366 43 18MB
English Pages 424 Year 1784
o I
R
u N T H E
UNITED STATES O
F
AMERICA. VOL.
I,
•In ftruggling with misfortunes Lies the true proof of virtue.
Shakspeare.
Cold, hunger, prifons, ills without a cure, All thefe men muft, and guiltlefs, oft endure. I
——Permitted Th'unworthy Faith
flies,
And Juftice,
laurels grace the lawlefs
rais'd,
brow,
the worthy caft below.
and Piety in exile mourns. here opf rgfs'd, to Heav'n returns.
Drydkn,
WEK^n
tff
PlTtSBl«R6«
A
T
O
R
U THE
IN
UNITED STATES O F
AMERICA: CONTAINING
An Account of the Present Situation
of
that Country J
The Population, Agriculture, Commerce,
Customs, and Manners
of the Inhabitants
j
of feveral Members of the CONGRESS, General Officers in the American Army
Anecdotes and
;
AND Many
A
other very lingular and intereiling Occurrences.
Defcription of the
INDIAN NATIONS,
the general
Face of the Country, Mountains, Forells, Rivers, and the mofl: beautiful, grand, and picturefque Views throughout that vafl Continent.
LIKEWISE Improvements
By
Husbandry
that may be adopted with great Advan,tage in Europe. in
SMYTH,
F?'D.-
J.
VO
E
s
q^
L.
LONDON, Pr'yitcd for
G.
New
R
B
I
N
s
o N, Pater-nofter-Row J. R o B and J. S e w E l L, Cornhill. ; ;
Bond-Street
MDCCLXXXIV.
s o.-N,
X
Lincoln's-Inn efq.
Eardly Wilmot, efq. Enfign Webb, Coldilream Reg. Guards
Mr. James WVight, Heafield
W. Z.
5
copies
Go-
ADVERTISEMENT,
THE
late
great and very extraor-
dinary revolution in America, a revolution with unparalleled
its
in
attending circumftances the annals
of
having excited the curiofity of
hiftory, all
ranks
of people, not only of Great Britain, but of every nation in Europe, to procure the
moll
authentic
that country,
the kind
information
and there being nothing of
hitherto
publifhed
any fatisfadory account caufe of
my
concerning
that gives
thereof,
is
the
offering thefe volumes to the
public.
The moft this
painful talk to
work has been
to
me
throughout
mention the hardfliips
ADVERTISEMENT.
ii
fhips and fever itie&
now
thefe are
given
I
an end, and freely
at
for although
;
lament,
have undergone,
for-*
may have much
I
folemnly declare that
I
2i4
I
to
have no
refentments to indulge, no revenge to purfue
;
and the few inilances
forded
me
met with of
treatment have
generous
kind and
I
and
infinite gratification
af'*
plea-*
fure to relate.
Far be
from
it
me
and
vindidive
which hitherto appear the public as welt
rica,
feem
as
ill
to
;
but
principles
have aduated
private conduct of in
Ame-
calculated for that
conci-
prevailing
the prefent
widen a
much extended
breach already too thofe illiberal
to wiiii to
party
which it is certainly ftjll more the intereft of America than of Great Britain liation
to effeift
As
and cheriih.
the fword of
to the fcabbard, pea?:e
may
cultivated,
war
and the
is
now
returned
beneficial arts
of
be fafely and advantageoufly it
would
afford infinite fatis-
fadiori
ADVERTISEMENT, fadion and pleafure
mind
to every benevolent
between thefe new American
to fee,
republics,
iii
and Great Britain
their parent
a contention in good offices, liberal
ftate,
condudt, and generofity, and in fhewing fubftantial proofs
on both
buried in oblivion
all
fides
their
mofities
and
diftrulls.
more
the
power of the
in
than of the
difpofition,
condu
United States of America gerally
by
raifed
fubfcriptlon,
2
and
are
gained by the horfe that wins two fourmile heats out of three
;
they amount to
an hundred pounds each for the running, and after
the
;
races
day's
pounds each every day
commonly continuing
There
week.
for a
fifty
firft
are alfo matches
and
fweepftakes very often, for confiderable
fums.
Befides
thefe
at
Willfamfburg,
there are races eftablifhed annually, al-
moft
at
every town and confiderable place
in Virginia
;
and frequent matches, on
which large fums of money depend inhabitants, almoft to a
;
the
man, being quite
devoted to the diverfion of horfe-racing.
Very
capital
horfes
are
ftarted
here,
make no defpicable figure Newmarket; nor is their fpeed, bot-
fuch as would at
tom, or blood inferior the
to their
appearance
;
gentlemen of Virginia fparing no
pains, trouble, or expence
in
importing
the beft ftock, and improving the excellence
of the breed by proper
ajid
judicious
crofling.
C
3
Indeed
A
22
Tour
in the
Indeed nothing can be more elegant
and beautiful than the horfes bred here, the road,
either for the turf, the field,
or the coach
;
and they have always
long, full, flowing riage horfes
tails
fine
but their car-
;
feldom are polfeffed of that
weight and power, which diftinguifh thofe of the fame kind in England.
Their ftock
is
from old Cade, old Crab,
old Partner, Regulus,Babraham,Bofphorus,
CuUen Arabian,
Devonfliire Childers, the
the Cumberland Arabian, &c. in England;
and fize,
and
a horfe
from Arabia, named the Bell-
which was imported is
now
into America,
in exiftence.
In the fouthern part of the colony, and in
North Carolina, they are much attached
to quarter-racing,
which
between two horfes, ter
of
a
mile
always a match
is
run one quar-
to
ftreight
out
merely an excurfion of fpeed
have a breed that perform
it
;
;
being
and they
with aftonifh-
ing velocity, beating every other, for that diftance,
with great eafe
no bottom.
However,
;
but they have
I
am
confident that
United States of America* that there
is
23
not a horfe in England, nor
perhaps the whole world, that can excel
them make
in rapid fpeed
and thefe likewife
:
excellent faddle horfes for the road.
The
Virginians, of
all
ranks and deno-
minations, are exceffively fond of horfes,
and efpecially thofe of the
race breed.
The
gentlemen of fortune expend great fum$
on
their
fome
generally keeping hand^
finds,
carriages,
and
feveral elegant fets of
horfes, as well as others for the race
road
:
even the moft indigent perfon has
his faddle- horfe,
place,
which he
rides to every
and on every occafion
;
for in this
country nobody walks on foot the diftance, except
man
and
when hunting
will frequently
go
:
fmalleffc
indeed a
five miles to catch
a horfe, to ride only one mile upon after-
wards. pleafure,
In fhort, their horfes are their
and
their pride.
CHAP.
A Tour in the
24
CHAP. Xbe
beautiful Situations^
different
Seats, on
INwere
III.
and Gcntlemens
James River.
Mr.
the evening,
R
and
I
unfortunately feparated, occa-
lioned by a very ridiculous and fmgular accident
the efFedt of which had like to
;
have been
tragical
when we were (liip,
enough
Juft
ready to return to the
by fome miftake, wrong
brought to the door it,
him.
to
we mounted them
horfes
were
;
and not obferving
:
thefe horfes being
and Mr.
R
,
having
bid adieu to the gentlemen with
whom,
very
we
fpirited,
dined, fuddenly clapped both his fpurs
with
in his horfe's fides, inadvertently,
great force; the horfe inftantly reared up,
and fprung forwards, leaving poor
R—
upon
on
the ground, at the door,
back,
By
with his
this
flat
his
fkuU almoft frad:ured.
means the miftake
in
the change
of our horfes was difcovered and re6lihed but Mr.
R
'.
was
fo
much
hurt,
that
he
United States of America,
be was obliged
to
be blooded, and carried
into the Raleigh again, v^^here
and was thereby reduced of returning alone to the
On
25
him
I left
;
to the necefiity fliip.
the ninth of Auguft the
fliip
under weigh, and proceeded up the
got
river,
paffing the delightful fituatlons of SandyPoint, Cabin-Point, Brandon, Flow^er de
Hundred, Maycox, fide
;
&c.
on the fouth
and Swine- Yards, belonging
to
Mr.
Cole, Colonel Byrd's beatuifulfeatof Weftover,
Colonel Harrifon's of Barclay, &c.
on the north to
fide
:
we anchored
oppofite
City- Point, at the confluence of the
Appamatox River and
and
the James,
about an hundred and thirty miles within land,
from the capes of Virginia.
Here the fecond mate was carried on ihore to the houfe of a Mrs. Brown, having been for a confiderable time languilliing,
and
in great pain,
occafioned by a
violent contufion he received
by a
fall
on
the deck from the main-yard-arm, reef-
ing the main-fail in a gale of wind
;
and
foon after he ended his days there.
As
A Tour in the
26
As
the fhip was
not to go
much
far-
ther up, and was to receive great part of
her cargo at this place,
I
hired a boat and
four negroes, for one dollar and a half
per day (about
pence
fterling)
;
fix
fhillings
and nine-
and on the tenth
I
left
the fhip moored, and proceeded up the river in the boat
;
propofmg
to
land at
every place whofe beauty of perfpedive, or fmgular appearance of any kind, might ftrike the attention, or excite
had almoft omitted
I
to
my curiofity.
mention an un-
fortunate accident that happened at this place, before I left the fliip.
A young
having killed and cut up a
failor,
large flurgeon, that
fine
had leaped out of the
water and fallen into the boat, along fide of the fhip, which happens frequently here
j
bringing in the
lafl
piece himfelf,
in his hand, his foot flipped off the
gun-
wale of the boat, between which and the fhip he
fell
into the river,
and was never
feen or heard of more.
The manded
com-
principal
fituations
my
and admiration, were
notice
that
Shirley
United States of America. Shirley Hundred,
a feat of Charles Car-
occupation of Mr.
efq. at prefent in
ter,
Bowler Cock place
this
:
27
is
indeed a charming
the buildings are of brick, large,
j
now
convenient, and expenfive, but
fall-
ing to decay; they were ereded
at a great
charge, by Mr. Carter's father,
who was
fecretary of the colony,
and
The
favourite feat of refidence.
proprietor has a moft
and
was
this
his
prefent
opulent fortune,
pofiefles fuch a variety
of
feats,
in
fituations fo exceedingly delightful, that
he overlooks and fuffers it buildings
fum
this
fweet one of Shirley,
to fall to ruin,
muft
have
in conftruding
;
coft
although the
an
immenfe
and would certainly
be expenfive to keep in repair, which expence, however, muft be greatly increafed
by
this
negled.
--
Varina, the feat of Ryland Randolph, efq.
a moft lovely and delightful fpot
an elegant building, but unfinifhed, occafioned tafte,
by the owner's
and perpetual
verfatility
of
alterations.
Chat-
7
A Tour in the
28
Chatfworth, the
of William Ran-
feat
dolph, efq. whofe father was furveyorgeneral of the fouthern diflrid: of North-
America, &c,
is
a very good houfe, with
aa agreeable perfpedtive
A Mr.
Mayho's All on
alfo.
a very pretty place
;
north
the
lide
of the
James.
On little
the fouth
are
fide
the
beautiful
towns of Bermuda Hundred, Of-
born's,
and Warv/iek
:
and a
be-
feat
longing to a Mr. Gary, a lovely fituation,
who
has alfo erected fome extremely va-
luable mills,
iron-works,
&c. of equal
emolument and importance
to
himfelf
They
are fituated
near the town of Warwick,
about five
and the community.
miles below Richmond, and the
falls
of
James-River.
[Thefe valuable mills and iron works
have been ftroyed,
m
1781,
fet
fire
during the in
an
to,
and entirely de-
late
unhappy war,
expedition
under the
com-
United States of America,
command
of
Brigadier
zg
General
Ar-
nold.]
I flept
on board the boat
and on the
;
eleventh, in the forenoon, landed at the
town of Shokoes,
at the falls
of James-
and immediately difcharged the
River, boat. I
then waited on Mr.
chant, at that place, on
been furnifhed with
He
——— — a merwhom I had been
letters
,
of
credit,
&c.
home, and received me with kindnefs, attention, and friendiiiip. He was
me
offered
which
at
I
to ferve
apartments in
his
houfe,
accepted, and he feemed fludious
and amufe me.
CHAP.
A Tour
30
H A
C Richmond.
AT
in the
IV.
P.
Falls of James-River^
&c.
whole appearance
this place the
of the country undergoes a
From
change.
the fea to the
one hundred and not a
hill
nence, being
;
fcarcely
one continued
about
falls,
fifty-five miles,
to be feen
total
there
is
an emilevel,
flat
without even a fingle flone to be found
on the
;
nothing but fand and
Ihells
and the land
of loam, fand, and
confifts
clay, but univerfally covered
Here
of feven miles v^^hich, that vaft
;
river, for the
length
during the courfe of current of water rufhes
raging with impetuofity, tumb-
ling and dafhing
an
with woods.
a ledge of rocks interrupts the
whole flream of the
down,
fhores,
from rock
aflonifliing roar, that
miles diftance.
The
is
to rock,
heard for
with
many
land fuddenly fwells
into hills of a great height,
and abounds with
United States of America,
^
i
with prodigious rocks, and large ftones, as well as trees.
On
the fummits of thofe hills, mofi: of
which over-look,
many
and
of them
over-hang the falling torrent of the James,
handfome houfes
mand
which com-
are built,
mod
and
a wild, grand,
elegant
perfpedtive.
The wide
;
of the
James, here,
is
the tide flows
up
falls,
about half a mile to the
which continue
very rocks
to interrupt
the current for the length of feven miles
There are
above. river
among
covered with
the
feveral iflands in the
falls,
which
wood and
of fmall extent
:
the
rocks
tide
lower end of one of thefe is
fervifeable
are chiefly j
but are
reaches
iflands,
the
which
in checking the violence
the torrent of the water in the
falls,
of
and
thereby favours the paflage of the ferry boats below.
There
are three
Richmond, the and
is
towns
largeft, is
feparated only
by
at
this place-
below the a creek,
falls,
named
Shokoes, from the town of Shokoes, which joins
A
32
the
in
lower end of the
joins the are both
Tour
on the north
on the fouth Chefterfield,
;
thefe
of the river
lide
town of known by the name of the
ftands
fide
befl:
falls
Rocky- Ridge, from
its
fituation.
come up
VefTels of fmall burthen
the rocks of the
to
and large fhips
falls,
come within two miles of them to load. At James town, the river is between two and three miles wide; and is
always frefh water
juft
above
it
the breadth de-
:
creafes gradually to the falls.
During
made
my
refidence at
Richmond,
feveral little excurfions
the adjacent country, on
gentlemen,
who
invitations.
Among
I
around in
vifits to feveral
honoured thofe,
me
from
with
whom
I
received particular attention and civilities,
were Thomas
Mann
Randolph, of Tucka-
hoe, efq. R. Good, of Chefterfield, efq.
Mr. Gary, &c. I
alfo
rode as
far
as
Weftham,
a
town on the James, feven miles above Richmond, juft where the falls
fmall
commence.
Tobacco, the grand ftaple
of
XJnifed States of America.
of Virginia,
navigated
is
down
3^
tlie
river
from the back country toWeftham, inhogfheads of a thoufand weight each, ready for
upon two ca-
exportation, every hogfliead
noes
laflied
together
;
then
brought
it is
by land-carriage to Shokoes, or Richmond, as the falls totally intercept and preclude all communication by water for their continuance of feven miles.
In floods, an immenfe body of water
comes down the James, which
fwells to a
height and aftonifhing
widenefs,
great
overflowing miles
all
the low ground for
but at the
;
falls,
tains arife abruptly
many
where the mouri-
on each
fide,
and con-
more narrow bounds,
fine the river within
the noife, violence, and impetuofity of the torrent,
not to be defcribed.
It is
dread-
tremenduous and awful.
fully It
is
when the river was man, who was bringing
feems that once,
in fuch a ftate, a
down
his
landing
at
tobacco to market, inilead of
Weftham, being
cated with Ipirituous liquor,
down the torrent Vol. L
j
quite intoxi-
was carried
and, amazing to think
D
on
i
A T^our In the
34
on
!
arrived fafe at Shokoes warehoufe-
•wharf below, with his tobacco
been brought to the Ihore, got over
all
from thence
who
the
falls,
he had
after
by boats
to his afliftance,
fent out
by
thofe,
with aflonilhment and horror, ob-
ferved
him
in his dreadful rapid defcent
When
and paflage over them. brought to the ftate
having
;
fliore,
he was
he was
ftill
in a
of infenfibility and ftupefadion, oc-
cafioned
This
by is
inebriation and terror.
indeed one of the moft extra-
ordinary accidents that has occurred, or
perhaps was ever heard of; but I have
no reafon lated to
to doubt the fa£t, as
me, and vouched
for,
perfons of credit and veracity,
it
was re-
by
feveral
who were
ey^-witnefTes of this fingular event.
CHAP.
of America
tJnited States
CHAP. Climate.
Inhahttants.
Face of the Country.
mendous Sounds.
V. 'Thunder
Sky.
35
Bullfrogs.
and Llghimhgi
Strange and treNegroes,
Inchantment.
TH
E
here,
muft confefs, did not a
cuftoms and manner of living
of mofl of the white inhabitants
prife
I
me
little
fur-
being inadive, languid, and
;
enervating to the
degree.
lafl
Indeed the whole appearance of the country, and face of nature,
is
ftrikingly
novel and charming to an European, efpecially to a Briton.
The
the fky, the water, the land,
air,
and the inhabitants,
being
two- thirds
blacks, are objeds entirely different all that he
fore.
had been accuftomed
The
from
to fee be-
fky clear and ferene, very
feldom over-caft, or any haze to be ob^ ferved in the atmofphere
ing in torrents, ately difperfing.
i
the rains falN
and the clouds immediFrequent dreadful thun-
D
2
deJf
A Tour
36 der
in
in the
loud contending peals
;
thunder
gufts happening often daily, and always
within every two or three days, at this Erufcations and flafhes
feafon of the year.
of lightning, conflantly fucceeding each
The
quick and rapid traufitions.
in
other,
and intenfely hot
air dry,
in
the
fummer, cold and piercing in the winter, and always keen
arid penetrating.
During
the night, thoufands of lights, like bright
burning candles^ being large winged infects, gliding through the air
called fire-flies,
in every direction
;
frequently vanifhing,
and perpetually fucceeded by new ones.
The
rivers, large
enormous
extent,
eye as far as
and fpreading under the
can comprize
it
being on fach
expances of water, of
a icale, that
great rivers in Europe,
dered only rivulets.
as
The
extended on out
bounds
afcents,
pendous
and
;
at
or
are called
are here
arifing
confi-
creeks or
an immenfe plain,
fiat
nature here
what
inconfiderable land,
a
;
foreft,
almoft withinto
abrupt
length fwelling into ftu-
mountains,
interfperfed
with rocks
United States of Amenca.
37
rocks and precipices, yet covered with
venerable trees, hoary with age, and torn
The mountains
with tempefts.
fuddenly
broken through, and fevered by mighty raging in torrents at the bottom o£
rivers,
tremendous chafm,
the
awful majeftic
the
plantations
The
thing in Europe
on
agriculture
from every
different
is
in
along the deep val-
filence
between them.
lies
gliding
or
being either tobacco,
;
three feet high, with the plants a yard apart
or
;
at the diftance
between each
feet
fix
Indian corn,
in
ftalk,
of
regular
ftreight rows, or avenues, frequently twelve
or fifteen feet in height.
While
the
mind
is filled
ment, and novel objects,
all
with aftonifhthe fenfes are
gratified.
The the
flowery ihrubs which over-fpread
land,
ferous perfumes relifh
fmell with odori-
regale the :
and
fruits
of cxquifite
and flavour, delight the
aff'ord a
The
tafte,
and
moft grateful refrefhment. prodigious
frogs, reptiles,
multitude
of
green
and large infers, on the
D
3
Irees,
A Tour in the
38
well
as
trees,
the bull-frogs in the
as
fwarnps, ponds, and places of water, dur-
ing the fpring, fummer, and
an
inceflant noife
and clamour
fall,
make
the bull-
;
frogs, in particular, emitting a moft tre-
mendous
roar,
louder than
from the
ing of a bull,
is
of
fimilarity
whofe voice they obtained but their note
the bellow-
name
their
harfh, fonorous,
and ab-
rupt, frequently appearing to pronounce articulate founds,
in ftriking refemblance
to the following words,
Knee
deep.
Ancle
Pia?ikita?2k,
Hogfiead
Deeper and deeper,
deep.
and many others
man
but
;
They
equally grating and diflbnant. prife a
tobacco^
all
fur-
exceedingly, as he will hear
their hoarfe, loud, bellowing clamor juft
by him, and fometimes yet
around him,
he cannot difcover from whence
proceeds; they being
and
all
juft
all
covered in water,
raifmg their mouth only a
above the furface
when they
then inftantly draw
it
afs of the fize of a
it
roar out,
under again.
man's
little
They
foot.
Nor
United States of America*
Nor can you
from whence the founds
among at
in the trees pro-
moft
they being
ceed,
animals
the
perceive
efFedually
hid
So
that
the leaves and branches. this abfolutely
firfl:
39
appears
be a
to
country of enchantments.
As
I
obferved
before,
thirds
of the inhabitants
whofe
difference of features
and rank ofFenfive
fmell,
two-
leaft
at
negroes,
are
and colour,
are extremely
difagreeable and difguftful to Europeans but, poor creatures
and fubmiffion
lity
pleafure of their
!
;
they are
and
lives,
it is
all
:
humi-
the greateft
when they
caa
pleafe the whites.
You
cannot underftand
all
of them, as
great numbers, being Africans, are inca-
pable of acquiring our language, and at bell
many
but
very
imperfedly,
of the others
alfo
if
at
all
fpeak a mixed
dialed between the Guinea and Englifh. It
is
fortunate
thefe poor creatures
humanity,
that
polfefs fuch a
fund
for
of contentment and refignation in their
D
4
minds
-,
A
^o minds
;
happieft
Tour
in the
for they indeed
inhabitants
in
feem to be the America,
not-
withftanding the hardnefs of their fare, the feverity of their labour, and the unkindnefs, ignominy, and ofteu barbarity
of their treatment,
CHAP.
XJmted States of America,
CHAP.
VI.
JUanner of Life of each Rank of
TO
^i
the Inhabitants^
manner
give an idea of the
in
which a white man fpends his this country, a defcription is
time in
ne-
cefTary of each degree in Hfe.
The gentleman of
fortune rifes about
nine o'clock; he perhaps
may make an
excurfion to walk as far as his ftables to fee his horfes, fifty
a
or
and very thin
butter,
on
feldom more than
he returns to
;
between nine and ten, which
generally tea
ham,
is
yards from his houfe
breakfaft, is
which
hung beef. pallat, on the
coffee,
bread and
flices
of venifon-
He
or
floor,
then
lies
down
in the cooleft
^-oom in the houfe, in his (hirt and troufers only,
another
with a negro
at his feet, to
off the flies
takes
a
^ liquor
;
at his head,
and
fan him, and keep
between twelve and one he
bombo, or toddy, compofed of water, fugar, jum, and draught
of
A
42
Tour in the
and nutmeg, which kept cool
and
there
may
cabbage,
he dines between two
:
three,
at
ham and
a
or
always a Handing difh;
at
cyder,
rally excellent here glafTes
toddy, punch,
and madeira, which
port, claret,
elfe
greens
be,
is
and
every table, whatever
dinner he drinks
few
made weak, and
is
:
gene-
is
having drank fome
of wine after dinner, he re-
turns to his pallat, with his two blacks to fan
him, and continues to drink toddy,
or fangaree,
all
the afternoon
:
he does
not always drink tea; between nine and t^n in the evening, he eats a light fupper
of milk and friiit,
fruit,
or wine, fugar,
&c. and almoft immediately
to bed,
for the
night
;
and
retires
in which,
if
it
be not furnlfhed with mufketoe curtains,
he
is
generally io molefted with the heat,
and harrafled and tormented with thofe pernicious
infeds
he receives very
the little
mufketoes,
that
refrefhment from
deep.
This
is
his family,
his general
when he
way
of living in
has no company.
Nq
Untied States of America.
No
doubt
one
many
refpedt,
/^ollow
it
The
from
fome in
it,
fome in another
;-
but more
than do not.
lower, and
many
of the middling
very differently.
live
claffes,
differ
43
A
man
morning about
in
this line
rifes in
o'clock
he then diinks a julap, made
;
of rum, ftrong rally
;
water,
fix
and fugar, but v^ry
then he walks, or more gene-
rides,
round his plantation, views
and
his ffock,
all
the
his crop, breakfails
all
about ten o'clock, on cold turkey, cold meat, fried
homminy,
toaft
and cyder,
ham, bread and butter, tea, coffee, or chocolate, which laft, however, is feldom tailed but
by the women
;
the reft of the
day he fpends much in the fame manner before defcribed in a
man of the
firft
rank,
only cyder fupplies the place of wine dinner,
and he
eats
never even think of
no fupper it.
j
at
they
The women
very feldom drink tea in the afternoon;
men never. The poor negro
the
gnd fare
ftill
Haves alone
harder.
It
is
work
hard,
aftoniililng,
and
^
44
^^^^
and unaccountable
^'«
^'^^
amazing degree of fatigue but happy, wretches
He
can fupport.
morning lowed
at
mouthfuls but
is
is
enough
thefe poor,
do undergo, and called
day break, and
time
what an
to conceive
is
up
feldom al-
fwallow
to
of homminy,
or
three
hoe-cake,
driven out immediately to the field
which he continues,
to hard labour; at
without intermiflion, until noon is
in the
obferved, as
and
-,
it
a fmgular circumftance,
that they always carry out a piece of fire
with them, and kindle one juft by their
work, fultry.
let
the weather be ever fo hot and
About noon
his dinner, and he
is
is
hour for that purpofe.
the time he eats
feldom allowed an
His meal
confiils
homminy and fait, and, if his mailer be a man of humanity, he has a little of
fat,
fkimmed milk,
rufty bacon,
herring to relifh his cake,
which
flaves twice a
homminy,
or
or hoe-
kind mafters allow their
week
:
but the
number of
thofe,
it is
much
few
for
the poor flave generally
^
fait
8
to be
lamented, are very farejj
the
United States of America, tlie
45
worfe for his mafter's riches, which of
confifting
numbers
and
land
negroes,
their
and di-
inereafe their hardHiips,
minifh their value to the proprietor, the
expence precluding an extenfion of indul-
gence and
They
liberality.
then
return
which continues the evening,
to
in the field until
when they
bacco-houfes,
fevere labour,
repair to the to-
where each has his talk in
flripping allotted him, that
for
duik in
fome hours.
If
it
employs him
be found, next
morning, that he has negleded, flighted, or not performed his labour, he
is
tied
up, and receives a number of lafhes, on his bare back, moft feverely infli«rted, at
the difcretion of thofe unfeeling fons of the
barbarity,
overfeers,
who
are
per-
mitted to exercife an unlimited dominion
over them. It is late at
night before he returns to
his fecond fcanty meal, and even the time
taken up
at
it,
encroaches upon his hours
of deep, which, altogether, do never exceed
A
46
number, for eating and
eight in
ceed
'Tour in the
repofe.
But
inftead of retiring to reft, as
might
would be glad out from home,
naturally be concluded he
he generally
to do,
and walks
fets
fix or feven miles in the night,
be the weather ever fo
to a negroe
fultry,
dance, in which he performs with afton-
and the moft vigorous exkeeping time and cadence, moft
ifhing agility, ertions,
exadly, with the mufic of a banjor
(a
large hollow inftrument with three ftrings),
and a quaqua drum),
until
(Ibmewhat refembling a he exhaufts himfelf, and
fcarccly has time, or ftrength,
home
before the hour he
is
to return
called forth
to toil next morning.
When qually lies
he
fleeps,
miferable
his comforts are e-
and limited
;
for
he
on a bench, or on the ground, with
only an old fcanty fingle blanket, and not always even that, to ferve both for his
bed and his covering. ing
lefs
Nor
is
his cloath-
niggardly and wretched, being
nothing but a
ftiirt
and
troufers,
made of coarfe
United States of America. coarfe thin
hard hempen
47 the
in
fluff
fummer, with the addition of a
fordid
woollen jacket, breeches, and fhoes, in the winter.
The
female flaves fare, labour, and re-
pofe, juft
when
in
the
fame manner;
which
they breed,
lofe
generally
is
every two or three years,
even
they feldom
more than a week's work thereby, or fuckling the
the delivery,
in
either child.
In fubmifllon to injury and
infults,
they
are likewife obliged to be entirely pafiive,
nor dare any of them
refill,
or even de-
fend himfelf againft the whites, fhould attack
him without
provocation;
for the
groe's
arm
his
own
defence,
they
the fmallefl
ne-
directs a
to be llruck off,
againfl a white perfon,
in
law
if
who
fhould
it
raifes it
be only
againft the
moft
wanton and wicked barbarity and outrage.
Yet
notwithllanding
fituation,
and rigid
has fubjei^ed
this
this
feverity to
degrading
which
fate
wretched race, they are certainly
A Tour
48
in the
certainly devoid of care,
and a£tually ap-
pear jovial, contented, and happy. tunate
it is
For-
indeed for them, that they are
bleffed with this eafy, fatisfied difpofition
of mind,
the weight, fure
of
human nature, unequal to muft fmk under the pref-
elfe
complicated
fuch
mifery
and
ivretchednefs.
Having had to
occafioa
more than once
mention homminy, hoe-cake,
may
it
not be improper at this time to ob^
ferve, that
homminy
made of Indian hufl^s, boiled
beanSi until
is
corn,
an American difh, freed
it
large
kind of French
becomes almoll a pulp
in general ufe, and to
agreeable.
ground
from the
whole, along with a fmall
proportion of a
it is
^r,
Hoe-cake
into meal,
is
my
tafte,
Indian
very corn,
kneaded into dough,
and baked on a hot, broad, iron hoe. This is alfo in common ufe, and to my palate,
extremely harlh and unpleafant.
CHAP.
United States vf America,
CHAP. Ordinaries^
Houfes.
A Jirange
Inns.
or
note Birds in the Air.
THE
VII.
Devour Frogs and
Black Snakes.
49
Flying Squirrels ^
covered
with
Fafci-
isfc.
houfes here are almoft
wood,
Animal.
Alice.
the
all
of
fame
the roof with fhingles, the fides and ends
with thin boards^ and not always lathed
and
plaiftered wichin
better
;
only thofe of the
are finiflied in that
fort
and painted on the
outfide.
manner,
The chim-
neys are fometimes of brick, but more
commonly of wood, coated on the infide with clay. The windows of the beft fort have
in
glafs
them
and only wooden
There
is
the reft have none,
fh utters.
no diftindion here between
inns,
taverns,
houfes
;
ordinaries,
they are
known by
;
all
in
and publicone,
the appellation of taverns, pub-
Kc-houfes, or ordinaries, which, general are
acceptance of the
fynonymous terms.
Vol.
I.
and are
E
in the
names here,
They
are
all
very
^o
A Tour
^
in the
very indifferent indeed, compared inns
the
England
in
fourths of
them
than mere
fhelters
are in reality
three-
little
better
from the weather; yet
them
the worft of
and
:
with
by no means
is
defi-
cient in charging high.
When his ears
a perfon arrives at
Richmond,
are continually aflailed with the
prodigious noife and roaring of the
which almoft
him from
ftuns him,
falls,
and prevents
fleeping for feveral nights,
it
being a confiderable time before he be-
comes habituated
to
it.
My principal amufement was walking I
took great delight in wandering
among
the rocks and
around the
lituations,
curfions
I
folitary falls.
aloiie
romantic
In thefe ex-
my
always carried a book in
when I came to any commanded my attention,
pocket, and that
place either
from the wildnefs and grandeur of perfpedive, the
raging
or
lie
down
ol
below, after admir-
ing the beauties of the fcene, frequently
the
from the obfervation
torrent
:
in the
I
would
fhade,
and
amuf^
United States of America.
amufe myfelf with reading,
which
recreation,
But
I
until I infen-
my
was
This
fibly dropt afleep.
51
daily
never negle(3:ed.
I
was once extremely
beholding, as foon as
lurpriled at
opened
I
my
eyes,
a prodigious large fnake, within a few
of me, bafldng hlmfelf in the fun.
feet
He
was
belly, very leafl:
me
with a copper-coloured,
jet black,
feven feet long.
no injury
for
;
and
at
However he
did
fparkling
fine
I
did not didurb him,
me
nor did he molefh
eyes,
but as foon as
;
he heard the ruiliing of the
my
on
leaves,
moving, he went oif with great pre-
cipitation
and fpeed.
Another time, whilft
I
was reading
a very folitary retired place
among
rocks and trees, on hearing fome noife near
me,
I
la
the
little
looked around, and juft
had the glimpfe of a very ftrange and fmgular animal, fuch as
I
had never ittn
even any refemblance of before. peared to
me more
than any thing fight I
had of
like a fiddle
elfe it
that
was
E
2
I
juft as
with
know it
It
ap-
feet, j
the
was running
A
52
Tour
in the
ning beliind a rock. every where for purpofe, for
fought there, and
I
immediately, to no
it
could not difcover even a
I
trace thereof remaining.
When had feen
returned,
mentioned ^vhat
I
but no one, from
;
inform
could
tion,
was
I
me
my
I
defcrip-
w^hat animal
it
*.
However, nothing
more common
is
He
here than the black fnake. bold and daring
yet, to the
;
is
very
human
race,
entirely harmlefs and inofFenfive
and
his bite poifonous,
as the fcratch of a briar
whicli,
faid,
is
truth, that
he
even the
rattle-fnake
is
arifes
is
as readily cured
:
notwithftanding
beheve with
I
mafter of
This fuperiority
nor
is
and
it
;
all
other fnakes
fubmits to
him.
from the ftrength
and power of his mufcles,
for
he infinuates
himfelf in fpiral wreaths around his antagonift,
and then contrad:ing,by that means
conquers or
kills
him.
His prey,
for
food, he fwallows whole. * For a defcription of
S
this animal, fee
chap.xtin, It
Unked It is
53
confidently reported, and univer-
fally credited,
and
States of America,
that they devour fquirrels,
they
that
have
whole in
fquirrels
been found with
their bellies.
myfelf
I
have feen them fwallow frogs of a very large fize. After the frog in,
if
you
ftrike
ftantly difgorge
it,
is
almoft wholly
the fnake, he will in-
and the frog will leap
away.
The
black fnakes are particularly fer-
viceable in deftroying rats and mice,
which
they feek after very eagerly, and devour for food
more
:
for this purpofe, they are even
ufeful than cats, becaufe,
by
their
form and peculiar make, they are enabled to purfue thefe vermin into their ilender
lurking holes and hiding places, which
they generally do, and thereby deflroy the
at
once
all,
have
whole progeny.
But the Americans, one and fuch an averfion and
antipathy to the
very appearance of the whole fpecies, that notwithftanding this kind of ferpents are abfolutely harmlcfs, and indeed extremely ferviceable for the purpofes juil
E
3
men-
tioned,
^
54
Tour
in the
tioned, yet they are as eager to kill
an4
deftroy them, as the mpft noxious, viru-
and deleteiious of the
lent, rattle,
have heard
I
fpecies, the
moccaflbp, and horn-fnakes.
many
flrange relations of
the power of fnakes,
in
charming
birds,
and drawing them down out of the to
air,
devour them, by a certain fafcination
in their eyes.
To
gave no credit; but viction
thefe tales I formerly I
now had
have
con-
of their truth, by frequent ocu-
lar demonflration. I
have obferved a
little
bird, fluttering
in the air, within a fmall compafs, gra-
dually defccnding until
it
came down on
a bufh, then hopping from fpray to fpray,
every time lower, condantly fending forth a tremulous, doleful note, expreffive of
dread
and
would drop
furprife,
until
at
length
into the jaws of a fnake
it
on
the ground, that was gaping open ready to
devour
On fnake,
it.
fuch occafions,
and the
I
inftant
always ftruck the
he moved,
the bird
Vnited States of America, bird
became
liberated
tion,
flying
away with
nefs,
and would chirp, and
head in the
as if grateful for
his
fafcina-
the greateft alert-
fome
for
air,
from
^^
foar over little
my
diftance,
deliverance from fo
its
This very extra-'
formidable an enemy. ordinary circumllance
I
have taken
parti-
cular notice of feveral different times. Squirrels of
many
various kinds abound
prodigioufly, but the grey fox-fquirrels are the moft plenty, and
you may
them
fee
mod common
any where
in
:
the
any time, jumping from
woods, and
at
tree to tree,
and making moft aftonifhing
leaps,
often fifteen,
times
thirty
feet,
twenty, and fome-
from one branch
Thefe are the
another.
flying-fquirrel,
jumps twice
though
as far
;
to
largeft,
but the
much
fmaller,
and indeed he takes
fuch prodigious vaults, that he feems to fly,
and appears
to
have wings, but they
are only an expanfion cf
on each fome
fide
little
fome
loofe fkin
of him, which affords him
fupport in the
E
4
air,
and breaks his
A
46 his fall
indeed
Tour in the
when he is
mifles his hold,
which
very feldom.
The moft
beautiful of the
whole fpe-
which
cies is the
ground
and moft
delicately ftriped with contrails
of
and lighter fhades.
dfirl^ier
fquirrel,
is
fmall,
CHAP.
United States of America,
CHAP.
VIIL
Quality and Jppearance of Soil Tobacco.
Corn*
Wheat.
Indian-
Falls of Jppamattox.
PeJerJhurg.
Pokahuntas. Indian Emperor's
Blandford-
Randolph and Boiling Families.
ter.
^j
Daugh'
The River
jppamattox.
THE
mofl commanding and excel-
lent fituations about
the feat of a
of the
hill
to the late colonel
who
are,
Mr. Adams, on the fummit which over-looks the town ;
and Belvidera, an elegant
over,
Richmond
villa
belonging
William Bird, of Weft-
formerly poffeffed a princely
fortune in America, and was' almoft the fole proprietor
of
the
many
for
falls,
the land adjoining
all
miles,
even above
Weftham. Juft
below the
tive fi(heries,
there are
falls
there are very lucra-
on each
fide
many more on
of the river; as
the James in dif-
ferent places, that yield great profit to the
owners.
On mills
the fouth fide
are moft valuable
and iron-works, which are worked
by
A Tour in the
58
by means of ing
falls
a canal, cut
from the adjoin-
of the James.
The low grounds on tremely rich and
the
fertile,
James
producing
quantities of Indian-corn, wheat,
The
bacco. lour,
foil
is
are ex-
and
vafl:
to-
of a dark redifh co-
and one foot and a half deep pure
loam.
The high
land
yet fufficiently
of an inferior quality,
is
fertile
to
produce good
crops of tobacco, wheat, and Indian corn
fome of
it
is
of a redifh colour, mixed
with clay, which worft
is
the beft
is
;
and the
of a light brown, intermixed
with fand.
The low grounds
yield an increafe in
wheat of twenty- five, times
thirty-five
feed
the high land
:
for one.
of one tity
This
acre.
is
and fome-
from one of
bufhels,
from eight
to fifteen
generally the produce
Much
of Indian corn
acre,
thirty,
about the fame quanis
produced from an
according to the quality and excel-
knce of the
foil,
though
it
does not require
United States of America.
more than
a peck of feed to plant
The produce
of an acre, in the cul-
quire it.
59
ture of tobacco, in the beft land,
is
about
fixteen
hundred and fixty pounds weight
on the
worfl, about five
An
weight.
hundred pounds
acre always contains nearly
twelve hundred and
of Indian-
fifty hills
corn, with two, three, and fometimes, in
flrong land, four ftalks in each
hill
or
;
about five thoufand plants of tobacco.
Above
the
falls,
again tolerably
the high land becomes
and
level,
height to the fummit of the
is
equal in
firft hills.
The towns of Richmond and Shokoes are in
or
Henrico county; and Chefterfield,
Rocky
Bridge,
is
in
the
county of
Cheflerfield.
On
the twenty-eighth of Auguft,
I fet
out on a journey to the fouihward, and as there
is
no fuch thing
be obtained in
all
as poft-chaifes to
America
to hire,
and
not having furnifhcd myfeif with horfes at
Richmond, becaufe
I
could purchafe them
I
was informed that
much
better
and
pheaper at Peterfb-urg, which was about
twenty-
A Tour in the
6o
twenty-five miles diflant, and dircdly in
my way, who I
I
rode a horfe of Mr.
prefled
me
to
make
was fortunate
ufe of him.
company of a
in the
Mr. Buchanan, who was
We
far as Peterfburg.
in the ferry-boat,
's,
alfo
going as
croffed the
James
early in the morning,
rode through the towns of Rocky-bridge,
and Warwick, which
from
about five miles
is
it.
We
halted at a
town named Ofborn's,
eight miles farther on, to bait our horfes, paffing
after
Chefterfield
county court-
houfe, and a church, or chapel, at this little
Here we dined, and
town.
afternoon, mounting our horfes,
in the
we
rived at Blandford, having croffed the
pamattox at the
river,
on a
lofty
wooden
ar-
Ap-
bridge,
town of Pokahuntas.
Here we put up
at
Boyd's, which
is
the beft houfc of public entertainment in the place. I fhall
never forget the prodigious and in-
ceffant noife affailed
my
and clamour
ears,
that continually
during the whole of this day's
United State> of America.
6
day's ride, proceeding from tbegreen-frogs*
and a multitude of other large
on the
infedls
and the bull-frogs in the
trees,
fwamps and
places of water,
of the road.
I
on bath
fides
was perpetually queflioning
Mr. Buchanan if they were not birds ; and was aftoniilied that I could not poffibly difcover
one of them
:
but the noife
of the buli-frogs was abfolutely tremendous.
Here,
at the
falls
of the river Appa-
mattox, are three towns, vi%, Elandford, Peterfburg, and Pokahuntas.
Over the there
is
a
river, juil
wooden
large
town of Pokahuntas the
below the bridge,
the daughter of the famed or
chief,
alfo the Indian
James),
at the
which ftands on
north fide of the river
peror,
falls,
named
after
Indian em-
Powhattan (which
is
appellation of the river
who gave
all
the land around this
place, as a portion in marriage,
with his
daughter Pokahuntas, to an anceftor of the prefent Randolph and Boiling families,
Trom which
ancient royal blood, a branch
of
A
62
Tour
in the
of the Randolphs, and the whole of th$ houfes
of the moil refpedable
(two
Boilings
Virginia),
in
are
a^ftually
de-
fcended.
On
the fouth fide of the river
town of Peterlburg,
fituated
and
amongft rocks,
is
is
under a
the hill,
extremely un-
healthy.
A
little
dillance, perhaps half a mile
below, on the fouth fide alfo of the Ap-
pamattox,
ftands
the
charming
pretty
town of Blandford, in a beautiful plain, on the river brink, on a very pleafant and delightful fpot.
The town field
county
of Pokahuntas Peterfburg
;
of Dinwiddle,
is
is
in Cheller-
in the
in the lower corner
Blandford ftands in the upper Prince George's county
them
is
The
county
;
;
and
end of
but neither of
a county- town. principal tobacco trade in
America
centers at Peterfburg, or Boiling's Point,
which
it
name of
is
generally called, from the
a family, (a branch of whofe
origin I have juft related), to
which the greater
United States of America.
63
of the town and adjoining
greater part
lands belong. It
fomething remarkable, that no
is
grew up
child born at this place ever
to
maturity, excepting the prefent proprietor,
Mr. Boiling, whofe
feat
over-looks
Peterfburg and the adjacent country and river
i
which
is
occafioned by the infalu-
brity of the air,
and the
healthinefs of the fituation.
There
are alfo
extreme un,
fome valuable mills
the vicinity of this place, ereded by Bannifter,
who
a
very public
refides in
terfburg,
fpirited
in
Mr.
man,
an elegant houfe near Pe-
which are
carried
on by means
of a canal, cut from the neighbouring
falls
of the Appamattox.
The Appamattox about the into the
fize
James
is
a fmall river,
much
of the Thames, and runs at City Point,
miles, in a dired: line,
about twelve
below Blandford.
Sailing veffels, floops, fchooners, and flats,
or lighters, falls
;
come up
to the bridge at the
but fhips of burden take in their
cargoes five and eight miles below.
In
A Tour in the
64
In Blandford
I
found an excellent or-
dinary at Boyd's, and a tolerably agreeable
mixed company of
men. Amongft the
ladies
reft,
and gentle-
were a couple of
v/hom was a mathe army, with gay young wives,
old gentlemen, one of jor in
who in to
did not feem altogether at eafe, nor,
all
be
probability, fo
;
diverfion
had they every reafon
however,
they afforded
us
and entertainment ^ enough to
obferve their various manoeuvres on both fides, or rather
on
the four appeared to be a chief,
and
to
for each
of
commander
ii"^
all fides
;
have different purfuits and
objects in view.
CHAP.
Ufiiied States
C
A
ri
(f America,
65
1X0
Po
Ceneral CharaBer^ and great Uofp'itaUty of the
Number of Inhabitants
ginlarts.
THE
Vir-^
in Virginia.
Virginians are generous, ex-
tremely
and
hofpitable,
poffefs
very liberal fentiments.
There
is
a greater diftindion fupported
between the different
clafles
of
than perhaps in any of the colonies
;
nor does that
fpirit
life
reft
here,
of the
of equality,
and levelling principle, which pervades the greateft part of America, prevail to fuch
an extent in Virginia.
However, there appears degrees of rank amongft
be but three
all
the inhabi-
exclufive of the negroes.
tants,
The
firft
confids of gentlemen of the
bell families
who
to
and fortunes in the colony,
much more
are here
numerous than America.
in
any other province
I.
in
Thefe in general have had a
liberal education, poflefs
VoL.
refpedable and
.
F
enlightened un-
denland-
A
66
Tour
in
the
knowledge
derftandings, and a thorough
of the world, that furnifhes them with
an
eafe
and freedom of manners and conhighly to their advantage in
verfation,
exterior,
which no
of fortune
viciffitude
or place can diveft them of; they being actually,
according to
agreeable and
befl:
my
ideas, the
companions, friends>
and neighbours, that need be
The
moft
defired.
number of them keep their and have handfome fervices of
greater
carriages,
but they
plate
;
have
ftuds,
all,
without exception,
as well as fets of elegant
and
beautiful horfes.
Thofe of the fecond degree
in
rank are
very numerous, being perhaps half the inhabitants,
and
fingularity,
and mixture of
confift
of fuch a variety, characflers,
that the exadt general criterion
and lead-
ing feature can fcarcely be afcertained.
However, they and hofpitable
are generous, friendly,
in the extreme
;
but mixed
with fuch an appearance of rudenefs, ferocity,
and haughtinefs, which
fadt only a
want of
is
polifh, occafioned
in
by
their
United States of America, deficiences
their
education,
in
knowledge of mankind, their general intercourfe
whom
and
as well
with
in
as
flaves,
by
over
they are accuftomed to exercife an
harfh and abfolute
Many to
67
of them
fome of the
command*
poITefs fortunes fuperior firft
rank, but their fa-
milies are not fo ancient, nor refpedtable
;
a circumftance here held in fome eftimation.
They every
are
all
fpeciesl
exceffively
attached
of fport, gaming, and
to
diffi-
pation, particularly horfe-racing, and that
moft
of
barbarous
all
diverfions,
that
peculiar fpecies of cruelty, cock-fighting.
In
fliort,
take
them
all
together, they
form aftrange combination of incongruous contradictory qualities, and principles di-
redly oppofite; the beft and the worft, the moft valuable and the moft worthlefs,
elegant accomplifhments and favage brutality,
being in
many of them moft
unac-
countably blended.
Yet indeed, notwlthftanding
this
appa-
rent inconfiftency of charader, principle,
F
2
and
A
68 and
Tour
in the
numbers of them
(Jondu£l:,
members of
valuable
are truly
and few,
foclety,
or none, deficient in the excellencies of intelledual
the
faculties,
which, though in a great mea-
genius,
fyre unimproved,
fplendid in an
The
and a natural
is
generally bright and
uncommon
third, or
lower
clafs
degree.
of the people
(who ever compofe the bulk of mankind), are in Virginia more few in number, in proportion to the
reft
of the inhabitants,
than perhaps in any other country in the
Even
univerfe. ble,
thefe are kind, hofpita-
and generous
;
yet illiberal,
noify,
and rude.
They
and averfe
They ail
much
are
to
addi(Sted to inebriety,
labour.
are likewife over-burdened
with
impertinent and infuperable curiofity,
that renders
them
and troublefome
peculiarly difagreeable
to ftrangers
:
yet thefe
undefirable qualities they pofTefs
by no
an equal degree with the gene-
means
in
rality
of the inhabitants of
land,
whofe
religion
New
Eng-
and government have
United States of America,
69
have encouraged,
and indeed
and
kind of inquifition, of
eftablifhed, a
inftituted
forwnVd impertinence and prying intrufion, againft every perfon
may
that
be
compelled to pafs through that troublefome,
illiberal
fcription,
country
:
from which de-
however, there are no doubt
many exceptions. To communicate
an idea of the ge-
neral hofpitality that prevails in Virginia,
and indeed through vinces, fent
it
may
all
the fouthern pro-
not be improper to repre-
fome peculiar cuftoms that are uni-
verfal
;
for inftance:
If a traveller, even a negroe, obferves
an orchard
full
of
or near his way, he
ples or peaches, in, alights, without
either ap-
fine fruit,
ceremony, and
fills
his
pockets, or even a bag, if he has one,
whhout afking
permiffion
;
proprietor fhould fee him, he leaft ojffended,
but makes
welcome, and
affifls
the fineft
him
and is
him
if the
not in the perfectly
in choofing oul
fruit.
F
3
But
A
70 But it
is
for
Tour in the
this is lefs to
be admired
confidered that there
any kind of
no
is
at,
here
fale
and the
fruit,
when fineft
peaches imaginable are fo abundant, that the inhabitants daily feed their hogs with
them during
the feafon.
In the time of prefTing cyder,
if a tra-
veller fhould call, to enquire his
way, he
is
generally offered as
he can drink, flay
all
is
night,
much
fine cyder as
frequently requefted to
and made heartily drunk
in the bargain, if he choofes
When gure than (the
perfon
a
common
name of
it.
of more calls
genteel
fi-
an ordinary
at
their inns), for refrefhment
and lodging for a night,
as foon as
any
of the gentlemen of fortune in the neigh-
bourhood hears of
him
himfelf,
it,
he either comes for
or fends
him
a polite
and
where he
preffing invitation to his houfe,
meets with entertainment and accommodation,
infinitely fuperior,
every re-
in
fped, to what he could have received at the inn.
If he fhould
happen
tigued with travelling, he
is
to be fa-
treated
in
th^
Jinked States of America.
yi
die moft hofpltable and genteel manner
and
his fervants
and horfes
alfo fare plen-
teoufly, for as long a time as
All this
to ftay.
grace
imaginable,
is
he choofes
done with the
beft
without even a hint
being thrown out of a curiofity or wifh to
know
name.
his
However, that
many
the lower
it
mufl be acknowledged,
of the fecond, and almoft
clafs
all
of the people, are ignorant
in the extreme.
Their fentiments, and illiberal,
fioned fined
their ideas are
narrow, and contracted
by to
all
a
their inadive
occa-
;
fituation,
con-
fmall compafs, and very
li-
mited fphere of knowledge, wherein the
fame objedls are ever prefented to
their
view, without any variation, change, or novelty,
being thereby precluded from a
more general and the
intercourfe with the world,
different
members of
fociety at
large.
About the commencement of
the late
unfortunate difturbances, and inaufpicious hoitilities,
the
American congrefs pre-
F 4
tended
A
72
T^our
in
the
tended to have a calculation made of the
numbers of
all
the inhabitants
in each
province and colony included within their
domination, v^hich they publifhed.
But
I
tenfible
have always concluded that
of-
enumeration of theirs to be greatly
exaggerated, purpofely to magnify their refources,
numbers, and prowefs. calculation,
Vir-
to contain fix
hun-
In that oftentatious ginia
was reprefented
dred and
which near I
fifty
thoufand inhabitants
;
of
tv\'o-thirds are blacks.
computed the true number of
in Virginia to be then about five
fouls
hundred
thoufand in the whole, with a fimilar proportion of flaves included Jiave
certainly
decreafed
in
;
and they
population
fince that time.
CHAP.
United States of America.
CHAR
X.
Nottoway-Rlver.
j9 wretched Situation,
73
Horfes re*
Troublefome Companion,
fufe to cat Bacon,
Ma-
hirrin-River.
IPurchafed two
horfes at
gave
the beft I
for
the worft coft
me
Peterfburg;
pounds,
fifteen
twenty- five pounds
and a negro boy, whofe
price
was forty
pounds.
began to prepare for
I
my
journey'
fouth ward, having had the honour to
by
vifit,
invitation, feveral of the principal fa-
and near
milies
in
whom
were
ling's,
Mr.
place,
among
Mr. Buchanan's, Mr. BoiMr. Bannifter's, Mr. Eppes'5,
Bland's,
took
I
this
my
&c. departure from Blandford,
on the fourth of September, in company with a young lad from North Carolina,
then on his return.
After having rode about fifteen miles
we
(lopped to
bc^it
our horfes, and dine, at Hattan's
-^ 'Tour in the
74
ordinary, where the
^'•Hattan's
^%rdinary indeed, and very
The day
was
fare
indifferent.
extremely hot and
being
fultry,
it
was
rather late in the afternoon
before
we
fet
out again on our journey,
&iM by
that
reaching
means
up
I intended to put
very
growing dark, ihelter
ordinary,
Stewart's
being taken
in a
an overfeer
was prevented
I
houfe
the
at that night
ill,
was
I
from,
and
for
it
was
to
take
as
obliged
;
of a houfe, wherein
fhell
and
lived,
fix
ne-
Carolina
left
five
or
groes befides.
The young man from
me
here,
My
and continued on
accommodation
at
his journey. this
place was miferable indeed, fortunate for me, better in the
that
I
morning, or
wretched
and
it
was
found myfelf I
might have
been in adual danger of perifhing for
want of common nefs
had detained
If
my
neceffaries, if
me
fituation,
fo intolerable,
fick-
therein.
but for one night, was
what muft
conftant refidence
my
it
was
his be,
whofs
\
it
United States of America.
y^
indeed hardly to be conceived
It is
what an uncomfortable forlorn
that
flate
young man, the
ir
pc.
overfeer, then
lived.
>
There might be about
fifty acrf§
land cleared of woods, and chiefly
of
uf^ jer
culture for Indian corn.
There was not another houfe nor hut
Upon the
plantation, nor a fingle fruit-
tree.
That
poor apology
miferable fhell, a
a houfe, confifted but of one fmall
for
room, which ferved for the accommodation of the overfeer and fix negroes
was not lathed nor ceiled nor
for
door in each
no
above,
lofted
thin boards
neither
;
had a
it
and one window, but had not even a brick
it
chimney, and, as
it
and only very
coveting
its
fide,
glafs in it;
plaiftered,
:
it
flood
on blocks about
a foot above upon the ground, the hogs lay confi:antly
made
it
near
half
very bad
under
fwarm with
;
a
mile
there
which
the floor, fleas
;
difiant,
water was
and
that
was not a neighbour within
A Tour
y6
in the
on one
vvithin five miles
miles on the other
;
and
fide,
eiglit
no book, no con-
venience, no furniture, no comfort in the
houfe, unlefs
you
by
call
name a
that
mi&rable thin chaff bed, fomewhat raifed
from the
which
in a corner of the
floor,
alternately
and
chair, his table,
him
ferved
room,
for
his
had
little
his couch.
In this wretched habitation
I
and no refrefhment, although the
fleep,
poor young
man
permitted
me
to lie
on
his bed alone,
and did not come there
himfelf, but lay
on the
groes
for they
;
were
with their hands the
night,
awake; and
all
when
floor
with the ne-
fhelling.
the former part of
their
fongs kept
of the mufketoes, prevented
me
fleep until day-break,
I
this
fnoring af-
and having of
all
fame room with me, with the
fiftance
from
me
the difagreeable idea of fuch
a parcel of nafty black devils, in the
Indian-corn
gratified the
my
horfe,
I
arofe,
poor inhabitants
manfion of mifery
mounted
when
w^ith a trifle,
and purfued
my
journey.
This
United States of America*
This morning river
I croffed
named Nottoway,
which
is
at Swede's-bridge,
fome very good land on low grounds and high
is
;
its
There
by the
this river, it
is
both
what
planters,
is
from
colour.
This
river is here about as large as the
Thames at Kew, but with wood and fallen by
over a pretty-
of timber.
conftrucSted
called mulattoe land
77
much incumbered trees, brought dowa is
the floods. I arrived at Stewart's
faft,
which was
ordinary to break-
toafled Indian hoe-cake,
and very excellent cyder,
after a ride this
morning of about eleven miles. Being always particularly careful of horfes,
and they having fared very indif-
ferently the
night before, I ordered the
hoftler to give
man
my
flared at
them plenty ^f meat. The me, and ajked me if they Being fomewhat
would
eat
at his
feeming impertinence, and out of
it ?
humour by want of
reft,
fatigue, I
irritated
indifpofltion,
anfwered, that
I
and
deflred
he would make the experiment, and imS
mediatelv
A
78
Tour in the
away from him, went
mediately, turning into the houfe.
In a few minutes, on looking out the window,
fore the door
and going out to enquire
;
the caufe of their affembling there,
into
a.
furprifed to find
the people of the place in the road be-
all
I
was much
I
at
met the
hoftler
my
and
boy, with each
large piece of bacon in his hand, telling
me of
the horfes would
not eat a morfel
it.
They
acquainted me, that
the horfes eat meat, derftood curiofity,
the road.
it
was
to fee
by which they un-
that excited the people*
bacojiy
and had drawn them forth into laughed heartily, and di-
I
leded the hoftler, fmce the poor filly horfes could not be prevailed on to tafte his ba-
them whatever
con, to give
would choofe
to eat,
elfe
they
and as much of
it
as they pleafed.
By
the bye,
nience,
my
was a great inconve-
it
and extremely troublefome, that
boy, being an African, was of very
little fervice to
me
;
for he fcarcely under-
3
ftood
United States of America*
word
ftood a fingle
nor did
know one
I
that I
faid
fyllable
79 him,
to
of his Ian-
guage.
This
Andrew
ridiculous
T
on
his
rior
his
way
I
company,
my
he was then
refided.
tafte
North
His exte-
peculiarly forbid-
declined his propofal, having
inclination to fuch
in this
as
to Halifax town, in
being to
ding,
one
who pretended to be make me an offer of the
wheje he
Carolina,
induced
,
a humourift, to
honour of
affair
I
was
altogether
an acquaintance.
But
and
egregioufly miftaken,
difappointed
Mr.
:
no
T—
>—.—
was not to be repulfed with fuch facility he was determined to amufe himfelf at :
my
expence, and at
my
ignorance of the
cuftoms of his country, and
mofl compelled to
fuffer
his
for I certainly did not accept
deavoured
my
I
was
al-
company, it,
but en-
utmoft to avoid that ho-
jiour. I told
I
him, that as
would not
it
threatened rain,
rifque getting wet,
but in-
tended to ftay fome time, the length of vv'hich
A Tour in the
8o
might be
however,
wliich,
T
Well, fo would Mr.
When
I
found
this,
—
.
determined to
I
out in the rain, which had
fet
on
and adually did
;
my
fo
to
T
company ; but Mr. commodate himfelf
uncertain^
now come avoid
his
would
ac-
every change of
to
mind, and he departed along with
me.
When flow,
I
rode
fo did
faft,
he went flow
alfo
:
at
he; when length I
turned fhort from him, along a path on but
the light,
my
llupid
fervant con-
tinued to accomp? .j Mr. *T
obliged faft to
me
to
return,
overtake him,
as
;
this
and gallop very
he had thereby
got fome miles before me.
But defcending a
declivity too rapidly,
and without caution, the road being on clay very wet fell
and
down with me
by which
I
was
ilippery,
my
in three-parts fpeed,
exceffively dirted, as well
^
as hurt.
Having remounted, and rode on I
cut
horfe
a
moft
again,
wretched figure, being
daubed
Ufiited States of America.
daubed from head the
befides
with red clay,
to foot
farther injuries
them
Mr.
:
—
T
which
and
ill
manners
I
much
but was
black, yet could
ftand
fit
adt of rudcnefs
did not feem to notice, incenfed
not
my expreffions
greatly encreafed fion,
overtook
a laughing
fell
'
to biirft his fides,
fall.
plight I
ridiculous
this
had re-
I
ceived from contufions by the
In
8i
my
at
ftupid
make him underThis
of refentmerit.
Mr.
T
's
diver-
and ill-timed noify mirth.
In this difagreeable condition, and uncourtly guife,
we
croffed
confiderable
a
named the Three Creeks, on three wooden bridges; and a confiderable river named Maherrin, larger than the Thames, at Hicks's bridge which is
ftream of water,
remarkably all
lofty,
in the fouthern
pear to be tion,
J
built
of timber, as
part of
America ap-
having pafled a
the feat of
fortune,
and
Mr. WiUIs,
a
man
of
and proprietor of the original
flock of extraordinary
Vol.
fine planta-
I.
G
fwift
horfes, for
whick
A
8a
Tour in the
•which this part of America
vanquifh
all
About fide
is
noted, that
others in quarter- racing.
on the
thirty miles higher up,
of this
near one Ingram's plan-
river,
tation, there
have been lately difcovered
fome very valuable medicinal fprings of mineral waters, which have already per-
formed many moll remarkable and aftonifliing cures on perfons afflided with various
kinds of lamenefs, infirmity, and
who
annually
from an hundred and
thefe
to
refort
difeafe,
fprings,
miles around.
fifty
We took fome refreihment at Edwards's ordinary,
with
an
exceeding good building,
accommodations,
excellent
erected at this
place,
which
is
lately
exadlly
twenty-eight miles north from Halifax, in
North Carolina, and forty-feven fouth
from Peteriburg
We
in Virginia.
relied but a very Ihort time here,
and, although
it
continued to rain
fall,
proceeded on our journey.
At
the
diftance
of
Hicks's bridge and ford,
ten
we
miles
entered the
province of North Carolina, and S
from three
miles
XJmted States of America. farther on, crofled a
tniles
83
large ftream
of water named Fountain's creek,
which we
miles north of Halifax town,
reached
that
night,
Roanoak,
river
in a flat ferry boat,
Towards the conclulion of ride, .
I
the
croffing
after
bank of which the town
fouth
fifteen
is
on the
built.
this day's
had the fatisfadion of retorting
the laugh on Mr.
T
—
fomely,
horfe
tumbled down,
and
fairly
his
him
rolled
in
the
mire,
all
three times moft completely.
over,
He and
for
very hand-
was
in fuch
a ridiculous condition
lamentable plight, being befides a
moft unwieldy, uncouth figure, that you could fcarcely difcover whether the creature
was human or not; nor would
it
have
been pofhble for the mofl rigid Cynic refrain
from
immoderate
laughter,
beholding his rueful countenance,
WTetched
to at
and
guife.
This was a moft unpleafant journey bad accommodation, bad roads, bad com;
.
pany and attendance, and,
in fhort, every
thing difagieeable in the extreme.
G
2
CHAP,
^
§4
^otir in the
CHAP. North Carolina,
Halifax Town.
Rock Fight,
Falls.
ALIFAX fouth fide larger, or
XI.
at
'Roanoak-Rlver,
Floods.
town on the of the Roanoak (a river a pretty
Is
leaft
containing more water
than the James), about eight miles be-
low the
and near
falls,
firft
miles
fifty
higher up than the tide flows; but floops, fchooners, and
or lighters, of great
flats,
burden, come up to this town flream, which 4
is
deep and gentle.
Halifax' enjoys
commerce and fome
the
againfl:
a tolerable
of
fliare
in tobacco, pork, butter, flour, tar,
turpentine, fkins, furs, and
cotton.
There
are
Halifax and
moft
all
white
;
many handfome its
vicinity, but
confl:rudled of timber,
among them
are
buildings in
they are
al-
and painted
Mr. Mountfort's,
Mr. Abner Nafh's, Mr. Martin's (now an ordinary, or inn, 7
built by,
and
for-
merly
"United States
of America,
%^
merly the refidence of a Mr. Elmfley, an
Mr.
eminent pradiitioner in the law),
Long's, Mr. Eaton's, and Mr. Jones's the
laft
Occoneachy-neck, an ex-
in
is
treme rich and valuable trad of land, about two miles from town, and
deed an elegant Halifax
is
in-
feat.
twenty- five miles due fouth
is
from Peterfburg, and one hundred from.
Richmond,
is
of a
the capital
diftrid:,
and the county- town of Halifax county. In and around the town
fandy
;
the
foil
the banks of the river on
is
the
fouth fide are high, but low on the north,
and very
fubjed:
to inundations, fo re-
markably, that the ferry-houfe, a wooden building, which ftands
on
that
fide,
is
obliged to be faflened with ropes, tied to the trees, to prevent
it
from being wafhed
away by the floods. The quantity of water
that
comes down
the Roanoak, on fuch occalions,
amazing 4>orp,
and
tobacco,
enormous horfes,
,G 3
;
is
trees,
cattle,
indeed fences,
and even Jiojifes,
A
86 houfes,
Tour
in the
fwept away by the tor-
are all
and caried down with the ftream.
rent,
There
phenomenon
a fingular
is
tends this river,
which
is,
days, or feafons of rain,
any thing, or but very
common magnitude
it
little
at-
that during
does not
rife
beyond the
but two or three
;
when
days after the rain has ceafed,
the
iky and fun are again become bright and fine,
and the bad weather
is
forgotten, then,
and not before^ the Roanoak begins to and encreafes with fuch rapidity
fvvell,
and
violence,
that
the inhabitants have
fcarcely time to drive their cattle, horfes,
iheep,
hogs,
^c.
off
from
the
low-
grounds up to the high, before the whole are overflowed tion
all their
away ^nd
;
and without
live flock
deflroyed,
this precau-
would be fwept which frequently
happens, notmthflanding every exertion
and
care.
There this river;
is
another
that
i*s,
peculiarity
attends
the low grounds are
generally higher, next the river fide, than
where they adjoin the high-land
5
thus,
by
U?2ifed States of America.
by means of
87
communicating from
guts,
the river to the back part of the low-
grounds, which
is
mofl:
commonly
fwamp with caufeways of the floods
ter
by which the creature
is
it,
miry
the
wa-
foon brought there,
is
of every
retreat
living
cut off in a very fhort time
begin to encreafe, and
the waters
after
over
a
confequently
included
all
within
mufl:
inevitably perifii, fhould the inundation
overfpread the whole.
However, the there
fpot,
in the
floods feldom cover every
being fome particular places
low grounds conflderably higher
than the
which, on fuch occafions,
refl:,
crowded with the poor
are
mals
:
fwells feveral feet above the
highefl: of thofe places.
The Roanoak, called, the
It
is
at
~
or as
Morattuck,
of a mile over
and
ani-
but once every two or three years
Roanoak
the
terrified
it
is
at Edinton,
itfelf
fometimes
above a quarter
Halifax, but very deep,
much wider many
empties
is
miles above.
into Albemarle
where
it is
G
4
Sound,
feven miles wide,
and
A
88
and
on
receives
Cho wan-River, by
north
the
Maherrin,
fide,
or Sound; vsrhich
confluence of the
the
and
Tour in the
formed-
three
and
Nottov^^ay,
is
the-
rivers,
Elackwater,
fomething more than two miles
Is
in breadth.
The communication with this
enormous body of water,
Roanoak
inlet,
where
fluduating banks,
from
the fea,
there
is
through bar,
a
is
and fhifting quick-
fands, that prevent fhips of
burden frorn
entering this extenfive bay. I
put up at Martin's, the beft houfe of
public entertainment in Halifax.
Here
was
I
difpofed of
my
in fadt totally ufelefs to
my
gained ten pounds by
From fions
this
around
vifiting,
by
me
;
but I
bargain.
made many excur-
place I it,
who
black boy,
and had the honour of
invitation,
every family of
note, for a confiderable
diftance in the
vicinity.
Being one of a party that
fome days on a jaunt
in
v as to
pafs
the country, I
propofe4 calling to take a view of the fall^
S9
United States of America. falls
We were accompanied
of Roanoak.
by Charles Eaton, whof^ feats are in
efq.
and Mr.
W.
Park,
the neighbourhood of
thefe falls.
There was nothing remarkable obferved
in
body of water, over rocks the
falls
:
only
them,
dalhing
but to thofe
of the James,
to
be
prodigious
a
and
tumbling
who
have feen
thefe
no
are
objed.
There
is
a very extraordinary clrcum-f
however, attends thefe
ftance,
fpring, about the
May^
eighth of
called the rock fight.
This
at
the
dog thrown not be able to in
it
fame time
to
acrofs,
fiflies,
to the
would
nor could live
one quarter of an hour
actually fee
is
fpawn, that a
into the river then,
fwim
it
occafioned
is
by fuch amazing numbers of thofe here called Bafs- Rocks, coming up falls
every
falls
:
you may
them crowded thick upon
each other, even to the furface of the w^ater.
This fmgular phenomenon continues for ^hree days, but
on one of
thefe days, in particular,
A Tour
9©
moil
agitation of the water
the
particular,
in the
the whole river being in a
violent,
foam.
•
There and
many
are
valuable
fiflierles at,
in the vicinity of Halifax,
on each
falls,
is
During
Mount
fide
Pleafant,
Dawfon,
efq.
of the river.
excurfion
this
below the
the
we
feat
at
called
—
of
on the banks of the Roan-
oak, about eighteen miles above Halifax,
and feats
in returning flayed
fome days, at the
of Mr. Eaton, and Mr. Park.
About a mile out of Halifax town creek
named Quankey
pellation for red paint,
(the
a
is
Indian ap-
with which
it
a-
bounds), with an exceeding lofty bridge
thrown over
built
it,
fouth fide of which
Nicholas
ings
in
drink
to
the feat of a
where we
Long,
walked out
is
of timber, on the
Mr.
frequently
the mornings and even-
cow's
milk, which
was
there excellent.
About
five or fix miles farther on, in the
fame diredion,
upon a
is
a confiderable fettlement,
pretty large water-courfe,
named the
"United States of America,
the Marfli,
on
where we
invitation
efq.
9
fcveral times went,
from Alexander M*Colloch,
a ^gentleman of confiderable note,
and Archibald Hamilton, efq.* a merchant of eminence,
who
on a
carried
very extenfive and valuable commerce in Virginia, as well as in North Carolina;
and we were entertained with great hofpitality
We
and politenefs by each of them. vifited Willie Jones,
Cathcart's,
William Williams,
among many met with a reception
efq.
dodor
efq.
&c.
other gentlemen's feats, and moft. courteous and friendly
from
all.
* This gentleman's brother, lieutenant colonel
John Hamilton, is now commanded a provincial
in the Britifli fervice,
corps,
named
the North
and
Ca-
rolina loyalifts, having behaved vfhh great gallantry,
both under the earl of Cornwallis and lord
Rawdon,
CHAP.
A Tour
92
in
the
CHAP.
Method of clearing Land.
Lsfty Timher. Fire.
TH
E
XIL Woods $n
Dreadful Conflagrations.
low grounds of Roartoak are
extremely rich and
fertile,
but ia
general too light and fandy for the cul^
which here grows much
ture of wheat,
too luxuriant and high,
whereby
and lodges before the ears
The
foil is
feet deep,
fill
and
is
indeed
fubjed:
to
which fweep away whole as
and ripen.
a fine black loam, for feveral
but extremely
well
falls
it
inexhauflible,
inundations, inclofures,
the crops, and often leave
land covered with wrecks
and incumbered with large trees, brought
as \}i\^
of the flood,
vaft quantities
down by
of
the tor-
rent.
The low-grounds d.
are generally
quarter to a mile wide
fervable,
Roanoak,
for
the
that the
;
and
it
from
is
ob-
whole length of the low-grounds are
al-
ways
tJm'ud States of America,
ways on one
fide
of the river only, never
on both together, but
when
thus,
north fouth
ftill
promifcuoufly
the low grounds
fide, there ;
9 5.
are
on the
high lands on the
are
and where the low grounds are
on the fouth
fide,
the land on the north
high, almoft
fide
is
the
river.
It
is
fliifh
to the brink
remarkable
they are rich and
fertile,
join the low grounds
that
alfo,
wherever the high lands join the
of
river,
but where they
only, they are of
a very inferior quality.
The
timber
is
the low grounds,
of an immenfe bulk on
and
confifts
of white
and yellow poplars, black wallnut, hornbeam,
red bud,
fycamores,
On
oaks,
fweet afh,
gum, dog wood, beech,
the rich high land,
it
elm,
G?r.
confifls
of
hickory, faffafrafs, oaks, ^c. and on the inferior
high land, of lofty pines,
of a
great height, mixed with fcrubby oaks,
black-gum, and maple. In this part of America there are feven different fpecies of oak, i;/z.
black-oak, white-.
-^ T'our in the
94
white-oak, red-oak, Spani£h-oak, wlllowoak, live-oak, and fcrubby oak.
The in
appearance and colour of the
the
beft
with a lArith
high lands,
very
either
iliffj
crooked
timber,
excepting
which generally grow every where,
is
is
and
fandy
the
large,
pines,
tall,
and
they are
unlefs
But the worft timber,
crowded together. ance, and
v,'orft
wet, and livery, with low,
light, or
on the worfl
and covered
That of the
timber.
whitifh-brown,
ftraight
dark brown,
tinge of red,
flight
tall
is
foil
land,
makes
a better appear-
larger than the trees in St*
James's and Hyde-parks.
The
general
mode of
clearing the land
where timber
in this country,
value, and labour
of great,
is
is
of no
by cut-
is
ting a circle round the tree, through the
bark, quite to the w^ood, before the fap rifes,
which
kills
it
;
and they
the ground below immediately,
cultivate
leaving
the trees to rot ftanding, which happens
within a very few years, and they never bear leaves more.
A
large
United States of America.
A large
field in this fituation,
g^ makes a
and tremendous
moft fingular,
ftriking,
appearance
would feem indeed dan-
it
:
gerous to walk in
it,
as the trees are of a
height and magnitude
prodigious
-,
vafl
and branches of enormous
limbs,
impending
in
awful ruins,
fize
from a great
height, fometimes breaking off, and fre-
quently whole trees falling to the ground,
with a horrible crafh, the found of which increafed and protraded
is
by the reverbera-
tioilof the furrounding echoes.
Yet, not-
withftanding this apparent danger, very
few I
accidents
happen
ever
never heard
any
of
from
it.
excepting
to
beads.
When
they faw
falls,
pieces,
huge
the timber
cut
fmaller
down, or in
trees
and heap them up together
piles,
where they at'
the
is
and in many fet fire to
in
different places,
them
in the winter,
which time the whole country around
appears in a blaze
;
and the atmofphere
is
then extremely incommoded, and totally
pervaded with fmoak.
For
A ^our in the
g6
For very frequently the large,
dry,
and almofl rotten flanding timber, catches and blazes with great fury
fire,
is alfo
communicated
;
the
to the leaves
fire
on the
ground, in the furrounding woods, which are there accumulated to a great depth,
by
falling
from the
trees
to the
earth,
where they have been encreafmg, jlratum fiiper
Jlratum^ from the moft remote pe-
riod of time; being
very dry and com-
they inftantly catch
buftible,
like
fire
the conflagration quickly fpreads
tinder
;
many
miles on every fide, and at length
becomes general and dreadfully tremendous
;
for there
tinguiihing,
is
no
poffibility
or retraining
the violence
and velocity of the devouring
which deftroy and confume timber,
clofures,
and
driving even the wild
and
all
beafl:s
of ex-
flames,
fences,
in-
vegetation
before
them
their progrefs, at length,
in
flocks
is
only terminated by fome large river,
or
by heavy
;
rains.
This
United States ofAmericdi
This has induced the
97
leglflature to
en-
deavour to guard agahift fuch alarming accidents,
by paffing ads
ting
to
fire
the
to prevent fet-
woods, &c.
notwith-
flanding which, thefe terrible conflagrations are
Vol.
ftill
I.
frequent every year.
H
C
H
x^
P,
A
^S
Tour in the
CHAP. Inhabitants of the Country
of People.
XIII.
and of the Towns.
ClaJJcs
Methods of Trade
Planters,
Stores.
and Commerce.
'
^
I
HE
inhabitants of
this
of
part
America may be comprehended in
jS.
a very few
clafTes.
All in the country, without exception,
are planters,
ftore-keepers or perfons
and hunters
trade,
:
in
thefe laft are chiefly
confined to the back country and frontiers
next the Indians. In
the
mechanics, keepers line,
towns
there
lawyers,
furgeons,
or perfons
fome
are
in
few flore-
the commercial
and tavern-keepers.
However, the are fo .
•
generality of the towns
inconfiderable,
that
in
England
they would fcarcely acquire the appellation of villages.
The
different diftind branches of
ma-
nufacturers, fuch as hofiers, haberdafhers,
7
clothiers,
Vnited States of America, clothiers,
linen-drapers,
gg
grocers,
flatlo-
&c. are not known here they comprehended in the fingle name
ners,
;
are all
and occupation of merchant, or
flore-
keeper.
What are called fhops in England, are known here by the appellation of ftores, and fupply the inhabitants with every dividual article neceflary in
life,
in-'
fuch as
linens, woollens, filks, paper, books, iron, cutlery, hats, ftockings, fhoes, wines, fpi-
fugars,
rits,
which ftins,
in
&c, and even jewelry
return
furs,
they receive
cotton,
butter,
;
for
tobacco,
flour,
&c^
in confiderable quantities at a time, being
obliged to give a year's credit.
By little is
this
it
fpccie
in
appears, that there circulation
no great occafion
raifes
his
his
own
cyder,
for
cloathing,
but
indeed there
;
for a planter
;
own
meats, beef, and bacon,
corn
and
bread,
and brandy,
peaches,
it
is
&c.
and
which
is
his
drink,
his
fruit,
apples,
great
part
of his
cotton.
Ha
He
A
lOO
He
Tour
hi the
has no market to repair to but the
neareft ftore
;
which
him
chiefly fuppHes
with finery, befides the ufeful and neceiTary articles for
agriculture,
and what
little
clothing his flaves require, for which he
pays his crop of tobacco, or whatever
may
be his ftaple produce, and
is
elfe
always
twelve months in arrear.
CHAP.
United States of America.
CHAP. 'Tarhiirg.
Got
oi
XIV.
Attacked by an itinerant New-light Preacher. Strange Ignorance and uncouth Appear^
Lojl.
Injlance of extraordinary
ance of the Inhabitants. Hofpltallty
and Benevolence. Chowan Sound. MocCure for
Rattle. Snakes.
cojfon Snakes.
Made an
I
i
excurfion
named Tarburg
to a is
it
:
large as Halifax, being
their Bite.
town,
little
not half fo
a very infignifi-
eant place indeed. I
was entertained by a Mr. Hail, the
night
I
remained in
place,
this
and
re-
turned to Halifax next day.
Tarburg
is
about forty miles due fouth
and has not been
from Halifax,
many years. The chief produce around is
tar,
place
this
Indian corn, and hogs.
There
is
a large
wooden bridge over
Tar-river, at this town,
and wide, yet carried
built
which
feveral as
away by
is
very high
good have been
the floods.
H
3
I
made
A Tour in the
102
made another
I
on account of the yentures therein,
was
It
jniles
Cho\yan- found.
to
Fulham's
ferry
below the town),
(about
where
fifteen
I
croffed
and that evening reached Mat-
the river,
thew
fhall relate.
1
the fouth fide of the Roanoak, as
as
far
fingularity of the ad-
out from HaHfax, and rode along
I fet
down
which
peregrination,
Brickie's ordinary.
Here
I
tions, but
found tolerable
had
to
accommoda-
defend myfelf againft the
formidable attacks of a new-light itinerant preacher,
who had
perverted this family,
as well as moil of the vicinity
of his
;
and
after
artillery,
fpiration,
upon
inhabitants in the
exhaufting
cant,
me
all
the
fire
and pretended inin
vain,
he
very
gravely and formally concluded, and pro-
nounced with great an
obfcinate
foleranity, that I
unbeliever^,
and
that
was
my
hour of receiving light and divine grace
was not yet
arrived.
Having rode I
fet
thirty-fix miles that day,
out next morning, and proceeded
through
United States of America,
103
through the dreary pines, which compofe
woods
ahiioft all the
way
;
that
grow down
this
and about twelve o'clock, following
me
a path that led
my
out of
entirely bewildered and
road,
I
got
loft.
Being extremely fatigued, hungry, and dry,
feveral miferable hovels,
I called at
at the diftances of five or fix
but could neither obtain diredions
der,
my way,
on
afun-
jr.iles
or
any kind of refreftiment
even the water was
and
infalubrious,
very
fo
that
it
;
tailed,
ill
could fcarcely
be drank. I
rode on in this
and precarious
fi
miferable
tuatlon,
among
dilemma thefe ig-
norant wretches, until night approached,
when they
all
refufed to permit
lodge un^er their fhelters **
ing (as they faid) where
*'
or
why
I
come
fhouid
" nobody comes
;
'* :
I
came from, where
there,
but (telling me)
could get to Mr. Tyers's, about
**
miles
I
to
Wonder-
*'
off,
me
might get quarters
if
I
it\^txi
for
;
''
he often had ftrange, outlandifh folks
^*
to lodge at his houfe
H
4
;
and was a rich *'
man,
I
A
©4
*'
Tour
man, and had a
in the
and
mill,
" fmith's fhop, and a
a black-
flill.*'
Thefe people are the moll wretchedly ignorant of any could not
county,
me
tell
or
3ny other
They
ever met with.
I
the
parifh
name of
the place,
they refided
nor
in,
place in the adjacent country
me
neither could they furnifli directions,
by which
I
with any
might again
dif-
cover and afcertain the right way.
Their appearance
alfo is equally fordid
and mean, being of a fallow complexion
and yellowifh hue, almoft mulattoes, with the
v/ood (the roots
named clothed
fmoak of the
is
their
cotton rags,
in
whole
that
dirt
With much
fo
fuel,
had been
once dyed of fome colour, and veloped in
as
light-
and knots of pine,
which
here),
tawney
as
all
en-
perfuafion, I procured
one
and
naftinefs.
of thefe lumps of mortality to accom-
pany me
as a
where, after
guide to this Mr. Tyers's,
much difficulty, and no
fmall
hazard in paffing over feveral deep and
miry
Vti Hed St a tcs of
miry fwamps,
I
at
America,
105
length arrived, a
little
after dark.
Here
I
of
churlifhnefs
the
for
ample compenfation
obtained
creatures
whom
I
thofe
ignorant
had been among, by
the hearty welcome, and kind hofpitable
entertainment
who
I
received from
appears to be a
little
Mr. Tyers,
monarch
in
this
domain, being the only magiflrate in
this
place for thirty miles around, aid,
I
had almoft pronounced, the only
in-
telligent being.
His houfe was the plainnefs, mirth
feat
of plenty and
and good-humour, and
genuine hofpitality without oflentation but entirely out of the
way from
;
all
public roads.
Here
I
found a large table loaded with
fat roafted turkies, ^tti^^
and ducks, boiled
fowls, large hams, hung-beef, barbicued pig,
^c.
enough
for
five-and-
twenty
men.
Mr. Tyers
told
me, that
It
was but
feldom he was favoured with the com-
pany of any
ftrangers
;
but
when he was fo
A I'our
lo6 fortunate,
io
in the
him
always afforded
it
great pleafure to entertain them, becaufe
he was
they could obtain no
fenfible that
refrediment any where near
him, and
for that reafon, he
had given diredtions
to the
for
inhabitants
round him, to fend
all
twenty miles aflrangers to
his
houfe.
Mr. Tyers, with a benevolence and grace that> would do honour to any ftation, mounted his horfe, next morning, to
accompany
me
day
for the
;
both to
fhew me the way, and the country.
We arrived at a miles over a
on Chowan-river,
(named Cotton's)
or found
upon
ferry
we
;
croffed
it,
is
it
is
three
and rode along
wooden caufeway,
marlh, which
:
through a
here called a poccofon,
growing thick with
tall
reeds, near three
miles over.
Down
way
this
I
numbers of cyprefs and
lofty,
in
Jow grounds
;
many
alfo obferved trees,
tall,
great
ftraight,
of the fwamps and
befides multitudes of
fm-
gular
U?2tfed States of America,
named
gular excreflences,
107
cyprefs knees,
which make a very odd appearance,
arif-^
ing in the form of knees, out of the moft
miry
places.
We
then
and reached
returned,
Matthew
old fandified landlord
and
in the
Brickie's,
where Mr. Tyers flayed
that night,
morning we parted
:
my alfo
he return-
ing to his houfe, the manfion of benevolence and virtue tily tired, I
and
;
andfick of
to Halifax, hear-
I
my
excurfion.
cannot omit obferving a fmgular and
very difagreeable fight
Chowan- river ferpents,
:
I
noticed in pafTmg
was numbers of large
it
lying upon logs and fallen trees
in the river,
balking themfelves in the
fun. It
feems
cofon, as
abounds
marfli, morafs,
this
fuch
places
with thefe
are
or poc-
named
noxious difguPiful
x
creatures.
Moft of them called
here,
were
of
the
kind
moccoifon fnakes, as large as the
rattle-fnake, deftitute
of
but
thicker,
rattles^
fhorter,
and
which renders them
more
A
lo8
Tour in the
more dangerous, bite
by
as
this
means they
without previous warning, which the
and
fattle-fnake never does,
and
equally poifonous
more
fatal;
fome fay
fo.
They
are beautifully
manner
fame
the
their bite is
fpeckled, juft In
the
as
though they appear
duller,
rattle- fnake,
the colours
of each being the fame, but thofe of the moccoffons not fo bright; for the fimilitude
between them
fo
is
very ftrong,
that thefe are generally reckoned the fe-
male
by the more ignorant
rattle fnakes,
inhabitants.
Although the
bite
of both thefe fnakes
have always proved certain death, yet is
it
that the inhabi-
furprifing to obfcrve,
under very flender apprehen-
tants
are
fions
from them
:
indeed they feem to
dread themno more than any other ferpent.
However, to
have
whole It
a
all
the
particular
Americans antipathy
appear to
the
fpecies.
has but very lately been difcovered,
that there
is
a
remedy of
efficacy for
the bite
United States of America.
i
o^
of thofe fnakes, and an antidote a-
bite
gainfl: their poifon.
This
of the juice
equal quantities
is
of hore-hound and plantain, adminiftered
and frequently,
internally, largely
poultices to the
of the bruifed plants
applied
wound.
was a poor negroe
It
and
flave that firfl
difcovered this valuable fovereign
remedy;
and the aflembly, or parliament of North-
him with
Carolina, rewarded
and two hundred pounds
A
it.
and an nity
;
his freedom,
for
divulging
laudable example to governments, inftance of their fuperior
which
will
huma-
for ever reflect
upon
them the higheft honour. Notwithftanding
remedy may be
readily
eafily adminiftered
as
this plain
and fimple
obtained,
and
by the moft ignorant,
both horehound and plantain grow
fpontaneoufly near almoft every houfe, and in moft places
cleared of
where the land has been
woods
j
yet the
knowledge of
this great benefit to be derived
from them
has extended but very
oecafioned
little,
by
.A
11
by
T!our in the
th$ fmall intercourfe, and very limited
communication there
tween the thinly and
is
in
general be-
diftantly fcattered
inhabitants of this wide-fpread country fo that
from
this ignorance, the
bite
of
thefe noxious
and deadly ferpents con-
tinue
prove almoft as
ftill
to
fatal as
ever.
CHAP.
XJnited States of America,
CHAP. Woman.
Extraordinary
XV.
American General an Inn*
SlmpHchy of the
Dreadful Thunder-clap.
keeper.
An
Negroes.
extraordinary Injlance thereof.
BOUT ber
I
1 1
Novem-
the beginning of
departed from Halifax, where
with great fatisfadion I had enjoyed a very agreeable focicty, on
borough, which
twenty-two miles called
I
bait
my
at
horfe,
my
juft
is
route to Hillf-
one hundred and
diftant.
Edmundfon's ordinary and
to breakfaft
;
which
to is
about ten or eleven miles from Halifax.
At
this
ftrongeft
houfe
I
faw the
woman, perhaps,
largeft
in the
and
world
:
fhe was fix feet two inches and a half in
height, well built in proportion, ftrong, robuft,
and mufcular
flature.
She
pofleffed
fpirit inferior to
no
bully,
as a
no man
man
of the fame
a boldnefs ;
bruifer, wreftler,
and
and there was or any per-
fon that excelled in athletic power and agility,
A
J 1
'Tour in the
miles around, that
agility, for fifty
had not complimented with a complete drubbing perfedl virago,
;
in
and
fair
was a
fhe
of great courage and
tonilhing ftrength and I
fhort,
flie
ill
af-
nature.
fubmitted to fome fmall impofition
in her charge, rather than enter the
lifts
with her in difpute, and run the rifque of experiencing her prowefs this
flie
for indeed
conftantly
upon all that frequent houfe, of which fhe is mafter as well or
levies this
only a contribution
is
;
exacfts
as miftrefs, her infignificant
hulband be-
ing an abfolute cypher.
Having
received an invitation to fpend
fome days with Thomas Eaton, his feat
efq.
at
on the banks of the Roanoak,
twenty- eight miles above Halifax,
I
ar-
rived there to dinner. It
fide
pleafantly fituated
is
of the
river,
wider here than
There place,
great
is
which
on the fouth is
one half
at Halifax.
a very public
ferry
at this
belonging to Mr. Eaton, and of
emolument
to
him.
The
of Amenta.
Vftiied States
1
1
The low grounds are more extenfivehere than any where
Mr. Eaton
on the Roanoak.
poflefles a
very fine
alone
worth
plantation
this
elfe
is
eftate
at
:
lead
three thoufand pounds, containing about
hundred acres
fifteen
;
yet
his
father
purchafed the whole for thirty pounds.
With
fuch aftonifhing rapidity has the
value of landed property increafed in this province.
During the few days
that I remained
Mr. Eaton's, we made many pleafant exeurfions in the vicinity, on vifits to every
at
perfon of any note.
In a
little
feries's, efq.
emigration to Ofborri
on the banks of Tar-River,
my
horfe
call
and make fome ftay
inn,
or
houfe,
lame,
falling
tavern,
kept
Jef->
by
at
obliged at
us
to
an ordinary,
Bute county court-
one Jethroe Sumner,
where we found an excellent dinner
as
well as an agreeable facetious hoft.
[This inn-keeper has diftinguifhed himfelf in the courfe
Vol. L
of the late war, being I
the
A Tour in the
114
who
army,
of the American
Sumner,
the general
has been
adiive
fo
in
ths
lufly,
antl
eafy
and
CaroHnas.
He
a
is
man
of a perfon
handfome,
rather
genteel
addrefs
marriage with
his
:
an
with
young woman of a good
whom
being a captain
war
j
but
above
of provincials his violent
all
and keeping an inn
houfe (which
is
fcarcely
oircumftance
in the
to his
may
at
lafl:
princi-
the court-
thought a meaa
fingular
occupation here),
more
with
he received a handfome fortune
his
ples,
family,
a
appear,
as the latter
contributed
appointment and promotion
American army, thaa any other
merit.
For
it
Is
one third of
more
than
their general officers
have
a
fad,
that
been inn-keepers, and have been chiefly indebted to that circumflance for
fuah
rank.
Becaufe by that flation, their
public,
principles
but inferior
and perfons be-
came more generally known; and
liy
the
United States of America, the mixture and variety of
and
ideas
their
nefs,
company they
way of
converfed with, in the
115
their bufi-
ambitious
their
views were more excited and extended the generality of the
than
who remained
planters,
refpeclable
and
honeft
in
peace at their homes.]
There rich
is
an extreme valuable body of
high land that extends
whole
county court-houfe
Bute
around
trad: is ftrong
common
and
fertile in
There
degree.
miles
five :
this
an un-
fcarcely
is
a
pine-tree to be found within that diftance,
although the furrounding woods on every fide,
are very
much
mix:ed with them.
Having been favoured with
a kind and
preffing invitation to vifit Robert der,
efq.
I
left
Mr.
upon him, from
Eaton's,
whom
every attention and
I
and called
alfo received
civility.
Mr. Alexander accompanied view a remarkable place
named
the
Horfe-ford
where horfcs can
Alexan-
in the ;
the
to
Roanoak, only
crofs the river,
I 2
me
one
in that
manner,
A
ii6
manner, for a above
miles
month
is
difficult
;
it
fifteen
it is
:
and
at
this
more than half a mile only during one
of the year,
in the drieft feafon
and even then and
vaft diftance
fordable
is
it
:
the
in
Eaton's ferry,
place the river
wide
Tour
is
extremely hazardous
the water being never lefs
than four feet deep, and the current very rapid. .
The
land on each fide of the river at
place
this
being very
The year,
nor
is
is
broken and
(lerile
and poor in
weather here, at really
quality.
of the
this feafon
charming, neither too cold,
much incommoded with
and iky being always lerene,
befides^
hilly,
clear,
heat
;
the air
bright,
and thunder and ftorms much
and lefs
frequent. I
forgot to mention, that while I
was at
Mr. Eaton's, one morning having very early,
{landing at the door,
arofe I
ob-
ferved a fmgle fmall black cloud, and not
another, of any kind, to be feen in the
hemifphere, the fky being a pure bright aaure:
that
inftant,
all
on a fudden, there
Vnked States of America. came the moft
there
and tremen-
violent
remember lightning flruck Mr.
^dous thunder-clap that ever to have heard; the
Eaton's kitchen,
fplit
down
performed a multitude of of eledricity, and
iiy
killed
I
the chimney,
fantaftic freaks
two negroe men,
but did no hurt to two infants, then in their arms.
This was accounted the more extraordinary, as there
was only
that fingle ex-»
plofion:
and
in the moft violent thunder
ftorms,
when
peals fucceed each other, in
ioud contention, for a confiderable duration
of time, any accident
therefrom
feldom ever heard of; only
is
large, lofty trees in
quently
the
in fliivers,
fplit
tom, and
happening
fet
on
fire
woods
are fre-
from top
to bot-
by the lightning on
fuch occafions.
Both Mr. Alexander and Mr. Eaton pofTefs excellent plantations, rich,
and very valuable and eminent felves
duftry,
:
they are both great
planters,
and value them-
highly upon their
and
fertile,
fkill,
their
in-
their fuperior crops. I
3
At
1
A 'Tour
1
At Mr. Eaton's that it
I
I
in the
faw the large ft turnip
can recollect ever to have heard of:
was four
feet eight inches in
but was of the
ference,
and not
circum-
fpungy kind,
flat
This
at all thick in proportion.
turnip was not cultivated alone, but grew in a large field untnanured, promifcuouf-
many
iy with
thoufands more,
of which were perhaps lor I meafured
as large as this,
myfelf in the
it
I fhall here relate
field.
a trifling, or rather
diverting circumftance that terefting to fome,
numbers
may
be in-
by evincing the great
fimplicity of the blacks.
Having taken with me Richmond, from I
had
me
a negroe
named
a plantation here,
which
juft piirchafed
over, the
and
Roanoak
carry
fettled, to
in a canoe,
that I
might contemplate on and enjoy an elegant, wild perfpedive, from the fummit of a confiderable eminence that arofe abruptly
on a river,
peninfula, alnioft furrounded I
ordered
him
to
meet
by the
me
with
the canoe at the oppofite fide of the peninfula.
When
United States of America,
Wh-en
arrived
I
there,
at
119 the
time
no
appointed, there was no canoe, and
negroe
called out for
I
:
loud as
Richmond,
but had no
could vociferate,
I
as
anfwer. It
was about the middle of th-e day, which
happened fultry ;
I
uncommonly hot and
be
to
was much
indifpofed and reduced
very weak with an intermittent fever After waiting until
the
of
heat
;
th-c
weather and the fever had almoft over-
come me,
refolved to
I
jthe fid€
of the
or
fi-nd
him
be
afleepj
river, until I fhould
as I
;
which
ly addided to
:
walk down, along
meet
apprehended he might
all
negroes are extreme-
but in this attempt
I
found
the utmoft difficulty, from the almoft infuperable impediments of trees fallen, and
impending over the water, deep miry foil
and leaves that funk
every
ftep,
to
my
knees
impenetrable briars and under-
wood, black muddy gutts from the river, which compelled me to make circuits of half a mile
of them,
and
to get
innumerable I
4
round
each
fwarms of
muike^
^ Tour in the
120
infeds,
fnufketocs, ticks, poifonous
Jtnd
fnakes.
Every quarter of a mile
loudly called
I
Frequently
him, but received no anfwer. quite
down
fatigue, I funk
for
and
overpowered with weaknefs
mere
and as often,
to reft,
felf-prefervation
and defence,
jp^s' compelled to arife again to infup-r
portable
toil.
my
me, with
At length night overtook cloaths torn,
my
flefh lace?
rated and bleeding with briars and thorns^
ftung
over by poifonous infeds,
all
fuffo-r
patcd with thirft and heat, and fainting
^nder fatigue, imbecility, and
difeafe.
In this wretched miferable condition, I at lerigth arrived at the place
where
I
had
landed 'm the morning, having travelled
about
a
five miles in
feven hours, through
perpetual thicket
of ^Imoft impene-
trablewoods.
Here tlje
}
I
found Richmond,
faft alleep
ir^
canoe, jexadly in the fame fpot where
had
left
him
in the
Being incenfed ffjfCf^t^ried
t
him
morning.
in the higheil degree, I
witli
fevere punifhment^
XJmted States of America.
svhenKe begged
me
Kay
mafla (fays
*
me,
me
^
into de canoe
*
fifh,
^
me
'*
•*
jnafTa
very
fit
jump
h'e);
;
me den
flill,
and no
malTa,
now,
^
ging, caufe if great
*
de canoe, he
mqifTa,
maffa,
fo,
*
flogging.'
ment
fine'
dei>
;
vsrake
me
fee
fifh
me
you come
till
me know me
fall afleep,
deferve flog-
did
jump
afleep,
into
den he
out again, and I no catch him;.
^
My
jump up
very grad
into de canoe; but
^
jump
juft leave
until another great fifh
«
^
you
here he be, maffa,
3
2%^
to liften to his excufe,
here, great fifh
fit
1
me
willing
now
take good
pain and vexation were for a
forgotten, and
I
mo-
laughed heartily at
the poor fellow's ignorance, and extreme fimplicity, in waiting there for
to
jump
more
into his canoe, becaufe
happened
to
do
fo
j
fifhe^
one had
and therefore forgave
\i\% crinie,
CHAP.
1
A Tour in the
22
CHAP. XVL Member of
ISiUtbuJh Creek,
the
Congrefs^
famous Mender[on, and
the
Anecdotes of
Origin of
the npvJ
Settlement of Kentucky,
WHEN
I
left
Mr. Alexander's,
I
proceeded up the river fide to Taylor's
ferry,
which
the moll fre-
is
quented of any on Roanoak, and ated on the great road leading
fitu-
is
from the
moft populous parts of the Carolinas, to the
richefl:
and mofl thick
fettled.
divifiOn
of Virginia. I
th^n flruck out on
a very fine
my left
fettlement
called
hand, into
Nutbufh,
from a creek of that name, which runs and it is a large body of ex^ through it ;
cellent land. I
put up
man
at the
houfe of a Mr. Penn, a
of fome property,
been furnifhed with
mendation and
From liteBi
this
3
whom
letters
I
had
of recom-
civility.
gentleman
attentions,
to
I
and we
received the po-
entered
on a very
United States of America.
123.
very ferious and private converfatlon oa political fubjeds,
his
mind, and
wherein he fullv opened
difclofed his fentiments
on
that head with the moft undifguifed confidence, freedom,
and candour.
[The above Mr. Penn was afterwards a delegate to Congrefs from the ftate of North Carolina 5 and a few days fubfequent to their declaration
of
dence, while I was a prifoner
Americans,
having
an
indepen-
among
opportunity of
cbnverfmg with him, and finding litical
the
his
principles fo totally different
what they appeared to me to be I gave him a hint thereof, which
po-
from
before, calling
back his recolledion to our former confidential
him,
cohverfation,
fo that
making any Here lawyer,
much
perfedly
he adually was incapable of farther reply.
I alfo called at
who
filenced
is
faid to
]
one Williams's, a be,
and
is
very
like a mulattoe»
At
A Tour
tZ4^
in
the
At this houfe I happened to fall in company, and ha^^^e a great deal of converfation with one of the
moft fingular,
add extraordinary perfons and excentric geniufes in America, and perhaps in the.
world.
His name father
is
is ftill
refidence
is
Nathaniel Henderfon; his
alive,
a poor man,
in the fettlement of
where he was
at this
time on a
This Ton was grown up fore
whofe
NutbuQi, vifit.
to maturity be-
he had been taught to read or write,
and he acquired thofe rudiments of education,
and arithmetic
alfo,
by
his
own
indefatigable induftry.
He
then obtained the inferior
conftable; office
from
that
office
was promoted
of
to the
of under- fherifF; after this he pro-
cured a licenfe to plead as a lawyer, in the inferior or county courts, and foon 3.fter
in the fuperlor, or higheft courts
of
judicature.
Even there,where oratory and eloquence is
as brilliant
and powerful as in Weft^
minfler-hall, he foon
became
diftinguiffied
an4
VJnited States
of America.
i
^5
and eminent, and his fuperior genras (honef forth with great fplendor, and univerfal applaufe.
He
man
was, at the fame time, a
and pliant
pleafure, gay, facetious,
of nor
;
did his amazing talents, and general praife, create
him a
enemy.
fingle
In (hort, while yet a very young manj
he was promoted from ^he bar
and
bench,
the
to
appointed Affociate
Chief
Judge of the province of North Carolina, with a falary adequate to the dignity.
Even tation
in this elevated ftation, his repu-
and renown continued
But having chafes,
made
and having
feveral
to
increafe.
large
pur-
fallen into a train
cxpence that his circumftances and
of fi-
nances could not fupport, his extenfive genius ftruck out on
a bolder
tra
JMifTouri
TheMiflburi, upon the
river Miflburi
The Sioux of the woods The Sioux of the mea-
-\
[^
dows
The
3 49
3000
towards the 1800 heads of the
^ Miffiilippi
2500
Blancs, Barbus, or white Indians
with beards
^,
»
rr.
M
-
-1
TheAffiniboils ^, ^, -n The Chriftaneaux
The
-
-
1500
(.
,
r^
,
r
lakesot the lame
I
\
name
•^
^5^0
3000
Ouifcanfms, on a river of that
name
that falls into the
Mafcoutens Sakis
Miffiffippi
-
in the eaft fide
The The
-
1 far north near- the
-
-
^ co
coo ISouthofPuans Bay 400
-j
The Mechecouakis 3
2 co
Folle Avoine, or the^
Wildcat Indians
The Pucans The Powtewatamis;
'
?ro Near Pucans Bay
700
J
River, and Detroit
near
St. -
Jofeph's -
350 The
-^
35^ Names
The
T(?z/r
m
of the Nations,
the Situation.
or River
Meflefagues,
Warriors,
Indians,
being wandering tribes on the Lakes Huron and Superior The Ottahwas Near the Lakes SupeThe Chlpwas j rior and Michigan The Wiandots, near Lake Erie The Six Nations, or as the French call "1
2000
900 5000 300
them, the Iroquois, on the frontiers
New- York, &c.
of
The Round-headed
1500
-
-
Indians, near the
head of the Ottahwa River
2500
-
The Algonquins, near the above The Nipiflins, near the above alfo The Chalas 1 r t t t ^t. Laurence Indi_, i-n The Amalutes .
^„.
,
>
-
,
ans, ^^
,
t
r-
on the back or
The Michmacks o o Nova-Scotia, ccc. Ai J The Abenaquis The Conawaghrunas, near the falls of I
rm
•
St.
400 i
'^o
I
f
^.
300
Lewis
I
-
-
-
-
Total amount
'J^o
-^ -^
7°® 35^
200 58,930
This
United States of America,
351
This being the whole number of men fit
may
from hence we
for bearing arms,
be enabled to form fome idea of the
num-
the Indian inhabitants,
men,
ber of
all
women and
children,
which
of North America;
however, rather a
I
am
on the continent calculation,
ready to confefs can be but
vague conjedture.
There being hundred and
fifty- eight
thirty warriors,
it is
computed
that about one-third of the fame
more
are old
men
nine
thoufand
number
unfit for bearing
arms,
which makes the number of males come to maturity
thoufand
five
multiplied
and
amount
by
hundred and feventy fix will
produce
thirty-one thoufand
and twenty, which
number of children,
are
to about eighty-eight
come
all
four
the
and
hundred
hundred
confider as the
fouls, viz.
of in
I
five
;
whole
men, w^omen and Indian nations that
any degree vathin our know-
ledge throughout the continent of North
America. It is
a mofl: melancholy confideratlon to
refledl, that thefe
few
are
all
that
remaih 04
A
2^2
Tour in the
of the many millions of
natives,
original inhabitants with
which
continent was peopled
vered by the Whites will foon be extind lated,
when
or abthis vafl
firft
difco-
and that even thefe
;
and
confidering the
totally annihi-
amazingly
rapid
depopulation they have hitherto experienced, fince that (to them) fatal period, or sera
of the
firft
arrival
of the whites in
America.
CHAP.
tint fed States
of America.
CHAP. Leave Kentucky, the Ohio. Jlffippiy
Sail
XLV*
down
the Ohio.
Agreeahle Companions.
and proceed down
Chickcfaws.
353
'The Falls
that River.
Their fine Horfes.
of
Enter the Mif-'
Meet fome
A gallant t^ation.
Attacked by a va/l Superiority of French and Indians,
Defeat them*
Their Origin,
ABOUT rival
at
fix
Their Cavalry.
weeks
after
my
ar-
Kentucky two gentlemen
from Virginia, on a tour from thence to New Orleans, called to view the fettlement.
They came from in a very fine
by water, which they had
Pittfburg,
batteau
purchafed, and Intended to proceed in the
fame manner down the Ohio and MUTfiffippl, being furniflied with letters of
recommendation to the Spaniih governor of
New
Orleans, &c.
Having remained along with us at Mr. Henderfon's fome days, I difcovered them to be uncommonly fenfible intelliVoL.
I.
A
a
gent
-^ Tour in the
354
gent perfons, pofTefTing an extraordinary
of genius,
(liare
and was not difRcult
accompany them
and
fpirit
enterprize,
to be perfuaded to
in their batteau to
New
Orleans.
For
promifed myfelf abundance of
I
fatisfadion and gratification in this voyage
down
the Ohio and IM iilifTippi
Befides
I
fatigued in
had been
my
fo exceffively over-
journey here, over the
mountains, that
abfolutely dreaded the
I
thoughts of returning in the fame
man-
ner.
For thefe reafons
I
embraced
with great pleafure, and
Mr. Henderfon, and iox:
their
entertainment,
I
returning
feveral other of the
principal inhabitants of
thanks
after
this offer
Kentucky,
civility
many
and hofpitable
embarked on board Mr.
Wood's and Mr. Lewis's batteau, along w4th my young favage whom I brought from the
eaft lide
of the Alegany
Moun-
tains.
This young man, whofe name was Wiliiam Fortune,folicited memoftearnefllyfor per-
^r-
XJinted States of America*
jiermlfTion to attend I
me
voyage, which
this
very readily granted, having hitherto
found him of great ufe
and
refpedt,
an
me
to
excellent
in every
hunter and
Woodfman. In both thefe offers felf
I
extremely fortunate.
tendant, whdfe fidelity
perienced thefe
and next
me
appeared equally
me
iri
perfuad-
v/ith
very to-
accommodations.
My prefent companions vellers
company of
undertake the voyage, and in
being able to furnifh lerable
at-
had already ex-
by having fucceeded to
my-
my
Tirft in
in the
who
gentlemen
gratified
ing
;
I
confidered
and fellow-tra-
were two gentlemen j the
James Wood,
efq,
firft
who was member
named of the
affembly of Virginia for the county of Frederick, was
young, adtive and vigorous was
frank, open and communicative in his diipofition,and poffefled a degree of candour and liberality
of fentiment, that rendered his ac-
quaintance valuable in the highefi: degree; the other was Charles LewiSj of Augufta
county in Virginia,
A
efq. fcarcely inferior to
a 2
Mr.
A
35^
Mr.
Wood
and
defert.
Tour
in the
in every eftimable qualification
They had two Chickefaw Indians, and three white men in their batteau, and as they juft wanted one man more to complete their
my
number,
fervant fupplied
the place.
However, although
now
I
call this
man
my fervant, yet he himfelfnever would have fubmitted to fuch an appellation, although
he mofl
readily performed every menial of-
and indeed any
fice,
yet fuch culous
-,
the infolence, folly, and ridi-
is
of thofe
pride
woods men, an
fervice I could defire
that they
ignorant
back-
would conceive
it
and infamy to be
indelible difgrace
ftyled fervants, even to his Majefty,
not-
withanding they will gladly perform the loweft
and mofl degrading
hire.
fervices
for
^
At the dawn of day on the nineteenth of July we
left
the Kentucky, and had a
very pleafant voyage Miififlippi, if
down
the
Ohio and
one can give that appel-
lation to fuch a one,
where we
flept
every night
United States of America, night on terra firma, or at the
2 57
our
fliore in
batteau.
We
by
pafTed
tude of fine
magnitude,
rivers,
mouth of and fome
of vafl into
Miffiffippi.
our right were the mighty rivers
Ouabache or
St.
Jerome's, and
many
River, befides a great fize,
muki-
a
empty themfelves
that
the Ohio and
On
the
whofe names
that run into the
BufFaloe
inferior in
v^e could not difcover,
Ohio before the con-
fluence thereof with the Miffiffippi.
On
the
left,
the following rivers
empty
themfelves into it, viz. Rotten or Bear Creek,
Reedy River, rokee or
the prodigious
Hogohegee,
Muddy
river
Che-
River,
Deep
many leffer ones. As we failed down the Miffiffippi, on our right were the rivers La Sonde, Aux Creek, befides
Prunes, Metchigamias Lake or River, the river St. Francis, the
White River, the
ver Sotouis or Akanfas,
Red
mines River, befides a others,
River, Piake-
vaft
number of
fome of a prodigious extent,
A
a 3
ri-
as
weU
A
35^ well as
many
Tour in the inferior ones,
we never heard. And oxi the left
fide
whofe names
were the Kafki-
nompa,the L'hickefaw, Prudhomme River,
Maggotty River, yoiic
Margot River, Ba-
or
River, Soto River, YafTons River,
Tioux River,
GoufFre River, Little
Petit
River, and the Ibberville which fcarcely deferves the
name of
known by
being the Eaflern boundary
and
a river,
only
is
of the Spaniards, forming the ifiand of
New the
whofe
Orleans, Ibberville
Southward
banks of the MifTiffippi titude of water- courfes, Vv'e
from
territory,
;
includes
both
a
mul-
befides
whofe very names.
could not poSibly learn.
The day paUed the
after
we
left
Kentucky we
of the Ohio very
falls
fafely,
by keeping well over on the
right
north -vveftern
for thefe
fiills
are
by no means dangerous ; and had palled them we obferved
after
we
the
low
fliore,
grounds on each
fide
very confiderably, itfclf,
until
we
or
of the river widea
as well
entered
as
the
the river
MiiTiiTippi,
where
United States of America,
where the land
fo
is
low
that
it
3^9 is fubje(5l
to frequent inundations.
we had
After
got fome diftance
down
the MiflifTippi, the high land, and fome-
times the mountains approached the river, fo
low grounds on each
as to render the
fide
very narrow, which however were
luxuriantly rich and
even beyond
fertile,
a pofTibility of defcription.
There places,
likewife
are
illands
in
many
and fome of them almoft covered
with reeds.
As we MiffiiTippi
as they
defcended the
we
flream of the
obferved feveral lakes,
or
are termed here Lagimes^ fome-
times on one
fide,
fometimes on the other
iide of the river.
Thefe lagunes generally had
vaft
quan-
tities
of large reeds growing round the
edges
;
and
within
thoufand's of water
them fowl
were
there
of every fpe-
cies.
Although there was no killing multitudes
of them,
difficulty
yet
it
in
was
almoft impoffible to get them, becaufe of
A
a 4
the
A
360
Tour
in the
the reeds, which rendered that part of the lagiine,
where they were, almoft inag-
ceflible.
Thefe lagunes were formed by the
body of water,
that
comes down
annual periodical floods, forcing
many
acrofs the necks of
in the
its
and meandering courfe of the
crooked
Miffiffippi,
and diverting the channel of the itfelf,
from
peninfula,
neck of
to
it,
where the
its
old
river
direction around the
new one
this
way
different penin-
formed by the extreme
fulas
vaft
acrofs
the
by which means thp place
river formerly flowed
becomes
a large lake of ftanding water, here de-
nominated a lagune.
One day \he
mouth of
tiful,
we were on
while
fhore at
the Yaflbus, a placid, beau-
and noble
river,
a fmall hunting
party of the Chickelaws came up to us,
and
at the requeil
Indians,
as
of our two Chickefaw
well as the
others,
we
re-
mained there two days along with them.
The Chickefaws
are a very brave
and
refpe(Sable nation, not for their numbers, for
United States of America . for
361
they are few, but for their virtue,
and unconquerable
They
fpirit.
remarkably handfome,
are alfo
have a beau-
iand
what
tiful
breed of horfes amongft them, which
is
very fingular,
they carefully preferve umnixed.
The ChickefawSjit is faid,and I make no doubt of the fad, came originally from South America, having travelled acrofs the continent for upwards of two thoufand miles, and brought thefe horfes along with
them, which
admired
arc;
kind
of the breed of that called
Spanlfh
much
gennets,
having long fince taken them from the Spaniards.
There tinent of
fome
as
is
no Indian nation on the con-
North America near the ChickefavvTs.
come next them
hand-
The Hurons
in beauty.
The Chickefaw
nation
been fteady friends and
and
fo
their fidelity
have
always
allies to Britain,
was never fhaken,
al-
though the French have often attempted it,
by promifes,
threats,
and the moft
formidable attacks with a force confider-
ably
A^oiir
•562
in the
ably more than four times the number of all
the warriors in the Chickefaw nation,
either to detach
of Great Britain
them from the or to cut them
interefl
entirely
off.
In the former war, while the French
were in
of Canada, they
poflfeffion
tached about fix hundred and
fifty
de-»
regular
more than two thoufand
troops, and
five
hundred Indians from Canada and nois,
againd
munity,
for
this fmall,
but heroic com-
avowed purpofe,
the
with pofitive orders, of completing a conqueft,
and
even
whole Chickefaw •
all
They
fet
total
extirpation of the
out on this expedition with confidence of fuccefs
imaginable, at leall in their
men
and
nation.
the fecrecy and
but they
Illi-
little
own minds
;
confidered what fort of
they were going to attack, and foon
found, by dire experience, that no fuperiority in
numbers
is
equal to a deter-
for mined valour and innate heroifm the whole detachment was totally de;
feated, the
French regulars being almoft to
United States of j^mcrica. \o a
man
cut ofF, and the Indians their
allies
faved only a fmall
their
number,
by
wounded and
a
proportion of
precipitate
them
behind
leaving
363
flight,
of
multitudes
flain.
This was the
laft
formidable attack
on the Chickefaw nation,
by the
either
French, or the northern Indians
made
for there
;
always has been a rooted enmity between the northern and fourhern Indians, v^'ho
have been almoft perpetually each other, without any
without any
at
real,
war with
and indeed
oftenfible caufe.
But the Chickefaws have always been diftinguiihed
and
feats
for
gallant
their
adions,
of the highefl heroifm, which
has rendered them, even individually, to
be particularly refpecled throughout
all
the nations of North America.
For are
which reafon Chickefaw guides
more fought
more
after,
and
ferviceable than thofe of
are
much
any other
nation.
For although
pommonly made
their
language
ufe of in
is
not
any nation but their
A
364 their
own, yet
Tour in the underftood by
is
it
and among Indians
is
all,
confidered as the
language of politenefs and univerfahty.
Another fingularity that feems pecuhar to
to
be
this nation is, their frequently
going out to meet
theii*
enemies on horfe-
back, which, with their very fine horfes take fuch delight in,
that they
renders
them in fact a nation of cavalry. This indeed is the cafe with no other nation either in North or South America,
we
unlefs
men
except the Patagonians, thofe
of vaft
ftature,
lately
and
uncommonly
difcovered
by
large
admiral
Byron, and the other circumnavigators,"
&c. on the
coafi;
of Patagonia, near the
freights of Magellan,
C
H A P.
United States of America.
CHAP. Orleans.
XLVL Proceed
Arrive at Natches.
Leave TnJJous.
French Inhabitants
Government,
averjc
Number
Liberty.
to
to
Nev/
Span'iJJ)
Earnejily w^Jh
Infurreillon quelled.
for British
365
of Fa?niUes
In.
Nezu Orleans and Louifana.
^N the
third
morning we fet out from
YafTous River, on our voyage the
Miffiffippi,
after
tionate leave of our really
taking
an
down affec-
and as
friendly,
we
found them, hofpitable Chickefaws.
We
met with nothing very material nor
interefting until
we arrived
at the
which we did on the 20th
Natches,
ot Auguft,
being juft thirty-two days from the time
we
left
Kentucky.
Here we time received
ftaid
three days, and in that
many
civilities
and marks of
kindnefs from Major Fields and Claiborne, w^ho were fettled
Mr. L.
on very
fine
and valuable plantations, upon the banks of the Miffiffippi, having come there from Virginia, of which colony they were alfo
4
natives
A
366 natives
;
Tour
and we really found them
very entertaining, prlling
From
in th'e
lenfible
to be
and enter-
men.
we
Natclics
proceeded on
our
voyage on the fourth morning, and arrived
New
at
Orleans in four days, being on
the twenty-feventh of Auguil.
Here we found almofi: all were French derftanding
;
the inhabitants
very few of them even un-
the Spanifh language
and
;
they entertained the moft rooted and im-
pl
-cable
averfion
and government,
the Spanifli
to
nation
as well as a ftrong
pie-
dlledion for the Britifh.
As
a proof of this, although there
is
a
penalty incurred, by proclamation of the
Spanifh Governor, of four hundred or
hundred tifh
five'
even admitting a Bri-
dollars, for
fubjed into one of their houfes, unlefs
they immediately make government acquainted with
it,
yet they
make no
fcruple
nor difficulty of receiving any Englifhman,
and entertaining him
in the
molr generous
and hofoitable manner openly fame time taking care
to
at
the
enhance the
efti-
,
mation
United States of j^merica.
367
matlon of their kind reception, by making
him
acquainted with the rifque they run,
and the penalty they incur the
forfeiture
of thereby.
This
New
of
is
the general pradice in the ifland
Orleans, at fome diftance from the
town, which however being the
government, and being a Spanilh garrifon, for
it
alfo
feat
of
occupied with
would be impoffible
the French inhabitants to
fuch
fulfil
hofpitable intentions and purpofes therein
with
fafety.
They were
at this
time extremely mor-
humbled and intimidated by a circumfl:ance that had occurred but a lliort time, tified,
at leaft but a
Soon
few years before our
after the
territory
leans had been ceded
of
arrival.
New
by France
Or-
to Spain,
the French inhabitants afiTembled together, in a large body, on the thirtieth of Odober,
one thoufand feven hundred and fixtyeight, determined to expel
Don Antonio
d'Uloa the Spanifli Governor, and other Spanifh officers
fecond of
9
-,
all
the
accordingly on the
November they
fent
them on board
A
368
Tour in the
board a large SpaniHi
with orders
to
the harbour,
fliip in
leave the
ifland
imme-
diately.
Previoufly to the above exploit
confined
they
M. Aubry, who was Command-
ant while the place belonged
The occauon was,
to France.
the Spaniards want-
ing to introduce their commercial regulations,
fubmit
which the inhabitants refufed to and declared they would be
to,
either French of Britifh fubjeds, but never
would confent
to be Spanifh.
The Governor
and the
nifh Officers failed for the left
ill
reft
of the Spa-
Havannah, and
the harbour a Spanifh frigate with
the marines, not in a condition to put to fea,
due
and two hoftages to the
for
payment of debts
French.
Four of the principal inhabitants embarked foon afterwards
to lay a reprefenta-
tion of their affairs before the Court
France, and
folicit redrefs
of
of their griev-.
ances.
Things continued fome time, but
at
in this condition for lafl
General Count O'Reiley,
United States of America,
O'Reiky, a brave experienced
(who claims
Irifh defcent,
Jamaica
in the
when
prietor
Weft
369
officer
of
the Ifland of
Indies, as lord pro-
the Spaniards pofTefled
it,)
was ordered there by the Court of Madrid,
New
Orleans, with three
thoufand Spaniards,
and three or four
and landed
at
fhips of war.
The tnitted
inhabitants then imrnediately fub-
and General O'Reiley ordered
;
thirty of the leading
men
in this affair to
be executed, and confifcated the
eftates of
about two hundred more.
This feverity reftrained their adions, but cannot
At under
this
command
the wall.
time fo great
Britifti
is
their defireto
government, and
be
fo general,
fo hearty, fo rooted is their deteftation to
that of Spain, that only a
of Britons, of
Spaniards
;
and enterprize, would
fpirit
be able to wrcft as
all
dozen or two
that country
the
from the
inhabitants
are
all
French, excepting the garrifon which confifts
only of a handful of lazy, proud, mi-
ferable Spaniards,
Vol.
I.
who
Bb
defpife the
French fettlers
570 5/
A Tour m the
I
fettlers as cordially as
they themfelves are
hated by them In return.
At
this
time there would be nothing
wanting or necelTary but ard
of Great Britain,
inhabitants fo
and to fuch a
wifli
.
for
all
French
fupport
II;
Britifh liberty,
degree do they deteft the
government of Spain.
The number of and
ered the ftand-
and the
would one and
much do they
arbitrary
to
ifland
of
New
families
to twelve thoufand at leaft, to
the
town
Orleans, and on the
weft fide of the Miffiffippi,
are thus averfe
in
may amount all
of
whom
be governed by the
Spaniards.
CHAP.
United States of America,
CHAP. Wait
i
XLVII.
Vaji Fertility of the SolL Spa-^
Dangerous JUigators, mjh Beards.
37
on the Governor. Nciv Orleans.
Great DiJireJJes of feme Englifh and French hnprifoncd by the Spaniards in Ne-w Alexico. VaJi Flocks
of Cattle and Horfes. Extenjive Savannahs. Pricfi.
Leave
Coaji along the
New
Orleans..
Jrrive
at
Gulf of Mexico. Mobile^
A good
Manchac* Penfacola,
Jpalachicolaj ^c.
INbanks, the
river
are
MifTiffipi,
many
and on the
very fingular ap-
pearances*
In the river, and in the creeks, rivulets
and water-courfes
falling into
efpecially
it,
near the mouth, are large dangerous ani-
mals named
alligators,
from ten
teen feet and upwards in length
;
to eigh-
they are
a fpecies of the crocodile, and equally, if not
more dangerous than thofe of the river Nile in Egypt; thefe alfo devouring men, oxen, or whatever elfe they can get within their
horrid jaws, in that crafty fubtle manner, fo
often defcribed
already
in
different
authors.
B
b 2
Thefe
A "Tour in the
272
Thefe render
it
dangerous to fleep in
open batteaux on the
MifTiffippi,
and on
account travellers are obliged to
this
on fhore every night, near
lie
to a large fire,
which always prevents the approach of any
beafts of prey.
On rich,
this river the foil
and
is
fo
extremely
fo luxuriantly fertile, that reeds
grow even on
the
cumftance that
I
believe
any where
paralleled
The grand indigo, this
high land is
a
;
not
cir-
to
be
elfe in the univerfe.
culture and ftaple here being
amazing
fertility
of the
foil
not
only produces larger crops thereof than are obtained from equal quantities of ground in
any other land or country, but
alfo
hances the value of the quality of
which
is
always greater according
fuperior richnefs and depth of the
enit,
to the
foil.
Another very fingular and flriking appearance
numerous
is
a kind of mofs, in long and
filaments,
Beardsy which tities,
hang
impending
in
here called Spanifi in prodigious
quan-
hoary majefty from all
United States of America* all
373
the large branches of the lofty oaks,
fometimes touching the very ground.
Thefe convey a venerable idea of antiquity,
and
ftrike the
vail
mind with an awe,
and a fenfation of reverential regard that can fcarcely be defcribed.
This has
alfo its
ferviceable and
beds is
when we
convenient to fleep in the
clean, foft, agreeable,
The town on the
being extremely
ufes,
New
of
woods
;
and
it
and abundant.
Orleans
banks
eaft^rn
make our
is
fituatcd
of the Mifliffippi,
about ninety miles above Cape Laos or
Mud'Cape, where
that river falls into the
gulf of Mexico.
The banks of
the river are fo perpen-
dicular,
and the water
ihip of
any burthen may lay her broad-
fide to the is
is
fo deep, that a
bank, to land and unload, and
moored by
on the
fhore.
The
river
a cable faftened to the trees
is
above a thoufand yards
and the current runs
wide,
all
down-
wards, as the tide does not reach near the
town
5
is
fcarcely perceived
Bba
at
indeed the fide
^
374
^^'^^
mouth of
at all within the
this aftonifhlng
whofe waters, efpccially during the
river,
may
be diftinguillied in
the gulf of Mexico for
many leagues, fome
periodical floods,
•
^^ i^^
fay above an hundred miles out at fea.
The
ftreets
of
in redangular
New
Orleans are laid out
direftions,
the houfes are
many of
generally only one ftory high, yet
them in
pretty good, and they
number
The pretty
and
to three or four
ifland
of
New
may amount
hundred.
Orleans
good land, and
all
of
is it
generally
very low
tiat.
It
is
about an hundred and eighty or
ninety miles in length, but not more than five
miles from navigable water at any
place throughout the whole of
at
it.
On the very next day after our New Orleans, Mr. Wood, Mr.
and
I
arrival
Lewis
waited on the Spanifh Governor; but
being informed that he was engaged for that day,
my companions
him any of
declined fending
the letters of introduction and
recommendation
they
were
furnifhed
with.
Thefe
United States of America,
375
Indeed thefe haughty Virginians were fo
extremely incenfed fion, that
it
of admif-
at this refufal
was with the utmoft
difficulty
could prevail upon them to confent to
I
pay
their perfonal refpeds to the
any more
at all, or to
credentials; to
Governor
fend or prefent their
efpecially as
it
did not appear
them, nor indeed to me, that he was
really
engaged
the time
at
we
received
that meflage
and apology of excufe f*om
him,
could
as
vv^e
plainly difcern him,
through a window, obferving and making his remarks, as
we judged, on
us, while
we
were walking backwards and forwards in the piazza, in expedation of his anfwer
walking ercife a
in that
manner being
a kind
of ex-
Spaniard holds in great contempt.
However we were admitted on the day following, and were even honored by a very friendly reception
;
though
that there appeared to
me
I
muft confefs
a fiiffnefs
and
formality, in his Excellency,,that indicated
a diftruft, and feemed to fay that he could
have difpenfed with our there was
vifit
;
not that
any thing perfonal meant
B
b 4
to us,
for
^
37^
T^our in
the
the frequeQt proofs of civility.
for
an4
pven generous attention, we received fron;
him
afterwards, evinced the contrary.
But we imputed
it
to that
narrow,
illi-
and jealous policy of the Spanish
beral,
government, by which they endeavour to preclude
all
other nations,
any communication with,
much from
the
but even as
knowledge of
American fettlements
The
not only from
reftridtions
all
their
as pofTible.
of the Spanifh govern-
ment on commerce render the
prices of all
European goods here very much advanced, and they would adually be almoft
intoler-
able, if the inhabitants did not contrive tq
get
many
things underhandedly from the
Englifh, French, and Dutch, by rneans of
an
illicit
trade.
Indeed almoft
New
Orleans
is
all
the flour that fupports
imported from PhiladeU
phia, in veifels belonging to a commercial
houfe there, viz. Meffrs. Willing and Morris,
who
have obtained an exclufive privi-
ledge, for that fole purpofe,
from the King
pf Spain,
from
United States of America.
From
this the
quifite of
Governor makes a per-
twenty thoufand
King of Spain,
vernor,
v\^ho
annu-.
dollars
being configned to
ally, as all the flour,
the
3 77
paid for by the
is
orders
Go-
to be diflributed
it
to the inhabitants at the rate of a dollar barrel, clear gain
^fter
the
a
advanced on the price,
dedudllon
of
cofts
all
and
charges.
During the time
I
was
at
New
a gentleman from Maryland, fallen,
by a very unfortunate
who had
accident, into
the hands of the Spaniards in co,
Orleans,
New Mexi-
and with feveral other Britlfh fubjeds
had been moft cruelly treated by them, arrived there.
Having
at
length obtained his liberty,
had been a confiderable time very
for he
rigidly confined,
he came to
endeavour
leans,
to
either
to Virginia,
New
Or-
to procure a paiTage,
Maryland, or Phila-
delphia.
This gentleman, defcended from a Rot.
man
Catholic family in Maryland,
was
mafter of a veflel belonging to his brother
Atha-
A
2y^
Tour in the
Athanafms Ford, of Leonard Town, in St. Mary's County, and had failed from the
Potowmak, loaded ;with the French Neutrals (as they were called,) who had
river
been removed from Nova-Scotia by the
government on account of
Britifh
their
ilrong prediledlon to the French intereft there,
which
ways ready
The failors,
to
veffel
at
every rifk they were
al-
promote and fupport.
was navigated by
and was bound
Britifh
to the MiffifTippi,
in order to carry thefe French Accadians to their
country-men
intended to
there,
where they
fettle.
But having got
into the trade-winds,
and
being unacquainted with the navigation of thatpart of the gulf of Mexico, after having
beenreducedto thegreateft
diftrefs for want
of provifions, their whole flock being exbaufted for fome time, having fubhfted en the
rats, cats,
and even
leather in the veflel,
la
the
fhoes and
they ran into Ber-
nard's bay, and landed
Hio de
all
at
the
mouth of
Norte, or Rio Grande, in the
king-
United States of America,
379
New
Mexico,
kingdom
or province of
inftead of the Miffiflippi.
Happening
to difcover a horfe,
diately after their killed
him
coming on
for food,
imme-
fhore, they
which was
certainly-
very ex^cufable in their emaciated ftarving condition.
They had repaft, when
fcarce finifhed their
the veffel was feized on
the Spaniards,
of the King
of them
fome
wretched
;
to the
and
by
confifcated for the ufe
and they were
town of
carried,
New
to Santa Fe, the capital,
moft
Mexico, and
no
lefs
than
eighty-fix days journey within land
from
the place where they
came on fhore on
this inhofpitable coaft.
Here they were
all
clofely confined for
fome time. But
at
length the
common people were
permitted to go at large, in the day, on condition of their labouring for the
,in-
habitants.
Yet the
officers
belonging to the
as well as all the Englifh failors,
vefTel,
were
ftill
impri-
380
A Tour
,
in the
.'
imprifoned with the moft rigid and barv barous feverity.
However they were
alfo
offered a
li-
mited enlargement, on condition of their
Hgning a paper, written language,
which however they privately
contrived to obtain
found
it
in the Spanifli
a tranflation of, and
contained an acknowledgment on
their parts of
having been guilty of the
mofl unjuftiBable and aggravated crimes, treated with the greateft
and of being
manity and tendernefs during
hu-
this their
captivity.
had the refolution and virtue
irhis they
of refufmg to fubfcribe
were adually
in
to,
although they
danger of ftarving and
perilhing for want of neceflary food.
At length
a prieft, poflefled
manity than
the
reft
of more hu-
of the barbarous
inhabitants of that country, having called to
vifit
them, took compaflion on their
extreme wretchedncfs, made them a prefent of a fat bullock every day, reited himfelf foefFedually for
and inte-
them
as to
obtain their enlargement.
But
3S
United States of America.
But
fo
numerous were
this
i
man's flocks
of cattle, as well as of horfes, that although received
thefe poor unfortunate creatures
above an hundred oxen from him, yet they could not be mifled out of the whole flock.
And Mr.
Ford
more than
fefl^ed
afl\ired
me
that
he pof-
thoufand horned
fifteen
cattle,
and near ten thoufand horfes and
colts,
which were kept
fat
without any
trouble the whole year round by the lux-
which
uriant pafture
For
it
feems the land there
grown with woods, but
rica,
that country aff'ords.
is
as in the reft
a rich
univerfally
abounding with the
fineil
world, and interfperfed
with clumps or
not over-
is
clufters
meadow,
grafs
tall
in
the
and there
here
of
Ame-
of
and
ftately
trees. I
made no
confiderable
Orleans, which to
me
flay at
New
as well
as to Air.
Wood, Mr. Lewis, and Mr.
Ford, was
rather a difagreeable place; and
Mr. Lewis
and
I
fet
out in a batteau for
leaving both there,
Mr.
who were 9
Wood
Manchac,
and Mr. Ford
about engaging a paflage for
A
382
Philadelphia in one of Willing and
for
Morris's It
was
Edmund I
Tour in the
veffels.
five
days before
we arrived at Mr.
Gray's near Manchac
was moll agreeably
;
furprifed at
but here
meeting
with an old acquaintance from Georgia,
whom
along with
I
had been
initiated
into the the myfteries of free-mafonry, in
my journey
through North-Carolina.
His name was Allan Groves, and propofed
fame route
returning
to
as I did,
we
as
he
Georgia by the all
agreed to join
company together. Having procured a batteau on the lbberville, or Amit River, which falls into Lake Maurepas, we embarked, andcoafted along the lakes, viz. Maurepas and Ponchatrain, pafling
by the mouth of the Nita
Albany River, the Tangepahoa River, the Chefondo River, and the Pearl River which
is
divided into
Weft River and
two branches,
Eaft River,
into the lake or bay of St. river
the
when
Lewis
;
called
it falls
alfo the
Ookahootoo, the Chencala River,
Booka Hooma River, Hunting River, Pafqua-
United
JS fates
of America.
383
Pafquagoocula River, Cedar River, Pines
Bay, and Pool River.
Having touched by
many
iflands,
among
way
the
a
at
v^^hich are
vafl;
Mattheu-
raux Ifland, Roebuck Ifland, Cat Ifland,
Ship
Broad Key,
Ifland,
Ifland,
we
arrived at Mobile point, at the
mouth of the is
and Dauphin
great bay of Mobile,
formed by a
vafl:
which
concourfe af mighty
waters.
Here we made no proceeded on our the
fl:ay,
coafl:ing
but immediately
voyage
;
pafllng
mouth of Perdido River, Efcambe or
Jordan River, Middle or Governors River, Chefl:er River,
and
Ifland,
St.
Rofa River, Bay
Chatahooche River,
St.
An-
drew's Bay, River, and Ifland, Roebuck point, St. Jofeph's Bay,
Efcondido, and
St.
Cape
George's Ifland which
forms the mouths of the river
and of the mighty
which
is
St. Bias or
Califl:obole,
river of Apalachicola,
the eafl;ern boundary of the,
province of Wefl; Florida. 2
The
^ four
384
The
lands in this province afe indeed
moft amazingly
fertile
on the banks of the Old fifty
that
and
rich, efpecially
Mifliflippi.
plantations, cultivated
or fixty years, is
the
in
by the French
produced
the year before I
was
lafl:
year,
there,
from
forty to fixty bufhels of Indian corn to
the acre.
The
culture of every thing here
is
al-*
together by hand hoes, and manual labour
of
flaves,
without the
afliftance
of horfea
or oxen.
CHAP.
United States of America,
HA
C
385
XLVIIL
P.
The Rivers Mljjijpppiy MiJJouris,
Illinois^
Taffous,
Akanjas^ Rotige^ Jpalachkola, Mubilcy i^c. Colo-
North River ^
rado.
or
Rio Bravo,
Neiv
A-fexlco.
Gulf of California. Mines of Potoft. Acapulco, Old Mexico. La Vera Cruz. Diflances of Places, JDefcrlptlon of the Country.
BEFORE
I
take
my
Weft
province of
leave
Florida,
of the it
may
not be improper to give a iketch of the courfes, extent, rivers
;
the
on the weft
as
of the Bay of Mexico; as
coall:
ftaple
the province,
of the river Miftiftippi,
fide
alfo the ftate foil,
between different
diftances
well within
places, as
along the
and combination of the
of the colony, culture of the
commodities, and population,
of Weft Florida.
Weft Florida
is
bounded on the fouth
by Ihe Gulf of Mexico, iflands, coaft,
&c.
including
all
within fix leagues of the
from the mouth of Apalachicola
the lake Ponchartrain
by
bounded
Vol.
I.
the
;
lake
C
c
on the weft Maurlpas,
it
to is
and
a canal
A Tour
386
a canal, or river, laft
fiffippi,
and by
on
north
from
eaft
Ibberville,
the
Miffiflippi
by a
line
the
in
lies
that
Mif-
to the
itfelf;
drawn due
that part of the river
which
fippi,
named
mentioned lake
joins the
the
in the
Miffif-
of
latitude
thirty-one degrees north, until
it
inter-
feds the river Apalachicola or Catahouachee
and on the
;
until
it
is its
faid river,
Gulf of Mexico. from
greateft length
Its
viz.
the
falls into
by the
eaft
from Apalachicola
eaft to weft,
to the Miffiflippi,
about four hundred ftatute miles breadth
fouth,
is
inconfiderable
being in
;
but
from north
to
few places fixty-nine
miles according to thefe boundaries.
From Rofe Bay, and to the north line,
miles,
which
is
St.
Mary's Bay,
not more than forty
is
the
general
diftance
acrofs, as far weft as the lakes Ponchartrain.
and Mauripas.
From
the
mouth of
the rivers Callfto-
bole and Apalachicola to the north line is
eighty-five miles,
which
is
the wideft
part of the province.
5
From
United States of America*
From
cape Loas, or
Mud
387
Cape,
at the
mouth of the MifTiffippi, to the canal cut by the French from the Ibbervllle to the Miffiflippi, being the northern boun-
dary of
New
Orleans on the
eaft
of the
hundred
and
wideft part of the ifland of
New
Mifliffippi,
an
about
is
eighty miles by land.
The Orleans Ifles
is
Aux
from Turtle Point, and the
Affiettes, oppofite to
to the Miffiflippi, and
is
Cat Ifland,
not more than
forty miles at the broadeft part,
which
is
about thirty-five miles above the mouth
of the river
:
then above that place, from
lakes Ponchartrain
and Mauripas,
from the Amit and
Ibberville rivers,
and it
is
not more than five miles, in general, to the Miffiffippi.
The town narrow lake
part,
of
New
Orleans
is
in that
between the fouth end of
Ponchartrain
and the
Miffiffippi,
about ninety miles fouth from the canal or river of
Ibberville,
and about
the
fame diftance north from the mouth of the Miffiffippi.
C
c 2
From
A 'Tour
j88
From
in the
the uppermoft, or moft northerly
end of the Ifland of that part of the firft
New
Orleans, to
MifTifTippi at the thirty-
degree of north latitude,
is
juft fifty
miles.
Thefe over
are
diilances
land,
in diredl courfes
by no means following the
meanders of the generally render
rivers,
which would
them double.
This boundary, already mentioned, was that
Weft
firll
eftablifhed for the province
Florida
;
but
I
of
have underftood that
the north line has been extended farther
up the river fnice, to include the Natches, and the mouth of the river YafTous, to which laft place it was carried back by Governor Johnftone's proclamation.
From
New
the upper part of the?ifland of
Orleans to the confluence of the
YafTous
is
about a hundred and thirty
miles north.
From fouth to
eighty
mouth of the river YafTous, Natches Old Town, is about
the
miles
;
from Natches, fouth
Baton Rouge, and
6
Fort Bute,
Is
to
about
feventy-
United States of America, feventy-five miles
the
389
•
from thence fouth to
;
mouth of Hooma
where
River,
enters the lake Mauripas,
is
it
about feventy-
five miles.
From
mouth of the Yaflbus up to the
the
firft
confiderable fork,
weft
fide,
Yaffous
from
its
which
about twelve miles
is
on the
is
and the
;
navigable forty- five
is
leagues
confluence with the MifTiflippi.
This province, extending
fo far along
the coaft of the Gulf of Mexico, and a-
long the rivers Miffiffippi and Apalachicola,
being about fix
hundred
five
hundred and ninety, or muft confequently
miles,
number of
include a prodigious
the
chief of which,
as
rivers
well as of
North America and perhaps in world, is the mighty and majeftic MifTiffippi, navigable
to the
Anthony, which is computed
falls
;
all
the river
of
St.
to
be eighteen
hundred miles, and afterwards
for a thou-
above
fand miles
and canoes
;
the falls
having the
c
3
batteaux
richeft lands,
happieft and moft delightful
C
in
variety
the
of
climates^
390
A
^
Tour
in the
climates,
and paffing through the
and
country upon earth.
fineft
Where
derives
it
its
fource
largeft
not
is
known,
having been traced
fifty-five
degrees north latitude,
as
far
as
and an
hundred and ten degrees weft longitude
from London
j
being even there a very
large river.
The
country in that part
very
is
flat
and marfhy, and the Indians themfelves cannot
tell
weft
has
it
From
how much its
fource.
that place
direction
farther north ar^d
the
to
it
runs in a fouth-eaft
degree
forty-fecond
north latitude, and ninetieth weft tude
;
then
with
many
longi^
bendings,
vaft
continues almoft a due fouth courfe, until it falls
into the
twenty- nine
latitude
nutes, five
Gulf of Mexico
and
degrees
ten
eighty-nine degrees
minutes weft longitude
ceived a vaft
and mighty
in north
j
rivers,
thirty-
having
number of wide, and having
mi-
re-
extenfive, ft
retched
along this globe in a diredt courfe, which has been
traced, above
three
thoufand miles
5
United States of America.
391
and including the prodigious nun;iber of its bendings and meanders not
miles
iefs
3
than
name
Its
faid to
feven thoufand miles.
fix or
the Indian language
in
is
fignify parent of rivers, or eldeft
fon of the Ocean. It
more than an hundred very
receives
confiderable rivers in
its
many of
courfe,
them fome thoufand miles in chief of which on the eaftern
length, the fide are the
following, viz. Firfl;
tween
whofe fource
the Illinois,
the
lakes Illinois
Huron, and Erie in one of
its
;
or
is
be-
Michegan,
as the MifTiffippi itfelf,
vaft bendings, approaches
near to lake Superior.
The
fecond
is
the vaft river Ohio, or Fair
River, a prodigious concourfe of mighty waters, extending behind fettlements,
New
whofe
fource
all
the Britifh
is
almoft in
York government, being navigable
in large batteaux within fourteen miles
of lake Erie
;
fo that the
French, before
the conqueft of Canada by the fent three thoufand
C
c
men, with 4
Britiili,
artillery,
military
A
^Q2
Tour in
the
&c. from Que-
military ftores, baggage,
New
bec to
Orleans
;
up
viz.
the river St.
Laurence, acrofs lake Ontario, and lake
and down French Creek, the Ohio,
Erie,
and the
Miffiffippi.
The Ohio hundred
which
in
rivers
above an
receives
itfelf
courfe,
its
(particularly the
Cherokee
fome of or
Hogo-
liegee) are equal to the largeft in Europe.
The
lail river
on the
ilippi
notice of,
is
that falls into the Miffi-
eaftern fide, that I fhall take
the YaiTous,
a fine, placid,
*
and beautiful ftream, being navi-
deep,
gable near an hundred and fifty miles. It
takes
its
rife
near the
of the
falls
Cherokee, or Elogohegee River, and runs
through the Chickefaw nation, receiving
many
branches,
able, in
its
but none very confider-
courfe of three hundred miles
to the Miffiffippi, line,
or
five
which
hundred
is
in
miles
a direct
with
its
windings. From, the fource to the mouth of this
fcry fine g:oui]tfy,
river,
it is
a
mod
delightful
with few mountains or
opea hills,
con-
United States of America, confidering
its
inland
fituation,
393 and
is
the happieft, and moft excellent and agreeable climate in the world. It
by
poffelTed chiefly
is
the Chicke-
faws, a very gallant, brave, and refpedable
and firm Allies of Great
nation,
Britain, as has been already mentioned.
On
the weftern fide of the MiiTiffippi
many
are
vaft rivers,
but none more con-
However not known.
than the Ohio.
fiderable
one of them
is
The largeft
is
fo well
the Pohitenous,orMifouri,
whofe fource has not been
"difcovered,
and whofe courfe extends (perhaps) fome thoufand miles, before fiffippi,
which
confluence
is
it
enters the
Mif-
almoft oppofite to the
of the
only
Illinois,
about
twenty-feven miles below.
A large the
river
north
river north of the
Moingona,
St. Peter's
is
and
is
;
Hill
is
farther
River,
South of the Miffouri Francis
MifToury
is
the river St.
proceeding fouthward, the next
the Imahans or
Akanfaw
River.
Then
^ ^^^^
394
Then
which
is
tremely crooked,
of
and
or
ex-
vaft extent,
placid,
beautiful
defcription.
The Red River
Ox
Black River, and into the
two very large
receives
branches on the north
River, and
almoft
MiffifTippi
laft river
fhall
I
wefliern fide
named the
fide,
Tonikas in Weft: Florida
The
and
named Rio Rouge,
river,
River,
beyond
^^^
that moft excellent, valuable,
delightful
Red
^^^
oppofite this
:
falls
to
the
is
take notice of on the
of the
Mifliffippi.
moft remarkable places weft,
a-
long the coaft of the great Bay of Mexico,
from Cape Laos, or
mouth of
Mud
the Mifliflippi,
Cape,
Enfe-
is
Woods Bay and
the
Balife
is firft la
Fort and Ifland, fome diftance weft
nada de Palos, then
at
Ifland,
Ouachas Lake, Afcenfion Bay, Vermillion Bay, then from Ouachas Lake
Cape
are eight fmall rivers,
There in
is
alfo
which indeed
difcovered
an is
to
and two lakes.
ifland at the
the
in the year
North
Cape
Cape,
itfelf,
firft
one thoufand
fe-
ven hundred and twenty-fix.
Weft
"United States
Weft of
of America.
the Cape, the
395 a imall
is
firft
and a large bay named Jacdaiches
river,
Bay, with three rivers running into the next
is
it';
Mexicana River, which fome
diftance from the fea
is
named Adayes River;
then a fmall but long ifland; then the river Floris; a long ifland
another ifland
Rio de falls
River
and a fmall
;
into St.
the
M. was
;
river
Bernards or
;
then
Colorado or River
Leon River
St.
;
River which
;
and
Rio del
5
and Honda or Deep River,
Bay of
On
Dun
Cane
little
Guadaloupe River
Vino
;
Maligne River ;
Magdalen;
the river
Trinidad
la
into la
Cane
;
;
all fall
Lewis's Bay, and
St. Jofeph.
the fouth-weft of Maligne River
year 1685, and
la Salle fettled in the
killed about three
hundred miles up
Trinidad River, in the year 1687.
On
the river Sablomini
and fettlement of Prefidio are five iflands thefe diff^erent
;
is
the
town
within the bay
and upon the banks of rivers' and their branches ;
are the nations of Killamouches
and Al-
lacappa, wandering Indians,
The
A Tour
396
The
in the
Guadaloupe and Leon
rivers
on the fouth-weft
into St. Jofeph's Bay,
of which
is
fall
a very long and large ifland
named St. Jofeph's ifland; and the rivers Honda, Del Vino, Sacro, and Nuces or Nutts, fall into a Bay on the fouth-weft of it, forming St. Jofeph's Lake or Bay.
On
the fouth fouth-weft
of the great river Bravo, or
De
>
New
Leon, and
very large and noble
The next las
Palmas, which
Nacos is
its
river
at
is
Norte,
la
which bounds on the north and
kingdom of
mouth
the
is
eaft the
indeed a
river.
of any note is
is
Rio de
named Rio de
fome dlQance from the
a line beautiful large river,
las
This
fea.
and derives
fource within an hundred miles of the
Gulf of California Rio de
la
in the
South Sea.
Norte or North River
is
alfo
a very extenfive and charming river, confiderably larger than
one,
fornian Gulf, los
laft
mentioned
running in a courfe about middle
way between le
the
the Mifriffippi and the Cali-
and the
Martyres,
rivers
Colorado,
and Rio Grande
le los
Apoftolosj
United States of America,
397
Apoflolos, or Del Coral or Blue River,
which form or nearer
is
hundred miles than Thefe
by
California
to
but
or
five
fix
to the Miffiffippi.
Rio de
efpecially
vaft rivers,
Norte, and the
the Gulf,
into
fall
la
head very near
MifTo^iri,
each other, about the forty-fixth degree north latitude, and the hundred and
fifth
weft longitude.
have thus inveftigated the fource of
I
prodigious
thefe
and extenfive
on a foundation that
and
it
juft
and
give
will
may
power
to
form a more
by
the diftances thefe vaft waters,
and principal
places, are
From Cape Loas
from each other.
to
Bernard's
about four hundred and
thence to the
to
feventy-five rniles,
Rio de
Norte
la
las
Bay
miles,
fifty
mouth of Rio de
two hundred, then is
be relied on
perfect idea of the country,
mentioning
is
waters,
Palmas
which make altoge-
ther feven hundred and twenty- five miles.
The nearly five
courfe of Rio de las eaft,
Palmas
and the extent of
hundred and
it
is
about
fifty miles.
From
-^ Tour in the
39^
From
mouth of Rio de
the
Palmas,
las
Gulf of Mexico, weft to the South at the mouth of the river Culiacan,
in the Sea,
the beginning of is fix
the Californian Gulf,
hundred miles.
From Tonlkas on
the
Mlffiffippi
Mexico, or Juan Baptifta on Rio de Norte, to
viz.
hundred and
fix
is
eroding of
the
hundred and five, to
Red River an feventy-i'
Trinidad feventy-five, to the Rio
Marco
St.
la
miles
fifty
Adayes
to
fifty,
to
is
Mexico on
an hundred and
the North River
fifty,
to
two hun-
dred.
From Mexico
Bay Bay of
to California, at the
Lucas, Pearl River, or the
of
St.
St.
Mary's near Cinaloa, or
to Culiacan, is
hundred and feventy-five miles viz. to the head of Pearl River three hundred and five
;
feventy-five miles, to the
dred and
fifty
fouth part of
miles, this being in the
New
New Mexico
mouth two hun-
Navarre.
or
St.
Paul's
is
about fix
hundred miles, up the North Kiver, from -the
Gulf of Mexico.
From
United States of America.
From Mexico, on the mines of Potofi to
the
is
399
North River,
five
to
hundred miles,
Old Mexico feven hundred,
Aca-
to
pulco nine hundred, and the fame to
La
Vera Cruz.
From Acapulco
to
La Vera Cruz
is
hundred miles, from Old Mexico
three
to
La
Vera Cruz two hundred and feventy, and to
Acapulco two hundred and feventy. All this country, to the weft of the Mif-
fiflippi, is
incomparably pleafant and de-
lightful.
In the
fertility
of the
foil,
in the agreeable
mildnefs of the climate, in the foftnefs and falubrity of the air, as well as in the
abun-
dance and excellence of moft beautiful water- courfes,
it is
not exceeded, perhaps
not equalled, by any other part of the
whole immenfe continent of America. Indeed
it
can be furpaifed by no country in
the univerfe.
The
multitude of moft ele-
gant and charming fituations that excel in grandeur
and delightfulnefs of perfpec-
tive, as well as the aftonifhing
of the
foil,
are far
can be conceived.
luxuriance
beyond any thing that
There
A
400
There are alfo
Tour^ &c. vaft
numbers of excellent
harbours, and beautiful extenfive navigable
The
rivers.
earth pours forth every ve-
getable producftion in the moft abundant profufion, almoft fpontaneoufly, and in a
manner without labour. Black cattle, horfes, and every
ufeful animal, multiply to an in-
credible degree, without ble, as there
is
no occalion for providing a
Hock of provender In
any kind of trou-
fhort, there
is
for
them
againft winter.
no advantage, charm, or
defirable qualification,
that bountiful na-
ture can beflow, but
heaped, with a de-
is
gree of profufion, on this lovely country, that
is
not to be defcribed in language, or
conceived in idea. For
it
really is capable
of being rendered, not only the garden of ,
America, but of the whole world.
Yet
this fine
country
is
at prefent little
better than an uncultivated defart,
owing
to the mifl:aken and narrow policy of the
Spanifh government, under whofe abfolute,
and uncontrouled domination
it
ever remained.
END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
has