- John Warren, 10
- Wm. Kenton, 1
- Philip Bush, jr., 10
- David Rice, 1
- John Rochester, 10
- John Rogers, 1
- Samuel G. Keen, 5
- Padtrick Curran, 1
- John Reedyun, 1
- Daniel Barber, 1
- Philip Yeiser, 3
-
-"The money subscribed was disbursed by Harry Innis. Men were employed as
-'road cutters,' as 'surveyors,' to 'carry provisions,' to 'grind corn,'
-and 'collect bacon.' The pay was two shillings sixpence per day, and
-the work extended over twenty-two days in the summer of 1792."[28]
-
-The Kentucky legislature passed an act in 1793, which provided a guard
-for pilgrims on the Wilderness Road; in 1794 an act was passed for the
-clearing of the Boonesborough fork of the road, from Rockcastle Creek to
-the Kentucky River. In 1795 the legislature passed an act to make the
-Wilderness Road a "wagon road" thirty feet wide from near Crab Orchard
-to Cumberland Gap. Proposals being advertised for, the aged Daniel Boone
-addressed Governor Isaac Shelby the following letter:
-
- "Sir feburey the 11th 1796
-
- after my Best Respts to your Excelancy and famyly I wish to inform
- you that I have sum intention of undertaking this New Rode that is
- to be Cut through the Wilderness and I think My Self intiteled to
- the ofer of the Bisness as I first Marked out that Rode in March
- 1775 and Never Re'd anything for my trubel and Sepose I am No
- Statesman I am a Woodsman and think My Self as Capable of Marking
- and Cutting that Rode as any other man Sir if you think with Me I
- would thank you to wright mee a Line by the post the first
- oportuneaty and he Will Lodge it at Mr. John Miler son hinkston
- fork as I wish to know Where and When it is to be Laat [let] So
- that I may atend at the time
-
- I am Deer Sir your very omble sarvent"[29]
-
-Boone probably did not get the contract.[30]
-
-In 1797 five hundred pounds were appropriated for the repair of the road
-and erection of toll-gates. The result of this and all subsequent
-legislation, to preserve a thoroughfare after its day and reason for
-existence had passed, is thus summed up by Mr. Allen: "But despite all
-this--despite all that has been done to civilize it since Boone traced
-its course in 1790 [1775?], this honored historic thoroughfare remains
-today as it was in the beginning, with all its sloughs and sands, its
-mud and holes, and jutting ledges of rock and loose bowlders, and twists
-and turns, and general total depravity." And yet "it is impossible,"
-Mr. Allen continues, "to come upon this road without pausing, or to
-write of it without a tribute."
-
-The mountainous portions of Boone's old road are the picturesque as well
-as the historic portions. And come what may, this zig-zag pathway
-through Powell's Valley and Cumberland Gap can never be effaced--never
-forgotten. The footsteps of the tens of thousands who have passed over
-it, exhausted though each pilgrim may have been, have left a trace that
-a thousand years cannot eradicate. And so long as the print of those
-weary feet can be seen in dark Powell's Valley, on Cumberland Gap, and
-beside Yellow and Rockcastle Creeks, so long will there be a memorial
-left to perpetuate the heroism of the first Kentuckians--and the memory
-of what the Middle West owes to Virginia and her neighbors. For when all
-is said this track from tide water through Cumberland Gap must remain a
-monument to the courage and patriotism of the people of old Virginia and
-North Carolina.
-
-Cumberland Gap, "that high-swung gateway through the mountain" stands
-as "a landmark of what Nature can do when she wishes to give an
-opportunity to the human race in its migrations and discoveries, without
-surrendering control of its liberty and its fate." Here passed the
-mound-building Indian and the buffalo, marking the first routes from
-North to South across the continent. Here later passed the first
-flood-tide of white men's immigration. There are few spots on the
-continent, it is said, where the traveler of today is brought more
-quickly to a pause, overcome equally by the stupendous panorama before
-him, and by the memory of the historical associations which will assail
-even the most indifferent. Ere you reach the Gap "the idea of it,"
-writes Mr. Allen, "dominates the mind. While yet some miles away, it
-looms up, 1675 feet in elevation, some half a mile across from crest to
-crest, the pinnacle on the left towering to the height of 2500 feet. It
-was late in the afternoon when our tired horses began the long, winding,
-rocky climb from the valley to the brow of the pass. As we stood in the
-passway, amid the deepening shadows of the twilight and the solemn
-repose of the mighty landscape, the Gap seemed to be crowded with
-two invisible and countless pageants of human life, the one passing
-in, the other passing out; and the air grew thick with unheard
-utterances--primeval sounds undistinguishable and strange, of creatures
-nameless and never seen by man; the wild rush and whoop of retreating
-and pursuing tribes; the slow steps of watchful pioneers; the wail of
-dying children and the songs of homeless women; the muffled tread of
-routed and broken armies--all the sounds of surprise and delight,
-victory and defeat, hunger and pain, and weariness and despair, that the
-human heart can utter. Here passed the first of the white race who led
-the way into the valley of the Cumberland; here passed that small band
-of fearless men who gave the Gap its name; here passed the 'Long
-Hunters'; here rushed armies of the Civil War; here has passed the wave
-of westerly immigration, whose force has spent itself only on the
-Pacific slopes; and here in the long future must flow backward and
-forward the wealth of the North and the South."
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] Johnson's _First Explorations of Kentucky_ (Filson Club
-Publications, No. 13), contains the journals of Walker and Gist used in
-connection with this chapter.
-
-[2] Johnson's _First Explorations of Kentucky_ (Filson Club Publications
-No. 13), p. 59.
-
-[3] _First Explorations of Kentucky_ (Filson Club Publications No. 13),
-pp. 85-86.
-
-[4] MSS. of Major Pleasant Henderson in the _Draper Collection_,
-Madison, Wisconsin; _Kentucky MSS._, vol. 2, fol. 23.
-
-[5] Draper Collection: _Kentucky MSS._ vol. 1.
-
-[6] The maternal grandfather of Abraham Lincoln.
-
-[7] This copy of the journal was made from the original by Mary
-Catharine Calk, granddaughter of Thomas Calk, Jr.
-
-[8] Draper Collection: _Kentucky MSS._, vol. 4, cc. p. 85.
-
-[9] _The Wilderness Road_: pp. 18-20.
-
-[10] Draper Collection: _Kentucky MSS._, vol. 1, fol. 215.
-
-[11] _Id._
-
-[12] Draper Notes, Wisconsin Historical Society, vol. 2; _id._, _Martin
-to Gov. Harrison_, Trip of 1860, vol. 3, p. 27.
-
-[13] _Draper Notes_, vol. 2, p. 56.
-
-[14] _Id._, pp. 126-127.
-
-[15] _Kentucky Gazette_: no. 33, April 12, 1788.
-
-[16] _Id._, no. 36, May 3, 1788.
-
-[17] _Id._
-
-[18] _Id._, no. 38, May 17, 1788.
-
-[19] _Id._, vol. ii, no. 10, November 1, 1788.
-
-[20] _Id._, vol. ii, no. 14, November 29, 1788.
-
-[20*] See _Historic Highways of America_, vol. ii, note 32.
-
-[21] Allen: _The Blue Grass Region of Kentucky_, pp. 251-252.
-
-[22] Speed: _The Wilderness Road_, p. 30; cf. pp. 42, 43; cf. Roosevelt:
-_The Winning of the West_ (1899), vol. i, p. 316.
-
-[23] Draper Collection: _Kentucky MSS._, vol. 23, cc. pp. 19-24.
-
-[24] Speed: _The Wilderness Road_, p. 30. Cf. _American Pioneer_, vol.
-ii, pp. 219-220; _St. Clair Papers_, vol. ii, p. 246; _Life of Nathaniel
-Massie_, p. 121; Collins's _History of Kentucky_, vol. ii, p. 327.
-
-[25] _Draper's Notes_, vol. II, Trip 1860, iii, p. 56.
-
-[26] Cf. _Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents_, vol. 1, p. 145.
-
-[27] _Kentucky Gazette_: vol. ii, no. 9, October 25, 1788.
-
-[28] _The Wilderness Road_, pp. 48-50.
-
-[29] Collins: _History of Kentucky_, vol. ii, p. 242.
-
-[30] _Id._, p. 213.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-1. Passages in italics are surrounded by _underscores_.
-
-2. Obvious errors in spelling and punctuation have been corrected except
-for narratives and letters included in this text.
-
-3. Footnotes have been moved to the end of the main text body.
-
-4. Images have been moved from the middle of a paragraph to the closest
-paragraph break.
-
-5. Carat character (^) followed by a single letter or a set of letters
-in curly brackets is indicative of subscript in the original book.
-
-6. For longtitude and latitude, the minutes and seconds are placed as
-single quotes within brackets. For example: 38 deg. 47['] 20[''].
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Historic Highways of America (Vol. 6), by
-Archer Butler Hulbert
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