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English Pages 582 Year 1896
CONQUEST OF THE COUNTRY
NORTHWEST OF THE RIVER OHIO 1778— 1783 AND
'
GEN.
LIFE
OF
GEORGE ROGERS CLARK
•
OVER ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIVE ILLUSTRATIONS
WITH NUMEROUS SKETCHES OF MEN WHO SERVED UNDER CLARK AND FULL LIST OF THOSE ALLOTTED LANDS IN CLARK'S GRANT FOR SERVICE IN THE CAMPAIGNS AGAINST THE BRITISH POSTS. SHOWING EXACT LAND ALLOTTED EACH.
BY
WILLIAM HAYDEN ENGLISH President Indiana Historical Society
Volume
1
INDIANAPOLIS, IND., AND KANSAS CITY, MO.
THE BOWEN-MERRILL COMPANY 1896.
8PRECKELS Copyright
1895
BY
WILLIAM HAYDEN ENGLISH
llbrcface ^
e)
PREFACE. In collecting
historical
matter for a history of Indiana,
which the author has been preparing material has in these
grown
volumes that the best use
years, his
to
make
of
it
has been
After consultation with discreet and
well-informed judges, in a separate
many
voluminous on the subjects embraced
so
a grave question.
now
for
it
has been determined to publish
form the matter
in relation to the con-
quest of the country northwest of the river Ohio (and this necessarily includes the
life
of
George Rogers Clark)
as
introductory volumes to the History of Indiana, the events therein relating largely to that country before tion as a territory.
Much and
it
is
made
ters,
any other disposition
of the material.
of this matter has never before
hoped
will
being perpetuated.
organiza-
This plan will probably be found more
satisfactory to the general public than
that could be
its
been published,
be found interesting, and worthy
To
that
end numerous
of
historical let-
papers, etc., are reproduced in fac-simile, or other-
wise.
(9)
PREFACE.
lO
The author, born and brought up on
the borders of Clark's
Grant, of a family which furnished Clark three officers in his
campaigns against the
and was
British,
allied to his
family in early times by marriage, naturally
felt
terest in the great historic events of Clark's life,
ticularly in those ish posts at
This
interest,
inti-
and added
of Indiana,
boundaries of the United States.
beginning
in early
assumed the form
finally
and par-
Kaskaskia and Vincennes, which were so
to the
in-
remarkable campaigns against the Brit-
mately connected with the history
an empire
an
of
never abated, but
life,
collecting
all
available
in-
formation in relation to the occurrences themselves, and the lives of the
men who
participated in them, especially
of their great leader.
The
information was sought, at
first,
without any fixed
intention of publication, but investigation satisfied the author that
no account
of the
life
of
General Clark, and of the
great events with which he was connected, had as yet been
published as
full as
the importance of the subject
demanded.
This view he found was also entertained by Judge Law,. James Parton, Senator Daniel of Virginia, and many others of superior
judgment,
who had
also investigated the
subject.
The
author, therefore, after waiting
pectation that the field
would be
many
years in ex-
fully occupied,
and
find-
ing yet a vacancy and himself in possession of a large
amount
of
unpublished material, determined upon the
publication of the present volumes under the circumstances
already stated.
PREFACE.
He
I I
make it a full and fair history, and trusts that he has brought much that was meager has earnestly endeavored to
and fragmentary
into a
more compact and
desirable form,
besides adding to the aggregate of information heretofore
published upon the subject. If
he has succeeded in doing
he desired, and will to
it
at
feel
rewarded
an advanced period
precious,
and
its
of life,
friends,
Bowman
Thanks Clark of
and
to
much labor devoted when time had become for
him
particularly
in
his
researches by
by members
of the
Clark
families.
are especially due St.
all
with gratitude, the aid and encourage-
ment generously extended and
he has accomplished
value understood and appreciated.
He remembers, numerous
this
Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson K.
Louis, the former being the son of Gov-
ernor William Clark, George Rogers Clark's youngest brother and of the celebrated Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific ocean, under the auspices of President Jefferson; to
Governor Clark's grandsons, William Hancock Clark
of Detroit,
and Meriwether Lewis Clark
R. C. Ballard Thruston
George Rogers Clark's
August F. Rodgers
sister
sister,
numerous descendants
of
to
a descendant
of
Frances; to Mr. and Mrs.
of California, the latter
ant of General Clark's to
of Louisville,
Kentucky;
of
being a descend-
Mrs. Lucy Croghan his
as the author.
also
eldest brother General
Jonathan Clark, who was himself a distinguished of the Revolution,
;
and whose wife was
of the
officer
same family
PREFACE.
12
Bowman family thanks are especially due to Mrs. Eleanor B. Bowman of Strasburg, Virginia, widow of Isaac S. Bowman, son of Lieutenant Isaac Bowman of Clark's Command and to Mrs. Mary D. Bowman of HarOf the
;
rodsburg, Kentucky, whose husband. Prof. John B.
man, long and honorably connected with Kentucky, spent mation
many
Bow-
the University of
years in collecting historical infor-
of his ancestors of the
Revolutionary period, but,
unfortunately, died without placing his material in form for publication.
In fact the aid and encouragement extended to the author
by representative members lies
of the
have been so cordial and useful
information and material, as to in a
Clark and
Bowman
fami-
in furnishing historical
make him feel that the work,
measure, has been prepared under their auspices.
A fair exhibit of the spirit in the case of Jefferson
manifested by
K. Clark
all will
be found
of St. Louis, the senior
representative of the Clark family,
who gave
the author
not only the use of the very large and valuable collection of family historical papers in his possession,
but gave him
also a letter of general authority to use all Clark historical
papers wherever found.
Mr. Temple Bodly
Jonathan Clark branch stricted use of his
Much
A similar letter was received from
of Louisville, a representative of the of the family,
who
also
gave unre-
very large collection of historic material.
valuable material was also furnished by Colonel
Reuben T. Durrett western history oblige proverbial.
is
of Louisville,
whose information about
unsurpassed, and
his
willingness
to
PREFACE,
The
writer
is
13
also indebted to the
Honorable Henry
S.
Edm. J. P. Schmitt, J. V. Southall, Esq., many others, who are generally mentioned in ap-
Cauthorn, Rev.
and
to
propriate connection in the
body
whether mentioned or not, he
of the
work; and
to all,
feels truly grateful,
and
tenders his profound acknowledgments.
^/U^ty^
§TRATI0N8
ILLUSTRATIONS, Vol.
I.
Page.
Westward the Course of Empire Takes
its
Way — States
FROM THE Old Northwest Territory (Frontispiece,
Created 2
A"ol. 1
Signature of the Author
13
Portrait of the Author
13
Illustrations (half
15
title)
Rogers' Coat of Arms
35
=
Fac-simile of George Rogers Clark's Letter to His Father in
1780....
The Old Clark Residence at Mulberry Hill, Ky Old Spring-house at Mulberry Hill
38 43
44
Signature of John Clark
52
Signature of Ann Clark
52
Fac-simile of letter op President Thomas Jefferson to Clark
57
Portrait of Governor Patrick Henry
73
Portrait of Governor Thomas Jefferson
88
Portrait of George Mason Portrait of George
89
Wythe
90
Signature of Thomas Jefferson
91
Fac-simile of Governor Henry's Letter of Instructions to Clark
96
Law Law
Signature of Judge John
100
Portrait of Judge John
100
Fac-simile of letter of George
Wythe, George Mason and Thomas 0"*
Jefferson to George Rogers Clark Fac-simile of Certificate of
Signature of Signature OF
Death of Joseph Bowman
Mary Bowman George Bowman
...
Signature OF JosT Hite 2
±0'.)
(17)
HI HI HI
8
.
ILLUSTRATIONS
1
Page.
Signature of Samuel Kircheval
112
Homestead of Bowman's Grandfather and Uncle George Bowman's Residence Fac-simile of Patent of King George II for Bowman Land The old Bowman Mill on this Land
114
Corn Island
116
118 121
136
in 1788
Signature OF John Montgomery
138
Signature of Elizabeth B. Ruddell
143
Signature of Isaac Ruddell
143
Signature of James Patton
146
Signature of Richard Chenowith
147
Old Fort Chenowith Clark's
148
Army Passing over the Ohio Falls
161
Capture of Rochblave, the British Commandant at Kaskaskia
174
Portrait of Simon Kenton
178
Signature of Simon Kenton
179
Portrait of Father Gibault
183
Signature of Father Dujannay
185
Signature of Father Meurin
185
Signature of Father Devernai
187
Bowman's Line of March from Kaskaskia to Cahokia Signature of Father Gibault Clark in Council with Indians
199
208
Portrait of Francis Vigo
267
Fac-simile of Note Executed by Francis Vigo
274
Departure of "The Willing" from Kaskaskia Signature and Writing of John Rogers
281
Off for Vincennes February, 1779 Father Gibault Blessing Clark's Troops Map Showing Route of Clark's Marches Map of Route Through the Over-flowed Lands Crossing the Great Waters Clark Entering the Water Big Sergeant and Drummer Boy
286
T^^R- Sackville
319
—
Old
St.
Xavier's Church
194
283
287
290 313 295
300
321
Portrait of Elihu Stout
322
Signature of Elihu Stout
322
Approach to the Fort Through Vincennes Night Attack on Fort Sackville, February
323 23, 1779
331
9
ILLUSTRATIONS.
1
Page. Fac-simile op Letter of Goyerxor Hamilton to Colonel Clark Proposing A Truce for Three Days
337
Fac-simile of Colonel Clark's Reply Fac-simile OF
338
Major Joseph Bowman's Commission
Signature of Francis Bosseron Signature of
J,
M.
P.
351
356
Legrace
357
Diagram of Ground Around Fort Sackville Diagram of Ground Around St. Xavier's Church Capture of British Boats on the Wabash Return of the Victors Sword Presented General Clark by the State of Virginia
—
376
376 359 405
's
N«X»^
c
Content6 ot Cbapters
—
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS, Vol.
I.
CHAPTER
I.
HISTORY OF THE CONQUEST OF THE COUNTRY NORTHWEST OF THE OHIO NECESSARILY INCLUDES THE LIFE OF GENERAL GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
— Traditional onlv, back of his grandparents — Sketch of — Will of his paternal grandfather — Sketch of his father and mother — Their removal from King and Queen county to Albemarle — Homestead on the Rivanna river where George Rogers Clark was born — Remove to Caroline count}^ — Sons enter the army — George R.and Richard go West
Account of his
his ancestors
grandparents
Fac-simile of letter from the former to his father
— Parents
removed
to
Ken-
—The old homestead at Mulberry Hill, where they settled, died buried — The father's will — Fac-simile of the father's and mother's
tucky in 1784
and were
29-52
signatures
CHAPTER
H.
EARLY HOME AND BOYHOOD DAYS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
— Life-long friendship between him and Thomas Jefferson — Education of latter limited Most proficient in mathematics — Engages in practical surveying in the upper Ohio valley — His settlement and adventures there— Serves in Dunmore's war — Visits Kentucky — His experiences there — Returns to Virginia as a representative of the Kentucky people — Urges their needs upon the Governor and legislature — Secures a much-needed supply of gunpowder— Adventures conveying the powder to destination — Successful termination of his mis-
Doubtful traditions
Fac-simile of letter from Jefferson to Clark
its
sion,
and return
to
53~8o
Kentucky
(23)
—
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.
24
CHAPTER
III.
FROM THE DELIVERY OF THE GUNPOWDER IN KENTUCKY IN THE WINTER OF 1776-7, TO THE AUTHORIZATION OF THE ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN, JANUARY 1778. 2,
Upon
Kentucky, Colonel Clark formulates plans tor a campaign
his return to
against the British posts northwest of the their condition w^ith the
—
Is a
Ohio
— Sends
spies to ascertain
party to several adventures in Kentucky
people and placed in militarj^
command— Visits
—A
favorite
Virginia to obtain
— Lays — The governor consults his executive
approval and aid of the state for an expedition against the British posts his plans before
Governor Patrick Henry
council and Jefferson,
Wythe and Mason— Sketches
of
Wythe and Mason
— Deceptive public instructions issued to Clark — Fac-simile of the governor's private instructions — Also fac-simile of letter Order for the campaign issued
of Jefferson,
Wythe and Mason
CHAPTER
81-104
IV.
FROM THE AUTHORIZATION OF THE ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN TO THE ARRIVAL AT THE FALLS OF THE OHIO.
— Is clothed with the au— Receives £1,200, with order for ammunition and military
Colonel Clark gratified at the approval of his plans thority he wished
all
— Advances £150 to Major William Smith to recruit troops on the Hol— Only a few obtained from that source— Secures services of Captains Helm and Bowman —Their companies reach Red Stone early in February, 1778— Sketch of Captain Helm — Sketch of the Bowmans — Interference with recruiting— Secures services of Captain William Harrod — Sketch of Harrod — Colonel Clark's officers and men mainly natives of Virginia—The expedition exclusively a Virginia enterprise — Departure from Red Stone early in May with only one-third the troops expected — Events of the voyage — Successfully stores
ston
avoids surprise and interference with his plans— Stops at river
— Meditates
better locality for
it
mouth of Kentucky
— Finally decides of Ohio a — Moves forward to that place — Greatly disappointed in
establishing a post there
not being joined by the additional troops expected.,
falls
105-130
—
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.
CHAPTER
V.
AT THE FALLS OF THE OHIO. Colonel Clark selects Corn Island for his camping ground and depot of sup-
— Reasons for the selection — Description of the island —^Joined by Mont— Sketch of Montgomery — Dillard's company declines to serve — Some depart without leave— Probable reasons so doing— Number of Clark's force — Sketches of persons on Corn Island — A Clark's plies
gomery's company
for
left
undertaking from lack of
crisis in
men — Determines
to brave
on the expedition against the British posts
CHAPTER
it all
and depart
.„..,.„.....
at
once
131-155
VI.
FROM CORN ISLAND TO THE CAPTURE OF KASKASKIA. the departure of the expedition announced — Effect of the announce— Character of the troops — Exciting scenes of the departure — Voyage down the Ohio — Land on an island at the mouth of the Tennessee —^Joined by a party of hunters — March across the countrj' towards Kaskaskia — Unjust distrust of the new-found hunter-guide — Suffer for food — Capture Kaskaskia by surprise — Description of the place, and events connected with the capture — Rochblave, the commandant, a prisoner — Conduct of Rochblave and wife — Alleged incidents connected with taking the and Colonel Clark and Simon Kenton's connection therewith — Sketch of Kenton 157-180
Time of ment
fort,
CHAPTER Vn. FROM THE CAPTURE OF KASKASKIA TO THE
VIN-
CENNES CAMPAIGN.
— His own account of his inpatriot priest — Meets Father Gibault— Sketch of Services he rendered the Americans — Captain Joseph Bowman captures Cahokia and other villages — His account of the expedition — Description of the villages — Father Gibault sent to Vincennes in American interest— Secures allegiance of that people to American cause — Captain Helm placed in command there and Captain Williams of the military — Colonel William Linn sent with party to Corn Island — That post removed to main land
Clark's policy towards inhabitants of Kaskaskia tercourse with them
this
civil
—
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.
26
Captain Montgomery sent to Virginia with prisoners and dispatches tain Helm's adventures with Indians
them
— He
visits
Cahokia
—
Clark's superior
in
skill
— Cap-
managing
— Receives vague information of — His dangerous adventure at Kaskaskia — Finds great alarm there at ru-
— Sends
out spies
forward movement of enemy from Detroit Prairie du
Rocher
— Returns
to heroic remedies
to
— Sends for Bowman's companj', and resorts — News arrives of the capture of Vincennes by the British.
mored approach of
the
enemy
181-214
CHAPTER
VIII.
LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR HAMILTON'S CAMPAIGN AGAINST VINCENNES.
— Contrast — News of Clark's in-
Hamilton an instigator of Indian raids against American frontiers between Clark and Hamilton as to employing Indians vasion received at Detroit
— Campaign to regain possession determined upon — Departure of expedition — Hamilton de-
Forces to be used mainly Indians
fends character of Indians, but assails the French
— Incidents of the journej'
— Surrender to vastly superior numbers — Ludi therewith — Detachments of British and Indians
Americans taken by surprise crous incidents connected
— Hamilton praises the sobriety and good conduct of his — Little apparent reason for the claim — Drinking common at that time a period — Liquor part of army supplies — Charge that Clark was at requires inhabitants of Vincennes to take hard drinker refuted — Hamilton oath of allegiance to the British — Greatly strengthens the fort — Sends desent to other points
Indians
this
tachment to mouth of Wabash — Makes extensive plans Americans, and attack their frontiers
in the spring
drive
to
off the
— Relies upon inclemency
of season, and remoteness of American forces, and settles
down
at
Vincennes
for the winter in fancied security
215-242
CHAPTER
IX.
NEWS OF CLARK'S SUCCESS AND TAKES ACTION THEREON.
VIRGINIA HEARS THE
Commandant Rochblave
sent a prisoner to Virginia
the Illinois country joyfully received
delegates in congress soldiers
— Also
to raise five
— Virginia
— The
— News
of the capture of
governor communicates
legislature returns thanks to
for service there
to the
— And another —^John Todd ap-
passes a law organizing the county of Illinois
hundred additional soldiers
it
Clark and his
—
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.
2*]
pointed lieutenant-commandant and instructed by Governor duties
Clark
— Important to the
letters
from the governor
governor describing
his intention to
Henry
Colonel Clark
to
his desperate situation
as to his
— Letter from
and foreshadowing
attempt the capture of Hamilton and Vincennes
CHAPTER
243-264
X.
PREPARING FOR THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST HAMILTON— THE DEPARTURE FROM KASKASKIA AND MARCH TO VINCENNES.
— Prepares to march against the British — Great assistance rendered by Francis Vigo — Sketch of Vigo — Visit to his grave — Not properly compensated bj government for his services and losses — He secures important information of the strength of the British at Vincennes — Captains Bowman's and McCarty's companies join Clark at Kaskaskia — Sketch of Captains McCartv, "Williams, Charleville moves forward by water with part of Clark's force and Rogers — The Clark marches by land — Troops blessed by Father Gibault and cheered on by French inhabitants — Details of march from Kaskaskia to Vincennes — Inci-
Difficulties of at
Colonel Clark's situation
Vincennes
latter
dents of remarkable passage
Wabash zens,
rivers
across overflowed bottoms of Big and Little
— Reaches Vincennes
and proceeds
at
at last,
is
once to attack the British
CHAPTER
well received bv French in
Fort Sackville
citi-
265-316
XI.
CAPTURE OF FORT SACKVILLE AND VINCENNES
— Attack of Fort Sackville — Sketch of the — French citizens furnish Americans much needed ammunition — Indian assistance declined by Clark — Firing on fort continued during the night— Detachment of British allowed to get in the — Some British and Indians captured on the outside — British roughly handled, and Indians killed — Hamilton's account of — Clark's demanding surrender of the — Hamilton's reply — Proposes three days' truce, which Clark declines — They meet for conference at Xavier's Church — Full details of that meeting — Some bloody incidents —They probably hasten the surrender of the — Terms of capitulation agreed upon — Fort surrendered tc the Americans — Messenger arrives from Virginia with important papers — Includ-
Sketch of Lieutenant John Bailey fort
—
St. Xavier's
Church
fort
letter
it
fort
finally
St.
fort
finally
ing commission of colonel for Lieutenant-Colonel Clark and major for Captain
Bowman — Fac-simile
of
Bowman's commission
Z^T~ZS^
——
CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.
28
CHAPTER
XII.
IMPORTANT EVENTS ON THE WABASH, FEBRUARY,
1779.
— Capture of seven British boats, forty — Rejoicing of Ameri— can and French inhabitants on return of the successful expedition — Sketches of Francis Bosseron and M. P. Legrace — Campaign against Detroit contemplated by Clark — Postponed for a time — Releases part of his prisoners Forwards others to Virginia — Captain George's company arrives at Kaskaskia — Sketch of Captain George — Clark divides his troops between Vincennes, Kaskaskia and Cahokia — Assigns officers to their respective positions — Goes himself with thirty men to Kaskaskia — Punishes Delaware Indians — Con-
Expedition up the river from Vincennes
men, and valuable property
Importance of the event
J.
templated June expedition against Detroit abandoned from lack of
men
— Issues general order in relation to disposition of his troops — Death of Major Bowman, and matters relating to him — Colonel Vincennes
Clark returns
to
Clark returns
to the falls of the
Ohio, and makes that his headquarters, "as
the most convenient spot to have an eye over the
CHAPTER
whole"
353~37^
XIII.
KILLING OF COLONEL CLARK'S MESSENGER AND CAPTURE OF IMPORTANT PAPERS. Official report
to governor of Virginia, and other important papers sent
the messenger
party of
— Instructions
given him by Colonel Clark
Huron Indians near
produced here
Is
killed
by
by a
Ohio
— Captured
papers sup-
— Copies of part of
them there
— Copies re-
the falls of the
posed to be in Canadian archives
—
— Colonel Clark's letter to speaker Virginia house of delegates — On learning loss
Clark's report of the Vincennes campaign sent the governor
of this communication Colonel Clark forwards duplicate report to Patrick
Henry and Thomas Major Bowman cennes
to
Jefferson
—This
letter in full
— Also
captured lettef of
Governor Patrick Henry— Rejoicing over capture of Vin-
— Virginia presents Clark with an elegant sword
379-404
—
CHAPTER
I.
HISTORY OF THE CONQUEST OF THE COUNTRY NORTHWEST OF THE OHIO NECESSARILY INCLUDES THE LIFE OF GENERAL GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
— Traditional only, back of his grandparents — Sketch of — Will of his paternal grandfather— Sketch of father and mother — Their removal from King and Queen county to Albemarle — Homestead on the Rivanna river where George Rogers Clark was born — Remove to Caroline county — Sons enter the army — George R.and Richard go West Fac-simile of letter from the former to his father — Parents removed to Kentucky in 1784— The old homestead at Mulberry Hill, where they settled, died and were buried — The father's will — Fac-simile of the father's and mother's
Account of his ancestors grandparents
his
liis
signatures.
pHE
great central figure in the conquest from the
British of the country northw^est of the river
Ohio
during the Revolutionary War was General George Rogers Clark, and any
reaching event terial
is
part of his
when he
account of that important and
far-
necessarily an account of the most
ma-
full
He was
life.
but twenty-five years old
successfully laid his plans before the governor of
Virginia for the reduction of the British posts beyond the
Ohio, and what
is
known
of his ancestry
and
life
up
to that
time can soon be related.
The
history of the remote ancestry of
Clark on the father's side factory.
Back
is
meager, vague and unsatis-
of his grandfather .
George Rogers
(29)
is
only tradition; but
this
30
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK,
tradition
seems clear and positive that
who
came
first
to this country,
his paternal ancestor,
emigrated from England, and
name was John. From what part of England this John Clark came, or who were his ancestors, there is no that his
reliable information.
Tradition has
it
that he settled
James river, in Virginia, and became a planter; on the vessel coming over, or soon after his met, and wife,
fell
and
in
on the
that either arrival,
he
who became his beauty." The prev-
love with, a Scotch girl,
that she
was "a red-haired
alence of reddish hair in
There
traceable to this lady. of this emigration
the Clark family
and
probably
uncertainty as to the date
as to the history of the family for
The
some time afterwards.
is
is
men-
date has been vaguely
tioned as ''about 1620 or 1630."
known
John and Jonathan Clark, descendants of John, the emigrant, and ''the red-haired Scotch lady," were living in Drysdale parish. King and Queen count}^, It is
that
Virginia, before 1725, as this Jonathan married there in that year. rect,
sons,
it
If
the date of the emigration mentioned
would seem conclusive
and
not, as
some have supposed,
emigrant, but there is
is
generation of this to
name
were the grand-
the sons of John, the
John has been in every Clark family, and in consequence it is
trace the
of
John branch
Jonathan was also a favorite name
in
very early times.
in the early days.
But beginning now with the John and Jonathan dale,
we
pass out of the
domain
of tradition,
of
especially true of Jonathan,
who was
Drys-
and can
their history with a reasonable degree of certainty. is
cor-
no certainty that the date mentioned
correct; besides the
difficult
that these
is
trace
This
the grandfather of
1
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. George Rogers Clark. but
Less
is
known
said he died, unmarried, in
it is
ginia, in
1
75 7
of his brother
leaving his estate to his brother Jonathan's
J
who was the father last named John moved
of
As
to Caroline
same year further on,
which
George Rogers Clark.
Uncle John died there,
his
may
it
John,
CaroHne county, Vir-
son John, this
3
his uncle
county
as will
in the
be shown
be that he moved to look after the estate
had bequeathed
to
him.
As already stated, Jonathan Clark was married in King and Queen county, Virginia, in 1725. He died there in 1734, leaving a widow, four ver}^
a considerable estate.
to have
The maiden name
She was
Elizabeth Wilson.
young
of
children,
and
of his wife
was
Quaker parentage, and said
been a remote descendant
of the celebrated martyr,
John Rogers. The children were named John, Ann, Benjamin and Elizabeth, as will be seen by the following copy of their father's will,
where he
died, as
which was recorded
shown by Mr.
in the
county
Southall's statement a
few pages further on:^
Will of Jonathan Clark, the Grandfather of George Rogers Clark. In the
name
of
The
God, amen.
ninth day of April, in
the year of our Lord, one thousand seven hundred and thirty-four, I,
Jonathan Clark,
and Queen county, being of perfect
to
mind *The
of
Drysdale parish,
ver}^ sick
and weak
mind and memory, thanks be
the mortality of
will or a
copy
is
my
also in the
Wisconsin Historical Society.
to
in
King
body, but
God, and calling
body and knowing
Draper
in
that
it is
collection of historic papers in the
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
32
appointed for
my
this
my soul to
my
and
my
and
me,
to bless
following:
It.
It.
my
It
pardon
full
give
wherewith
my
It is
my
is
into eternal
and
will
will
and plantation whereon
I
and
and Benjamin Clark,
all
hath pleased
it
desire that all
my
just
my personal that my loving
desire
live,
and benefit
that land
of the land
during her natural
my
give and bequeath unto
and
paid out of
first
now
at
manner and form
give and dispose of in
I
for all
executors, hereafter mentioned,
wife, Eliz'h Clark, shall have the use
I
I
fol-
be decently buried
to the earth to
debts and funeral charges be
It.
of all,
first
Savior, to receive
as touching such worldly estate
estate.
manner and form
in
committed and be received
body
the discretion of
God
and ordain
God, trusting that through mercy and the merits
sins in this life
bliss,
do make
to die,
to say principally,
is
of Jesus Christ,
my
once
and testament,
last will
lowing; that
men
all
life.
two sons, John Clark
whereon
I novv^ live,
to
be equally divided between them, after their mother's death, to I
give
them and
to their heirs
and bequeath unto
Clark and Benjamin Clark,
whereon
my
mother now
between them and
my
Clark and Benj. Clark, and all
that tract of land
It.
that tract or parcel of land
liveth,
to their heirs
forever.
two sons, John
aforesaid
all
give and bequeath likewise unto
ever,
and assigns
to
be equally divided
and assigns
forever.
It.
I
my aforesaid two sons, John
to their heirs
which
I
lately
and assigns
for-
took up in Gooch-
land county, on James river, to be equally divided between
them.
It.
I
give and bequeath unto
Elizabeth Clark, the one-third part of estate
and negroes.
It.
I
my all
give and bequeath
loving wife,
my all
personal
the residue
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. of
my
among my
personal estate and negroes to be divided
four children,
John Clark,
and Elizabeth Clark,
Ann
Clark, Benjamin Clark
my
two daughters may have
so that
my
twenty shillings apiece more than hereby appoint
my
33
two sons; and,
loving wife, Eliza Clark, and
my
I
do
loving
John Rogers,' executors of this my last will and testament, hereby revoking and disannulling all former wills
friend,
by me made. In witness whereof,
day and year
seal, the
have hereunto
I
first
set
my
hand and
above written. his
Jonathan J Clark,
[l. s.]
mark
The
will
seems
to
and declared by the and testament,
said
Jonathan Clark,
in presence
Jones and Samuel of
have been ''signed, sealed, published
Bill,
to
be
his last will
of" William Bennet, Richard
who proved
King and Queen county, June
the
same
in the court
24, 1734.
In view of the general intelligence of the Clark family,
and the
fact that
lated a
handsome
made
his
mark
Jonathan Clark seems estate,
to
is
to write his
have accumu-
appear strange that he
name
to his will; but
that at the time of executing
was paralyzed, or
be unable
may
instead of writing his
the explanation probably
the will he
it
to
in
such physical condition as
name.
If
this
be so
it
is
a re-
markable coincidence that exactly the same thing happened in the case of his great-grandson,
whose
will
the time
it
was signed by
his
George Rogers Clark,
mark, he being paralyzed
was executed, and unable
to write his
at
name, on
account of which important litigation ensued, as will be fully
shown before
the conclusion of this work.
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
34
One
of the daughters of this
Jonathan Clark
said to
is
have married Torquil McLeod, probably a countryman of
Of the other daughter the author has
her grandmother.
no information.
All the children were probably born in
King and Queen county,
Lunenburg
count}^, in that state,
the seventy-fifth year of in
his age.
and twenty-nine sons.
We can
died in infancy.
two
Seven
may
not
It is
all
be shown
—two
daughters
only say here, of those
of the sons,
in
remarkable
of these children,
however,
who
sur-
William and Marston Greene,
removed west and became prominent tory, as will
and he died
He was
being the father of thirty-one children
vived, that
They finally
His wife was Elizabeth Lee.
there in 1730. settled in
Benjamin was born
Virginia.
later on.
in early
The
Indiana
his-
children, however,
have been of one mother.
probable that Benjamin Clark had two wives, and
that one
was a Miss Greene.
middle name of one of dition that she
was a
It will
his sons
be observed that the
was Greene. There
sister or relative of
is
a tra-
General Greene of
War. The two marriages would tend to number of children. Deeds show he had
the Revolutionary
explain the large a wife
named Elizabeth.
John Clark, the brother
of
Benjamin, was the oldest
of
the four children, having been born in Drysdale parish,
King and Queen county, Another account 1726.
In
of the
same
1
Virginia, October
20,
fixes the date of his birth as
749, he married his second cousin, locality,
who was
1724.
October
Ann
9,
Rogers,
then in the sixteenth year of
her age.
The Rogers
family, like the Clarks, with
whom
they
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. were already
related,
were
English stock. Giles Rogers,
of
Ann's grandfather, emigrated tershire,
England,
T,Z^
to
America from Worces-
ury, and settled in
in the early part of the seventeenth cent-
King and Queen county,
Virginia.
It is
claimed that he was of a family of high stand-
This
ing:.
arms
of the
is
Rogers family
Rogers, the son of
ters,
in
England.
this Giles,
John
Mary
married
of a distinguished Virginia
Byrd, also ily,
been the coat-of-
said to have
fam-
and they had seven sons and four daugh-
Ann,
the wife of this
John Clark, and mother
of
George
Rogers Clark, being the second daughter.
—
The other children were four daughters Lucy, Mildred, Mary and Rachel and four sons, John, George, Giles and Byrd. Lucy married Samuel Redd, Annie married John Clark, Mildred married Reuben George, Mary married
—
Larkin Johnston and Rachel married Donald Robinson.
They
all left
Virginia,
Giles died in
children.
and John removed
the border to
Albemarle county,
to southern Virginia, or across
Two
North Carolina.
of the sons,
Byrd and
George, removed to Kentucky, and George Rogers Clark
was named
after the latter.
in relation to
The
the Rogers family
information here given
was
largely derived from
Joseph Rogers Underwood, formerly United States senator
from Kentucky, and a descendant It is
band
not
of
known
exactly
how
of this
long John Clark, the hus-
Annie Rogers, continued
Queen county, but
George Rogers.
to reside in
King and
a conveyance of real estate executed in
1748 gives that county as the then residence of himself and brother
Benjamin.
In
this
deed the name
is
spelled
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
36
Shortly after that they both removed to Albe-
''Clerk."*
marle county, Virginia, which was formed from Goochland county
Some of the Rogers, and probably Clarks,
in 1744.
already resided there, and
John and Benjamin by county.
John
It is
settled
share.
It
part
the land,
of
their father,
was
willed
to
situated in that
probable they moved to Albemarle in 1749.
upon
was
the part of the land which
situated
of his nine children
upon the Rivanna
were born,
viz.:
river
fell
to his
where four
Jonathan, August
i,
1750; George Rogers, November 19, 1752; Ann, July 14,
The exact location will be more fully described later on. The author has an authentic abstract of title of this land down to its occupancy 1755, and John, September 15, 1757.
by the
father of
George Rogers Clark.
It
was kindly pre-
pared for him by S. V. Southall, Esq., a prominent attor-
ney
of Charlottesville,
Virginia.
This was certainly the
homestead where General Clark was born.f *At this period in Virginia the word "clerk" was doubtless usually given the English pronunciation of "dark." 1748, between Edwin Hickman, of Saint Ann's parAlbemarle, and Thomas Graves, of Saint George's parish, in Spottsjlvania countj', and John and Benjamin Clerk, of Drisdale parish, in King and Queen county. Recites patent of May 25, 1734, by Joseph Smith, Edwin Hickman, Thomas Graves and Jonathan Clerk, for 3277 acres in Goochland, now Albemarle, and recites the death of Joseph Smith and Jonathan Clerk then recites the will of Jonathan Clerk in favor of John and Benjamin Clerk, his sons. Then Hickman and Thomas Graves convey to John and Benjamin Clerk 809^^ acres, giving boundaries. Recorded March Court, 1748, Deed Book No. i, pages 25,
+Deed 23d December,
ish, in
;
26, 27,
Deed
13
August, 1752.
Deed of
partition
between John and Benjamin
Recites that Jonathan Clark, late of King and Queen count}', did in his lifetime, together with Joseph Smith, Edwin Hickman and Clark, of Albemarle.
Thomas Graves, take up 3,277 acres in Goochland, now Albemarle, on the Rivanna, by patent dated the 25th May, 1734. Then recites that Jonathan Clark died before the date of patent, and
left his
part of land to be equally divided between
two sons, John Clark and Benjamin Clark, as shown by County Court of King and Queen, dated the 9th of April, his
his will, recorded in
1734.
Then
recites
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. John Clark continued
to reside
when he removed
the year 1757,
on
and had secured much valuable land
John Clark
southwest corner
Mrs. Clark's father was a surve3'or,
of Caroline county.
ginia.
land until about
this
to the
37
an
also held
in that part of Vir-
interest in lands there
and
these interests probably influenced his removal.
He sold his 410 acres of land in Albemarle, where George Rogers Clark was born,
£300, as shown
for
b}^
to
Wm.
Tandy,
of that county,
the conve3^ance of himself and
Deed Book No.
Ann,
his wife,
which
There
a blank as to the residence of Clark and wife and
is
recorded in
is
as to the date of the deed, but
1768.
Deed Book
and Elizabeth, acres, to
his
it
was recorded November,
page 247, shows that Benjamin Clark wife, conveyed his half of the land, 410 14, 1762.
Both brothers prob-
ably sold about the same time, but this
At ued
may have been
the execution of the deeds.
the homestead in Caroline county the family contin-
to reside for
many
years,
and during the time
children were born, viz.: Richard, 6 July, 1760; 25 September, 1762 II
pp. 22-23.
3,
John Fry, October
some time before
5,
six other
Edmund,
Lucy, 15 September, 1765 Elizabeth, February, 1768 William, i August, 1770, and Frances, ;
;
;
20 January, 1773. Great events occurred during the period of the residence in
Caroline.
Dunmore's War, and
the great
War
of the
Revolution took place, in which several of the sons of partition by surviving patentees after Jonathan Clark's death, and conveyance unto John and Benjamin Clark to be equally divided between them of 820 acres. Then Benjamin Clark conveys in severalty to John Clark one moiety of 820 acres, giving boundaries, and John Clark conveys in severalty to Benjamin Clark the other moiety of 820 acres, giving bouniJaries. Recorded Deed Book No. I, pages 480 to 483.
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
38
John Clark and Ann Rogers tinction.
enter the
The
was one
eldest son, Jonathan,
American army, and
Edmund,
Jonathan, John,
William Clark are on the
His brothers, service.
Richard, George Rogers and
list
of persons receiving military
bounty land warrants from Virginia services," but this
war was
same
certainly in the
dis-
of the first to
at the close of the
a lieutenant-colonel, with a glorious record.
John and Edmund, were
much
participated with
for
''
revolutionary
William Clark was the cousin and not the
brother of George Rogers Clark.
The
brother William
served with distinction in subsequent wars, but was too
young
to serve in the
Revolutionary
The
War.
others
mentioned were brothers. In the meantime George Rogers Clark was
making
his
imperishable record in the far west, wresting from the British the great
country northwest of the Ohio river.
His
brother Richard and his cousin, William (son of Benja-
From
min), were with him.
came
to the family at the old
success of the son
George
time to time glad tidings
homestead
One
in the west.
of the letters
received by the father from this heroic son has the possession of the author
o
wonderful
of the
A fac-simile of
it is
come
here given,
although something out of chronological order. toric incident
mentioned
in the letter will
on when writing
of the period
be seen that the
letter
rected to the father in indicates that to have
when
was written
at
it
into
The
be noticed
occurred. Louisville
his-
later
It will
and
di-
Caroline county, Virginia, which
been
his residence in 1780.
FAC-SIMILE OF LETTER FROM GEORGE ROGERS CLARK (In
.^
Two
Pages.
TO HIS Father, Written in 1780. See Opposite Page.)
^^ ^.,^ #. j^ ---
---^
^
FAC-SIMILE OF LETTER
FROM GEORGE ROGERS CLARK
TO HIS Father, Written in 1780. (Continued from opposite page.)
J^-^c^^A-
^ ^^^^^^^^ /
t^L.^^. ^/Ac^^
1^^
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
Dear
parents turned to their
and
home was, sons, far away
as the old Virginia
43
the hearts of these in the
Ohio
valley,
at last love for the absent, joined to other consider-
ations, influenced
them,
in
October, 1784, to turn their faces
towards the wilderness of the west, accompanied by the
John had died
younger children.
in Virginia of disease
contracted in the service of his country, and Jonathan and
Edmund
joined the parents at the
falls of
the Ohio som.e
time after the conclusion of the war.
was a long and tedious journey for the old people and they did not arrive at the falls of the Ohio until March, 1785, It
having been detained by bad weather and various other vexatious but unavoidable causes.
They ville,
located at a place a few miles southeast of Louis-
then and
still
known
as ''Mulberr}^ Hill,"
they spent the few remaining years of their
and here
Here
lives.
they wqre buried, still
and here dust
the
of their bodies
mingles the
with
She
soil.
died December 24, 1798,
and he
in the
next July o The Homestead of Gen. Clark's Father At Mulberry
Here
is
Hill,
Ky.
(Still
standing).
August.
a picture from a photograph of the house
they lived and died, which sadly dilapidated
is still
condition.
It
r
where
standing (1895) but in a is
historic in other
re-
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
44 spects,
having been frequently shot into by Indians, the
showing where the
logs
Here
also
balls
were imbedded.
is
a picture of the
old spring house on
this
home-
Clark stead at
Mul-
berry Hill.
The place is now owned by a
descendant
of
General
Jonathan
Old Spking House at Mulberry Hill.
Clark, and the
standing.)
(Still
has never been out of the Clark family.
title
In reply to information asked of Mr. R. C. Ballard
Thruston, a descendant of Frances, the youngest
George Rogers Clark,
Ann
Clark,
in relation to the
sister of
graves of John and
he answered, August 26,
1894, that
''the
parents of George Rogers Clark were buried at Mulberry Hill,
and
their graves
marked by
of stone with inscriptions
send
to
sired to
the
which
will
copy
this
you unless they have been destroyed.
remove
same time
their
remains
when
to
week and It was de-
Cave Hill Cemetery,
Edmund
Clark were removed,
the graves were opened even the bones of
Clark and
at
that those of General Jonathan, General
George Rogers and Captain but
I
large rectangular slabs
his wife
had decayed and nothing was
John
left
to
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. remove, and the large stone slabs were
where
saw them when
I
"The
old cabin
I
is still
dated condition, and,
I
left
4^
overturned
photographed the cabin. standing, but in a badly dilapi-
hear,
now uninhabitable.
It
one time attacked by the Indians and the logs are
of the bullets, so, following their
one
which
of
On
the 30th of the
Tuesday
went out
I
I
secured some,
same month, he wrote
to the old
I
was
There
I
that
on
''last
Clark cabin and visited the
graveyard where John Clark and his wife,
were buried.
many
send you."
will
I
example,
at
full of
Relic hunters have cut out
bullet holes as the result.
was
found three large
Ann
Rogers,
flag stones
which
my childhood covered the remains of John his wife, Ann Rogers, and his son. Captain Edmund but, with the assistance of my brother and a farm
told in
Clark,
Clark,
hand, was not able to turn them right side up. afternoon
I
So
this
again returned, better equipped than before, and
succeeded in turning them over, but, alas! they had been
used to mark other graves than those .
.
.
I
I
was looking
for.
have not, however, given up the hunt, but
shall
who
lives
within a few days call on Mr. John Pearce,
about half a mile from the old Clark cabin, and
is
a grand-
son of General Jonathan Clark, born and reared within sight of the old cabin,
graveyard. of age
He
is
a
man
of
and probably can give
since he has devoted his
tained
and a frequent
all
life
visitor to the old
about sixty or sixty- five years
me to
the desired information,
farming and probably
re-
the old family traditions."
Early in the
summer
of 1895 the author
made
a
visit
with Mr. Thruston to the old Mulberry Hill homestead,
:
:
:
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
46
pnd found the old buildings
as represented in this chapter.
The
is
little
family graveyard
upon an elevation overlook-
ing the southeastern part of Louisville and seems to have
many
contained onl}^ a few graves, and these have been
removed
Cave
to
remains of John Clark and
Ann
of the bodies
tainty,
Rogers were not removed
where they were, but no
is
difficulty in
failed,
determining about
inscriptions or
referring to either of them,
following
We
location of the graves with cer-
to identify the
although there was no
The
The
Hill Cemetery.
with the others for the reason already stated.
however,
from
marking
stones,
were found.
the will of
John Clark, the
father of
George Rogers Clark In the
name
of
God, amen.
John Clark,
I,
of Jefferson
county, and state of Kentucky, being at present in a
and low in
my
state
of health,
but at the same time perfectly
senses, and, considering the uncertainty of
make my last following manner
think proper to
do
in the First.
as shall
I
heirs
of I
my
now
Item.
my two
I
do I
debts to be paid and satisfied
give and bequeath to all
life,
and testament, which
my
of the re-
manner
estate in the following
and assigns forever
sonal,
and
my just
will
be hereafter mentioned, and then dispose
mainder Item.
direct all
weak
son Jonathan and his
the estate, both real and per-
in his possession.
give and bequeath to
my
son William and to
grandsons, John O'Fallon and Benjamin O'Fallon,
to their heirs
and assigns
forever, to be equally divided
between them, share and share
alike, three
thousand acres
:
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. which
of land
claim under an entry on a treasury war-
I
No. 7926, made
rant,
47
in the surveyor's office of
Fayette
county, on the 29th day of March, 1783, which land hath
been surveyed and
which a patent hath issued
for
in
my
own name. Item. his heirs
to
my
son
Edmund and
and assigns forever one thousand acres
uate, lying
Miami
and bequeath
give
I
and being on the waters
river
;
which
to
of land sit-
of the east fork of the
claim under an entry on part of a
I
No. 307, made
military land warrant.
in the office of the
surveyor for the continental line on the i6th day of August, 1767
;
also
one thousand acres
an entry on part
of the aforesaid
in the office of the aforesaid
line
on the 17th day
made
in the
of land
name
of
of
which
son,
claim under
warrant No. 307, made
surveyor for the continental
These
August, 1767.
my
I
entries are
John Clark, deceased, and
my son, Jonathan Clark, the heir at law, hath relinquished in my favor his right thereto. Also three negroes, to wit Peter
(Venius child), and Scipio and
children), also the
advanced Item.
and
to I
sum
of
to
my
request.
give and bequeath to
and assigns
Lue, also one negro
(Rose's
money which my son Jonathan
him agreeable
to his heirs
Daphny
my
son George Rogers
one negro
forever,
man named
woman named Venice, with live,
pres-
ent and future increase, except Peter.
Item.
I
give and bequeath to
Gwathney, and
his heirs
both real and personal
thousand acres of land
my
and assigns
now
in his
situate, lying
ers of Poag's creek, in the
son-in-law,
Owen
forever, all the estate
possession,
also
one
and being on the wat-
county of Logan.
For which
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
48 land
I
have a deed made by
my
son Jonathan, dated the
24th day of October, 1796.
Item.
I
give and bequeath to
Croghan, and
son-in-law, William
and assigns
to his heirs
woman named
my
Christian; also
forever,
one negro
her children together with
all
her future increase, which negroes are
now
in the posses-
sion of said Croghan.
Item.
I
give and bequeath to
my
son-in-law, Richard
C. Anderson, and to his heirs and assigns forever, one
negro
woman named
Kate; also one other
named Phoebe;
also all the children of the said negroes with their future
which negroes are now
increase;
in the possession of said
Richard C. Anderson. Item.
I
my
give and bequeath to
M. Thruston, and hundred acres
to his
heirs
son-in-law, Charles
and assigns forever, four
of land, situate, lying
and being
in the
county
of Shelby,
on the waters
ment
my tract of fourteen hundred acres of land; also woman named Angella, and her two children,
of Clear creek,
it
being the
settle-
part of
one negro
together with her future increase, which said negroes are
now
in the
said
Thruston
Item. his heirs
now
I
possession of said Thruston. all
give and bequeath to
together with
My
my
all
my
still
and
my
son William, and to
forever, the tract of land
longing, to wit:
hogs;
do give unto
moneys due from him unto myself.
and assigns
live,
I
all
whereon
the appurtenances thereto be-
stock of horses, cattle, sheep
my
I
and
plantation utensils; the whole of
household and kitchen furniture; also the whole of the
debts due to
me on
bonds, notes or book account, except
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. the mone}^ due to
49
me from my son-in-law Charles M.
Thriis-
ton. I
also give unto
York,
Cupid and Harry. of
my
are deeded to
my
will that
lands in
me by my
my
son,
sums
of
my
son William the
George Rogers Clark. all
my
just debts;
money,
of
age or nearly of age,
To John
to wit:
to
O'Fallon,
Benjamin O'Fallon,
All those debts and payments are to be
son William out of the legacy which
Item.
I
and bequeath
give
It is
my two grandsons, John and Ben-
one hundred pounds, and pounds.
Tame,
Grant, which said lands
Illinois
jamin O'Fallon, when they shall be the following
my
son William shall pay
pay unto
also that he shall
also three old negroes.
also give to
I
man named
wife Rose, and their two
his
Nancy and Juba;
children,
whole
son William one negro
York and
old
also
my
to
my
O'Fallon and Benjamin O'Fallon,
to
have
made by left
him.
two grandsons, John
them and
Ben and
forever, four negroes, to wit:
I
fifty
their heirs
Priscilla, vv^ith their
present and future increase; also Esther and her future increase;
which
said negroes are to be disposed of at the dis-
my
cretion of
executors to be hereafter named, for the
John and Benjamin O'Fallon, until they age, at which time said negroes are to be
benefit of said shall
come
of
equally divided between them and delivered into their possession.
Lastly,
I
do hereby appoint
Rogers and William Clark,
my sons, Jonathan, George my sons-in-law Richard C.
Anderson, William Croghan and Charles M. Thruston,
and
my
last will
friend,
Benjamin Sebastian, executors,
and testament; and
I
to this,
my
do hereby revoke. all former
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
50
wills heretofore last will
my
made by me,
and testament.
I
declaring this only to be m}^
have signed the same and affixed
seal this 24th July, 1799.
John Clark,
[seal.]
Signed and sealed and published by the testator John Clark as and for his us,
who
last will
and testament,
in
presence of
signed our names in his presence, and in the pres-
ence of each other.
Jno. Hughs,
RoBT. K. Moore,
Marston
G. Clark.
Codicil to the Above Will.
Be
it
known
to all
men, by these
presents, that
I,
John
Clark, of Jefferson county, and state of Kentucky, have
made and
my
declared
last will
(and) testament in writing.
Bearing date the twenty-fourth day seven hundred and ninety-nine,
my
ratify
and confirm
parts,
one only excepted, which
bequeathed to
my
I,
the said
said last will is
John Clark, do
and testament
that the said negroes be
her future increase,
increase.
made
two grandsons aforesaid last
I
its
have
two grandsons, John and Benjamin
and her present and future
my
in all
that part wherein
O'Fallon, the following negroes, to wit:
which time the
one thousand
of July,
to
Now
it is
Priscilla
my
will,
use of above directed until
shall arrive to lawful age, at
mentioned negro, is
Ben,
to wit:
Esther and
be equally divided between John
and Benjamin O'Fallon, which said negro and her increase
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. from
time
this
I
them and
give to
ent and future increase, heirs forever, to be
deHvered
Benjamin O'Fallon years,
and
my
will
all
fully
my
and meaning of
with her pres-
WilHam and his possession when John and son
is
age of twenty-one
that this codicil be ad-
my last will
and testament, and
things therein mentioned and contained be faith-
and
truly performed,
respect as
my
in his
Priscilla
shall arrive to the
judged a part and parcel that
give to
I
The
their heirs forever.
Ben,
balance of said negroes, to wit:
5
if
last will
Witness
the
same were
and
as fully
and amply
fully declared
and
set
in
every
down
in
and testament.
my
hand
this
twenty-sixth day of July, one
thousand seven hundred and ninety-nine.
John Clark, (Signed
[seal.]
in the presence of us)
Sam Gw^athmey, Jno. Hughs.
''
At a
court held for Jefferson county at the court-house
in Louisville,
on the
ist
day
of October, 1799, the within
instrument in writing purporting to be the
last will
and
testament of John Clark, deceased, was produced in court
John Hughs and Robert K. annexed was also proved by John
and proved by the oaths Moore, and the
codicil
of
Hughs and Samuel Gwathmey,
subscribing witnesses, and
ordered to be recorded, and on the motion of William Clark, one of the executors therein named,
who made oath
according to law, execution of the said will was granted
him and bate."
leave given the other executors to join in the pro-
ANCESTORS OF GEORGE ROGERS
The /^ '&^X
CI.
ARK
fac-similes here given of
the signatures of
and
Ann
John Clark,
Clark, his wife, are
reproduced from official papers and are
undoubtedly genuine.
first
later.
was written
in 1774,
The
and the
latter
some
fifteen years
—
CHAPTER
II.
EARLY HOME AND BOYHOOD DAYS OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
— Life-long friendship between him and Thomas Jefferson — Education of latter limited Most proficient in mathematics — Engages in practical survejing in the upper Ohio valley — His settlement and adventures there — Serves in Dunmore's w^ar— Visits Kentucky — His experiences there — Returns to Virginia as a representative of the Kentucky people — Urges their needs upon the Governor and legislature — Secures a much-needed supply of gunpowder — Incidents while destination — Successful termination of his misconvejdng the powder to
Doubtful traditions
Fac-simile of letter from Jefferson to Clark
its
sion,
and return
Kentucky.
to
jT has been
shown
in the previous chapter that
Rogers Clark was born on
his father's
marle county, Virginia, November title
to that land
was acquired has
19,
farm
1752.
also already
George
in
Albe-
How
the
been shown.
In order to ascertain the exact locality of the homestead,
and any
traditions that
in relation to
it,
might remain
in the
neighborhood
or the Clark family, the author again had
recourse to the gentleman before mentioned, S. V. Southall,
Esq.,
who
the locality
To
lives
and
its
the inquiries
near
it,
and
is
entirely familiar with
history.
made he answered
was born about two miles
that, ^'General
Clark
east of Charlottesville, in a plain
house which stood on a knoll near to and overlooking the eastern
bank
of the
Rivanna (S3)
river.
His birth-place
is
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
54
home
about one and one-half miles north of Monticello, the
and burial place
Mr.
of
And
Jefferson.
about two
it is
and one-half miles northwest from Shadwell, where Mr. Jef-
There
was born.
ferson
no vestige
is
Near
which General Clark was born.
sume on
the farm to which
handsome brick
the house in
left of
(and
its site
pre-
I
belonged), there stands quite a
it
residence, the
home
Captain
of
McMurdo,
a retired English officer."
In another
letter,
Mr. Southall,
a few days later
''Before writing you
had some
I
said:
conversation about
little
George Rogers Clark with Dr. Wilson Cary Nicholas Randolph,
of Charlottesville,
and executor
ferson Randolph, grandson
Dr. R. told
me
house
of the
with what
I
in
son of Colonel of
Mr.
that his father pointed out to
which Clark was born.
wrote you.
I
Thomas
Jefferson.
him the
It tallies
asked Dr. R.
if
he
jointly
it
was very good from quantity
site
exactly
knew any-
thing about the social position of Clark's family.
he inferred
Jef-
He
said
of land patented
by Clark's father and a Mr. Graves, running down
to land patented
by Randolph, who was a brother-in-law
of Peter Jefferson, father of
Thomas
Jefferson,
and who
induced Peter Jefferson, in poor health, to move up from Chesterfield county, Virginia, to Albemarle, giving
two hundred and exchange
on
for a
this tract of
one
punch bowl.
of
was
his
Thomas
two hundred and
of Clark's cousins
knew
acres of
fifteen
him
patented land in Jefferson
fifteen acres.
was born
Dr. R. says
raised in this county.
Dr. R.
no traditions here about Clark and presumed none
could be found at this
late
day."
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
am
*^I
55
unable, on inquiry," adds Mr. Southall, ''to find
John Clark in this county. About three miles below the Clark place there was formerly any descendants
Rivanna
in the
of
dam
river a
called 'Jefferson's
Dam,' very
Whether
near to Shadwell, where Mr. Jefferson was born. built
by him, or
Mr. Wirt Henry,
in Patrick
Rogers Clark going speaks of his
it
do not know.
his father, Peter Jefferson, I
in a
Henry's Life, speaks
when
to Jefferson's Mill
way
not to satisfy
me
George
of
a boy, but he
of the
accuracy of
statement."
As George Rogers Clark was born removed from Albemarle county would
follow, that
if
he went
Rivanna, as a mill boy,
it
Mr. Southall thought
The
1
752,
and
his parents
to Caroline in
1757,
to "Jefferson's Mill,"
it
on the
must have been when he was not
over five years of age, and that
in
it is
this
not surprising, therefore,
improbable.
question naturally arises as to what intercourse,
if
any, existed between young Clark and Jefferson, both born
Some have spoken
same neighborhood.
in the
of
them
as
playmates in boyhood, but Jefferson was the elder by about
They may have met,
nine years.
equality of their ages, tion of
it,
especially
when
by Clark, who,
existed
well
not likely that a vivid recollec-
any, was carried into later
if
his parents
It is
it is
but, in view of the in-
as already stated,
removed
to the
either,
and
was only
five
by
another county.
to
known, however,
between them
life
that the
end
warmest friendship
of their lives,
and
it
was
probably made more intense by the recollection that they
were natives
of the
same
locality.
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
56
Seldom between men can be found more
and
delicate
touching expressions of regard than those of Jefferson in a written near the close of
letter
second Presidential
his
when he was comparatively an old man, but in the zenith of his glory, to Clark, who was then resting under term,
a cloud
—disappointed,
mind and body.
But Jefferson,
forget him, but wrote is is
in possession
and
neglected
him
in his
afflicted,
a letter, the original of
of the writer,
and a
able in flects
The
fac-simile of its
and tenderness
which which
chronological
reader will, no doubt, realize that
delicacy
its
in
high place, did not
here produced, although greatly out of
order.
both
it is
of expression,
admir-
and
re-
honor, not only upon Clark, but upon the head and
the heart of
great author.
its
The brother
referred to in the
William Clark, tion of
just
first
part of the letter
then returned from the great explora-
Lewis and Clark
the auspices of Jefferson,
to the Pacific ocean,
made under
and the ''bones" were remark-
able specimens in natural history, in which subject
known Mr. Jefferson took great interest. Not much is known of the early boyhood Rogers Clark. facilities of
best.
is
George
His father had a large family, and the
where he was
raised
He, however,
for
were then probably not a time,
opportunities as he had, and for nine
under the
of
it
obtaining a good education in the part of Car-
oline county of the
was
tuition of
improved such
months
Donald Robertson, who
utation of being a superior teacher.
It is
at least
was
had the rep-
said that
young
James Madison, afterwards President of the United States, was a pupil with Clark, under Robertson's tuition. Mad-
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. ison
and Clark were nearly
of the
same age.
59
But Clark
did not persist in his scholastic studies like Madison, and
acquired only a
ough even
in
common
English education
some branches
— not very thor-
In spelling he was
of that.
certainly deficient, or very careless, but that
been a deficiency quite
common
in
Mathematics and surveying were
to
have
pioneer period.
this
his favorite studies,
and
he became quite proficient.
in the latter
At
seems
that period there
had been no systematic government
surveys of land, as at present, consequently the running and establishing of boundaries
were
services of surveyors in great
of
much
demand.
employment congenial to Clark's
and material things rather than the and he entered upon
It
tastes, for
natural intellect which sought practical
teacher,
importance, and the
was, in
had
knowledge
of
men
rules of the school-
active duties as a practical sur-
in the field
visited the
Kanawha this
an
he had a strong
when he was quite young. George Washington, who was also a young
veyor
fact,
in
surveyor,
country in the vicinity of the mouth of the
1770, surveying and locating land.
About
time public attention was strongly turned in the direc-
tion of the
Ohio
valley,
and enterprising men began
To do
take steps to secure desirable locations. ices
came
of
surveyors were
indispensable.
so the serv-
The movement
exactly in time to suit Clark's aspirations.
vitality
and ambition, he determined
and unite
his destiny
new when he
with a
about nineteen years old
at
was
to
make
Full of
once ''to go west"
country.
He was
only
crossed the mountains
on an exploring and surveying expedition. objects
to
One
a location of land for himself.
i\
of his
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
6o This
been
first
journey was probably
in the spring of 1772, as
in 1771, or
it is
known that
may have he made an
it
extensive tour through the upper Ohio valley in 1772, return-
An
ing to his father's house again late in August.
account
journey was graphically written by one of his com-
of this
panions, seemingly the head of the party, the Reverend
David Jones, afterwards a chaplain
Wayne's War, and
lution,
condensed from
is
the
War of
War of the RevoThe
181 2.
following
his journal, as printed in Cist's Miscellany,
being, probably, the
it
in the
printed mention of Clark's
first
early history:
"1
left
Fort Pitt on Tuesday, June 9, 1772, in
company
with George Rogers Clark, a young gentleman from Vir-
who with new world.
several others inclined to
ginia, this I
labored none,
We
traveled
by water
had an opportunity
I
on the many creeks which empty
of
make
in a canoe,
making
and
as
my remarks
into the Ohio, as also the
These are omitted.
courses of the said river."
a tour in
In a few
Mingo Town, supposed to be ''where some of that nation name of plundering canoes, we
days they arrived opposite the present reside
;
Steubenville,
but as they have a
passed them quietly as possible, and were so happy as not to
be discovered by any
of
From
them.
river runs west of south for thirty miles to
''Here
I
met
my
interpreter,
this
town the
Grave creek.
who came
the
across
country from the waters of the Monongahela, and with
some Indians, with
when we came stones,
by the
were only
in
;
whom
I
conversed.
instead of feathers
river side.
From
It
my
was
in the night
bed
vv^as
Fort Pitt to
gravel
we Our
this place
one place where white people
live.
1
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. lodging was on the banks of the river, which at not to suit me, but afterwards
We
''Saturday, June 13. a creek, called
became more
it
6
seemed
first
natural.
concluded to move down to
by the Indians, Caapteenin (Captina).
This comes from the west side of the Ohio, and
Newcomerstown, which
is
Indians, about 75 E. S. E. of the
town
the chief
We
from
Delaware
of the
encamped on
is
the east side
Ohio, opposite to the mouth of Caapteenin.
This was near seventy miles below, and from Grave creek to the
Kanawha
west, but
may
the river Ohio
be said
many
very crooked, turning to
it is
to
run south-
points of the
compass. ''Tuesday, i6th.
Kanawha; fifty
it
comes from the east, and
yards wide at the mouth.
Kanawha, and
little
evening on Thursday, the i8th,
in the
and
Set out for the
is
we
arrived at the
near one hundred
We went up this stream
about ten miles, and out on every side to view the land and to obtain provisions.
and a
My
stately buffalo bull.
interpreter killed several deer,
The
land
to the land nearer to Fort Pitt.
is
It
good, but not equal not well watered
is
about the Kanawha, and consequently not the most promising for health.
Here we have pine
hills,
appear too poor to raise good wheat.
but they do not
Having
ourselves with a view of this part of the country, for
satisfied
we
set
out
Caapteenin again, and arrived safe Tuesday, June 30th.
Being rather unwell, we moved up
.
creek,
and then
Ten Mile
left
miles before
Grave
our canoes and crossed the country
creek, which empties into the
suppose, the
to
Monongahela.
way we traveled, it was between fifty and we came to the house of David Owens.
to I
sixty
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
62 '
Set out for Fort Pitt on horseback
'Tuesday, July 14.
company with Mr. Clark, Mr. Higgins and Mr. Owens, my interpreter; but as it was some time before the Indians could be at Fort Pitt, we took another tour down to Ohio in
across the waste wilderness,
about
to
fifteen
and on the Sabbath
white people,
who met
I
preached
in a cabin
near a
creek called Wheeling. '^
Monday, July
Set out for Fort
20.
We
Pitt.
had a
small path called Catfish's road which led us through the
middle of the land between Ohio and Monongahela; so that
I
had the pleasure
of seeing a large extent of
The
but very few inhabitants. greater part can be settled.
land
is
good land,
uneven, but the
Wednesday, July
2 2d,
came
to Fort Pitt, conversed with several principal Indians of
different nations.
.
.
.
Parted from
and reached home on the 20th day
The
interest that already existed
friends at
home,
in relation to the
of
my
friends here
August."
among young Clark's new country over the
mountains, was largely increased by his glowing description of
its
desirable qualities,
and some
of
them generally
returned with him.
Upon one
panied him, but only
to take a glance at the country.
soon returned home. his
occasion his father accom-
He
His son, however, spent much of
time for several years in the upper Ohio valley, chiefly
near the mouth of Fish creek, in Grave Creek township,
some twenty-five or thirty miles below Wheeling, where he
made
a location of land, and built a cabin.
It is
the celebrated Michael Cresap subsequently
owner
of this land.
said that
became
the
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. Here Clark devoted himself mainly ing, fishing,
He
cated.
to surveying, hunt-
and improving the land on which he had wrote
home
to his friends at
some money surveying; was pleased with location, and rather enjoyed his rough frontier fact,
his
land
life.
He
unconsciously preparing himself for the
trials
and hardships he was destined soon
On
campaigns. letter,
lo-
was mak-
that he
ing
was, in
63
encounter in military
to
the 9th of January,
headed ''Ohio
river.
he wrote a
1773,
Grave Creek township,"
brother Jonathan, at ''Woodstock,
Dunmore
to his
county, Vir-
ginia," in which he said:
"
embrace ye opportunity by Mr. Jarrot
I
know you
that
am
I
good
in
you
health, hoping that this will find
...
same.
in the
to let
I
am
settled
on
my land
with
great plenty of provisions, and drive on pretty well as to clearing, hoping,
by the spring,
to get a full crop.
I
know
nothing more worth acquainting you with, but that country
very
settles
per bushel, but
low
settling as
Land
good deal
me by
as ye
in
some
parts 7s. 6d.
The
people are
Sioto river, ^66 below
very considerable of cash
ye
sum
for
by surveying on
first
my
Fort
action in a wider field.
way
to
Pitt.
had an I
get a
Pray write
this river.
opportunity after the receipt of
his restless
journey further
I
place.
down
this.
affectionate brother."
did not remain in Grave Creek township
however, as
their
is
have a great plenty.
I
Nothing more but your
He
and corn
has raised almost as dear here as below.
offer of a
to
fast,
this
and adventurous In the spring of
all
the time,
demanded 1773 he made a
spirit
the river with a party of Virginians on
Kentucky.
Exactly
how
far
he went on
this
64
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
occasion
is
was back
known, but
not
and
at his location
He was
after.
was probably not
CaroHne county
at his father's in
that year,
it
in the
or less, with the
may have been
men
In Dodge's ''Red that
and
involved in them.
some
Men
of
of
of the
them
that
He was
associating, It is
in
more
possible he
himself."^
Ohio Valley,"
it
is
said
spring of 1774 an alarm spread
''in the
.
.
.
disturbances,
a party to
summer
and about
time serious troubles with the Indians began. first
he
again on the Ohio river shortly
there in the spring of 1774,
the region of the
far, as
through the border occasioned by the killing of a white
man
A
near Wheeling by a band of Cherokees.
party of
Virginia surveyors and explorers, under the lead of Captain Cresap, repaired at
Clark was one of
ers
George Rog-
once to Wheeling.
this
party."
In the latter part of July of the same year four hundred
men, under Major Angus McDonald, crossed the Ohio the
mouth
of Fish creek, near Clark's cabin,
some Indian There
is
villages
at
and destroyed
on the Muskingum.
some reason
to believe that Clark,
and William
Helm and Joseph Bowman,
afterwards
captains under Clark in the Illinois campaign,
went with
Harrod, Leonard
this expedition.
certain that
It is
1774 culminated
of
Clark was in the
to
when
among
memorable
in
unfortunate events in the spring
what
is
known
the first to join the
as
Dunmore's War,
army.
He was
battle of Point Pleasant, for he
not
happened
be with the wing, led by Dunmore, which was not en-
gaged.
It
is
not necessary here to enter into this well-
known campaign, *
See important
letter
or into the events which immediately of Clark on this subject in appendix.
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. preceded, and, no doubt, occasioned
doubt as either
to Clark's rank, but
on Dunmore's
Whatever in
his
or in
staff
is
it
such a satisfactory manner that
some
is
believed that he was
command
may have been,
rank
There
it.
65
of a
company.
he discharged the duties it
is
said he
was
offered
a permanent position in the English military service, but
he did not want
it
because the trouble between the mother
country and the colonies was then approaching a
and besides
thoughts and aspirations were
his
direction of the great west,
the best field for
him
in
all
crisis,
the
in
which he rightfully regarded
which
to
as
win success and imper-
ishable renown.
The movement towards
the west, which had been slowly
gathering strength before Dunmore's after
War, rapidly increased
it.
Many
of the
young, the enterprising, the adventurous,
as well as the unfortunate, turned their thoughts towards
and many who had been
the fair land of Kentucky,
Dunmore's army joined friends
in the
and acquaintances had already gone
ing Leonard Helm, William Harrod,
seph and John
Bowman,
no doubt, met some
creased his desire to go further, and visited the interior of
there, includ-
Isaac Hite, and others.
of these persons
what
is
Clark's
Simon Kenton, JoClark,
en route, and
have gone part of the way with them.
of
Some of
movement.
in
may
This probably, it
is
in-
certain that he
now Kentucky
in the spring
1775.
There
is
no evidence, however, that visions
military career ter written his
of his future
mind. From a letbrother Jonathan, dated " Steward's Cross-
had
as yet entered his
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
66
ing, Apl. I, 1775,"
it
appears that he went, mainly, as a
The
surveyor, and to secure desirable locations of land.
"
letter said:
found
I
take this opportunity to acquaint you that
I
my
things according to
all
arrival here.
This leaves
find ye in the
same
me
expectation on
my
hoping that
will
quite well,
state of health.
I
it
have engaged as a
deputy surveyor under Cap'n Hancock Lee, for to lay out lands on ye Kentuck, for ye Ohio company, at ye rate of
£
80 I
pr year, and ye privilege of taking what land
hope that you
patent for est
me
as soon as possible, as
importance to me.
friends
and
let
I
that
I
am
want.
to get that
be of ye great-
will
our
will write to
He
well."
''Pray get ye patent for
you possible can,
if
it
hope that you
them know
following postscript: before June,
no money nor pains
will spare
I
as delay
is
adds the
my
land
dangerous."
About this time, and for some months afterwards, his letters show that he encountered some misfortunes of a character not
was
known, which rather depressed him, but
of short duration, for
spirits, at
the
Kentucky
river,
site
had never
fifty
families
said, to live,
would be
the
and
living there
by
He thought a richer or more beautiful country been seen in America. He was sure if his
father could see
he did,
in fine
"Leestown," seventy miles up
where he intended, he
did not doubt but
Christmas.
of
by midsummer he was
it
at last,
it
and
he would come there to his
remains are
at rest in
live,
and come
"the beautiful
country," with that of his wife and most of their children, as has already
been
related.
"Hancock Lee, and
others,"
we
are told in Collins's
History of Kentucky, settled Leestown, on the east side
of
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. Kentucky
the
now
is
river,
Clark, but
if
about a mile below where Frankfort
The
situated.
probably included
'^'and others,"
did, the connection
it
67
was
likely of short
duration.
"
It
was the
first
spot," says Collins, ''settled by whites,"
(in that region) ''and as early as 1775
was a kind
of stop-
ping-place, or resting-place for the explorers and improvers
from the
or
Pitt,
Monongahela country, who came
in
down the Ohio, and up the Kentucky to look for land." As a town, however, it proved a failure, but that
canoes
Clark was there
is
shown by a
than, dated, " Lees
which he
Town
letter to his
brother Jona-
Kentucke, July 6th, 1775,"
said:
"I embrace the opportunity of Cap'n E. Taylor
you but
this
small epistle.
I
am
series of misfortunes this four
mention; but richer
hope
I
to get
and claims
good
this
may
as
any
in
months
past, too tedious to
or not, but
I
I
am
this
have I
all
ye land
My
laid out a
intend to
believe has
If
is
(here)
his claim
father talked of seeing
shall not advise
convinced that
I
I
Colonel Henderson
if
country he never will rest until he gets in engrossing
A
ye better of them yet.
be got reasonable enough, and
ye world.
land in August.
come
have had nothing but a
ye country below Kentucke.
all
should be good, land as
I
and more beautiful country than
never been seen in America.
send
to
in a flow of spirits at this time
has not been ye case long, for
it
in
him whether
to
he once sees ye it
to live.
possibly can, expecting him.
I
am
We
town seventy miles up ye Kentucke where
live,
families living in
and it
I
don't doubt but there will be
fifty
hope that you
will
by Christmas.
I
68
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
write to
me by
you
all
are,
the
first
and what news,
My
Johney see
compliments wrote
this as
as
expect you
I
to
at
vv^ill
have
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell.
fre-
Let
to himself as before."
But Clark did not make himself a
He was
me know how
This from your affectionate brother.
quent opportunities. P. S.
opportunity, letting
Harrodstown, and other
Leestown.
fixture at
stations, as well
as
Leestown, familiarizing himself with the country and people, organizing, and, for the time,
remained
until the fall of 1775,
mined
remove permanently
He
the spring.
his affairs
It is
known
on the 6th
ginia,
that place,
which he
to this beautiful country.
and
that he
know
at
Winchester, Vir-
of that date, to his brother
from
Jonathan, in
He
is
I left
as
my
determined
I
should be glad that you'd
have something particular to
I
father's last Saturday. to
go
to
know ye
truth,
which
is
All was
ye Kentuck, but hearing
some disturbances there with ye Indians, he
here to
letter
said:
of you.
well.
was
February, 1776, from a
of
come here tomorrow,
I
by which time he deter-
with a view to removing west in
"li you have ye time to spare
of
He
returned to his old home, and devoted the next winter
winding up
to
the irreg-
and meager settlements.
ular militia of the scattered
to
commanding
ye reason of
sent
me up
my being here.
have not time to write particulars, as Maj'r Helvinstone,
by
whome
P. S.
If
I
send
this, is
just going.
you can't come yourself
I
I
am
yours, etc.
should be glad that
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. you would send Jonney.
shall stay here three or four
"^
days." It
I
69
would be
interesting to learn '^the
something
partic-
ular" he desired to
know
with the unknown.
His father was deterred by '^Indian
of his brother, but
disturbances," or
some other
Kentucky country
at that time, as
it
remains
from going
cause,
to the
he did not remove there
some years afterwards.
until
In the spring of 1776 Clark returned to Kentucky, re-
sumed
his relations
He was
leader.
with the
and soon became a
settlers,
brave, energetic, bold, prepossessing in
appearance, of pleasing manners, and qualities calculated to
win upon a
in fact,
with
all
the
The
frontier people.
unorganized and chaotic condition of the country needed such a man, and the
The which
man had come.
desire to secure first
employment and productive
influenced him, soon widened into a desire to
promote the security and welfare the
creation
of
of the people,
sagacity also.
He was
gunpowder,
of
of
little
remote country and Virginia, and
now
in the
Draper
some instances
is
collection,
it is
this
quite likely his views young Clark
to his
brother
The The author is inmany favors kindly
Wisconsin Historical Society.
corrected and modernized.
debted to Mr. Thwaites, the secretary of the society, for extended.
He
scarcity.
connection between
four letters quoted in this chapter, written by
Jonathan, are
settlers
ammunition, espe-
which there was great
saw, too, that there was but
spelling in
for
developed,
quick to perceive that the
needed organization, and a supply
*The
He
a better government.
and
not only in military sagacity, but in political
speedily,
cially
land,
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
yo
enlarged in
this
direction, until he
came,
template the possibility of independent
con-
at last, to
states.
This view was probably furthered by the apparent suc-
& Company
Henderson
cess of
in
bringing the country
south of the Kentucky river into a political organization
known
This was done without the con-
as Transylvania.
sent of the state of Virginia, under the pretext that the land
had been acquired by treaty with the Cherokee Indians.
There were seeming derson
also.
was determined,
therefore, that there should be
better understanding about these complicated
matters,
and
some way or
that, in
interests of these far-off settlers
the
was
Hen-
Company and Virginia, but between North Carolina
and Virginia It
not only between the
conflicts,
mother government called to
meet
at
and unsettled
other, the facts
should be
of Virginia.
and the
made known
A council
Harrodstown, June
some
to
of citizens
6, 1776, to
con-
sider the subject.
This Harrodstown meeting was mainly the work of Clark,
and the reasons which influenced him are memoir, written that he of the it
up
in the
latter part of
commenced thinking
Kentucky country persistently.
in
When
stated in his
He
his life.
of the condition
says
and future
1775, and that he followed
he went back
to
Virginia in
1776, he was careful to ascertain public sentiment there, as to the character
and
validity of
Henderson
& Com-
pany's claim to the country south of the Kentucky river.
was good; others doubted whether or not Virginia could, with propriety, have any He wanted to know where he pretensions to the country. ^^Many," he
said, '^thought
'
'
it
1
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. and
Were
his fellow-pioneers stood.
they citizens of Vir-
ginia, entitled to the protection of the state, or
and
outside of her jurisdiction, jurisdiction of
create a
any organized
new government,
existing government,
at
and therefore
state,
free to
attach themselves to any
or
These were broad and
will?
him
superficial thinker in relation to
governmental
to
be anything but a affairs.
wisely concluded that the best plan to get at facts,
and determine the future try,
were they
for that matter outside the
far-reaching questions, showing
He
7
was
of this
new and
beautiful coun-
primary
for the people to get together, in their
and sovereign capacity, and send delegates
to the
mother
power
to act as cir-
cumstances might determine would be best.
From some
country to represent them, with
unexplained cause, not
full
now known, but probably accidental,
he did not reach the place of meeting until that
it
was
that he
held,
and the proceedings were so
Clark had intended.
recommended
Had
day
far
advanced
as
members
and John Gabriel Jones were selected
of the Virginia Legislature,
settlers
late in the
which was not exactly what
he been present he would have
that they be selected as the agents of the
with general powers, rather than as members of
the Virginia Legislature; but he cheerfully acquiesced in
what had been done, and determined to Virginia,
and do
all in his
power
to
proceed
at
once
for the interests of the
settlers.
The journey tofore, but to
this
time was not
made by
water, as here-
by land over the wilderness road, and proved
be very uncomfortable and vexatious.
tremely wet season, with
mud
It
was an ex-
or mountains most of the
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
72
Having
way, and constant danger from Indians. horses, Clark
the
of
and sore
blistered
became
his feet
until
one so
that he said, long afterwards, that he
more torment than he had ever done before or
''suffered
The
since."
walked
lost
party was disappointed in not finding any
white people at Martin's
fort,
near Cumberland Gap, as
they had expected, for the people had fled from fear of InClark's
dians.
however, were so foot-sore and
part}^,
exhausted that they remained
some time
this
at
abandoned place
They pushed on
to recuperate.
to eastern Vir-
ginia after a brief rest, onl}^ to find that the legislature,
which then met
at
Williamsburg, had adjourned, and the
members gone home,
all
which, and
of
much more,
graphically told in a diary of the period written
which he gives the
in
many
little
of the
by Clark
journey, including
incidents connected therewith of
nature which
He
details
a personal
have made interesting.
subsequent events
arrived at his father's house in Virginia on the
November, and
at
Williamsburg
is
five
first of
days thereafter, hav-
ing traveled a distance of about seven hundred miles from
Harrodstown. ditors,
He
records that he ''settled with the au-
drew the money
of the treasurer,
piece of cloth for a jacket, price
He that
He
also it
bought a
was "in the
cost
£3, and
No. 10,693, first class." drew a blank, as it probably
it
he does record that he went to church on Sunday
the 9th, which
ment.
15s, buttons, etc., 3s."
which he says
state lotter}^,
does not say whether
did, but
this
lottery ticket
£4
£726, bought a
The
volume.
is
more
to his credit than the lottery invest-
diary will be found in
full in
the appendix to
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
The
fact that the legislature
had adjourned was a
Jones went back
appointment indeed.
73
dis-
to the settlements
on the Holston, but Clark determined to persevere,
and
the governor,
if
at least confer
with
he could not with the
The governor was
legislature.
the
world renowned Patrick Henry, then
home
at his
ill
in
Hanover county.
Sick as he was, however, he was keenly allvc to cvcrythiug involving the wel-
PATRICK HENRY.
He
fare of Virginia.
an attentive hearing fairs
on the western
received Clark graciously, and gave
to his relation of the condition of affrontier.
As gunpowder seemed gave Clark a favorable state
on that
possible,
subject.
be an immediate necessity, he
to
letter to the
executive council of the
Clark repaired to them, as soon as
and urged a grant
of
five
hundred pounds
of
powder.
The members
of the
executive council doubtless fully
realized the importance of
were sincerely anxious
to
complying with the request, and do
so,
but they had the power to
do only what the law authorized, and provision for such a case.
making a state
disposition
of
If
the
their action.
money
or property of the
of the
powder
the}^ hesitated to do, unless
by agreeing if
to do, their
only
to trust to a future legislature to legalize
This
join in the risk
had made no
they violated the law by
which they were not authorized
remedy would be
it
to
Clark would
be responsible for the value
the legislature failed to legalize the trans-
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
74
action; besides they expected Clark to
transporting
This
it
at the
expense of
Kentucky.
to
may have
appeared
been only reasonable, but able.
be
to the council, at first, to it
was, in
The powder was needed and
frontier of the state,
to
defend
sacrificed valuable
and
very unreason-
to protect its
Clark had no direct personal interest solely for the public good,
fact,
have
the western
unprotected citizens.
in
He was
it.
acting
to accomplish that he
had
much
ex-
time, subjected himself to
pense, as well as great exposure and discomfort, and
all
without any pecuniary compensation whatever, as far as the author has been able to discover.
him
therefore, to require
the
powder
to
any contingency, or
in
It
was most
unjust,
be responsible for the value of for
its
transportation
by the dangerous routes by which
to the distant frontier
only the western wilderness could at that time be reached.
He the
felt
keenly the injustice of the requirement, and
same time
realized that
ment and misfortune had the sagacity fail
to fail in securing
He may
it.
to grant his request, without conditions,
mined
to decline
it
it
wrote the council. if
at
would be a great disappointhave
to see that the council could not finally
declined to receive
that
it
otherwise.
At
all
if
he firmly
events he deter-
with the conditions imposed, and so
He
did this very adroitly; pointing out
Virginia claimed the Kentucky country, then Vir-
ginia should aid in that "s, country
its
protection from the savages,
and
which was not worth defending was not
worth claiming."
He
regretted this
Kentucky pioneers by the
state,
necessity would, probably, drive
abandonment
of the
and foreshadowed
them
to
that
look in some
;
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
75
other direction for protection, which he did not doubt they
would
find.
If
they could not, in some
way
or other, get
such assistance as would protect them from the enemy, they would be annihilated or driven from the country and the older settlements
would then be the points
These and other views, his spirited
forcibly presented
and manly bearing
of exposure.
by Clark, and
in relation to the matter,
impressed the council so favorably that they finally
made
the following order:
''In Council,
Williamsburg, August
23, 1776.
''Mr. George Rogers Clark having represented to this
board the defenseless
Kentucki
state of the inhabitants of
and having requested, on
their behalf, that they should be
supplied with five hundred weight of gunpowder;
"Ordered, therefore, that the said quantity be forthwith sent
manding
to Pittsburg,
and delivered
officer at that station,
and delivered
to the said
by him
this
day "five hundred weight
be considered a small
immense importance
to the
affair,
to
the
com-
be safely kept,
George Rogers Clark, or
for the use of the said inhabitants of
At
to
gunpowder
of
his order,
Kentucki." of
gunpowder" would
but at that time
it
was
of
impoverished and helpless
pioneers in the far off wilderness, exposed, as they were, to the assaults of merciless savages.
But there was a that
it
settled
ating upon;
one
still
greater value to the grant in this,
of the questions
namely, that
it
Clark had been deliber-
recognized the Kentucky
country as a part of Virginia, and that as a part of that state.
it
was
to
be defended
Apparently Clark regarded
committal as of greater importance than the grant
this
of the
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
76
powder, great as that was
now
a matter of grave consideration even
it is
might have been the
effect
In fact
at this particular crisis.
if
as to
what
Virginia had resisted Clark's
appeal for help upon that occasion. It
might have had a serious bearing, indeed, not only
upon the
future of Virginia
and Kentucky, but
Would
of this great country as well.
of the
whole
the jurisdiction of
Virginia have been extended by Clark's prowess over the great territory northwest of the Ohio river, and
would
this
country have been included within the boundary of the
United States when the treaty Great Britain?
These,
but they are, at
least,
to the results
it
is
was made with
of peace
true, are far-fetched queries,
within the range of possibilities, as
which might have followed a
refusal of Clark's
request. It will
the
be seen by the order
powder
w^as to
of the Virginia Council, that
be delivered
at Pittsburg.
Clark ex-
pected that the people in Kentucky would provide means for
conveying
it
to the points in the interior
where
most needed, although he must have realized that be a dangerous undertaking. subject of his mission, advising force to bring the
never reached
He
wrote
them
powder home. This
its
destination,
of
to
to
which
was
would
them on
send a
letter,
it
it
the
sufficient
unfortunately, fact,
however,
Clark was not advised until a considerable time afterwards. In the interval, he was busy consulting influential people
about matters of interest to the Kentucky pioneers, and he
was present when the Virginia Legislature again met
at
and so was John Gabriel Jones,
Williamsburg
in the fall,
his colleague,
who came on from
the Holston country.
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
They were
not admitted as
way; probably,
now
shown by
the
some
it,
in
an advisory
respects, like delegates
received
by the Congress
from the
of the
United
That they were not without commanding influence
States. is
in
body, but they
of the
to close relations with
were admitted
territories are
members
77
main
the fact that they succeeded in accomplishing
object of their mission, in spite of the persistent
opposition of Colonel Henderson and Colonel Arthur Campbell,
men
both
of the great
inent
former the president
Transylvania Company, and the
member
annexed
of high standing; the
latter a
prom-
who wished the country represented. The legislation
of the legislature
to the
county he
secured over such formidable opposition was the formal recognition of the
Kentucky country, and
with the same
as a county,
its
organization
name and boundaries
it
now
has as a state.
Here was another triumph magnificent proportions had, in
fact,
been
and
and far-reaching
this
time one of
influence.
He
chiefly instrumental in laying the foun-
dations of the great
rapidly
for Clark,
commonwealth
grew and prospered
until
it
of
Kentucky, which
reached a front rank
among advanced and enlightened commonwealths. To have been instrumental in founding such a state was indeed a high honor, and to this was supplemented in after life
the winning of a vast territory for his country, out of
which has sprung grandeur.
The
and
history of these great states will last while
the country lasts,
able mention in
six other states, of like prosperity
and the name
them
all.
of
Clark deserves honor-^
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
78
Their mission successfully ended, Clark and Jones turned
and having now learned
their faces to the west,
powder was by the
still
at Pittsburg,
river route, and,
if
that the
they determined to go
possible, take
it
home
with them.
This was an exceedingly dangerous undertaking, for the country was swarming with Indians, instigated to hostility against the
who were
then being
Americans by the
British.
They, however, boldly and bravely took the chances, and selecting seven reliable
boatmen, departed by the
their perilous journey with the
They had
the
good fortune
(Maysville, Ky.)
sufficient force to carry the it
to arrive at
some-
Realizing that they had not
powder
into the interior, they
in several different places.
Collins's History of
on
Limestone creek
without molestation, although
times pursued by Indians.
carefully hid
river
powder.
It
is
said, in
Kentucky, that the exact places were
''the three islands in
what
is
now Lewis
county, near
Manchester, Ohio, and about eleven miles above Lime-
They intended to go to Harrodstown and organize
stone."
a sufficient force to return and escort tions,
but
Harrodstown, after
to the interior sta-
stopped for a time, at a cabin on Licking
all
creek, except Clark,
Soon
it
who went on
with two of the
men
to
to organize a military force.
Clark
left,
Colonel John
Todd
arrived with
a small military force, and being advised by Mr. Jones of the situation, they attempted to transport the
an escort
of only ten
powder with
men, but before reaching
it
they were
attacked and entirely routed by Indians, several taken pris-
oners and three killed,
He
among the latter John
Gabriel Jones.
had made a long and perilous journey, and discharged
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK. his duties faithfully
and
when almost
threshold of his home.
at the
efficiently,
well of his covintry, and
doomed
but was
be feared
to
it is
He
in the
December
appendix
and
men going
—met on the waters (were) defeated —^John
powder
In
be
will
work, he says, under date
of this
''Ten
25, 1776:
honor
memory.
by Clark, and which
the diary of this period kept
to die
deserved
sufficient
has not been given to this faithful pioneer's
found
79
to the
Ohio
of
for
Licking creek by Indians,
of
G. Jones, William Graden
and Josiah Dixon were killed."
One
of the
prisoners
taken by the Indians was Clark's cousin, Joseph Rogers,
whose sad
fate
related in a subsequent chapter.
is
Clark w^as also followed by Indians, but fortune attended him, and he
his usual
good
managed to reach Harrodstown
in safety.
When
the
that place, a
the
news
of the defeat of
company
powder January
2,
of thirty
gratification
and and
to
relief of the
of eighteen of the thirty
expedition,
it is
to
It
1777.
and successfully conveyed
was
Todd's party reached raised
and sent
was found
in
Harrodstown,
people.
Here
men who went on
after
good order
to the great
are the
names
this perilous
be regretted that the names of
all
can not be given:
James Harrod, who was the captain of the company; Simon Kenton, Leonard Helm, Silas Harlan, Isaac Hite,
Henry Higgins, Elisha Bathey, Joseph Blackford, James Elliott, David Glenn, Jonathan Ingram, Andrew McConnell, Benjamin Linn, Francis McConnell, Samuel Moore, Nathaniel Randolph, William McConnell and Jacob Sodowsky (or Sandusky).
EARLY LIFE OF GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.
8o
Several of these distinguished themselves under Clark in the
campaign against the
British posts northwest of the
river Ohio, the organization of
hand.
''The company marched by McClellan's
Georgetown)
to the
Lower Blue
then turned to the right a
little,
near the mouth of Cabin creek. der,
it
which was now near
was proposed
from the mouth
of
to return
Cabin creek
(now
Lick, and May's Lick;
and struck the Ohio
at or
After securing the pow-
by the war road leading to the
but by the advice of Simon Kenton, of danger, they
fort
at
Upper Blue Lick;
who
discovered signs
went down the Ohio several
miles,
and
took through the woods until they struck the buffalo road
Lower Blue
Lick, and returned to Harrodsburg over the route they had come." ^ leading from Limestone to the
*Collins's Kentucky, Vol.
2, p.
467.
CHAPTER
III.
FROM THE DELIVERY OF THE GUNPOWDER IN KENTUCKY IN THE WINTER OF 1776-7, TO THE AUTHORIZATION OF THE ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN, JANUARY 177S. 2,
Upon
his return to
Kentucky, Colonel Clark formulates plans for a campaign
against the British posts northwest of the their
condition — Is a party
Ohio
— Sends
with the people and placed in military
spies to ascertain
Kentucky
to several adventures in
command — Visits
—A
favorite
Virginia to obtain
approval and aid of the state for an expedition against the British posts
— Lays
his plans before Governor Patrick Henry— The governor consults his executive council and Jefferson, Wythe and Mason— Sketches of Wythe and Mason-
— Deceptive public instructions issued to Clark — Fac-simile of the governor's private instructions — Also fac-simile of Order for the campaign issued
letter
of Jefferson,
Wythe and Mason.
when Clark cached the interior of Kentucky he made a short stop at ''Leestown," and possibly at ^'McClelland's," as we learn from Collins's jT
is
probable that
i
History of that state that on ^'January 30, 1777, the fort at
Harrodsburg was strengthened by the
arrival of
George
Rogers Clark, Robert Patterson, the McClellands, Edward Worthington, Robert Todd, and others, and the families of several of
them, from McClelland's
which was abandoned because
(Georgetown),
of recent Indian attacks
threatened renewal of same."
on the 29th
fort
Clark says
and
in his diary that
December, 1776, "r large party of Indians attacked McClelland's fort and wounded John McClelland, 6
of
(81)
CAMPAIGN AGAINST BRITISH POSTS CONTEMPLATED.
82
Todd and Edward Worthington;
Charles White, Robert
two
the
McClelland on the 6th
month he
White died the next day, and
mortally."
first,
On
of January.
the 30th of that
enters ''moved to Harrodsburg from McClel-
land's fort."
now
Clark had
ment
for
Kentucky, and a supply
several stations. tion
secured a regularly organized govern-
Thus
far his line
He
and defense.
ammunition
of
had been one
for the
of prepara-
next turned his thoughts to an ag-
gressive warfare against the enemies of his country. realized that northwest of the
Ohio
river
He
was the open door
by which the
hostile Indians raided the white settlements,
and that these
raids
were
instigated,
under the direction of the posts
in
planned and prosecuted
officers of the British military
These were Detroit, Vincennes,
that country.
Kaskaskia, and Cahokia, standing in importance in about the order mentioned.
there
is
no reason
In his deliberations upon the subject
to believe that
he did not think of the
whole
possible ultimate acquisition of the
of that great
country as well as the present defense of the white
settle-
ments.
Like
his father
he was rather
silent
ner, but evidently a deep thinker.
and reserved
He
and earnestly upon the subject during
memoir
his stay in
He
tion "until
it
specific as to
no one
was
ripe for execution," but he
when he
During the time he was at
Kentucky knew
that
Harrodstown with
in
considered in
Kentucky
friends,
it
man-
deliberated long
tucky, but mainly kept his thoughts to himself. in his
in
Kensays,
his destina-
was not
ripe for execution.
in 1777,
who were
he was
much
next year promi-
CAMPAIGN AGAINST BRITISH POSTS CONTEMPLATED.
him
nently associated with
would be remarkable
if
83
campaign.
in the Illinois
It
he did not communicate with some
of them, to the extent, at least, of arranging to join with
him
in
some honorable
military enterprise in the future.
This would be particularly true as to Joseph
Bowman,
the cousin of his brother Jonathan's wife, and an old Virginia friend,
who became
most trusted
officer
the second in
after that
his
throughout the whole campaign, down
to the capture of Vincennes,
soon
command and
memorable
and who died
event.
in the service
Bowman was
at
Har-
rodstown that summer as shown by Clark's diary, which
company
says that ''on September ii, 1777, a
seven
men went
ing
(the
it
were
first
to
Joseph Bowman's
of thirty-
for corn, while shell-
general corn-shelling in Kentucky), they
fired on; a skirmish
ing two dead on the spot.
ensued; Indians drew Eli Gerrard
was
off,
killed
leav-
and
six
wounded." Leonard Helm, another of Clark's young Virginia acquaintances and original captains, was also there, and William Harrod, still another, making three out of the four of others
his
original
captains in the
Todd, Edward Worthington,
Illinois
Silas
campaign.
Harlan, and others
served under him as officers, were also there, and did not then definitely fix itary enterprise,
upon the
it
pretty well understood that an important
sent, to be the head,
the
command.
if
who they
''destination " of a mil-
contemplated by Clark,
likely in the future, of
Robert
was, no doubt,
movement was
which Clark was, by
and that they were
But whether arranged
to in
common
con-
have a share
in
advance or not,
—
OUT TO INVESTIGATE,
SPIES SENT
84 they were
ready when the time for action arrived, and
all
stood faithfully by
him through
the campaign.
In Clark's letter to George Mason, he says: the beginning of the
war taken pains
had since
^'I
make myself
to
ac-
quainted with the true situation of the British posts on the frontiers."
was
It
of
paramount importance
ascertain whether the capture of these posts
to his plans to
were
practicable.
Their commandants, he knew, were inciting the Indians
Kentucky
to hostility against the
tion of these posts
open a
He spies,
was
settlements.
his first object,
The
expecting
reduc-
it
might
field for other action.
says,
sent
''I
two young hunters
to those places as
with proper instructions for their conduct, to prevent
suspicion.
know my
Neither did they, or any one in Kentucky, ever design until
was
it
returned to Harrodstown with
have reasonably expected. (the British)
had but
etc., that
all
the information
in
good order, the
they might, in the case of a
that the greatest pains
I
could
found from them, that they
expectation of a
little
were kept
but that things
I
They
ripe for execution.
was taken
visit,
from
visit
us,
militia trained,
be prepared
minds
to inflame the
of
the French inhabitants against the Americans, notwith-
standing they could discover traces of affection in some of the inhabitants
gaged
in the
—
that the Indians in that quarter
war, etc."
There was nothing,
were en-
therefore,
discouraging in the report brought back from over the Ohio
by
these
young
hunters.
Under date of April 2oth, he says: ''Ben Linn and Samuel Moore sent The diary also shows that they express to the Illinois." Their names are given
in Clark's diary.
INDIANS OUTWITTED AND KILLED.
Kentucky on the
returned to
2 2d
These two scouts probably did not
of
85
June, following.
join in the regular
cam-
At
least
paign and consequently were not entitled to land.
no such names are on the Linn, a
at least,
good excuse
if
for
list
of persons allotted lands.
named Linn is the same, had remaining at home for a while after the the next
9th of July, as under that date Clark enters in his diary,
''Lieutenant Linn married
—great merriment."
Both Linn and Moore were with the company
men who, under successfully
the
command
of
of thirty
Captain James Harrod,
conveyed the gunpowder which Clark had pro-
cured in Virginia, through the wilderness, beset by Indians,
now
stands, to
of Clark's time, during his stay in
Kentucky
from the Ohio
river,
near where Maysville
Harrodstown.
The whole in 1777,
was not spent
campaign against the far that enterprise
yet clothed with
He
rection.
He was
in
planning and preparing for a
British posts the next year.
was
power
all
prospective, for he
any
to take
had plenty
of time to
Thus
was not
as
active steps in that di-
engage
in other things.
also looking after the defense of the stations in
Kentucky.
He was
a party to one affair a short time before his re-
turn to Virginia, which or September, 1777,
sow seed near the
is
worth
relating.
was
in
August
when men were preparing ground
fort at
Harrodstown
action of cattle near a part of the field
the fort,
It
and which was
full
of
to
that the strange
most distant from
high weeds, led Clark to
suspect that Indians might be concealed there, waiting for the
workmen
to get sufficiently
near to be within gun-shot.
INDIANS OUTWITTED
S6
Word was
quietly passed to the
but near the
men, slipped out ing
it
KILLED,
workmen
out of the range of a
fort,
from the weeds.
fired
AND
to
rifle
keep
at
work,
should one be
Clark then, with a small party of
of the opposite side of the fort,
and keep-
between them and where the Indians were concealed,
reached far enough into the timber and bushes not to be
made a detour and came up carefully in rear. The savages were thus taken by sur-
seen; then they
the Indians' prise
and four
them
of
killed
by James Ray, who became
—one by Clark, and another quite
prominent and lived to
The Indians who escaped Indian encampment which had
old age in that neighborhood.
were pursued
to a large
the appearance of having been used for
gun
all
now
of the
as a
by a considerable number, but they
center of depredations
had
some time
fled, leaving,
however, some 'plunder." '
The
Ray was given to him, by The rest of the property a trophy. Indians was divided by lottery among
Indian killed by
order of Clark, as
captured from the
This
Clark's party.
the substance of the affair as
is
municated by General Ray
com-
to early historians.
Clark, with characteristic modesty and brevity, merely says in his diary, under date of
wounded
near the
Indians
ten or twelve
fort
5th:
—
'^
killed
Surrounded three
and
plunder was sold for upwards of
the
others;
August
seventy pounds."
" Clark's stay
Kentucky country
in
him
to the inhabitants,
who now
further endeared
upon him
as the leader
greatest safety.
was not
1777 had
in the
likely to
They
upon
whom
still
looked
they could rely with
instinctively felt that his active spirit
remain quiet
in these
dangerous times, and,
CLARK DETERMINES TO ATTACK THE BRITISH POSTS.
when he was about
Clark says, that the
in
fall,
to leave for Virginia,
every eye seemed to be turned on him in
expectation that he was going to undertake
who thought he contemplated lutionary
Army
to the
'
This was on the
He had carefully mined
frontier.
'^I left
'promising them that
certainly return to their assistance,
mined."
and feared he
in the east,
Kentucky
with reluctance," said he,
ist of
which
I
would
October, 1777.
looked over the western
enemy's posts
I
them
had predeter-
field
that he could best serve his country
force against the
enterprise
entering service in the Revo-
of Virginia,
would never return
some
There were some, however,
would benefit them.
that
87
and deter-
by leading a
in the Illinois
and on the
The authority to do it, and the men and means necessary to make it a success, could only come from the home government of Virginia. To that he now directed
Wabash.
his attention,
energy. state,
and
with his usual caution, good judgment and
He went there, at
Williamsburg,
first,
the accounts of the
had been
to
quietly
Kentucky
still
employed himself militia,
development
fact, all
in settling
which shows that he
in military authority in the
but he was, in
the capital of the
Kentucky country,
the time feeling his
way
the
to
of his great plan of striking the British posts
northwest of the Ohio river.
Events
in the east
about
this
time proved favorable to the adoption of his plans.
The
capture of the British
army under Burgoyne had
greatly encouraged the Americans,
ing
more
as
if
and they were
feel-
they might be able to carry the war into
the enemy's country.
Clark talked confidentially upon
the subject to a few discreet friends, but
it
was about two
-
88
SEEKS AUTHORITY AND AID FROM VIRGINIA.
months
after his arrival in Virginia before
he ventured to
lay his plans before the governor of the state.
The he
eventful day
first
Henry.
December, 1777, when the great Governor Patrick
was the loth
presented the matter to
They were
of
we have
not strangers to each other, as
already seen. Henry, the grand old patriot, gave eager attention to the youthful Virginian, but the plans
now
pre-
sented were vastly greater in importance than those he had
presented the previous year in relation to giving the settlers in
Kentucky a government and the
Clark's of
it;
memoir he
"At
sa3's:
stations
first
gunpowder.
In
he seemed to be fond
but to detach a party at so great a distance, although
the service performed might be of great utility, appeared
daring and hazardous, as nothing but secrecy could give
To
success to the enterprise.
assembly, then
soon be
sitting,
lay the matter before the
would be dangerous,
known throughout first
the frontiers,
end
it
would
and probably the
by the Indians
prisoner taken
would give
as
the alarm,
which would
in the certain destruction of the
party."
But Henry's great mind, no doubt,
'
'
"eTferso"""
grasped not only the danger the
in-
vading party might be involved
in,
but the vast benefit
future of the country cessful.
He
if
the
realized that
it
it
might be
to the
campaign should prove suc-
was a matter
of the gravest
importance, and required the earnest and careful consideration of the wisest
and most
discreet
men
in the state.
CONSULTS HENRY, JEFFERSON, WYTHE AND MASON.
He
invited as his confidential counselors
89
and advisors upon
memorable occasion three men who fully came up to that requirement, namely Thomas Jefferson, George Wythe
this
and George Mason.
Seldom body
of
in the annals of military affairs has a stronger
men assembled
to consider the
campaign than was assembled on
expediency of a
this occasion.
Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, George Wythe, George
Mason and George Rogers Clark
—
men who made an
five
honorable impress upon the age in which they lived, and
who may justly be ranked if
not, indeed, of
with the
first
Their place
any time.
well to
of their time,
in history
is
well
and Henry, but
established, especially that of Jefferson
may be
men
make some mention
it
here of the high
esteem in which the others were held by Jefferson.
We
have already shown
Clark and
Of the
we now
first,
his
high regard for General
give his tribute to
he said.
''
I
Mason and Wythe.
had many occasional and
strenuous co-adjutors in debate, and one, most steadfast, able and zeaious, host.
who was
man wisdom among
This was George Mason, a
of the first order of
those
himself a
who
acted on the theater of the
Revolution, of expansive mind, pro-
found judgment, cogent
in
argument,
learned in the lore of our former constitution ,
and earnest for the republican
change on democratic principles.
\
^^
^AV
george mason.
His elocution was neither
flowing nor smooth; but his language was strong,
his
Jefferson's opinion of mason and wythe.
go
manner most
impressive, and strengthened by a dash of
when Of Mr. Wythe Mr.
biting cynicism,
said:
''I
was about
made
seasonable."^
it
Jefferson feeHngly and eloquently
became acquainted with Mr. Wythe when he
He directed my studies
thirty-five years of age.
in the law, led
my
provocation
me
into business,
most affectionate
and continued
A
friend.
until death
him,
close intimacy with
during that period of forty odd years, the most important of his
life,
ing of
enables
my own
No man
ever
me
to state
knowledge,
left
I
its
leading facts, which, be-
vouch
their truth.
behind him a character more venerated His virtue was of
than George Wythe.
the purest tint; his integrity inflexible,
and ism,
warm
his justice exact; of
and devoted
as he
was
and the natural and equal
patriot-
to liberty,
rights of
man,
he might truly be called the Cato of his countr}^, without the avarice of the
^Y
^^u
GEORGE WYTHE.
;
for
a
Temperance and
never lived.
more
regularity in
gave him general good health, and
and suavity
was
of
disinterested
to
person
his habits
his unaffected
manners endeared him
of easy elocution, his
all
Ro-
modesty
every one.
He
language chaste, methodical in
I had an opHenrj by George Mason Mr. Henry and knowing his sentiments, as well as hearing him speak in the house on different occasions. He is by far the most powerful speaker I ever heard. Every word he says not only engages, but commands the attention, and your passions are no longer your own when he addresses
*The
following was said of Patrick
:
portunity' of conversing with
them. the
first
But
his eloquence
man upon this in Rome about
is
the smallest part of his merit.
He
is
in
my opinion
continent, as well in abilities as public virtues, and had
the time of the first Punic War, when the Roman people he lived had arrived at their meridian glory, and their virtue not tarnished, Mr. Henry's (Life of talents must have put him at the head of that glorious commonwealth. Patrick Henry, Vol. i.)
Jefferson's opinion of mason and wythe. the arrangement of his matter, learned
use of
it,
and
of great urbanity in
apprehension, but with a tion,
and sound
logical in the
debate; not quick of
time profound in penetra-
little
in conclusion.
''In his philosophy he
was
firm,
nor perhaps trusting any one with left
and
91
and neither troubling his religious creed,
he
the world to the conclusion that that religion must be
good which could produce a
life
of such
''His stature was of the middle
size,
exemplary
virtue.
wxll formed and
proportioned, and the features of his face were manly,
comely, and engaging.
honor
of his
Such was George Wythe, the
own, and the model
of future times."
These distinguished gentlemen were the subject of the contemplated
and Clark records
made
into his
in his
in consultation
campaign
memoir
for several
upon
weeks,
that every inquiry
was
proposed plan of operations, and particularly
that of a retreat, in case of misfortune, across the Mississippi into the
Spanish territory.
Messrs. Jefferson,
It
might be inferred that
Wythe and Mason were
regular
mem-
bers of the council of Virginia, but they were not,^as will be
seen from the proceedings of that body of " Friday, January 2,
1778," which seems
to
have been the day the proposed
"expedition against Kaskaskia," was formally communi*Jefferson and
Mason, however, were members of the Virginia General As-
sembly, and probably
Wythe
also.
ACTION OF THE VIRGINIA COUNCIL.
92
cated by the governor to the council and approved
—the
" with
much
same
to
be
set
on
foot
''to issue his
and
as Httle delay
as
For that purpose the governor was
secrecy as possible."
warrant upon the treasurer for twelve hun-
dred pounds to Colonel George Rogers Clark,
who
is
will-
ing to undertake the service, he giving bond and security
same."
faithfully to account for the
structions is
Also approving
which the governor had already prepared.
in-
Here
the full text of this important order taken from ist Vol.
Life of Patrick Henry,
by
his
grandson, pp. 584-5:
Friday, January Present: His Excellency, John Page,
John
Blair,
Nathaniel
Harrison
2,
1778.
Dudley Digges,
and David Jameson,
Esquires.
The governor informed some conversation with
the council that he
several gentlemen
had had
who were
well
acquainted with the western frontiers of Virginia, and the situation of the post at forces,
Kaskasky held by the
where there are man}^
stores to
pieces of
a considerable amount, and
cannon and military
that he
the place was at present held by a very
which induced him
British king's
was informed
weak
garrison,
to believe that an expedition against
it
might be carried on with success, but that he wished the advice of the council on the occasion.
Whereupon
they advised His Excellency to set on foot
the expedition against
much
Kaskasky with
as
little
delay and as
secrecy as possible, and for the purpose to issue his
warrant upon the treasurer for twelve hundred pounds,
EXPEDITION AGAINST KASKASKIA AUTHORIZED. payable to Colonel George Rogers Clark, to
who
93 willing
is
undertake the service, he giving bond and security
And
fully to account for the
same.
advised the governor to
draw up proper
faith-
the council further instructions for
His Excellency having prepared the
Colonel Clark.
structions accordingly, the
in-
same were read and approved.
This action of the governor and privy council was under a law of the Virginia Legislature, passed by the General
Assembly then
in session,
authorizing ^'the governor, with
the advice of the privy council," to organize an expedition, ''to
march against and attack any
and give the necessary orders
of
our western enemies,
for the expedition."
Vol. Hening's Statutes, p. 375.)
Clark says
this
(9th
law was
passed to enable the governor to order the Illinois cam-
paign but that
when
it
passed ''but few in the house
knew
the real intent of it." It
will
be seen that the members composing the privy
council were is
to
all
gentlemen
of the highest character
be presumed they were more or
less
and
it
consulted in
determining upon the Kaskaskia campaign, and the plan of
conducting
it,
before the formal action of the 2d of Jan-
uary.
On
the
same day the order
Governor Henry issued two
of the council
was made,
sets of instructions to
Colonel
Clark; one for the public eye which was intended to divert attention from the real object,
and the other private
for his
guidance in conducting the real campaign into the enem37's
GOVERNOR henry's INSTRUCTIONS.
94
The one intended
country.
for the public eye will first
be
given: (Public)
INSTRUCTIONS TO GENERAL CLARK. Lieutenant-Colonel George Rogers Clark
You
are to proceed, without loss of time, to enlist seven
men,
companies
of
as militia,
under your orders.
officered in the usual
Kentucky, and there
you
:
shall give
to
They
manner,
to act
are to proceed to
obey such orders and directions
them, for three months
as
after their arrival at
that place; but to receive pay, etc., in case they
remain on
duty a longer time.
You the
empowered to raise these men in any county in commonwealth, and the county lieutenants respectively are
are requested to give
you
all
possible assistance in that
business.
Given under
my hand
at
Williamsburg, January P.
The Henry
original private letter of instructions of
2,
1778.
Henry. Governor
to Colonel Clark came into the possession of the
Indiana Historical Society over half a century ago, and a fac-simile
was made
of
it.
one-third in size, as follows:
It is
reproduced here, reduced
PATEICK HENRY'S LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS, In
Two
Pages, See Opposite Page.
Fac-simile, reduced in size.
^^f>^ -r***^
^0
A
.
..»