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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63221 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63221)
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-Project Gutenberg's Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary Times, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary Times
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Alfred James Morrison
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2020 [EBook #63221]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN VIRGINIA--REVOLUTIONARY TIMES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _Travels in Virginia in
- Revolutionary Times_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHTED BY
- J. P. BELL COMPANY, INC.
- LYNCHBURG, VA.
- 1922
-
-
-
-
- Travels _in_ Virginia
- _in_ Revolutionary
- Times
-
-
- EDITED BY
- A. J. MORRISON
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENT
-
-
-This is a book of Travels in Virginia during a period that may be
-called revolutionary, from the year 1769 to the year 1802, when the
-United States lay still to the east of France and Spain, and the
-limit of Virginia to the west was the river Ohio: it was a proud
-commonwealth, and with reason, territorially, in the character of
-its ruling people, and in that inexplicable inheritance which has
-made Virginia significant. It is interesting to observe, among these
-travellers, how carefully the best informed of them estimate the
-strength of Virginia, whether justly or not regarded at home and here
-and there abroad as the most influential of the new states. Those were
-extraordinary years in the making of America, the fund of the capital
-of the country, as it were, accumulating to the point of application
-in surprising ways. It is well to look back, through foreign eyes, and
-see a little of what the situation was at that time in the State of the
-first dynasty.
-
-Of these travellers, one was in the country before the war and his
-memoranda introduce the Revolution--very peaceful, then disturbances,
-and then musquetry, the author shooting for King George; another
-came with the good King’s troops and saw Virginia on parole; one was
-a chaplain in the army of the allies, one a general officer of that
-army, and there was a surgeon to the enemies from Hesse, whose book is
-excellent in a series of remarkable books. The others came after the
-war, men of science, youngsters seeing the world, a missionary, a sad
-emigrant from France, and a sailor who had quitted the sea and embarked
-in the novelist’s business. A notable group of observers, and if, even
-where they are most explicit, we could see but a small part of what
-they intend us to see, what a picture. From year’s end to year’s end,
-decade to decade, the century is out, and everything is different; and
-to come at the truth of the matter as it was before we should have to
-retrace every step of the way, and that is impossible. As a makeshift
-we read novels and documented histories.
-
-The method in the chapters following has been to let the traveller
-tell his own story, interrupting him where he seems least interesting,
-adding very little, making him responsible for his version of the
-facts. It is not so much the itemized account that is wanted as the
-proceeds of the whole, the general balance as one impression. As many
-travellers, so many roads and they may follow but one. The young man
-will be apt to lose his temper and record disagreeable things. The
-great man, treated with consideration, will, if his digestion is good,
-be careful to be polite. The season will be a factor, for earth roads
-are not the same winter and summer. However, we should not be greatly
-deceived by the verdicts of eleven intelligent men who traverse the
-greater part of a given region during a space of thirty years.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- I. Narrative of John F. D. Smyth: 1769-1775 9
-
- II. Anburey, and the Convention Army in Virginia: 1779 23
-
- III. The Abbé Robin, One of the Chaplains to the French Army
- in America: 1781 31
-
- IV. The Marquis of Chastellux, Major-General in the French
- Army and Member of the French Academy: 1782 39
-
- V. Dr. Schoepf, Surgeon to the Hessian Troops
- (Ansbach-Bayreuth Division): 1783 49
-
- VI. Count Castiglioni, Chevalier of the Order of St.
- Stephen, P. M.: 1786 61
-
- VII. Missionary Journeys of Dr. Coke: 1785-1791 71
-
- VIII. A Summer at Bath--Captain Bayard: 1791 81
-
- IX. What Isaac Weld Saw: 1796 91
-
- X. The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt: 1796 111
-
- XI. John Davis of Salisbury: 1801-1802 123
-
- List of Travels 137
-
-
-
-
-_I._
-
-_NARRATIVE OF JOHN F. D. SMYTH._
-
-_1769-1775._
-
- _Captain Smyth--The Capes and Jamestown--Williamsburg
- and the Races--Richmond--Music of the
- Bullfrog--Blandford--Petersburg--Swede’s Bridge--Hicks’s Bridge--Mr.
- Willis--James River Lowgrounds--Summer Routine of the Planter.
- North Carolina--The Lower Sawra Towns--Journey to Kentucky--Indian
- Braves--Fort on Smith’s River--The Wart Mountain: Amazing
- Perspective--Judge Henderson’s Settlement._
-
-
-John Ferdinand Dalziel Smyth, it appears, changed his name in 1793
-to Stuart. Smyth’s last published work was a poem in folio called
-“Destiny and Fortitude: An Heroic Poem on the Misfortunes of the House
-of Stuart.” His father, Wentworth Smyth, was killed in the Highlands
-of Scotland after being concerned in the attempt to bring in the
-Stuarts in 1745. J. F. D. Smyth studied medicine at the University of
-Edinburgh. He came to America possibly about 1769, and settled at first
-near Williamsburg as a physician. He was active in the Revolution, and
-for a time drew a pension of £300 a year for his losses sustained in
-America. He was killed accidentally in London in 1814. In this case
-there is nothing in a name, because in tracing Smyth from the title
-page of his best known work, his “Tour in the United States,” nothing
-can be discovered about him. It is only by chance that in looking up
-Smyth the eye falls upon Stuart. Although he was in most of the English
-colonies, and saw the greater part of the Spanish possessions in
-Louisiana and Florida, Captain Smyth preferred the Potomac region, and
-lived there, both peacefully and adventurously, until finally disturbed
-by the war. He was not a Tory, because he was not strictly an American.
-In 1778, his correspondence proves, he was a captain in the Queen’s
-Rifles. Two years before he had been ingeniously farming some six
-hundred acres of good land on the Maryland side of the Potomac. Captain
-John Ferdinand Dalziel Smyth, explorer, planter, fighter and author,
-was (from his own account) not unlike the more famous Smith, who, if he
-had chosen, could have spelled the name with a y as well.
-
-John F. D. Smyth came in sight of land on the 4th day of August (he
-neglects to give the year), “in the forenoon, in a fine day, with a
-clear, serene sky. We soon sailed within the capes of Virginia, Cape
-Henry and Cape Charles, which last is an island named Smith’s. We past
-Lynhaven Bay on our left, and the opening of the Chesapeak on the
-right, and in the evening anchored in Hampton Road, which appears to
-be very safe. The night being calm, we were assaulted by great numbers
-of musketoes, a very noxious fly.” After a day the ship proceeded to
-Jamestown, “passing a great number of most charming situations on
-each side of this beautiful river.” Jamestown still sent a member
-to the House of Burgesses, but there was only one voter, who was the
-proprietor of the borough and also the Burgess, Champion Travers, Esq.
-Making an excursion with a companion to Williamsburg, with which town
-Captain Smyth was well pleased, they “dined very agreeably at the
-Raleigh Tavern, where we had exceeding good Maderia.” What with pocket
-boroughs and good Maderia, the traveler must have felt as if he had
-scarcely left home.
-
-The author describes Williamsburg, that capital city, but being fond
-of sports, he gives most space to the races: “Very capital horses are
-started here, such as would make no despicable figure at Newmarket; nor
-is their speed, bottom or blood inferior to their appearance. Their
-stock is from old Cade, old Crab, old Partner, Regulus, Babraham,
-Bosphorus, Devonshire Childers, the Cullen Arabian, the Cumberland
-Arabian, &c., in England; and a horse from Arabia named the Bellsize,
-which was imported into America and is now in existence.” The
-quarter-racing of Southern Virginia and North Carolina struck Smyth as
-being a strange institution. Many early travelers devote a page or two
-to the quarter-race, a match between two horses to run one-quarter of
-a mile straight out. Smyth observes: “They have a breed in Virginia
-that performs it with astonishing velocity, beating every other for
-that distance with great ease; but they have no bottom. However, I am
-confident that there is not a horse in England, nor perhaps the whole
-world, that can excel them in rapid speed; and these likewise make
-excellent saddle horses for the road. The Virginians, of all ranks and
-denominations, are excessively fond of horses, and especially those of
-the race breed. Nobody walks on foot the smallest distance, except when
-hunting; indeed, a man will frequently go five miles to catch a horse,
-to ride only one mile afterwards.”
-
-Returning from Williamsburg to Jamestown, Smyth joined the ship again,
-which, on the 9th of August, got “under weigh” for City Point. They
-passed many delightful situations and charming seats, the names of
-which are still well known either actually or historically. At City
-Point the genial author hired a boat and four negroes for a dollar
-and a half per day to continue up the river to Richmond. “I slept on
-board the boat, and on the 11th, in the forenoon, landed at the town
-of Shokoes, at the falls of James River. There are three towns at this
-place. Richmond, the largest, is below the falls, and is separated only
-by a creek, named Shokoes, from the town of Shokoes. On the south side
-of the river stands the town of Chesterfield, best known by the name of
-Rocky Ridge.” In those days the river was the road to town. Tobacco was
-boated down to Westham, seven miles above the falls, and thence brought
-by land carriage to Shokoes, or Richmond. Smyth speaks of a man who,
-bringing a double load down to Westham, unconsciously kept on, passed
-all the falls, and arrived not quite sobered at Shokoes. “This is one
-of the most extraordinary accidents that has occurred, or perhaps was
-ever heard of.”
-
-The great rivers of America, the great forests, the fierce electrical
-storms, the strange methods of agriculture, the lightning bugs, the
-mosquitoes and the bullfrogs astonished the European. Of the bullfrog,
-Smyth remarks: “Their note is harsh, sonorous and abrupt, frequently
-appearing to pronounce articulate sounds, in striking resemblance to
-the following words: Hogshead tobacco, knee deep, ancle deep, deeper
-and deeper, Piankitank, and many others, but all equally grating and
-dissonant. They surprise a man exceedingly, as he will hear their
-hoarse, loud bellowing clamor just by him, and sometimes all around
-him, yet he cannot discover from whence it proceeds. They are of the
-size of a man’s foot.” Bullfrogs by day and the falls by night: “When a
-person arrives at Richmond his ears are continually assailed with the
-prodigious noise and roaring of the falls, which almost stuns him and
-prevents him from sleeping for several nights.”
-
-Richmond was close to nature in those days. Captain Smyth used to
-take walks among the rocks and solitary romantic situations around
-the falls. His custom was to carry a book in his pocket, and read
-in the shade until he “insensibly dropt asleep. This was my daily
-recreation, which I never neglected. But I was once extremely surprised
-at beholding, as soon as I opened my eyes, a prodigious large snake,
-within a few feet of me, basking himself in the sun. He was jet black,
-with a copper-coloured belly, very fine, sparkling eyes, and at least
-seven feet long.”
-
-August 28th Smyth set out for the South. Crossing the James in a
-ferry-boat early in the morning, he rode through the towns of Rocky
-Ridge and Warwick (about five miles beyond), stopped at Osborne’s,
-eight miles from Warwick, and reached Blandford in the afternoon,
-having crossed the Appomattox by a lofty wooden bridge at the
-town of Pocahontas, one of the three towns at the falls of the
-Appomattox--Petersburg, Blandford, Pocahontas. “In Blandford, the
-charming, pretty town of Blandford, in a beautiful plain on the river
-brink, on a very pleasant and delightful spot, I found an excellent
-ordinary at Boyd’s.”
-
-Smyth purchased two horses at Petersburg. For the best he gave £15
-and the worst cost him £25. On the 4th of September he left Blandford
-and rode fifteen miles to Hatton’s Ordinary, and thence to the
-Nottoway River, at Swede’s Bridge. “I arrived at Stewart’s Ordinary to
-breakfast, which was toasted Indian hoecake and very excellent cyder.
-Being always particularly careful of my horses, and they having fared
-very indifferently the night before, I ordered the hostler to give
-them plenty of meat.” The hostler understanding meat to mean meat,
-put bacon before these Petersburg horses. A crowd assembled, and this
-new balanced ration became a great joke. The horses having been fed
-corn, which, after all, is a form of bacon, the party proceeded to
-Three Creeks, crossed them on three wooden bridges, and then crossed
-the Meherrin at Hicks’s Bridge, “remarkably lofty and built of timber,
-as all in the southern part of America appear to be.” Near Hicks’s
-Bridge[A] (and ford) lived Mr. Willis, breeder of the original stock
-of triumphant quarter racers. “We took some refreshment at Edwards’s
-Ordinary, an exceedingly good building, with excellent accommodations,
-lately erected at this place. At the distance of ten miles we entered
-the province of North Carolina.”
-
-Smyth mentions that the James River lowgrounds produced twenty-five,
-thirty, and sometimes thirty-five bushels of wheat from one of seed;
-the high land from eight to fifteen for one. “Much about the same
-quantity of Indian corn is produced from an acre, according to the
-quality and excellence of the soil, though it does not require more
-than a peck of seed to plant it. The produce of an acre in the culture
-of tobacco, in the best land, is about 1,660 pounds weight; on the
-worst about 500 pounds weight. An acre always contains nearly 1,250
-hills of Indian corn, with two, three, and sometimes in strong land,
-four stalks in each hill, or about 5,000 plants of tobacco.”
-
-In the summer-time, says Captain Smyth, the average planter “rises
-in the morning about 6 o’clock [the very rich men, he says, rose at
-9]; he then drinks a julep, made of rum, water and sugar, but very
-strong; then he walks, or more generally rides, round his plantation,
-views all his stock and all his crop, breakfasts about 10 o’clock on
-cold turkey, cold meat, fried hominy, toast and cyder, ham, bread and
-butter, tea, coffee or chocolate, which last, however, is seldom tasted
-but by the women; the rest of the day he spends in much the same manner
-before described [i. e., in trying to keep cool]; he eats no supper;
-they never even think of it. The women very seldom drink tea in the
-afternoon, the men never.”
-
-Captain Smyth, as already described (following his tour as he gives
-it), landed at Norfolk, saw Williamsburg, Richmond and Petersburg, and
-from Petersburg set out for Halifax, in North Carolina. From Halifax
-he took the Hillsborough Road and thence passed to Camden, in South
-Carolina, coming back to Hillsborough as a base from whence to proceed
-to Kentucky, better known at that time as Henderson’s Settlement.
-Smyth saw Judge Henderson[B] in North Carolina, and had much talk with
-him, thought him an extraordinary man, and became curious to see the
-wonderful country beyond the Holston and the Big Sandy, the proprietary
-regions of Western Virginia. “From the conversation I had with this
-very extraordinary person, Mr. Henderson, I entertained a strong
-inclination to pay a visit to his domain; which must certainly afford
-a large field for speculation and enterprise, being situated in the
-very heart of the continent of America, and in a great degree precluded
-from the general intercourse of the rest of mankind, being likewise
-several hundred miles from any other settlement.” This was before the
-establishment of the county of Kentucky in 1776. After that year the
-number of emigrants from the coast country was so large it is almost
-a matter of surprise that anybody was left in Virginia east of the
-mountains.
-
-Smyth made a rather difficult journey from Hillsborough to the North
-Carolina line. That was the back road in those times, which the
-Southern Railway has done so much to develop in recent years. In 1772
-the road was scarcely a blazed path through the woods. Near the North
-Carolina line Captain Smyth stayed for about ten days at the upper
-and the lower Sawra Towns, old Indian settlements south of Dan River.
-“The whole settlement of the Lower Sawra Towns, being a vast body of
-excellent and most valuable land containing 33,000 acres, of which
-more than 9,000 are exceedingly rich low grounds, is the property of
-Mr. Farley, of the island of Antigua, in the West Indies. About the
-year 1761 the whole of this extensive tract of land was sold to Mr.
-Maxwell, who concluded the purchase without seeing it. In the spring
-of the ensuing year he went out to view his new estate. It happened
-just at that time that a prodigious flood in the Dan had overspread the
-whole of the lowgrounds on the river, of which near 10,000 acres were
-covered by the inundation. This extraordinary circumstance and very
-awful appearance astonished and intimidated Mr. Maxwell, who on his
-return to Westover, expressing dissatisfaction with his purchase, the
-£500 was returned to him. That same year Mr. Farley, of Antigua, being
-on a visit in Virginia, immediately offered £1,000 for the purchase,
-without ever having seen it also; which offer was as readily accepted.
-In the year 1769 Mr. Farley’s son, James Farley, came into Virginia,
-and ventured out that distance in the back country to view the estate.
-After some difficulty in removing accidental settlers, he divided the
-tract into numerous plantations and farms which he rented out, keeping
-in his own hands a most valuable, excellent tract, the choice of the
-whole. In short, the value of this estate has augmented so exceedingly
-that in the year 1772 Mr. Farley refused £28,000 for the purchase of
-it.”
-
-This transaction is interesting enough, as showing what the apparent
-opportunities were for land speculation in the later colonial period,
-and yet how impossible it was for any exclusive business of that sort
-to succeed on a large scale. General Washington owned more than 500,000
-acres of land to the west, the proceeds of which to his estate were not
-very considerable. Robert Morris, the shrewd financier, went bankrupt
-in attempting to develop the western country as a field for the
-operator in real estate. There was a continent of land to be exploited,
-and it was very difficult to corner even a small part of the market.
-The land could not be handled as capital until a sufficient number of
-settlers had come in, each contributing his accumulations to enhance
-the value of the common stock. It was from the necessity of the case a
-common stock at the first, and the pioneers were not long in finding
-that out.
-
-In his journey to Kentucky, Captain Smyth happened upon some of these
-pioneers. His observations confirm the belief that the hero is a hero,
-but also a very fallible person. “On the 15th day of May I took my
-leave of Mr. Bailey and his family (at the Lower Sawra Towns), every
-one of whom seemed to be really more concerned for my safety than I
-could possibly have conceived, being all in tears and appearing almost
-certain that I should be destroyed by the savages; having used their
-most earnest persuasions and utmost endeavors to change my resolution
-of proceeding on this journey. The kind-hearted and truly amiable Miss
-Betsy Bailey insisted on piloting me over the Dan herself, rather than
-any of her brothers, although the ford at this place was exceedingly
-rapid, rocky and dangerous. In a very few hours, by pursuing the wrong
-path, I found myself in the woods without any track whatever to direct
-my course, that in which I had been having terminated, being only made
-by the hogs, which run wild almost all over America, and especially in
-the Western frontiers. It is impossible for me to ascertain how far I
-had traveled in this most disagreeable of all imaginable situations,
-when all on a sudden, on the side of a gentle ascent, I perceived a
-number of men sitting on the ground, and such they were as I had never
-seen before, painted black and red and all armed with firelocks and
-tomahawks.”
-
-These were Indians, and they were very hospitable to Smyth. He gave
-them the stone buckle and gold lace from the crown of his hat. “They
-seemed much pleased with the present and made signs for me to sit
-down and eat with them. This I readily complied with, and partook
-of a repast which consisted of venison, kernels of hickory nuts and
-wallnuts, all mixed together with wild honey, and every one eat with
-his hands. Having a keen appetite I eat very heartily, which seemed to
-afford a particular satisfaction to my hospitable savage friends, for
-such indeed they were to me.” Smyth spent the night with these warriors
-(they were really on the war path), and the next morning one of them
-put him into the way to Beaver Creek, upon Smith’s River, in what was
-then Pittsylvania County.
-
-Along Leatherwood Creek, Captain Smyth, the bold tourist, saw several
-fine plantations deserted of the owners. The cattle and horses were
-wandering about and presented a very mournful, melancholy appearance.
-Reports of the movements of the Indians had driven the inhabitants
-to the fort on Smith’s River. About eight miles beyond Leatherwood
-Creek (Patrick Henry lived on that stream for a year or two after the
-Revolution) a man appeared on horseback, whose horse was covered with
-foam and sweat. He was astonished beyond measure when Smyth told him he
-had come from the Sawra Towns and had eaten and slept with a party of
-Indians. “In riding about two or three miles further I at length came
-to the fort itself, which contained all the inhabitants of the country
-around. I was exceedingly happy at the thought of being once more among
-inhabitants, but this imaginary felicity was of very short duration,
-for when I went to the gate of the fort expecting to go in, I was
-positively refused admittance. They within insisted that I was an enemy
-or a Frenchman because I had been in company with the Indians and had
-escaped unmolested, and also as my accent was different from theirs.
-This I found they were informed of by the man I met on horseback, and
-who turned back full speed as soon as I acquainted him of my having
-been with the Indians. I continued to entreat for admittance until
-they threatened to fire upon me if I did not retire, which made me
-withdraw from the gate to consider what steps I must pursue, for I
-never found myself in so singular and unpleasant a predicament in my
-life. I wandered round and round this fortress until night began to
-advance, and then ventured to approach the gate once more. They again
-threatening to shoot me, I assured them that I would as soon be killed
-by them as by the Indians, and solemnly swore I would set fire to the
-stockades. Upon this I was desired to wait a few minutes, until they
-consulted together; at the conclusion of which they agreed to admit
-me. The wicker gate was then opened and I crept in.” The conditions
-inside, of necessity, were not very agreeable.
-
-How exactly truthful Captain Smyth is it is not possible to say. By
-his account after a few days at the fort he procured a guide and set
-out for the mountains, regardless of the Indians. He had heard of the
-Wart Mountain[C] and climbed that eminence for the view which, as he
-describes it, was an amazing prospect. Doubtless with a map before him
-he was able to include in his description more than the eye fell upon.
-“Language fails in attempting to describe this most astonishing and
-almost unbounded perspective. On the east you could perceive the deep
-and broken chasms, where the rivers Dan, Mayo, Smith’s, Bannister’s
-and Stanton direct their courses; some raging in vast torrents and
-some gliding in silent, gentle meanders. On the north you see the
-Black Water, a branch of the Stanton; and the break in the mountains
-where the Fluvannah, a vast branch of the James, passes through. On
-the northwest you will observe with great astonishment and pleasure
-the tremendous and abrupt break in the Alegany Mountains, through
-which the mighty waters of the New River and the Great Kanhawah pass.
-On the west you can very plainly discover the three forks or branches
-of the Holston, where they break through the Great Alegany Mountains,
-and still beyond them you may observe Clinch’s River or Pelisippi. On
-the south you can see the Dan, the Catawba, the Yadkin and the Haw,
-breaking through the mighty mountains that appear in confused heaps and
-piled on each other in every direction.” It is safe to say that Smyth
-did not see all this. But the description is interesting. Many voyagers
-to the West must have beheld scenes comparable, with thoughts more or
-less defined that here was a land for the possessing and a new world
-indeed.
-
-From the Wart Mountain Captain Smyth continued, by way of New River,
-the branches of the Holston (Stahlnaker’s Settlement on the middle
-fork), Clinch River and the Warrior’s branch to the Kentucky River. “In
-five more easy days’ journeys, the particulars of which are not worth
-relating, we at length arrived at the famed settlement near the mouth
-of the Kentucky on the 8th day of June, after having traveled at least
-490 miles, from the fort on Smith’s River, in nineteen days. I was soon
-directed to the house of Mr. Henderson, where I found a most hospitable
-and kind reception.”
-
-From that outpost of Virginia Captain Smyth passed down the Ohio to the
-territories of Spain, along the Gulf coast by water to East Florida,
-and so to Charleston.[D]
-
-
-
-
-_II._
-
-_THOMAS ANBUREY, AND THE CONVENTION ARMY IN VIRGINIA._
-
-_1779._
-
- _Lieutenant Anburey--Progress of the Convention Army--Winter
- Roads--Charlottesville--Colonel Harvey--The Piedmont
- Plantation--Roundabout Directions--The Quarter-Race--Richmond--Forest
- Fire--Barrack Cats._
-
-
-General Burgoyne, of amiable qualities but of no great skill as a
-commander, having had the misfortune to lose his army at Saratoga, in
-the month of October, 1777, a convention was agreed upon, stipulating
-the treatment to be accorded the defeated troops. Thereafter, until
-exchanged, these Saratoga troops were known among themselves as the
-Convention Army. The art of saving one’s face is one of the most
-intricate yet in existence. Young Thomas Anburey, who was perhaps a
-lieutenant in the Twenty-ninth Regiment of Foot under General Burgoyne,
-surrendered with his brother officers, and with them was sent first
-to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and later to Virginia. Anburey, a very
-cheerful young person, kept a sort of journal of his military and other
-travels in America, and worked up his notes into the form of letters
-to a friend. His observations are not profound, but are marked by
-good sense and ingenuousness, and make much better reading than more
-pretentious narratives.[E]
-
-After being quartered for more than a year in Massachusetts, Anburey
-and his friends were sent South, in order to shift the incidence
-of taxation in the matter of subsistence for so many able-bodied
-men, numbers of whom (the Hessians, for instance) no doubt had in
-America their first opportunity of getting at least one square meal
-a day. “Especially the Germans,” says Anburey, “who seeing in what a
-comfortable manner their countrymen live, left us in great numbers,
-as we marched through New York, the Jerseys and Pennsylvania; among
-the number of deserters is my servant, who, as we left Lancaster, ran
-from me with my horse, portmanteau, and everything he could take with
-him.” It was at best a strange spectacle, this of an army of desirable
-citizens marching captive through an abounding wilderness, and merely
-on parole.
-
-From Lancaster the Convention Army moved to Frederick Town, in
-Maryland, where they spent Christmas Day, 1778. The commissary of
-provisions at Frederick, Mr. McMurdo, was very polite to the officers
-quartered at his house. Anburey says: “His attention was such that
-although for this day (which is as much a day of festival as in
-England), he had been engaged for some time past among his friends and
-relations, he would stay at home and entertain us with an excellent
-Christmas dinner, not even forgetting plum pudding. I now experienced
-what had been often told me, that the further I went to the southward
-I should find the inhabitants possess more liberality and hospitality.”
-Anburey’s impressions of the North, of course, were formed rather
-precipitately at Saratoga.
-
-Charlottesville, almost a frontier town then, was the destination of
-the Convention Army. “After we left Frederick Town we crossed the
-Potowmack River with imminent danger, as the current was very rapid,
-large floats of ice swimming down it; though the river was only half a
-mile wide, the scow that I crossed over in had several narrow escapes.
-At one time it was quite fastened in the ice, but by great exertions of
-the men in breaking it, we made good our landing on the opposite shore,
-near a mile lower than the ferry.” And the river crossed, hardships
-only increased on the Virginia side. The roads were bad from a late
-fall of snow not sufficiently encrusted to bear a man’s weight. The
-troops were continually sinking in mud up to their knees and cutting
-their shins and ankles; and after a march of sixteen or eighteen miles
-over such badly metalled roads, the men often had to sleep in the woods
-and the officers in any cabin available.
-
-“But on our arrival at Charlottesville no pen can describe the scene of
-misery and confusion that ensued. The officers of the First and Second
-Brigade were in the town, and our arrival added to their distress. This
-famous place we had heard so much of consisted only of a courthouse,
-one tavern, and about a dozen houses, all of which were crowded with
-officers. Those of our brigade, therefore, were obliged to ride about
-the country and entreat the inhabitants to take us in.” The men fared
-very badly. Instead of sleeping on the snow, under the trees, they
-went into barracks, hastily covering over a few cabins which had been
-begun but were left unroofed, and half-filled with snow. The trouble
-was that Colonel Harvey, to whom Congress had assigned the business
-of getting quarters ready for the tourists, had in turn placed his
-brother in charge. Colonel Harvey’s brother said that the army was not
-expected until the spring. There was no whiskey provided, the stock
-of provisions was scant, and the quarters were as described of the
-fretwork description.
-
-“As to the officers, upon signing a parole they might go to Richmond
-and other adjacent towns to procure themselves quarters. Accordingly
-a parole was signed, which allowed a circuit of near 100 miles. And
-after the officers had drawn lots, as three were to remain in the
-barracks with the men, or at Charlottesville, the principal part of
-them set off for Richmond, and many of them are at plantations twenty
-or thirty miles from the barracks. I was quartered, with four other
-officers of our regiment, at Jones’s Plantation, about twenty miles
-from the barracks. The face of the country appears an immense forest,
-interspersed with various plantations, four or five miles distant from
-each other. On these there is a dwelling house in the centre, with
-kitchens, smoke-house and outhouses detached, and from the various
-buildings each plantation has the appearance of a small village. At
-some little distance from the houses are peach and apple orchards, and
-scattered over the plantation are the cabins and tobacco houses.” The
-worm fence was an object of wonder to every foreigner, and yet in a
-country of abundant timber the most natural thing in the world. Anburey
-mentions that in the New England settlements (where the holdings
-were smaller and fences could be made with more particularity) the
-inhabitants had a saying, “He is making Virginia fences,” used of a man
-not sober, but able to walk, as it were.
-
-Anburey was twice at Richmond, once in the winter and once in the
-summer of 1779. The neighboring gentlemen were very hospitable,
-and would not let him leave until he had visited the whole circle.
-He speaks especially of Warwick and “Tuckahoe.” The proprietor of
-“Tuckahoe” was threatened with the burning of valuable mills because an
-English officer had been made welcome. It was an idle threat. On the
-way to Richmond, by the road through Goochland Courthouse, Anburey met
-that perennial, the celebrated roundabout directions: “If perchance
-you meet an inhabitant and enquire your way, his directions are, if
-possible, more perplexing than the roads themselves, for he tells you
-to keep the right-hand path, then you’ll come to an old field; you
-are to cross that, and then you’ll come to the fence of such a one’s
-plantation; then keep that fence, and you’ll come to a road that has
-three forks; keep the right-hand fork for about half a mile, and then
-you’ll come to a creek; after you cross that creek you must turn to the
-left, and there you’ll come to a tobacco house; after you have passed
-that you’ll come to another road that forks; keep the right-hand fork,
-and then you’ll come to Mr. Such-a-One’s ordinary, and he will direct
-you.” The fact of such directions as these, and the use made of them,
-are to be explained when we remember that the backwoodsman carries a
-map in his head, whereas the cockney’s brain is damaged by the use of
-maps.
-
-In the woods the Convention officer came upon a track for
-quarter-racing. “Near most of the ordinaries there is a piece of ground
-cleared in the woods for that purpose, where there are two paths, about
-six or eight yards asunder, which the horses run in. I think I can,
-without the slightest exaggeration, assert that even the famous Eclipse
-could not excel them in speed, for our horses are some time before they
-are able to get into full speed; but these are trained to set out in
-that manner the moment of starting. It is the most ridiculous amusement
-imaginable, for if you happen to be looking another way, the race is
-terminated before you can turn your head; notwithstanding which, very
-considerable sums are betted at these races. Only in the interior parts
-of this province are these races held, for they are much laughed at and
-ridiculed by the people in the lower parts, about Richmond and other
-great towns. At Williamsburg is a very excellent course for two, three
-or four-mile heats.”
-
-On his summer trip to Richmond, Anburey was struck by the numbers of
-peach orchards in full fruit--“it is deemed no trespass to stop and
-refresh yourself and your horse with them”--and by the sight of a
-family leaving a most comfortable house and good plantation to set out
-for Kentucky over the mountains. The summer of 1779 apparently was a
-good peach season, and a bad season in the item of forest fires. “The
-town of Richmond, as well as the plantations around for some miles,
-has been in imminent danger; as the woods have been on fire, which for
-some time past has raged with great fury, and that element seemed to
-threaten universal destruction; but, providentially, before it had done
-any material damage there fell a very heavy rain, which, nevertheless,
-has not altogether extinguished it [July 14, 1779]. During the summer
-months these fires are very frequent, and at Charlottesville I have
-seen the mountains on a blaze for three or four miles in length. They
-are occasioned by the carelessness of waggoners.”
-
-During the winter of 1779 the Convention Army at Charlottesville
-lost heavily by desertion. “I should observe that this desertion is
-among the British troops. For what reason it is impossible to say,
-the Americans shew more indulgence to the Germans, permitting them
-to go round the country to labor, and being for the most part expert
-handicraftsmen, they realize a great deal of money exclusive of their
-pay.”
-
-The officers made themselves pretty comfortable. They put up a coffee
-house, a theatre and a cold bath. Anburey made, or had made, a drawing
-entitled “Encampment of the Convention Army at Charlottes Ville,
-in Virginia, after they had surrendered to the Americans.” In this
-interesting print it is difficult to distinguish the theatre, but the
-coffee house is easily found.
-
-September, 1780, when orders came to move to the North again, the
-officers were loath to go. They had understood that they were to remain
-at Charlottesville until exchanged. Several of them “had laid out great
-sums in making themselves comfortable habitations; for the barracks
-became a little town, and there being more society, most of the
-officers had resorted there. The great objection to residing at them
-on our first arrival, was on account of the confined situation, being
-not only surrounded, but even in the woods themselves. The proprietor
-of the estate will reap great advantages, as the army entirely cleared
-a space of six miles in circumference around the barracks. After we
-quitted the barracks, the inhabitants were near a week in destroying
-the cats that were left behind, which impelled by hunger had gone into
-the woods. There was reason to suppose they would become extremely wild
-and ferocious and would be a great annoyance to their poultry.”
-
-The Convention Army, crossing the “Pignet Ridge, or more properly,
-the Blue Mountains,” at Wood’s Gap, moved to Winchester, and thence,
-recrossing the Ridge at Williams’s Gap, proceeded to Frederick Town,
-and so to New York to take ship.
-
-
-
-
-_III._
-
-_THE ABBÉ ROBIN, ONE OF THE CHAPLAINS TO THE FRENCH ARMY IN AMERICA._
-
-_1781._
-
- _‘New Travels in America’--From Rhode Island to
- Maryland--Annapolis--The French Army in the Chesapeake--M. de La
- Fayette--Williamsburg--Tobacco--Yorktown after Siege--Billetting of
- the French Troops._
-
-
-The French Army, after a voyage of eighty-five days, landed at Boston
-June 24, 1781. With it came the Abbé Robin, a philosopher who was
-more than once in America and has left recorded descriptions of
-Louisiana as well as of the Atlantic Coast. The Abbé Robin was a
-genial, generalizing observer--his New Travels in America[F] is an
-interesting book, particularly in its passages with a bearing upon the
-activities and the good behavior of the Allies from France. We learn
-therein how the French introduced among us the brass band and set on
-foot improvements in the art of the dance: they also brought us to a
-knowledge of the ancient diversion faro.
-
-The New Travels of the Abbé Robin, like so many other travellers’ books
-of that period, are in the form of letters to a friend. The author
-proceeded with the Army from Boston to Providence, through Connecticut
-(where he was struck with traces of the “active and inventive genius”
-of the inhabitants), to the Camp at Philippsburg, down the Hudson into
-the Jerseys, past Philadelphia and Baltimore. He writes:
-
-
- Annapolis, September 21, 1781.
-
- The army was to prosecute the rest of the march to Virginia by land,
- and with that view took the road leading to Alexandria, a flourishing
- commercial town upon the Potomack; but upon the news of the arrival
- of the _Romulus_ ship of war, with two frigates and a number of
- transports, we turned off towards Annapolis, but the horses and
- carriages continued their journey by land.
-
- As we advance towards the south we observe a sensible difference in
- the manners and customs of the people. This opulence was particularly
- observable at Annapolis. That very inconsiderable town, standing at
- the mouth of the river Severn, where it falls into the bay, out of
- the few buildings it contains, has at least three-fourths such as
- may be styled elegant and grand. The state-house is a very beautiful
- building, I think the most so of any I have seen in America. The
- peristyle is set off with pillars, and the edifice is topped with a
- dome.
-
- We are embarking with the greatest expedition; the weather is the
- finest you can conceive, and the wind fair: I think the impatience of
- the French will soon be at an end.
-
-
- Williamsburgh, September 30, 1781.
-
- The army has had a very agreeable passage hither, except the
- grenadiers, chasseurs, and the first American regiments [these
- sailed from the Head of Elk], who were fourteen days on the water.
- Judge how inconvenient this must have been to troops crowded into
- a narrow space, and without any decks over them; while even the
- officers had nothing but biscuit to live upon. The shores of this
- Bay, which is formed by the influx of so many great rivers, are far
- from being lofty, neither are they much cleared of woods, and it is
- but rarely that you discover any habitations; but the few we saw were
- very agreeably situated. This country will be, in time, one of the
- most beautiful in the world.
-
- When our little fleet had sailed up James River, celebrated for the
- excellent tobacco which grows upon its shores, we disembarked at
- James-Town, the place where the English first established themselves
- in Virginia. The troops have already joined the grenadiers,
- chasseurs, and the three thousand men brought hither by Count
- de Grasse, consisting of the regiments of Agenois, Gatinois and
- Touraine, under the command of Mons. de St. Simon, Maréchal de Camp.
- This General had a little before effected a junction with fifteen
- hundred or two thousand Americans, commanded by M. le Marquis
- de la Fayette, who, as you have heard, could never be reduced,
- notwithstanding the forces of Cornwallis were three or four times his
- number. I should have mentioned, that M. de la Fayette, in quality of
- Major-General of an American army, at the age of twenty-four years,
- found himself at this time superior in command to a French general
- officer, and continued so until the other detachments of the army
- were collected into one body under General Washington.
-
- Williamsburg does not contain above a hundred and fifty houses, and
- is the only town we have yet seen in Virginia worth mentioning not
- situated on the banks of any river. What makes the situation of
- this place valuable, is the neighbourhood of James and York rivers,
- between which grows the best tobacco in the whole State, and for
- this reason it seems to have been built where it is: I do not think,
- nevertheless, that it will ever be a place of any great importance;
- the towns of York, James, Norfolk, and Edenton, being more favourably
- situated for trade, will undoubtedly eclipse it.
-
- With the most lively satisfaction I contemplated these monuments
- of the real glory of men, the college and the library; and while I
- contemplated them, they recalled to my mind places and persons most
- intimately connected with my heart. The tumult of arms has driven
- from hence those who had the care of these philosophical instruments,
- for the Muses, you know, take no pleasure but in the abodes of
- peace: We could only meet with one solitary professor, of Italian
- extraction; and I can not but say, his conversation and abilities
- appeared to be such, that after what he had told us in commendation
- of his brethren, we could not help regretting their absence.
-
- About Williamsburg and the shores of the bay, the land is covered
- with trees yielding rozin; the meadows and marshes subsist great
- numbers of excellent horses, which far exceed those of the other
- states in point of beauty: vast quantities of hemp are raised here,
- as well as flax, Indian corn and cotton: the cotton shrubs produce
- annually, and at the first view we took them for beans in blossom.
- Silk worms succeed here very well, and it is not improbable but they
- may at some future time form one of the most considerable branches
- of trade in this State. The commodity most in demand is tobacco;
- you well know the character it has, and for common use it may be
- considered as the best in the world. What the English imported
- yearly from this State, and from Maryland, might have amounted to
- about ninety-six thousand hogsheads; but among themselves they did
- not consume one sixth part of that quantity, and either disposed of
- the rest among us, or exported it to the north [of Europe]; judge
- then how valuable this commerce was to that nation. They purchased
- it here at the very lowest rate, taking it in exchange for their
- broad-clothes, linen and hard wares, and selling again for ready
- money what they did not want for their own home consumption, and
- thus they increased their capital every year to the amount of eight
- or nine millions. No other of their possessions, not even those
- in India, ever afforded them so clear a profit. Three hundred and
- thirty vessels, and about four thousand sailors were constantly
- employed in this trade: of these the city of Glasgow, in Scotland,
- owned the greatest part, and by that means supported its flourishing
- manufactures, which were perhaps more considerable than those of any
- town in England.
-
- Since the war, the tobacco exportation has been only about forty
- thousand hogsheads annually; what advantages then would have accrued
- to the English, could they have sooner made themselves masters of
- Chesapeake-bay. There are now fifty or sixty vessels collected at
- York, under the cannon of Cornwallis, sent on purpose to load with
- this weed, which three fourths and a half of the human race take such
- supreme delight in chewing, snuffing or smoking.
-
- The army is at present before York. We hear the reports of the cannon
- very distinctly; and I am now going to join the troops, where I think
- I shall shortly have something very interesting to impart to you.
-
-
- Camp at York, November 6, 1781.
-
- I have been through the unfortunate little town of York since the
- siege, and saw many elegant houses shot through and through in a
- thousand places, and ready to crumble to pieces; rich household
- furniture crushed under their ruins, or broken by the brutal
- English soldier; carcases of men and horses half covered with
- dirt: books piled in heaps, and scattered among the ruins of the
- buildings, served to give me an idea of the tastes and morals of the
- inhabitants; these were either treatises of religion or controversial
- divinity; the _history_ of the English nation, and their foreign
- settlements; collections of charters and acts of parliament;
- the works of the celebrated _Alexander Pope_; a translation of
- _Montaigne’s Essays_; _Gil Blas de Santillane_, and the excellent
- _Essay upon Women_, by _Mr. Thomas_.
-
- The plan of the fortifications for the defence of York and Glocester
- has been entirely changed; they are drawing them into a narrower
- compass than before, have destroyed the English works, and are busy
- at constructing new ones. The travelling artillery is partly at
- Williamsburg and partly at York; and the heavy cannon is at West
- Point (called _Delaware_ in the maps), a place situated between the
- two rivers that form that of York.
-
- On the twenty-fourth [of October] the troops began to go into winter
- quarters. The regiments of Bourbonnais and Royal Deux Ponts are at
- Williamsburg, where our head Quarters are fixed. The regiments of
- Soissonnais, and the grenadier companies, and Chasseurs of Saintonge
- are at York. The rest of the regiment of Saintonge is billetted about
- in the country betwixt York and Hampton; and this latter place,
- situated on James River, is occupied by the Legion of Lauzun.
-
- This great and happy event, in which the French have had so
- considerable a share, will soon give a new turn to American affairs.
- The Southern States, so long harassed and distrest, will now assume
- new spirit and activity. To what a pitch of grandeur will not these
- new states shortly arise.
-
- NOTE.--In his second letter the Abbé mentions M. de St. Simon. This
- was the philosopher, whose plans for reorganizing society are still
- of interest.
-
-
-
-
-_IV._
-
-_THE MARQUIS OF CHASTELLUX, MAJOR-GENERAL IN THE FRENCH ARMY, AND
-MEMBER OF THE FRENCH ACADEMY._
-
-_1782._
-
- _M. de Chastellux--Tour to the Natural Bridge--New Kent Court
- House--Hanover Court House--Offley--Secretary Nelson--Willis’
- Ordinary--Monticello--New London--Cumberland Court
- House--Petersburg--Richmond--Formicola’s--Governor Harrison--College
- of William and Mary._
-
-
-“From the moment the French troops were established in the quarters
-they occupied in Virginia, I formed the project of traveling into the
-upper parts of that province, where I was assured that I should find
-objects worthy of exciting the curiosity of a stranger; and faithful to
-the principles, which from my youth I had laid down, never to neglect
-seeing every country in my power, I burned with impatience to set out.
-The season, however, was unfavorable, and rendered traveling difficult
-and laborious; besides, experience taught me that traveling in winter
-never offered the greatest satisfaction we can enjoy--that of seeing
-Nature as she ought to be, and of forming a just idea of the general
-face of a country; for it is easier for the imagination to deprive
-the landscape of the charms of spring than to clothe with them the
-hideous skeleton of winter; as it is easier to imagine what a beauty
-at eighteen may be at eighty, than to conceive what eighty was at
-eighteen.”
-
-In these words, the Marquis of Chastellux, writing from Williamsburg
-about the 1st of May, 1782, begins the chronicle of his tour to the
-Valley of Virginia. He was in America with the army perhaps two years,
-during which time he sustained his reputation as a capable officer, an
-agreeable man, and a philosopher of tolerant insight. M. de Chastellux
-was a good traveler. In the country, if the bacon and eggs were stale
-and the vintage was spring water of the morning, he found something
-to admire in the landscape. At Philadelphia he dined with members of
-the Congress, of all parties, listened to political theories, drank
-tea with the ladies, was easily amused and formed opinions which may
-be discovered on a careful reading. Where is there a more sensible
-man than the old campaigner? The Marquis of Chastellux entered the
-army at fifteen, and was given command of a regiment at twenty-one.
-He served with distinction in the Seven Years’ War. His studies were
-never neglected, and being a man of rank he was early adopted among the
-scholars.
-
-On the 8th of April, 1782, M. de Chastellux set out from Williamsburg
-for Rockbridge County. “On the 8th I set out with Mr. Lynch, then my
-aid-de-camp and adjutant, Mr. Frank Dillon, my second aid-de-camp,
-and M. le Chevalier d’Oyré, of the Engineers. Six servants and a led
-horse composed our train, so that our little caravan consisted of four
-masters, six servants and eleven horses. I regulated my journey by the
-spring, and gave it time sufficient to precede us. The eighteen miles
-through which we passed before we baited our horses at Bird’s Tavern
-were sufficiently known to me, for it was the same road I traveled
-the year before in coming from Williamsburg. The remaining sixteen,
-which completed our day’s work and brought us to New Kent Courthouse,
-offered nothing curious. All I learned by a conversation with Mr. Bird
-was that he had been pillaged by the English when they passed his
-house in their march to Westover in pursuit of M. de la Fayette, and
-in returning to Williamsburg after endeavoring in vain to come up with
-him. Mr. Bird repeated with indignation that the refugee camp followers
-had taken from him the very boots from off his legs. As the next day’s
-journey was to be longer than that of the preceding one, we left New
-Kent Courthouse before 8 o’clock, and rode twenty miles to Newcastle,
-where I resolved to give our horses two hours repose. When the heat was
-a little abated and our horses were somewhat reposed we continued our
-journey that we might arrive before dark at Hanover Courthouse, from
-which we were yet sixteen miles. The country through which we passed
-is one of the finest of lower Virginia. There are many well cultivated
-estates and handsome houses. We arrived at Hanover Courthouse before
-sunset, and alighted at a tolerable handsome inn--a very large saloon
-and a covered portico to receive the company who assemble every three
-months at the courthouse, either on private or public affairs. This
-asylum is the more necessary, as there are no other houses in the
-neighborhood.”
-
-From Hanover Courthouse, which, as well as New Kent, had reason to
-remember the passage of the English, the party proceeded at 9 the next
-morning towards Offley, the residence for the time of General Nelson,
-recently Governor of the State. “I had got acquainted with him during
-the expedition to York, at which critical moment he was Governor, and
-conducted himself with the courage of a brave soldier and the zeal of a
-good citizen. I am sorry to add that the only recompense of his labors
-was the hatred of a great part of his fellow citizens, arising from the
-necessity under which he had often labored of pressing their horses,
-carriages and forage.”
-
-M. de Chastellux and his aids arrived at Offley at 1 o’clock on the
-10th of April, and spent two rainy days there. General Nelson was
-absent, but Secretary Nelson was there, an old man very gouty, who
-related with a serene countenance what the effect had been of the
-French batteries in front of Yorktown. “The tranquility which has
-succeeded these unhappy times by giving him leisure to reflect upon
-his losses, has not embittered the recollection; he lives happily on
-one of his plantations, where in less than six hours he can assemble
-seventy of his relations, children, grandchildren, nephews and nieces.
-The rapid increase of his own family justifies what he told me of the
-population of Virginia in general, of which, from the offices he has
-held all his life, he must have it in his power to form a very accurate
-judgment. In 1742 the people subject to taxes in Virginia amounted only
-to the number of 63,000; by his account they now exceed 160,000.
-
-“After passing two days very agreeably with this interesting family, we
-left there the 12th at 10 in the morning, accompanied by the secretary
-and five or six of his young relations, who conducted us to Little
-River Bridge, a small creek on the road about five miles from Offley.”
-
-Eleven miles through woods brought them to Willis’s Ordinary, a
-solitary place, but at the moment crowded. “As soon as I alighted
-I inquired what might be the reason of this numerous assembly, and
-was informed it was a cock fight. This diversion is much in vogue in
-Virginia, where the English customs are more prevalent than in the rest
-of America. Whilst our horses were feeding we had an opportunity of
-seeing a battle. The stakes were very considerable; the money of the
-parties was deposited in the hands of one of the principal persons,
-and I felt a secret pleasure in observing that it was chiefly French.
-Whilst the interested parties animated the cocks to battle, a child of
-fifteen, who was near me, kept leaping for joy and crying, ‘Oh, it is a
-charming diversion.’ We had yet seven or eight and twenty miles to ride
-to the only inn where it was possible to stop before we reached Mr.
-Jefferson’s.”
-
-Keeping on towards Monticello, the party passed an ordinary, some
-sixteen miles from Willis’s, kept by an extremely fat man. They found
-him contented in an arm chair, which served him also for a bed. A stool
-supported his enormous legs. “A large ham and a bowl of grog served him
-for company, like a man resolved to die surrounded by his friends.”
-
-They spent the night twelve miles farther on at a house where there
-were fourteen children, not one of them ten years old; and set out
-at 8 o’clock the next morning through the foothills of the Southwest
-Mountain. That day, the 13th of April (an important day with Mr.
-Jefferson) they came to Monticello. “The visit which I made Mr.
-Jefferson was not unexpected, for he had long since invited me to come
-and pass a few days with him; notwithstanding which I found his first
-appearance serious, nay even cold; but before I had been two hours with
-him we were as intimate as if we had passed our whole lives together.
-Walking, books, but above all a conversation always varied and
-interesting, made four days pass away like so many minutes. I recollect
-with pleasure that as we were conversing one evening over a bowl of
-punch, after Mrs. Jefferson had retired, our conversation turned on
-the poems of Ossian. In our enthusiasm the book was sent for and
-placed near the bowl, where by their mutual aid the night far advanced
-imperceptibly upon us. Sometimes natural philosophy, at others politics
-or the arts, were the topics of our conversation, for no object had
-escaped Mr. Jefferson; and it seemed as if from his youth he had placed
-his mind, as he had his house, on an elevated situation, from which he
-might contemplate the universe.”
-
-Mr. Jefferson and M. de Chastellux rode over to Charlottesville, “a
-rising town,” to see Colonel Armand,[G] whose legion was in quarters
-there. Colonel Armand had a pet wolf which had been caught wild in the
-neighborhood. M. de Chastellux left Monticello on the 17th, and on
-the 19th arrived at the Natural Bridge, by way of Rockfish Gap and
-Steel’s Tavern. Returning by way of New London (Bedford), “already a
-pretty considerable town, at least seventy or eighty houses,” the party
-of tourists reached Cumberland Courthouse on the 23d. “This is the
-chief manor house of a very considerable country; it is situated in a
-plain of about a mile diameter, sixteen miles from Hodnett’s, which we
-had passed. Besides the courthouse and a large tavern, its necessary
-appendage, there are seven or eight houses inhabited by gentlemen of
-fortune. I found the tavern full of people, and understood that the
-judges were assembled to hold a court of claims--that is to say, to
-hear and register the claims of sundry persons, who had furnished
-provisions for the army. We know that in general, but particularly in
-unexpected invasions, the American troops had no established magazine,
-and as it was necessary to have subsistence for them, provisions and
-forage were indiscriminately laid hold of on giving the owners a
-receipt, which they call a certificate. During the campaign, whilst the
-enemy was at hand, little attention was given to this sort of loans,
-which accumulated incessantly, without the sum total being known, or
-any means taken to ascertain the proofs. Virginia being at length
-loaded with these certificates, it became necessary, sooner or later,
-to liquidate these accounts.
-
-“The last Assembly of the State of Virginia had accordingly thought
-proper to pass a bill, authorizing the justices of each county to take
-cognizance of these certificates, to authenticate their validity, and
-to register them, specifying the value of the provisions in money,
-according to the established tariff. I had the curiosity to go to the
-courthouse to see how this affair was transacted, and saw it was
-performed with great order and simplicity. The justices wore their
-common clothes, but were seated on an elevated tribunal, as at London
-in the court of King’s bench or common pleas. We had rode forty-four
-miles, and night was closing fast upon us when we arrived at Powhatan
-Courthouse, a more recent settlement than that of Cumberland. We had a
-good supper and good beds, but our horses were obliged to do without
-forage.”
-
-Early in the morning of the 24th they left Powhatan, and rode
-forty-four miles to Petersburg, passing Chesterfield Courthouse, where
-were still to be seen the ruins of the barracks occupied by the Baron
-Steuben and burned by the English. At Petersburg M. de Chastellux
-called at ‘Battersea’ and was entertained at ‘Bollingbrook.’ The town
-is described as already flourishing, and destined to become more so
-every day--the depot for a vast region to the south. “Five miles from
-Petersburg we passed the small river of Randolph over a stone bridge,
-and traveling through a rich and well peopled country, arrived at a
-fork of roads, where we were unlucky enough precisely to make choice
-of that which did not lead to Richmond, the place of our destination.
-But we had no reason to regret our error, as it was only two miles
-about and we skirted James River to a charming place called Warwick,
-where a group of handsome houses form a sort of village, and there are
-several superb ones in the neighborhood. As we had lost our way and
-traveled but slowly, it was near 3 o’clock when we reached Manchester,
-a sort of suburb to Richmond, on the right bank of the river, where you
-pass the ferry. The passage was short, there being two boats for the
-accommodation of travelers. Richmond is divided into three parts. I was
-conducted to that on the west, where I found a good inn. Mr. Formicola,
-my landlord, is a Neapolitan, who came to Virginia with Lord Dunmore,
-but had gone rather roundabout, having been before in Russia. His only
-error was the exalted idea he had formed of the manner in which French
-general officers must be treated. After dinner I went to pay a visit
-to Mr. Harrison, then Governor of the State. He talked much of the
-first Congress in America, in which he sat for two years. This subject
-led us naturally to that which is the most favorite topic among the
-Americans--the origin and commencement of the present revolution.”
-
-This conversation with Governor Harrison, other conversations, and
-M. de Chastellux’s own careful observations led him to form opinions
-about Virginia, then the most influential of the States, which were
-correct enough. His analysis was a forecast. There can be found no
-better summary of conditions in Virginia at that time, the statement
-of a man of great good sense and a wide experience of men and
-affairs. He remarks: “One must be in the country itself, one must be
-acquainted with the language, and take a pleasure in conversing and in
-listening, to be qualified to form, and that slowly, a proper opinion
-and a decisive judgment. After this reflection the reader will not
-be surprised at the pleasure I took in conversing with Mr. Harrison.
-He urged me to dine with him next day, and to pass another day at
-Richmond. We set out, however, on the 27th, at 8 in the morning for
-Westover. We traveled six and twenty miles without halting, in very
-hot weather, but by a very agreeable road, with magnificent houses in
-view at every instant; for the banks of James River form the garden of
-Virginia.
-
-“It is not by accident,” observes the Marquis of Chastellux, writing
-at Williamsburg, May 1, 1782, “that I have postponed the consideration
-of everything respecting the progress of the arts and sciences in this
-country until the conclusion of my reflections on Virginia; I have done
-it expressly because the mind, after bestowing its attention on the
-variety of human institutions, reposes itself with pleasure on those
-which tend to the perfection of the understanding, and the progress
-of information. The College of William and Mary, whose founders are
-announced by the very name, is a noble establishment which embellishes
-Williamsburg and does honor to Virginia. I must add that the zeal of
-the professors has been crowned with the most distinguished success,
-and that they have already formed many distinguished characters, ready
-to serve their country in the various departments of government. After
-doing justice to the exertions of the University of Williamsburgh, for
-such is the College of William and Mary, if it be necessary for its
-farther glory to cite miracles, I shall only observe that they created
-me a doctor of laws.”
-
-
-
-
-_V._
-
-_DR. JOHANN DAVID SCHOEPF, SURGEON TO THE HESSIAN TROOPS._
-
-_1783._
-
- _Dr. Schoepf--Leesburg--Plantation Houses--The Price of
- Land--Fredericksburg--Hunter’s Iron-Works--Richmond--The
- General Assembly--The Tavern Formicola--Manchester--Mr.
- Rubsamen--Williamsburg--Yorktown or Little York--Surry Court
- House--Smithfield--The Nation of Virginia--Suffolk--The Trade in
- Salt._
-
-
-Dr. Johann David Schoepf was born at Weinsiedel in 1752 and died
-in the year 1800. He studied medicine at Hof, Erlangen, Berlin and
-Vienna, then traveled in Russia, Italy and Switzerland, and made his
-degree in medicine at Erlangen in 1776. That year he came to America
-as surgeon to the Hessian troops in the British army. In 1784 he went
-to London and traveled through England and in France, Spain and Italy.
-He published in 1787 a _Materia Medica Americana_. Dr. Schoepf was
-particularly interested in scientific matters, was an accurate observer
-of things and of people, and his book is one of the best of the early
-travels in this country. These volumes have now been translated, and
-the account given below is a modification. Dr. Schoepf approached
-Virginia from the north, coming through Western Maryland.
-
-“By this road Leesburg is the first town on the Virginia side, a place
-of few houses, small and wooden. On account of the high, pleasant
-and healthful situation a Latin school has been established here. An
-advertisement of this institution was to be seen on the tavern door,
-recommending it in a handsome style to the public, which should give
-it patronage, since schools hitherto, except in the chief cities, are
-scarce enough in America. It is not the universal custom in America to
-hang shields before the inns, but inns may always be identified by the
-great number of papers and notices with which the walls and doors of
-these public houses are plastered--and the best inns are in general the
-most papered. From such announcements the traveler gets a many-sided
-entertainment, and gains instruction as to where taxes are heavy, where
-wives have eloped or horses been stolen, and where the new doctor has
-settled.
-
-“Along the road from Leesburg towards Fredericksburg there was not a
-little difference to be remarked between the appearance of the country
-and the thickly settled regions of Piedmont Maryland and Pennsylvania,
-through which we had just passed. It was strange to see so much wild
-and newly cleared ground, due not to any unfertility of the soil,
-but to the large estates whose owners were unwilling to sell and
-found it difficult to secure tenants where there is so much land to
-be had almost for the asking. And the contrast in the appearance of
-the plantations, after the Potomac is crossed, is rather striking.
-In this part of Virginia, as in lower Maryland, the farmer builds a
-small village about him. In some cases, however, all of his buildings
-would scarcely make one comfortable house. From the time of his first
-clearing he is continually adding, and his plan may be not a very good
-one. We passed Moore’s Tavern and the Red House (30 miles from Goose
-Creek), and skirting the Bull Run Mountains, approached the strictly
-tobacco country. Fairly good tobacco is raised to the west along the
-foothills, but the profit is trifling on account of the heavy expense
-of carriage to warehouses whence it can be taken off by the European
-ships. In this region the crop had been greatly damaged by an August
-frost. The loss was the greater because many of these planters raise
-only the Sweetscented, a tender variety, but more profitable by 2-1/2
-shillings the hundred, or 25 shillings Virginia currency the hogshead.
-
-“We spent a night at a plantation where, although no tavern is kept,
-the traveler is entertained for pay. There are disadvantages about this
-sort of inn, but on the one hand the proprietor escapes the payment
-of a liquor license and the trouble of catering to a crowd of idlers,
-and on the other hand the guest must answer only a few times the usual
-questions as to where he is going, where he came from, and what his
-business is. The captain had a large family, and wished to sell some of
-his land, of which he owned 4,000 acres. Land hereabouts can be bought
-for from 25 to 50 or 60 shillings Virginia currency. The captain would
-sell his for 40 shillings cash, and with the proceeds move to Kentucky.
-The people throughout are bent on providing for their children. This
-is difficult to do in the East, and hence the steady emigration to
-Kentucky.
-
-“Beyond this we got out of the right road, and meeting only a few
-darkeys, whose horizon was not extensive, traveled half a day before
-we were set right. We passed Cedar Run at a dangerous ford, and came
-to a plantation where there is a copper mine worked intermittently,
-a narrow vein. Following the direction, “keep straight on” (nobody
-thinks the stranger can be quite as ignorant as he says he is), we
-crossed Acquia Creek, and reached Fredericksburg. The public buildings
-of Fredericksburg--church, market house and court house--we found in
-bad condition, not because they had been damaged directly by the war,
-but simply because during the war there had been no use made of them.
-Tobacco was bringing a small price here, and at a sure profit to the
-buyers. No ships were in and taxes were due; the price had been knocked
-down to 25 shillings the hundred. The same at Alexandria. Hunter’s
-Iron Works, near Fredericksburg, at the falls above Falmouth, is one
-of the finest and most extensive works of this sort in America. There
-is a rolling and a slitting mill, both very ingeniously contrived, and
-of this description of iron works there have been up to this time only
-one or two established in all America. Under the British rule such
-enterprises were forbidden. Past Fredericksburg, we had the honor to
-breakfast with an American general, whose attire was conspicuous--a
-large white chapeau, a blue coat, a brown waistcoat and green breeches
-decorated him, and he a short, fat man.
-
-“From this point on towards Richmond the country is open and level,
-and adorned with many large and at times tasteful dwellings. The
-rich Virginians do not prefer a town life. Here and there we passed
-large wheat fields. Several years before the war, owing to the heavy
-English import duties on tobacco, the people had begun to raise wheat
-on a more extensive scale. Here, as in other parts of America, the
-cornfields are seeded to wheat without removing the stalks. The weevil
-is bad, especially if the grain lies long in the straw. After floating
-off the light seed the good, heavy grain is broadcasted, mixed with
-shell lime. Between Fredericksburg and Richmond we noticed a good many
-swampy spots, which might easily be drained. We met on this road, to
-our great surprise, two Alsatians traveling along on foot, with their
-bundles slung behind. They had come into the Chesapeake on a French
-ship, and were seeking their fortune in Virginia. A foot passenger is
-a very unusual sight in Virginia. Passing Hanover Courthouse (December
-18, 1783) and Hanover Town, we came to Richmond. On this road we were
-struck with the little provision made for the winter feeding of cattle.
-How easy it would be to lay down grass. Near Richmond we saw mules,
-the first pair. Mules, being found well adapted to the country, are
-beginning to be used a good deal.
-
-“Richmond, before 1779 not a very important town, is built on two
-heights, separated by a creek called Shokoes. The houses are in general
-of wood, and are irregularly scattered about. A recent census gives the
-number as 280, and the population about 2,000. The falls of the James
-engaged my curiosity first. The total fall of the river from Westham
-to Richmond (7 miles) is only seventy-one feet, and hence there is
-no stupendous cataract. But the falls as a whole, over innumerable
-boulders, between winding wooded banks, present a great and striking
-appearance. The sound of the water, particularly at night, is heard not
-only through the entire town, but before the wind for several miles
-around. At the falls innumerable herring and shad are caught early in
-spring, and at times even in February. These appear in the Delaware and
-the Hudson not before the middle of April or the first of May. James
-River is one of the greatest and most beautiful of American streams.
-
-“During my stay at Richmond the Assembly was in session. A small frame
-building serves as House of Assembly, and with a change of properties
-as ballroom and banquet room. The term is used, ‘the Assembly sits.’
-This does not seem to me to be precisely descriptive. The members
-appeared to me to be anywhere rather than in their seats, and to be
-discussing anything except laws to be framed. The doorkeeper was
-busy, and in the vestibule there was an uproar. The vestments of the
-members are diverse--boots, trousers, Indian leggings, great-coats, the
-usual coat, and short jackets. In other words, each one wears what he
-pleases. The members from the West are greatly inconvenienced in coming
-so far. They even speak of establishing a separate government for the
-West, as in the province of New York, where there is a Governor at New
-York and another at Albany. If this is done, the West will very likely
-become in a short time an independent State. The pay of members has
-recently been fixed at 18 Virginia shillings or 3 Spanish dollars per
-diem. During the war they preferred tobacco (50 pounds) to currency.
-At a vote, the Speaker calls for the Ayes and Noes, and judges with
-a critical ear which side has made the majority of sounds. If the
-predominance is a matter of doubt a division is called.
-
-“I stopped at the Tavern Formicola, which was naturally much crowded
-at that season. Every evening there came generals, colonels, captains,
-senators, delegates, judges, doctors, clerks and gentlemen of every
-weight and calibre to sit around the fire, drink, smoke, sing and swap
-anecdotes. Very entertaining, but Formicola’s not being a spacious
-house, I found the crowd embarrassing. There is only one newspaper
-published at Richmond; this paper appears twice a week.
-
-“On the south side of James River, opposite Richmond, lies a little
-town called Manchester. The rocks in the river between the two places
-have been bought up, as well as a narrow strip along each bank, and the
-owner proposes to throw a fine bridge across, which, if built, will
-be the first and only one of the kind in America. The project depends
-upon whether the Assembly will license this bridge as a toll bridge.
-At Manchester I visited Mr. Jacob Rubsamen, a German, who was before
-the war engaged in mining in Jersey. At the outbreak of the war he
-came to Virginia and set up a powder mill, the first powder mill to be
-established in this country. Rubsamen was able to find saltpetre in the
-mountains; his sulphur he brought from Europe, on account of the heavy
-expense of getting it out in this country. His works were not very
-profitable, and were destroyed in the end by the British. Mr. Rubsamen
-told me that lead ore is found on New River and the Greenbrier, copper
-on the Roanoke (Dan), and iron everywhere about, particularly in
-Buckingham County. Coal was recently discovered twelve miles from
-Richmond by the mere chance of the uprooting of a tree by the wind.
-This coal brings 1 shilling a bushel (at the wharf), Virginia currency.
-Its smell is disagreeable, as I observed when at Richmond.
-
-“Leaving Richmond we reached Williamsburg in two days, passing by
-Warwick (where the British had destroyed a considerable plant for
-the working of iron), Osborne’s, a pleasant place, though small, and
-Petersburg, a town of a thriving trade and larger than Richmond. Cotton
-is raised in this region on good new land or on heavily fertilized
-land, and the favorite tobaccos are the Sweetscented, the Long Green,
-the Varina, the Frederick, the Oroonoko, the Hudson, Thickjoint,
-Thickset, Shoestring and other varieties.
-
-“Williamsburg is to be counted among the most beautiful of American
-cities. The Capitol, or Statehouse, closes one end of the High Street,
-a large and modern building. Because no better use can be made of it
-now, a Latin school is to be established where the government was once
-installed. Doctors in all the faculties are graduated at the College of
-William and Mary. Most of the students, however, complete their studies
-at the English and Scottish universities. The citizens of this town,
-as of all lower Virginia, greatly hope that the seat of government
-will be brought back to Williamsburg. At the tavern I found very good
-entertainment and paid high for it. The black attendants, neatly and
-modishly attired, make their bows with dignity and respectfulness. They
-spoke with enthusiasm of the politeness of the French officers lately
-quartered there.
-
-“We made an excursion to Yorktown, called also Little York, to see
-that famous place, and particularly to inspect the great oyster banks
-there. The inhabitants have not yet recovered from the disturbances of
-war, and many houses are still in ruins or half repaired. The spars of
-the ships sunk in the river to block the passage are yet to be seen.
-We returned the same day to Williamsburg, to set out the next morning
-for the South. Seven miles from Williamsburg, on the Southern road, we
-came to James River, and after much delay were obliged to turn back
-to Williamsburg because of an unfavorable wind at the ferry. The next
-day at sunrise, when the wind is generally still, we came again to the
-ferry and were put across, but not without delay. Lord Cornwallis was
-the excuse. They said he had ruined the wharf, and the tide was not yet
-high enough to take off men and horses from the bank, which is there
-low.
-
-“Not far below the ferry lies James Island, formerly only a peninsula;
-in a fierce storm with high water the river broke through the slender
-tongue of land. Jamestown appears in several modern geographies as a
-place of eighty to a hundred houses. In reality there are there but one
-or two, and they ruinous. The most valuable land in this region is that
-along the rivers and creeks, not so much from the superior fertility,
-as because of the accessibility to water transportation. Such land
-sells at four, five or six pounds, Virginia. If the corn crop fails the
-planter is in straits, and if the price of tobacco is high everything
-else--bacon, corn, etc.--is high in proportion. Desiring gain, and
-spending his time on tobacco, the planter loses through not giving
-attention to those articles of necessity which he might produce at home.
-
-“Five miles from James River we came to Surry Courthouse, where there
-was a crowd, because it was court day. Eleven miles farther on we
-passed Nelson’s Ordinary, and after ten miles more reached Smithfield,
-or Isle of Wight Courthouse. The road from Williamsburg is mainly
-through woods, but we passed more churches (five, that is to say) than
-during any other day’s journey in America.
-
-“Towards Smithfield the traveler passes beyond the tobacco country. The
-chief exports here are tar, pitch, turpentine and salted meat. A barrel
-of tar, thirty-one and one-half gallons, costs from 8 to 9 Virginia
-shillings; a barrel of turpentine 18 shillings, and a barrel of salted
-pork (220 pounds) 50 shillings. At Smithfield we spent the evening with
-a party of gentlemen from the neighborhood. The conversation was for
-the most part on the subject of Virginia, what advantages that State
-has over every other State in the world, and how the nation of Virginia
-is superior to every other nation--in resources, manners, purity of
-speech and in all respects.
-
-“The stranger notes deficiencies. For instance, a gentleman of
-Petersburg remarked to me that he thought of sending his son to
-Edinburgh to make a doctor of him, since he would probably not marry
-and set up as a planter, being now past the age of twenty-one. But it
-must be admitted that physically, the Virginians are a comely race, and
-they show on all subjects clear and strong understandings. It is to be
-regretted that they do not give more attention to the exact sciences.
-They read, but they do not study.
-
-“Christmas Eve we came to Everett’s Bridge, and the next day to
-Suffolk, on another arm of Nansemond Creek. In the month of May,
-1779, a great part of Suffolk was burned by the British. There are no
-stones at this place, and the deep, fine sand of the streets is an
-inconvenience. Before the houses they lay a sort of pavement, pitch
-and tar mixed with the sand and allowed to harden. They drive a trade
-from this place to the West Indies in small vessels, shallops of twenty
-to fifty tons burthen. Salt is an especial article of their traffic.
-When the vessels, which bring it from Tortola, Turk’s Island and other
-of the West Indies, are delayed, the price of salt is tripled and
-quadrupled. During the war the people were greatly in want of salt,
-and the attempt was made to get it from the sea by damming the water
-in ponds along the coast. Little success attended this experiment
-south of the thirty-seventh parallel, probably because of the frequent
-rain-storms which freshened the ponded sea water.
-
-“From Suffolk to Cunningham’s we skirted the great Dismal Swamp. Along
-the road from York, in Virginia, to this point it is observable that
-the south bank of all the rivers and creeks is steeper and rougher than
-the north bank. This may be due to the weathering of the north and
-northeast storms.”
-
-
-
-
-_VI._
-
-_COUNT CASTIGLIONI, CHEVALIER OF THE ORDER OF ST. STEPHEN, P. M._
-
-_1786._
-
- _Luigi Castiglioni--Alexandria--Mount Vernon--General
- Washington--Fredericksburg--Peach Trees and
- Persimmons--Richmond--Petersburg--Colonel Banister--Dr.
- Greenway--Colonel Coles--Staunton River--Buckingham Court
- House--Eniscotty--Rockfish Gap--Staunton--Middle River
- Ford--Winchester--Charlestown._
-
-
-In the diary of George Washington for the year 1785 appear these
-entries: “Sunday, December 25.--Count Castiglioni came here to dinner.
-December 29.--Count Castiglioni went away after breakfast on his tour
-to the southward.”
-
-This was Count Luigi Castiglioni, who had landed at Boston in May,
-and after going through New England and a part of Canada, had come
-to New York, whence, on the 27th of November, he had set out for the
-South, reaching Alexandria December 24th, and spending Christmas at
-Mount Vernon. Count Castiglioni was a man of science, Chevalier of
-the Order of St. Stephen, P. M., member of the Philosophical Society
-of Philadelphia, and also member of the Patriotical Society of Milan,
-Patrician of Milan. The book written by him, _Viaggio negli Stati
-Uniti_, is particularly descriptive of the useful plants to be found
-in this country, with a view to their introduction into Europe, either
-for the farm and the kitchen garden or for practical inclusion in
-the _materia medica_. This book and that of Dr. Schoepf, 1783-1784,
-give an excellent statement as to the natural history, the methods of
-agriculture, milling, mining, etc., of that period in the history of
-the fourteen States.
-
-“Alexandria,” says Count Castiglioni, “numbers 300 houses and possibly
-3,000 inhabitants. At times, although the latitude is only 38 degrees
-45 minutes, the cold is so great that the Potowmack may be ridden and
-driven over. Such freezing weather is never of long duration, and many
-winters the river is not frozen at all. This newly established town has
-already received the name and the privileges of a city, and as soon as
-the Potowmack is made navigable will become one of the most flourishing
-of the trading towns of Virginia.
-
-“When I was there the plan for the improvement of the navigation
-(suggested by General Washington) was beginning to be put into effect.
-Near Alexandria brick and tiles are made at a reasonable price, the
-soil thereabouts being a soft, viscous clay. They make lime there
-from the oyster shells, which are found in extraordinary banks. The
-people have two theories about these great shell banks, one being that
-they are due to successive inundations of the sea, the other that the
-aborigines assembled them, either for burial mounds or for some other
-religious purpose.
-
-“The morning of the 25th of December I left Alexandria and went to
-Mount Vernon. There I spent four memorable days. General Washington
-is perhaps fifty-seven years of age, a man large and strong of build,
-of a majestic but kindly bearing, and, notwithstanding the fatigues
-of war, appears not yet to be aging. This celebrated man, who began
-and so happily carried through the American war, seems, as it were,
-to have been formed by nature to free this country of European rule
-and to inaugurate an epoch in the history of mankind. Bred to arms, he
-has not neglected the study of politics, and there is probably no one
-in America who has a better knowledge of the present condition of the
-United States or more sincerely desires their welfare. May Heaven spare
-him many years for the good of his country, for an example to it and to
-Europe.
-
-“Leaving Mount Vernon December 29th, in the morning, I went by
-Colchester, a little place on the River Ochoquan, Dumfries, where there
-are several warehouses for tobacco; Aquaja (only a few houses), and
-fourteen miles beyond came to Falmouth, on the Rappahannock, whence it
-is the custom to ferry down to Fredericksburg, on the opposite bank.
-Fredericksburg, like Alexandria, is by law styled a city, and carries
-on a heavy trade in tobacco. From Fredericksburg many plantations are
-seen, larger and smaller. The large houses are generally built with a
-porch, and the outbuildings ranged at either side. The tobacco exhausts
-a cleared field in three years, and no attempt is made to manure, the
-cattle being kept at large in the woods. Two acres in tobacco bring
-about two hogsheads, or maybe 3,000 pounds. One thousand pounds (a
-hogshead) fetches from 27 to 39 shillings Virginia money the hundred.
-
-“The following day I traveled thirty miles through a district where
-much tobacco is raised, and much peach brandy and persimmon beer is
-made. The peach flourishes so in Virginia that often when a tract of
-land is cleared the peach trees take possession of the whole area,
-nothing being done for the propagation of them except letting in the
-sun on the ground. The persimmon is gathered from a sort of Guayakana
-in the woods. The fruit would be very good to eat but for the skin,
-which has an unpleasantness in the taste. In the evening I came to
-Richmond, now the capital of Virginia, a town which has grown rapidly,
-and numbers some 4,000 inhabitants, and 400 houses. The town is built
-on two hills, separated by a brook, over which is thrown a wooden
-bridge, with side ways for foot passengers. The trade of the place
-consists largely in tobacco, and there is much competition from the
-other markets at Alexandria and Petersburg. When I was there a well had
-just been dug to the depth of seventy feet on one of the hills, which
-rise one above another from the James, here a river foaming among great
-rocks. I visited the spot. The earth removed smelled of sulphur, and
-had the look of rotted wood, ash gray, but turning white on exposure
-to the air. There were found at the bottom of this well, bedded in the
-earth described, many bones, some larger than the bones of cattle, and
-also remains of the aboriginal Indians, stone implements, etc., proof
-that these tribes had been in possession of the land many centuries
-before.
-
-“January 6th [1786] I passed on to Petersburg, through Osborne’s.
-Blandford, Pocahontas and Petersburg are now incorporated under the
-name Petersburg. Great quantity of tobacco is brought to Petersburg,
-even from the North Carolina country, and is there exported to Europe
-as James River tobacco, which is the best sort.
-
-“A mile from the town lives Colonel Banister, a nephew[H] of the
-famous John Banister, who gave up his place as professor of botany and
-librarian at the University of Oxford, and settling in this part of
-Virginia, at great pains and with rare judgment collected and described
-a number of the scarcest plants. From Colonel Banister’s I went, on
-the 9th, to Kingston, a rich plantation belonging to Captain Walker,
-in the county of Dinwiddie. The following day I visited Dr. Greenway,
-by birth an Englishman, and an amateur of botany.[I] I examined his
-collection with true pleasure, and the next day came again, since Dr.
-Greenway had given me leave to transscribe from his notes; I have
-included this material in my descriptions of American plants, relative
-to the medicinal practices of the aborigines. Five miles from Kingston
-the traveler passes the River Nottoway. The few Indians remaining of
-the tribe of that name live near Southampton Courthouse, forty miles
-distant.
-
-“Having come from Kingston along this road, by the Nottoway and
-Hiksford (a wooden bridge leads over the Meherrin), thirteen miles
-beyond the Meherrin, I entered the State of North Carolina on the
-parallel thirty-six degrees thirty minutes. In this and other parts of
-Virginia, as also in both the Carolinas, there is found a very noxious
-serpent called by the inhabitants the Moquisson.
-
-“Returning from Georgia and the Carolinas, after I had passed the
-River Dan [May 11, 1786] three miles from the North Carolina line,
-I came to the plantation of Mr. W----. In the evening prayers were
-read, but after the first verse the announcement was made that it was
-bed time, and we had better disperse. The next day I reached Colonel
-Coles’s, having come forty miles through Paintonborough and by a
-bridge over Banister River. I had met Colonel Coles at Richmond, and
-was received by him with great cordiality. When he heard that I was
-on my way to Philadelphia he gave me a letter to his brother, Colonel
-John Coles, who has a place on that road, near Charlottesville. I
-examined with pleasure, at Colonel Coles’s (on Staunton River) several
-artificial meadows of clover and rye grass, or wild rye, and also the
-Colonel’s stud.
-
-“I crossed the Staunton in a boat the morning of the 14th. Here I
-left the main road and traveled twenty miles through a rough country.
-The next day, after passing Johns’ Ordinary, I came to Buckingham
-Courthouse, situated on a high hill, at the foot of which runs the
-Appomattox.
-
-“I spent the night at Mr. Patteson’s, who has a fine plantation near,
-and the following day reached James River, twenty miles beyond. A mile
-from the river a high wind began to blow and the sky was suddenly
-covered with black clouds.
-
-“Thunder and lightning followed, and the rain and hail came down
-in streams. The horses were frightened and would not go on. When
-we reached the bank the storm had almost passed. We called to the
-ferryman, who was standing in his door on the other side, but he
-moved not a foot until the rain had entirely ceased, and then gave as
-excuse that he had not seen us. While we were waiting a large serpent
-came out of the river onto the banks. I killed it, and found it to
-be not unlike what they call in Lombardy the smiroldo. On the other
-side of the river, in a group of houses, stands the building in which
-the court of Albemarle County was formerly held. I dried my clothes
-here, ate dinner, and kept on four miles to Eniscotty, the residence
-of Colonel John Coles, who received me hospitably as his brother. The
-situation, at the top of a hill, is such that the leaves fall later
-there, and appear earlier in the spring, than in the country adjacent.
-The calicanthus grows well, with such an exposure; the hill is called
-in the neighborhood the Green Hill, which, indeed, in situation and
-fertility may be compared with the foothills of Monte di Brianza. The
-mulberry and the vine should flourish here.
-
-“May 18th I left Eniscotty. I crossed the Blue Ridge by the road
-through Rockfish Gap, which is not comparable, either in steepness or
-in length, to the roads over the Apennines, much less those over the
-Alps. Thick fog, followed by rain, compelled me to spend the day at a
-house on the divide, the proprietor of which told me much regarding
-the fertility of the lands in that region and the customs of the
-inhabitants. He informed me that many people from the lower country
-stayed at his house on their way to the springs in the Alleghany
-Mountains. Having crossed the Blue Mountains and the South River, I
-came to Stantown the morning of the 23d. Here I was enabled to see a
-mocking-bird. These birds are often kept in cages, and are bought by
-the English at extravagant prices. They are very scarce to the north,
-and have many times fetched three to four guineas at Boston. About
-Stantown tobacco is only beginning to be cultivated. They raise wheat,
-Turkish corn [Indian corn] and hemp. Heavy rains kept me at Stantown
-until the 27th, and prevented me seeing the extraordinary Natural
-Bridge.
-
-“At Middle River, a small stream usually fordable the year through, I
-found several travelers waiting for an opportunity to cross. I put up
-at a house nearby, and as often as the rain permitted went out, like
-the Egyptians, to measure with a rod the rise or fall of the waters.
-
-“The morning of the 29th the good man of the house advised me that I
-might now cross. A crowd of people were at the bank to see us make the
-attempt. My servant stripped himself and ventured in (on horseback)
-with the carriage. He had hardly left the bank when the force of the
-stream swept him down and overturned the calesche. I called to him from
-where I was standing that his only hope was to let the horse go, and
-swim; he kept by the horse, and managed to save both it and himself. I
-resolved never again, in the matter of ferrying a swollen stream, to
-trust to the advice of these wild pioneers. The next morning I was able
-to cross, and at the North River was taken over in a flat canoe, the
-horses swimming at the side.
-
-“The following day, having passed Smith Creek, a dangerous stream, I
-came into a new road, full of roots and bad from the rain besides. The
-wheels of the calesche, which had already been many times repaired,
-broke into a hundred pieces, and at the first smithy I determined to
-abandon the vehicle and continue the journey on horseback. Beyond the
-Shenadore, which we crossed in a canoe, the horses swimming behind,
-we fell into a marshy and rocky road, which leads over Mill Creek
-and Stony Creek. Keeping on, through a country of many delightful
-prospects, between the Blue and the Alleghany Mountains, we passed
-through Millerstown, the county seat of the county of Shenadore,
-Stowerstown, Newtown, and arrived at Winchester.
-
-“Winchester, for commerce, is one of the most important towns of
-Virginia. The number of the houses is about 200. The traffic is in
-wheat, flour and hemp, sold at Baltimore and Philadelphia, whence
-European manufactures are brought and expedited further beyond the
-mountains. The water at Winchester--limestone--has a strong effect on
-first being used. The 18th of June I left Winchester and spent that
-night at Weathers-don-Marsh, called also Charletown, and from there,
-on the following day, passed the Blue Ridge for the second time at
-Harper’s Ferry.”
-
-
-
-
-_VII._
-
-_DR. COKE IN VIRGINIA._
-
-_1785-1791._
-
- _Dr. Thomas Coke--The Eastern Shore--Alexandria--Swollen
- Creeks--The Pies of Mecklenburg--A Retired Dancing-Master--Halifax
- County--Following the Spring--Petersburg--Dan River
- Landscapes--Richmond--Port Royal._
-
-
-It would be an interesting book that should give the history of
-missions in this country. That godly man, Nicholas Ferrar, who was
-so active in the affairs of the London Company; the good minister
-of Jamestown, who came with the first supply; the pastors of the
-congregations that settled in Massachusetts; the Jesuit fathers; the
-emissaries of the Society of Friends; the Presbyterians from the north
-of Ireland and from Scotland; Whitefield, Asbury, Coke--how large was
-the share of these men in the making of America. Among them, Dr. Thomas
-Coke was not the least. He was nine times in this country and covered
-a great part of it as then known, including the islands of the British
-and several of the French Indies.
-
-Dr. Coke was born in 1747, and was graduated B. A. at Oxford in
-1768. In 1775 he was made D. C. L., and had considerable prospects
-of church preferment, but was reckoned a Methodist after 1776. His
-bishop reproved him, but declined to remove him. His rector dismissed
-him. Wesley employed him for a time to assist in answering his
-voluminous correspondence. In 1782 he was the first president of the
-Irish Conference, and held the office for the rest of his life, with
-a few intermissions. In 1784 he drew up a plan for missions, and was
-appointed superintendent, with episcopal functions, in America. That
-year he came to this country and ordained Asbury, at Baltimore, as
-deacon, elder and superintendent. Wesley was very indignant at the
-change of the title superintendent to bishop, and the confirmation of
-the change led in 1792 to the O’Kellyan schism. Dr. Coke possessed a
-private fortune of £1,200 a year. He died in 1813 on a voyage to India.
-His work in the field of missions was cosmopolitan, and to him more
-than to any other the creation of the vast network of the Methodist
-foreign missions is due.
-
-September, 1784, Dr. Coke sailed from King Road, Bristol, for New York.
-In November he was on the Eastern Shore. Returning to Philadelphia
-and Baltimore, he was at Alexandria March 9, 1785. This great man was
-able to enjoy the country. He was born in Wales. But he does not seem
-to have been skilled in the art of cross-country horsemanship in all
-weathers. He writes (March 9th): “In my ride this morning to Alexandria
-through the woods, I have had one of the most romantic scenes that ever
-I beheld. Yesterday there was a very heavy fall of snow and hail and
-sleet. The fall of sleet was so great that the trees seemed to be trees
-of ice. So beautiful a sight of the kind I never saw before.”
-
-There was no one to pilot Dr. Coke from Alexandria, and his servant had
-overstayed his time on a visit to the Eastern Shore. Between Alexandria
-and Colchester there were two runs to be crossed, both greatly swollen
-from the sudden thaw. “A friend who lives in Alexandria came with me
-over the first run, and everybody informed me I could easily cross the
-second if I crossed the first. When I came to the second (which was
-perhaps two hours after I crossed the first) I found that I had two
-streams to pass. The first I went over without much danger; but in
-crossing the second, which was very strong and very deep, I did not
-observe that a tree, brought down by the flood, lay across the landing
-place. I endeavored, but in vain, to drive my horse against the stream
-and go around the tree. I was afraid to turn my horse’s head to the
-stream and afraid to go back. In this dilemma I thought it most prudent
-for me to lay hold on the tree, and go over it, the water being shallow
-on the other side. No sooner did I execute my purpose so far as to lay
-hold of the tree (and that instant the horse was carried from under
-me) but the motion that I gave it loosened it, and down the stream it
-instantly carried me.” The tree, with passenger, lodged below at a
-little island, and then there floated down another tree. The doctor,
-besides being thoroughly wetted, was near losing his life. After more
-than a hundred years the suggestion may be offered that the first tree
-should never have been laid hold of. “I was now obliged to walk,”
-continues Dr. Coke, “about a mile, shivering, before I came to a house.
-The master and mistress were from home, and were not expected to return
-that night. But the principal negro lent me an old ragged shirt,
-coat, waistcoat, breeches, etc., and the negroes made a large fire and
-hung my clothes up to dry all night.” Before bedtime the horse, having
-got around the tree, was recovered and brought in by a neighbor, who
-supposed the rider to be drowned. “As he seemed to be a poor man, I
-gave him half a guinea. I trust I shall never forget so awful but very
-instructive a scene.”
-
-After this March welcome to Virginia, Dr. Coke passed through the
-State into North Carolina, and returned to Alexandria May 23d. He was
-at Fredericksburg and Williamsburg (where inquiring for a Methodist
-he was told there was one in the town, who proved to be “a good
-old Presbyterian” and hospitable), at Smithfield and Portsmouth,
-in Mecklenburg County, at New Glasgow, towards the mountains, and
-in Culpeper County. These sojournings are specified. There was a
-bad season in May that year, and near Alexandria the creeks were
-again difficult at the crossings. It was observed on this, the first
-tour, that in Mecklenburg County “they have a great variety of fruit
-pies--peach, apple, pear and cranberry, and puddings--very often.”
-About New Glasgow (on Buffalo River, just north of Amherst Courthouse)
-Dr. Coke remarks: “The wolves, I find, frequently come to the fences
-at night, howling in an awful manner; and sometimes they seize upon a
-straying sheep. At a distance was the Blue Ridge, an amazing chain of
-mountains. I prefer this country to any other part of America--it is
-so like Wales, my native country. And it is far more populous than I
-expected.”
-
-In April, 1787, Dr. Coke was a second time in Virginia, scarcely a
-fortnight. He had come from England to the Island of Antigua, and
-sailed from St. Eustatia in a large Dutch ship, February 10th, for
-Charleston. “In the course of our journey through North Carolina I
-preached at the house of a gentleman near Salisbury, who was formerly a
-dancing-master, and has amassed a considerable fortune, with which he
-has purchased a large estate. In traveling through Virginia our rides
-were so long that we were frequently on horseback till midnight after
-preaching in the middle of the day. Since I left Charleston I have got
-into my old romantic way of life, of preaching in the midst of great
-forests, with scores and sometimes hundreds of horses tied to the
-trees, which adds much solemnity to the scene.
-
-“In the course of my journey through this State I visited the county
-of Halifax, where I met with a little persecution on my former visit.
-I am now informed that soon after I left the county on my former tour
-a bill was presented against me as a seditious person before the grand
-jury, and was found by the jury, and ninety persons had engaged to
-pursue me and bring me back again. Another bill was also presented
-in one of the neighboring counties, but was thrown out. Many of the
-people, I find, imagined that I would not venture amongst them again.
-However, when I came they all received me with perfect peace and
-quietness. Indeed, I now acknowledge that however just my sentiments
-may be concerning slavery, it was ill-judged of me to deliver them from
-the pulpit. Many of the inhabitants at Richmond, I was informed, said
-that I would not dare to venture into that town. But they did not
-know me, for I am a plain, blunt man, that goes directly on. However,
-instead of opposition, the Governor of the State, who resides there,
-ordered the Capitol to be opened to me, and a very respectable and very
-attentive congregation I was favored with.” On the way from Richmond to
-Alexandria there was a plot laid for Dr. Coke by a company of agreeable
-men at one of the inns. “In the first dish of tea there was a little
-rum; in the second a little more, but the third was so strong that on
-our complaining of a conspiracy, it seemed as if the rum had sprung
-into our tea of itself, for both company and waiters solemnly protested
-they were innocent. On the last day of April Mr. Asbury and I arrived
-at Baltimore.”
-
-The following year, 1788 (the Atlantic seems to have been but a ferry
-even then), Dr. Coke was in Virginia again for a few days, coming, as
-in 1787, from the West Indies by Charleston. “In traveling from North
-Carolina to Virginia we were favored with one of the most beautiful
-prospects I ever beheld. The country, as far as we could see from the
-top of a hill, was ornamented with a great number of peach orchards,
-the peach trees being all in full bloom, and displaying a diversity of
-most beautiful colors--blue, purple and violet. On the opposite side
-of a beautiful vale which lay at the foot of a hill, ran the River
-Yeadkin, reflecting the rays of the sun from its broad, placid stream;
-and the mountains which bounded the view formed a very fine background
-for the completing of the prospect. The two days following we rode on
-the ridge of a long hill, with a large vale on each side, and mountains
-rising above mountains for twenty, and sometimes, I suppose, for
-forty miles on each hand. In Halifax County, Virginia, where I met
-with much persecution four years ago, almost all the great people of
-the county came in their chariots and other carriages to hear me, and
-behaved with great propriety: there were not less than five colonels
-in the congregation. On the 18th of April we opened our first Virginia
-Conference for the State of Virginia in the town of Petersburgh. From
-Petersburgh we set off for our second Virginia Conference, which we
-held in the town of Leesburgh, visiting Richmond by the way.”
-
-Dr. Coke’s fourth and last journey in Virginia (the last, that is,
-recorded in his book, published 1793) was again in April, year 1791. As
-in 1787 and 1788, the approach was from the south. “On Monday, the 11th
-of April, we arrived at Dickes’s Ferry, in Virginia. Our ride on that
-day was remarkably pleasing. The variety arising from the intermixture
-of woods and plantations along the sides of the broad, rocky river Dan,
-near which we rode most part of the time, could not but be a source of
-great pleasure to an admirer of the beauties of nature. Hitherto (April
-15th) I might be said to have traveled with the spring. As I moved from
-South to North the spring was, I think, as far advanced when I was in
-Georgia as when I came into Virginia. But now it has evidently got the
-start of me. The oaks have spread out their leaves, and the dogwood,
-whose bark is very medicinal, and whose innumerable white flowers form
-one of the finest ornaments of the forest, is in full bloom. The deep
-green of the pines, the bright transparent green of the oaks, and the
-fine white of the flowers of the dogwood, with other trees and shrubs,
-form such a complication of beauties as are indescribable to those who
-have only lived in countries that are almost entirely cultivated.
-
-“For about 800 miles which I have rode since I landed in South
-Carolina, we have had hardly any rain. But this day, the 16th, we
-were wetted to the skin. However, we at last happily found our way to
-the house of a friend by the preachers’ mark--the split bush.” This
-circumstance may appear to many immaterial; however, as it may convey
-some idea of the mode in which the preachers are obliged to travel in
-this country, I will just enlarge upon it. The method was to split two
-or three bushes, at the junction of several roads, along the road that
-should be followed; very useful to the itinerant at the formation of
-new circuits in the forest. Dr. Coke observes: “In one of the circuits
-the wicked discovered the secret, and split bushes in wrong places on
-purpose to deceive the preachers.”
-
-The character of this great man appears in his book, written without
-artifice. The people were glad to see him. “On the 20th of April
-we opened our conference at Petersburgh. April 24th I preached in
-Richmond, in the Capitol where the Assembly sits, to the most dressy
-congregation I ever saw in America. However, they gave great attention.
-In the afternoon I rode to Colonel Clayton’s, about twenty-five miles
-from Richmond. April 20th I came among the cedar trees. This evening we
-arrived at Port Royal, where a numerous and very dressy congregation
-had been waiting for us about two hours with wonderful patience. A
-gentleman of the name of Hipkins, a capital merchant of the town, sent
-us a genteel invitation to sup with him, and lodge at his house. I
-accepted of it. Soon after I came in he observed that the Philadelphia
-paper had informed the public of the death of Mr. Wesley.[J] I gave no
-credit to the account, but, however, intreated the favour of seeing the
-paper. He sent immediately to a neighboring merchant who took in that
-paper, and about 10 o’clock the melancholy record arrived. I evidently
-saw by the account that it was too true.
-
-“The next morning I set off for New York, in order to be in time for
-the British packet. At Alexandria the news was confirmed by a letter
-from London. On the 29th I crossed the run of water called Akatenke,
-down which I was carried by the flood. We were now come into a country
-abounding with singing birds. But alas! I could take no pleasure
-in them, the death of my venerable friend had cast such a shade of
-melancholy over my heart. The night being very dark, it was with great
-difficulty that my friend, who traveled with me, and myself found our
-way from Alexandria to Blaidensburg.”
-
-
-
-
-_VIII._
-
-_A SUMMER AT BATH._
-
-_1791._
-
- _Captain Bayard, of the Artillery--From Baltimore to
- Bath--Bath described--Tea at Bath--Irish Comedians--Valley
- Lands--Winchester--Colonel P.--The Sabbath in America--Land
- Merchants._
-
-
-In the year VI (1798) there was published at Paris a book written by
-a retired captain of artillery, Ferdinand Marie Bayard, described on
-the title page, “A Journey Into the Interior of the United States, to
-Bath, Winchester, the Shenandoah Valley, etc., etc., During the Summer
-of 1791.” It is strange that this book has not been translated. It is
-interesting as a sort of sentimental journey of a very intelligent
-man (member of the Society of Sciences Letters and Arts at Paris),
-who visited a spot not often mentioned by the early traveler in this
-country. Captain Bayard was born at Moulins la Marche in 1768, and was
-living in 1836. He was in his twenty-third year the summer of 1791.
-He had already retired from the army and become a traveler in various
-parts of the world.
-
-Captain Bayard seems to have landed at Baltimore, with his wife and
-small boy. He remarks, “The months of June, July and August are bad
-for children if kept in town in this country. Bath, situated 120
-miles from Baltimore, and near the Valley of the Shenandoah, offered a
-stopping place in the country and a point of departure from which to
-visit that fertile region, where, beneath skies almost always serene,
-the inhabitants cultivate a generous soil, which rewards liberally the
-slightest efforts of human industry. I wished to see this promised
-land, from the bosom of which an innumerable population is beginning
-to arise, prosperous and content, and already passing the limits of
-the Valley to occupy the vast spaces beyond. Besides, before returning
-home, I desired to gain a knowledge of the American people, and this
-I could better compass in the country than in the towns. For the trip
-I hired a carriage at Baltimore, at 41 francs the passenger, baggage
-included. The owner was the driver, and a very skilful one, as we
-learned on the road, which is often abominable and extremely dangerous.
-
-“Four miles south of the Potomac [by way of Ellicott’s Lower
-Mill, Ellicott’s Upper Mill, the Red House, the Monocacy River,
-Fredericktown, and Middletown] we arrived at Bath, in Virginia. The
-town is situated in a triangular and very narrow gorge. The mountain to
-the west is high and steep, and in the month of March snow and earth
-become loosened from the declivity and descend in avalanches. The
-houses built next to this dangerous mountain are protected by heavy
-palisades. Several people, having neglected the precaution, have had
-their houses engulfed. The residents boast of the climate--the winter
-not too cold, and the heat of summer moderate. Bath has two public
-buildings--the theatre and the bathhouse. The first is a log edifice,
-and the second a framed barrack, partitioned into eight cells, in each
-of which there are steps arranged for the convenience of the bathers.
-The spring is hard by. The water is dispensed in a goblet by the man in
-charge. The water is clear, lukewarm, and insipid, but very efficacious.
-
-“I have seen many come to Bath fearfully rheumatic, who had to be
-carried to the spring at first, and in three weeks were able to walk
-with a crutch. Bath was formerly called Warm Springs. The name was
-changed in deference to the English resort. This imitative mania is
-a bad symptom, and augurs ill for that nation, whose name is dear to
-lovers of liberty everywhere. At Bath the young women ride about a
-great deal, and are excellent horsewomen. It is to be remarked that
-their physiognomy is distinct among American women. During the fall,
-boats come up the river from Alexandria and Georgetown, and return
-laden with grain. After that season there is no more traffic by water
-until the spring, and if any one has neglected to provide himself he
-must make a trip to Winchester for supplies, thirty-nine miles off. The
-inhabitants of this region are very fond of the English boxing match.
-Generally a bruiser (breaker of bones) is in charge of these combats,
-who sees to the strict carrying out of all the regulations.
-
-“At our boarding house (excellent fare) there were about forty people,
-among them two Virginians--Madame B. and Madame A.--who spoke French
-tolerably well. Madame B. had read the works of Swedenborg, and
-entertained us with descriptions drawn from those mystical books. There
-were several very pious people at our boarding house, one of whom had
-a theory that eating was not to satisfy the appetite. I noticed that he
-ate a great deal. At Bath it is the custom to drink tea at 5 o’clock.
-Everything is very ceremonious. At the right of the lady dispensing tea
-are ranged in a half circle all the other ladies. A profound silence
-follows the entrance of each invited guest; all the ladies as grave
-as judges on the bench. A small acajou table is placed before the
-dispenser of tea. Silver pots contain the coffee and the hot water,
-which serves to weaken the tea or to receive the cups. A domestic
-brings on a silver waiter the cup, the sugar dish, the cream pot, the
-butter balls, the thin slices of ham. A Frenchman is embarrassed at
-the necessity of watching his cup and saucer in one hand, and with the
-other receiving a tart or a slice of very thin ham.
-
-“In sending back the cup the spoon must be placed in a manner to
-indicate whether you will begin again, or have finished drinking. A
-Frenchman on one occasion, unfamiliar with English and ignorant of this
-polite sign language, was overcome at seeing the sixteenth cup arrive,
-which, having emptied, he hit upon the device of stowing it in his
-pocket, dreading a seventeenth. The tea dispensed and consumed, there
-are songs. Mademoiselle L. was the accomplished artist at Bath. Her
-favorite song was one of a certain Patrick, who, absent, was still to
-be remembered.
-
-“We had at Bath a troupe of Irish comedians, alternately emperors,
-shepherds, clowns, and no doubt very badly fed. The young man who
-played the lover found great difficulty in pronouncing his consonants.
-A tall, thin man played the tragic role of enamored prince. A blonde
-soubrette was solemnly coquettish. The others of the troupe are
-scarcely to be recalled. We had tragedy, comedy, comic opera, and
-farce. Every week there was a dance. Billiards was an amusement, and
-there was play at the taverns, particularly after the arrival of a
-gentleman who kept a Pharaoh bank. He was treated with great courtesy,
-and I heard nothing said against his probity. Nevertheless, it happens
-that the planter who arrives at Bath with equipage and attendants goes
-home with nothing but a horse, and a very mean horse.
-
-“I hired a horse to go to Winchester. For more than half of the way
-the country is wild. As you draw nearer the town in the Valley, many
-well-stocked farms appear, the land being very fertile. On the slope
-there range strong, long-wooled sheep, not afraid of wolves during the
-summer. Such war is made upon the wolves that even in this heavily
-timbered country there is little danger from them except when the
-snow lies deep upon the ground. It is a magnificent country about
-Winchester. The men are tall, well-made, of strong constitutions, and
-ruddy. The horses and cattle have the eye and the gait of health.
-I stopped at a tavern kept by a German, who has made a fortune in
-the business. I was treated with consideration, for having lived at
-Strasbourg and for having crossed the Rhine. At this tavern there is a
-good cook, the meat is excellent, there is game and fresh-water fish;
-the house is well furnished, wines of every country, good linen, good
-beds, the rooms well lighted, and the whole at a reasonable price. The
-day after I arrived there came to the tavern an old gentleman limping
-from the gout. I mentioned Thomas Payne to him and the ‘Rights of
-Man.’ He fixed me with his eye, out the air with his stick, and said
-vehemently that he wished Thomas Payne was hanged. He left me, and at
-the same time I got up, whistling the air of ‘Ca Ira.’ I learned the
-cause of his behavior: he had held a lucrative office before the war,
-and was an incurable Tory.
-
-“A Mr. Smith, who lives a mile from Winchester, asked me to dine.
-I spent the time very agreeably there. From the liberality of his
-opinions I was led to discuss the political situation of America with
-considerable frankness. Mr. Smith and his brother-in-law accompanied me
-back to Winchester, discoursing by the way of their fortunate lot, of
-the progress of agriculture, and of the richness of the inexhaustible
-soil, which yields an abundance to the inhabitants of this beautiful
-Valley.
-
-“I had a letter of introduction to Colonel P., formerly aid de camp
-to General Washington. Colonel P. lives some sixteen miles from
-Winchester, greatly esteemed for his public and private virtues. On the
-way to his house I passed through a country of abundant harvests, fat
-pastures and well peopled; where there was forest the trees were of a
-magnificent growth, and in the intervals a deep green turf invited the
-traveler to repose. It was hot. I dismounted beneath a poplar tree, the
-white flower of which offered its corolla to the bee and the humming
-bird. The coolness of the place, the delicious perfumes exhaled by the
-acacias, the ivy, and the flowers springing from the sod, all gave to
-the senses that calm which is the precursor of sleep; but ideas of
-the happiness prepared for generations to come in this land of peace
-and plenty, thoughts of the future greatness of the American people,
-supplied a reverie sweeter than that of dreams.
-
-“Not far from the house of Colonel P., I met a large man on horseback,
-whose open countenance was an invitation to talk. He was dressed like
-a farmer during the busy season. I asked him the way. He showed me
-the road, and continued his path without adding a word to the precise
-answer he had given me. Arrived at the house, I found the overseer
-near the barn directing some negroes who were shelling corn. I had not
-been long in the house, a structure of logs, and very comfortable,
-when there entered the same man I had met in the road, none other than
-Colonel P. himself. I presented my letter, which he quickly read, and
-receiving me in the most friendly manner, offered me refreshments.
-We talked of the war, and he sketched for me in brief its causes. At
-dinner I drank old whiskey distilled on the place. The Colonel spoke
-with pleasure of his farm operations: he makes everything at home.
-He showed me the plan of his 1,000 acres, at the centre of which he
-will build a large and commodious house. At the present time his
-outbuildings are more carefully constructed than his mansion. I quitted
-Colonel P. at sunset, much pleased with him, and grateful for his kind
-attentions.[K] Shortly after, the moon appeared over the mountains to
-the south, and cast a light over the valley. The whippoorwill commenced
-its plaints, almost extinguished by the various song of the melodious
-mocking-bird. The blacks were coming in from the fields singing behind
-the slow horses fatigued with the day’s work.
-
-“The next day at Winchester I went to church, a frame building, and
-hitched around it horses of price well caparisoned. The negroes sat in
-the gallery, dressed in their Sunday clothes. Below were their masters
-and mistresses, whose appearance proclaimed them alive to the sanctity
-of the place and to the solemnity of the ceremony.
-
-“The minister, a Presbyterian, was the grandson of a Frenchman. Coming
-back from church I observed that the doors of all the houses were
-closed. They remained so throughout the day. Mrs. B. and her daughters
-retired after dinner to read chapters of the Old and the New Testament.
-Throughout the United States this is the manner of observing Sunday.
-
-“The Valley of the Shenandoah is a most prosperous and healthful
-region. Tobacco, corn, flax and wheat are the principal crops. Twelve
-miles from Winchester I could have bought land for 50 shillings the
-acre, but nearer the town the price of cleared land is from three to
-four pounds. Several Europeans who have settled hereabouts have not
-succeeded well, and for the reason that they failed to discard European
-customs. It should not be overlooked that the price of labor and that
-of produce is in reverse proportion to what prevails in Europe. Here
-labor is high and market values, net, are low. An especial error of
-foreigners is the attempt to improve too fast. A Frenchman who has
-bought 300 acres of land thinks he has a ‘property,’ and goes to work
-on the grand scale. What with building and embellishments he is very
-apt to go bankrupt. There are men in this region who have made fortunes
-in land speculations. There is not a tavern at Winchester where land
-merchants may not be found. They are as enthusiastic in their offers
-as the women who sell toothpicks at the doors of Paris restaurants and
-cafés. An especially pleasing feature of their preliminaries is that
-they assure you their only motive is to make your fortune. I met one of
-these merchants who desired to enrich me, _nolens volens_, by selling
-me land at an excessively high price.
-
-“Winchester is destined to be a manufacturing town, and to a degree
-incalculable as soon as communication with the Atlantic coast shall
-have been established by means of the rivers or by canal. Already there
-is a famous carriage works at Winchester; and boots, shoes, and saddles
-are made there, which, for use and for style of workmanship, equal the
-product of the older cities.
-
-“I set out from Winchester for Bath at 4 o’clock in the morning, in
-order to be on the mountain before the sun was too high. A light
-fog covered the Valley, resembling transparent gauze, through which
-appeared the tops of trees, houses and cabins, the cabin chimneys
-already smoking. I observed that the squirrels were early awake. Coming
-to Bath, I found the great subject of talk was a duel lately fought and
-announced in the _Gazette_.”
-
-
-
-
-_IX._
-
-_ISAAC WELD._
-
-_1796._
-
- _Hoe’s Ferry--Freshwater Oysters--Vicissitudes of Ferriage--By-Ways
- and Hospitality--The Northern Neck--Tappahannock--A Forest
- Fire--From Urbanna to Gloucester--Norfolk--Richmond--The
- Mocking-Bird--Frogs--Columbia--The Green Springs--The Southwest
- Mountain--Monticello--Lynchburgh--New London--Botetourt County--The
- Lower Valley--Lexington, Staunton, Winchester._
-
-
-1.
-
-The following are the observations of young Isaac Weld, of Dublin.
-He was on his way from Philadelphia, and stopped at the Falls of the
-Potomac:
-
-“From hence I followed the course of the river downwards as far as
-George Town, where I again crossed it, and after passing through the
-Federal city, proceeded along the Maryland shore of the river to
-Piscatoway, and afterwards to Port Tobacco. In the neighborhood of
-Piscatoway there are several very fine views of the Virginian shore;
-Mount Vernon in particular appears to great advantage. From Port
-Tobacco to Hoe’s Ferry on the Potowmac River, the country is flat and
-sandy and wears a most dreary aspect. Nothing is to be seen here for
-miles together but extensive plains that have been worn out by the
-culture of tobacco, overgrown with yellow sedge and interspersed with
-groves of pine and cedar trees, the dark green colour of which forms a
-curious contrast with the yellow of the sedge. In the midst of these
-plains are the remains of several good houses.
-
-“Such a number of roads in different directions cross over these
-flats, upon none of which is there anything like a direction post, and
-the face of a human being is so rarely met with that it is scarcely
-possible for a traveler to find out the direct way at once. Instead
-of twelve miles, the distance by the straight road from Port Tobacco
-to the ferry, my horse had certainly traveled twice the number before
-we got there. After having waited for two hours and a half for my
-breakfast, the most I could procure was two eggs, a pint of milk and a
-bit of cake bread, scarcely as big as my hand.
-
-“After having got into the ferry-boat the man of the house, as if
-conscious that he had given me very bad fare, told me that there was a
-bank of oysters in the river, close to which it was necessary to pass,
-and that if I chose to stop the men would procure abundance of them for
-me. The curiosity of getting oysters in fresh water tempted me to stop,
-and the men got near a bushel of them in a very few minutes. These
-oysters are extremely good when cooked, but very disagreeable eaten
-raw; indeed all the oysters found in America are, in the opinion of
-most Europeans, very indifferent and tasteless when raw. The Americans,
-on their part, find still greater fault with our oysters, which, they
-say, are not fit to be eaten in any shape, because they taste of
-copper.
-
-“The river at the ferry is about three miles wide, and with particular
-winds the waves rise very high; in these cases they always tie the
-horses, for fear of accidents, before they set out; indeed with the
-small open boats which they make use of it is what ought always to be
-done, for in this country gusts of wind rise suddenly. Having omitted
-this precaution, the boat was on the point of being overset two or
-three different times as I crossed over. On the Virginian shore,
-opposite to the ferry house from whence I sailed, there are several
-large creeks, which fall into the Potowmac. As I wished to go beyond
-these creeks I therefore hired the boatman to carry me ten miles down
-the Potowmac River in the ferry-boat, past the mouths of them all; this
-he accordingly did, and in the afternoon I landed on the beach, not a
-little pleased at finding that I had reached the shore without having
-been under the necessity of swimming any part of the way.
-
-“The part of the country where I landed appeared to be a perfect
-wilderness. Taking a road, however, as nearly as I could guess, in a
-direct line from the river up the country, at the end of an hour I came
-upon a narrow road, which led to a large old brick house, somewhat
-similar to those I had met with on the Maryland shore. On inquiring
-here from two blacks for a tavern, I was told there was no such thing
-in this part of the country. In the course of five or six miles I saw
-several more of the same sort of old brick houses, and the evening
-now drawing toward a close, I began to feel the necessity of going
-to some one of them. I was considering within myself which house I
-should visit, when a lively old negro, mounted on a little horse, came
-galloping after me. On applying to him for information on the subject,
-he took great pains to assure me that I should be well received at any
-of the houses I might stop at, and strongly recommended me to proceed
-under his guidance to his master’s house, which was but a mile farther
-on.
-
-“‘Masser will be so glad to see you,’ added he; ‘nothing can be like.’
-
-“I accordingly took the negro’s advice and rode to the dwelling of his
-master, made him acquainted with my situation, and begged I might be
-allowed to put my horse in his stable for the night. The reception,
-however, which this gentleman gave me differed so materially from what
-I had been led to expect, that I was happy at hearing from him that
-there was a good tavern at the distance of two miles. I apologized for
-the liberty I had taken, and made the best of my way to it. Instead of
-two miles, however, this tavern proved to be about three times as far
-off. The next day I arrived at Stratford, the residence of a gentleman,
-who, when at Philadelphia, had invited me to pass some time with him
-whenever I visited Virginia. Some of the neighbouring gentlemen dined
-here together, and having related to them my adventures on arriving in
-Virginia, the whole company expressed the greatest astonishment. Every
-one seemed eager to know the name of the person who had given me such a
-reception, and begged me to tell it. I did so, and the Virginians were
-satisfied, for the person was a Scotsman, and had, it seems, removed
-but a short time before from some town or other to the plantation on
-which I found him.
-
-“This part of Virginia is called the Northern Neck, and is remarkable
-for having been the birthplace of many of the principal characters
-which distinguished themselves in America, during the war, by their
-great talents.
-
-“Though many of the houses in the Northern Neck are built of brick and
-stone, in the style of the old English manor houses, yet the greater
-number there and throughout Virginia are of wood, amongst which are
-all those that have been built of late years. This is chiefly owing
-to a prevailing, though absurd, opinion, that wooden houses are the
-healthiest, because the inside walls never appear damp. Tobacco is
-not near so much cultivated now as it was formerly, the great demand
-for wheat having induced most of the planters to raise that grain
-in preference. Those who raise tobacco and Indian corn are called
-planters, and those who cultivate small grain, farmers.
-
-“Towards the end of April I crossed the Rappahannock River, which
-bounds the Northern Neck on one side, to a small town called
-Tappahannock, or Hobb’s Hole, containing about 100 houses. Before the
-war this town was in a much more flourishing state than at present;
-that unfortunate contest ruined the trade of this little place, as it
-did that of most of the seaport towns in Virginia. The Rappahannock is
-about three-quarters of a mile wide opposite the town. Sharks are very
-often seen in this river. What is very remarkable, the fish are all
-found on the side of the river next to the town.
-
-“As I passed through this part of the country, from Tappahannock to
-Urbanna, I observed many traces of fires in the woods, which are
-frequent, it seems in the spring of the year. I was a witness myself to
-one of these fires, that happened in the Northern Neck.
-
-“The day had been remarkably serene; in the afternoon, however, it
-became sultry, and streams of hot air were perceptible now and then,
-the usual tokens of a gust. About 5 o’clock the horizon towards the
-north became dark, and a terrible whirlwind arose. I was standing with
-some gentlemen on an eminence at the time, and perceived it gradually
-advancing. As it came along it leveled the fence rails, and unroofed
-the sheds for the cattle. We made every endeavor, but in vain, to get
-to a place of shelter; in the course of two minutes the whirlwind
-overtook us; the shock was violent; it was hardly possible to stand,
-and difficult to breathe. The whirlwind passed over in about three
-minutes, but a storm, accompanied by heavy thunder and lightning,
-succeeded. On looking round immediately after the whirlwind had
-passed a prodigious column of fire now appeared in a part of the wood
-where some brushwood had been burning; in many places the flames rose
-considerably above the summit of the trees, which were of a large
-growth. It was a tremendous, and at the same time sublime sight. The
-negroes in the surrounding plantations were all assembled with their
-hoes, and watches were stationed at every corner to give the alarm if
-the fire appeared elsewhere.
-
-“The country between Urbanna and Gloucester is neither so flat nor so
-sandy as that bordering upon the Rappahannock. The trees, chiefly
-pines, are of very large size, and afford abundance of turpentine,
-which is extracted from them in large quantities by the inhabitants,
-principally, however, for home consumption. Gloucester contains only
-ten or twelve houses. There are remains here of one or two redoubts
-thrown up during the war. The town of York consists of about seventy
-houses, an Episcopalian church, and a gaol. Great quantities of tobacco
-were formerly inspected here; very little, however, is now raised in
-the neighborhood. The little that is sent for inspection is reckoned
-to be of the very best quality, and is all engaged for the London
-market. In the town the houses bear evident marks of the siege; and
-the inhabitants will not, on any account, suffer the holes perforated
-by the cannon balls to be repaired on the outside. Till within a year
-or two the broken shells themselves remained; but the New England men
-that traded to York, finding they would sell well as old iron, dug
-them up and carried them away in their ships. Twelve miles from York,
-to the westward, stands Williamsburg. The town consists of about 1,200
-inhabitants, and the society in it is thought to be more extensive and
-more genteel at the same time than what is to be met with in any other
-place of its size in America. No manufactures are carried on here, and
-scarcely any trade.
-
-“From Williamsburgh to Hampton the country is flat and uninteresting.
-From this town there is a regular ferry to Norfolk, across Hampton
-Roads, eighteen miles over. Norfolk would be a place of much greater
-trade than it is at present were it not for the impolicy of some laws
-which have existed in the State of Virginia. One of these laws, so
-injurious to commerce, was passed during the war. It was enacted that
-all merchants and planters in Virginia, who owed money to British
-merchants, should be exonerated from their debts if they paid the money
-due into the public treasury instead of sending it to Great Britain.
-The treasury at first did not become much richer in consequence of
-this law. However, when the continental paper money became so much
-depreciated many of the people began to look upon the measure in a
-different point of view. In vain did the British merchant sue for his
-money when hostilities were terminated; he could obtain no redress.
-
-“Another law, baneful in the highest degree to the trading interest,
-is one which renders all landed property inviolable. Owing to this law
-they have not yet been enabled to get a bank established at Norfolk.
-Repeated attempts have been made in the State Assembly to get this
-last mentioned law repealed, but they have all proved ineffectual. The
-debates have been very warm on the business.
-
-“The houses in Norfolk are about 500 in number. These have all been
-erected since the year 1776, when the town was totally destroyed by
-fire. The losses suffered on that occasion were estimated at £300,000.
-Amongst the inhabitants are great numbers of Scotch and French. The
-latter are almost entirely from the West Indies, and principally from
-St. Domingo.
-
-“Not a bit of fodder was to be had on the whole road from Norfolk to
-Richmond, excepting at two places. Oats were not to be had on any
-terms. Great crowds were assembled at Petersburgh, as I passed through,
-attracted to it by the horse races, which take place four or five
-times in the year. The only particular circumstance in their mode of
-carrying on their races in Virginia is that they always run to the left.
-
-“Richmond is situated immediately below the falls of James River,
-on the north side. The river opposite to the town is crossed by the
-means of two bridges, which are separated by an island. The bridge,
-leading from the south shore to the island, is built upon fifteen large
-flat-bottomed boats, kept stationary in the river by strong chains and
-anchors. The bows of them, which are very sharp, are put against the
-stream, and fore and aft there is a strong beam, upon which the piers
-of the bridge rest. The bridges thrown across this river, opposite the
-town, have repeatedly been carried away; it is thought idle, therefore,
-to go to the expense of a better one. The strongest stone bridge could
-hardly resist the bodies of ice that are hurried down the falls by the
-floods on the breaking up of a severe winter.
-
-“Though the houses in Richmond are not more than 700 in number, yet
-they extend nearly one mile and a half along the banks of the river.
-The lower part of the town is built close to the water, and opposite to
-it lies the shipping. This is connected with the upper town by a long
-street, which runs parallel to the course of the river, about fifty
-yards removed from the banks. The situation of the upper town is very
-pleasing; it stands on an elevated spot, and commands a fine prospect
-of the falls of the river and of the adjacent country on the opposite
-side. The best houses stand here, and also the Capitol, or State house.
-From the opposite side of the river this building appears extremely
-well.
-
-“A canal is completed at the north side of the falls, which renders
-the navigation complete from Richmond to the Blue Mountains, and at
-particular times of the year boats with light burthens can proceed
-still higher up. In the river, opposite the town, are no more than
-seven feet of water, but ten miles lower down about twelve feet. Most
-of the vessels trading to Richmond unload the greatest part of their
-cargoes at this place into river craft, and then proceed up to the
-town. Trade is carried on here chiefly by foreigners.”
-
-
-2.
-
-Isaac Weld, who spent about two years in this country, from 1795 to
-1797, returned to Ireland “without entertaining the slightest wish to
-revisit the American continent.” During his visit he saw a great deal,
-wrote a very good book after going home (an extraordinary book as the
-work of a very young man), and it is a matter of congratulation that he
-came. Weld was a little past twenty-one when he landed at Philadelphia.
-He was born in Dublin, of influential family connections, and had the
-advantage in his youth of an acquaintance with the Martineaus, those
-exceptionally intelligent people. Isaac Weld died in 1856. He had been
-for years vice-president of the Royal Dublin Society, and was famous as
-a topographer. Some account has already been given of his tour through
-the Northern Neck to Richmond. The observations continue:
-
-“Having stayed at Richmond somewhat longer than a week, which I found
-absolutely necessary, if it had only been to recruit the strength
-of my horses, I proceeded in a north-westerly direction towards the
-Southwest or Green Mountains.
-
-“The first week in May had arrived; the trees had obtained a
-considerable part of their foliage, and the air in the woods was
-perfumed with the fragrant smell of numberless flowers and flowering
-shrubs. The music of the birds was also delightful. It is thought that
-in Virginia the singing birds are finer than what are to be met with on
-any other part of the continent, as the climate is more congenial to
-them. The notes of the mocking-bird, or Virginian nightingale, are in
-particular most melodious. It is a remark, however, made by Catesby,
-and which appears to be a very just one, that the birds in America are
-much inferior to those in Europe in the melody of their notes, but
-that they are superior in point of plumage. I know of no American bird
-that has the rich, mellow note of our blackbird, the sprightly note of
-the skylark, or the sweet and plaintive one of the nightingale. After
-having listened to the mocking-bird, there is no novelty in hearing the
-song of any other bird in the country; and indeed, their songs are, for
-the most part, but very simple in themselves, though combined they are
-pleasing.
-
-“The frogs in America, it must here be observed, make a most singular
-noise, some of them absolutely whistling, whilst others croak so loudly
-that it is difficult at times to tell whether the sound proceeds from a
-calf or a frog; I have more than once been deceived by the noise when
-walking in a meadow. These last frogs are called bullfrogs; they mostly
-keep in pairs, and are never found but where there is good water;
-their bodies are from four to seven inches long, and their legs are in
-proportion; they are extremely active, and take prodigious leaps.
-
-“The first town I reached on going towards the mountains was Columbia,
-or Point of Fork, as it is called in the neighborhood. It is situated
-about sixty miles above Richmond, at the confluence of Rivanna and
-Fluvanna Rivers, which united form James River. This is a flourishing
-little place, containing about forty houses, and a warehouse for the
-inspection of tobacco. On the neck of land between the two rivers, just
-opposite to the town, is the magazine of the State, in which are kept
-12,000 stand of arms, and about thirty tons of powder. The low lands
-bordering upon the river in this neighborhood are extremely valuable.
-
-“From Columbia to the Green Springs, about twenty miles farther on,
-the road runs almost wholly through a pine forest, and is very lonely.
-Night came on before I got to the end of it, and, as very commonly
-happens with travelers in this part of the world, I soon lost my way.
-A light, seen through the trees, seemed to indicate that a house was
-not far off. My servant eagerly rode up to it, but the poor fellow’s
-consternation was great indeed when he observed it moving from him,
-presently coming back, and then with swiftness departing again into the
-woods. I was at a loss for a time myself to account for the appearance.
-I found it proceeded from the firefly. As the summer came on these
-flies appeared every night. After a light shower in the afternoon I
-have seen the woods sparkling with them in every quarter.
-
-“After wandering about till it was near 11 o’clock, a plantation at
-last appeared, and having got fresh information respecting the road
-from the negroes in the quarter, who generally sit up half the night,
-and over a fire in all seasons, I again set out for the Green Springs.
-With some difficulty I at last found the way, and arrived there about
-midnight. The hour was so unseasonable that the people at the tavern
-were very unwilling to open their doors. Besides the tavern and the
-quarters of the slaves, there is but one more building at this place.
-This is a large farmhouse, where people that resort to the springs are
-accommodated with lodgings about as good as those at the tavern. The
-springs are just on the margin of the wood at the bottom of a slope
-which begins at the houses, and are covered with a few boards merely
-to keep the leaves from falling in. The waters are chalybeate, and are
-drank chiefly by persons from the low country, whose constitutions have
-been relaxed by the heats of summer.
-
-“Having breakfasted in the morning at this place, I proceeded on my
-journey up the Southwest Mountain. In the course of the day’s ride I
-observed a great number of snakes, which were now beginning to come
-forth from their holes. I killed a black one that I found sleeping,
-stretched across the road; it was five feet in length. The black snake
-is more commonly met with than any other in this part of America. It is
-wonderfully fond of milk, and is frequently found in the dairies, which
-in Virginia are for the most part in low situations like cellars.
-
-“The Southwest Mountains run nearly parallel to the Blue Ridge, and
-are the first which you come to on going up the country from the sea
-coast in Virginia. The soil here changes to a deep argilaceous earth,
-particularly well suited to the culture of small grain and clover, and
-produces abundant crops. As this earth, however, does not absorb the
-water very quickly the farmer is exposed to great losses from heavy
-falls of rain. On the sides of the mountain, where the ground has been
-worn out with the culture of tobacco, and the water has been suffered
-to run in the same channel for a length of time, it is surprising to
-see the depth of the ravines, or gullies, as they are called. However,
-the country in the neighborhood of these mountains is far more populous
-than that which lies towards Richmond; and there are many persons that
-even consider it to be the garden of the United States. The salubrity
-of the climate is equal also to that of any part of the United States;
-and the inhabitants have in consequence a healthy, ruddy appearance.
-The people appeared to me to be of a more frank and open disposition,
-more inclined to hospitality, and to live more contentedly on what they
-possessed than the people of the same class in any other part of the
-United States I passed through.
-
-“Along these mountains live several gentlemen of large landed property,
-who farm their own estates, as in the lower parts of Virginia; among
-the number is Mr. Jefferson. His house is at present in an unfinished
-state, but if carried on according to the plan laid down, it will be
-one of the most elegant private habitations on the United States.
-Several attempts have been made in this neighborhood to bring the
-manufacture of wine to perfection; none of them, however, have
-succeeded to the wish of the parties. A set of gentlemen once went to
-the expense even of getting six Italians over for the purpose. We must
-not, however, conclude that good wine can never be manufactured upon
-these mountains. It will require some time, and different experiments,
-to ascertain the particular kind of wine, and the mode of cultivating
-it best adapted to the soil of these mountains.
-
-“Having crossed the Southwest Mountains I passed along to Lynchburgh, a
-town situated on the south side of Fluvanna River. This town contains
-about 100 houses, and a warehouse for the inspection of tobacco,
-where about 2,000 hogsheads are annually inspected. It has been built
-entirely within the last fifteen years, and is rapidly increasing, from
-its advantageous situation for carrying on trade with the adjacent
-country. The boats, in which the produce is conveyed down the river,
-are from forty-eight to fifty-four feet long, but very narrow in
-proportion to their length. Three men are sufficient to navigate one of
-these boats, and they can go to Richmond and back again in ten days.
-They fall down with the stream, but work their way back again with
-poles. The cargo carried in these boats is always proportioned to the
-depth of water in the river, which varies very much. Along the banks I
-observed great quantities of weeds hanging upon the trees considerably
-above my head, though on horseback. A few miles from Lynchburgh,
-towards the Blue Mountains, is a small town called New London, in which
-there is a magazine and also an armory, erected during the war. About
-fifteen men were here employed, as I passed through, repairing old arms
-and furbishing up others. At one end of the room lay the musquets, to
-the amount of about 5,000, all together in a large heap, and at the
-opposite end lay a pile of leathern accoutrements, absolutely rotting
-for want of common attention. All the armories throughout the United
-States are kept much in the same style.
-
-“Between this place and the Blue Mountains the country is rough and
-hilly, and but very thinly inhabited. The few inhabitants, however,
-met with here are uncommonly robust and tall; it is rare to see a man
-amongst them who is not six feet high. These people entertain a high
-opinion of their own superiority in point of bodily strength over the
-inhabitants of the low country. A similar race of men is found all
-along the Blue Mountains.
-
-“Beyond the Blue Ridge, after crossing by this route near the Peaks
-of Otter, I met with but very few settlements till I drew near to
-Fincastle, in Bottetourt County. This town was only begun about the
-year 1790, yet it already contains sixty houses, and is most rapidly
-increasing. The improvement of the adjacent country has likewise
-been very rapid, and land now bears nearly the same price that it
-does in the neighborhood of York and Lancaster, in Pennsylvania. The
-inhabitants consist principally of Germans, who have extended their
-settlements from Pennsylvania along the whole of that rich tract of
-land which runs through the upper part of Maryland, and from thence
-behind the Blue Mountains to the most southern part of Virginia. They
-have many times, I am told, crossed the Blue Ridge to examine the land,
-but the red soil which they found there was different from what they
-had been accustomed to.
-
-“The difference indeed between the country on the eastern and on the
-western side of the Blue Ridge, in Bottetourt County, is astonishing,
-when it is considered that both are under the same latitude, and that
-this difference is perceptible within the short distance of thirty
-miles. On the eastern side of the Ridge, cotton grows extremely
-well; and in winter snow scarcely ever remains upon the ground more
-than a day or two at a time. On the other side cotton never comes to
-perfection, and in every farmyard you see sleighs or sledges. On the
-eastern side of the Blue Ridge, in Virginia, not one of these carriages
-is to be met with.
-
-“Another circumstance may also be mentioned (besides the contrast in
-the soils) as making a material difference between the country on one
-side of the Blue Ridge and that on the other, namely, that behind the
-mountains the weevil is unknown. In the lower parts of Virginia, and
-the other states where the weevil is common, they always thresh out
-the grain as soon as the crops are brought in, and leave it in the
-chaff, which creates a degree of heat sufficient to destroy the insect.
-According to the general opinion, the weevil originated on the eastern
-shore of Maryland, where a person, in expectation of a great rise in
-the price of wheat, kept over all his crops for the space of six years,
-when they were found full of these insects. For a considerable time the
-Potowmac River formed a barrier to their progress. The Blue Mountains
-at present serve as a barrier, and secure the country to the westward
-from their depredations.
-
-“Bottetourt County is entirely surrounded by mountains. The climate
-is particularly agreeable. It appears to me that there is no part of
-America where the climate would be more congenial to the constitution
-of a native of Great Britain or Ireland. In the western part of the
-county are several medicinal springs, whereto numbers of people resort
-towards the latter end of summer. Those most frequented are called
-the Sweet Springs. A set of gentlemen from South Carolina have, I
-understand, since I was there, purchased the place and are going to
-erect several commodious dwellings in the neighborhood.
-
-“The country immediately behind the Blue Mountains, between Bottetourt
-County and the Potowmack River, is agreeably diversified with hill
-and dale, and abounds with extensive tracts of rich land. The natural
-herbage is not so fine here as in Bottetourt County, but when clover
-is once sown it grows most luxuriously; wheat also is produced in as
-plentiful crops as in any part of the United States. Tobacco is not
-raised excepting for private use, and but little Indian corn is sown,
-as it is liable to be injured by the nightly frosts, which are common
-in the spring. The whole of this country to the west of the mountains
-is increasing most rapidly in population. In the neighborhood of
-Winchester it is so thickly settled that wood is now beginning to be
-thought valuable.
-
-“As I passed along the road from Fincastle to the Potowmack, which is
-the high road from the Northern States to Kentucky, I met with great
-numbers of people from Kentucky and the new State of Tennessee going
-towards Philadelphia and Baltimore, and with many others going in a
-contrary direction ‘to explore,’ as they call it, that is to search
-for lands conveniently situated for new settlements in the western
-country. These people all travel on horseback, with pistols or swords,
-and a large blanket folded up under their saddle. There are now houses
-scattered along nearly the whole way from Fincastle to Lexington, in
-Kentucky. It would be still dangerous for any person to venture singly;
-but if five or six travel together they are perfectly secure. Formerly
-travelers were always obliged to go forty or fifty in a party.
-
-“The first town you come to, going northward from Bottetourt County,
-is Lexington, a neat little place that did contain about 100 houses,
-a courthouse and gaol, but the greater part of it was destroyed by
-fire just before I got there. Thirty miles farther on stands Staunton.
-This town carries on a considerable trade with the back country, and
-contains nearly 200 dwellings, mostly built of stone, together with a
-church. Winchester stands 100 miles to the northward of Staunton, and
-is the largest town in the United States on the western side of the
-Blue Mountains. The houses are estimated at 350.”
-
-
-
-
-_X._
-
-_THE DUKE OF LA ROCHEFOUCAULD-LIANCOURT._
-
-_1796._
-
- _The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt--The Status of Norfolk--From
- Yorktown to Richmond--The Business of Richmond--Tobacco
- Inspection--Administration of Virginia--The Dover Mines--Goochland
- Court House--Monticello--Staunton--Winchester--Alexandria--Roads and
- Inns._
-
-
-The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt was born January 11, 1747, and
-died in 1827. He was in this country, of which he made a thorough
-investigation, during the years 1795, 1796 and 1797, having been
-obliged to quit France in 1792 by reason of the insanities of the
-Revolution. It is stated that his education was neglected. He was
-early in the army, and was in England in 1769. On his return from
-England he made a practical application of the methods of agriculture
-he had studied in that country. He set up a model farm on his estate,
-and established a school of arts and trades for the sons of soldiers,
-which, in 1788, numbered 130 students. It was he who made the answer
-to Louis XVI, “No, sire, it is Revolution,” when the King observed,
-“This seems to be a revolt.” He turned over a part of his fortune to
-the King. From 1792 to 1795, and after his return from America, he was
-in England, being much with Arthur Young, the famous agriculturist.
-Returning to France in 1799, he continued his scientific and
-philanthropic works, and (as much as was possible) was active in public
-affairs. He was the organizer of the first savings bank.
-
-The two large volumes of travels in this country by the Duke of La
-Rochefoucauld-Liancourt were translated, and published at London in
-1799. These volumes are a record, and a summary of statistics for that
-period of the history of this country such as are not to be found
-elsewhere, the work of a man who had an eye for both the intimate and
-the exterior concerns of the State. France was a volcano in those
-years, and the observer was glad to give an undivided attention to the
-facts of the new country across the seas. Below are a few statements
-bearing on Virginia, taken from the second volume of this remarkable
-book. The traveler came by ship, three days from Charleston to Norfolk,
-landing May 29th [1796].
-
-“Norfolk is built on Elizabeth River, at nine miles from the spot
-where it discharges its waters into the bay. In the intervening space
-there are few houses. An almost uninterrupted succession of pines
-are the only object which meets the traveler’s eye. Erancy Island
-lies nearly in the middle of the river at a short distance above its
-mouth. Two points of land, which approach within a quarter of a mile
-of each other in front of Norfolk, are strengthened with forts which
-are capable of successfully defending the entrance. Portsmouth, a
-small assemblage of houses on the opposite side of the river, did not
-share in the conflagration of Norfolk. From its situation it seemed
-entitled to expect all the commerce of Elizabeth River; at its quays
-the greatest depth of water is found. But at the conclusion of the
-peace, the inhabitants, being incensed against the English, refused
-to admit any merchant of that nation, or any newcomer whose political
-principles were liable to suspicion. The consequence has been that the
-inhabitants have removed to the opposite side; that Norfolk has been
-rebuilt, and that its trade is twenty times more considerable than that
-of Portsmouth.
-
-“At the close of the year eighty-three there were not yet twelve houses
-rebuilt at Norfolk. At present the number is between 700 and 800.
-Last year the yellow fever is said to have carried off 500 persons
-from a population of 4,000. The inhabitants of Norfolk, even those
-among them who are the most opulent, fancy that the use of wine and
-strong liquors furnishes them with a preservative. Previous to the
-war the town is said to have contained 8,000 inhabitants. Norfolk
-carries on a considerable trade with Europe, the Antilles, and the
-Northern States. Her exports are wheat, flour, Indian corn, timber of
-every kind, particularly planks, staves and shingles; salt meat and
-fish, iron, lead, flaxseed, tobacco, tar, turpentine, hemp. All these
-articles are the produce of Virginia, or of North Carolina, which
-latter State, having no seaports, or none that are good, makes her
-exportations principally through those of Virginia. This port almost
-singly carries on all the commerce of that part of Virginia which lies
-south of the Rappahannoc, and of North Carolina far beyond the Roanoke.
-They are at present forming a canal which, passing through the Dismal
-Swamp, is to unite the waters of the south branch of Elizabeth River,
-or rather of Deep Creek, with Albemarle Sound. What must appear very
-surprising is that for this canal, which already seems in such a state
-of forwardness, no levels have been taken. It is thus almost all the
-public works are carried on in America, where there is a total want of
-men of talents in the arts, and where so many able men, who are perhaps
-at this moment unemployed in Europe, might to a certainty make their
-fortunes at the same time that they were rendering essential service to
-the country.
-
-“The European demand has within four years more than doubled the value
-of the exports from Norfolk. A barrel of flour, whose medium value
-in 1791 was $5.55, rose in 1795 to $9.35; and Indian corn was at 37
-cents the bushel in 1791, at 54 in 1792, and at 66 in 1795. Exclusive
-of the flour exported from Norfolk, there is drawn from the State,
-through that and other ports, a great quantity of wheat, which is
-taken by the merchants of Philadelphia and New York, or the millers of
-Brandywine, who manufacture it into flour, which they export to Europe.
-Good mills are not very common in Virginia. The exportation of tobacco
-from Norfolk has by the diminution of the culture of that article in
-Virginia, been reduced above one-third within the last five years. The
-medium rate of house rent at Norfolk is $230. Many English commercial
-houses are established at Norfolk. This year England procured from
-Virginia a number of horses to mount the cavalry, which she proposes to
-send to the French islands. Of 400 horses already shipped off, only 150
-lived to reach the place of their destination.
-
-“Agriculture can hardly be said to exist in Norfolk County or in
-that of Princess Ann. The landed property is much divided, and the
-inhabitants devote themselves rather to the selling of timber than to
-the cultivation of the soil. In all these parts land is sold at from
-$6 to $7 per acre; and often the value of the timber, which it offers
-for the axe, amounts to four or five times the price of the original
-purchase. From eighty to ninety vessels of different dimensions are
-annually built at Norfolk. The price of building is, for the hull on
-coming from the hands of the carpenter, $24 per ton for those above 120
-tons. Ready for sea, they cost from $47 to $50 per ton. It was intended
-that Norfolk should build one of the six frigates of which the United
-States had determined to compose their marine. That which was to have
-been built at Norfolk was among the number countermanded: it was begun
-at Gosport, where there are dock yards for the construction of the
-largest vessels. The communication between Norfolk and Portsmouth is
-continual: it is carried on by six rowboats belonging to a company, and
-by three scows, in which horses and carriages are conveniently ferried
-over. The fare for each passenger is one-sixteenth of a dollar; but on
-paying $6 a person may become free of the passage for twelve months.
-To the port of Norfolk, above any other in the United States, came
-the greatest number of colonists escaped from Saint Domingo. Private
-subscriptions raised in all the towns of Virginia, together with
-further sums voted by the State Legislature and by Congress, afforded
-the unfortunate French incontestable proofs of the benevolence and
-generosity of the Americans. Major William Lindsey, commissioner of
-the Custom House, is, of all the inhabitants of Norfolk, the individual
-with whom I have the most particular reason to be satisfied. He is
-a man recommended by simplicity of manners and goodness of heart,
-and is held in universal esteem. I am profoundly indebted to him for
-information on a variety of subjects.
-
-“A wherry, employed in transporting the mail from Norfolk to Hampton,
-whence it is forwarded by land to Richmond, is the usual conveyance
-for passengers who intend to pursue that route. In good weather the
-passage is performed in two hours: we were ten hours in crossing for
-want of wind. The Richmond mail arrives at Hampton, an inconsiderable
-village, three times a week. Formerly there was a custom house
-established here. In 1795 this was united with that of Norfolk. The
-monument voted by Congress for erection at York Town is not even yet
-begun. Such negligence is inconceivable, shameful and unaccountable. On
-the opposite side of the river from York Town, in Gloucester County,
-are annually built a considerable number of vessels. The highest
-rents at York Town are from $80 to $100. Flour, an article which it
-is difficult to procure, costs at present $15. From York Town to
-Williamsburg land is sold at $4 or $5 the acre. The students at the
-college in Williamsburg pay $14 to each professor whose course of
-lessons they attend. Their board and lodging cost them from $100 to
-$120. The lands about Williamsburg yield from eight to twelve bushels
-of wheat per acre, or from twelve to fourteen of Indian corn. Those few
-spots that are manured with dung produce double that quantity. Crowded
-in the stage by ten passengers and their baggage, we did not arrive
-at Richmond before 11 o’clock at night, though we had set out from
-Williamsburg at 8 in the morning; the rain, which has been abundant
-during the last two days, having rendered the roads very bad.
-
-“The position of Richmond is truly agreeable. On the opposite side
-of the river the country rises in a gentle aclivity; and the little,
-but well-built town of Manchester, environed by cultivated fields,
-which are ornamented by an infinite number of trees and dotted with
-scattered houses, embellishes the sweet, variegated, agreeable and
-romantic perspective. This town has prodigiously increased, but within
-the last two or three years it has remained stationary. A few years
-back a conflagration consumed almost all the lower part of the town. At
-present there are few wooden houses at Richmond. The trade of this town
-consists in the purchase of the country productions, and in selling at
-second-hand the articles of domestic consumption, which are generally
-procured from England. The number of merchants who carry on a direct
-commerce with Europe is inconsiderable. They keep their ships at
-Norfolk, and send down the produce of the country in smaller vessels.
-The commission trade may be considered as the real business of the
-place. It is from the merchants of Richmond or Petersburg that those
-of Norfolk most commonly purchase the grain, flour and tobacco which
-the latter export. The country produce is paid for by the merchants
-in ready money or at short credit; they even frequently obtain it on
-cheaper terms by furnishing the planters with an advance of money on
-their crop. The Richmond merchants supply all the stores through an
-extensive tract of back country. As they have a very long credit from
-England, they can allow a similar indulgence of six, nine or twelve
-months to the shop-keepers whom they supply. All the merchants deal in
-bills of exchange on Europe.
-
-“The falls of James River, which obstructed its navigation from
-the distance of seven miles above Richmond, heretofore imposed the
-necessity of employing land carriage for that space. At present a
-canal, running parallel with the course of the river for those seven
-miles, connects the communication by water, and opens a navigation
-which extends without interruption 200 miles above Richmond. I have
-seen one of the two mills at Richmond. It stands below the falls of the
-river, receives a great power of water, and turns six pair of stones.
-It is a fine mill, and unites the advantages of all the new inventions:
-the cogs of the wheels are clumsily executed. It costs a yearly rent
-of near $6,000 to Monsieur Chevalier, a Frenchman from Rochefort,
-heretofore director of the French paquets to America, and now settled
-in Virginia. Flour mills are more numerous at Petersburg than at
-Richmond, and the mills there are also upon a good construction.
-The exportations of Petersburg are more considerable than those of
-Richmond, although generally speaking, the produce it receives is
-inferior in quality. Tobacco, for instance, which sells at Richmond for
-$6 or $7 the hundred weight, does not fetch quite $5 at Petersburg.
-City Point, or Bermuda Hundred, is the spot where the custom house is
-established for these two places. At half a mile from the custom house
-stands the habitation of Mr. D. Randolph, who is fully entitled to
-the reputation which he enjoys of being the best farmer in the whole
-country.
-
-“The inspection of tobacco in Virginia, and especially on James River,
-is esteemed to be conducted with a degree of exactness and severity,
-which contributes as much as the real superiority of the article itself
-to keep up its price in the market. The hogsheads are broken at the
-warehouse, and examined in every direction and in every part. The
-tobacco is then repacked in its hogshead, which is branded with a hot
-iron, marking the place of inspection and the quality of the contents.
-The planter receives a certificate of the particulars. It is by selling
-this ‘tobacconote’ to the merchant that the planter sells his tobacco.
-The civil laws of Virginia have struck me as wisely ordained. The State
-of Virginia has no public debt, except $100,000, in which she was found
-debtor to the Union on the settlement of the accounts of the States
-with the general government; and a claim made on the part of France for
-arms and military stores furnished during the war. From the condition
-of the finances of the State of Virginia it follows that the taxes
-are by no means heavy. The counties impose no taxes, unless when they
-have bridges, prisons or courthouses to build. The slave laws are much
-milder here than in any of the other countries through which I have
-hitherto traveled.
-
-“On the 20th of June Mr. Guillemard and myself set out for the
-mountains; Monticello, the habitation of Mr. Jefferson, was the object
-of this part of our journey. Messrs. Graham & Havens, merchants of
-Richmond, and owners of a coal mine at Dover, near by, were so kind
-as to conduct us thither. This mine is scarcely wrought. There is not
-one person throughout America versed in the art of working mines. The
-country between Dover and Goochland Courthouse, where we stopped at
-night, is more variegated than before; you find there more heights,
-and some fine prospects, especially on Mount Pleasant, which commands
-a wide extensive vale entirely cleared, and full of houses and clumps
-of trees. This day was a court day at Goochland. It was near 9 o’clock
-at night when I arrived. At the inn the company easily discerned that I
-was a Frenchman. There arrived a large bowl of grog, and we drank one
-after another, toasting the French, France, America, Virginia, and M.
-de la Fayette, whose name they mentioned with enthusiasm. In spite of
-my little disposition for drinking, I was obliged two or three times to
-drink in my turn, for it was absolutely necessary to empty the bowl.
-It was with great difficulty I prevented the arrival of a second. The
-road grows duller after you leave Goochland Courthouse. The plantations
-become constantly less frequent and less extensive. Inns are very
-scarce on this road; the next is nearly seventeen miles distant from
-that where we passed the night. I went a mile farther on, to stop at
-one which I knew was kept by a Frenchman. After having spent nearly the
-whole day there, we went ten miles farther on to an ordinary, where we
-stopped for the night, and the next day proceeded to Monticello.
-
-“Mr. Jefferson’s house commands one of the most extensive prospects you
-can meet with; when finished by his new plan, it will certainly deserve
-to be ranked with the most pleasant mansions in France or England.
-He has divided all his land under culture into four farms, and every
-farm into seven fields of forty acres. His system of rotation embraces
-seven years. Mr. Jefferson possesses one of those excellent threshing
-machines, which a few years since were invented in Scotland. He has a
-drilling machine, invented in his own neighborhood. Mr. Jefferson, in
-common with all landholders in America, imagines that his habitation
-is more healthy than any other; that it is as healthful as any in
-the finest parts of France. In private life Mr. Jefferson displays a
-mild, easy, and obliging manner, though somewhat cold and reserved;
-he possesses a stock of information not inferior to that of any other
-man. His daughters have been educated in France, where they became
-acquainted with my family. Fifteen hundred leagues from our native
-country, in another world, and frequently given up to melancholy, we
-fancy ourselves restored to existence when we hear our family and our
-friends mentioned by persons who have known them.
-
-“We arrived at Staunton by the road through Rockfish Gap. The most
-frequented road to the Sweet, Warm and Hot Springs at Greenbriar,
-and from thence to Kentucky, passes through Staunton. Eight inns are
-established there, three of which are large. Hemp, which grows very
-fine, is cultivated throughout the whole of this country. Wheat in
-this region is mowed with the sickle, as in Europe, and is infected
-with the rot. On the other side of the Blue Mountains they mow with
-the scythe. From Staunton we passed by Keyssel Town, Newmarket,
-Strasburgh (formerly called Stover’s Town), and Newtown, to Winchester.
-Winchester sends to Alexandria the whole produce of the upper country,
-and draws from Baltimore, but especially from Philadelphia, all sorts
-of dry goods. Upwards of thirty well-stocked stores, or shops, have
-been opened at Winchester. The town contains ten or twelve inns,
-large and small, which are often full. In the course of last year
-upwards of 4,000 persons passed through the place, going to settle in
-Tennessee or Kentucky. Landed property in the vicinity of Charlestown
-is more divided, perhaps, than in any other part of Virginia. Very few
-of the planters possess more than 2,000 acres of land, and few even
-so much. Alexandria is, beyond all comparison, the handsomest town
-in Virginia, and, indeed, is among the finest in the United States.
-Alexandria carries on a constant trade with the West India Islands, and
-also some with Europe. There is a bank at Alexandria, the only one in
-Virginia. The establishment of a bank at Richmond was authorized by the
-Legislature of Virginia in December, 1792, but the subscriptions not
-filling it does not exist.[L]
-
-“The roads are in general good throughout this State; and although the
-inns are sometimes bad, yet upon the whole they are better than in
-the other States. Those in the back country, where I have traveled,
-are preferable to the inns in many of the most inhabited parts of New
-England.”
-
-
-
-
-_XI._
-
-_JOHN DAVIS OF SALISBURY._
-
-_1801-1802._
-
- _The Sailor Turned Author--Vice-President Burr--Washington in
- 1801--Cherokees--Gadesby’s--Colchester--Occoquan--Romantic
- Situation--Tavern Luxuries--Eloquence and a War-Dance--Parson
- Weems--Scholarship Per Se--Frying Pan--Newgate--Mr. Ball--‘To
- Virginia.’_
-
-
-In the year 1798 John Davis came to America. He had been very much of a
-traveler, had lived in the East Indies, had crossed the equator several
-times and doubled the Cape of Good Hope more than once. Davis came
-from Salisbury, in England. He deserves a place in the biographical
-dictionaries, but is not found there. Having been a sailor before
-the mast for eleven years, he became a desultory man of letters, of
-considerable literature, who paid his way while in this country by
-potboiling for New York and Philadelphia booksellers and by teaching in
-South Carolina and Virginia.[M] He brought with him across the Atlantic
-a library of 300 volumes, French, Latin and English. These books he
-read. For statistics, commerce, land speculations, Davis cared nothing
-whatever. He was an impressionist and not to be disregarded as a poet.
-His work, therefore, is distinct among these early travels which are
-usually records of fact as fact, and as such are extremely valuable.
-However a man sees, let him write.
-
-Thomas Jefferson, who was pleased to accept the dedication to him of
-this volume, supposed that it would be of a statistical sort. “Should
-you in your journeyings have been led to remark on the same objects on
-which I gave crude notes some years ago, I shall be happy to see them
-confirmed or corrected by a more accurate observer,” wrote President
-Jefferson from Monticello.
-
-Davis accepted the acceptance and published a book as little like the
-“Notes on Virginia” as any book could well be. The author had read
-Horace and believed as that poet did that his work was going to last.
-“That this volume will regale curiosity while man continues to be
-influenced by his senses and affections, I have little doubt,” was the
-statement of John Davis in his preface. “It will be recurred to with
-equal interest on the banks of the Thames and those of the Ohio. There
-is no man who is not pleased in being told by another what he thought
-of the world and what the world thought of him.” There is a good deal
-of truth in both the particular and the general observation. We have
-not yet taken the time to review our history with much care. Whenever
-that is done, John Davis, of Salisbury, citizen of the world, more or
-less, should find readers again after a hundred years.
-
-Having translated for bookseller Caritat, in New York (at Aaron
-Burr’s suggestion), “The Campaign in Italy of General Buonaparte,”
-and afterwards having spent a winter as tutor in the family of Mr.
-Drayton, of South Carolina, Davis came back to the North, wrote a novel
-called the “Wanderings of William,” for Thompson, of Philadelphia,
-and, nevertheless, being in want of ready money, applied to Mr.
-Burr, now Vice-President, for a recommendation that might lead to
-government employment. The Vice-President very obligingly promised the
-indigent author a place in the Treasury Department. Davis set out for
-Washington, which at that time had only begun to emerge. The village of
-1801 is thus described, as if by Goldsmith: “Washington, on my second
-journey to it wore a very dreary aspect. The multitude had gone to
-their homes, and the inhabitants of the place were few. There were no
-objects to catch the eye but a forlorn pilgrim forcing his way through
-the grass that overruns the streets, or a cow ruminating on a bank,
-from whose neck depended a bell, that the animal might be found the
-more readily in the woods. I obtained accommodations at the Washington
-Tavern, which stands opposite the Treasury. There I found seven
-Cherokee chiefs. They came to be instructed in the mode of European
-agriculture.” Presenting himself to Secretary Gallatin immediately
-after the Cherokee chiefs had descended the Treasury stairs, Davis was
-told by the Secretary that the Vice-President had made a mistake, and
-that there was no consulship or any other office to be had. Another
-instance of the startling difference between promise and fulfilment.
-
-“Finding a schooner at Georgetown ready to sail for Alexandria, I put
-my trunk on board of her, and left without regret the Imperial City.
-The wind being contrary, we had to work down the Potomac. The river
-here is very beautiful. Mason’s Island forms one continued garden;
-but what particularly catches the eye is the Capitol, rising with
-sacred majesty above the woods. It was easier landing at Alexandria in
-America than Alexandria in Egypt; and I found elegant accommodations at
-Gadesby’s hotel. It is observable that Gadesby keeps the best house of
-entertainment in the United States. The splendour of Gadesby’s hotel
-not suiting my finances, I removed to a public-house kept by a Dutchman.
-
-“To what slight causes does a man owe some of the principal events of
-his life. I had been a fortnight at Alexandria, when, in consequence
-of the short advertisement I had put in the _Gazette_, a gentleman was
-deputed to wait on me from a Quaker, on the banks of the Occoquan,
-who wanted a Tutor for his children. The following evening I left
-Alexandria on horseback to visit the abode of Mr. Ellicott. Having
-crossed the bridge [at Colchester], which is built over the Occoquan, I
-alighted at the door of the tavern.
-
-“Having ordered supper, I gazed with rapture on the Occoquan River,
-which ran close to the house, and, gradually enlarging, emptied itself
-into the capacious bosom of the Potomac. The fishermen on the shore
-were hawling their seine, and the sails of a little bark, stemming the
-waves, were distended by the breeze of night. The seaboy was lolling
-over the bow, and the helmsman was warbling a song to his absent fair.
-
-“The next day I proceeded to Occoquan; but so steep and craggy was
-the road that I found it almost inaccessible. On descending the last
-hill, I was nearly stunned by the noise of two huge mills, whose roar,
-without any hyperbolical aggravation, is scarcely inferior to that of
-the great falls of the Potomac, or the cataract of Niagara. My horse
-would not advance; and I was myself lost in astonishment.
-
-“Friend Ellicott and his wife received me with an unaffected simplicity
-of manners, whom I was happy to catch just as they were going to
-dinner. An exquisite Virginia ham smoked on the board, and two damsels
-supplied the guests with boiled Indian corn, which they had gathered
-with their own hands. Friend Ellicott, uncorrupted by the refinement of
-modern manners, had put his hat to its right use, for it covered his
-head.
-
-“Our agreement was soon made. Quakers are men of few words. Friend
-Ellicott engaged me to educate his children for a quarter of a year. He
-wanted them taught reading, writing, and arithmetic. Delightful task!
-As to Latin or French, he considered the study of either language an
-abuse of time; and very calmly desired me not to say another word about
-it.
-
-“No place can be more romantic than the view of Occoquan to a stranger,
-after crossing the rustic bridge, which has been constructed by the
-inhabitants across its stream. He contemplates a river urging its
-course along mountains that lose themselves among the clouds; he
-beholds vessels taking on board flour under the foam of the mills, and
-others deeply laden expanding their sails to the breeze; while every
-face wears contentment, every gale wafts health, and echo from the
-rocks multiplies the voices of the waggoners calling to their teams.
-
-“No walk could be more delightful than that from Occoquan to
-Colchester, when the moon was above the mountains. You traverse the
-bank of a placid stream over which impend rocks, in some cases bare,
-but more frequently covered with an odoriferous plant that regales the
-traveller with its fragrance. So serpentine is the course of the river
-that the mountains, which rise from its bank, may be said to form an
-amphitheatre; and nature seems to have designed the spot for the haunt
-only of fairies; for here grow flowers of purple dye, and here the
-snake throws her enamelled skin.
-
-“After clambering over mountains, almost inaccessible to human toil,
-you come to the junction of the Occoquan with the noble river of the
-Potomac, and behold a bridge, whose semi-elliptical arches are scarcely
-inferior to those of princely London. And on the side of this bridge
-stands a tavern, where every luxury that money can purchase is to
-be obtained at a first summons; where the richest viands cover the
-table, and where ice cools the Madeira that has been thrice across the
-ocean.[N] The apartments are numerous and at the same time spacious;
-carpets of delicate texture cover the floors; and glasses are suspended
-from the walls in which a Goliah might survey himself. No man can be
-more complaisant than the landlord. Enter but his house with money
-in your pocket, and his features will soften into the blandishments
-of delight; call and your mandate is obeyed; extend your leg and the
-boot-jack is brought you.
-
-“On the north bank of the Occoquan is a pile of stones, which indicates
-that an Indian warrior is interred underneath. The Indians from the
-back settlements, in traveling to the northward, never fail to leave
-the main road, and visit the grave of their departed hero. If a stone
-be thrown down, they religiously restore it to the pile; and, sitting
-round the rude monument, they meditate profoundly; catching, perhaps, a
-local emotion from the place.
-
-“A party of Indians, while I was at Occoquan, turned from the common
-road into the woods to visit this grave on the bank of the river. The
-party was composed of an elderly Chief, twelve young War Captains, and
-a couple of Squaws. Of the women, the youngest was an interesting girl
-of seventeen; remarkably well shaped, and possessed of a profusion of
-hair, which in colour was raven black. She appeared such another object
-as the mind images Pocahontas to have been.
-
-“The Indians being assembled round the grave, the old Chief rose
-with a solemn mien, and, knocking his war-club against the ground,
-pronounced an oration to the memory of the departed warrior. No orator
-of antiquity ever exceeded this savage chief in the force of his
-emphasis, and the propriety of his gesture. Indeed, the whole scene was
-highly dignified. The fierceness of his countenance, the flowing robe,
-elevated tone, naked arm, and erect stature, with a circle of auditors
-seated on the ground, and in the open air, could not but impress upon
-the mind a lively idea of the celebrated speakers of ancient Greece and
-Rome.
-
-“Having ended his oration, the Indian struck his war-club with fury
-against the ground, and the whole party obeyed the signal by joining
-in a war-dance--leaping and brandishing their knives at the throats of
-each other, and accompanying their menacing attitudes with a whoop and
-a yell, which echoed with ten-fold horror from the banks of the river.
-The dance took place by moonlight, and it was scarcely finished, when
-the Chief produced a keg of whiskey, and having taken a draught, passed
-it round among his brethren. The squaws now moved the tomahawks into
-the woods, and a scene of riot ensued. The keg was soon emptied. The
-effects of the liquor began to display itself in the looks and motions
-of the Indians. To complete the scene, the old warrior was uttering the
-most mournful lamentations over the keg he had emptied; inhaling its
-flavour with his lips, holding it out with his hands in a supplicating
-attitude, and vociferating to the bye-standers, ‘Scuttawawbah!
-Scuttawawbah! More strong drink! More strong drink!’
-
-“About eight miles from the Occoquan mills is a house of worship,
-called Powheek Church; a name it derives from a Run that flows near its
-walls. Hither I rode on Sundays and joined the congregation of Parson
-Weems. I was confounded on first entering the church-yard at Powheek to
-hear
-
- ‘_Steed threaten steed with high and boastful neigh._’
-
-Nor was I less stunned with the rattling of carriage-wheels, the
-cracking of whips, and the vociferations of the gentlemen to the
-negroes who accompanied them. But the discourse of Parson Weems calmed
-every perturbation.
-
-“After church I made my salutations to Parson Weems, and having turned
-the discourse to divine worship, I asked him his opinion of the piety
-of the blacks. ‘Sir,’ said he, ‘no people in this country prize the
-Sabbath more seriously than the trampled-upon negroes. They are swift
-to hear; they seem to hear as for their lives.--How, sir, did you like
-my preaching?’ ‘Sir,’ cried I, ‘it was a sermon to pull down the proud
-and humble the haughty.’
-
-“I had been three months at Occoquan. My condition was growing irksome.
-I, therefore, resigned my place to an old drunken Irishman, who was
-traveling the country on foot in search of an Academy. I remonstrated
-with Friend Ellicott on the impropriety of employing a sot to educate
-his children. ‘Friend,’ said he, ‘of all the schoolmasters I ever
-employed, none taught my children to write so good a hand, as a man who
-was constantly in a state that bordered on intoxication. They learned
-more of him in one month than of any other in a quarter. I will make
-trial of Burbridge.’”
-
-Davis returned to New York, collecting a few dollars at Philadelphia,
-due him from sales of “The Wanderings of William.” In April, 1802, he
-was at Washington again, where Congress was in session. “I watched
-an opportunity to make the Vice-President my salutations as he came
-out of the Capitol. He demonstrated no little pleasure to see me;
-and his chariot being at the steps, he took me home with him to
-dine.” The House of Representatives was then sitting in a detached
-temporary building. Davis thought John Randolph the most eloquent in
-debate. After a few days in Washington, the itinerant passed on to
-Prince William County, where he had been engaged as tutor by Mr. Ball
-at twenty-five pounds the quarter. At Frying Pan, in Prince William
-County, Davis inquired the way. “How far, my boy,” said I, “is it to
-Frying Pan?” “You be in the Pan now,” replied the boy.
-
-“Frying Pan is composed of four log huts and a meeting-house. It took
-its name from a curious circumstance. Some Indians, having encamped on
-the run, missed their frying pan in the morning, and hence the name was
-conferred on the place. I did not stop at Frying Pan, but prosecuted
-my walk to Newgate, where in the piazza of the tavern I found a party
-of gentlemen from the neighboring plantations carousing over a bowl
-of toddy and smoking segars. No people could exceed these men in
-politeness. On my ascending the steps to the piazza every countenance
-seemed to say: This man has a double claim to our attention because
-he is a stranger. In a moment there was room made for me to sit down;
-a new bowl was called for, and every one who addressed me did so
-with a smile of conciliation. The higher Virginians seem to venerate
-themselves as men. Whatever may be advanced against Virginians,
-their good qualities will ever outweigh their defects; and when the
-effervescence of youth has abated, when reason asserts her empire,
-there is no man on earth who discovers more exalted sentiments, more
-contempt for baseness, more love of justice, more sensibility of
-feeling, than a Virginian. At Newgate my pilgrimage was nearly at an
-end, for Mr. Ball’s plantation was only distant eight miles.”
-
-Beyond Newgate, Bull Run was to be crossed. Having passed that famous
-stream, the pedagogue and peripatetic, after a mile or two, came to
-the Ball plantation. An old negro showed him the way, who related,
-among many other things, that when he was a young buck he made as much
-as fifteen dollars one winter as capitation money--“Master, I don’t
-tell you a word of a lie”--levied on the wolves of the region. At
-Mr. Ball’s: “In my way through the garden I passed two young ladies
-gathering roses, who, however immured in the woods, were clad with not
-less elegance than the most fashionable females of Europe. I asked them
-whether Mr. Ball was at home. They replied that their papa was in the
-parlour, and with much sweetness of manner directed me by the shortest
-path to the house. Mr. Ball[O] received me with undissembled accents
-of joy. He said he had long expected my coming and was gratified at
-last. I was not a little delighted with the suavity of his manners and
-the elegance of his conversation. I now opened what some called an
-Academy and others an Old Field School; and, however it may be thought
-that content was never felt within the walls of a seminary, I for my
-part experienced an exemption from care and was not such a fool as to
-measure the happiness of my condition by what others thought of it.
-Of the boys I can not speak in very encomiastic terms. Of my female
-students there was none equal in capacity to Virginia. Geography was
-one of our favorite studies. I often addressed the rose of May in an
-appropriate ode--
-
-_TO VIRGINIA, LOOKING OVER A MAP_
-
- “Powerful as the magic wand,
- Displaying far each distant land,
- Is that angel hand to me,
- When it points each realm and sea.
-
- “Plac’d in geographic mood,
- Smiling, shew the pictur’d flood,
- Where along the Red Sea coast
- Waves o’erwhelm’d the Egyptian host.
-
- “Again the imag’d scene survey,
- The rolling Hellespontic Sea,
- Whence the Persian from the shore
- Proudly pass’d his millions o’er.
-
- “And behold to nearer view,
- Here thy own lov’d country too--
- Virginia! which produc’d to me
- A pupil fair and bright like thee.”
-
-What with a horse, the artisanry of verse, a mild philosophy, and the
-business of his office, John Davis spent three months very agreeably
-on Bull Run, within sight of the Blue Ridge. Then a New Jersey farmer
-of the neighborhood discovered that his eldest boy wrote a better
-hand than the teacher. Davis resigned the academy to the carpenter of
-the plantation. “I now once more seized my staff and walked towards
-Baltimore. It was a killing circumstance to separate from Virginia (the
-student of geography), but who shall persume to contend against fate?
-_Phyllida amo ante alias, nam me discedere flevit._ I embarked August,
-1802, in the good ship Olive, Captain Norman, lying at Baltimore, for
-Cowes, in the Isle of Wight.”
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF TRAVELS
-
-
-1. A Tour in the United States. Containing an Account of the Present
-Situation of that Country, the Population, Agriculture, Commerce,
-Customs & Manners of the Inhabitants, &c., &c. By John Ferdinand D.
-Smyth. Two Volumes. London, 1784.
-
-2. Travels through the Interior Parts of America. In a Series of
-Letters. By an Officer. [Thomas Anburey.] Two Volumes. London, 1789.
-
-3. New Travels through North America. In a Series of Letters,
-exhibiting the History of the Victorious Campaign of the Allied Armies,
-under his Excellency General Washington and the Count de Rochambeau
-in the Year 1781. Translated from the Original of the Abbé Robin.
-Philadelphia. Robert Bell: Third Street. 1783.
-
-4. Travels in North America in the Years 1780-81-82 by the Marquis
-de Chastellux, one of the forty members of the French Academy &
-Major General in the French Army, serving under Count de Rochambeau.
-Translated from the French by an English Gentleman [George Grieve] who
-resided in America at that period. With Notes by the Translator. New
-York. 1828. [From the English edition of 1787.]
-
-5. Reise durch einige der mittlern und südlichen vereinigten
-Nordamerikanischen Staaten, nach Ost-Florida und den Bahama-Inseln,
-unternommen in den Jahren 1783 und 1784. Von Johann David Schoepf. 2
-Bde. Erlangen. 1788.
-
- [Translated and edited by A. J. Morrison. Two Volumes. William J.
- Campbell. Philadelphia. 1911.]
-
-6. Viaggio negli Stati Uniti dell’ America settentrionale, fatto negli
-anni 1785, 1786, e 1787, da Luigi Castiglioni, &c., &c. 2 Tome. Milano.
-1790.
-
-7. Extracts of the Journals of the Rev. Dr. Coke’s Five Visits to
-America. London. 1793.
-
-8. Voyage dans l’Intéreur des États Unis, à Bath, Winchester, dans
-la Vallé de Shenandoha, etc., etc., etc., pendant l’été de 1791. Par
-Ferdinand M. Bayard. Paris. 1797.
-
-9. Travels through the States of North America and the Provinces of
-Upper and Lower Canada, during the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797. By Isaac
-Weld, Junior. 3rd Edition. Illustrated and embellished with sixteen
-plates. Two Volumes. London. 1800.
-
-10. Travels through the United States of North America, the Country
-of the Iroquois, and Upper Canada. In the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797,
-&c., &c. By the Duke de la Rochefoucauld-Liancourt. [Translated by H.
-Neuman.] Two Volumes. London. 1799.
-
-11. Travels of Four Years and a Half in the United States of America.
-During 1798, 1799, 1800, 1801, and 1802. Dedicated by permission to
-Thomas Jefferson, Esq., President of the United States. By John Davis.
-London. 1803.
-
- [Edited by A. J. Morrison. Henry Holt & Co. New York. 1909.]
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[A] Or Hicksford, now Emporia.
-
-[B] Richard Henderson, one of the Colonial Judges of North Carolina, b.
-Hanover County, Va., 1735.
-
-[C] In Pittsylvania County, near the North Carolina line, and northwest
-of the Little Sawra Towns. cf. Map, Jefferson’s _Notes_, Ed. 1787.
-
-[D] Smyth’s entire book, two volumes, is one of the most interesting of
-that period. It is possible he exaggerates, and he may be a compiler
-here and there when he professes to be giving his own adventures. He is
-readable always. Chapters of his book offer puzzles which are yet to
-be elucidated. Some one must carefully check up the adventures of John
-Rowzee Peyton with those of Smyth. (See John L. Peyton, _Adventures of
-My Grandfather_.)
-
-[E] And it is not at all impossible that the work was wholly a
-compilation, done skilfully at London.
-
-[F] Translated by Philip Freneau. Philadelphia, 1783: Price ‘two thirds
-of a dollar.’
-
-[G] The Marquis Armand de la Rouërie, called in America Colonel Armand.
-
-[H] Colonel Banister was the son of the botanist. cf. Campbell, p. 725.
-
-[I] Dr. Greenway was a connection of Gen. Winfield Scott. cf. Scott’s
-_Autobiography_, I, pp. 3-5.
-
-[J] John Wesley, d. in London, March 2, 1791. In Georgia and the
-Carolinas Dr. Coke had been on ground familiar to Wesley. cf. _Rev. J.
-Wesley’s Journal_, 1st American edition, New York, 1837. Vol. I, pp.
-1-52 (1735-1738).
-
-[K] From the description of the plantation, acreage, equipment, etc.,
-and the character of the proprietor, Col. P. might have been Col.
-Richard Kidder Meade, father of Bishop Meade, to whom Washington’s
-farewell advice was, “Friend Dick, you must go to a plantation in
-Virginia.”
-
-[L] New York at that time, according to this traveler, had but two
-banks; and there were but three at Philadelphia, the commercial centre
-of the country.
-
-[M] Davis wrote in 1806 a historical novel, _The First Settlers of
-Virginia_, largely the story of Pocahontas. In the modern romantic way,
-Davis discovered the Princess Pocahontas.
-
-[N] During the war in Europe the United States were a sort of temporary
-depot of the produce of all countries. Commodities over and above
-consumption were re-exported. Madeira might come back a second time.
-cf. La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, Vol. II, p. 588.
-
-[O] Spencer Ball, m. a daughter of Robert Carter of ‘Nomini.’ cf.
-_Journal and Letters of Philip Vickers Fithian_, p. 70.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Text of direct quotes has been retained from the original, with no
- correction of spelling or grammatical errors.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary
-Times, by Various
-
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-
-Project Gutenberg's Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary Times, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary Times
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Alfred James Morrison
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2020 [EBook #63221]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN VIRGINIA--REVOLUTIONARY TIMES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
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-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="50%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber and is entered into the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Text of direct quotes has been retained from the original, with no correction of spelling or grammatical errors.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1><i>Travels in Virginia in<br />
-Revolutionary Times</i></h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center">
-COPYRIGHTED BY<br />
-J. P. BELL COMPANY, INC.<br />
-LYNCHBURG, VA.<br />
-1922</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxlarge">Travels <i>in</i> Virginia<br />
-
-<i>in</i> Revolutionary<br />
-Times</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Edited by</span><br />
-
-A. J. MORRISON</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">ADVERTISEMENT</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This is a book of Travels in Virginia during a period that
-may be called revolutionary, from the year 1769 to the year
-1802, when the United States lay still to the east of France
-and Spain, and the limit of Virginia to the west was the
-river Ohio: it was a proud commonwealth, and with reason,
-territorially, in the character of its ruling people, and in that
-inexplicable inheritance which has made Virginia significant.
-It is interesting to observe, among these travellers, how carefully
-the best informed of them estimate the strength of Virginia,
-whether justly or not regarded at home and here and
-there abroad as the most influential of the new states. Those
-were extraordinary years in the making of America, the fund
-of the capital of the country, as it were, accumulating to the
-point of application in surprising ways. It is well to look
-back, through foreign eyes, and see a little of what the situation
-was at that time in the State of the first dynasty.</p>
-
-<p>Of these travellers, one was in the country before the war
-and his memoranda introduce the Revolution&mdash;very peaceful,
-then disturbances, and then musquetry, the author shooting
-for King George; another came with the good King&#8217;s
-troops and saw Virginia on parole; one was a chaplain in
-the army of the allies, one a general officer of that army, and
-there was a surgeon to the enemies from Hesse, whose book
-is excellent in a series of remarkable books. The others came
-after the war, men of science, youngsters seeing the world, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-missionary, a sad emigrant from France, and a sailor who
-had quitted the sea and embarked in the novelist&#8217;s business.
-A notable group of observers, and if, even where they are
-most explicit, we could see but a small part of what they intend
-us to see, what a picture. From year&#8217;s end to year&#8217;s
-end, decade to decade, the century is out, and everything is
-different; and to come at the truth of the matter as it was
-before we should have to retrace every step of the way, and
-that is impossible. As a makeshift we read novels and documented
-histories.</p>
-
-<p>The method in the chapters following has been to let the
-traveller tell his own story, interrupting him where he seems
-least interesting, adding very little, making him responsible
-for his version of the facts. It is not so much the itemized
-account that is wanted as the proceeds of the whole, the general
-balance as one impression. As many travellers, so many
-roads and they may follow but one. The young man will be
-apt to lose his temper and record disagreeable things. The
-great man, treated with consideration, will, if his digestion
-is good, be careful to be polite. The season will be a factor,
-for earth roads are not the same winter and summer. However,
-we should not be greatly deceived by the verdicts of
-eleven intelligent men who traverse the greater part of a
-given region during a space of thirty years.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">I.</td><td> Narrative of John F. D. Smyth: 1769-1775</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_9"> 9</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">II.</td><td> Anburey, and the Convention Army in Virginia:
-1779</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_23"> 23</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">III.</td><td> The Abb&eacute; Robin, One of the Chaplains to the
-French Army in America: 1781</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_31"> 31</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">IV.</td><td> The Marquis of Chastellux, Major-General in the
-French Army and Member of the French
-Academy: 1782 &nbsp; &nbsp;</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_39"> 39</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">V.</td><td> Dr. Schoepf, Surgeon to the Hessian Troops
-(Ansbach-Bayreuth Division): 1783</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_49"> 49</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">VI.</td><td> Count Castiglioni, Chevalier of the Order of St.
-Stephen, P. M.: 1786</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_61"> 61</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">VII.</td><td> Missionary Journeys of Dr. Coke: 1785-1791</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_71"> 71</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">VIII.</td><td> A Summer at Bath&mdash;Captain Bayard: 1791</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_81"> 81</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">IX.</td><td> What Isaac Weld Saw: 1796</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_91"> 91</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">X.</td><td> The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt: 1796</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_111"> 111</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" valign="top">XI.</td><td> John Davis of Salisbury: 1801-1802</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_123"> 123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>List of Travels</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_137"> 137</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I"><i>I.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>NARRATIVE OF JOHN F. D. SMYTH.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1769-1775.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Captain Smyth&mdash;The Capes and Jamestown&mdash;Williamsburg
-and the Races&mdash;Richmond&mdash;Music of
-the Bullfrog&mdash;Blandford&mdash;Petersburg&mdash;Swede&#8217;s
-Bridge&mdash;Hicks&#8217;s Bridge&mdash;Mr. Willis&mdash;James
-River Lowgrounds&mdash;Summer Routine of the
-Planter. North Carolina&mdash;The Lower Sawra
-Towns&mdash;Journey to Kentucky&mdash;Indian Braves&mdash;Fort
-on Smith&#8217;s River&mdash;The Wart Mountain:
-Amazing Perspective&mdash;Judge Henderson&#8217;s Settlement.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JOHN FERDINAND DALZIEL SMYTH, it appears,
-changed his name in 1793 to Stuart. Smyth&#8217;s last published
-work was a poem in folio called &#8220;Destiny and
-Fortitude: An Heroic Poem on the Misfortunes of the House
-of Stuart.&#8221; His father, Wentworth Smyth, was killed in
-the Highlands of Scotland after being concerned in the attempt
-to bring in the Stuarts in 1745. J. F. D. Smyth
-studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. He came
-to America possibly about 1769, and settled at first near
-Williamsburg as a physician. He was active in the Revolution,
-and for a time drew a pension of &pound;300 a year for his
-losses sustained in America. He was killed accidentally in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-London in 1814. In this case there is nothing in a name,
-because in tracing Smyth from the title page of his best
-known work, his &#8220;Tour in the United States,&#8221; nothing can
-be discovered about him. It is only by chance that in looking
-up Smyth the eye falls upon Stuart. Although he was in
-most of the English colonies, and saw the greater part of the
-Spanish possessions in Louisiana and Florida, Captain
-Smyth preferred the Potomac region, and lived there, both
-peacefully and adventurously, until finally disturbed by the
-war. He was not a Tory, because he was not strictly an
-American. In 1778, his correspondence proves, he was a
-captain in the Queen&#8217;s Rifles. Two years before he had been
-ingeniously farming some six hundred acres of good land
-on the Maryland side of the Potomac. Captain John Ferdinand
-Dalziel Smyth, explorer, planter, fighter and author,
-was (from his own account) not unlike the more famous
-Smith, who, if he had chosen, could have spelled the name
-with a y as well.</p>
-
-<p>John F. D. Smyth came in sight of land on the 4th day
-of August (he neglects to give the year), &#8220;in the forenoon,
-in a fine day, with a clear, serene sky. We soon sailed within
-the capes of Virginia, Cape Henry and Cape Charles, which
-last is an island named Smith&#8217;s. We past Lynhaven Bay
-on our left, and the opening of the Chesapeak on the right,
-and in the evening anchored in Hampton Road, which appears
-to be very safe. The night being calm, we were assaulted
-by great numbers of musketoes, a very noxious fly.&#8221;
-After a day the ship proceeded to Jamestown, &#8220;passing a
-great number of most charming situations on each side of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-this beautiful river.&#8221; Jamestown still sent a member to the
-House of Burgesses, but there was only one voter, who was
-the proprietor of the borough and also the Burgess, Champion
-Travers, Esq. Making an excursion with a companion to
-Williamsburg, with which town Captain Smyth was well
-pleased, they &#8220;dined very agreeably at the Raleigh Tavern,
-where we had exceeding good Maderia.&#8221; What with pocket
-boroughs and good Maderia, the traveler must have felt as
-if he had scarcely left home.</p>
-
-<p>The author describes Williamsburg, that capital city, but
-being fond of sports, he gives most space to the races: &#8220;Very
-capital horses are started here, such as would make no despicable
-figure at Newmarket; nor is their speed, bottom or
-blood inferior to their appearance. Their stock is from old
-Cade, old Crab, old Partner, Regulus, Babraham, Bosphorus,
-Devonshire Childers, the Cullen Arabian, the Cumberland
-Arabian, &amp;c., in England; and a horse from Arabia
-named the Bellsize, which was imported into America and
-is now in existence.&#8221; The quarter-racing of Southern Virginia
-and North Carolina struck Smyth as being a strange
-institution. Many early travelers devote a page or two to
-the quarter-race, a match between two horses to run one-quarter
-of a mile straight out. Smyth observes: &#8220;They have
-a breed in Virginia that performs it with astonishing velocity,
-beating every other for that distance with great ease;
-but they have no bottom. However, I am confident that there
-is not a horse in England, nor perhaps the whole world, that
-can excel them in rapid speed; and these likewise make excellent
-saddle horses for the road. The Virginians, of all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-ranks and denominations, are excessively fond of horses, and
-especially those of the race breed. Nobody walks on foot the
-smallest distance, except when hunting; indeed, a man will
-frequently go five miles to catch a horse, to ride only one
-mile afterwards.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Returning from Williamsburg to Jamestown, Smyth
-joined the ship again, which, on the 9th of August, got &#8220;under
-weigh&#8221; for City Point. They passed many delightful situations
-and charming seats, the names of which are still well
-known either actually or historically. At City Point the
-genial author hired a boat and four negroes for a dollar and
-a half per day to continue up the river to Richmond. &#8220;I
-slept on board the boat, and on the 11th, in the forenoon,
-landed at the town of Shokoes, at the falls of James River.
-There are three towns at this place. Richmond, the largest,
-is below the falls, and is separated only by a creek, named
-Shokoes, from the town of Shokoes. On the south side of
-the river stands the town of Chesterfield, best known by the
-name of Rocky Ridge.&#8221; In those days the river was the road
-to town. Tobacco was boated down to Westham, seven miles
-above the falls, and thence brought by land carriage to Shokoes,
-or Richmond. Smyth speaks of a man who, bringing
-a double load down to Westham, unconsciously kept on,
-passed all the falls, and arrived not quite sobered at Shokoes.
-&#8220;This is one of the most extraordinary accidents that has
-occurred, or perhaps was ever heard of.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The great rivers of America, the great forests, the fierce
-electrical storms, the strange methods of agriculture, the
-lightning bugs, the mosquitoes and the bullfrogs astonished<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-the European. Of the bullfrog, Smyth remarks: &#8220;Their
-note is harsh, sonorous and abrupt, frequently appearing to
-pronounce articulate sounds, in striking resemblance to the
-following words: Hogshead tobacco, knee deep, ancle deep,
-deeper and deeper, Piankitank, and many others, but all
-equally grating and dissonant. They surprise a man exceedingly,
-as he will hear their hoarse, loud bellowing clamor
-just by him, and sometimes all around him, yet he cannot
-discover from whence it proceeds. They are of the size of
-a man&#8217;s foot.&#8221; Bullfrogs by day and the falls by night:
-&#8220;When a person arrives at Richmond his ears are continually
-assailed with the prodigious noise and roaring of the
-falls, which almost stuns him and prevents him from sleeping
-for several nights.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Richmond was close to nature in those days. Captain
-Smyth used to take walks among the rocks and solitary romantic
-situations around the falls. His custom was to carry
-a book in his pocket, and read in the shade until he &#8220;insensibly
-dropt asleep. This was my daily recreation, which I
-never neglected. But I was once extremely surprised at beholding,
-as soon as I opened my eyes, a prodigious large
-snake, within a few feet of me, basking himself in the sun.
-He was jet black, with a copper-coloured belly, very fine,
-sparkling eyes, and at least seven feet long.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>August 28th Smyth set out for the South. Crossing the
-James in a ferry-boat early in the morning, he rode through
-the towns of Rocky Ridge and Warwick (about five miles
-beyond), stopped at Osborne&#8217;s, eight miles from Warwick,
-and reached Blandford in the afternoon, having crossed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-Appomattox by a lofty wooden bridge at the town of Pocahontas,
-one of the three towns at the falls of the Appomattox&mdash;Petersburg,
-Blandford, Pocahontas. &#8220;In Blandford,
-the charming, pretty town of Blandford, in a beautiful plain
-on the river brink, on a very pleasant and delightful spot, I
-found an excellent ordinary at Boyd&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Smyth purchased two horses at Petersburg. For the best
-he gave &pound;15 and the worst cost him &pound;25. On the 4th of September
-he left Blandford and rode fifteen miles to Hatton&#8217;s
-Ordinary, and thence to the Nottoway River, at Swede&#8217;s
-Bridge. &#8220;I arrived at Stewart&#8217;s Ordinary to breakfast,
-which was toasted Indian hoecake and very excellent cyder.
-Being always particularly careful of my horses, and they
-having fared very indifferently the night before, I ordered
-the hostler to give them plenty of meat.&#8221; The hostler understanding
-meat to mean meat, put bacon before these Petersburg
-horses. A crowd assembled, and this new balanced
-ration became a great joke. The horses having been fed
-corn, which, after all, is a form of bacon, the party proceeded
-to Three Creeks, crossed them on three wooden bridges, and
-then crossed the Meherrin at Hicks&#8217;s Bridge, &#8220;remarkably
-lofty and built of timber, as all in the southern part of America
-appear to be.&#8221; Near Hicks&#8217;s Bridge<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> (and ford) lived
-Mr. Willis, breeder of the original stock of triumphant quarter
-racers. &#8220;We took some refreshment at Edwards&#8217;s Ordinary,
-an exceedingly good building, with excellent accommodations,
-lately erected at this place. At the distance of ten
-miles we entered the province of North Carolina.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>Smyth mentions that the James River lowgrounds produced
-twenty-five, thirty, and sometimes thirty-five bushels
-of wheat from one of seed; the high land from eight to fifteen
-for one. &#8220;Much about the same quantity of Indian corn
-is produced from an acre, according to the quality and excellence
-of the soil, though it does not require more than a peck
-of seed to plant it. The produce of an acre in the culture of
-tobacco, in the best land, is about 1,660 pounds weight; on
-the worst about 500 pounds weight. An acre always contains
-nearly 1,250 hills of Indian corn, with two, three, and
-sometimes in strong land, four stalks in each hill, or about
-5,000 plants of tobacco.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the summer-time, says Captain Smyth, the average
-planter &#8220;rises in the morning about 6 o&#8217;clock [the very rich
-men, he says, rose at 9]; he then drinks a julep, made of
-rum, water and sugar, but very strong; then he walks, or
-more generally rides, round his plantation, views all his stock
-and all his crop, breakfasts about 10 o&#8217;clock on cold turkey,
-cold meat, fried hominy, toast and cyder, ham, bread and
-butter, tea, coffee or chocolate, which last, however, is seldom
-tasted but by the women; the rest of the day he spends in
-much the same manner before described [i. e., in trying to
-keep cool]; he eats no supper; they never even think of it.
-The women very seldom drink tea in the afternoon, the men
-never.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Captain Smyth, as already described (following his tour
-as he gives it), landed at Norfolk, saw Williamsburg, Richmond
-and Petersburg, and from Petersburg set out for Halifax,
-in North Carolina. From Halifax he took the Hillsborough<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-Road and thence passed to Camden, in South Carolina,
-coming back to Hillsborough as a base from whence to
-proceed to Kentucky, better known at that time as Henderson&#8217;s
-Settlement. Smyth saw Judge Henderson<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> in North
-Carolina, and had much talk with him, thought him an extraordinary
-man, and became curious to see the wonderful
-country beyond the Holston and the Big Sandy, the proprietary
-regions of Western Virginia. &#8220;From the conversation
-I had with this very extraordinary person, Mr. Henderson,
-I entertained a strong inclination to pay a visit to his domain;
-which must certainly afford a large field for speculation
-and enterprise, being situated in the very heart of the
-continent of America, and in a great degree precluded from
-the general intercourse of the rest of mankind, being likewise
-several hundred miles from any other settlement.&#8221; This
-was before the establishment of the county of Kentucky in
-1776. After that year the number of emigrants from the
-coast country was so large it is almost a matter of surprise
-that anybody was left in Virginia east of the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Smyth made a rather difficult journey from Hillsborough
-to the North Carolina line. That was the back road in those
-times, which the Southern Railway has done so much to develop
-in recent years. In 1772 the road was scarcely a blazed
-path through the woods. Near the North Carolina line Captain
-Smyth stayed for about ten days at the upper and the
-lower Sawra Towns, old Indian settlements south of Dan
-River. &#8220;The whole settlement of the Lower Sawra Towns,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-being a vast body of excellent and most valuable land containing
-33,000 acres, of which more than 9,000 are exceedingly
-rich low grounds, is the property of Mr. Farley, of the
-island of Antigua, in the West Indies. About the year 1761
-the whole of this extensive tract of land was sold to Mr. Maxwell,
-who concluded the purchase without seeing it. In the
-spring of the ensuing year he went out to view his new estate.
-It happened just at that time that a prodigious flood
-in the Dan had overspread the whole of the lowgrounds on
-the river, of which near 10,000 acres were covered by the
-inundation. This extraordinary circumstance and very awful
-appearance astonished and intimidated Mr. Maxwell, who
-on his return to Westover, expressing dissatisfaction with
-his purchase, the &pound;500 was returned to him. That same year
-Mr. Farley, of Antigua, being on a visit in Virginia, immediately
-offered &pound;1,000 for the purchase, without ever having
-seen it also; which offer was as readily accepted. In the year
-1769 Mr. Farley&#8217;s son, James Farley, came into Virginia,
-and ventured out that distance in the back country to view
-the estate. After some difficulty in removing accidental
-settlers, he divided the tract into numerous plantations and
-farms which he rented out, keeping in his own hands a most
-valuable, excellent tract, the choice of the whole. In short,
-the value of this estate has augmented so exceedingly that in
-the year 1772 Mr. Farley refused &pound;28,000 for the purchase
-of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This transaction is interesting enough, as showing what
-the apparent opportunities were for land speculation in the
-later colonial period, and yet how impossible it was for any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-exclusive business of that sort to succeed on a large scale.
-General Washington owned more than 500,000 acres of land
-to the west, the proceeds of which to his estate were not very
-considerable. Robert Morris, the shrewd financier, went
-bankrupt in attempting to develop the western country as a
-field for the operator in real estate. There was a continent
-of land to be exploited, and it was very difficult to corner
-even a small part of the market. The land could not be handled
-as capital until a sufficient number of settlers had come
-in, each contributing his accumulations to enhance the value
-of the common stock. It was from the necessity of the case
-a common stock at the first, and the pioneers were not long
-in finding that out.</p>
-
-<p>In his journey to Kentucky, Captain Smyth happened
-upon some of these pioneers. His observations confirm the
-belief that the hero is a hero, but also a very fallible person.
-&#8220;On the 15th day of May I took my leave of Mr. Bailey and
-his family (at the Lower Sawra Towns), every one of whom
-seemed to be really more concerned for my safety than I
-could possibly have conceived, being all in tears and appearing
-almost certain that I should be destroyed by the savages;
-having used their most earnest persuasions and utmost endeavors
-to change my resolution of proceeding on this journey.
-The kind-hearted and truly amiable Miss Betsy Bailey
-insisted on piloting me over the Dan herself, rather than any
-of her brothers, although the ford at this place was exceedingly
-rapid, rocky and dangerous. In a very few hours, by
-pursuing the wrong path, I found myself in the woods without
-any track whatever to direct my course, that in which I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-had been having terminated, being only made by the hogs,
-which run wild almost all over America, and especially in
-the Western frontiers. It is impossible for me to ascertain
-how far I had traveled in this most disagreeable of all imaginable
-situations, when all on a sudden, on the side of a
-gentle ascent, I perceived a number of men sitting on the
-ground, and such they were as I had never seen before,
-painted black and red and all armed with firelocks and tomahawks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These were Indians, and they were very hospitable to
-Smyth. He gave them the stone buckle and gold lace from
-the crown of his hat. &#8220;They seemed much pleased with the
-present and made signs for me to sit down and eat with them.
-This I readily complied with, and partook of a repast which
-consisted of venison, kernels of hickory nuts and wallnuts,
-all mixed together with wild honey, and every one eat with
-his hands. Having a keen appetite I eat very heartily, which
-seemed to afford a particular satisfaction to my hospitable
-savage friends, for such indeed they were to me.&#8221; Smyth
-spent the night with these warriors (they were really on the
-war path), and the next morning one of them put him into
-the way to Beaver Creek, upon Smith&#8217;s River, in what was
-then Pittsylvania County.</p>
-
-<p>Along Leatherwood Creek, Captain Smyth, the bold tourist,
-saw several fine plantations deserted of the owners. The
-cattle and horses were wandering about and presented a very
-mournful, melancholy appearance. Reports of the movements
-of the Indians had driven the inhabitants to the fort
-on Smith&#8217;s River. About eight miles beyond Leatherwood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-Creek (Patrick Henry lived on that stream for a year or two
-after the Revolution) a man appeared on horseback, whose
-horse was covered with foam and sweat. He was astonished
-beyond measure when Smyth told him he had come from the
-Sawra Towns and had eaten and slept with a party of Indians.
-&#8220;In riding about two or three miles further I at
-length came to the fort itself, which contained all the inhabitants
-of the country around. I was exceedingly happy at
-the thought of being once more among inhabitants, but this
-imaginary felicity was of very short duration, for when I
-went to the gate of the fort expecting to go in, I was positively
-refused admittance. They within insisted that I was
-an enemy or a Frenchman because I had been in company
-with the Indians and had escaped unmolested, and also as
-my accent was different from theirs. This I found they were
-informed of by the man I met on horseback, and who turned
-back full speed as soon as I acquainted him of my having
-been with the Indians. I continued to entreat for admittance
-until they threatened to fire upon me if I did not retire, which
-made me withdraw from the gate to consider what steps I
-must pursue, for I never found myself in so singular and
-unpleasant a predicament in my life. I wandered round and
-round this fortress until night began to advance, and then
-ventured to approach the gate once more. They again threatening
-to shoot me, I assured them that I would as soon be
-killed by them as by the Indians, and solemnly swore I would
-set fire to the stockades. Upon this I was desired to wait a
-few minutes, until they consulted together; at the conclusion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-of which they agreed to admit me. The wicker gate was then
-opened and I crept in.&#8221; The conditions inside, of necessity,
-were not very agreeable.</p>
-
-<p>How exactly truthful Captain Smyth is it is not possible
-to say. By his account after a few days at the fort he procured
-a guide and set out for the mountains, regardless of
-the Indians. He had heard of the Wart Mountain<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> and
-climbed that eminence for the view which, as he describes it,
-was an amazing prospect. Doubtless with a map before him
-he was able to include in his description more than the eye
-fell upon. &#8220;Language fails in attempting to describe this
-most astonishing and almost unbounded perspective. On
-the east you could perceive the deep and broken chasms,
-where the rivers Dan, Mayo, Smith&#8217;s, Bannister&#8217;s and Stanton
-direct their courses; some raging in vast torrents and
-some gliding in silent, gentle meanders. On the north you
-see the Black Water, a branch of the Stanton; and the break
-in the mountains where the Fluvannah, a vast branch of the
-James, passes through. On the northwest you will observe
-with great astonishment and pleasure the tremendous and
-abrupt break in the Alegany Mountains, through which the
-mighty waters of the New River and the Great Kanhawah
-pass. On the west you can very plainly discover the three
-forks or branches of the Holston, where they break through
-the Great Alegany Mountains, and still beyond them you
-may observe Clinch&#8217;s River or Pelisippi. On the south you
-can see the Dan, the Catawba, the Yadkin and the Haw,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-breaking through the mighty mountains that appear in confused
-heaps and piled on each other in every direction.&#8221; It
-is safe to say that Smyth did not see all this. But the description
-is interesting. Many voyagers to the West must
-have beheld scenes comparable, with thoughts more or less
-defined that here was a land for the possessing and a new
-world indeed.</p>
-
-<p>From the Wart Mountain Captain Smyth continued, by
-way of New River, the branches of the Holston (Stahlnaker&#8217;s
-Settlement on the middle fork), Clinch River and
-the Warrior&#8217;s branch to the Kentucky River. &#8220;In five more
-easy days&#8217; journeys, the particulars of which are not worth
-relating, we at length arrived at the famed settlement near
-the mouth of the Kentucky on the 8th day of June, after
-having traveled at least 490 miles, from the fort on Smith&#8217;s
-River, in nineteen days. I was soon directed to the house of
-Mr. Henderson, where I found a most hospitable and kind
-reception.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>From that outpost of Virginia Captain Smyth passed
-down the Ohio to the territories of Spain, along the Gulf
-coast by water to East Florida, and so to Charleston.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II"><i>II.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>THOMAS ANBUREY, AND THE CONVENTION
-ARMY IN VIRGINIA.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1779.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Lieutenant Anburey&mdash;Progress of the Convention
-Army&mdash;Winter Roads&mdash;Charlottesville&mdash;Colonel
-Harvey&mdash;The Piedmont Plantation&mdash;Roundabout
-Directions&mdash;The Quarter-Race&mdash;Richmond&mdash;Forest
-Fire&mdash;Barrack Cats.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">GENERAL BURGOYNE, of amiable qualities but of
-no great skill as a commander, having had the misfortune
-to lose his army at Saratoga, in the month of
-October, 1777, a convention was agreed upon, stipulating the
-treatment to be accorded the defeated troops. Thereafter,
-until exchanged, these Saratoga troops were known among
-themselves as the Convention Army. The art of saving one&#8217;s
-face is one of the most intricate yet in existence. Young
-Thomas Anburey, who was perhaps a lieutenant in the Twenty-ninth
-Regiment of Foot under General Burgoyne, surrendered
-with his brother officers, and with them was sent
-first to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and later to Virginia. Anburey,
-a very cheerful young person, kept a sort of journal of
-his military and other travels in America, and worked up his
-notes into the form of letters to a friend. His observations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-are not profound, but are marked by good sense and ingenuousness,
-and make much better reading than more pretentious
-narratives.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a></p>
-
-<p>After being quartered for more than a year in Massachusetts,
-Anburey and his friends were sent South, in order to
-shift the incidence of taxation in the matter of subsistence
-for so many able-bodied men, numbers of whom (the Hessians,
-for instance) no doubt had in America their first opportunity
-of getting at least one square meal a day. &#8220;Especially
-the Germans,&#8221; says Anburey, &#8220;who seeing in what a comfortable
-manner their countrymen live, left us in great numbers,
-as we marched through New York, the Jerseys and Pennsylvania;
-among the number of deserters is my servant, who,
-as we left Lancaster, ran from me with my horse, portmanteau,
-and everything he could take with him.&#8221; It was at
-best a strange spectacle, this of an army of desirable citizens
-marching captive through an abounding wilderness, and
-merely on parole.</p>
-
-<p>From Lancaster the Convention Army moved to Frederick
-Town, in Maryland, where they spent Christmas Day, 1778.
-The commissary of provisions at Frederick, Mr. McMurdo,
-was very polite to the officers quartered at his house. Anburey
-says: &#8220;His attention was such that although for this
-day (which is as much a day of festival as in England), he
-had been engaged for some time past among his friends and
-relations, he would stay at home and entertain us with an
-excellent Christmas dinner, not even forgetting plum pudding.
-I now experienced what had been often told me, that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-the further I went to the southward I should find the inhabitants
-possess more liberality and hospitality.&#8221; Anburey&#8217;s
-impressions of the North, of course, were formed rather precipitately
-at Saratoga.</p>
-
-<p>Charlottesville, almost a frontier town then, was the destination
-of the Convention Army. &#8220;After we left Frederick
-Town we crossed the Potowmack River with imminent danger,
-as the current was very rapid, large floats of ice swimming
-down it; though the river was only half a mile wide,
-the scow that I crossed over in had several narrow escapes.
-At one time it was quite fastened in the ice, but by great exertions
-of the men in breaking it, we made good our landing
-on the opposite shore, near a mile lower than the ferry.&#8221;
-And the river crossed, hardships only increased on the Virginia
-side. The roads were bad from a late fall of snow not
-sufficiently encrusted to bear a man&#8217;s weight. The troops
-were continually sinking in mud up to their knees and cutting
-their shins and ankles; and after a march of sixteen or
-eighteen miles over such badly metalled roads, the men often
-had to sleep in the woods and the officers in any cabin available.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But on our arrival at Charlottesville no pen can describe
-the scene of misery and confusion that ensued. The officers
-of the First and Second Brigade were in the town, and our
-arrival added to their distress. This famous place we had
-heard so much of consisted only of a courthouse, one tavern,
-and about a dozen houses, all of which were crowded with
-officers. Those of our brigade, therefore, were obliged to
-ride about the country and entreat the inhabitants to take us
-in.&#8221; The men fared very badly. Instead of sleeping on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-snow, under the trees, they went into barracks, hastily covering
-over a few cabins which had been begun but were left
-unroofed, and half-filled with snow. The trouble was that
-Colonel Harvey, to whom Congress had assigned the business
-of getting quarters ready for the tourists, had in turn placed
-his brother in charge. Colonel Harvey&#8217;s brother said that the
-army was not expected until the spring. There was no whiskey
-provided, the stock of provisions was scant, and the quarters
-were as described of the fretwork description.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As to the officers, upon signing a parole they might go
-to Richmond and other adjacent towns to procure themselves
-quarters. Accordingly a parole was signed, which allowed a
-circuit of near 100 miles. And after the officers had drawn
-lots, as three were to remain in the barracks with the men,
-or at Charlottesville, the principal part of them set off for
-Richmond, and many of them are at plantations twenty or
-thirty miles from the barracks. I was quartered, with four
-other officers of our regiment, at Jones&#8217;s Plantation, about
-twenty miles from the barracks. The face of the country
-appears an immense forest, interspersed with various plantations,
-four or five miles distant from each other. On these
-there is a dwelling house in the centre, with kitchens, smoke-house
-and outhouses detached, and from the various buildings
-each plantation has the appearance of a small village.
-At some little distance from the houses are peach and apple
-orchards, and scattered over the plantation are the cabins
-and tobacco houses.&#8221; The worm fence was an object of
-wonder to every foreigner, and yet in a country of abundant
-timber the most natural thing in the world. Anburey mentions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-that in the New England settlements (where the holdings
-were smaller and fences could be made with more particularity)
-the inhabitants had a saying, &#8220;He is making Virginia
-fences,&#8221; used of a man not sober, but able to walk, as
-it were.</p>
-
-<p>Anburey was twice at Richmond, once in the winter and
-once in the summer of 1779. The neighboring gentlemen
-were very hospitable, and would not let him leave until he
-had visited the whole circle. He speaks especially of Warwick
-and &#8220;Tuckahoe.&#8221; The proprietor of &#8220;Tuckahoe&#8221; was
-threatened with the burning of valuable mills because an
-English officer had been made welcome. It was an idle threat.
-On the way to Richmond, by the road through Goochland
-Courthouse, Anburey met that perennial, the celebrated
-roundabout directions: &#8220;If perchance you meet an inhabitant
-and enquire your way, his directions are, if possible, more
-perplexing than the roads themselves, for he tells you to keep
-the right-hand path, then you&#8217;ll come to an old field; you are
-to cross that, and then you&#8217;ll come to the fence of such a one&#8217;s
-plantation; then keep that fence, and you&#8217;ll come to a road
-that has three forks; keep the right-hand fork for about half
-a mile, and then you&#8217;ll come to a creek; after you cross that
-creek you must turn to the left, and there you&#8217;ll come to a
-tobacco house; after you have passed that you&#8217;ll come to another
-road that forks; keep the right-hand fork, and then
-you&#8217;ll come to Mr. Such-a-One&#8217;s ordinary, and he will direct
-you.&#8221; The fact of such directions as these, and the use made
-of them, are to be explained when we remember that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-backwoodsman carries a map in his head, whereas the cockney&#8217;s
-brain is damaged by the use of maps.</p>
-
-<p>In the woods the Convention officer came upon a track for
-quarter-racing. &#8220;Near most of the ordinaries there is a piece
-of ground cleared in the woods for that purpose, where there
-are two paths, about six or eight yards asunder, which the
-horses run in. I think I can, without the slightest exaggeration,
-assert that even the famous Eclipse could not excel them
-in speed, for our horses are some time before they are able
-to get into full speed; but these are trained to set out in that
-manner the moment of starting. It is the most ridiculous
-amusement imaginable, for if you happen to be looking another
-way, the race is terminated before you can turn your
-head; notwithstanding which, very considerable sums are
-betted at these races. Only in the interior parts of this province
-are these races held, for they are much laughed at and
-ridiculed by the people in the lower parts, about Richmond
-and other great towns. At Williamsburg is a very excellent
-course for two, three or four-mile heats.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>On his summer trip to Richmond, Anburey was struck by
-the numbers of peach orchards in full fruit&mdash;&#8220;it is deemed
-no trespass to stop and refresh yourself and your horse with
-them&#8221;&mdash;and by the sight of a family leaving a most comfortable
-house and good plantation to set out for Kentucky over
-the mountains. The summer of 1779 apparently was a good
-peach season, and a bad season in the item of forest fires.
-&#8220;The town of Richmond, as well as the plantations around
-for some miles, has been in imminent danger; as the woods
-have been on fire, which for some time past has raged with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-great fury, and that element seemed to threaten universal
-destruction; but, providentially, before it had done any material
-damage there fell a very heavy rain, which, nevertheless,
-has not altogether extinguished it [July 14, 1779].
-During the summer months these fires are very frequent,
-and at Charlottesville I have seen the mountains on a blaze
-for three or four miles in length. They are occasioned by
-the carelessness of waggoners.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During the winter of 1779 the Convention Army at Charlottesville
-lost heavily by desertion. &#8220;I should observe that
-this desertion is among the British troops. For what reason
-it is impossible to say, the Americans shew more indulgence
-to the Germans, permitting them to go round the country to
-labor, and being for the most part expert handicraftsmen,
-they realize a great deal of money exclusive of their pay.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The officers made themselves pretty comfortable. They
-put up a coffee house, a theatre and a cold bath. Anburey
-made, or had made, a drawing entitled &#8220;Encampment of the
-Convention Army at Charlottes Ville, in Virginia, after they
-had surrendered to the Americans.&#8221; In this interesting print
-it is difficult to distinguish the theatre, but the coffee house
-is easily found.</p>
-
-<p>September, 1780, when orders came to move to the North
-again, the officers were loath to go. They had understood that
-they were to remain at Charlottesville until exchanged. Several
-of them &#8220;had laid out great sums in making themselves
-comfortable habitations; for the barracks became a little
-town, and there being more society, most of the officers had
-resorted there. The great objection to residing at them on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-our first arrival, was on account of the confined situation,
-being not only surrounded, but even in the woods themselves.
-The proprietor of the estate will reap great advantages, as
-the army entirely cleared a space of six miles in circumference
-around the barracks. After we quitted the barracks,
-the inhabitants were near a week in destroying the cats that
-were left behind, which impelled by hunger had gone into
-the woods. There was reason to suppose they would become
-extremely wild and ferocious and would be a great annoyance
-to their poultry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Convention Army, crossing the &#8220;Pignet Ridge, or
-more properly, the Blue Mountains,&#8221; at Wood&#8217;s Gap, moved
-to Winchester, and thence, recrossing the Ridge at Williams&#8217;s
-Gap, proceeded to Frederick Town, and so to New York to
-take ship.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III"><i>III.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>THE ABB&Eacute; ROBIN, ONE OF THE CHAPLAINS
-TO THE FRENCH ARMY IN AMERICA.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1781.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>&#8216;New Travels in America&#8217;&mdash;From Rhode Island to
-Maryland&mdash;Annapolis&mdash;The French Army in the
-Chesapeake&mdash;M. de La Fayette&mdash;Williamsburg&mdash;Tobacco&mdash;Yorktown
-after Siege&mdash;Billetting of
-the French Troops.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE FRENCH ARMY, after a voyage of eighty-five
-days, landed at Boston June 24, 1781. With it came
-the Abb&eacute; Robin, a philosopher who was more than
-once in America and has left recorded descriptions of Louisiana
-as well as of the Atlantic Coast. The Abb&eacute; Robin was
-a genial, generalizing observer&mdash;his New Travels in America<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a>
-is an interesting book, particularly in its passages with
-a bearing upon the activities and the good behavior of the
-Allies from France. We learn therein how the French introduced
-among us the brass band and set on foot improvements
-in the art of the dance: they also brought us to a
-knowledge of the ancient diversion faro.</p>
-
-<p>The New Travels of the Abb&eacute; Robin, like so many other
-travellers&#8217; books of that period, are in the form of letters to
-a friend. The author proceeded with the Army from Boston
-to Providence, through Connecticut (where he was struck<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-with traces of the &#8220;active and inventive genius&#8221; of the inhabitants),
-to the Camp at Philippsburg, down the Hudson
-into the Jerseys, past Philadelphia and Baltimore. He
-writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="right">Annapolis, September 21, 1781.</p>
-
-<p>The army was to prosecute the rest of the march to Virginia
-by land, and with that view took the road leading to
-Alexandria, a flourishing commercial town upon the Potomack;
-but upon the news of the arrival of the <i>Romulus</i> ship
-of war, with two frigates and a number of transports, we
-turned off towards Annapolis, but the horses and carriages
-continued their journey by land.</p>
-
-<p>As we advance towards the south we observe a sensible
-difference in the manners and customs of the people. This
-opulence was particularly observable at Annapolis. That
-very inconsiderable town, standing at the mouth of the river
-Severn, where it falls into the bay, out of the few buildings
-it contains, has at least three-fourths such as may be styled
-elegant and grand. The state-house is a very beautiful building,
-I think the most so of any I have seen in America. The
-peristyle is set off with pillars, and the edifice is topped with
-a dome.</p>
-
-<p>We are embarking with the greatest expedition; the
-weather is the finest you can conceive, and the wind fair: I
-think the impatience of the French will soon be at an end.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="right">Williamsburgh, September 30, 1781.</p>
-
-<p>The army has had a very agreeable passage hither, except
-the grenadiers, chasseurs, and the first American regiments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-[these sailed from the Head of Elk], who were fourteen days
-on the water. Judge how inconvenient this must have been
-to troops crowded into a narrow space, and without any decks
-over them; while even the officers had nothing but biscuit to
-live upon. The shores of this Bay, which is formed by the
-influx of so many great rivers, are far from being lofty,
-neither are they much cleared of woods, and it is but rarely
-that you discover any habitations; but the few we saw were
-very agreeably situated. This country will be, in time, one
-of the most beautiful in the world.</p>
-
-<p>When our little fleet had sailed up James River, celebrated
-for the excellent tobacco which grows upon its shores, we
-disembarked at James-Town, the place where the English
-first established themselves in Virginia. The troops have
-already joined the grenadiers, chasseurs, and the three thousand
-men brought hither by Count de Grasse, consisting of
-the regiments of Agenois, Gatinois and Touraine, under the
-command of Mons. de St. Simon, Mar&eacute;chal de Camp. This
-General had a little before effected a junction with fifteen
-hundred or two thousand Americans, commanded by M. le
-Marquis de la Fayette, who, as you have heard, could never
-be reduced, notwithstanding the forces of Cornwallis were
-three or four times his number. I should have mentioned,
-that M. de la Fayette, in quality of Major-General of an
-American army, at the age of twenty-four years, found himself
-at this time superior in command to a French general
-officer, and continued so until the other detachments of the
-army were collected into one body under General Washington.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>Williamsburg does not contain above a hundred and fifty
-houses, and is the only town we have yet seen in Virginia
-worth mentioning not situated on the banks of any river.
-What makes the situation of this place valuable, is the neighbourhood
-of James and York rivers, between which grows
-the best tobacco in the whole State, and for this reason it
-seems to have been built where it is: I do not think, nevertheless,
-that it will ever be a place of any great importance; the
-towns of York, James, Norfolk, and Edenton, being more
-favourably situated for trade, will undoubtedly eclipse it.</p>
-
-<p>With the most lively satisfaction I contemplated these
-monuments of the real glory of men, the college and the
-library; and while I contemplated them, they recalled to my
-mind places and persons most intimately connected with my
-heart. The tumult of arms has driven from hence those who
-had the care of these philosophical instruments, for the
-Muses, you know, take no pleasure but in the abodes of peace:
-We could only meet with one solitary professor, of Italian
-extraction; and I can not but say, his conversation and abilities
-appeared to be such, that after what he had told us in
-commendation of his brethren, we could not help regretting
-their absence.</p>
-
-<p>About Williamsburg and the shores of the bay, the land is
-covered with trees yielding rozin; the meadows and marshes
-subsist great numbers of excellent horses, which far exceed
-those of the other states in point of beauty: vast quantities
-of hemp are raised here, as well as flax, Indian corn and
-cotton: the cotton shrubs produce annually, and at the first
-view we took them for beans in blossom. Silk worms succeed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-here very well, and it is not improbable but they may
-at some future time form one of the most considerable
-branches of trade in this State. The commodity most in
-demand is tobacco; you well know the character it has, and
-for common use it may be considered as the best in the world.
-What the English imported yearly from this State, and from
-Maryland, might have amounted to about ninety-six thousand
-hogsheads; but among themselves they did not consume
-one sixth part of that quantity, and either disposed of the
-rest among us, or exported it to the north [of Europe]; judge
-then how valuable this commerce was to that nation. They
-purchased it here at the very lowest rate, taking it in exchange
-for their broad-clothes, linen and hard wares, and
-selling again for ready money what they did not want for
-their own home consumption, and thus they increased their
-capital every year to the amount of eight or nine millions.
-No other of their possessions, not even those in India, ever
-afforded them so clear a profit. Three hundred and thirty
-vessels, and about four thousand sailors were constantly employed
-in this trade: of these the city of Glasgow, in Scotland,
-owned the greatest part, and by that means supported
-its flourishing manufactures, which were perhaps more considerable
-than those of any town in England.</p>
-
-<p>Since the war, the tobacco exportation has been only about
-forty thousand hogsheads annually; what advantages then
-would have accrued to the English, could they have sooner
-made themselves masters of Chesapeake-bay. There are now
-fifty or sixty vessels collected at York, under the cannon of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-Cornwallis, sent on purpose to load with this weed, which
-three fourths and a half of the human race take such supreme
-delight in chewing, snuffing or smoking.</p>
-
-<p>The army is at present before York. We hear the reports
-of the cannon very distinctly; and I am now going to join
-the troops, where I think I shall shortly have something very
-interesting to impart to you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="right">Camp at York, November 6, 1781.</p>
-
-<p>I have been through the unfortunate little town of York
-since the siege, and saw many elegant houses shot through
-and through in a thousand places, and ready to crumble to
-pieces; rich household furniture crushed under their ruins,
-or broken by the brutal English soldier; carcases of men and
-horses half covered with dirt: books piled in heaps, and
-scattered among the ruins of the buildings, served to give
-me an idea of the tastes and morals of the inhabitants; these
-were either treatises of religion or controversial divinity;
-the <i>history</i> of the English nation, and their foreign settlements;
-collections of charters and acts of parliament; the
-works of the celebrated <i>Alexander Pope</i>; a translation of
-<i>Montaigne&#8217;s Essays</i>; <i>Gil Blas de Santillane</i>, and the excellent
-<i>Essay upon Women</i>, by <i>Mr. Thomas</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The plan of the fortifications for the defence of York and
-Glocester has been entirely changed; they are drawing them
-into a narrower compass than before, have destroyed the English
-works, and are busy at constructing new ones. The travelling
-artillery is partly at Williamsburg and partly at York;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-and the heavy cannon is at West Point (called <i>Delaware</i> in
-the maps), a place situated between the two rivers that form
-that of York.</p>
-
-<p>On the twenty-fourth [of October] the troops began to go
-into winter quarters. The regiments of Bourbonnais and
-Royal Deux Ponts are at Williamsburg, where our head
-Quarters are fixed. The regiments of Soissonnais, and the
-grenadier companies, and Chasseurs of Saintonge are at
-York. The rest of the regiment of Saintonge is billetted
-about in the country betwixt York and Hampton; and this
-latter place, situated on James River, is occupied by the
-Legion of Lauzun.</p>
-
-<p>This great and happy event, in which the French have had
-so considerable a share, will soon give a new turn to American
-affairs. The Southern States, so long harassed and
-distrest, will now assume new spirit and activity. To what
-a pitch of grandeur will not these new states shortly arise.</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;In his second letter the Abb&eacute; mentions M. de St. Simon. This
-was the philosopher, whose plans for reorganizing society are still of
-interest.</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV"><i>IV.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>THE MARQUIS OF CHASTELLUX, MAJOR-GENERAL
-IN THE FRENCH ARMY, AND
-MEMBER OF THE FRENCH ACADEMY.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1782.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>M. de Chastellux&mdash;Tour to the Natural Bridge&mdash;New
-Kent Court House&mdash;Hanover Court House&mdash;Offley&mdash;Secretary
-Nelson&mdash;Willis&#8217; Ordinary&mdash;Monticello&mdash;New
-London&mdash;Cumberland Court
-House&mdash;Petersburg&mdash;Richmond&mdash;Formicola&#8217;s&mdash;Governor
-Harrison&mdash;College of William and
-Mary.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">&#8220;FROM the moment the French troops were established
-in the quarters they occupied in Virginia, I formed
-the project of traveling into the upper parts of that
-province, where I was assured that I should find objects worthy
-of exciting the curiosity of a stranger; and faithful to
-the principles, which from my youth I had laid down, never
-to neglect seeing every country in my power, I burned with
-impatience to set out. The season, however, was unfavorable,
-and rendered traveling difficult and laborious; besides,
-experience taught me that traveling in winter never offered
-the greatest satisfaction we can enjoy&mdash;that of seeing Nature
-as she ought to be, and of forming a just idea of the general
-face of a country; for it is easier for the imagination to deprive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-the landscape of the charms of spring than to clothe
-with them the hideous skeleton of winter; as it is easier to
-imagine what a beauty at eighteen may be at eighty, than to
-conceive what eighty was at eighteen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In these words, the Marquis of Chastellux, writing from
-Williamsburg about the 1st of May, 1782, begins the chronicle
-of his tour to the Valley of Virginia. He was in America
-with the army perhaps two years, during which time he
-sustained his reputation as a capable officer, an agreeable
-man, and a philosopher of tolerant insight. M. de Chastellux
-was a good traveler. In the country, if the bacon and
-eggs were stale and the vintage was spring water of the
-morning, he found something to admire in the landscape.
-At Philadelphia he dined with members of the Congress, of
-all parties, listened to political theories, drank tea with the
-ladies, was easily amused and formed opinions which may be
-discovered on a careful reading. Where is there a more sensible
-man than the old campaigner? The Marquis of Chastellux
-entered the army at fifteen, and was given command
-of a regiment at twenty-one. He served with distinction in
-the Seven Years&#8217; War. His studies were never neglected,
-and being a man of rank he was early adopted among the
-scholars.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of April, 1782, M. de Chastellux set out from
-Williamsburg for Rockbridge County. &#8220;On the 8th I set
-out with Mr. Lynch, then my aid-de-camp and adjutant, Mr.
-Frank Dillon, my second aid-de-camp, and M. le Chevalier
-d&#8217;Oyr&eacute;, of the Engineers. Six servants and a led horse composed
-our train, so that our little caravan consisted of four<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-masters, six servants and eleven horses. I regulated my
-journey by the spring, and gave it time sufficient to precede
-us. The eighteen miles through which we passed before we
-baited our horses at Bird&#8217;s Tavern were sufficiently known
-to me, for it was the same road I traveled the year before in
-coming from Williamsburg. The remaining sixteen, which
-completed our day&#8217;s work and brought us to New Kent
-Courthouse, offered nothing curious. All I learned by a
-conversation with Mr. Bird was that he had been pillaged by
-the English when they passed his house in their march to
-Westover in pursuit of M. de la Fayette, and in returning
-to Williamsburg after endeavoring in vain to come up with
-him. Mr. Bird repeated with indignation that the refugee
-camp followers had taken from him the very boots from off
-his legs. As the next day&#8217;s journey was to be longer than
-that of the preceding one, we left New Kent Courthouse before
-8 o&#8217;clock, and rode twenty miles to Newcastle, where I
-resolved to give our horses two hours repose. When the heat
-was a little abated and our horses were somewhat reposed we
-continued our journey that we might arrive before dark at
-Hanover Courthouse, from which we were yet sixteen miles.
-The country through which we passed is one of the finest of
-lower Virginia. There are many well cultivated estates and
-handsome houses. We arrived at Hanover Courthouse before
-sunset, and alighted at a tolerable handsome inn&mdash;a very
-large saloon and a covered portico to receive the company
-who assemble every three months at the courthouse, either
-on private or public affairs. This asylum is the more necessary,
-as there are no other houses in the neighborhood.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>From Hanover Courthouse, which, as well as New Kent,
-had reason to remember the passage of the English, the party
-proceeded at 9 the next morning towards Offley, the residence
-for the time of General Nelson, recently Governor of the
-State. &#8220;I had got acquainted with him during the expedition
-to York, at which critical moment he was Governor, and
-conducted himself with the courage of a brave soldier and
-the zeal of a good citizen. I am sorry to add that the only
-recompense of his labors was the hatred of a great part of his
-fellow citizens, arising from the necessity under which he
-had often labored of pressing their horses, carriages and
-forage.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>M. de Chastellux and his aids arrived at Offley at 1 o&#8217;clock
-on the 10th of April, and spent two rainy days there. General
-Nelson was absent, but Secretary Nelson was there, an
-old man very gouty, who related with a serene countenance
-what the effect had been of the French batteries in front of
-Yorktown. &#8220;The tranquility which has succeeded these unhappy
-times by giving him leisure to reflect upon his losses,
-has not embittered the recollection; he lives happily on one
-of his plantations, where in less than six hours he can assemble
-seventy of his relations, children, grandchildren, nephews
-and nieces. The rapid increase of his own family justifies
-what he told me of the population of Virginia in general, of
-which, from the offices he has held all his life, he must have
-it in his power to form a very accurate judgment. In 1742
-the people subject to taxes in Virginia amounted only to the
-number of 63,000; by his account they now exceed 160,000.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>&#8220;After passing two days very agreeably with this interesting
-family, we left there the 12th at 10 in the morning, accompanied
-by the secretary and five or six of his young relations,
-who conducted us to Little River Bridge, a small creek
-on the road about five miles from Offley.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eleven miles through woods brought them to Willis&#8217;s Ordinary,
-a solitary place, but at the moment crowded. &#8220;As
-soon as I alighted I inquired what might be the reason of this
-numerous assembly, and was informed it was a cock fight.
-This diversion is much in vogue in Virginia, where the English
-customs are more prevalent than in the rest of America.
-Whilst our horses were feeding we had an opportunity of
-seeing a battle. The stakes were very considerable; the
-money of the parties was deposited in the hands of one of
-the principal persons, and I felt a secret pleasure in observing
-that it was chiefly French. Whilst the interested parties
-animated the cocks to battle, a child of fifteen, who was near
-me, kept leaping for joy and crying, &#8216;Oh, it is a charming
-diversion.&#8217; We had yet seven or eight and twenty miles to
-ride to the only inn where it was possible to stop before we
-reached Mr. Jefferson&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Keeping on towards Monticello, the party passed an ordinary,
-some sixteen miles from Willis&#8217;s, kept by an extremely
-fat man. They found him contented in an arm chair, which
-served him also for a bed. A stool supported his enormous
-legs. &#8220;A large ham and a bowl of grog served him for company,
-like a man resolved to die surrounded by his friends.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They spent the night twelve miles farther on at a house
-where there were fourteen children, not one of them ten years<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-old; and set out at 8 o&#8217;clock the next morning through the
-foothills of the Southwest Mountain. That day, the 13th
-of April (an important day with Mr. Jefferson) they came
-to Monticello. &#8220;The visit which I made Mr. Jefferson was
-not unexpected, for he had long since invited me to come and
-pass a few days with him; notwithstanding which I found
-his first appearance serious, nay even cold; but before I had
-been two hours with him we were as intimate as if we had
-passed our whole lives together. Walking, books, but above
-all a conversation always varied and interesting, made four
-days pass away like so many minutes. I recollect with pleasure
-that as we were conversing one evening over a bowl of
-punch, after Mrs. Jefferson had retired, our conversation
-turned on the poems of Ossian. In our enthusiasm the book
-was sent for and placed near the bowl, where by their mutual
-aid the night far advanced imperceptibly upon us. Sometimes
-natural philosophy, at others politics or the arts, were
-the topics of our conversation, for no object had escaped
-Mr. Jefferson; and it seemed as if from his youth he had
-placed his mind, as he had his house, on an elevated situation,
-from which he might contemplate the universe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Jefferson and M. de Chastellux rode over to Charlottesville,
-&#8220;a rising town,&#8221; to see Colonel Armand,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a> whose
-legion was in quarters there. Colonel Armand had a pet
-wolf which had been caught wild in the neighborhood. M.
-de Chastellux left Monticello on the 17th, and on the 19th
-arrived at the Natural Bridge, by way of Rockfish Gap and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-Steel&#8217;s Tavern. Returning by way of New London (Bedford),
-&#8220;already a pretty considerable town, at least seventy
-or eighty houses,&#8221; the party of tourists reached Cumberland
-Courthouse on the 23d. &#8220;This is the chief manor house
-of a very considerable country; it is situated in a plain of
-about a mile diameter, sixteen miles from Hodnett&#8217;s, which
-we had passed. Besides the courthouse and a large tavern,
-its necessary appendage, there are seven or eight houses inhabited
-by gentlemen of fortune. I found the tavern full of
-people, and understood that the judges were assembled to
-hold a court of claims&mdash;that is to say, to hear and register
-the claims of sundry persons, who had furnished provisions
-for the army. We know that in general, but particularly in
-unexpected invasions, the American troops had no established
-magazine, and as it was necessary to have subsistence for
-them, provisions and forage were indiscriminately laid hold
-of on giving the owners a receipt, which they call a certificate.
-During the campaign, whilst the enemy was at hand,
-little attention was given to this sort of loans, which accumulated
-incessantly, without the sum total being known, or any
-means taken to ascertain the proofs. Virginia being at length
-loaded with these certificates, it became necessary, sooner or
-later, to liquidate these accounts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The last Assembly of the State of Virginia had accordingly
-thought proper to pass a bill, authorizing the justices
-of each county to take cognizance of these certificates, to authenticate
-their validity, and to register them, specifying
-the value of the provisions in money, according to the established
-tariff. I had the curiosity to go to the courthouse to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-see how this affair was transacted, and saw it was performed
-with great order and simplicity. The justices wore their
-common clothes, but were seated on an elevated tribunal, as
-at London in the court of King&#8217;s bench or common pleas.
-We had rode forty-four miles, and night was closing fast
-upon us when we arrived at Powhatan Courthouse, a more
-recent settlement than that of Cumberland. We had a good
-supper and good beds, but our horses were obliged to do
-without forage.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning of the 24th they left Powhatan, and
-rode forty-four miles to Petersburg, passing Chesterfield
-Courthouse, where were still to be seen the ruins of the barracks
-occupied by the Baron Steuben and burned by the English.
-At Petersburg M. de Chastellux called at &#8216;Battersea&#8217;
-and was entertained at &#8216;Bollingbrook.&#8217; The town is described
-as already flourishing, and destined to become more so every
-day&mdash;the depot for a vast region to the south. &#8220;Five miles
-from Petersburg we passed the small river of Randolph over
-a stone bridge, and traveling through a rich and well peopled
-country, arrived at a fork of roads, where we were unlucky
-enough precisely to make choice of that which did not
-lead to Richmond, the place of our destination. But we had
-no reason to regret our error, as it was only two miles about
-and we skirted James River to a charming place called Warwick,
-where a group of handsome houses form a sort of village,
-and there are several superb ones in the neighborhood.
-As we had lost our way and traveled but slowly, it was near
-3 o&#8217;clock when we reached Manchester, a sort of suburb to
-Richmond, on the right bank of the river, where you pass<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-the ferry. The passage was short, there being two boats for
-the accommodation of travelers. Richmond is divided into
-three parts. I was conducted to that on the west, where I
-found a good inn. Mr. Formicola, my landlord, is a Neapolitan,
-who came to Virginia with Lord Dunmore, but had gone
-rather roundabout, having been before in Russia. His only
-error was the exalted idea he had formed of the manner in
-which French general officers must be treated. After dinner
-I went to pay a visit to Mr. Harrison, then Governor of the
-State. He talked much of the first Congress in America, in
-which he sat for two years. This subject led us naturally to
-that which is the most favorite topic among the Americans&mdash;the
-origin and commencement of the present revolution.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This conversation with Governor Harrison, other conversations,
-and M. de Chastellux&#8217;s own careful observations led
-him to form opinions about Virginia, then the most influential
-of the States, which were correct enough. His analysis
-was a forecast. There can be found no better summary of
-conditions in Virginia at that time, the statement of a man
-of great good sense and a wide experience of men and affairs.
-He remarks: &#8220;One must be in the country itself, one must
-be acquainted with the language, and take a pleasure in conversing
-and in listening, to be qualified to form, and that
-slowly, a proper opinion and a decisive judgment. After
-this reflection the reader will not be surprised at the pleasure
-I took in conversing with Mr. Harrison. He urged me to
-dine with him next day, and to pass another day at Richmond.
-We set out, however, on the 27th, at 8 in the morning
-for Westover. We traveled six and twenty miles without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-halting, in very hot weather, but by a very agreeable road,
-with magnificent houses in view at every instant; for the
-banks of James River form the garden of Virginia.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is not by accident,&#8221; observes the Marquis of Chastellux,
-writing at Williamsburg, May 1, 1782, &#8220;that I have
-postponed the consideration of everything respecting the
-progress of the arts and sciences in this country until the
-conclusion of my reflections on Virginia; I have done it expressly
-because the mind, after bestowing its attention on
-the variety of human institutions, reposes itself with pleasure
-on those which tend to the perfection of the understanding,
-and the progress of information. The College of William
-and Mary, whose founders are announced by the very
-name, is a noble establishment which embellishes Williamsburg
-and does honor to Virginia. I must add that the zeal
-of the professors has been crowned with the most distinguished
-success, and that they have already formed many
-distinguished characters, ready to serve their country in the
-various departments of government. After doing justice to
-the exertions of the University of Williamsburgh, for such
-is the College of William and Mary, if it be necessary for
-its farther glory to cite miracles, I shall only observe that
-they created me a doctor of laws.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V"><i>V.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>DR. JOHANN DAVID SCHOEPF, SURGEON
-TO THE HESSIAN TROOPS.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1783.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Dr. Schoepf&mdash;Leesburg&mdash;Plantation Houses&mdash;The
-Price of Land&mdash;Fredericksburg&mdash;Hunter&#8217;s Iron-Works&mdash;Richmond&mdash;The
-General Assembly&mdash;The
-Tavern Formicola&mdash;Manchester&mdash;Mr. Rubsamen&mdash;Williamsburg&mdash;Yorktown
-or Little York&mdash;Surry
-Court House&mdash;Smithfield&mdash;The Nation of
-Virginia&mdash;Suffolk&mdash;The Trade in Salt.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">DR. JOHANN DAVID SCHOEPF was born at Weinsiedel
-in 1752 and died in the year 1800. He studied
-medicine at Hof, Erlangen, Berlin and Vienna, then
-traveled in Russia, Italy and Switzerland, and made his degree
-in medicine at Erlangen in 1776. That year he came
-to America as surgeon to the Hessian troops in the British
-army. In 1784 he went to London and traveled through
-England and in France, Spain and Italy. He published in
-1787 a <i>Materia Medica Americana</i>. Dr. Schoepf was particularly
-interested in scientific matters, was an accurate
-observer of things and of people, and his book is one of the
-best of the early travels in this country. These volumes have
-now been translated, and the account given below is a modification.
-Dr. Schoepf approached Virginia from the north,
-coming through Western Maryland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>&#8220;By this road Leesburg is the first town on the Virginia
-side, a place of few houses, small and wooden. On account
-of the high, pleasant and healthful situation a Latin school
-has been established here. An advertisement of this institution
-was to be seen on the tavern door, recommending it in a
-handsome style to the public, which should give it patronage,
-since schools hitherto, except in the chief cities, are scarce
-enough in America. It is not the universal custom in America
-to hang shields before the inns, but inns may always be
-identified by the great number of papers and notices with
-which the walls and doors of these public houses are plastered&mdash;and
-the best inns are in general the most papered.
-From such announcements the traveler gets a many-sided
-entertainment, and gains instruction as to where taxes are
-heavy, where wives have eloped or horses been stolen, and
-where the new doctor has settled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Along the road from Leesburg towards Fredericksburg
-there was not a little difference to be remarked between the
-appearance of the country and the thickly settled regions of
-Piedmont Maryland and Pennsylvania, through which we
-had just passed. It was strange to see so much wild and
-newly cleared ground, due not to any unfertility of the soil,
-but to the large estates whose owners were unwilling to sell
-and found it difficult to secure tenants where there is so much
-land to be had almost for the asking. And the contrast in
-the appearance of the plantations, after the Potomac is
-crossed, is rather striking. In this part of Virginia, as in
-lower Maryland, the farmer builds a small village about him.
-In some cases, however, all of his buildings would scarcely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-make one comfortable house. From the time of his first
-clearing he is continually adding, and his plan may be not
-a very good one. We passed Moore&#8217;s Tavern and the Red
-House (30 miles from Goose Creek), and skirting the Bull
-Run Mountains, approached the strictly tobacco country.
-Fairly good tobacco is raised to the west along the foothills,
-but the profit is trifling on account of the heavy expense of
-carriage to warehouses whence it can be taken off by the European
-ships. In this region the crop had been greatly damaged
-by an August frost. The loss was the greater because
-many of these planters raise only the Sweetscented, a tender
-variety, but more profitable by 2&frac12; shillings the hundred, or
-25 shillings Virginia currency the hogshead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We spent a night at a plantation where, although no tavern
-is kept, the traveler is entertained for pay. There are disadvantages
-about this sort of inn, but on the one hand the
-proprietor escapes the payment of a liquor license and the
-trouble of catering to a crowd of idlers, and on the other
-hand the guest must answer only a few times the usual questions
-as to where he is going, where he came from, and what
-his business is. The captain had a large family, and wished
-to sell some of his land, of which he owned 4,000 acres. Land
-hereabouts can be bought for from 25 to 50 or 60 shillings
-Virginia currency. The captain would sell his for 40 shillings
-cash, and with the proceeds move to Kentucky. The
-people throughout are bent on providing for their children.
-This is difficult to do in the East, and hence the steady emigration
-to Kentucky.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>&#8220;Beyond this we got out of the right road, and meeting
-only a few darkeys, whose horizon was not extensive, traveled
-half a day before we were set right. We passed Cedar Run
-at a dangerous ford, and came to a plantation where there is
-a copper mine worked intermittently, a narrow vein. Following
-the direction, &#8220;keep straight on&#8221; (nobody thinks the
-stranger can be quite as ignorant as he says he is), we crossed
-Acquia Creek, and reached Fredericksburg. The public
-buildings of Fredericksburg&mdash;church, market house and
-court house&mdash;we found in bad condition, not because they
-had been damaged directly by the war, but simply because
-during the war there had been no use made of them. Tobacco
-was bringing a small price here, and at a sure profit
-to the buyers. No ships were in and taxes were due; the
-price had been knocked down to 25 shillings the hundred.
-The same at Alexandria. Hunter&#8217;s Iron Works, near Fredericksburg,
-at the falls above Falmouth, is one of the finest
-and most extensive works of this sort in America. There is
-a rolling and a slitting mill, both very ingeniously contrived,
-and of this description of iron works there have been up to
-this time only one or two established in all America. Under
-the British rule such enterprises were forbidden. Past Fredericksburg,
-we had the honor to breakfast with an American
-general, whose attire was conspicuous&mdash;a large white chapeau,
-a blue coat, a brown waistcoat and green breeches decorated
-him, and he a short, fat man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From this point on towards Richmond the country is open
-and level, and adorned with many large and at times tasteful
-dwellings. The rich Virginians do not prefer a town<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-life. Here and there we passed large wheat fields. Several
-years before the war, owing to the heavy English import duties
-on tobacco, the people had begun to raise wheat on a
-more extensive scale. Here, as in other parts of America,
-the cornfields are seeded to wheat without removing the
-stalks. The weevil is bad, especially if the grain lies long in
-the straw. After floating off the light seed the good, heavy
-grain is broadcasted, mixed with shell lime. Between Fredericksburg
-and Richmond we noticed a good many swampy
-spots, which might easily be drained. We met on this road,
-to our great surprise, two Alsatians traveling along on foot,
-with their bundles slung behind. They had come into the
-Chesapeake on a French ship, and were seeking their fortune
-in Virginia. A foot passenger is a very unusual sight in
-Virginia. Passing Hanover Courthouse (December 18,
-1783) and Hanover Town, we came to Richmond. On this
-road we were struck with the little provision made for the
-winter feeding of cattle. How easy it would be to lay down
-grass. Near Richmond we saw mules, the first pair. Mules,
-being found well adapted to the country, are beginning to
-be used a good deal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Richmond, before 1779 not a very important town, is
-built on two heights, separated by a creek called Shokoes. The
-houses are in general of wood, and are irregularly scattered
-about. A recent census gives the number as 280, and the
-population about 2,000. The falls of the James engaged my
-curiosity first. The total fall of the river from Westham to
-Richmond (7 miles) is only seventy-one feet, and hence there
-is no stupendous cataract. But the falls as a whole, over innumerable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-boulders, between winding wooded banks, present
-a great and striking appearance. The sound of the water,
-particularly at night, is heard not only through the entire
-town, but before the wind for several miles around. At the
-falls innumerable herring and shad are caught early in
-spring, and at times even in February. These appear in the
-Delaware and the Hudson not before the middle of April or
-the first of May. James River is one of the greatest and most
-beautiful of American streams.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;During my stay at Richmond the Assembly was in session.
-A small frame building serves as House of Assembly, and
-with a change of properties as ballroom and banquet room.
-The term is used, &#8216;the Assembly sits.&#8217; This does not seem
-to me to be precisely descriptive. The members appeared to
-me to be anywhere rather than in their seats, and to be discussing
-anything except laws to be framed. The doorkeeper
-was busy, and in the vestibule there was an uproar. The
-vestments of the members are diverse&mdash;boots, trousers, Indian
-leggings, great-coats, the usual coat, and short jackets.
-In other words, each one wears what he pleases. The members
-from the West are greatly inconvenienced in coming so
-far. They even speak of establishing a separate government
-for the West, as in the province of New York, where there is
-a Governor at New York and another at Albany. If this is
-done, the West will very likely become in a short time an independent
-State. The pay of members has recently been
-fixed at 18 Virginia shillings or 3 Spanish dollars per diem.
-During the war they preferred tobacco (50 pounds) to currency.
-At a vote, the Speaker calls for the Ayes and Noes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-and judges with a critical ear which side has made the majority
-of sounds. If the predominance is a matter of doubt
-a division is called.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I stopped at the Tavern Formicola, which was naturally
-much crowded at that season. Every evening there came
-generals, colonels, captains, senators, delegates, judges, doctors,
-clerks and gentlemen of every weight and calibre to sit
-around the fire, drink, smoke, sing and swap anecdotes. Very
-entertaining, but Formicola&#8217;s not being a spacious house, I
-found the crowd embarrassing. There is only one newspaper
-published at Richmond; this paper appears twice a week.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the south side of James River, opposite Richmond,
-lies a little town called Manchester. The rocks in the river
-between the two places have been bought up, as well as a
-narrow strip along each bank, and the owner proposes to
-throw a fine bridge across, which, if built, will be the first
-and only one of the kind in America. The project depends
-upon whether the Assembly will license this bridge as a toll
-bridge. At Manchester I visited Mr. Jacob Rubsamen, a
-German, who was before the war engaged in mining in Jersey.
-At the outbreak of the war he came to Virginia and set
-up a powder mill, the first powder mill to be established in
-this country. Rubsamen was able to find saltpetre in the
-mountains; his sulphur he brought from Europe, on account
-of the heavy expense of getting it out in this country. His
-works were not very profitable, and were destroyed in the end
-by the British. Mr. Rubsamen told me that lead ore is found
-on New River and the Greenbrier, copper on the Roanoke
-(Dan), and iron everywhere about, particularly in Buckingham<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-County. Coal was recently discovered twelve miles
-from Richmond by the mere chance of the uprooting of a
-tree by the wind. This coal brings 1 shilling a bushel (at the
-wharf), Virginia currency. Its smell is disagreeable, as I
-observed when at Richmond.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Leaving Richmond we reached Williamsburg in two days,
-passing by Warwick (where the British had destroyed a considerable
-plant for the working of iron), Osborne&#8217;s, a pleasant
-place, though small, and Petersburg, a town of a thriving
-trade and larger than Richmond. Cotton is raised in this
-region on good new land or on heavily fertilized land, and
-the favorite tobaccos are the Sweetscented, the Long Green,
-the Varina, the Frederick, the Oroonoko, the Hudson, Thickjoint,
-Thickset, Shoestring and other varieties.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Williamsburg is to be counted among the most beautiful
-of American cities. The Capitol, or Statehouse, closes one
-end of the High Street, a large and modern building. Because
-no better use can be made of it now, a Latin school is
-to be established where the government was once installed.
-Doctors in all the faculties are graduated at the College of
-William and Mary. Most of the students, however, complete
-their studies at the English and Scottish universities. The
-citizens of this town, as of all lower Virginia, greatly hope
-that the seat of government will be brought back to Williamsburg.
-At the tavern I found very good entertainment and
-paid high for it. The black attendants, neatly and modishly
-attired, make their bows with dignity and respectfulness.
-They spoke with enthusiasm of the politeness of the French
-officers lately quartered there.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>&#8220;We made an excursion to Yorktown, called also Little
-York, to see that famous place, and particularly to inspect
-the great oyster banks there. The inhabitants have not yet
-recovered from the disturbances of war, and many houses
-are still in ruins or half repaired. The spars of the ships
-sunk in the river to block the passage are yet to be seen. We
-returned the same day to Williamsburg, to set out the next
-morning for the South. Seven miles from Williamsburg, on
-the Southern road, we came to James River, and after much
-delay were obliged to turn back to Williamsburg because of
-an unfavorable wind at the ferry. The next day at sunrise,
-when the wind is generally still, we came again to the ferry
-and were put across, but not without delay. Lord Cornwallis
-was the excuse. They said he had ruined the wharf, and the
-tide was not yet high enough to take off men and horses from
-the bank, which is there low.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not far below the ferry lies James Island, formerly only
-a peninsula; in a fierce storm with high water the river broke
-through the slender tongue of land. Jamestown appears in
-several modern geographies as a place of eighty to a hundred
-houses. In reality there are there but one or two, and they
-ruinous. The most valuable land in this region is that along
-the rivers and creeks, not so much from the superior fertility,
-as because of the accessibility to water transportation. Such
-land sells at four, five or six pounds, Virginia. If the corn
-crop fails the planter is in straits, and if the price of tobacco
-is high everything else&mdash;bacon, corn, etc.&mdash;is high in proportion.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-Desiring gain, and spending his time on tobacco, the
-planter loses through not giving attention to those articles of
-necessity which he might produce at home.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Five miles from James River we came to Surry Courthouse,
-where there was a crowd, because it was court day.
-Eleven miles farther on we passed Nelson&#8217;s Ordinary, and
-after ten miles more reached Smithfield, or Isle of Wight
-Courthouse. The road from Williamsburg is mainly through
-woods, but we passed more churches (five, that is to say)
-than during any other day&#8217;s journey in America.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Towards Smithfield the traveler passes beyond the tobacco
-country. The chief exports here are tar, pitch, turpentine
-and salted meat. A barrel of tar, thirty-one and one-half
-gallons, costs from 8 to 9 Virginia shillings; a barrel of turpentine
-18 shillings, and a barrel of salted pork (220
-pounds) 50 shillings. At Smithfield we spent the evening
-with a party of gentlemen from the neighborhood. The conversation
-was for the most part on the subject of Virginia,
-what advantages that State has over every other State in the
-world, and how the nation of Virginia is superior to every
-other nation&mdash;in resources, manners, purity of speech and in
-all respects.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The stranger notes deficiencies. For instance, a gentleman
-of Petersburg remarked to me that he thought of sending
-his son to Edinburgh to make a doctor of him, since he
-would probably not marry and set up as a planter, being now past
-the age of twenty-one. But it must be admitted that physically,
-the Virginians are a comely race, and they show on all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-subjects clear and strong understandings. It is to be regretted
-that they do not give more attention to the exact sciences.
-They read, but they do not study.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Christmas Eve we came to Everett&#8217;s Bridge, and the next
-day to Suffolk, on another arm of Nansemond Creek. In
-the month of May, 1779, a great part of Suffolk was burned
-by the British. There are no stones at this place, and the
-deep, fine sand of the streets is an inconvenience. Before the
-houses they lay a sort of pavement, pitch and tar mixed with
-the sand and allowed to harden. They drive a trade from
-this place to the West Indies in small vessels, shallops of
-twenty to fifty tons burthen. Salt is an especial article of
-their traffic. When the vessels, which bring it from Tortola,
-Turk&#8217;s Island and other of the West Indies, are delayed, the
-price of salt is tripled and quadrupled. During the war the
-people were greatly in want of salt, and the attempt was made
-to get it from the sea by damming the water in ponds along
-the coast. Little success attended this experiment south of
-the thirty-seventh parallel, probably because of the frequent
-rain-storms which freshened the ponded sea water.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From Suffolk to Cunningham&#8217;s we skirted the great Dismal
-Swamp. Along the road from York, in Virginia, to this
-point it is observable that the south bank of all the rivers and
-creeks is steeper and rougher than the north bank. This may
-be due to the weathering of the north and northeast storms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI"><i>VI.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>COUNT CASTIGLIONI, CHEVALIER OF THE
-ORDER OF ST. STEPHEN, P. M.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1786.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Luigi Castiglioni&mdash;Alexandria&mdash;Mount Vernon&mdash;General
-Washington&mdash;Fredericksburg&mdash;Peach
-Trees and Persimmons&mdash;Richmond&mdash;Petersburg&mdash;Colonel
-Banister&mdash;Dr. Greenway&mdash;Colonel
-Coles&mdash;Staunton River&mdash;Buckingham Court
-House&mdash;Eniscotty&mdash;Rockfish Gap&mdash;Staunton&mdash;Middle
-River Ford&mdash;Winchester&mdash;Charlestown.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN the diary of George Washington for the year 1785 appear
-these entries: &#8220;Sunday, December 25.&mdash;Count Castiglioni
-came here to dinner. December 29.&mdash;Count
-Castiglioni went away after breakfast on his tour to the
-southward.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was Count Luigi Castiglioni, who had landed at
-Boston in May, and after going through New England and
-a part of Canada, had come to New York, whence, on the
-27th of November, he had set out for the South, reaching
-Alexandria December 24th, and spending Christmas at
-Mount Vernon. Count Castiglioni was a man of science,
-Chevalier of the Order of St. Stephen, P. M., member of the
-Philosophical Society of Philadelphia, and also member of
-the Patriotical Society of Milan, Patrician of Milan. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-book written by him, <i>Viaggio negli Stati Uniti</i>, is particularly
-descriptive of the useful plants to be found in this
-country, with a view to their introduction into Europe, either
-for the farm and the kitchen garden or for practical inclusion
-in the <i>materia medica</i>. This book and that of Dr.
-Schoepf, 1783-1784, give an excellent statement as to the
-natural history, the methods of agriculture, milling, mining,
-etc., of that period in the history of the fourteen States.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Alexandria,&#8221; says Count Castiglioni, &#8220;numbers 300
-houses and possibly 3,000 inhabitants. At times, although
-the latitude is only 38 degrees 45 minutes, the cold is so great
-that the Potowmack may be ridden and driven over. Such
-freezing weather is never of long duration, and many winters
-the river is not frozen at all. This newly established town
-has already received the name and the privileges of a city,
-and as soon as the Potowmack is made navigable will become
-one of the most flourishing of the trading towns of Virginia.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When I was there the plan for the improvement of the
-navigation (suggested by General Washington) was beginning
-to be put into effect. Near Alexandria brick and tiles
-are made at a reasonable price, the soil thereabouts being a
-soft, viscous clay. They make lime there from the oyster
-shells, which are found in extraordinary banks. The people
-have two theories about these great shell banks, one being
-that they are due to successive inundations of the sea, the
-other that the aborigines assembled them, either for burial
-mounds or for some other religious purpose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The morning of the 25th of December I left Alexandria
-and went to Mount Vernon. There I spent four memorable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-days. General Washington is perhaps fifty-seven years of
-age, a man large and strong of build, of a majestic but kindly
-bearing, and, notwithstanding the fatigues of war, appears
-not yet to be aging. This celebrated man, who began and so
-happily carried through the American war, seems, as it were,
-to have been formed by nature to free this country of European
-rule and to inaugurate an epoch in the history of mankind.
-Bred to arms, he has not neglected the study of politics,
-and there is probably no one in America who has a better
-knowledge of the present condition of the United States
-or more sincerely desires their welfare. May Heaven spare
-him many years for the good of his country, for an example
-to it and to Europe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Leaving Mount Vernon December 29th, in the morning,
-I went by Colchester, a little place on the River Ochoquan,
-Dumfries, where there are several warehouses for tobacco;
-Aquaja (only a few houses), and fourteen miles beyond came
-to Falmouth, on the Rappahannock, whence it is the custom
-to ferry down to Fredericksburg, on the opposite bank. Fredericksburg,
-like Alexandria, is by law styled a city, and carries
-on a heavy trade in tobacco. From Fredericksburg
-many plantations are seen, larger and smaller. The large
-houses are generally built with a porch, and the outbuildings
-ranged at either side. The tobacco exhausts a cleared field
-in three years, and no attempt is made to manure, the cattle
-being kept at large in the woods. Two acres in tobacco bring
-about two hogsheads, or maybe 3,000 pounds. One thousand
-pounds (a hogshead) fetches from 27 to 39 shillings Virginia
-money the hundred.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>&#8220;The following day I traveled thirty miles through a district
-where much tobacco is raised, and much peach brandy
-and persimmon beer is made. The peach flourishes so in
-Virginia that often when a tract of land is cleared the peach
-trees take possession of the whole area, nothing being done
-for the propagation of them except letting in the sun on the
-ground. The persimmon is gathered from a sort of Guayakana
-in the woods. The fruit would be very good to eat but
-for the skin, which has an unpleasantness in the taste. In
-the evening I came to Richmond, now the capital of Virginia,
-a town which has grown rapidly, and numbers some 4,000
-inhabitants, and 400 houses. The town is built on two hills,
-separated by a brook, over which is thrown a wooden bridge,
-with side ways for foot passengers. The trade of the place
-consists largely in tobacco, and there is much competition
-from the other markets at Alexandria and Petersburg. When
-I was there a well had just been dug to the depth of seventy
-feet on one of the hills, which rise one above another from
-the James, here a river foaming among great rocks. I visited
-the spot. The earth removed smelled of sulphur, and
-had the look of rotted wood, ash gray, but turning white on
-exposure to the air. There were found at the bottom of this
-well, bedded in the earth described, many bones, some larger
-than the bones of cattle, and also remains of the aboriginal
-Indians, stone implements, etc., proof that these tribes had
-been in possession of the land many centuries before.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;January 6th [1786] I passed on to Petersburg, through
-Osborne&#8217;s. Blandford, Pocahontas and Petersburg are now
-incorporated under the name Petersburg. Great quantity<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-of tobacco is brought to Petersburg, even from the North
-Carolina country, and is there exported to Europe as James
-River tobacco, which is the best sort.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A mile from the town lives Colonel Banister, a nephew<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a>
-of the famous John Banister, who gave up his place as professor
-of botany and librarian at the University of Oxford,
-and settling in this part of Virginia, at great pains and with
-rare judgment collected and described a number of the scarcest
-plants. From Colonel Banister&#8217;s I went, on the 9th, to
-Kingston, a rich plantation belonging to Captain Walker, in
-the county of Dinwiddie. The following day I visited Dr.
-Greenway, by birth an Englishman, and an amateur of botany.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a>
-I examined his collection with true pleasure, and the
-next day came again, since Dr. Greenway had given me leave
-to transscribe from his notes; I have included this material
-in my descriptions of American plants, relative to the medicinal
-practices of the aborigines. Five miles from Kingston
-the traveler passes the River Nottoway. The few Indians
-remaining of the tribe of that name live near Southampton
-Courthouse, forty miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having come from Kingston along this road, by the Nottoway
-and Hiksford (a wooden bridge leads over the Meherrin),
-thirteen miles beyond the Meherrin, I entered the
-State of North Carolina on the parallel thirty-six degrees
-thirty minutes. In this and other parts of Virginia, as also
-in both the Carolinas, there is found a very noxious serpent
-called by the inhabitants the Moquisson.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>&#8220;Returning from Georgia and the Carolinas, after I had
-passed the River Dan [May 11, 1786] three miles from the
-North Carolina line, I came to the plantation of Mr. W&mdash;&mdash;.
-In the evening prayers were read, but after the first verse the
-announcement was made that it was bed time, and we had
-better disperse. The next day I reached Colonel Coles&#8217;s,
-having come forty miles through Paintonborough
-and by a bridge over Banister River. I had met Colonel
-Coles at Richmond, and was received by him with great
-cordiality. When he heard that I was on my way to Philadelphia
-he gave me a letter to his brother, Colonel John
-Coles, who has a place on that road, near Charlottesville. I
-examined with pleasure, at Colonel Coles&#8217;s (on Staunton
-River) several artificial meadows of clover and rye grass, or
-wild rye, and also the Colonel&#8217;s stud.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I crossed the Staunton in a boat the morning of the 14th.
-Here I left the main road and traveled twenty miles through
-a rough country. The next day, after passing Johns&#8217; Ordinary,
-I came to Buckingham Courthouse, situated on a high
-hill, at the foot of which runs the Appomattox.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I spent the night at Mr. Patteson&#8217;s, who has a fine plantation
-near, and the following day reached James River,
-twenty miles beyond. A mile from the river a high wind
-began to blow and the sky was suddenly covered with black
-clouds.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thunder and lightning followed, and the rain and hail
-came down in streams. The horses were frightened and
-would not go on. When we reached the bank the storm had
-almost passed. We called to the ferryman, who was standing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-in his door on the other side, but he moved not a foot until
-the rain had entirely ceased, and then gave as excuse that he
-had not seen us. While we were waiting a large serpent
-came out of the river onto the banks. I killed it, and found
-it to be not unlike what they call in Lombardy the smiroldo.
-On the other side of the river, in a group of houses, stands
-the building in which the court of Albemarle County was
-formerly held. I dried my clothes here, ate dinner, and kept
-on four miles to Eniscotty, the residence of Colonel John
-Coles, who received me hospitably as his brother. The situation,
-at the top of a hill, is such that the leaves fall later
-there, and appear earlier in the spring, than in the country
-adjacent. The calicanthus grows well, with such an exposure;
-the hill is called in the neighborhood the Green Hill,
-which, indeed, in situation and fertility may be compared
-with the foothills of Monte di Brianza. The mulberry and
-the vine should flourish here.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May 18th I left Eniscotty. I crossed the Blue Ridge by
-the road through Rockfish Gap, which is not comparable,
-either in steepness or in length, to the roads over the Apennines,
-much less those over the Alps. Thick fog, followed
-by rain, compelled me to spend the day at a house on the
-divide, the proprietor of which told me much regarding the
-fertility of the lands in that region and the customs of the
-inhabitants. He informed me that many people from the
-lower country stayed at his house on their way to the springs
-in the Alleghany Mountains. Having crossed the Blue
-Mountains and the South River, I came to Stantown the
-morning of the 23d. Here I was enabled to see a mocking-bird.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-These birds are often kept in cages, and are bought
-by the English at extravagant prices. They are very scarce
-to the north, and have many times fetched three to four
-guineas at Boston. About Stantown tobacco is only beginning
-to be cultivated. They raise wheat, Turkish corn [Indian
-corn] and hemp. Heavy rains kept me at Stantown
-until the 27th, and prevented me seeing the extraordinary
-Natural Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At Middle River, a small stream usually fordable the
-year through, I found several travelers waiting for an opportunity
-to cross. I put up at a house nearby, and as often
-as the rain permitted went out, like the Egyptians, to measure
-with a rod the rise or fall of the waters.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The morning of the 29th the good man of the house advised
-me that I might now cross. A crowd of people were
-at the bank to see us make the attempt. My servant stripped
-himself and ventured in (on horseback) with the carriage.
-He had hardly left the bank when the force of the stream
-swept him down and overturned the calesche. I called to him
-from where I was standing that his only hope was to let the
-horse go, and swim; he kept by the horse, and managed to
-save both it and himself. I resolved never again, in the matter
-of ferrying a swollen stream, to trust to the advice of these
-wild pioneers. The next morning I was able to cross, and at
-the North River was taken over in a flat canoe, the horses
-swimming at the side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The following day, having passed Smith Creek, a dangerous
-stream, I came into a new road, full of roots and bad
-from the rain besides. The wheels of the calesche, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-had already been many times repaired, broke into a hundred
-pieces, and at the first smithy I determined to abandon the
-vehicle and continue the journey on horseback. Beyond the
-Shenadore, which we crossed in a canoe, the horses swimming
-behind, we fell into a marshy and rocky road, which
-leads over Mill Creek and Stony Creek. Keeping on, through
-a country of many delightful prospects, between the Blue
-and the Alleghany Mountains, we passed through Millerstown,
-the county seat of the county of Shenadore, Stowerstown,
-Newtown, and arrived at Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Winchester, for commerce, is one of the most important
-towns of Virginia. The number of the houses is about 200.
-The traffic is in wheat, flour and hemp, sold at Baltimore and
-Philadelphia, whence European manufactures are brought
-and expedited further beyond the mountains. The water at
-Winchester&mdash;limestone&mdash;has a strong effect on first being
-used. The 18th of June I left Winchester and spent that
-night at Weathers-don-Marsh, called also Charletown, and
-from there, on the following day, passed the Blue Ridge for
-the second time at Harper&#8217;s Ferry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII"><i>VII.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>DR. COKE IN VIRGINIA.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1785-1791.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Dr. Thomas Coke&mdash;The Eastern Shore&mdash;Alexandria&mdash;Swollen
-Creeks&mdash;The Pies of Mecklenburg&mdash;A
-Retired Dancing-Master&mdash;Halifax County&mdash;Following
-the Spring&mdash;Petersburg&mdash;Dan River
-Landscapes&mdash;Richmond&mdash;Port Royal.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT would be an interesting book that should give the history
-of missions in this country. That godly man, Nicholas
-Ferrar, who was so active in the affairs of the London
-Company; the good minister of Jamestown, who came
-with the first supply; the pastors of the congregations that
-settled in Massachusetts; the Jesuit fathers; the emissaries
-of the Society of Friends; the Presbyterians from the north
-of Ireland and from Scotland; Whitefield, Asbury, Coke&mdash;how
-large was the share of these men in the making of America.
-Among them, Dr. Thomas Coke was not the least. He
-was nine times in this country and covered a great part of it
-as then known, including the islands of the British and several
-of the French Indies.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Coke was born in 1747, and was graduated B. A. at
-Oxford in 1768. In 1775 he was made D. C. L., and had
-considerable prospects of church preferment, but was reckoned
-a Methodist after 1776. His bishop reproved him, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-declined to remove him. His rector dismissed him. Wesley
-employed him for a time to assist in answering his voluminous
-correspondence. In 1782 he was the first president of
-the Irish Conference, and held the office for the rest of his
-life, with a few intermissions. In 1784 he drew up a plan
-for missions, and was appointed superintendent, with episcopal
-functions, in America. That year he came to this
-country and ordained Asbury, at Baltimore, as deacon, elder
-and superintendent. Wesley was very indignant at the
-change of the title superintendent to bishop, and the confirmation
-of the change led in 1792 to the O&#8217;Kellyan schism.
-Dr. Coke possessed a private fortune of &pound;1,200 a year. He
-died in 1813 on a voyage to India. His work in the field
-of missions was cosmopolitan, and to him more than to any
-other the creation of the vast network of the Methodist foreign
-missions is due.</p>
-
-<p>September, 1784, Dr. Coke sailed from King Road, Bristol,
-for New York. In November he was on the Eastern
-Shore. Returning to Philadelphia and Baltimore, he was
-at Alexandria March 9, 1785. This great man was able to
-enjoy the country. He was born in Wales. But he does not
-seem to have been skilled in the art of cross-country horsemanship
-in all weathers. He writes (March 9th): &#8220;In my
-ride this morning to Alexandria through the woods, I have
-had one of the most romantic scenes that ever I beheld. Yesterday
-there was a very heavy fall of snow and hail and
-sleet. The fall of sleet was so great that the trees seemed to
-be trees of ice. So beautiful a sight of the kind I never
-saw before.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>There was no one to pilot Dr. Coke from Alexandria, and
-his servant had overstayed his time on a visit to the Eastern
-Shore. Between Alexandria and Colchester there were two
-runs to be crossed, both greatly swollen from the sudden
-thaw. &#8220;A friend who lives in Alexandria came with me
-over the first run, and everybody informed me I could easily
-cross the second if I crossed the first. When I came to the
-second (which was perhaps two hours after I crossed the
-first) I found that I had two streams to pass. The first I
-went over without much danger; but in crossing the second,
-which was very strong and very deep, I did not observe that
-a tree, brought down by the flood, lay across the landing
-place. I endeavored, but in vain, to drive my horse against
-the stream and go around the tree. I was afraid to turn my
-horse&#8217;s head to the stream and afraid to go back. In this
-dilemma I thought it most prudent for me to lay hold on
-the tree, and go over it, the water being shallow on the other
-side. No sooner did I execute my purpose so far as to lay
-hold of the tree (and that instant the horse was carried from
-under me) but the motion that I gave it loosened it, and
-down the stream it instantly carried me.&#8221; The tree, with
-passenger, lodged below at a little island, and then there
-floated down another tree. The doctor, besides being thoroughly
-wetted, was near losing his life. After more than a
-hundred years the suggestion may be offered that the first
-tree should never have been laid hold of. &#8220;I was now obliged
-to walk,&#8221; continues Dr. Coke, &#8220;about a mile, shivering, before
-I came to a house. The master and mistress were from
-home, and were not expected to return that night. But the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-principal negro lent me an old ragged shirt, coat, waistcoat,
-breeches, etc., and the negroes made a large fire and hung
-my clothes up to dry all night.&#8221; Before bedtime the horse,
-having got around the tree, was recovered and brought in by
-a neighbor, who supposed the rider to be drowned. &#8220;As he
-seemed to be a poor man, I gave him half a guinea. I trust
-I shall never forget so awful but very instructive a scene.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After this March welcome to Virginia, Dr. Coke passed
-through the State into North Carolina, and returned to Alexandria
-May 23d. He was at Fredericksburg and Williamsburg
-(where inquiring for a Methodist he was told there was
-one in the town, who proved to be &#8220;a good old Presbyterian&#8221;
-and hospitable), at Smithfield and Portsmouth, in Mecklenburg
-County, at New Glasgow, towards the mountains, and
-in Culpeper County. These sojournings are specified. There
-was a bad season in May that year, and near Alexandria the
-creeks were again difficult at the crossings. It was observed
-on this, the first tour, that in Mecklenburg County &#8220;they
-have a great variety of fruit pies&mdash;peach, apple, pear and
-cranberry, and puddings&mdash;very often.&#8221; About New Glasgow
-(on Buffalo River, just north of Amherst Courthouse)
-Dr. Coke remarks: &#8220;The wolves, I find, frequently come to
-the fences at night, howling in an awful manner; and sometimes
-they seize upon a straying sheep. At a distance was
-the Blue Ridge, an amazing chain of mountains. I prefer
-this country to any other part of America&mdash;it is so like
-Wales, my native country. And it is far more populous
-than I expected.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>In April, 1787, Dr. Coke was a second time in Virginia,
-scarcely a fortnight. He had come from England to the
-Island of Antigua, and sailed from St. Eustatia in a large
-Dutch ship, February 10th, for Charleston. &#8220;In the course
-of our journey through North Carolina I preached at the
-house of a gentleman near Salisbury, who was formerly a
-dancing-master, and has amassed a considerable fortune,
-with which he has purchased a large estate. In traveling
-through Virginia our rides were so long that we were frequently
-on horseback till midnight after preaching in the
-middle of the day. Since I left Charleston I have got into
-my old romantic way of life, of preaching in the midst of
-great forests, with scores and sometimes hundreds of horses
-tied to the trees, which adds much solemnity to the scene.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the course of my journey through this State I visited
-the county of Halifax, where I met with a little persecution
-on my former visit. I am now informed that soon after I
-left the county on my former tour a bill was presented against
-me as a seditious person before the grand jury, and was
-found by the jury, and ninety persons had engaged to pursue
-me and bring me back again. Another bill was also presented
-in one of the neighboring counties, but was thrown
-out. Many of the people, I find, imagined that I would not
-venture amongst them again. However, when I came they
-all received me with perfect peace and quietness. Indeed, I
-now acknowledge that however just my sentiments may be
-concerning slavery, it was ill-judged of me to deliver them
-from the pulpit. Many of the inhabitants at Richmond, I
-was informed, said that I would not dare to venture into that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-town. But they did not know me, for I am a plain, blunt
-man, that goes directly on. However, instead of opposition,
-the Governor of the State, who resides there, ordered the
-Capitol to be opened to me, and a very respectable and very
-attentive congregation I was favored with.&#8221; On the way
-from Richmond to Alexandria there was a plot laid for Dr.
-Coke by a company of agreeable men at one of the inns. &#8220;In
-the first dish of tea there was a little rum; in the second a
-little more, but the third was so strong that on our complaining
-of a conspiracy, it seemed as if the rum had sprung into
-our tea of itself, for both company and waiters solemnly protested
-they were innocent. On the last day of April Mr.
-Asbury and I arrived at Baltimore.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The following year, 1788 (the Atlantic seems to have been
-but a ferry even then), Dr. Coke was in Virginia again for
-a few days, coming, as in 1787, from the West Indies by
-Charleston. &#8220;In traveling from North Carolina to Virginia
-we were favored with one of the most beautiful prospects I
-ever beheld. The country, as far as we could see from the
-top of a hill, was ornamented with a great number of peach
-orchards, the peach trees being all in full bloom, and displaying
-a diversity of most beautiful colors&mdash;blue, purple and
-violet. On the opposite side of a beautiful vale which lay
-at the foot of a hill, ran the River Yeadkin, reflecting the
-rays of the sun from its broad, placid stream; and the mountains
-which bounded the view formed a very fine background
-for the completing of the prospect. The two days following
-we rode on the ridge of a long hill, with a large vale on each
-side, and mountains rising above mountains for twenty, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-sometimes, I suppose, for forty miles on each hand. In Halifax
-County, Virginia, where I met with much persecution
-four years ago, almost all the great people of the county came
-in their chariots and other carriages to hear me, and behaved
-with great propriety: there were not less than five colonels
-in the congregation. On the 18th of April we opened our
-first Virginia Conference for the State of Virginia in the
-town of Petersburgh. From Petersburgh we set off for our
-second Virginia Conference, which we held in the town of
-Leesburgh, visiting Richmond by the way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Coke&#8217;s fourth and last journey in Virginia (the last,
-that is, recorded in his book, published 1793) was again in
-April, year 1791. As in 1787 and 1788, the approach
-was from the south. &#8220;On Monday, the 11th of April, we
-arrived at Dickes&#8217;s Ferry, in Virginia. Our ride on that day
-was remarkably pleasing. The variety arising from the intermixture
-of woods and plantations along the sides of the
-broad, rocky river Dan, near which we rode most part of the
-time, could not but be a source of great pleasure to an admirer
-of the beauties of nature. Hitherto (April 15th) I
-might be said to have traveled with the spring. As I moved
-from South to North the spring was, I think, as far advanced
-when I was in Georgia as when I came into Virginia. But
-now it has evidently got the start of me. The oaks have
-spread out their leaves, and the dogwood, whose bark is very
-medicinal, and whose innumerable white flowers form one of
-the finest ornaments of the forest, is in full bloom. The deep
-green of the pines, the bright transparent green of the oaks,
-and the fine white of the flowers of the dogwood, with other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-trees and shrubs, form such a complication of beauties as are
-indescribable to those who have only lived in countries that
-are almost entirely cultivated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For about 800 miles which I have rode since I landed in
-South Carolina, we have had hardly any rain. But this day,
-the 16th, we were wetted to the skin. However, we at last
-happily found our way to the house of a friend by the preachers&#8217;
-mark&mdash;the split bush.&#8221; This circumstance may appear
-to many immaterial; however, as it may convey some idea
-of the mode in which the preachers are obliged to travel in
-this country, I will just enlarge upon it. The method was
-to split two or three bushes, at the junction of several roads,
-along the road that should be followed; very useful to the
-itinerant at the formation of new circuits in the forest. Dr.
-Coke observes: &#8220;In one of the circuits the wicked discovered
-the secret, and split bushes in wrong places on purpose to
-deceive the preachers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The character of this great man appears in his book, written
-without artifice. The people were glad to see him. &#8220;On
-the 20th of April we opened our conference at Petersburgh.
-April 24th I preached in Richmond, in the Capitol where the
-Assembly sits, to the most dressy congregation I ever saw in
-America. However, they gave great attention. In the afternoon
-I rode to Colonel Clayton&#8217;s, about twenty-five miles
-from Richmond. April 20th I came among the cedar trees.
-This evening we arrived at Port Royal, where a numerous
-and very dressy congregation had been waiting for us about
-two hours with wonderful patience. A gentleman of the
-name of Hipkins, a capital merchant of the town, sent us a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-genteel invitation to sup with him, and lodge at his house. I
-accepted of it. Soon after I came in he observed that the
-Philadelphia paper had informed the public of the death of
-Mr. Wesley.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> I gave no credit to the account, but, however,
-intreated the favour of seeing the paper. He sent immediately
-to a neighboring merchant who took in that paper, and
-about 10 o&#8217;clock the melancholy record arrived. I evidently
-saw by the account that it was too true.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The next morning I set off for New York, in order to be
-in time for the British packet. At Alexandria the news was
-confirmed by a letter from London. On the 29th I crossed
-the run of water called Akatenke, down which I was carried
-by the flood. We were now come into a country abounding
-with singing birds. But alas! I could take no pleasure in
-them, the death of my venerable friend had cast such a shade
-of melancholy over my heart. The night being very dark, it
-was with great difficulty that my friend, who traveled with
-me, and myself found our way from Alexandria to Blaidensburg.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII"><i>VIII.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>A SUMMER AT BATH.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1791.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Captain Bayard, of the Artillery&mdash;From Baltimore
-to Bath&mdash;Bath described&mdash;Tea at Bath&mdash;Irish
-Comedians&mdash;Valley Lands&mdash;Winchester&mdash;Colonel
-P.&mdash;The Sabbath in America&mdash;Land Merchants.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN the year VI (1798) there was published at Paris a book
-written by a retired captain of artillery, Ferdinand Marie
-Bayard, described on the title page, &#8220;A Journey Into the
-Interior of the United States, to Bath, Winchester, the Shenandoah
-Valley, etc., etc., During the Summer of 1791.&#8221; It
-is strange that this book has not been translated. It is interesting
-as a sort of sentimental journey of a very intelligent
-man (member of the Society of Sciences Letters and Arts at
-Paris), who visited a spot not often mentioned by the early
-traveler in this country. Captain Bayard was born at Moulins
-la Marche in 1768, and was living in 1836. He was in
-his twenty-third year the summer of 1791. He had already
-retired from the army and become a traveler in various parts
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Bayard seems to have landed at Baltimore, with
-his wife and small boy. He remarks, &#8220;The months of June,
-July and August are bad for children if kept in town in this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-country. Bath, situated 120 miles from Baltimore, and near
-the Valley of the Shenandoah, offered a stopping place in the
-country and a point of departure from which to visit that fertile
-region, where, beneath skies almost always serene, the inhabitants
-cultivate a generous soil, which rewards liberally
-the slightest efforts of human industry. I wished to see this
-promised land, from the bosom of which an innumerable population
-is beginning to arise, prosperous and content, and
-already passing the limits of the Valley to occupy the vast
-spaces beyond. Besides, before returning home, I desired to
-gain a knowledge of the American people, and this I could
-better compass in the country than in the towns. For the trip
-I hired a carriage at Baltimore, at 41 francs the passenger,
-baggage included. The owner was the driver, and a very
-skilful one, as we learned on the road, which is often abominable
-and extremely dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Four miles south of the Potomac [by way of Ellicott&#8217;s
-Lower Mill, Ellicott&#8217;s Upper Mill, the Red House, the Monocacy
-River, Fredericktown, and Middletown] we arrived at
-Bath, in Virginia. The town is situated in a triangular and
-very narrow gorge. The mountain to the west is high and
-steep, and in the month of March snow and earth become
-loosened from the declivity and descend in avalanches. The
-houses built next to this dangerous mountain are protected
-by heavy palisades. Several people, having neglected the precaution,
-have had their houses engulfed. The residents boast
-of the climate&mdash;the winter not too cold, and the heat of summer
-moderate. Bath has two public buildings&mdash;the theatre
-and the bathhouse. The first is a log edifice, and the second<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-a framed barrack, partitioned into eight cells, in each of
-which there are steps arranged for the convenience of the
-bathers. The spring is hard by. The water is dispensed in
-a goblet by the man in charge. The water is clear, lukewarm,
-and insipid, but very efficacious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have seen many come to Bath fearfully rheumatic, who
-had to be carried to the spring at first, and in three weeks
-were able to walk with a crutch. Bath was formerly called
-Warm Springs. The name was changed in deference to the
-English resort. This imitative mania is a bad symptom, and
-augurs ill for that nation, whose name is dear to lovers of
-liberty everywhere. At Bath the young women ride about a
-great deal, and are excellent horsewomen. It is to be remarked
-that their physiognomy is distinct among American
-women. During the fall, boats come up the river from Alexandria
-and Georgetown, and return laden with grain. After
-that season there is no more traffic by water until the spring,
-and if any one has neglected to provide himself he must make
-a trip to Winchester for supplies, thirty-nine miles off. The
-inhabitants of this region are very fond of the English boxing
-match. Generally a bruiser (breaker of bones) is in
-charge of these combats, who sees to the strict carrying out
-of all the regulations.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At our boarding house (excellent fare) there were about
-forty people, among them two Virginians&mdash;Madame B. and
-Madame A.&mdash;who spoke French tolerably well. Madame B.
-had read the works of Swedenborg, and entertained us with
-descriptions drawn from those mystical books. There were
-several very pious people at our boarding house, one of whom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-had a theory that eating was not to satisfy the appetite. I
-noticed that he ate a great deal. At Bath it is the custom to
-drink tea at 5 o&#8217;clock. Everything is very ceremonious. At
-the right of the lady dispensing tea are ranged in a half circle
-all the other ladies. A profound silence follows the entrance
-of each invited guest; all the ladies as grave as judges
-on the bench. A small acajou table is placed before the dispenser
-of tea. Silver pots contain the coffee and the hot
-water, which serves to weaken the tea or to receive the cups.
-A domestic brings on a silver waiter the cup, the sugar dish,
-the cream pot, the butter balls, the thin slices of ham. A
-Frenchman is embarrassed at the necessity of watching his
-cup and saucer in one hand, and with the other receiving a
-tart or a slice of very thin ham.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In sending back the cup the spoon must be placed in a
-manner to indicate whether you will begin again, or have finished
-drinking. A Frenchman on one occasion, unfamiliar
-with English and ignorant of this polite sign language, was
-overcome at seeing the sixteenth cup arrive, which, having
-emptied, he hit upon the device of stowing it in his pocket,
-dreading a seventeenth. The tea dispensed and consumed,
-there are songs. Mademoiselle L. was the accomplished artist
-at Bath. Her favorite song was one of a certain Patrick,
-who, absent, was still to be remembered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We had at Bath a troupe of Irish comedians, alternately
-emperors, shepherds, clowns, and no doubt very badly fed.
-The young man who played the lover found great difficulty
-in pronouncing his consonants. A tall, thin man played the
-tragic role of enamored prince. A blonde soubrette was solemnly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-coquettish. The others of the troupe are scarcely to
-be recalled. We had tragedy, comedy, comic opera, and farce.
-Every week there was a dance. Billiards was an amusement,
-and there was play at the taverns, particularly after the arrival
-of a gentleman who kept a Pharaoh bank. He was
-treated with great courtesy, and I heard nothing said against
-his probity. Nevertheless, it happens that the planter who
-arrives at Bath with equipage and attendants goes home with
-nothing but a horse, and a very mean horse.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hired a horse to go to Winchester. For more than half
-of the way the country is wild. As you draw nearer the town
-in the Valley, many well-stocked farms appear, the land being
-very fertile. On the slope there range strong, long-wooled
-sheep, not afraid of wolves during the summer. Such war
-is made upon the wolves that even in this heavily timbered
-country there is little danger from them except when the snow
-lies deep upon the ground. It is a magnificent country about
-Winchester. The men are tall, well-made, of strong constitutions,
-and ruddy. The horses and cattle have the eye and
-the gait of health. I stopped at a tavern kept by a German,
-who has made a fortune in the business. I was treated with
-consideration, for having lived at Strasbourg and for having
-crossed the Rhine. At this tavern there is a good cook, the
-meat is excellent, there is game and fresh-water fish; the
-house is well furnished, wines of every country, good linen,
-good beds, the rooms well lighted, and the whole at a reasonable
-price. The day after I arrived there came to the tavern
-an old gentleman limping from the gout. I mentioned
-Thomas Payne to him and the &#8216;Rights of Man.&#8217; He fixed me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-with his eye, out the air with his stick, and said vehemently
-that he wished Thomas Payne was hanged. He left me, and
-at the same time I got up, whistling the air of &#8216;Ca Ira.&#8217; I
-learned the cause of his behavior: he had held a lucrative
-office before the war, and was an incurable Tory.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A Mr. Smith, who lives a mile from Winchester, asked
-me to dine. I spent the time very agreeably there. From the
-liberality of his opinions I was led to discuss the political situation
-of America with considerable frankness. Mr. Smith
-and his brother-in-law accompanied me back to Winchester,
-discoursing by the way of their fortunate lot, of the progress
-of agriculture, and of the richness of the inexhaustible soil,
-which yields an abundance to the inhabitants of this beautiful
-Valley.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had a letter of introduction to Colonel P., formerly aid
-de camp to General Washington. Colonel P. lives some sixteen
-miles from Winchester, greatly esteemed for his public
-and private virtues. On the way to his house I passed through
-a country of abundant harvests, fat pastures and well peopled;
-where there was forest the trees were of a magnificent
-growth, and in the intervals a deep green turf invited the
-traveler to repose. It was hot. I dismounted beneath a poplar
-tree, the white flower of which offered its corolla to the
-bee and the humming bird. The coolness of the place, the
-delicious perfumes exhaled by the acacias, the ivy, and the
-flowers springing from the sod, all gave to the senses that
-calm which is the precursor of sleep; but ideas of the happiness
-prepared for generations to come in this land of peace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-and plenty, thoughts of the future greatness of the American
-people, supplied a reverie sweeter than that of dreams.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not far from the house of Colonel P., I met a large man
-on horseback, whose open countenance was an invitation to
-talk. He was dressed like a farmer during the busy season.
-I asked him the way. He showed me the road, and continued
-his path without adding a word to the precise answer he had
-given me. Arrived at the house, I found the overseer near
-the barn directing some negroes who were shelling corn. I
-had not been long in the house, a structure of logs, and very
-comfortable, when there entered the same man I had met in
-the road, none other than Colonel P. himself. I presented
-my letter, which he quickly read, and receiving me in the
-most friendly manner, offered me refreshments. We talked
-of the war, and he sketched for me in brief its causes. At
-dinner I drank old whiskey distilled on the place. The Colonel
-spoke with pleasure of his farm operations: he makes
-everything at home. He showed me the plan of his 1,000
-acres, at the centre of which he will build a large and commodious
-house. At the present time his outbuildings are more
-carefully constructed than his mansion. I quitted Colonel
-P. at sunset, much pleased with him, and grateful for his
-kind attentions.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a> Shortly after, the moon appeared over the
-mountains to the south, and cast a light over the valley. The
-whippoorwill commenced its plaints, almost extinguished by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-the various song of the melodious mocking-bird. The blacks
-were coming in from the fields singing behind the slow horses
-fatigued with the day&#8217;s work.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The next day at Winchester I went to church, a frame
-building, and hitched around it horses of price well caparisoned.
-The negroes sat in the gallery, dressed in their Sunday
-clothes. Below were their masters and mistresses, whose
-appearance proclaimed them alive to the sanctity of the place
-and to the solemnity of the ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The minister, a Presbyterian, was the grandson of a
-Frenchman. Coming back from church I observed that the
-doors of all the houses were closed. They remained so
-throughout the day. Mrs. B. and her daughters retired after
-dinner to read chapters of the Old and the New Testament.
-Throughout the United States this is the manner of observing
-Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Valley of the Shenandoah is a most prosperous and
-healthful region. Tobacco, corn, flax and wheat are the principal
-crops. Twelve miles from Winchester I could have
-bought land for 50 shillings the acre, but nearer the town the
-price of cleared land is from three to four pounds. Several
-Europeans who have settled hereabouts have not succeeded
-well, and for the reason that they failed to discard European
-customs. It should not be overlooked that the price of labor
-and that of produce is in reverse proportion to what prevails
-in Europe. Here labor is high and market values, net, are
-low. An especial error of foreigners is the attempt to improve
-too fast. A Frenchman who has bought 300 acres of
-land thinks he has a &#8216;property,&#8217; and goes to work on the grand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-scale. What with building and embellishments he is very apt
-to go bankrupt. There are men in this region who have made
-fortunes in land speculations. There is not a tavern at Winchester
-where land merchants may not be found. They are
-as enthusiastic in their offers as the women who sell toothpicks
-at the doors of Paris restaurants and caf&eacute;s. An especially
-pleasing feature of their preliminaries is that they
-assure you their only motive is to make your fortune. I met
-one of these merchants who desired to enrich me, <i>nolens
-volens</i>, by selling me land at an excessively high price.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Winchester is destined to be a manufacturing town, and
-to a degree incalculable as soon as communication with the
-Atlantic coast shall have been established by means of the
-rivers or by canal. Already there is a famous carriage works
-at Winchester; and boots, shoes, and saddles are made there,
-which, for use and for style of workmanship, equal the
-product of the older cities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I set out from Winchester for Bath at 4 o&#8217;clock in the
-morning, in order to be on the mountain before the sun was
-too high. A light fog covered the Valley, resembling transparent
-gauze, through which appeared the tops of trees,
-houses and cabins, the cabin chimneys already smoking. I
-observed that the squirrels were early awake. Coming to
-Bath, I found the great subject of talk was a duel lately
-fought and announced in the <i>Gazette</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX"><i>IX.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>ISAAC WELD.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1796.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>Hoe&#8217;s Ferry&mdash;Freshwater Oysters&mdash;Vicissitudes of
-Ferriage&mdash;By-Ways and Hospitality&mdash;The
-Northern Neck&mdash;Tappahannock&mdash;A Forest Fire&mdash;From
-Urbanna to Gloucester&mdash;Norfolk&mdash;Richmond&mdash;The
-Mocking-Bird&mdash;Frogs&mdash;Columbia&mdash;The
-Green Springs&mdash;The Southwest Mountain&mdash;Monticello&mdash;Lynchburgh&mdash;New
-London&mdash;Botetourt
-County&mdash;The Lower Valley&mdash;Lexington,
-Staunton, Winchester.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>1.</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE following are the observations of young Isaac Weld,
-of Dublin. He was on his way from Philadelphia,
-and stopped at the Falls of the Potomac:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From hence I followed the course of the river downwards
-as far as George Town, where I again crossed it, and after
-passing through the Federal city, proceeded along the Maryland
-shore of the river to Piscatoway, and afterwards to Port
-Tobacco. In the neighborhood of Piscatoway there are several
-very fine views of the Virginian shore; Mount Vernon
-in particular appears to great advantage. From Port Tobacco
-to Hoe&#8217;s Ferry on the Potowmac River, the country is
-flat and sandy and wears a most dreary aspect. Nothing is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-to be seen here for miles together but extensive plains that
-have been worn out by the culture of tobacco, overgrown with
-yellow sedge and interspersed with groves of pine and cedar
-trees, the dark green colour of which forms a curious contrast
-with the yellow of the sedge. In the midst of these
-plains are the remains of several good houses.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Such a number of roads in different directions cross over
-these flats, upon none of which is there anything like a direction
-post, and the face of a human being is so rarely met with
-that it is scarcely possible for a traveler to find out the direct
-way at once. Instead of twelve miles, the distance by the
-straight road from Port Tobacco to the ferry, my horse had
-certainly traveled twice the number before we got there. After
-having waited for two hours and a half for my breakfast, the
-most I could procure was two eggs, a pint of milk and a bit
-of cake bread, scarcely as big as my hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After having got into the ferry-boat the man of the house,
-as if conscious that he had given me very bad fare, told me
-that there was a bank of oysters in the river, close to which it
-was necessary to pass, and that if I chose to stop the men
-would procure abundance of them for me. The curiosity of
-getting oysters in fresh water tempted me to stop, and the
-men got near a bushel of them in a very few minutes. These
-oysters are extremely good when cooked, but very disagreeable
-eaten raw; indeed all the oysters found in America are,
-in the opinion of most Europeans, very indifferent and tasteless
-when raw. The Americans, on their part, find still
-greater fault with our oysters, which, they say, are not fit to
-be eaten in any shape, because they taste of copper.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>&#8220;The river at the ferry is about three miles wide, and with
-particular winds the waves rise very high; in these cases they
-always tie the horses, for fear of accidents, before they set
-out; indeed with the small open boats which they make use
-of it is what ought always to be done, for in this country gusts
-of wind rise suddenly. Having omitted this precaution, the
-boat was on the point of being overset two or three different
-times as I crossed over. On the Virginian shore, opposite to
-the ferry house from whence I sailed, there are several large
-creeks, which fall into the Potowmac. As I wished to go
-beyond these creeks I therefore hired the boatman to carry
-me ten miles down the Potowmac River in the ferry-boat,
-past the mouths of them all; this he accordingly did, and
-in the afternoon I landed on the beach, not a little pleased
-at finding that I had reached the shore without having been
-under the necessity of swimming any part of the way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The part of the country where I landed appeared to be a
-perfect wilderness. Taking a road, however, as nearly as I
-could guess, in a direct line from the river up the country,
-at the end of an hour I came upon a narrow road, which led
-to a large old brick house, somewhat similar to those I had
-met with on the Maryland shore. On inquiring here from
-two blacks for a tavern, I was told there was no such thing in
-this part of the country. In the course of five or six miles I
-saw several more of the same sort of old brick houses, and
-the evening now drawing toward a close, I began to feel the
-necessity of going to some one of them. I was considering
-within myself which house I should visit, when a lively old
-negro, mounted on a little horse, came galloping after me. On<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-applying to him for information on the subject, he took great
-pains to assure me that I should be well received at any of
-the houses I might stop at, and strongly recommended me to
-proceed under his guidance to his master&#8217;s house, which was
-but a mile farther on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Masser will be so glad to see you,&#8217; added he; &#8216;nothing
-can be like.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I accordingly took the negro&#8217;s advice and rode to the
-dwelling of his master, made him acquainted with my situation,
-and begged I might be allowed to put my horse in his
-stable for the night. The reception, however, which this gentleman
-gave me differed so materially from what I had been
-led to expect, that I was happy at hearing from him that there
-was a good tavern at the distance of two miles. I apologized
-for the liberty I had taken, and made the best of my way to it.
-Instead of two miles, however, this tavern proved to be about
-three times as far off. The next day I arrived at Stratford,
-the residence of a gentleman, who, when at Philadelphia,
-had invited me to pass some time with him whenever I visited
-Virginia. Some of the neighbouring gentlemen dined
-here together, and having related to them my adventures on
-arriving in Virginia, the whole company expressed the greatest
-astonishment. Every one seemed eager to know the name
-of the person who had given me such a reception, and begged
-me to tell it. I did so, and the Virginians were satisfied, for
-the person was a Scotsman, and had, it seems, removed but a
-short time before from some town or other to the plantation
-on which I found him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>&#8220;This part of Virginia is called the Northern Neck, and
-is remarkable for having been the birthplace of many of the
-principal characters which distinguished themselves in America,
-during the war, by their great talents.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Though many of the houses in the Northern Neck are
-built of brick and stone, in the style of the old English manor
-houses, yet the greater number there and throughout Virginia
-are of wood, amongst which are all those that have been built
-of late years. This is chiefly owing to a prevailing, though
-absurd, opinion, that wooden houses are the healthiest, because
-the inside walls never appear damp. Tobacco is not
-near so much cultivated now as it was formerly, the great
-demand for wheat having induced most of the planters to
-raise that grain in preference. Those who raise tobacco and
-Indian corn are called planters, and those who cultivate small
-grain, farmers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Towards the end of April I crossed the Rappahannock
-River, which bounds the Northern Neck on one side, to a
-small town called Tappahannock, or Hobb&#8217;s Hole, containing
-about 100 houses. Before the war this town was in a much
-more flourishing state than at present; that unfortunate contest
-ruined the trade of this little place, as it did that of most
-of the seaport towns in Virginia. The Rappahannock is
-about three-quarters of a mile wide opposite the town. Sharks
-are very often seen in this river. What is very remarkable,
-the fish are all found on the side of the river next to the town.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I passed through this part of the country, from Tappahannock
-to Urbanna, I observed many traces of fires in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-woods, which are frequent, it seems in the spring of the year.
-I was a witness myself to one of these fires, that happened in
-the Northern Neck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The day had been remarkably serene; in the afternoon,
-however, it became sultry, and streams of hot air were perceptible
-now and then, the usual tokens of a gust. About 5
-o&#8217;clock the horizon towards the north became dark, and a
-terrible whirlwind arose. I was standing with some gentlemen
-on an eminence at the time, and perceived it gradually
-advancing. As it came along it leveled the fence rails, and
-unroofed the sheds for the cattle. We made every endeavor,
-but in vain, to get to a place of shelter; in the course of two
-minutes the whirlwind overtook us; the shock was violent; it
-was hardly possible to stand, and difficult to breathe. The
-whirlwind passed over in about three minutes, but a storm,
-accompanied by heavy thunder and lightning, succeeded. On
-looking round immediately after the whirlwind had passed a
-prodigious column of fire now appeared in a part of the wood
-where some brushwood had been burning; in many places
-the flames rose considerably above the summit of the trees,
-which were of a large growth. It was a tremendous, and at
-the same time sublime sight. The negroes in the surrounding
-plantations were all assembled with their hoes, and
-watches were stationed at every corner to give the alarm if
-the fire appeared elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The country between Urbanna and Gloucester is neither so
-flat nor so sandy as that bordering upon the Rappahannock.
-The trees, chiefly pines, are of very large size, and afford
-abundance of turpentine, which is extracted from them in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-large quantities by the inhabitants, principally, however, for
-home consumption. Gloucester contains only ten or twelve
-houses. There are remains here of one or two redoubts
-thrown up during the war. The town of York consists of
-about seventy houses, an Episcopalian church, and a gaol.
-Great quantities of tobacco were formerly inspected here;
-very little, however, is now raised in the neighborhood. The
-little that is sent for inspection is reckoned to be of the very
-best quality, and is all engaged for the London market. In
-the town the houses bear evident marks of the siege; and the
-inhabitants will not, on any account, suffer the holes perforated
-by the cannon balls to be repaired on the outside. Till
-within a year or two the broken shells themselves remained;
-but the New England men that traded to York, finding they
-would sell well as old iron, dug them up and carried them
-away in their ships. Twelve miles from York, to the westward,
-stands Williamsburg. The town consists of about
-1,200 inhabitants, and the society in it is thought to be more
-extensive and more genteel at the same time than what is to
-be met with in any other place of its size in America. No
-manufactures are carried on here, and scarcely any trade.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From Williamsburgh to Hampton the country is flat and
-uninteresting. From this town there is a regular ferry to
-Norfolk, across Hampton Roads, eighteen miles over. Norfolk
-would be a place of much greater trade than it is at
-present were it not for the impolicy of some laws which have
-existed in the State of Virginia. One of these laws, so injurious
-to commerce, was passed during the war. It was
-enacted that all merchants and planters in Virginia, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-owed money to British merchants, should be exonerated from
-their debts if they paid the money due into the public treasury
-instead of sending it to Great Britain. The treasury at
-first did not become much richer in consequence of this law.
-However, when the continental paper money became so much
-depreciated many of the people began to look upon the measure
-in a different point of view. In vain did the British merchant
-sue for his money when hostilities were terminated; he
-could obtain no redress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another law, baneful in the highest degree to the trading
-interest, is one which renders all landed property inviolable.
-Owing to this law they have not yet been enabled to get a
-bank established at Norfolk. Repeated attempts have been
-made in the State Assembly to get this last mentioned law
-repealed, but they have all proved ineffectual. The debates
-have been very warm on the business.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The houses in Norfolk are about 500 in number. These
-have all been erected since the year 1776, when the town was
-totally destroyed by fire. The losses suffered on that occasion
-were estimated at &pound;300,000. Amongst the inhabitants are
-great numbers of Scotch and French. The latter are almost
-entirely from the West Indies, and principally from St. Domingo.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a bit of fodder was to be had on the whole road from
-Norfolk to Richmond, excepting at two places. Oats were
-not to be had on any terms. Great crowds were assembled at
-Petersburgh, as I passed through, attracted to it by the horse
-races, which take place four or five times in the year. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-only particular circumstance in their mode of carrying on
-their races in Virginia is that they always run to the left.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Richmond is situated immediately below the falls of
-James River, on the north side. The river opposite to the
-town is crossed by the means of two bridges, which are separated
-by an island. The bridge, leading from the south shore
-to the island, is built upon fifteen large flat-bottomed boats,
-kept stationary in the river by strong chains and anchors. The
-bows of them, which are very sharp, are put against the
-stream, and fore and aft there is a strong beam, upon which
-the piers of the bridge rest. The bridges thrown across this
-river, opposite the town, have repeatedly been carried away;
-it is thought idle, therefore, to go to the expense of a better
-one. The strongest stone bridge could hardly resist the bodies
-of ice that are hurried down the falls by the floods on the
-breaking up of a severe winter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Though the houses in Richmond are not more than 700
-in number, yet they extend nearly one mile and a half along
-the banks of the river. The lower part of the town is built
-close to the water, and opposite to it lies the shipping. This
-is connected with the upper town by a long street, which runs
-parallel to the course of the river, about fifty yards removed
-from the banks. The situation of the upper town is very
-pleasing; it stands on an elevated spot, and commands a fine
-prospect of the falls of the river and of the adjacent country
-on the opposite side. The best houses stand here, and also
-the Capitol, or State house. From the opposite side of the
-river this building appears extremely well.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>&#8220;A canal is completed at the north side of the falls, which
-renders the navigation complete from Richmond to the Blue
-Mountains, and at particular times of the year boats with
-light burthens can proceed still higher up. In the river, opposite
-the town, are no more than seven feet of water, but
-ten miles lower down about twelve feet. Most of the vessels
-trading to Richmond unload the greatest part of their cargoes
-at this place into river craft, and then proceed up to the town.
-Trade is carried on here chiefly by foreigners.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<h3>2.</h3>
-
-<p>Isaac Weld, who spent about two years in this country,
-from 1795 to 1797, returned to Ireland &#8220;without entertaining
-the slightest wish to revisit the American continent.&#8221;
-During his visit he saw a great deal, wrote a very good book
-after going home (an extraordinary book as the work of a
-very young man), and it is a matter of congratulation that he
-came. Weld was a little past twenty-one when he landed at
-Philadelphia. He was born in Dublin, of influential family
-connections, and had the advantage in his youth of an acquaintance
-with the Martineaus, those exceptionally intelligent
-people. Isaac Weld died in 1856. He had been for
-years vice-president of the Royal Dublin Society, and was
-famous as a topographer. Some account has already been
-given of his tour through the Northern Neck to Richmond.
-The observations continue:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having stayed at Richmond somewhat longer than a week,
-which I found absolutely necessary, if it had only been to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-recruit the strength of my horses, I proceeded in a north-westerly
-direction towards the Southwest or Green Mountains.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The first week in May had arrived; the trees had obtained
-a considerable part of their foliage, and the air in the woods
-was perfumed with the fragrant smell of numberless flowers
-and flowering shrubs. The music of the birds was also delightful.
-It is thought that in Virginia the singing birds are
-finer than what are to be met with on any other part of the
-continent, as the climate is more congenial to them. The
-notes of the mocking-bird, or Virginian nightingale, are in
-particular most melodious. It is a remark, however, made by
-Catesby, and which appears to be a very just one, that the
-birds in America are much inferior to those in Europe in
-the melody of their notes, but that they are superior in point
-of plumage. I know of no American bird that has the rich,
-mellow note of our blackbird, the sprightly note of the skylark,
-or the sweet and plaintive one of the nightingale. After
-having listened to the mocking-bird, there is no novelty in
-hearing the song of any other bird in the country; and indeed,
-their songs are, for the most part, but very simple in themselves,
-though combined they are pleasing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The frogs in America, it must here be observed, make a
-most singular noise, some of them absolutely whistling, whilst
-others croak so loudly that it is difficult at times to tell
-whether the sound proceeds from a calf or a frog; I have
-more than once been deceived by the noise when walking in
-a meadow. These last frogs are called bullfrogs; they mostly
-keep in pairs, and are never found but where there is good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-water; their bodies are from four to seven inches long, and
-their legs are in proportion; they are extremely active, and
-take prodigious leaps.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The first town I reached on going towards the mountains
-was Columbia, or Point of Fork, as it is called in the neighborhood.
-It is situated about sixty miles above Richmond,
-at the confluence of Rivanna and Fluvanna Rivers, which
-united form James River. This is a flourishing little place,
-containing about forty houses, and a warehouse for the inspection
-of tobacco. On the neck of land between the two
-rivers, just opposite to the town, is the magazine of the State,
-in which are kept 12,000 stand of arms, and about thirty tons
-of powder. The low lands bordering upon the river in this
-neighborhood are extremely valuable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From Columbia to the Green Springs, about twenty miles
-farther on, the road runs almost wholly through a pine forest,
-and is very lonely. Night came on before I got to the end of
-it, and, as very commonly happens with travelers in this part
-of the world, I soon lost my way. A light, seen through the
-trees, seemed to indicate that a house was not far off. My
-servant eagerly rode up to it, but the poor fellow&#8217;s consternation
-was great indeed when he observed it moving from him,
-presently coming back, and then with swiftness departing
-again into the woods. I was at a loss for a time myself to
-account for the appearance. I found it proceeded from the
-firefly. As the summer came on these flies appeared every
-night. After a light shower in the afternoon I have seen the
-woods sparkling with them in every quarter.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>&#8220;After wandering about till it was near 11 o&#8217;clock, a plantation
-at last appeared, and having got fresh information respecting
-the road from the negroes in the quarter, who generally
-sit up half the night, and over a fire in all seasons, I
-again set out for the Green Springs. With some difficulty I
-at last found the way, and arrived there about midnight. The
-hour was so unseasonable that the people at the tavern were
-very unwilling to open their doors. Besides the tavern and
-the quarters of the slaves, there is but one more building at
-this place. This is a large farmhouse, where people that resort
-to the springs are accommodated with lodgings about as
-good as those at the tavern. The springs are just on the margin
-of the wood at the bottom of a slope which begins at the
-houses, and are covered with a few boards merely to keep the
-leaves from falling in. The waters are chalybeate, and are
-drank chiefly by persons from the low country, whose constitutions
-have been relaxed by the heats of summer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having breakfasted in the morning at this place, I proceeded
-on my journey up the Southwest Mountain. In the
-course of the day&#8217;s ride I observed a great number of snakes,
-which were now beginning to come forth from their holes. I
-killed a black one that I found sleeping, stretched across the
-road; it was five feet in length. The black snake is more
-commonly met with than any other in this part of America.
-It is wonderfully fond of milk, and is frequently found in
-the dairies, which in Virginia are for the most part in low
-situations like cellars.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Southwest Mountains run nearly parallel to the Blue
-Ridge, and are the first which you come to on going up the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-country from the sea coast in Virginia. The soil here changes
-to a deep argilaceous earth, particularly well suited to the
-culture of small grain and clover, and produces abundant
-crops. As this earth, however, does not absorb the water very
-quickly the farmer is exposed to great losses from heavy falls
-of rain. On the sides of the mountain, where the ground has
-been worn out with the culture of tobacco, and the water has
-been suffered to run in the same channel for a length of time,
-it is surprising to see the depth of the ravines, or gullies, as
-they are called. However, the country in the neighborhood
-of these mountains is far more populous than that which lies
-towards Richmond; and there are many persons that even
-consider it to be the garden of the United States. The salubrity
-of the climate is equal also to that of any part of the
-United States; and the inhabitants have in consequence a
-healthy, ruddy appearance. The people appeared to me to
-be of a more frank and open disposition, more inclined to
-hospitality, and to live more contentedly on what they possessed
-than the people of the same class in any other part of
-the United States I passed through.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Along these mountains live several gentlemen of large
-landed property, who farm their own estates, as in the lower
-parts of Virginia; among the number is Mr. Jefferson. His
-house is at present in an unfinished state, but if carried on
-according to the plan laid down, it will be one of the most
-elegant private habitations on the United States. Several
-attempts have been made in this neighborhood to bring the
-manufacture of wine to perfection; none of them, however,
-have succeeded to the wish of the parties. A set of gentlemen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-once went to the expense even of getting six Italians over for
-the purpose. We must not, however, conclude that good wine
-can never be manufactured upon these mountains. It will
-require some time, and different experiments, to ascertain
-the particular kind of wine, and the mode of cultivating it
-best adapted to the soil of these mountains.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having crossed the Southwest Mountains I passed along
-to Lynchburgh, a town situated on the south side of Fluvanna
-River. This town contains about 100 houses, and a warehouse
-for the inspection of tobacco, where about 2,000 hogsheads
-are annually inspected. It has been built entirely
-within the last fifteen years, and is rapidly increasing, from
-its advantageous situation for carrying on trade with the
-adjacent country. The boats, in which the produce is conveyed
-down the river, are from forty-eight to fifty-four feet
-long, but very narrow in proportion to their length. Three
-men are sufficient to navigate one of these boats, and they can
-go to Richmond and back again in ten days. They fall down
-with the stream, but work their way back again with poles.
-The cargo carried in these boats is always proportioned to
-the depth of water in the river, which varies very much.
-Along the banks I observed great quantities of weeds hanging
-upon the trees considerably above my head, though on
-horseback. A few miles from Lynchburgh, towards the Blue
-Mountains, is a small town called New London, in which
-there is a magazine and also an armory, erected during the
-war. About fifteen men were here employed, as I passed
-through, repairing old arms and furbishing up others. At
-one end of the room lay the musquets, to the amount of about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-5,000, all together in a large heap, and at the opposite end
-lay a pile of leathern accoutrements, absolutely rotting for
-want of common attention. All the armories throughout the
-United States are kept much in the same style.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Between this place and the Blue Mountains the country
-is rough and hilly, and but very thinly inhabited. The few
-inhabitants, however, met with here are uncommonly robust
-and tall; it is rare to see a man amongst them who is not six
-feet high. These people entertain a high opinion of their own
-superiority in point of bodily strength over the inhabitants
-of the low country. A similar race of men is found all along
-the Blue Mountains.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beyond the Blue Ridge, after crossing by this route near
-the Peaks of Otter, I met with but very few settlements till
-I drew near to Fincastle, in Bottetourt County. This town
-was only begun about the year 1790, yet it already contains
-sixty houses, and is most rapidly increasing. The improvement
-of the adjacent country has likewise been very rapid,
-and land now bears nearly the same price that it does in the
-neighborhood of York and Lancaster, in Pennsylvania. The
-inhabitants consist principally of Germans, who have extended
-their settlements from Pennsylvania along the whole
-of that rich tract of land which runs through the upper part
-of Maryland, and from thence behind the Blue Mountains
-to the most southern part of Virginia. They have many
-times, I am told, crossed the Blue Ridge to examine the land,
-but the red soil which they found there was different from
-what they had been accustomed to.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>&#8220;The difference indeed between the country on the eastern
-and on the western side of the Blue Ridge, in Bottetourt
-County, is astonishing, when it is considered that both are
-under the same latitude, and that this difference is perceptible
-within the short distance of thirty miles. On the eastern side
-of the Ridge, cotton grows extremely well; and in winter
-snow scarcely ever remains upon the ground more than a day
-or two at a time. On the other side cotton never comes to
-perfection, and in every farmyard you see sleighs or sledges.
-On the eastern side of the Blue Ridge, in Virginia, not one
-of these carriages is to be met with.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another circumstance may also be mentioned (besides the
-contrast in the soils) as making a material difference between
-the country on one side of the Blue Ridge and that on the
-other, namely, that behind the mountains the weevil is unknown.
-In the lower parts of Virginia, and the other states
-where the weevil is common, they always thresh out the grain
-as soon as the crops are brought in, and leave it in the chaff,
-which creates a degree of heat sufficient to destroy the insect.
-According to the general opinion, the weevil originated on
-the eastern shore of Maryland, where a person, in expectation
-of a great rise in the price of wheat, kept over all his crops
-for the space of six years, when they were found full of these
-insects. For a considerable time the Potowmac River formed
-a barrier to their progress. The Blue Mountains at present
-serve as a barrier, and secure the country to the westward
-from their depredations.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bottetourt County is entirely surrounded by mountains.
-The climate is particularly agreeable. It appears to me that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-there is no part of America where the climate would be more
-congenial to the constitution of a native of Great Britain or
-Ireland. In the western part of the county are several medicinal
-springs, whereto numbers of people resort towards the
-latter end of summer. Those most frequented are called the
-Sweet Springs. A set of gentlemen from South Carolina
-have, I understand, since I was there, purchased the place
-and are going to erect several commodious dwellings in the
-neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The country immediately behind the Blue Mountains,
-between Bottetourt County and the Potowmack River, is
-agreeably diversified with hill and dale, and abounds with
-extensive tracts of rich land. The natural herbage is not so
-fine here as in Bottetourt County, but when clover is once
-sown it grows most luxuriously; wheat also is produced in as
-plentiful crops as in any part of the United States. Tobacco
-is not raised excepting for private use, and but little Indian
-corn is sown, as it is liable to be injured by the nightly frosts,
-which are common in the spring. The whole of this country
-to the west of the mountains is increasing most rapidly in
-population. In the neighborhood of Winchester it is so
-thickly settled that wood is now beginning to be thought valuable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I passed along the road from Fincastle to the Potowmack,
-which is the high road from the Northern States to
-Kentucky, I met with great numbers of people from Kentucky
-and the new State of Tennessee going towards Philadelphia
-and Baltimore, and with many others going in a
-contrary direction &#8216;to explore,&#8217; as they call it, that is to search<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-for lands conveniently situated for new settlements in the
-western country. These people all travel on horseback, with
-pistols or swords, and a large blanket folded up under their
-saddle. There are now houses scattered along nearly the
-whole way from Fincastle to Lexington, in Kentucky. It
-would be still dangerous for any person to venture singly;
-but if five or six travel together they are perfectly secure.
-Formerly travelers were always obliged to go forty or fifty in
-a party.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The first town you come to, going northward from Bottetourt
-County, is Lexington, a neat little place that did contain
-about 100 houses, a courthouse and gaol, but the greater
-part of it was destroyed by fire just before I got there. Thirty
-miles farther on stands Staunton. This town carries on a
-considerable trade with the back country, and contains nearly
-200 dwellings, mostly built of stone, together with a church.
-Winchester stands 100 miles to the northward of Staunton,
-and is the largest town in the United States on the western
-side of the Blue Mountains. The houses are estimated at
-350.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="X"><i>X.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>THE DUKE OF LA ROCHEFOUCAULD-LIANCOURT.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1796.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt&mdash;The
-Status of Norfolk&mdash;From Yorktown to Richmond&mdash;The
-Business of Richmond&mdash;Tobacco Inspection&mdash;Administration
-of Virginia&mdash;The Dover Mines&mdash;Goochland
-Court House&mdash;Monticello&mdash;Staunton&mdash;Winchester&mdash;Alexandria&mdash;Roads
-and Inns.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt was born
-January 11, 1747, and died in 1827. He was in this
-country, of which he made a thorough investigation,
-during the years 1795, 1796 and 1797, having been obliged
-to quit France in 1792 by reason of the insanities of the
-Revolution. It is stated that his education was neglected.
-He was early in the army, and was in England in 1769. On
-his return from England he made a practical application of
-the methods of agriculture he had studied in that country.
-He set up a model farm on his estate, and established a school
-of arts and trades for the sons of soldiers, which, in 1788,
-numbered 130 students. It was he who made the answer to
-Louis XVI, &#8220;No, sire, it is Revolution,&#8221; when the King observed,
-&#8220;This seems to be a revolt.&#8221; He turned over a part
-of his fortune to the King. From 1792 to 1795, and after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-his return from America, he was in England, being much
-with Arthur Young, the famous agriculturist. Returning
-to France in 1799, he continued his scientific and philanthropic
-works, and (as much as was possible) was active in
-public affairs. He was the organizer of the first savings bank.</p>
-
-<p>The two large volumes of travels in this country by the
-Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt were translated, and
-published at London in 1799. These volumes are a record,
-and a summary of statistics for that period of the history of
-this country such as are not to be found elsewhere, the work
-of a man who had an eye for both the intimate and the exterior
-concerns of the State. France was a volcano in those
-years, and the observer was glad to give an undivided attention
-to the facts of the new country across the seas. Below
-are a few statements bearing on Virginia, taken from the
-second volume of this remarkable book. The traveler came
-by ship, three days from Charleston to Norfolk, landing May
-29th [1796].</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Norfolk is built on Elizabeth River, at nine miles from
-the spot where it discharges its waters into the bay. In the
-intervening space there are few houses. An almost uninterrupted
-succession of pines are the only object which meets
-the traveler&#8217;s eye. Erancy Island lies nearly in the middle
-of the river at a short distance above its mouth. Two points
-of land, which approach within a quarter of a mile of each
-other in front of Norfolk, are strengthened with forts which
-are capable of successfully defending the entrance. Portsmouth,
-a small assemblage of houses on the opposite side of
-the river, did not share in the conflagration of Norfolk. From<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-its situation it seemed entitled to expect all the commerce of
-Elizabeth River; at its quays the greatest depth of water is
-found. But at the conclusion of the peace, the inhabitants,
-being incensed against the English, refused to admit any
-merchant of that nation, or any newcomer whose political
-principles were liable to suspicion. The consequence has
-been that the inhabitants have removed to the opposite side;
-that Norfolk has been rebuilt, and that its trade is twenty
-times more considerable than that of Portsmouth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At the close of the year eighty-three there were not yet
-twelve houses rebuilt at Norfolk. At present the number is
-between 700 and 800. Last year the yellow fever is said to
-have carried off 500 persons from a population of 4,000. The
-inhabitants of Norfolk, even those among them who are the
-most opulent, fancy that the use of wine and strong liquors
-furnishes them with a preservative. Previous to the war the
-town is said to have contained 8,000 inhabitants. Norfolk
-carries on a considerable trade with Europe, the Antilles,
-and the Northern States. Her exports are wheat, flour, Indian
-corn, timber of every kind, particularly planks, staves
-and shingles; salt meat and fish, iron, lead, flaxseed, tobacco,
-tar, turpentine, hemp. All these articles are the produce of
-Virginia, or of North Carolina, which latter State, having
-no seaports, or none that are good, makes her exportations
-principally through those of Virginia. This port almost
-singly carries on all the commerce of that part of Virginia
-which lies south of the Rappahannoc, and of North Carolina
-far beyond the Roanoke. They are at present forming a
-canal which, passing through the Dismal Swamp, is to unite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-the waters of the south branch of Elizabeth River, or rather
-of Deep Creek, with Albemarle Sound. What must appear
-very surprising is that for this canal, which already seems
-in such a state of forwardness, no levels have been taken. It
-is thus almost all the public works are carried on in America,
-where there is a total want of men of talents in the arts, and
-where so many able men, who are perhaps at this moment
-unemployed in Europe, might to a certainty make their fortunes
-at the same time that they were rendering essential
-service to the country.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The European demand has within four years more than
-doubled the value of the exports from Norfolk. A barrel of
-flour, whose medium value in 1791 was $5.55, rose in 1795
-to $9.35; and Indian corn was at 37 cents the bushel in 1791,
-at 54 in 1792, and at 66 in 1795. Exclusive of the flour exported
-from Norfolk, there is drawn from the State, through
-that and other ports, a great quantity of wheat, which is taken
-by the merchants of Philadelphia and New York, or the
-millers of Brandywine, who manufacture it into flour, which
-they export to Europe. Good mills are not very common in
-Virginia. The exportation of tobacco from Norfolk has by
-the diminution of the culture of that article in Virginia, been
-reduced above one-third within the last five years. The medium
-rate of house rent at Norfolk is $230. Many English
-commercial houses are established at Norfolk. This year
-England procured from Virginia a number of horses to
-mount the cavalry, which she proposes to send to the French
-islands. Of 400 horses already shipped off, only 150 lived
-to reach the place of their destination.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>&#8220;Agriculture can hardly be said to exist in Norfolk County
-or in that of Princess Ann. The landed property is much
-divided, and the inhabitants devote themselves rather to the
-selling of timber than to the cultivation of the soil. In all
-these parts land is sold at from $6 to $7 per acre; and often
-the value of the timber, which it offers for the axe, amounts
-to four or five times the price of the original purchase. From
-eighty to ninety vessels of different dimensions are annually
-built at Norfolk. The price of building is, for the hull on
-coming from the hands of the carpenter, $24 per ton for those
-above 120 tons. Ready for sea, they cost from $47 to $50
-per ton. It was intended that Norfolk should build one of
-the six frigates of which the United States had determined
-to compose their marine. That which was to have been built
-at Norfolk was among the number countermanded: it was
-begun at Gosport, where there are dock yards for the construction
-of the largest vessels. The communication between
-Norfolk and Portsmouth is continual: it is carried on by six
-rowboats belonging to a company, and by three scows, in
-which horses and carriages are conveniently ferried over. The
-fare for each passenger is one-sixteenth of a dollar; but on
-paying $6 a person may become free of the passage for twelve
-months. To the port of Norfolk, above any other in the
-United States, came the greatest number of colonists escaped
-from Saint Domingo. Private subscriptions raised in all the
-towns of Virginia, together with further sums voted by the
-State Legislature and by Congress, afforded the unfortunate
-French incontestable proofs of the benevolence and generosity
-of the Americans. Major William Lindsey, commissioner of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-the Custom House, is, of all the inhabitants of Norfolk, the
-individual with whom I have the most particular reason to be
-satisfied. He is a man recommended by simplicity of manners
-and goodness of heart, and is held in universal esteem.
-I am profoundly indebted to him for information on a variety
-of subjects.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A wherry, employed in transporting the mail from Norfolk
-to Hampton, whence it is forwarded by land to Richmond,
-is the usual conveyance for passengers who intend to
-pursue that route. In good weather the passage is performed
-in two hours: we were ten hours in crossing for want of wind.
-The Richmond mail arrives at Hampton, an inconsiderable
-village, three times a week. Formerly there was a custom
-house established here. In 1795 this was united with that of
-Norfolk. The monument voted by Congress for erection at
-York Town is not even yet begun. Such negligence is inconceivable,
-shameful and unaccountable. On the opposite side
-of the river from York Town, in Gloucester County, are annually
-built a considerable number of vessels. The highest
-rents at York Town are from $80 to $100. Flour, an article
-which it is difficult to procure, costs at present $15. From
-York Town to Williamsburg land is sold at $4 or $5 the acre.
-The students at the college in Williamsburg pay $14 to each
-professor whose course of lessons they attend. Their board
-and lodging cost them from $100 to $120. The lands about
-Williamsburg yield from eight to twelve bushels of wheat
-per acre, or from twelve to fourteen of Indian corn. Those
-few spots that are manured with dung produce double that
-quantity. Crowded in the stage by ten passengers and their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-baggage, we did not arrive at Richmond before 11 o&#8217;clock at
-night, though we had set out from Williamsburg at 8 in the
-morning; the rain, which has been abundant during the
-last two days, having rendered the roads very bad.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The position of Richmond is truly agreeable. On the
-opposite side of the river the country rises in a gentle aclivity;
-and the little, but well-built town of Manchester, environed
-by cultivated fields, which are ornamented by an infinite
-number of trees and dotted with scattered houses, embellishes
-the sweet, variegated, agreeable and romantic perspective.
-This town has prodigiously increased, but within
-the last two or three years it has remained stationary. A few
-years back a conflagration consumed almost all the lower part
-of the town. At present there are few wooden houses at Richmond.
-The trade of this town consists in the purchase of the
-country productions, and in selling at second-hand the articles
-of domestic consumption, which are generally procured from
-England. The number of merchants who carry on a direct
-commerce with Europe is inconsiderable. They keep their
-ships at Norfolk, and send down the produce of the country
-in smaller vessels. The commission trade may be considered
-as the real business of the place. It is from the merchants of
-Richmond or Petersburg that those of Norfolk most commonly
-purchase the grain, flour and tobacco which the latter
-export. The country produce is paid for by the merchants
-in ready money or at short credit; they even frequently obtain
-it on cheaper terms by furnishing the planters with an
-advance of money on their crop. The Richmond merchants<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-supply all the stores through an extensive tract of back country.
-As they have a very long credit from England, they can
-allow a similar indulgence of six, nine or twelve months to
-the shop-keepers whom they supply. All the merchants deal
-in bills of exchange on Europe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The falls of James River, which obstructed its navigation
-from the distance of seven miles above Richmond, heretofore
-imposed the necessity of employing land carriage for that
-space. At present a canal, running parallel with the course
-of the river for those seven miles, connects the communication
-by water, and opens a navigation which extends without
-interruption 200 miles above Richmond. I have seen one of
-the two mills at Richmond. It stands below the falls of the
-river, receives a great power of water, and turns six pair of
-stones. It is a fine mill, and unites the advantages of all the
-new inventions: the cogs of the wheels are clumsily executed.
-It costs a yearly rent of near $6,000 to Monsieur Chevalier,
-a Frenchman from Rochefort, heretofore director of the
-French paquets to America, and now settled in Virginia.
-Flour mills are more numerous at Petersburg than at Richmond,
-and the mills there are also upon a good construction.
-The exportations of Petersburg are more considerable than
-those of Richmond, although generally speaking, the produce
-it receives is inferior in quality. Tobacco, for instance, which
-sells at Richmond for $6 or $7 the hundred weight, does not
-fetch quite $5 at Petersburg. City Point, or Bermuda Hundred,
-is the spot where the custom house is established for
-these two places. At half a mile from the custom house<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-stands the habitation of Mr. D. Randolph, who is fully entitled
-to the reputation which he enjoys of being the best farmer
-in the whole country.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The inspection of tobacco in Virginia, and especially on
-James River, is esteemed to be conducted with a degree of
-exactness and severity, which contributes as much as the real
-superiority of the article itself to keep up its price in the
-market. The hogsheads are broken at the warehouse, and
-examined in every direction and in every part. The tobacco
-is then repacked in its hogshead, which is branded with a
-hot iron, marking the place of inspection and the quality of
-the contents. The planter receives a certificate of the particulars.
-It is by selling this &#8216;tobacconote&#8217; to the merchant that
-the planter sells his tobacco. The civil laws of Virginia have
-struck me as wisely ordained. The State of Virginia has no
-public debt, except $100,000, in which she was found debtor
-to the Union on the settlement of the accounts of the States
-with the general government; and a claim made on the part
-of France for arms and military stores furnished during the
-war. From the condition of the finances of the State of Virginia
-it follows that the taxes are by no means heavy. The
-counties impose no taxes, unless when they have bridges,
-prisons or courthouses to build. The slave laws are much
-milder here than in any of the other countries through which
-I have hitherto traveled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the 20th of June Mr. Guillemard and myself set out
-for the mountains; Monticello, the habitation of Mr. Jefferson,
-was the object of this part of our journey. Messrs. Graham
-&amp; Havens, merchants of Richmond, and owners of a coal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-mine at Dover, near by, were so kind as to conduct us thither.
-This mine is scarcely wrought. There is not one person
-throughout America versed in the art of working mines. The
-country between Dover and Goochland Courthouse, where we
-stopped at night, is more variegated than before; you find
-there more heights, and some fine prospects, especially on
-Mount Pleasant, which commands a wide extensive vale entirely
-cleared, and full of houses and clumps of trees. This
-day was a court day at Goochland. It was near 9 o&#8217;clock at
-night when I arrived. At the inn the company easily discerned
-that I was a Frenchman. There arrived a large bowl
-of grog, and we drank one after another, toasting the French,
-France, America, Virginia, and M. de la Fayette, whose
-name they mentioned with enthusiasm. In spite of my little
-disposition for drinking, I was obliged two or three times to
-drink in my turn, for it was absolutely necessary to empty
-the bowl. It was with great difficulty I prevented the arrival
-of a second. The road grows duller after you leave Goochland
-Courthouse. The plantations become constantly less
-frequent and less extensive. Inns are very scarce on this
-road; the next is nearly seventeen miles distant from that
-where we passed the night. I went a mile farther on, to stop
-at one which I knew was kept by a Frenchman. After having
-spent nearly the whole day there, we went ten miles farther
-on to an ordinary, where we stopped for the night, and
-the next day proceeded to Monticello.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Jefferson&#8217;s house commands one of the most extensive
-prospects you can meet with; when finished by his new plan,
-it will certainly deserve to be ranked with the most pleasant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-mansions in France or England. He has divided all his land
-under culture into four farms, and every farm into seven
-fields of forty acres. His system of rotation embraces seven
-years. Mr. Jefferson possesses one of those excellent threshing
-machines, which a few years since were invented in Scotland.
-He has a drilling machine, invented in his own neighborhood.
-Mr. Jefferson, in common with all landholders in
-America, imagines that his habitation is more healthy than
-any other; that it is as healthful as any in the finest parts of
-France. In private life Mr. Jefferson displays a mild, easy,
-and obliging manner, though somewhat cold and reserved;
-he possesses a stock of information not inferior to that of any
-other man. His daughters have been educated in France,
-where they became acquainted with my family. Fifteen
-hundred leagues from our native country, in another world,
-and frequently given up to melancholy, we fancy ourselves
-restored to existence when we hear our family and our friends
-mentioned by persons who have known them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We arrived at Staunton by the road through Rockfish
-Gap. The most frequented road to the Sweet, Warm and
-Hot Springs at Greenbriar, and from thence to Kentucky,
-passes through Staunton. Eight inns are established there,
-three of which are large. Hemp, which grows very fine, is
-cultivated throughout the whole of this country. Wheat in
-this region is mowed with the sickle, as in Europe, and is infected
-with the rot. On the other side of the Blue Mountains
-they mow with the scythe. From Staunton we passed by
-Keyssel Town, Newmarket, Strasburgh (formerly called
-Stover&#8217;s Town), and Newtown, to Winchester. Winchester<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-sends to Alexandria the whole produce of the upper country,
-and draws from Baltimore, but especially from Philadelphia,
-all sorts of dry goods. Upwards of thirty well-stocked stores,
-or shops, have been opened at Winchester. The town contains
-ten or twelve inns, large and small, which are often full.
-In the course of last year upwards of 4,000 persons passed
-through the place, going to settle in Tennessee or Kentucky.
-Landed property in the vicinity of Charlestown is more divided,
-perhaps, than in any other part of Virginia. Very
-few of the planters possess more than 2,000 acres of land, and
-few even so much. Alexandria is, beyond all comparison, the
-handsomest town in Virginia, and, indeed, is among the finest
-in the United States. Alexandria carries on a constant trade
-with the West India Islands, and also some with Europe.
-There is a bank at Alexandria, the only one in Virginia. The
-establishment of a bank at Richmond was authorized by the
-Legislature of Virginia in December, 1792, but the subscriptions
-not filling it does not exist.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The roads are in general good throughout this State; and
-although the inns are sometimes bad, yet upon the whole they
-are better than in the other States. Those in the back country,
-where I have traveled, are preferable to the inns in many
-of the most inhabited parts of New England.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI"><i>XI.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>JOHN DAVIS OF SALISBURY.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>1801-1802.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><i>The Sailor Turned Author&mdash;Vice-President Burr&mdash;Washington
-in 1801&mdash;Cherokees&mdash;Gadesby&#8217;s&mdash;Colchester&mdash;Occoquan&mdash;Romantic
-Situation&mdash;Tavern
-Luxuries&mdash;Eloquence and a War-Dance&mdash;Parson
-Weems&mdash;Scholarship Per Se&mdash;Frying
-Pan&mdash;Newgate&mdash;Mr. Ball&mdash;&#8216;To Virginia.&#8217;</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN the year 1798 John Davis came to America. He had
-been very much of a traveler, had lived in the East Indies,
-had crossed the equator several times and doubled
-the Cape of Good Hope more than once. Davis came from
-Salisbury, in England. He deserves a place in the biographical
-dictionaries, but is not found there. Having been a sailor
-before the mast for eleven years, he became a desultory man
-of letters, of considerable literature, who paid his way while
-in this country by potboiling for New York and Philadelphia
-booksellers and by teaching in South Carolina and Virginia.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a>
-He brought with him across the Atlantic a library of 300
-volumes, French, Latin and English. These books he read.
-For statistics, commerce, land speculations, Davis cared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-nothing whatever. He was an impressionist and not to be
-disregarded as a poet. His work, therefore, is distinct among
-these early travels which are usually records of fact as fact,
-and as such are extremely valuable. However a man sees,
-let him write.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Jefferson, who was pleased to accept the dedication
-to him of this volume, supposed that it would be of a statistical
-sort. &#8220;Should you in your journeyings have been led to
-remark on the same objects on which I gave crude notes some
-years ago, I shall be happy to see them confirmed or corrected
-by a more accurate observer,&#8221; wrote President Jefferson from
-Monticello.</p>
-
-<p>Davis accepted the acceptance and published a book as
-little like the &#8220;Notes on Virginia&#8221; as any book could well be.
-The author had read Horace and believed as that poet did
-that his work was going to last. &#8220;That this volume will regale
-curiosity while man continues to be influenced by his
-senses and affections, I have little doubt,&#8221; was the statement
-of John Davis in his preface. &#8220;It will be recurred to with
-equal interest on the banks of the Thames and those of the
-Ohio. There is no man who is not pleased in being told by
-another what he thought of the world and what the world
-thought of him.&#8221; There is a good deal of truth in both the
-particular and the general observation. We have not yet
-taken the time to review our history with much care. Whenever
-that is done, John Davis, of Salisbury, citizen of the
-world, more or less, should find readers again after a hundred
-years.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>Having translated for bookseller Caritat, in New York
-(at Aaron Burr&#8217;s suggestion), &#8220;The Campaign in Italy of
-General Buonaparte,&#8221; and afterwards having spent a winter
-as tutor in the family of Mr. Drayton, of South Carolina,
-Davis came back to the North, wrote a novel called the &#8220;Wanderings
-of William,&#8221; for Thompson, of Philadelphia, and,
-nevertheless, being in want of ready money, applied to Mr.
-Burr, now Vice-President, for a recommendation that might
-lead to government employment. The Vice-President very
-obligingly promised the indigent author a place in the Treasury
-Department. Davis set out for Washington, which at
-that time had only begun to emerge. The village of 1801 is
-thus described, as if by Goldsmith: &#8220;Washington, on my second
-journey to it wore a very dreary aspect. The multitude
-had gone to their homes, and the inhabitants of the place were
-few. There were no objects to catch the eye but a forlorn
-pilgrim forcing his way through the grass that overruns the
-streets, or a cow ruminating on a bank, from whose neck depended
-a bell, that the animal might be found the more readily
-in the woods. I obtained accommodations at the Washington
-Tavern, which stands opposite the Treasury. There
-I found seven Cherokee chiefs. They came to be instructed
-in the mode of European agriculture.&#8221; Presenting himself
-to Secretary Gallatin immediately after the Cherokee chiefs
-had descended the Treasury stairs, Davis was told by the Secretary
-that the Vice-President had made a mistake, and that
-there was no consulship or any other office to be had. Another
-instance of the startling difference between promise and fulfilment.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>&#8220;Finding a schooner at Georgetown ready to sail for Alexandria,
-I put my trunk on board of her, and left without regret
-the Imperial City. The wind being contrary, we had
-to work down the Potomac. The river here is very beautiful.
-Mason&#8217;s Island forms one continued garden; but what particularly
-catches the eye is the Capitol, rising with sacred
-majesty above the woods. It was easier landing at Alexandria
-in America than Alexandria in Egypt; and I found
-elegant accommodations at Gadesby&#8217;s hotel. It is observable
-that Gadesby keeps the best house of entertainment in the
-United States. The splendour of Gadesby&#8217;s hotel not suiting
-my finances, I removed to a public-house kept by a Dutchman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To what slight causes does a man owe some of the principal
-events of his life. I had been a fortnight at Alexandria,
-when, in consequence of the short advertisement I had put
-in the <i>Gazette</i>, a gentleman was deputed to wait on me from
-a Quaker, on the banks of the Occoquan, who wanted a Tutor
-for his children. The following evening I left Alexandria
-on horseback to visit the abode of Mr. Ellicott. Having
-crossed the bridge [at Colchester], which is built over the
-Occoquan, I alighted at the door of the tavern.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having ordered supper, I gazed with rapture on the Occoquan
-River, which ran close to the house, and, gradually enlarging,
-emptied itself into the capacious bosom of the Potomac.
-The fishermen on the shore were hawling their seine,
-and the sails of a little bark, stemming the waves, were distended
-by the breeze of night. The seaboy was lolling over
-the bow, and the helmsman was warbling a song to his absent
-fair.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>&#8220;The next day I proceeded to Occoquan; but so steep and
-craggy was the road that I found it almost inaccessible. On
-descending the last hill, I was nearly stunned by the noise of
-two huge mills, whose roar, without any hyperbolical aggravation,
-is scarcely inferior to that of the great falls of the
-Potomac, or the cataract of Niagara. My horse would not
-advance; and I was myself lost in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Friend Ellicott and his wife received me with an unaffected
-simplicity of manners, whom I was happy to catch
-just as they were going to dinner. An exquisite Virginia
-ham smoked on the board, and two damsels supplied the
-guests with boiled Indian corn, which they had gathered with
-their own hands. Friend Ellicott, uncorrupted by the refinement
-of modern manners, had put his hat to its right use,
-for it covered his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our agreement was soon made. Quakers are men of few
-words. Friend Ellicott engaged me to educate his children
-for a quarter of a year. He wanted them taught reading,
-writing, and arithmetic. Delightful task! As to Latin or
-French, he considered the study of either language an abuse
-of time; and very calmly desired me not to say another word
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No place can be more romantic than the view of Occoquan
-to a stranger, after crossing the rustic bridge, which
-has been constructed by the inhabitants across its stream.
-He contemplates a river urging its course along mountains
-that lose themselves among the clouds; he beholds vessels
-taking on board flour under the foam of the mills, and others
-deeply laden expanding their sails to the breeze; while every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-face wears contentment, every gale wafts health, and echo
-from the rocks multiplies the voices of the waggoners calling
-to their teams.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No walk could be more delightful than that from Occoquan
-to Colchester, when the moon was above the mountains.
-You traverse the bank of a placid stream over which impend
-rocks, in some cases bare, but more frequently covered with
-an odoriferous plant that regales the traveller with its fragrance.
-So serpentine is the course of the river that the
-mountains, which rise from its bank, may be said to form an
-amphitheatre; and nature seems to have designed the spot
-for the haunt only of fairies; for here grow flowers of purple
-dye, and here the snake throws her enamelled skin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After clambering over mountains, almost inaccessible to
-human toil, you come to the junction of the Occoquan with
-the noble river of the Potomac, and behold a bridge, whose
-semi-elliptical arches are scarcely inferior to those of princely
-London. And on the side of this bridge stands a tavern,
-where every luxury that money can purchase is to be obtained
-at a first summons; where the richest viands cover the table,
-and where ice cools the Madeira that has been thrice across
-the ocean.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a> The apartments are numerous and at the same
-time spacious; carpets of delicate texture cover the floors;
-and glasses are suspended from the walls in which a Goliah
-might survey himself. No man can be more complaisant than
-the landlord. Enter but his house with money in your pocket,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-and his features will soften into the blandishments of delight;
-call and your mandate is obeyed; extend your leg and the
-boot-jack is brought you.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the north bank of the Occoquan is a pile of stones,
-which indicates that an Indian warrior is interred underneath.
-The Indians from the back settlements, in traveling
-to the northward, never fail to leave the main road, and visit
-the grave of their departed hero. If a stone be thrown down,
-they religiously restore it to the pile; and, sitting round the
-rude monument, they meditate profoundly; catching, perhaps,
-a local emotion from the place.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A party of Indians, while I was at Occoquan, turned
-from the common road into the woods to visit this grave on
-the bank of the river. The party was composed of an elderly
-Chief, twelve young War Captains, and a couple of Squaws.
-Of the women, the youngest was an interesting girl of seventeen;
-remarkably well shaped, and possessed of a profusion of
-hair, which in colour was raven black. She appeared such
-another object as the mind images Pocahontas to have been.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Indians being assembled round the grave, the old
-Chief rose with a solemn mien, and, knocking his war-club
-against the ground, pronounced an oration to the memory of
-the departed warrior. No orator of antiquity ever exceeded
-this savage chief in the force of his emphasis, and the propriety
-of his gesture. Indeed, the whole scene was highly dignified.
-The fierceness of his countenance, the flowing robe,
-elevated tone, naked arm, and erect stature, with a circle of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-auditors seated on the ground, and in the open air, could not
-but impress upon the mind a lively idea of the celebrated
-speakers of ancient Greece and Rome.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having ended his oration, the Indian struck his war-club
-with fury against the ground, and the whole party
-obeyed the signal by joining in a war-dance&mdash;leaping and
-brandishing their knives at the throats of each other, and
-accompanying their menacing attitudes with a whoop and a
-yell, which echoed with ten-fold horror from the banks of the
-river. The dance took place by moonlight, and it was scarcely
-finished, when the Chief produced a keg of whiskey, and having
-taken a draught, passed it round among his brethren.
-The squaws now moved the tomahawks into the woods, and a
-scene of riot ensued. The keg was soon emptied. The effects
-of the liquor began to display itself in the looks and motions
-of the Indians. To complete the scene, the old warrior was
-uttering the most mournful lamentations over the keg he had
-emptied; inhaling its flavour with his lips, holding it out
-with his hands in a supplicating attitude, and vociferating
-to the bye-standers, &#8216;Scuttawawbah! Scuttawawbah! More
-strong drink! More strong drink!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About eight miles from the Occoquan mills is a house of
-worship, called Powheek Church; a name it derives from a
-Run that flows near its walls. Hither I rode on Sundays
-and joined the congregation of Parson Weems. I was confounded
-on first entering the church-yard at Powheek to hear</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#8216;<i>Steed threaten steed with high and boastful neigh.</i>&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Nor was I less stunned with the rattling of carriage-wheels,
-the cracking of whips, and the vociferations of the gentlemen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-to the negroes who accompanied them. But the discourse of
-Parson Weems calmed every perturbation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After church I made my salutations to Parson Weems,
-and having turned the discourse to divine worship, I asked
-him his opinion of the piety of the blacks. &#8216;Sir,&#8217; said he, &#8216;no
-people in this country prize the Sabbath more seriously than
-the trampled-upon negroes. They are swift to hear; they
-seem to hear as for their lives.&mdash;How, sir, did you like my
-preaching?&#8217; &#8216;Sir,&#8217; cried I, &#8216;it was a sermon to pull down the
-proud and humble the haughty.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had been three months at Occoquan. My condition was
-growing irksome. I, therefore, resigned my place to an old
-drunken Irishman, who was traveling the country on foot in
-search of an Academy. I remonstrated with Friend Ellicott
-on the impropriety of employing a sot to educate his children.
-&#8216;Friend,&#8217; said he, &#8216;of all the schoolmasters I ever employed,
-none taught my children to write so good a hand, as a man
-who was constantly in a state that bordered on intoxication.
-They learned more of him in one month than of any other
-in a quarter. I will make trial of Burbridge.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Davis returned to New York, collecting a few dollars at
-Philadelphia, due him from sales of &#8220;The Wanderings of
-William.&#8221; In April, 1802, he was at Washington again,
-where Congress was in session. &#8220;I watched an opportunity
-to make the Vice-President my salutations as he came out of
-the Capitol. He demonstrated no little pleasure to see me;
-and his chariot being at the steps, he took me home with him
-to dine.&#8221; The House of Representatives was then sitting in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-a detached temporary building. Davis thought John Randolph
-the most eloquent in debate. After a few days in
-Washington, the itinerant passed on to Prince William
-County, where he had been engaged as tutor by Mr. Ball at
-twenty-five pounds the quarter. At Frying Pan, in Prince
-William County, Davis inquired the way. &#8220;How far, my
-boy,&#8221; said I, &#8220;is it to Frying Pan?&#8221; &#8220;You be in the Pan
-now,&#8221; replied the boy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Frying Pan is composed of four log huts and a meeting-house.
-It took its name from a curious circumstance. Some
-Indians, having encamped on the run, missed their frying
-pan in the morning, and hence the name was conferred on
-the place. I did not stop at Frying Pan, but prosecuted my
-walk to Newgate, where in the piazza of the tavern I found a
-party of gentlemen from the neighboring plantations carousing
-over a bowl of toddy and smoking segars. No people
-could exceed these men in politeness. On my ascending the
-steps to the piazza every countenance seemed to say: This
-man has a double claim to our attention because he is a stranger.
-In a moment there was room made for me to sit down;
-a new bowl was called for, and every one who addressed me
-did so with a smile of conciliation. The higher Virginians
-seem to venerate themselves as men. Whatever may be advanced
-against Virginians, their good qualities will ever outweigh
-their defects; and when the effervescence of youth has
-abated, when reason asserts her empire, there is no man on
-earth who discovers more exalted sentiments, more contempt
-for baseness, more love of justice, more sensibility of feeling,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-than a Virginian. At Newgate my pilgrimage was nearly at
-an end, for Mr. Ball&#8217;s plantation was only distant eight
-miles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Newgate, Bull Run was to be crossed. Having
-passed that famous stream, the pedagogue and peripatetic,
-after a mile or two, came to the Ball plantation. An old negro
-showed him the way, who related, among many other
-things, that when he was a young buck he made as much as
-fifteen dollars one winter as capitation money&mdash;&#8220;Master, I
-don&#8217;t tell you a word of a lie&#8221;&mdash;levied on the wolves of the
-region. At Mr. Ball&#8217;s: &#8220;In my way through the garden I
-passed two young ladies gathering roses, who, however immured
-in the woods, were clad with not less elegance than the
-most fashionable females of Europe. I asked them whether
-Mr. Ball was at home. They replied that their papa was in
-the parlour, and with much sweetness of manner directed
-me by the shortest path to the house. Mr. Ball<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a> received me
-with undissembled accents of joy. He said he had long expected
-my coming and was gratified at last. I was not a little
-delighted with the suavity of his manners and the elegance
-of his conversation. I now opened what some called an
-Academy and others an Old Field School; and, however it
-may be thought that content was never felt within the walls
-of a seminary, I for my part experienced an exemption from
-care and was not such a fool as to measure the happiness of
-my condition by what others thought of it. Of the boys I
-can not speak in very encomiastic terms. Of my female students<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-there was none equal in capacity to Virginia. Geography
-was one of our favorite studies. I often addressed the
-rose of May in an appropriate ode&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="center"><i>TO VIRGINIA, LOOKING OVER A MAP</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Powerful as the magic wand,</div>
-<div class="verse">Displaying far each distant land,</div>
-<div class="verse">Is that angel hand to me,</div>
-<div class="verse">When it points each realm and sea.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Plac&#8217;d in geographic mood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Smiling, shew the pictur&#8217;d flood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where along the Red Sea coast</div>
-<div class="verse">Waves o&#8217;erwhelm&#8217;d the Egyptian host.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Again the imag&#8217;d scene survey,</div>
-<div class="verse">The rolling Hellespontic Sea,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whence the Persian from the shore</div>
-<div class="verse">Proudly pass&#8217;d his millions o&#8217;er.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;And behold to nearer view,</div>
-<div class="verse">Here thy own lov&#8217;d country too&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Virginia! which produc&#8217;d to me</div>
-<div class="verse">A pupil fair and bright like thee.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>What with a horse, the artisanry of verse, a mild philosophy,
-and the business of his office, John Davis spent three
-months very agreeably on Bull Run, within sight of the Blue
-Ridge. Then a New Jersey farmer of the neighborhood discovered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-that his eldest boy wrote a better hand than the
-teacher. Davis resigned the academy to the carpenter of the
-plantation. &#8220;I now once more seized my staff and walked
-towards Baltimore. It was a killing circumstance to separate
-from Virginia (the student of geography), but who shall
-persume to contend against fate? <i>Phyllida amo ante alias,
-nam me discedere flevit.</i> I embarked August, 1802, in the
-good ship Olive, Captain Norman, lying at Baltimore, for
-Cowes, in the Isle of Wight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF TRAVELS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p>1. A Tour in the United States. Containing an Account of the
-Present Situation of that Country, the Population, Agriculture,
-Commerce, Customs &amp; Manners of the Inhabitants, &amp;c., &amp;c. By
-John Ferdinand D. Smyth. Two Volumes. London, 1784.</p>
-
-<p>2. Travels through the Interior Parts of America. In a Series of
-Letters. By an Officer. [Thomas Anburey.] Two Volumes. London,
-1789.</p>
-
-<p>3. New Travels through North America. In a Series of Letters, exhibiting
-the History of the Victorious Campaign of the Allied
-Armies, under his Excellency General Washington and the Count
-de Rochambeau in the Year 1781. Translated from the Original
-of the Abb&eacute; Robin. Philadelphia. Robert Bell: Third Street. 1783.</p>
-
-<p>4. Travels in North America in the Years 1780-81-82 by the Marquis
-de Chastellux, one of the forty members of the French Academy &amp;
-Major General in the French Army, serving under Count de Rochambeau.
-Translated from the French by an English Gentleman
-[George Grieve] who resided in America at that period. With
-Notes by the Translator. New York. 1828. [From the English
-edition of 1787.]</p>
-
-<p>5. Reise durch einige der mittlern und s&uuml;dlichen vereinigten Nordamerikanischen
-Staaten, nach Ost-Florida und den Bahama-Inseln,
-unternommen in den Jahren 1783 und 1784. Von Johann David
-Schoepf. 2 Bde. Erlangen. 1788.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[Translated and edited by A. J. Morrison. Two Volumes. William J. Campbell.
-Philadelphia. 1911.]</p></div>
-
-<p>6. Viaggio negli Stati Uniti dell&#8217; America settentrionale, fatto negli
-anni 1785, 1786, e 1787, da Luigi Castiglioni, &amp;c., &amp;c. 2 Tome.
-Milano. 1790.</p>
-
-<p>7. Extracts of the Journals of the Rev. Dr. Coke&#8217;s Five Visits to
-America. London. 1793.</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p>8. Voyage dans l&#8217;Int&eacute;reur des &Eacute;tats Unis, &agrave; Bath, Winchester, dans la
-Vall&eacute; de Shenandoha, etc., etc., etc., pendant l&#8217;&eacute;t&eacute; de 1791. Par
-Ferdinand M. Bayard. Paris. 1797.</p>
-
-<p>9. Travels through the States of North America and the Provinces of
-Upper and Lower Canada, during the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797.
-By Isaac Weld, Junior. 3rd Edition. Illustrated and embellished
-with sixteen plates. Two Volumes. London. 1800.</p>
-
-<p>10. Travels through the United States of North America, the Country
-of the Iroquois, and Upper Canada. In the Years 1795, 1796, and
-1797, &amp;c., &amp;c. By the Duke de la Rochefoucauld-Liancourt. [Translated
-by H. Neuman.] Two Volumes. London. 1799.</p>
-
-<p>11. Travels of Four Years and a Half in the United States of America.
-During 1798, 1799, 1800, 1801, and 1802. Dedicated by permission
-to Thomas Jefferson, Esq., President of the United States. By
-John Davis. London. 1803.</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[Edited by A. J. Morrison. Henry Holt &amp; Co. New York. 1909.]</p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Or Hicksford, now Emporia.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a> Richard Henderson, one of the Colonial Judges of North Carolina,
-b. Hanover County, Va., 1735.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[C]</a> In Pittsylvania County, near the North Carolina line, and northwest
-of the Little Sawra Towns. cf. Map, Jefferson&#8217;s <i>Notes</i>, Ed. 1787.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[D]</a> Smyth&#8217;s entire book, two volumes, is one of the most interesting of
-that period. It is possible he exaggerates, and he may be a compiler
-here and there when he professes to be giving his own adventures. He is
-readable always. Chapters of his book offer puzzles which are yet to be
-elucidated. Some one must carefully check up the adventures of John
-Rowzee Peyton with those of Smyth. (See John L. Peyton, <i>Adventures
-of My Grandfather</i>.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[E]</a> And it is not at all impossible that the work was wholly a compilation,
-done skilfully at London.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[F]</a> Translated by Philip Freneau. Philadelphia, 1783: Price &#8216;two thirds
-of a dollar.&#8217;</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[G]</a> The Marquis Armand de la Rou&euml;rie, called in America Colonel
-Armand.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[H]</a> Colonel Banister was the son of the botanist. cf. Campbell, p. 725.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[I]</a> Dr. Greenway was a connection of Gen. Winfield Scott. cf. Scott&#8217;s
-<i>Autobiography</i>, I, pp. 3-5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[J]</a> John Wesley, d. in London, March 2, 1791. In Georgia and the
-Carolinas Dr. Coke had been on ground familiar to Wesley. cf. <i>Rev. J.
-Wesley&#8217;s Journal</i>, 1st American edition, New York, 1837. Vol. I, pp.
-1-52 (1735-1738).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[K]</a> From the description of the plantation, acreage, equipment, etc., and
-the character of the proprietor, Col. P. might have been Col. Richard
-Kidder Meade, father of Bishop Meade, to whom Washington&#8217;s farewell
-advice was, &#8220;Friend Dick, you must go to a plantation in Virginia.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[L]</a> New York at that time, according to this traveler, had but two
-banks; and there were but three at Philadelphia, the commercial centre
-of the country.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[M]</a> Davis wrote in 1806 a historical novel, <i>The First Settlers of Virginia</i>,
-largely the story of Pocahontas. In the modern romantic way,
-Davis discovered the Princess Pocahontas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[N]</a> During the war in Europe the United States were a sort of temporary
-depot of the produce of all countries. Commodities over and above
-consumption were re-exported. Madeira might come back a second time.
-cf. La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, Vol. II, p. 588.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[O]</a> Spencer Ball, m. a daughter of Robert Carter of &#8216;Nomini.&#8217; cf.
-<i>Journal and Letters of Philip Vickers Fithian</i>, p. 70.</p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Travels in Virginia in Revolutionary
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