Unsettling the West

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Unsettling the West Page 11

by Rob Harper


  Fearing “an indian War,” many fled, but a large group, led by michael cresap,

  resolved to “fall on and kill every indian they met on the river.” They brushed

  aside warnings that randomly killing indians “might involve the country in a

  war”: these aspiring speculators cared less about preserving frontier peace

  than ensuring access to Kentucky lands. cresap’s party promptly ambushed a

  trader’s canoe on the Ohio, killing two indians on board. The next day they

  attacked the hardman’s party. a day or two later, thirty miles upriver, another

  band of colonists followed cresap’s example. like Wheeling, yellow creek lay

  far upstream from the Kanawha boundary. no indians had objected when

  Joshua Baker and other colonists built homesteads there. Baker and his

  neighbors sometimes “insulted and abused” passing indian diplomats, but

  the Beaver river senecas nonetheless camped for a week or so on the oppo-

  site shore, living “peaceably and neighbourly” and sometimes visiting Baker’s

  tavern. But on receiving word of cresap’s attacks, daniel greathouse

  patronage, 1773–74

  55

  organized a gang to ambush them. most hid in Baker’s back room while oth-

  ers invited the senecas across to drink. Four men and three women came

  over. after they got drunk, greathouse’s men leapt out and killed them, spar-

  ing only the infant daughter of John gibson, a colonial trader. On hearing the

  gunshots, the victims’ companions tried to canoe across the river to save

  them. The murderers lined up on the riverbank and shot the would- be rescu-

  ers as they paddled. all told, the murderers killed nine senecas and wounded

  two more. They then gathered their families, fled eastward, and sent the baby

  girl to her white father.18

  dunmore did not intentional y provoke these atrocities— cresap, great-

  house, and their followers acted on their own initiative— but his decisions

  nonetheless brought them about. By authorizing surveys and issuing land

  grants beyond the Kanawha, he defied imperial policy and triggered a land

  rush. shawnees, determined to enforce the recognized boundary, seized

  small groups of surveyors, took their equipment, and released them with

  warnings of more severe punishment in the future. The land jobbers, con-

  vinced the governor would support them, responded with a killing spree.

  Both the shawnees and cresap’s gang could argue that they were abiding by

  imperial policy. to be sure, neither group gave much credence to govern-

  ment dictates they disliked, but both eagerly exploited interpretations that

  favored their interests. dunmore’s and croghan’s contradictory promises

  gave both groups reason to think they could use force— even deadly force—

  without losing the favor of the imperial state.

  Within days of the yellow creek massacre, thousands of upper Ohio colo-

  nists fled eastward, convinced of what one recent account cal s the “inevita-

  bility of indian reprisals.” But for weeks afterward no such attacks took place.

  immediately after the attacks, the hardman and other survivors fled to his

  muskingum Valley town of Wakatomica and began talking of vengeance. The

  most outspoken, logan, was an unlikely militant: he was the son of a promi-

  nent Oneida diplomat, bore the name of a colonial official, spoke english

  wel , and was known as “a friend to the white people.” now, after losing his

  family at yellow creek, he and other survivors resolved to avenge their losses.

  They threatened the dozens of white traders living in nearby towns, declaring

  “that wherever they might meet a white they would shoot him.” nonetheless,

  for over two weeks they harmed no one. The hardman took charge of his

  fellow survivors, insisting that they “begin no war with the english.” he pri-

  vately told visiting delawares that “his heart [could not] be good, untill he

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  ha[d] sent one party at least, against the Virginians,” but made clear that he

  aimed to retaliate only against the killers and others who had occupied in-

  dian land. meanwhile, he and other Ohio indians helped protect colonial

  traders, first by hiding them from logan’s band and then by sending them to

  pittsburgh with an armed guard.19

  guyasuta, meanwhile, denounced the shawnees and encouraged Virgin-

  ians to blame the murders on the victims. When connol y and mcKee called

  Ohio indian leaders to pittsburgh to condole for their losses, guyasuta

  showed up first. he had spent the winter persuading William Johnson and

  the six nations of the shawnees’ ill wil , and now he repeated the perfor-

  mance. rather than criticize the Kentucky land rush, he blamed the violence

  on the hardman’s people, claiming that “all other nations [we]re displeased

  with” them. if the shawnees “would not listen to reason,” he argued, “they

  ought to be chastised.” This interpretation delighted connol y, as it exoner-

  ated him and dunmore while affirming Virginia’s claim to Kentucky. after

  their meeting, connol y issued a new proclamation warning of “immediate

  danger from the indians and particularly the shawanese.” guyasuta then

  took his campaign on the road, with a guard of fifty men, to press the Wyan-

  dots and other nations to ignore shawnee pleas for help. in Williamsburg,

  dunmore, too, seized on guyasuta’s argument, insisting that “the indians

  have been the aggressors” and bore responsibility for “the fatal consequences.”

  The more experienced croghan assured the governor that only “some few”

  shawnees and senecas had interfered with Virginia’s surveys, but he tactful y

  avoided mentioning the boundary that dunmore had brushed aside. in a 5

  may condolence speech, connol y stressed that people had been “killed on

  both sides,” implying that indians shared the blame for the killings. he then

  offhandedly mentioned dunmore’s plans for Kentucky, noting that Virginia’s

  governing council would soon meet to discuss “their settling in this

  country.”20

  connol y’s self- serving performance defeated all peacemaking efforts. at

  the time, his delaware and seneca audience knew little about what had hap-

  pened and had no desire to argue. But a few days later, when the delaware

  diplomat White eyes repeated the speech in the muskingum towns, the sur-

  vivors and the victims’ friends and relatives could not help but take offense.

  soon thereafter, logan’s followers killed and scalped their first victim, a

  pennsylvania trader named campbel , near gekelemukpechünk. The hard-

  man, meanwhile, issued a blistering reply. he called croghan and mcKee

  liars, presumably referring to their previous assurances about the Kanawha

  patronage, 1773–74

  57

  boundary, and he insisted that the conflict stemmed from Virginians “pass-

  ing up and down the Ohio, and making settlements upon it.” most dramati-

  cal y, he rejected connol y’s plea to forgive and forget. Just as connol y had

  asked shawnees to overlook “what your people have done to us,” he asked the

  Virginians to disregard “what our young men may now be doing.” in late

  may, two shawnee warriors visited gr
ave creek, the site of the attack on the

  hardman’s party, and killed a colonist named proctor. They brought his scalp

  back to Wakatomica, where ten shawnee and haudenosaunee warriors, led

  by logan and the nephew of the dead Othawakeesquo, soon set out to attack

  whatever Virginians they could find on the Ohio.21 By mid- June, logan’s

  band had killed and scalped thirteen men, women, and children.

  But even after this belated vengeance, hope for peace remained. On 10

  June, mcKee noted “a cessation” of hostilities, with only a few “refractory”

  individuals still hostile. With “some wise interposition of government,” he

  argued, peace could be restored. a week later, thirty British traders returned

  to pittsburgh from the scioto towns, leading 120 horses laden with goods,

  guarded by an armed shawnee escort. They brought a much more concilia-

  tory speech from the war leader cornstalk, who had, “with great trouble and

  pains,” persuaded “the foolish people amongst us” to keep the peace until

  they found out whether “the white people in general” desired war. rather

  than threatening violence, he asked connol y to similarly restrain his own

  “foolish people” in the future. in mid- June, logan’s band returned to Wak-

  atomica and promised to “sit stil ” until they heard from the Virginians. The

  hardman admitted that the april attacks “made us like a crazy people,” but

  nonetheless he pledged to “keep . . . the roads open for the english.” For over

  two weeks, indians attacked no colonists. as tensions cooled, White eyes

  tirelessly carried messages back and forth between pittsburgh and the shaw-

  nee towns. On 29 June he assured connol y that leaders of all western

  nations— including the shawnees— eagerly sought peace. rather than allow-

  ing “rash inconsiderate men” to match violence with unending violence, he

  urged the Virginians to “take pity of them, That our young people as they

  grow up may hereafter enjoy the Blessings of that peace and Friendship es-

  tablished betwen us.”22

  connol y and dunmore, though, had already taken steps to escalate hos-

  tilities. in may, dunmore called for 1,200 men to defend the province’s west-

  ern claims, while connol y ordered his militia to treat any indians east of the

  Ohio “as enemies.” in early June, dunmore urged militia commanders to pre-

  pare for war and to pursue indians even “into their own country and beyond

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  the limits prescribed” by law. echoing guyasuta, he suggested building a fort

  on point pleasant, at the mouth of the Kanawha. connol y’s militia, mean-

  while, largely ignored his distinctions between allied and enemy indians. in-

  dian envoys to pittsburgh repeatedly complained of militia harassment. after

  shawnee escorts brought thirty British traders safely to pittsburgh, connol y

  sent forty men to seize them. They escaped, but during their flight a militia

  patrol wounded one of them. in mid- June, one of connol y’s men shot at a

  delaware who was helping mcKee; in early July on Beaver river, another pa-

  trol briefly arrested and threatened a passing trader and his delaware escorts;

  in late august, several militia attacked three delawares who had come to

  pittsburgh to trade, killing two. connol y made little effort to stop such vio-

  lence. he prohibited trade with shawnees and refused to prosecute the dela-

  wares’ killers. adding insult to injury, connol y appointed michael cresap a

  militia captain while insisting that indian leaders hand over “your imprudent

  young men” to face Virginian justice. if they failed to do so, he warned, they

  would have to answer to “a very large Body of Virginians” already marching

  toward Ohio.23

  But for all this bluster, dunmore’s political and financial problems

  seemed to make war unlikely. On 7 June, connol y found his militia garri-

  son debating a recent report that Virginia’s house of Burgesses had dis-

  solved without appropriating any money to pay them. connol y set out to

  squash the rumor, only to learn that it was true: the governor had dismissed

  his legislature for criticizing imperial policies. his pro- pennsylvania rival,

  aeneas mackay, gleeful y spread the news around pittsburgh. connolly

  hurried to mackay’s home and “abuse[d] him in a most blasphemous and

  outrageous manner,” but rage did not change his problem: he and dunmore

  had set out to fight a war with no means of paying for it. as one observer

  noted, dunmore had “no store either of provisions, amunition, or, what is

  worse, money,” and no means of obtaining any without the Burgesses. con-

  nol y paid his pittsburgh garrison in goods bought on credit, but he had to

  promise the traders 300 percent interest. he tried to bul y the upper Ohio

  population into obedience, only to earn, according to William crawford,

  “the displeashure of the people.” meanwhile, the need to harvest crops and

  guard families deterred potential recruits. Those who did volunteer often

  proved unwilling to stay on duty. One officer claimed his garrison would

  surely desert “unless i kill part and tye the Other.” Without reinforcements,

  he warned, “we will have a war amongst our selves without that of the

  indians.”24

  patronage, 1773–74

  59

  nonetheless, by exploiting hopes for land and official patronage, con-

  nol y and dunmore patched together a diverse coalition of supporters. to

  raise troops and laborers, connol y handed out militia commissions to men

  like crawford whose wealth, influence, and patronage ties “cou’d bring in

  Volunteers . . . to enter into pay of government.” such brokers tolerated

  connol y’s incompetence in hopes of winning the governor’s favor and, with

  it, the prospects of land grants and official appointments. crawford had little

  use for connol y, but he nonetheless raised a large company at his order.

  some of crawford’s men were indentured servants, temporarily released for

  militia service. all involved, including the servants’ owners, gambled that

  Virginia would eventual y fulfill dunmore’s promises of payment. With the

  backing of crawford and other local leaders, connol y called out local militia

  units, drafted townspeople to rebuild Fort pitt, and sent out armed patrols.

  dunmore similarly won croghan’s allegiance. When he learned that dun-

  more planned to wage war, croghan initial y denounced him and reached

  out to pro- pennsylvania adversaries. But croghan’s best hope of confirming

  his land claims still lay in winning dunmore’s support. after intermediaries

  brokered a rapprochement, he regretted having “too incautiously” cast asper-

  sions on the governor’s character and policies. dunmore, who needed

  croghan’s diplomatic expertise, promised in exchange “a proclamation to

  forbid people to incroach upon his property.”25

  similar pursuits of dunmore’s favor enabled the governor to raise an

  army in backcountry Virginia. militia officers liked dunmore’s proposals be-

  cause they coveted Kentucky land. William preston, for example, served as

  both militia commander and head surveyor for Fincastle county, which at

&
nbsp; the time included Kentucky. The surveyors who clashed with shawnees in

  april worked for preston; he and his friends were eager to see those surveys

  completed. But rather than ordering out an unlawful and unfunded expedi-

  tion, William christian, a militia officer and speculator, suggested that they

  “encourage men to rise and go out without expresly ordering them to do so.”

  such an approach, he thought, could attract one hundred men in a few days

  “who would find their own provisions (& each man a horse)” and “take their

  chance of pay.” christian also urged his colleagues to deceive recruits about

  their plans. he warned against saying “any thing publickly of attacking the

  [scioto] towns,” guessing that they could more easily persuade men to join a

  longer campaign after getting them on the march. They issued officer com-

  missions to popular local leaders like daniel Boone, whose charisma brought

  at least one recalcitrant company back on duty. They also appealed to greed.

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  preston stressed the shawnees’ “great stock of horses” and other opportuni-

  ties for plunder, and he assured skeptics that the house of Burgesses would

  eventual y “reward every Vol unteer in a handsome manner, over and above

  his pay.” lacking the legal authority and funds to draft, feed, or pay militia,

  dunmore offered hope of future compensation. a successful campaign, he

  reasoned, would “oblige the assembly to indemnify” militia expenses after

  the fact.26 left to their own devices, most backcountry Virginians had little

  reason, and no means, to band together to wage war against shawnees. But

  the incentives that dunmore and his deputies promised, or hinted at, eventu-

  al y mobilized more than two thousand men: the largest fighting force the

  Ohio Valley had seen since the seven years’ War.

  By contrast, many indians remained anxious to avoid conflict. in the

  spring of 1774, three cherokees— a woman, her husband, Ketigeestie, and a

  man named Will— found a white man half drowned in the tennessee river,

  the lone survivor of a capsized canoe. They revived the man and brought

 

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