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Unsettling the West

Page 18

by Rob Harper


  litical and economic calculations contributed as wel . great lakes indians

  depended heavily on access to trade that the British controlled. hamilton’s

  offer of food, blankets, gunpowder, and other supplies served important

  needs that could not be met otherwise. The call to arms also brought diplo-

  matic opportunities. dunquat’s Wyandots in particular aimed to secure Brit-

  ish recognition of their boundaries, including territory they hoped to

  decolonize, insisting that “what lands they should drive the rebels from

  should be vested in them as by right of conquest.”6

  in early 1778, daniel Boone led twenty- eight men to a salt spring called

  Blue licks. The people of Boonesborough desperately needed salt to preserve

  meat, their primary food source until the following year’s harvest. as the

  men boiled down the brine at their kettles, Boone went out to check his bea-

  ver traps. he ran into about one hundred shawnee warriors, marching on the

  town that bore his name. eighteen months before, near the same spot, he had

  recaptured his daughter and two other girls from a handful of shawnees and

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  cherokees. now the tables had turned, thanks to British support. The coloni-

  zation of Kentucky offended shawnees no less in 1776 than in 1778, but impe-

  rial backing persuaded a critical mass to endorse a war to defend their

  land— including the land on which Boonesborough now stood. Boone saved

  his town by persuading his woeful y outnumbered saltmakers to surrender

  and pledging that the rest of the community would follow suit in the spring.

  When the prisoners reached chillicothe, shawnee families adopted many of

  the men. at least one, Joseph Jackson, lived with them for over twenty years,

  seemingly content. Others, including Boone, later escaped and returned to

  Kentucky, where the people of Boonesborough flatly refused the shawnees’

  terms.7 This failed attempt at compromise gave shawnees all the more reason

  to embrace the British alliance.

  British support and encouragement had spurred this escalation of vio-

  lence, but British officers largely failed to dictate its nature and scope. ger-

  main asked hamilton to protect loyalists from attack, but he placed a greater

  priority on “crushing the rebellion,” using “every means . . . that providence

  has put into his majesty’s hands.” accordingly, although hamilton prom-

  ised safe passage and sanctuary to the King’s “faithfull & loyal subjects,” his

  allies’ indiscriminate attacks gave colonists little reason to trust him. On one

  occasion, British- allied warriors left his proclamation alongside the charred

  remains of a burnt homestead, whose occupants they had taken as captives.

  indians complied with British cal s for restraint only as far as they coincided

  with their own priorities. rather than handing over prisoners as hamilton

  asked, his allies preferred to adopt them. Of seventy- three taken in 1777,

  only twenty reached British hands. Of the nearly thirty saltmakers captured

  with Boone, shawnees delivered only four to detroit. to indian families,

  ransoming an adopted captive amounted to selling a blood relative. in 1778,

  indians captured an upper Ohio colonist named peggy West and her two

  daughters. a year later, one of the daughters reached detroit, where the

  British commandant and his wife took her in. They attempted to track down

  her mother and sister, whom delaware families had adopted, but their fate is

  unclear.8

  hamilton’s war dance formed a coalition uniting British patrons who

  wanted indians to wage war, and indians who wanted to gain supplies and

  reclaim lost territory. The British got the war they wanted, spreading terror

  across the Ohio Valley, but driving colonists from Kentucky proved more dif-

  ficult. as the fighting dragged on, British- allied indians began to question

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  their choice of patron. Fortunately for the British, colonists’ atrocities against

  indians seemed to leave little room for doubt.

  a few weeks after Boone’s men set out to make salt, the delaware elder mi-

  cheykapeecci and her family left home to make sugar. They traveled to an old

  town site about fifty miles north of pittsburgh, where they planned to collect

  maple sap, boil it down, and pack the sweet residue for the year ahead. days

  of heavy rain slowed their progress. Then, without warning, they heard a

  burst of gunfire and saw several hundred white men descending on their

  camp. micheykapeecci’s son, the only man in the group, fired his gun once,

  wounding an attacker, before he himself was shot. as he fel , one of the white

  men ran up and “sunk [a] tomahawk in his head.” an old woman met the

  same fate. The dying man’s wife and children escaped into the woods. as mi-

  cheykapeecci tried to follow, a gunshot tore off the end of her little finger.

  Then one of the white men grabbed her. later, she told the interpreter simon

  girty that a munsee delaware group was camped at a nearby salt spring.

  girty and a group of the white men found them, killed three more women

  and a boy, and took a fourth woman captive. micheykapeecci and the mun-

  see woman traveled to pittsburgh as prisoners but were soon released. The

  american commander expressed regret for his men’s “savage conduct,” but

  kept the precious kettles and other plunder.9

  much like the capture of Boone’s saltmakers, the attack on micheykap-

  eecci’s family displayed a scale of mobilization the Ohio Valley had not seen

  since dunmore’s War. it also heralded a wave of similar attacks on neutral

  and allied indians. most accounts attribute these atrocities to “indian haters”

  whom “american officials could not control.” The categorical bloodlust of

  Ohio Valley colonists, in this view, overwhelmed the pragmatic diplomacy of

  congress and the continental army.10 many colonists, to be sure, wanted

  indians dead, but the distinction between enlightened officialdom and hate-

  ful killers obscures the real roots of escalation. however much congressional

  agents and army officers opposed such atrocities in principle, they them-

  selves had made them possible. emerging revolutionary governments pro-

  cured the money, food, and ammunition necessary to mobilize colonists to

  fight indians. like their British counterparts, revolutionary officials repeat-

  edly failed to direct or control the violence they enabled. militia recalcitrance

  stymied both basic defensive measures and grandiose plans to capture de-

  troit and niagara. nonetheless, by organizing, arming, and deploying hun-

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  101

  dreds of colonial militia, revolutionary governments enabled indian haters

  to kill.

  a year before the assault on micheykapeecci’s camp, the congressional

  indian agent george morgan reported that upper Ohio colonists were eager

  to wage war on indians. They had plotted “to massacre our known Friends at

  their hunting camps” and threatened visiting indian diplomats, whom mor-

  gan lodged “in my own chamber for their security.” some, he alleged, longed

  to fight indians “on account of the[ir] f
ine lands.” This hostility, he warned,

  could lead to a large- scale conflict that the embattled revolutionary move-

  ment could not win. The United states could have abandoned indian haters

  to kil , or be killed, on their own. But ignoring the Ohio Valley jarred with the

  ambitions of american land speculators, morgan included. congress could

  tighten its grasp on the region only with the help of colonists on the ground,

  and the prospect of war threatened to send them packing. “if the inhabitants

  once get alarmed,” one official warned, “there will be no stopping of their

  Flight, & the country will be soon depopulated.” to avoid that calamity, con-

  gressional agents recommended stationing continental troops in forts along

  the Ohio and giving the region’s colonists gunpowder and shot. Of course,

  encouraging colonists to stay risked antagonizing Ohio indians, many of

  whom still hoped to reverse the loss of Kentucky, but the agents believed they

  could appease native nations by “buying . . . their friendship” with gifts. mor-

  gan similarly urged congress to appoint “an Officer of abilities,” someone

  “cool & experienced” with “a liberal mind,” to supervise frontier defense and

  diplomacy.11 he trusted that rational and enlightened authority figures,

  backed with the requisite military force, could bring unruly westerners to

  heel. The state- appointed commanders of the new county militias sympathized

  with morgan’s desire for order. pennsylvania entrusted Westmoreland coun-

  ty’s defenses first to William lochry, a longtime magistrate and prominent

  pro- pennsylvania partisan, and then to his brother archibald. dorsey pente-

  cost, a prominent landowner and erstwhile pennsylvania official, now ac-

  quired an array of appointments under Virginia, including command of

  yohogania county’s militia. Ohio county’s david shepherd, another veteran

  of the local courts, belonged to a family of Virginia merchants who supplied

  the militia garrisons he commanded. These men varied considerably in back-

  ground and education, and backed opposing factions in the still rancorous

  boundary dispute, but they shared a desire to cement their positions in the

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  upper Ohio Valley’s emerging political and economic elite. They could do so

  only with the friendship and patronage of eastern officials.12

  state authority also proved critical to militia effectiveness. in the first half

  of 1777, revolutionary governments established the legal framework for

  county militias, stipulating that on- duty militia receive the same wages as

  regular troops and empowering officers to fine delinquents. across the upper

  Ohio Valley, commanders used this system to garrison a string of small forts

  at key river crossings. even in remote Kentucky, Virginia officials organized a

  formal county militia. Virginia governor patrick henry dispatched ammuni-

  tion, authorized powder magazines, and ordered local militia officers to keep

  their men’s “arms and accoutrements . . . in the best possible order.” in april,

  general edward hand of the continental army arrived at Fort pitt with a

  small force of regulars. in a series of meetings, hand and local militia officers

  implemented defensive measures and began planning a campaign across the

  Ohio against British- allied indians.13

  morgan and others hoped these measures would preserve order, but in-

  stead they fueled more violence. sending large bodies of armed and un-

  trained men to distant corners of the region made attacks on neutral and

  allied indians all the more likely. actual violence corresponded with the scale

  of mobilization. When militia companies merely occupied small forts and

  maintained defensive patrols, attacks on indians remained sporadic and op-

  portunistic. in June, a band of white people— likely a Westmoreland militia

  patrol— killed several senecas returning home from a pittsburgh council.

  another group of indians quickly retaliated, killing two or three of the at-

  tackers. in late July, when indians killed a militia sergeant on the Ohio, the

  victim’s companions threatened two delaware messengers who happened to

  pass nearby. John gibson, a veteran trader and interpreter turned army offi-

  cer, saved the messengers’ lives only “with the utmost difficulty.” But other

  delaware messengers continued to pass back and forth without interference.

  militia patrols occasional y found and skirmished with British- allied raiders,

  but they were too few, too scattered, and too disorganized even to defend

  their communities effectively, let alone carry out large- scale attacks.14

  That changed in august, when general hand called for two thousand

  men to march on British- allied Wyandot and haudenosaunee towns. he

  asked each of the four upper Ohio counties to raise two hundred men to ren-

  dezvous at Fort pitt. From there they would embark downriver to point

  pleasant, where hundreds of western Virginians would join them. The plan

  foundered almost immediately. congress had recently ordered the county

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  militias to send one third of their available men to the continental army,

  leaving commanders hard- pressed to raise more. in addition, they insisted

  on leaving some at home for local defense. Of the few men available, many

  objected to hand’s demand that they serve a six- month tour of duty. Others

  complained about delayed payments for prior militia service. With western

  counties so “considerably drain’d of men,” officers had scant hope of recruit-

  ing the number that hand required. Feeding the army proved another obsta-

  cle. The general argued that the state governments should bear the cost of

  provisions, but Virginia commissary William aylett countered that congress

  ought to pay. caught in between, militia commanders raised supplies on

  their personal credit. Finding and paying for horses, oxen, and wagons pre-

  sented still more difficulties. at least one militia company could not even

  supply its men with guns. By early november, only a few hundred militia had

  assembled at Fort pitt. hand abandoned his plans and assigned the men to

  defensive duty. he then headed downriver to make similar arrangements for

  the two- hundred- odd Virginians who had assembled at point pleasant,

  where food supplies were already running low.15

  meanwhile, mekoche shawnee leaders, anxious to keep hand’s army

  away from their towns, sent two messengers to point pleasant themselves.

  For more than two years, the fort there had repeatedly welcomed shawnee

  diplomats. a recent attack, though, made the Virginian commander mat-

  thew arbuckle wary of the shawnees’ goodwil . rather than reassuring the

  messengers of his friendship, arbuckle “thought proper to detain” them. per-

  plexed, the veteran diplomat cornstalk sent his son elinipsico for an expla-

  nation. arbuckle offered none, but he insisted on seeing cornstalk and other

  shawnee leaders as soon as possible. cornstalk came alone. arbuckle con-

  fined him with the others, explaining that he was “well satisfied the sha-

  wanese are all our enemies.” When the militia arrived for hand’s expedition,

&nb
sp; cornstalk and the messengers remained as hostages. shortly thereafter

  elinipsico returned, concerned for his father’s well- being, and joined him in

  captivity. The next day, the shawnees heard a loud commotion outside the

  fort. The wife of the fort’s interpreter, herself an adopted shawnee, warned

  them that indians had killed a militiaman named gilmore, who had gone out

  hunting to feed the increasingly famished garrison. gilmore’s friends, who

  had arrived with him only a few days before, demanded vengeance. arbuckle

  briefly defended his prisoners but backed down when the militia “cocked

  their guns [and] threatened [him] with instant death.” cornstalk met them at

  the door and took “seven or eight bullets” through his body. elinipsico fell

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  behind him. a third hostage attempted to escape through the chimney “but

  was shot down.” The fourth “was shameful y mangled” and tortured before

  he died. rather than taking action against the murderers, arbuckle found

  witnesses to testify that “it was not in his power” to stop the slaughter. When

  hand arrived a week later, he, too, concluded that “it would be vain for me to

  bring the perpetrators of this horrid act to justice.” instead he dismissed the

  assembled militia. The killers and their companions “returned home shortly

  before christmass.”16

  a few months later, a similar string of events led to the attack on mi-

  cheykapeecci’s sugar camp. after returning to Fort pitt, hand learned that

  the British had stockpiled supplies on the cuyahoga river. eager for some

  kind of victory, he raised several hundred militia to seize the goods. They set

  out on the one- hundred- mile overland journey in the middle of February, a

  season when, hand reasoned, indians “might suppose us to be inactive.” The

  flaw in his plan became apparent when “heavy rains . . . together with the

  melting of the snow” rendered the rivers impassible. after turning back,

  the damp militiamen stumbled upon the tracks of micheykapeecci’s family.

  scouts followed the tracks to a town large enough to house fifty to sixty peo-

 

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