227 21 12MB
English Pages 348 Year 1878
FAMOUS AMERICAN INDIANS.
TECUMSEH AND
THE SHAWNEE PROPHET. INCLUDING SKETCHES OP
GEORGE ROGERS CLARK, SIMON KEXTON. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, CORNSTALK, BLACKHOOF. BLUEJACKET, THE SHAWNEE LOGAN, AND OTHERS FAMOUS IN THE FRONTIER WARS OF TECUMSEH'S TIME.
BY
EDWARD EGGLESTON AND
LILLIE EGGLESTON SEELYE.
NEW YORK DODD, MEAD & COMPANY, 751
Eroadwav. 1878.
COPYRIGHT BY
DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY. 1878.
PREFACE Ix
this
work
avc
have related
for the benefit of
the general reader one of the most romantic passages in
American
interest
We
history.
young people
have especially sought to
in the history of the
through the curiosity that everybody aboriginal It it
life
country
feels
about
and exciting adventure.
would defeat the purpose of the book
to
cumber
with foot-notes and references to authorities.
large
number
out of the
of works, including
way
it
necessary to refer by
to an original authority, even his lead.
A
list
when most
A
scarce and
books, have been consulted, but
have not often thought
lowing
many
we
name
closely fol-
of the chief works on the
various branches of our subject has been inserted at
the close, for the benefit of those
study the matter further.
who may wish
to
CONTENTS PAGE ;
Preface
3
CHAPTER
I.
Tccumsch's Nation
13
CHAPTER The Childhood
of
Tecumseh
25
CHAPTER Wars
n.
HI.
of the Shawnecs in Tccumsch's Childhood
CHAPTER The Revolutionary War
in the
.
.
34
IV.
West
—-Colonel Clark's
Expeditions
-
41
I
CHAPTER
V.
Early Batdes and Adventures of Tecumseh.......
52
6
CONTENTS. PAOK
CHAPTER Harmer and
Defeat of
St.
VI.
Clair
59
CHAPTER Vn. Skirmishes Avith the
Whites— Tecumseh and Kenton.
CHAPTER A
VHI.
Sketch of Simon Kenton
71
CHAPTER
IX.
Wayne's Victory over the Indians
CPIAPTER The Peace
at
Greenville
64
8^
X.
— Blue
Jacket
91
CHAPTER XL Death of Wawillaway—Tecumseh
CHAPTER The Rise
at
96
XII.
of the Prophet
CHAPTER The Band
as a Peace-maker.
105
XIII.
Greenville— The Prophet
in
Council.
118
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
7 PAGK
XIV.
Tecumseh's Defiant Speeches
CHAPTER
130
XV.
Genera! Plarrison and the Prophet
CHAPTER
135
XVI.
Plans and Character of Tecumseli
151
CHAPTER XVn.
—
159
........
170
Formation of Tecumseh's Confederacy. ........
CPIAPTER XVni. Execution of Leatherlips
for Witchcraft
CHAPTER
XIX.
Meeting of Harrison and Tecumseh
CHAPTER
—
at
Vincennes.
.
174
XX.
Th-e Last Council between Harrison
and Tecumseh. 193
CPIAPTER XXL Getting Ready for
Wai
-
207
CONTENTS.
8
PAGE
CHAPTER The
Battle
XXII.
of Tippecanoe
216
CHAPTER XXHI. 224
Incidents of the Battle
CHAPTER XXIV. Tecumseh's Return
232
CHAPTER XXV, HulPs Surrender
-
240
CHAPTER XXVI, Sieges
and
Battles at the
Western Forts ......... 251
CPIAPTER XXVII. Incidents of the
War
— Hand
to
Pland Encounter,
262
and Death of Logan
CHAPTER XXVIIL Destruction of the Mississinewa Villages
Massacre on the River Raisin
—Battle and 267
CONTENTS.
9
CHAPTER XXIX. The
Siesre of
Fort
IMeicrs
2 71
CHAPTER XXX. The Second Attack on Fort
IMeigs
283
CPIAPTER XXXI. The Attack on Fort Stephenson
CHAPTER
2S9
XXXII.
Anecdotes of Tecumseh
CHAPTER
296
XXXIII.
Perry's Victory
301
CHAPTER XXXIV. Battle of the
Thames
— Death
of
Tecumseh
306
CHAPTER XXXV. After Tecumseh's
Appendix
Death
319
329
TECUMSEH THE SHAWNEE PROPHET.
CHAPTER
I.
TECUMSEH'S NATION. Since the savages on to civiHzed
men, the Indian race has produced no
He had
more splendid genius than Tecumseh. age and fortitude to these
were known
this continent
in
common
with most Indians, but
he added an imagination capable of seeking
the largest results, a practical
upon the
readiest
wisdom
that laid hold
means of achieving
his ends,
an energy rarely equaled by any commander. this
we must add
the tact to skill to
cour-
the knowledge of
command,
mold men
as
human
and
To
nature,
the art to persuade, and the
he desired.
He
sought to unite
the Indians into one vast confederacy or empire, and,
putting himself at their head, to stay the progress of the whites.
He was
result of the
defeated, but that defeat
inherent superiority of civilization to
savagery.
Had
opportune
field,
his gifts
been exercised
his
in a
more
he would no doubt have proven
himself one of the great leaders of men. in
was the
And
even
mistaken patriotism and foregone defeat, he
showed himself a shrewd
diplomatist, a great
mander, a persuasive orator,
com-
a statesman, and a man
of indomitable patience, brilliant courage, and won-
TECUMSEH.
l4 dcrful
power of gaining and holding the
allegiance
of his followers.
He came
of one of the most energetic and war-
The Shawnees have always
like of the Indian tribes.
been a
restless people,
They belong
other Indians. nations
more adventurous than any
known
to that family of Indian
This family was
as the Algonquin.
the most numerous of
all
the Indian races, and spoke
a language not very different in the different
The
tribes
ginia
and
which the whites in
first
encountered
Massachusetts spoke dialects of
gonquin speech. To
this stock
tribes.
in Virthis
Al-
belong the Six Nations
of Canada, the Chippewas or Ojibbeways of Wisconsin
and Minnesota, celebrated
in
Longfellow's Hia-
watha, the Crees of British America, the Mohegans, the Dclawares, the Kickapoos, the was, the Sacs and Foxes, and
Illinois,
many
the Otta-
other tribes well
known in the history of the settlement of the counThe Algonquin people are supposed to have try. constituted half the population east of the Mississippi at the time of the settlement of the country,
and
to
have numbered not
less
than ninety thou-
sand.
The language complex, and
guages speech.
like
of the Algonquin Indians
to the ears of those
our own
Words
it
is
who speak
very lan-
seems to be a very strange
are joined to words, and
still
other
TECUMSEH words are added
NATION.
S
to express various meanings, as to
time, place, person acting, person
so forth.
One
15
acted upon, and
of the most curious things in the Al-
gonquin languages
that the
is
words take on various
forms, not with reference to male and female, but
with reference to a division of things into superior
and all,
some of
In
inferior.
the dialects,
or nearly-
all,
animate beings are superior, while inanimate ob-
jects are
put into another gender, so to speak.
But
Algonquin tongues, the
divi-
in one, at least, of the
sion
is
more remarkable
— God, the
spirits or angels,
and men, are accounted superior;
and
zvonicn
all
lower creatures are another " gender."
The Algonquin
very stately and suited to ora-
is
tory, but not well suited to light
has
It
many
Chippewa wishes
they
When
affix to
it
to
that "
merely remarks him."
the
and familiar speech.
and rhetorical
delicate
say that a
of a dead person
not living.
is
should write,
"
dead,
he
is
spoken
Tecumseh
Much
after
his
as
though
Has-been Washington,"
to im-
ply that the Washington of
The
is
a
they have put the sand upon
name
death becomes "Tecumseh-e-bun."
longer
man
When
the termination of the past tense to
indicate that he
we
turns.
whom we
speak Avas no
alive.
history of the Shawnecs, even after the settle-
ment of America,
is
wrapped
in
obscurity.
They
TECUMSEH.
I
moved about
so
and
incessantly,
were
so
often
divided in their migrations, that \vc are unable to track the various divisions. that the Eries,
by
who
Some
are of the opinion
are said to have been destroyed
the Iroquois in very early times, were none oth
Shawnces before
crs than the
gan.
Certain
that
it is
early documents, they
when we
seem
and of uncertain habitation.
to
wanderings be-
their first
hear of them
We
hear of a war which
was being waged against them by the Iroquois time of Captain John Smith's arrival 1607.
They were
at that
the Susquehanna, and on tions
them
as on the
in
be divided, wandering,
in
at the
America
in
time located to the west of its
De Laet men-
banks.
Delaware
in
They
1632.
are
also said to have been located at the South, and to
have come from near Lake
concile these conflicting accounts to
We
Erie.
can only re-
by supposing them
have already divided into several bands, some of
which were their seat, in
in
motion, for other authorities
place
the latter part of the seventeenth century,
in the basin of the
Cumberland River
in
Kentucky.
Later they are found on the Wabash, where Tecumseh
long afterward made a new settlement, and
in
1708
they are spoken of as removing from the Mississippi
South Carolina.
The Swance
in Florida, derives its
name from
to
who had come from
or
Suwanec
a party of
north of the Ohio.
River,
Shawnees
Yet another
tecumseh's nation,
17
authority speaks of a tribe of Shawnees that had
been wandering
who were
for four years in the wilderness,
then
From
Creeks.
Shawnees were to be later
returning to
we gather
of which
all
in the earliest
— a people of
and
country of the
the
the
that
times what they proved
restless energy,
without fixed
unity or local habitation, very energetic and warlike,
breaking into small bands and reuniting again. den, in 1745, said that " the restless of all the Indians,"
quite gone
One
down
New
to
Shawnees were the most
and that "one
among
developed strangely
in
savages.
The
is
the usclessncss of
historic sense
uneducated people, and
mixed with
not yet civilized.
fiction
Some
had
tribe
Spain," or Florida,
thing that impresses us
tradition
Col-
in
all
fact
not
is
soon gets
annals of races
authors have quoted from
speeches of the Shawnees to show what their traditions of the creation are, but an Indian orator gets
up
his
account of the creation for the purpose of car-
rying his point at the moment, and his story
doubt quite as fresh to those of
may It
that
his ov/n tribe
is
no
who
be present as to any others. is
inferred that the
first
negotiated
Shawnees were present
at
beneficent treaty of peace and friendship
by William Penn
no assurance of
in
this fact, for to
ates but just arrived,
all
1682,
But there
Penn and
is
his associ-
Indians were simply Indians,
TECUMSEH.
1
and the
makes no mention of
treat}'
or names.
It is
guages were
quite probable that the Indian lan-
at that early
stood that the treaty
savages more in
The presence fact that in
1701,
we
nation
their
its
day so imperfectly under-
itself
was apprehended by the
peaceful import than in
of the Shawnees
is
its details.
inferred from the
Penn's later council with the Indians in
find
Wapatha, a chief of the Shawnees, ex-
pressly mentioned as representing his people
and
;
in
1722, in conference with the whites, the Shawnees are said to have exhibited a copy of the
though the two founded.
treaties of
About
first
treaty,
Penn may have been con-
nearly seventy families of
1698,
Shawnees, with the consent of the government of Pennsylvania,
removed from Carolina and
settled
They perhaps found remain-
on the Susquehanna.
ing there that portion of their tribe which was contending with the Iroquois
in the
time of John Smith,
unless the Iroquois succeeded in quite driving out.
And
these from Carolina
who had been
them
may have been some
expelled in the wars in which they
were almost always engaged, returning again
to
an
old home. In the year 1706,
Thomas
Chalkley, a minister of
the Society of Friends, found Shawnees and Senecas living at Conestoga, near the Susquehanna. lates
that
one of the
tribes
He
re-
had a woman among
TECUMSEII'S NATIOxN.
"On
the chiefs.
"they
in
called a council, in
and spoke one
who
which they were grave,
after another,
took part
in this
Quaker way,
his quaint
without any heat or
woman
Observing that there was a
jarring."
ent
informing them of our \'iews
them," he says,
to
visit
1
in all deliberations, the
pres-
missionary
how it came that a woman was admitted to council. He answered that some women were wiser than some men a proposition not inquired of the interpreter
—
difficult
even
This " an-
white people to accept.
woman" spoke much
grave
cient,
for
in council
and gave
her influence heartily in favor of the missionaries, so that
good Thomas Chalklcy adds that "the poor
Indians, and in particular
and women, were under a
of the
young men
solid exercise
and concern
some
of mind."
As
early
as
West,
allied
with the Miamis, and yet
1684 there were
Shawnees
we
in
the
afterward
hear of Southern Shawnees expelled from Georgia
emigrating to the West, and building a village at the
mouth
of the
wares,
who gave them
Wabash.
Wyoming, whither the famous vians, dians.
They
applied to the Dela-
territory in the valley of the
part of
them removed.
In 1742,
Count Zinzendorf, the leader of the Mora-
had a very curious adventure with these In-
He went
to
Wyoming
introduce Christianity
determined to try to
among them.
He was
not
TECUMSEH.
20 well received their lands,
ate
him
a small
him of seeking
the Indians suspected
and some of them determined
He
privatel}'. fire to
had warmed itself
;
to assassin-
with
sat in his tent at night,
keep him warm.
The heat
of the
fire
into activity a rattlesnake, that stretched
across his leg the better to feel the
fire,
but
the pious Count was too deeply engaged in meditation
to
observe the
reptile.
The
Indians raised
the blanket which served as door to his tent, but
seeing the venerable missionary sitting wrapped
in
devout reflections and peacefully unconscious of the presence of the snake, they were seized with superstitious terror.
They
hurriedly returned to their
man was
lage and told their associates that the old
under the special protection of the Great
vil-
Spirit, for
they had found him with only a blanket for a door,
and had seen a large
rattlesnake
over him
crawl
without doing him any harm.
When broke out
America
the in in
war 1754
between England and France
it
involved the English colonies in
a struggle with the French in
Canada
and the West, and the Shawnees on the Ohio took part with the French.
sylvania rejected
all
But those residing
solicitations
influence of Penn's treaties and
missionary labors
wards the whites.
to join
in
Penn-
them
;
the
Count Zinzendorf's
had rendered them friendly
to-
TECUMSEIIS NATION.
About
this
children,
time occurred the curious " grasshopper
beginning
which,
quarrel,"
ended
a
in
between
contest
Shawnecs
the expulsion of the
in
Wyoming
from the
21
There seems
Valley.
to
have
grown up a gradual estrangement between the Dclawares and Shawnees, which was fanned to a flame
by
most
a
The w^omen
circumstance.
trivial
the two tribes were gathering berries side,
when some
of the
Shawnee
by the
children
fell
of
river-
into a
wrangle with the Delaware children over the posses-
The mothers took
sion of a grasshopper. their children, the
Delaware
women
sides with
maintaining that,
though a Shawnee child had caught the grasshopper, it
was caught on the side of the
river belonging to the
Dclawares, hence the Delaware children were entitled to
it.
From
such arguments they came to blows;
upon which the Shawnee women w^rc speedily
driv-
en to their canoes by the superior numbers of their
angry ers,
assailants.
influenced
On
prepared to avenge the
The
Shawnees were crossing the
ward
until
many of
battle
river,
killed.
abandoned the
Wyoming and
tribes that
Soon
after
full
after-
half of the
this the
latter
with
those
settled
had remained
began while
and lasted
the Dclawares and
Shawnees were
Shawnee
the squaws,
but found the Dcla-
insult,
wares ready to meet them. the
Shawnee hunt-
their return, the
by the angry complaints of
in
the valley of
TECUMSEH.
22 the Ohio.
It
was here,
the Scioto, and the
volved
in the
on the Miami,
in their villages
Mad
River, that they
became
in-
savage conflict that raged so long be-
tween the Indians and the white
in
settlers,
which
border warfare Tecumseh was cradled, educated, and spent his
life.
The Shawnees were bands or
at
one time divided into twelve
but the number gradually declined
tribes,
Besides these bands there
to four. sion,
running through
what
are called " totems," the
could marry a person of his
a corruption
Each totem has some
name, usually of an animal; and
nees
another divi-
word being
of "dodaim," a family mark.
The
is
the Algonquin tribes, into
all
own
it is
said that
very small,
many
man
totem.
present remnant of the once powerful
is
no
of them
Shaw-
having become
absorbed by intermarriage with the whites no doubt.
Others
may have mixed
with the Indian
tribes,
but
the strength of this once powerful people has been
wasted
in
the
almost ceaseless wars in which they
have been engaged, against the whites and against other Indian nations.
They have
ever been eager to
take the sword, and they have perished
The Shawnees were accustomed
by the sword.
to boast of their
superiority to the other tribes, and their haughty pride
has had
much
struction.
to
do with
their conflicts
and
their de-
TECUMSEH'S NATION. "
The Master
1803,
2$
of Life," said one of their chiefs
"was himself an
Indian.
nces before any other of the
He
sprang from his brain.
in
He made the Shawhuman race. They
gave them
all
the knowl-
edge he himself possessed, and placed them upon the great island (America), and
all
the other red people
descended from the Shawnees. the Shawnees he of his breast,
made
After he had
the French and English out
Dutch out of
the
Long Knives (Americans) these inferior races of
made
his feet,
out of his hands.
men he made
them beyond the stinking
and the All
white, and placed
lake (the Atlantic Ocean)."
This arrogant pride and warlike ferocity made the
Shawnees one of the most formidable of
all
the tribes
with which the white settlers had to contend
Ohio Valley.
They
and
and carnage,
faithlessness.
forget that they tion
the
slew old and young, male and
female, without pity and without remorse.
joiced in battle
in
But
in
They
re-
in deception, stratagem,
judging them we must not
were savage.
Their whole educa-
made them what they were; and
in too
many
instances the white men, in the bitter struggles of
"the dark and bloody ground," civilization,
and
fell
into
the
easily forgot their
cruelty,
bad
faith,
and
revengefulncss of savages.
Tecumseh had tude of his race.
the pride, the energy, and the forti-
In intellect and humanity he was
TECUMSEH.
24
superior to them, but in
him.
man
He
all
their fierce antipathies
were
confessed that he could not see a white
without feeling the flesh of his face creep.
was a savage,
patriotically believing in savage
but he was none the that savage
life
less
one of the very ablest
has produced.
He life,
men
CHAPTER
II.
THE CHILDHOOD OF TECUMSEH. There
are always curious contradictions in the
accounts of an event that reach us only through the traditions of Indians
and
Tecumseh
men.
frontier
was born, according
to
some
accounts, in 1768, and
according to others,
in
1771,
some say near
cothe, though
Tecumseh
reported to have said that
occurred near the old Indian village of
his birth
There
Piqua,
is
Chilli-
is
a story that he and his brother, the
Prophet, were twins, and even that a third brother
was born
at the
same time; though according
to
one
account the Prophet and a twin brother were some years younger than Tecumseh,
— 1768 —was — 1771 — the date
birth,
later
who was perhaps
seems more
likely
that of Tecumseh's,
that the earlier date
and the
It
a twin.
of the
Prophet's
There can be
little
doubt that Tecumseh was born at the old Indian lage of Piqua, or Pickaway, on the
Mad
vil-
River, near
the Miami.
There
is
likewise a great contradictorincss in the
accounts given of the family history.
It
v/ould be
easy to believe, from Tecumseh's superior mind, that
TECUMSEIL
26
There
there was white blood In his family. ever, pretty
good evidence
tliat
assertions of some,
he had both Anglo-Saxon and Creek blood
his veins,
seem
to
Prophet,
bragging than he did voluble than truthful.
who
in battle,
The
as a small novel of the
tion, rather
excelled
dians,
story
is
in
interesting to
own
Prophet's
than for any probable historical
inven-
ba.sis.
this incredi-
was a Creek Indian, who, with other In-
went
to
one of the Southern
Savannah or Charleston, English
more
and who was more
His paternal grandfather, according to ble tale,
in
be entirely founded on a boast of
Lauliwasikau, the
us
how-
was of
that the family
The
pure Shawnee extraction.
is,
governor.
cities,
cither
to hold a council with the
The governor's daughter was
present at some of her father's interviews with the Indians.
She had previously conceived a violent
admiration for the Indian character, of which she
took this opportunity to inform the governor.
most obliging of
fathers inquired of the Indians in
council, next morning,
expert
hunter.
which of them was the most
Tecumseh's
handsome young man,
sitting
grandfather,
modestly
on finding that
his
then
a
in a retired
part of the room, was pointed out to him. ernor,
This
The gov-
daughter was really desir-
ous of marrying an Indian, directed her attention, council the following day, to this
in
young Creek war-
THE CHILDHOOD OF TECUMSEH. rior,
and
chiefs It
promptly
sbxC
in
fell
2/
The
love with him.
were informed of the young lady's attachment.
seemed
them
to
young Creek he seems
incredible, at
was
that the governor
but finding
first,
earnest, they ad\'ised the
in
to accept this piece of fortune, to
to
which
He
have made no objection.
Avas
immediately taken to another apartment, where a train of black
him of
servants disrobed
Indian
his
costume, washed him, and presented him with a new suit of
European
clothes,
after
ceremony was performed.
It
which the marriage customary with the
is
Indians to bathe a
man on adopting him among
may
be what suggested the soap and
them, and this
water part of the story to the Prophet's mind, though
one cannot but think
it
possible that he appreciated
the necessity for washing an Indian before present-
ing him to a lady.
The young warrior
did not return
home
with the
other Indians at the close of the council, but remained
He amused
with his romantic wife. hunting, in which
himself with
he was very successful, usually
taking two black servants with him to bring back his large quantities of
game.
Puckcshinwau, was a son of governor made
birth
the
thirty
guns to be
to
visit
fired.
The
Prophet's father,
this marriage,
great
This boy,
the Indians, Avas given
and
rejoicing,
who was
by them
at his
causing
permitted his
name,
TECUMSEII.
28
He
which means "something that drops." preferred
among
to
This
the Indians.
an account which
more
is
is
the Prophet's tale
credible states that
Puckcshinwau, was a
seh's father,
afterwards
desert the governor's house for a hfe
full
;
but
Tecum-
Indian belong-
ing to the Kiscopoke, while his mother was of the
Shawnee
Turtle tribe of the
name was Methoataske, and means eggs
in the
The
" a turtle laying
sand."
parents of
their tribe,
His mother's
nation.
Tecumsch removed
Avith
others of
under the lead of the great chief Black-
hoof, from the
South
to the valley of the Ohio,
They
the middle of the eighteenth century.
about estab-
lished themselves at first
on the Scioto and afterwards
Mad
River, one of the tributaries
on the banks of the
of the Great Miami.
by
birth,
Puckcshinwau was not a chief
but he rose to that rank, and was killed
the battle of
Kanawha in who
death, Methoataske,
woman, returned
After her husband's
1774.
spoken of as a respectable
is
to the South,
where she
advanced age among the Cherokee
Though
the Prophet
cumseh to
in
The
the
lived to an
Indians.
known by
is
Tecumseh never had but " a shooting star."
in
several names,
one, which
means
influences surrounding Te-
babyhood and bo}'hood must have tended
make him what he was
an Indian child
is
in after
life.
The
life
of
pre-eminently one of hardship.
INDIAN BABY,
(oii its
mother's back, strapped to a board.)
THE CHILDHOOD OF TECUMSEH.
We
can imagine him as a baby bound hand and
and strapped baggage on
his mother's
which come from the of an Indian hunter's take to
tlie
foot,
and carried Hke a piece of
to a board
Then he must endure
who
29
back
for the first six
months.
the long periods of famine
vicissitudes
and improvidence
Like other Indian boys
hfc.
water from the time they are babies,
Tecumseh, no doubt, enjoyed swimming
Mad
in the
and Miami Rivers during the warm summer days. His
first
bow and
toy was probably a
arrow, and he
learned to hunt as naturally as to swim.
There were seven children dian family, five of
is
were people of more or
said to
have taken great pains This
ucation of the fatherless boy. able, if
it
be
remarkable In-
Tecumseh's eldest brother, Chee-
less distinction.
seekau,
whom
in this
true, for there
be called direct education
is
is
usually
among
in
the ed-
rather remarklittle
that can
We
the Indians.
must remember that the only honorable occupations for
an
else is
Indian
work
man
for
are hunting
squaws.
Of
and warfare
course,
;
all
Tecumseh's
education was mainly in the arts of the soldier and the hunter, but Cheeseekau
labored to to
make Tecumseh
have taught him a love
everything
mean and
sordid,
is
said not only to
have
a great warrior, but also for truth, a
contempt
for
and the practice of those
cardinal Indian virtues, courage in battle
and
forti-
TECUMSEII.
30 tudc
Checscckau attempted the edu-
If
in suffering.
cation of his other brother, the Prophet, in
any of
these particulars, he must have failed signally, for he
possessed neither truth nor courage. "
From
boyhood Tecumseh seems
his
His pastimes,
a passion for war.
were generally
leon,
was the leader of
in
companions
his
and was accustomed
to divide
have had
like those of
sham
the
to
Napo-
He
battle-field.
in all their sports,
them
into parties,
one
of which he always headed, for the purpose of fighting
mimic self
by
all
his activity, strength,
the use of the
it}- i:i
of
cised
His dexter-
skill.
bow and arrow exceeded
that
by whom he
whom he exerHe was generally sur-
and respected, and over
unbounded
rounded by a stand or
fall
by
seems very skill in
influence.
set of
of Tecumseh's It
and
the other Indian boys of his tribe,
v/as loved
that
which he usually distinguished him-
battles, in
companions who were ready
his side."
Such are the
to
stories told
boyhood by some who knew him. likely that
he displayed
hunting and war, and above
in his all
youth
the great
powers of leadership, which marked him so strongly in after
life.
That Tecumseh was capable of strong shovv^n
by
his
regard for his onl}-
koosee, or Tecumapease, the better
sister,
affection
is
Menewaula-
name by which
known, and which was doubtless given
she
is
to her
THE CHILDHOOD OF TECUMSEH. later in
I
according lo Indian usage, to signify
life,
She was
her relationship to the great Tecumseh. "sensible, kind-hearted,
and uniformly exemplar}'
in
her conduct," and must have been a person of com-
manding
character, for she
is
said to
have exercised
a remarkable influence over the females of her
She was married
with her brother
Tecumseh up
He
respect,
making her many valuable
is
said to
favorite
to the time
death.
tribe.
Wasegoboah, or
to a brave called
Tecumapease was a great
Stand Firm.
of his
have treated her always with presents.
In considering the influences which surrounded the
I
>
3
boyhood of Tecumseh, we must not told
around the Indian camp-fires of the daily events
of the time
;
and
what these events the in
forget the stories
it
will
v/cre.
be necessary to
When
he was very young
war of the American Revolution began.
the Far
West
influence from
her rebellious
France on
at the
Living
of those days, he was not so entirely
removed from the Revolutionary War
some
here
recall
it.
colonics,
same
time.
as not to feel
Great Britain, remote from
was engaged
in
war with
She carried on the war
this continent at great disadvantage,
and
it
was
the policy of the mother country to use the savages to harass the
Americans.
That Tecumseh rent events
is
listened well to
shown
in his after
all
life,
he heard of cur-
when he evinced
TECUMSEH.
32
a considerable knowledge of the past differences be-
tween the United States and England.
The news which came Tecumseh, as
to the hearing of the
boy
which comes to us
our
fresh as that
in
newspapers to-day, consisted of accounts of perpetual
The
skirmishings, scalpings, and fightings.
and exciting events of border warfare,
in
successive
which the
Indians were very successful during Tecumseh's early
His patriotic
childhood, entered into his education. feelings
were
all
enlisted
who were opposing
on the
side of the Indians,
themselves to the ever-increasing
stream of immigration which poured over the Alleghanics
during the
last
of the
twenty-five years
eighteenth century, and w^iich became a flood during the
first
decade of the nineteenth.
Tecumseh was not more than his
father
was
killed,
and
his
when
six years old
family were several
times sufferers from the war between the whites and Indians.
During
all his
childhood this fierce border
war was waging.
Between 1783 and 1790, it was estimated that fifteen hundred men, women and children were
slain or
taken captive by the Indians upon
the waters of the Ohio.
The
loss
was
also
undoubt-
edly great on the Indian side, and the Avhites were often ready to learn from the Indians lessons of inhu-
man
cruelty and torture.
Tecumseh's childhood was
thus
rocked
in
the
THE CHILDHOOD OF TECUMSEH.
33
cradle of the Indian wars of the Revolutionary period,
and by
all
training
he learned to
English as
the strength of early impressions and love
war,
to
to hate the Americans,
allies,
regard
and
the
to op-
pose himself to the tide of immigration west of the Alleghanies.
Doubtless the boy Tecumseh, sitting by the camp-
and listening
fire
to the stories of this
to reminiscences of the "
and
the whites had not
savage war
good old times
"
when
come among them with guns and
strong drink and the superfluous wants of civilization, laid in his
boyish mind the foundation for his great
plan, in the strong conviction that the whites right to leave the
home
Indians had allowed them, and to encroach
upon the wilderness.
ther
up
carefully
all
injuries inflicted
He
certainly
had no
on the sea-shore, which the
He seems
to
still
have stored
that he heard of broken treaties
on the Indians by
was well versed
fur-
and
their neighbors.
in all facts of this kind,
though he naturally did not take the same pains
remember side.
also the instances of perfidy
on
his
to
own
CHAPTER
III.
WARS OF THE SHAWNEES
IN TECUMSEH'S
CHILDHOOD. About
the time of Tecumseh's birth (1768), the
Shawnee and Delaware
nations conchided a peace
with the Chcrokees, a Southern nation of Indians,
and remained until
peace with both whites and Indians
at
The cause
1774.
of disturbance which sent
them on the war-path with
the whites in this year
was the murder of Indians by lawless white men
of horses, without regard
retaliation for the stealing
to
whether the Indians killed were the offenders or
The
settlers
along the
in
frontier, feeling sure that
not.
the
Indians would avenge the death of their friends, pre-
pared for defence, and sent an express to the Assembly of the colony of Virginia, then in session, asking for assistance.
brated
Mingo
Hostilities chief,
were begun by the cele-
Logan, whose pathetic speech
He had
familiar to every schoolboy.
the
whites,
stroyed several
settlers'
friendly
to
retaliation for the
but,
is
always been
Indian-like,
now
de-
families indiscriminately in
murder of
his
own
relatives.
The
Earl of Dunmore, at that time governor of Virginia,
WARS OF THE SHAWNEES. raised several
regiments west of the
which he placed under the
drew Lewis, with
command
instructions
mouth of the Great Kanawha
River,
be joined by Lord Dunmore in the interior.
raised
Shawnees,
Dclawares,
The
to
35
Blue Ridge,
An-
of General
proceed
to
where he
\\'as
at the
head of
the to
forces
Lidians, consisting of
and
Mingos,
lowas,
were
under the command of Cornstalk, a renowned ShawGeneral Lewis, after a march of nineteen
nee chief
days through one hundred and sixty-five miles of reached the mouth
wilderness,
Here he waited of Dunmore.
several days
He
if
anything could be heard
from
Lord
Lewis that he had changed to
march
Kanawha.
Before the scouts returned,
of the governor. arrived
the
at length dispatched scouts over-
land to Pittsburg to see
express
of
expecting the arrival
an
Dunmore, informing his
directly against the
plan and intended
Indian towns on the
General Lewis, though not altogether pleased
Scioto.
with this change of plan, was preparing, early the
next morning, to obey the orders of the governor,
when he
learned that a large
body
of Lidians, Avhich
"covered four acres of ground," was close
When
who was
at
hand.
man
of remarkable cool-
ness, received this intelligence,
he lighted his pipe
Lewis,
a
and ordered out two detachments
emy, one
to
march
to the right,
to
meet the en-
some
distance from
TECUMSEII.
36
the Ohio, and the other to proceed along
About
mile
a
its
bank.
from camp they met the Indians
by whom
under Cornstalk,
two
the
were almost simultaneously attacked,
detachments it
being
now
about sunrise.
The commanders
uniform were soon severely wounded, one of
in full
them
resei-ve,
long,
rable
The
mortally.
from the
day
of both these detachments being
and
troops having been reinforced
the battle was
it is
waged stubbornly
ranked among " the most
and well contested that has been fought on
continent."
The underbrush,
ravines,
carrying
away
their
this
fallen trees
They succeeded
were favorable to the Indians.
their
and
all
memo-
in
wounded and throwing most of
dead into the Ohio, according to
their universal
practice of concealing their slain in battle,
whenever
possible.
There were many celebrated battle, sico,
chiefs present at this
among whom were Logan, Red
and Cornstalk, who
is
Eagle, Elenip-
styled " chief
sachem of
the Shawnees and leader of the northern confederacy."
It is said
that this chief,
friendly to the whites,
who was
had opposed
generally
this attack
General Lewis, but had been overruled.
on
In battle
he fought with great bravery, being the loudestvoiced and Indians.
most conspicuous
When
their lines
in
began
encouraging the to
waver he was
WARS OF THE SHAWNEES. among them "
Be strong
moment,
a
in
He
" !
"
crying,
3/
Be strong
buried his tomaliawk in
tlic
" !
head
of one of his retreating warriors, and, shaming the
completely
rest,
rallied his forces.
was during
It
father, the chief
day's battle that Tecumseh's
this
Puckeshinwau, was
son, Cheeseekau,
His eldest
killed.
Toward
fought at his side.
the latter
part of the day, the Indian forces, having been at-
tacked in the rear by the Virginians, began a slow
and orderly dians
conducted by Cornstalk, the In-
retreat,
advancing and
fighting stubbornly
back alternately, and
falling
all
At
the way.
came on the savages disappeared
length as night
in
the darkness.
After the battle they recrossed the Ohio and marched
Here a council of war
to the valley of the Scioto.
was held
to
determine future movements.
rose in council and
made
this
speech
we do now ? The Long Knives
(a
Cornstalk
"What
:
shall
name by which
the
Indians called the whites because of their swords) are
coming upon
us
by two
out and fight them ?"
Shall
routes.
kill
all
our
women and
until
we
Then
Cornstalk, striking his
are
killed
turn
Here he made an impressive
pause, and no one answering he proceeded
we
wc
children
ourselves
?
"
:
" Shall
and then
All
tomahawk
fight
v/ere silent.
into the
war-
post standing in the midst of the council, said with great vehemence:
"Since you arc not inchned to
TECUMSEH.
38
fight, I will
go and make
And
peace.'"
peace was
made.
Governor Dunmorc had marched
from the Indians suing
for peace.
press to General Lewis,
who had
and was marching Scioto, ordering
for
him
the
to within a few
met by messengers
miles of the camp, where he was
He
sent an ex-
crossed the Ohio
Shawnee towns on the
to retreat across the river.
The
general and his forces were so anxious to continue the campaign and avenge the blood of their ions, that
continued
them
in
compan-
they disregarded the governor's order and their
march
Lord Dunmorc met
until
person and repeated his
command emphati-
cally.
Cornstalk Avas one of those able Indians of
more than
the Shawnees had
was the earnest
among
whom He
their proportion.
friend of the
Moravian
missions
the Indians, and always encouraged any effort
which tended toward the moral and physical better-
ment of
his people.
highly as an orator.
He was also spoken of very When the treaty was concluded
betw^een the Indians and
Dunmorc, Cornstalk made a
speech which showed his patriotism and sense of justice.
He
described the wa'ongs his people had suffer-
ed from the his
colonists,
and contrasted the condition of
nation before their intercourse with the whites,
with their degraded and miserable state at that time.
WARS OF THE SHAWNEES. He
39
spoke boldly of the dishonesty of the traders,
and proposed that no commerce with the Indians should be carried on for individual
honest
men
should be sent
profit,
but that
among them who would
trade for such things as they needed at a fair price
and, above
all,
that no
should be allowed to
"fire-water" of any kind
come among them.
This treaty with Governor
New
a lasting peace.
Dunmore
difficulties
did not bring
were ever
arising.
Cornstalk's friendship for the whites, and his desire to avoid the disastrous effects of a
people, led
him
to his
death.
war on
his
own
1777, tv/o years
In
after the
beginning of the Revolutionary War, an
offensive
alliance
with
all
was
formed
Western Virginia.
against
his influence,
but
went secretly panied by whites, all
the state
in
Indians
the
determined to
hope of thus prevent-
much dreaded
Plawk,
who was
among
accom-
also friendly to the
After fully explaining
commander, he frankly of feeling
He
for his people.
to the fort at Point Pleasant,
Red
and another Indian.
to the
He
in vain.
give warning to the whites,
ing the war he so
among
Cornstalk opposed this
speaking of
said, in
Shawnees
the
:
"
The
current sets so strongly against the Americans,
consequence of the agency of the will float
with
it,
I fear,
British, that
in spite of all
my
The commander, Captain Arbuckle,
in
they
exertions." in
violation
TECUMSEH.
40 of
good
all
While
many
faith,
detained the chiefs as hostages.
they were there the officers in the fort held
much
conversations with Cornstalk, and were
surprised at his intelligence.
He seemed
take
to
pleasure in giving them descriptions of his country.
One day as he was drawing a rude map on the floor by way of illustration, a call was heard from the opposite shore, which he knew to be the voice of his favorite son Elenipsico, a fine young Indian, who was Kanawha.
Elenipsico, at
his father's request, crossed the river
and joined him
prominent
in the battle at
at the fort,
where they greeted each other very
tionately.
Soon
affec-
two men belonging to the
after
fort
went out hunting, and one of them having been killed
by some
longed rushed madly
in to kill the captives at the
fort in revenge, believing Elenipsico to
with him the Indians stalk
and
his
preter's wife,
dians
and
who
felt
a captive
an affection
to die like a slain
by
among
for them.
do with
to
agitated, but his father
being cruelly
Corn-
companions were warned by the
it,
inter-
the In-
Elenipsico
and seemed
encouraged him, saying,
" If the Great Spirit has sent
you ought
have brought
killed their friend.
who had been
denied having anything
much
which he be-
Indians, the regiment to
man."
you here
to be killed,
Which they both
the enraged soldiers.
did,
CHAPTER
IV.
;
1
THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR IN THE WEST— COLONEL CLARK'S EXPEDITIONS. The
expedition of Colonel Clark against the Brit-
ish posts in the
West
illustrates so well the general
character of the
West
at that time,
methods of warfare, and interest, that
we
give
tain relations to the
shows the early
this
many
full
of
has also cerit
between the United States ground.
During the Revolutionary in possession of
It
of Tecumseh, in so far as
conflict
and Great Britain on
withal a story so
briefly here.
it
life
is
and the Western
War
the British were
posts on the frontier,
among
which was Kaskaskia, near the junction of the Kaskaskia River with the IMississippi, in what the State of
Illinois.
French
founded
post,
is
now
This place was originally a in
1673, but
it
had been sur-
rendered to the British at the time of the
fall
of
Canada and the consequent overthrow of the French power
in
America, and from
this
point the British
authorities during the Revolution furnished the In-
dians with the supplies which enabled
the
American
frontier.
them
to harry
TECUMSEII.
42
In 1778, one of the
first
expeditions beyond the
Ohio was sent out from Virginia against Kaskaskia.
command
This expedition was placed under the Colonel George Rogers Clark, a age,
immense energy, and
He
durance.
had,
Indian warfare.
man
peculiar
talent
for
Indians seldom fight in the open
Their great strength
battle-field.
of great cour-
powers of en-
incredible
besides, a
of
lies in
surprises.
They make sudden movements and plan ambuscades with great
A
craft.
lack of attention to these
peculiarities of a savage foe caused Braddock's defeat
and many other
tier
man,
in all
methods.
men
of
scarce,
the
and
skillful fron-
border skirmishes, adopted the Indian
In nearly
killed
But the
disasters.
all
frontier conflicts the
and wounded was
craft
expeditions
small.
took the place of sent
force.
from the East
Colonel Clark, were disastrous
failures,
that the large forces of regulars
number
Men were Many of
after
that of
from the
would march
fact
into
the country, allowing the wary Indians time to pre-
pare
traps
march only
into to
which the
A
would blindly
be cut to pieces.
The object of Clark's secret.
troops
expedition was kept a profound
regiment was authorized to be raised for
the protection of the Western frontier, and the confi-
dence
in
Colonel Clark was so great that no trouble
was found
in raising three
hundred men without delay.
COLONEL CLARK This
force
little
more than
made
EXrEDITIONS.
S
a wilderness journey
They
thousand miles.
a
43
crossed
of the
mountains of the ]\Ionongahela and descended by
Here they were
water to the Falls of the Ohio.
met by some Kentucky volunteers;
for
no
conflict,
great or small, took place on the Western frontier in
which the warlike Kcntuckians did not have a
The expeditionary Ohio
where they hid
proceeded dov/n the
force then
about sixty miles above
to a point
part.
its
mouth,
their boats to prevent their being dis-
covered by the Indians.
Clark's
little
army was now
one hundred and thirty miles from Kaskaskia, and the country to be traversed Illinois
—was,
Through
this
tation, the
men, his
low
its
prairie,
on
means
his shoulder
available the
morasses on their route. their
is
now Southern impassable.
covered with a dense vege-
and
They waded through
back.
after
— what
wild state, almost
brave colonel marched at the head of his
his rifle
quickest
in
his provisions
or crossed
on
by the
numerous streams and
They marched two days
provisions were exhausted,
and arrived
before the fortifications of Kaskaskia in the night.
The long march had been accomplished without alarming either the English or the Indians
had suspected
his
coming.
;
no one
Clark halted, formed his
men, and delivered a short and pointed speech, of
which
the substance was
that " the
town was
to
TECUMSEII.
44 be taken
great that the
But the surprise was so
events."
at all
capture was effected by
stratagem,
without resistance, on the night of the fourth of July.
The
inhabitants Avere closely shut within their houses,
to prevent intelligence of the arrival of the
cans becoming known in the other detachment was mounted on the
Ameri-
A
settlements.
horses
the
of
country and immediately pushed on up the Mississippi to surprise the villages there.
They were
all
taken as secretly and suddenly as Kaskaskia, and the
power
was
of Great Britain
entirely
broken
the
in
River country, by the sudden onslaught
Mississippi
of a few hundred men.
Winning the
favor of the French at Kaskaskia
by
kindness and shrewd management, Clark got them to take the oath of allegiance to
Then he dispatched to
the United States.
a friendly priest, Father Gibault,
sound the people
at Vincennes,
an old French
set-
Wabash which had become a British and which now lay between Clark and the
tlement on the post,
American
settlements.
Through
the influence of this priest in the absence
of the governor, Vincennes declared for the Ameri-
cans
with
;
but on the approach of Governor Hamilton a
British
force,
with one private
was forced
the
soldier
to surrender.
American
captain,
who
constituted the garrison,
By
planting a loaded can-
COLONEL CLARK'S EXPEDITIONS. non
in the
gate of the
fort,
and standing over
a Hghted match, the commander of son
of
45 with
it
this Httle garri-
two extorted the honors of war from
his
captor.
Vincennes, having been considered within reach of
an
attack from the Americans, had been strongly
and was now weU garrisoned, and under
fortified,
the
command
of the
Enghsh governor, Hamilton,
an experienced and excellent to
march upon Clark
as
officer.
certainty of success, for his force
proposed
was greatly superior
of the Americans, and he had also under his
to that
command
a
body
The season was ment seem ing
He
soon as possible, wuth a
such, however, as to
entirely impracticable.
country
streams
of six hundred Indian warriors.
low and
is
make any moveThe interven-
and the
level,
and
rivers
during heavy
overflow their banks
rains.
They were by this time greatly swollen. The British commander reasoned that Colonel Clark would also same reason
be unable to move
for the
him, and that upon
the shores of the Mississippi no
reinforcements could
from
the
distant
streams should to attack the
fall
by any
;
tary officer, or a
possibility reach
settlements. in the spring,
Americans
ance of success
at
that detained
As
soon
as
him the
Hamilton proposed
Kaskaskia with the assur-
and had Clark been a regular
common man accustomed
mili-
to regard
TECUMSEH.
46 difficulties or
even to respect
impossibilities,
Governor
Hamilton's plans would have been sure to bring victory.
He
reckoned badly, however,
in feeling sure that
man
anytliing could detain so impetuous a
anywhere.
as Clark
Shrewdly guessing what were the pur-
poses of the British governor, and having been in-
formed of the
saw that
size of
Hamilton's force, he quickly
to await his arrival at
Kaskaskia would be
The other expedient was almost
fatal.
perate; but he decided, in spite of
himself the
To
all
equally des-
obstacles, to
be
first to attack.
carry out this arduous undertaking he would
have to
pass, without a road,
and sixty miles of
" fertile
through one hundred
soil,
whose
light,
spongy
loam, saturated with water, afforded no firm footing
and to cross the Kaskas-
to the steps of the soldiery, kia,
the Little Wabash, the Embarras, and the Great
Wabash
Rivers, besides a
number
of their tributa-
of which were swollen and margined
ries,
all
wide
belts of inundated land."
for Vincennes,
however,
He began
by
the march
having nothing but a few
pack-horses and the backs of the soldiers on which to carry his provisions
was made
mud
in eleven
and ammunition.
weary days of plodding through
and water, the troops sleeping
shelter
This march
on the damp ground.
at night
At one
without
time the
men
COLONEL CLARK'S EXPEDITIONS. refused to
march through an
ed a
drummer boy on
little
47
Clark mount-
icy river.
the shoulder of a
ser-
tall
geant, and ordered the one to beat a
march while the
other proceeded
Clark
sword and
ward
!
fell
into
the
water.
by the
elated
and of course followed the commander.
scene,
man
dauntless
his
in behind the sergeant, crying, " For-
The men were amused and
"
drew
This
had each of the companies give a
"feast" on successive nights of the march, to which
By means
the others were invited. the
men were made
of these frolics
to forget the awful perils
and
hardships of their march.
At
last
which of
On
itself
seemed a
around
its
its foot,
while the western shore was low and
sink under his rider and
The
some
no
It
his
instantly buried in
now covered
for
five
places too deep for fording,
too shallow fof boats.
difficulties.
Hall, in
he has seen the horse
become
prairie Avas
miles with water, in in others
impassable.
bank stood the En-
of treacherous quicksands, where
mire.
River,
with the swift current of the river sweeping
" Sketches of the West," says
the
Wabash
barrier quite
the high eastern shore of
glish fort
full
they reached the Great
took him
five
Clark hesitated for
days to get his
now
starving and exhausted troops across this Avaste of water,
maneuvering successfully
from the enemy by
to conceal his forces
keeping as nearly under shelter
TECUMSEH.
48
of the timber as possible, sometimes wading breastdeep, and at other times using canoes or constructing
At one time when
rafts.
them by blacking
his
the
men
faltered
war-whoop, and making them follow
Having
he diverted
powder, giving a
face with
his
example.
he
at last achieved the passage of the river
appeared before Vincennes, surprising the post pletely as he
had surprised the more western
as
com-
forts.
Before attacking the post he sent secretly the
lowing characteristic
letter to the
fol-
French inhabitants
now at this manOne ifesto of a commander whose troops had eaten almost nothing for five days, and who were now to contend cannot but smile
of the town.
with a force greatly superior, a part of which was
composed of Indians who would show no mercy case they were victorious **
To "
in
:
the Inhabitants of Post Vincennes.
Gentlemen
lage Avith night,
my
Being now within two miles of your vilarmy, determined to take your Fort this :
and not being
method
willing to surprise you, I take this
to request such of
you
as are true citizens
willing to enjoy the liberty I bring you, to remain
your houses. to the King,
And
those,
if
any there fight like
men.
and
join the
And
such as do not go to the Fort shall be discovered wards, they
may depend on who are true
contrary, those treated.
in
are, that are friends
will instantly repair to the Fort,
Hair-Buyer General, and
and
still
severe punishment.
if
any
after-
On
the
friends to liberty will be well
G. R. Clark."
COLONEL CLARK'S EXPEDITIONS.
49
The nick-name of Hair-Buyer General applied to commander doubtless refers to the British
the English
use of the Indians as
allies,
and the
practice,
who
part of the savages, of scalping tliose their hands.
It is
but
into
Hamilton was
that
fair to state
on the
fell
magnanimous gentleman, notwith-
a courteous and
standing Clark's contempt.
The
latter,
like
many
other brave and patriotic soldiers, was not remarkable for observing the courtesies of
His spelling
personal culture.
is
life,
nor indeed for
very eccentric.
much "adju-
speaks of himself as having been very tated "
at
one time
;
he says " atacted," and he
receives " intiligence."
But
ucation of the schools to
commander, and
frontier
By
it
make
does not take the ed-
and
a daring
this last
he was.
round and round so
as to
make them
seem many more than they were, and by a tricks,
skillful
Hannibal's stratagem of marching
repeating
his few soldiers
He
some of which seemed almost
series of
like practical
jokes and school-boy pranks, he outwitted the English
commander
that he could
that he
He
ill
in
He had
every way.
afford to lose one,
men under
shelter,
had them now
rapidly and then slacken, so as to
hot
fire
men
had sent round by water had not yet come.
kept his
ing one
so few
and another force
party with another. the
men would
seem
After a
to
fire
be reliev-
particularly
shout and laugh as though 3
it
TECUMSEH.
50 •were only play.
Fearing that some important
dis-
patches intended for him had fallen into the enemy's
hands and would be destroyed, he concluded a surrender at once,
made with " Sir
if
to force
The demand was
possible.
characteristic effrontery, as follows
In order to save yourself from the impending
:
I order you immediately to suryour garrison, stores, &:c., &c. for if I am obliged to storm, you may depend on such treatment as is justly due a mm-derer. Beware of destroying stores of any kind, or any papers or letters that are in
storm that threatens you,
render yourself,
Avith all
your possession, or hurting one house in town, for, by Heavens if you do, there shall be no mercy shown you, !
"G. R. Clark.
"To
Gov. Hamilton."
Hamilton refused posed a
truce.
to surrender, but soon after pro-
This Clark refused, making up in
assurance what he lacked in force.
ton at
last capitulated,
much more numerous
Colonel Hamil-
surrendering to Clark a force
than the attacking party.
By
this victory the great north-western region was added
to the territory of the United States.
Two
years later the border war came directly to
Tccumsch's own home, left
in
an
affair
that
must have
a strong impression on the boy's mind.
The
Indian village of Piqua, picturesquely situated on a precipitous
cliff
overlooking the
dered by a beautiful It is
said that there
prairie,
Mad
River, and bor-
was then quite populous.
was within
its limits
a rude
losr
COLONEL CLARK'S EXPEDITIONS.
51
fort surrounded with pickets, and more than two hundred acres of corn and other vegetables had been planted there by the Indians.
This time Colonel Clark led an expedition of a
thousand Kentuckians against the Shawnees residing
on the Great IMiami. denly, as
was
to send
to
children,
He dropped upon them
the
woods
for safety their
among whom, no doubt, was Though they defended their
Tecumseh.
time, their villages were
destroyed. great
squaws and the
young
cabins for a
burned and the corn-fields
"This seems," says James Hall, with
justice,
method
sud-
and they had scarcely time
his fashion,
" to
have
been
the
most
effectual
for bridling the ferocity of the Indians
;
the
death of a portion of their warriors only increased their fury, but the destruction of their villages
corn-fields chilled
that
their
war could be carried
crippled their military
engage
in
and
courage by showing them to their
homes, while
power by forcing them
hunting to support their families."
it
to
CHAPTER
V.
EARLY BATTLES AND ADVENTUP.ES OF TECUMSEIL In 1786, Captain Benjamin Logan led a party of
mounted men
against the villages of Machachacs (or
Mcquacakes), one of the four tribes into which the
Shawnccs were divided on the waters of the
made on
His attack was
River.
the villages while most of the warriors were
absent, which
dian youths,
on opposite
may who
sides,
who defended
account for the fact that two Inafterwards became distinguished
should have been
stands,
first
those
In one of
Dayton
city of
Tccumseh, who was not more than
teen or eighteen years of age, the
among
the villages at this time.
Logan's skirmishes, near where the
now
and who lived
at that time,
Mad
time.
came under
He was under
boy Tecumsch took
similar story
is
Jacket,
told of the great
lost his
fright
and
Seneca
and of Frederick the Great.
instance on record in which
This
peril.
It is
fled.
chief, is
A Red
the only
Tecumsch showed
presence of mind in
for
fire
the charge of his
brother, the distinguished brave Chccscckau. said that the
six-
fear or
EARLY BATTLES OF TECUMSEH.
53
In this same skirmish, or in some other during expedition,
this
Captain Logan
Spemica
captured
Lawba, who afterwards took Logan's own name and
became
celebrated, not hke
Tecumseh, as the enemy Captain Logan
of the white man, but as his friend.
having entered a village from which, the warriors
were mostly absent, captured, with
slight resistance,
women and
thirty prisoners, mostly
after the conclusion of the battle
But
children.
he was
much
an-
noyed by arrows shot by some one with an aim
good
as
made
in
to
the
Search was
greatly harass the men. tall
grass about the village
Indian boy was discovered with
so
until
bow and
an
quiver,
boldly persecuting the enemies of his people, though
He was made
he fought single-handed.
and lived until
lie
in
was exchanged and returned
High Horn," but as
after his captivity
He
with Logan, the famous services v.'hich
the whites in the liant
;
own
is
not to be confounded
Mingo Logan
chief Avas able to
render to
war of 1812, were many and
but there was one
most friendly and tion here.
he was always
Logan, and was ever afterward a steadfast
friend of the whites.
The
to his
His name, Spemica Lawba, meant " The
people.
known
prisoner,
Captain Logan's famJly for some years,
faithful
earlier enterprise
bril-
of this
savage that deserves men-
TECUMSEII.
54
The
Indians around Fort
Wayne had
been show-
ing signs of hostility, and the whites thouglit best
remove
to
women and
tlie
were twenty-five,
children, of
whom
there
to a better protected place in Ohio.
This defenceless party was intrusted to the care and After nearly a hundred miles
guidance of Logan.
of perilous travel he brought
safely to their
His sense of responsibility
destination. cult
them
in this diffi-
and delicate mission was so great that he
not to have slept during the whole time of
is
said
its
per-
formance.
Tccumseh, a
made by
The
Ohio River large
a
to four
until
which
men
of
hundred
are propelled
commerce
greater part of the
vv'as,
flatboats
more than flatboats,
took part in an attack
the Indians on some flatboats descending
the Ohio.
by
later,
little
still
by
of the
very recent times, carried on peculiar
float
often
construction,
feet in length.
These covered
on the large Western
rivers,
great oars, that require from
to the oar,
two
and are moved by the men
walking forward on the deck of the boat
push the oars through the water. needs a crew of six or more.
as
they
So that each boat
In the time of peril
from the Indians several of these boats were lashed together in order that the force for defense might be greater.
day
TJie flatbont
led adventurous
men and
keelboat
and dangerous
men
lives.
of that
Voyag-
EARLY BATTLES OF TECUMSEIL jng-
down
great
the
Ohio and Mississippi Rivers,
they were a prey to the Indians and the laws
who
55
infested the river
fierce out-
and the wilds of Tennes-
see and Kentucky, through which their return jour-
ney by land was made. If
Tecumseh had manifested any
and coolness
mined
to
in his
lack of bravery
previous battle, he seemed deter-
wipe out the
stain this time, for
such courage as to leave
in the
he showed
background some of
The
the oldest and bravest warriors in the party.
boats were captured and the
exception of one,
who was
men
killed with the
all
taken prisoner and burnt
Tecum-
according to the barbarous Indian custom. seh silently witnessed the revolting scene, liis first
experience of the kind.
When
the youth expressed his abhorrence of the Indians so eloquent
they
all
agreed with him
it,
over,
and made
And
it
is
bcliex-ed
none of the party were ever afterward guilty
of participation
could better
over men.
mere
it v.'as
saying that they never
would burn another prisoner. that
being
forceful a speech that
and in
it
in
this fiendish
indicate It
practice.
Nothing
Tecumseh's wonderful power
was a very extraordinary thing
for a
stripling to succeed in persuading Indians to
renounce a custom so fixed and so suited to the savagery of the Indian temper.
From
the beginning of Tecumseh's
renown
this battle dates
as a brave.
In
TECUMSEII.
56 liunting,
which
he early
becariie famous.
About
the chief occupation of an Indian,
is
when he could not have been more
1787,
than nineteen years of age, he and his brother Cheeseekau, with a party of Kiscopokes
by
the impulse to
of the Shawnees
—
— moved no doubt
wander which was so strong started
in all
westward on an expedition
in search of adventure.
They stopped River, in diana.
what
for
some time on the Mississlnewa
now
is
the north-eastern part of In-
Here the young men were near home.
some months, growing bolder disposition,
or
After
more vagrant
in
they crossed the country westward and
encamped on the Apple Creek.
Mississippi, opposite the
After remaining for eight
mouth of or
nine
months, they started toward the country of the Cherokees, traveling to the south through Illinois to the
Ohio River, -where they engaged in
in
a buffalo hunt,
which Tecumseh was thrown from
had
his thigh broken.
for several
his horse
and
This accident detained them
months opposite Fort Massac.
After his
recovery they continued their wanderings southward
under the lead of Checseekau.
On
their arrival in
the Cherokee country they found that tribe at war
with the whites.
With
true
and adventure, they offered their attack
on a
fort, the
Shawnee
love of battle
to join the
name
of which
Cherokees is
in
unknown.
EARLY BATTLES OF TECUMSEH.
A
day or
may
tv/o before the assault
took place,
if
made
a speech to at a certain
hour on a certain morning they would reach the
and he would be shot told
them
however,
him
that they
fused.
in the
forehead and
would succeed
they persevered.
if
They
killed.
Cheeseekau was
sentiment.
He
joicing that
it
He
to induce
tried
re-
killed according to his pre-
with true Shawnee fanaticism, re-
fell
was
his lot to die in battle,
want
that he did not
fort,
the attack,
in
back from the undertaking, but he
to turn
we
which he predicted that
believe the story, Cheeseekau
his followers, in
57
to
be buried
at
home
and saying like
an old
woman, but preferred
that the fowls of the air should
The
Indians, always superstitious,
pick his bones.
were panic-stricken, and of
fled in spite of the
attempts
Tecumseh and the Cherokee leaders to rally them. The young Tecumseh had not yet had enough of adventurous
this
life.
nearly two years.
He
remained
in the
naturally to have taken the lead of his party. told his
them
that he
own country
of being told.
and going
was determined not
until
He
to return to
he had done something worthy
So he took with him eight or ten men,
to the nearest settlement
house, killed
South
After his brother's death he seems
all
he attacked a
the men, and took the w^omen and
children prisoners.
Such
is
the adventure which an Indian could re-
3*
TECUMSEH.
58
count with pride around the camp-fire on
Tecumseh
home.
tribes at this
them
a daring
Southern
Southern
in after
life,
in
when he was forming
During the w-hole time he
joining
life,
which was of use
as a brave,
his great confederacy.
led
the
and gaining acquaintance and a rep-
among them
his visit to
of
time, probably learning somctliing of
their languages,
utation
many
visited
his return
many
in
forays
the
of
His encampment was three times
tribes.
attacked in the night, but so great was his. carefulness,
and so excellent
At one
over him. attacked dow^n, in
him.
judgment
his
a camping-ground, that
Tecumseh, who had not yet
He was
was dressing some meat.
Under Tecumseh's
upon the whites and flight
lead,
by the sheer impetuosity
own country
little
band
on
laid
his feet
to follow
they rushed boldly
killed two, putting the rest to
out the loss of a man. his
choice of
time a party of thirty whites
an instant, and ordered his
him.
in the
no advantage was gained
with
of their charge, with-
Tecumseh
at last set out for
eight followers.
On
their
homeward journey they went through Western Virginia.
Crossing the Ohio near
the
mouth of the
Scioto River, they visited the IMachachac villages on J\Iad
River
;
thence they went
which they reached
in the fall of
absent from Ohio for three years.
to 1
the
Auglaize,
790, having been
CHAPTER DEFEAT OF
VI.
AND
IIAR?nIER
ST.
CLAIR.
If Tccumsch had a budget of adventure to relate to his friends
around the camp-fires, the Indians
Ohio had, on
their part, the fresh
victory
recount.
to
news of a great
preceding
Just
Indians had been fought.
was now seven years
It
since the close of the Revolutionary still
had been
Tecumseh's
between General Harmer and the
return, a battle
English
in
War, but the
held posts in the Western country.
stipulated,
when
It
the independence of the
United States was acknowledged by Great that
Americans should be held responsible
due
to British subjects,
Britain,
for debts
which had been contracted
before the -war and repudiated after the Revolution
began.
But under the
earlier
form of government,
the United States could not enforce the collection of these debts in opposition to statutes enacted several States to failure of
British
by the This
our government to comply with one of the
stipulations of
ment
defeat the
creditor.
the treaty gave the British govern-
a pretext for refusing to surrender the frontier
posts, the
holding of which kept the profitable fur
TECUMSEII.
Go
trade in the hands of
Enghsh
were not surrendered
made,
new
until a
Meantime
in 1794.
These posts
traders.
treaty
had been
the presence of this semi-
and of the English
hostile military power,
traders,
kept the Indians in a state of constant enmity to the
growing American settlements
Harmer had been
West.
at the
sent into the
West
at the
The
hundred Kentucky volunteers.
eleven
head
hundred Federal troops and over
of about three
sole
object of this expedition was to penetrate into the
Miami country and This
Indians. it
it
to destroy the corn- fields of the
accomplished successfully
attempted nothing more,
The
forces
Kentucky
troops,
was sent out
He
miles directly into a trap.
own
and
his
in
the
men had
tall grass.
troops.
stricken
Hardin
enemy
with
for six
Indians had retreated,
two
and then approached
When
parties,
had
either side of it,
concealing
Colonel Hardin
v/alked into this snare, the savages
suddenly appeared on
in
The
some distance on
at
trail,
themselves
in pursuit,
followed the
after dividing themselves into
countermarched their
well.
commander
Colonel Hardin, the
a small detachment.
and
and had
were about to return, when some In-
dians were seen. of the
;
would have been
all
all
bravel)^
sides
and hred upon the
tried
to
rally
his
panic-
men, but the Indians were greatly superior
numbers
to
this
detachment, and they charged
DEFEAT OF IIARMER AND upon the all
soldiers with
but those
Two
days
CLAIR.
ST.
6
gun and tomahawk, destroying
who saved
themselves
later the
army again
b}' flight.
out on
set
its
re-
After marching about ten miles from the
turn.
ruined villages, Avith a
Harmer
sent back
detachment of four or
and about sixty regulars
where he supposed the
to
hundred
militia
principal
towns,
Indians
would
five
the
scattered
But by
gather on the departure of the troops.
movement Harmer
who
this
again foolishly divided his army.
There Avere only a few Indians found however,
Mardin
Colonel
the village,
at
The undis-
on being attacked.
fled
ciplined militia, eager for revenge, rushed off with-
out orders in pursuit of them, leaving the regulars at
the village.
It
was
for
some such subdivision
the wily savages
were waiting.
the regular troops
left
No
alone than an
that
sooner were
immense num-
ber of Indians rose from an ambuscade.
A
fierce
followed, the enraged Indians throwing aside
battle
guns and fighting with tomahawks, and the Amerwith their bayonets, with which
icans
they
great havoc in the Indian ranks for a time.
savages greatly
brave
these Willis,
The
were
militia
made The
outnumbered them, however, and
troops
and
slain
almost
had been
their
to
commander.
Major
very
man.
the
recalled,
last
but though
they
fought a brave battle, and themselves suffered con-
TECUMSEH.
62
siderablc loss, they were too late to relieve the reg-
They
ulars.
retired at last
good order before
in
the superior numbers of the savages, their ranks "like
who
attacked
demons."
In this victory over General Harmcr, Blue Jacket,
an
Shawnee
influential
chief of the Miamis,
The year
and
Little
Turtle, a
the Indians.
following Tecumseh's return he spent
In
hunting.
in
chief,
commanded
the
fall
1791, news
of
reached
the Indians that General St. Clair was preparing to
march
into their country.
The young
cumseh was sent out with a party of the
movements of
this
new
warrior Tc-
spies to
expedition.
watch Clair,
St.
a brave and veteran soldier, began his march cautiously
Two
the
at
forts
head of fourteen
hundred
were erected about forty miles
troops.
apart,
on
the route, for places of deposit, and to secure safety in case of retreat.
While Tccumsch and
his party
were lying on Nettle Creek, a stream which flows into the Great Miami, St. Clair passed out through
Greenville to the head waters of the Wabash. this
way
it
happened that Tecumseh, acting
In as a
scout, did not participate in the battle itself
General fare,
St. Clair,
was suddenly,
who had no skill in Indian warat a moment when he fancied
himself secure, attacked on
whelming
force
of
Indians,
all
sides
by an over-
who had
long
been
DEFEAT OF HARMER AND hanging upon
his
and
flanks,
ST.
CLAIR.
had
thus
63
become
thoroughly acquainted with the numbers and
The
position of his troops.
countless stricken
hordes of
and
fled,
savages,
yells,
lay their hands
they turned
all
by
sides
they became panic-
pursued by the Indians, who flUed
the air with demoniac
could
on
themselves environed
but seeing
dis-
soldiers fought bravely,
back at
on. last
while they killed
Weary
all
they
with slaughter,
to enjoy the
plunder of
the deserted camp.
The
troops had
been formed
in close order;
a
plan which was always bad, and which was wholly
given up in Indian warfare after this disaster. close order of the whites
advantage, and
The
gave the Indians a great
St. Clair's loss in this
to
nearly eight hundred, while
•the
Indian loss did not
it
defeat is
much exceed
amounted
supposed that ten men.
The
whole country was plunged into grief and consternation
by
this
overthrow of an army regarded as
well-nigh invincible.
CHAPTER
VII.
SKIRMISHES WITH THE WHITES— TECUMSEH AND KENTON. In the month of December, 1792, Tecumseh was
encamped with called
ten warriors and a boy, near a place
Big Rock.
As
the party sat smoking around
camp-fire, early
their
suddenly
morning, they were
the
in
upon by a company of whites
fired
nearly three times their
number, under
of Robert
Tecumseh
McClelland.
war-whoop, and the Indians sprang
feet
and returned the
fire.
He
command
instantly
the
told the
to
boy
gave their
to run,
but looking around saw Black Turkey, one of warriors,
running
Tecumseh
also.
him back, and although he was and joined
in the fight.
one was
slain
Two
called
a hundred
yards
and
the order
whites were killed, of
by Tecumseh himself
land's party retreated,
his
angrily
away when Tecumseh saw him, he obeyed
whom
of
wliilc following
McClel-
them Te-
cumseh broke the
trigger to his gun, and then gave
over the pursuit.
The
Indians
came
off with a loss
SKIRMISHES WITH THE WHITES. of but two wounded, one of
whom
65
was the runaway,
Black Turkey. In Tecumseh's next adventures he flict
all
came
into con-
with Simon Kenton, one of the most famous of
men and
the frontier
Indian fighters.
1792, some horses were
Kentucky by
A
Indians.
In March,
stolen from settlements in
party of thirty-six whites
immediately
gathered to pursue the marauders,
of this party
Kenton was the
trail
Following the
leader.
of the Indians they crossed the Ohio River
means of trail
all
ground.
pursuit. trail
the next day in bad weather and over wet
The
following morning twelve
The remaining twenty-four about eleven
until
they heard the tinkling of a
men were accustomed horses.
by
and continued to follow the Indian
rafts,
men were
permitted to return, being unable to continue
the
and
in
followed
when
the morning,
bell,
to tic
still
the
such as the frontier
on the necks of
their
Supposing themselves to be near an Indian
encampment, baggage were
unnecessary articles of clothing and
all
laid aside,
and two detachments sent
The
ahead to reconnoitcr.
that the sound of the bell
scouts advancing found
was coming
was ordered, and the whites saw a proaching them.
were again sent
lie
A
halt
solitary Indian ap-
was dispatched, and the scouts
forAvard
finding an Indian
nearer.
by Kenton, who
encampment
felt
close at hand.
sure of
This
TECUMSEH.
66
they soon discovered on a fork of the Little Miami.
But the Indian
force appeared to be so large that on
calling a council
came
night
on,
was thought best
it
a retreat could be effected with-
if
This was
out discovery.
done, two scouts being
At
watch the enemy's camp.
left to
being wet and ravine,
cold, the
where a
to retire until
men
night, the
party was marched into a
could be built without danger of
fire
discovery by means of the smoke.
The men were then which were
divided into three divisions,
attack the
to
Indians simultaneously.
They had approached very near the camp when an Indian rose and stirred the
fire.
For
fear of discov-
The
ery he was instantly shot, and the attack began. whites had
chosen
"Boone"
choice of a watchword
This
for
their
watchword.
was unfortunate,
Boone's was a name which the savages had
rood reasons
for
for
many
knowing, and which was indeed
quite as familiar to their ears as to those of the whites.
The
made after midnight, and it was very few moments the whites and Indians
attack was
dark.
In a
were mingled together; wild and confusing " Boone," and "
both
i:)artics.
Che Boone,"
the presence of first
all
sides
Kenton expected the Indians
panic-stricken at the
the
arose on
cries of
first
from to
be
dash of a night attack, but
Tecumseh had prevented
this.
alarm he had rushed forward and
At
killed a
SKIRMISHES WITH THE WHITES.
man
white
\\ith his
war-club, and his presence of
mind and the confidence of the Indians
in his leader-
By some
ship quite defeated Kenton's hopes. said that
6/
more probable which fell
made
into the
how
tells
water
in the
the
melee an In-
splashing which he
the
;
is
led the whites to believe that reinforcements
were coming.
Kenton accordingly ordered
a retreat
They were pursued
few minutes of fighting.
after a
by
is
Kenton discovered another camp on the
opposite bank of the river, but that account
dian
it
the Indians through the remainder of the night
and a part of the next day.
On
the day previous to this battle one of the white
men had succeeded which he had tied retreat off.
catching an Indian horse,
was ordered he mounted
When
camp.
in the rear of the
this
a
horse and rode
Early the following morning Tecumseh and
four of his
men
started out in pursuit of the retreat-
ing Kentuckians.
Discovering
followed him, and at
had stopped
to
last
man's
this
trail,
they
came upon him where he
cook some meat.
of the Indians, two of
him.
in
whom
He
fled
at sight
with Tecumseh pursued
Seeing that they would inevitably overtake
him, he turned and aimed his gini at them.
two Indians who were
in
mediately sprang behind
The
adwance of Tecumseh imtrees,
up and took him prisoner.
but Tecumseh rushed
He was
tied
and taken
TECUMSEH.
68 back
to
Tccumseh then asked some of
camp.
the
Indians to catch the horses, but as they seemed un-
wiUing to do
When men
it,
he went himself with one other.
he returned to the camp, he found that
At
had killed the prisoner.
indignant, angrily denouncing
as
it
his
he was very
cowardly to
kill
In this matter of the treatment
a helpless captive.
of prisoners, he was always
far
the savages, and indeed more
of the white
this
more humane than
humane than many
settlers.
Tecumseh's next skirmish was with another party In 1793, a party of thirty-three
under Kenton.
was formed
to cut off
ed settlements
in
some Indians who had
Kentucky,
and were
tion
Kenton commanded one of the three
into
which the small party
Creek.
Soon
attack-
returning
In this expedi-
through Ohio with their prisoners.
vrcre
crossing the Ohio River, they
divisions
After
divided.
encamped near Paint
after their halt for
the night, a noise
was heard, and an Indian cam^p was discovered at hand.
This camp
men
close
was not that of the marauders,
but of Tecumseh, who with a few followers, accompanied by their W(3men and children, was engaged in
hunting on the banks of
rcc(.)nnoitered
and found
tliat
this crock.
whites
the Indian horses were
between them and the Indian camp. that no attack should be
The
made on
It
was decided
the Indians until
SKIRMISHES WITH THE WHITES. it
69
The
should be light enough to shoot accurately.
plan was for each of the three bodies of
men
to place
themselves on different sides of the encampment,
which would then be guarded, as the creek was on
The Kentuckians marched
the fourth side.
enemy's camp very
had reached
whites
the
gun was began
instantly
rushing to their positions
deranged by the
first
camp.
side of the
seven, that the
stantly "treed,"
this alarm,
men
the
attack,
their
but the plan was entirely
wrong
Tccumseh
called
that
whom
their
were but six or
children must be defend-
sent back the battle cry, and in-
Western parlance
in
cealed themselves
On
fired.
party's having taken the
women and
The Indians
dark,
;
dog barked among
a
It is said
out to his warriors, of
ed.
Before two of the parties
early.
their positions,
the Indians, and a
to tlic
behind
trees.
— that
was
It
con-
is,
quite
still
and a good deal of random shooting and much
Indian shouting was done with
little
time Tccumseh sent some of his rear of the
At
effect.
men around
whites to get the horses
;
this
to the
these were
brought to the front without discovery, and the Indians
quickly mounted and rode awa}% carrying
them
witli
the
all
name
when
their only
of John
wounded man, a white man by
Ward.
three years old
lie
by the
had
Indians,
l^ccn
captured
among whom
he had grown up, married, and raised several
chil-
TECUMSEII.
70 drcn.
Curiously enough, he was
one of the men associated
Simon Kenton. ceived in this
in this
the
brother
John Ward died of the wound
fight.
So strange were the
of border hfe in that day.
of
expedition with re-
vicissitudes
CHAPTER
VIII.
A SKETCH OF SIMON KENTON. Simon Kenton of
lives,
and there
tures give us a
and of the
one of the most eventful
lived is
more
no
man whose adven-
frontier
vivid picture of border warfare,
and Indians
relations of the settlers
time of Tecumsch's advent, than chapter, therefore,
give a sketch of
we
some
was several times
turn aside from incidents in the
Tecumseh
life
fled
to
who
of one
Kenton
his antagonist.
at the
In the present
his.
from
Virginia at seventeen years of age, in consequence of a fight with a affections
of a
young man who was his rival in the The girl had been country belle.
unable to decide between the two likely,
fight
it
;
or what
is
more
had preferred the glory of having her lovers out.
Kenton was but sixteen when the
fight
took place, and, owing to foul play on the part of the friends of his robust
A
rival,
he had been beaten.
year after he sought another
fight, in
antagonist, after throwing him, kicked
him
brutally.
He however managed
of his humiliation to
tie his
very long, to some brush,
enemy's after
which
his
and taunted
in the hair,
moment
which was
which he beat him
TECUMSEir.
72 most unmercifully.
West and assumed became renowned
One of
name
the
Kenton
as
who was
man
like
About
who was
1/77, Kenton,
a
Indian horses.
the Indians,
in
front,
two
the Little Miami.
off with
In
number of
a
They
while the other one rode
horses with a whip to keep
They dashed through
to time.
thus, hearing behind
Indians.
acting as a scout
capacity with
this
made
rear, lashing the
them up
ordinary
They were discovered and chased by The captured horses Avere led by two
who rode
in the
in
Shawnee town on
adventure, the spies
men,
the
Tecumseh.
men to
other
of
that
quite different from the exceptional
under Boone, was sent
this
flghtcr.
illustrate the character
backwoodsman and
the
Here he
Butler.
(^f
avouIcI
fled to the
a hunter and Indian
of his adventures will
Indian,
man
Believing that the
die from the effects of the beating,
them the
rode
the
cries of the
forward,
woods
pursuing
aiming a straight
course for the Ohio River, during the whole night,
without
stopping to
rest,
and
after
a short time in the morning, traveled
and the following river far ever,
ahead of
were so rough that
it
all
that
day
thus reached the
their pursuers.
the animals to cross.
them
They
night.
halting but
Its waters,
was impossible
They were
how-
to force
unwilling to
go, however, in order to save their
own
let
lives.
SIMON KENTON. Death or
*'
captivity
might be
73
tolerated, but the loss
of so beautiful a lot of horses, after having worked so hard for them, was not to be thought
The
of
Indians were upon them at the close of twen-
ty-four hours which they had wasted on this spot.
Kenton's gun flashed when he
and he
fired,
tried to
save himself by^ running through the woods, but an
up near him, extending
Indian soon galloped liand
and
Kenton
!"
er
said afterwards that
have made
was wet, would ^'
brothered
"
him
to
if
his gun,
he would have
fire
Making
heart's content.
his
which
him promise good treatment, however, Kenton rendered. erl}'^
his
his
cahing out affectionately, " Brother! broth-
He
then received
many
sur-
proofs of broth-
kindness, the Indians using their ramrods over
head and exclaiming with indignation,
Indian friends
hoss,
hey!"
Meantime,
The forcing
one of Kenton's
was shot while bravely riding
but the other made good
" Steal
to his rescue,
his escape.
captors secured their prisoner for the night
him
to lie
upon
liis
by
back and putting a stout
pole across his breast, to which they fastened his wrists with thongs
were then made
made
fast
in the
A
driven into the ground. his
neck and secured
His
of buffalo hide.
to
a
same manner halter
was
feet
to stakes
tied
around
sapling growing near.
Finally a strong rope was passed around his bi'east
TECUM SEH.
74 and
tied to the stick to
which
his
arms had been
tened, his elbows also being tied to this pole. this
fas-
While
operation was being performed they boxed his
cars soundly, calling rascal !"
him
"
A
tief
and swearing profusely
!
a hoss steal
at the
!
a
same time.
For, as the author of " Western Adventure " says, "
Indians had picked up a good
the Western
all
many
English words, particularly our oaths, which,
from the frequency with which they were used by our hunters and traders, they probably looked upon as the very root
and foundation of the English lan-
guage."
The in
Indians with their prisoner were three days
reaching their village of Chillicothe.
night he was confined in the the day time was fine, wild,
tied,
for
way
their
and entirely unbroken
During the
described, and in
amusement, on a
colt,
which was one
of the horses the Indians had recovered from
Ken-
ton's party.
When
they came near Chillicothe, the party halted
and a messenger was sent forward lage of their arrival. fish
to inform the vil-
A chief by the
soon came to meet them.
He
name
of Black-
regarded Kenton
severely.
"You have been
stealing horses?" he shouted, in
good English. "Yes,
sir,"
answered Kenton.
SIMON KENTON.
"Did Captain Boone demanded "No,
you
tell
75
to steal our horses?"
the chief.
sir;
did
I
my own
of
it
accord,"
said
Kenton. This
enraged
Blackfish
hickory stick with
great
he applied a
so
that
force
to
Kenton's back
all
the inhabitants,
and shoulders.
On
ncaring the village he saw^
down to He was now
men, women, and children
the
running to meet him.
greeted with
torrents of abuse,
and demands that he should be This operation was
immediately tied to the stake. soon performed, the
sq_uaws assisting
then danced around
him
and
yelling, striking
with switches.
smallest,
him
They
in
until midnight,
freely with their
it.
They
whooping hands and
reserved the pleasure of burn-
ing him, however, until another time.
The let.
following day he was
made
In this operation, a double
to run the gaunt-
row of men, women,
and boys extended about a quarter of a
mile, each
holding some instrument of torture, such as clubs, switches, hoe-handles,
and tomahawks.
At
the be-
ginning of the line stood two warriors with butcherknives in their hands, wliile at the end an Indian
beating a drum.
A
the council-house.
The
length of this
line,
little
be}-ond the
prisoner
is
v.-as
drum waz
forced to run
tlie
between the double row of well-
TECUMSEH.
1^
applied Indian vengeance, taking refuge in the couticil-housc.
The
race being over, a council was held to decide
the question of whether the prisoner should be im-
mediately burned or taken
and exhibited to the in a ring
tirely silent,
to the other villages
first
The
tribes.
on the
warriors sat en-
floor of the council-
house, while the vote was taken.
The manner
was
circle.
to pass a war-club
were
around the
Those who
postponing the execution were to
in favor of
who were
pass the club on in silence, while those " contrary
of this
minded
"
were to
strike
it
violently
on the
ground.
An
Indian, furnished with a knife and
wood, was appointed to count the did
by making a mark on one
piece of
This he
votes.
side of the
wood
for
those of one opinion, and on the other side for the
He
other.
quickly announced that the execution
was postponed, and that the prisoner was a
to
quired
the
be taken
of
there.
inthis
He
informed that he was to be burned.
way
an escape.
to
He
Waughcotomoco, Kenton meditated thought
if
he must burn anyway
they could do no worse to him
He
to
Kenton
when informed
what they would do with him
fiercely
On
Waughcotomoco.
the interpreter,
of
decision,
was
called
village
could not
make up
his
if
he were recaptured.
mind
to this daring act,
RUNNING THE GAUNTLET.
SIMON KENTON. until the Indians fired their
however,
of a
fled
drum
into the
far
With
ahead.
dense woods.
sued, but so swift
escaped had
it
guns and raised
which was answered by the deep
the scalp halloo, roll
77
was
a loud
crj-
Kenton
was instantly pur-
lie
his flight that
he would have
not been that he stumbled into the
midst of another war party, which had come forth fi'om the village
At
on hearing the
Tccumseh's birthplace,
village of Piqua,
this
firing.
he was again tied to the stake, the Avarriors assemAfter their debate they
bling in the council-house.
surrounded the stake, dancing and yelling
for
some
hours.
At Waughcotomoco he was once more compelled to run the gauntlet, in
He was fate
was
which he was severely
hurt.
then taken to the council-house, where his to
awaiting his
be decided. death,
He was
when
sitting dejectedly
opened, and Simon Girty, a famous outlaw joined the Indians, and excelled
appeared, along
with some
door
council-house
the
them
prisoners
who had
in savagery,
and
scalps.
Kenton was removed from the council- house, and after
some hours was taken back and informed
his fate
had been decided.
He
that
divined from the
savage scowls of the Indians on his entrance that there
was no hope
for
Girty to seat himself.
him.
He was
Kenton seems
ordered by to
have
felt
TECUMSEII.
78
somewhat stubborn about obeying
in
any hurry
this
renegade white man, but Girty violently jerked him
down.
"How many men manded " It
impossible for
is
I
me
can
and you can judge
"Do
Kentucky ?" de-
Girty.
said Kenton, " but cers,
are there in
to answer that question,"
you the number of
tell
offi-
for yourself"
you know WiUiam Stewart?" was the next
inquiry.
" Perfectly well
he
;
is
an old and intimate acquaint-
ance," answered the prisoner. "
What
"
Simon
is
As soon his feet
?
"
Butler," replied Kenton. as Girty heard the
and threw
his
name he sprang
to
arms around the neck of the
Previous to Simon Girty's desertion of the
prisoner.
whites,
your own name
they had been spies together
in
Governor
Dunmore's expedition, and Girty had formed a warm attachment for Kenton. Girty then in
made
the astonished warriors a speech
which he told them that
bosom
friend
path, slept
;
that they
his friend.
He
was
his
had traveled the same war-
upon the same
same wigwam."
their prisoner "
blanket, and dwelt in the
earnestly pleaded for the
life
of
Several of the chiefs expressed their ap-
proval by a low guttural sound.
Many
others disap-
SIMON KENTON.
79
proved, saying they would be acting like squaws to
change
their
mind every hour, recounting Kenton's
misdemeanors, and pathetically pleading the disap-
pointment of those who had come from a distance to see the burning.
Girty again urged vehemently his request, claim-
ing
own savage loyalty he had come among them.
as the reward of his
it
the Indian cause since
The debate
lasted for an
hour and a
who
Kenton,
the vote was taken.
half,
to
and then
a few hours be-
fore had been despairingly resigned to his
fate,
now
watched with the greatest excitement the war-club go around.
who
He saw
that
there were
passed the club in silence than those
the ground with
One
It
day, however,
was heard, and they were obliged to
go to the council-house heart,
struck
lived with his friend, be-
ing treated with great kindness.
war-whoop
vv'ho
it.
For three weeks Kenton
the
many more
having a great
was unusually
full,
— Kenton with dread
dislike
many
a distance being present.
to all
chiefs
and warriors from
Kenton saw
Mas an ominous look on the
in his
council-houses.
faces
that
of the
there
warriors.
Girty walked around the room offering his hand to
was received with
those present, and
it
but when Kenton
offered his
scowls.
He
it
cordiality,
was rejected with
tried six Indians in this
way and then
TECUMSEH.
%0
down
sat
in
utter
lowed, in which stern to
A
dejection.
the
warm
from
chiefs
a
debate
fol-
were
distance
and indignant, and Girty's arguments seemed
have
httic influence.
He
at last
turned to Ken-
ton. *'
Well,
The a
friend,
you must
die
!
" said he.
prisoner was then started on his journey with
halter
some
my
When
around his neck.
distance, Girty passed
they had gone
them on horseback,
ing Kenton he had friends at the next village
he hoped
tell-
whom
to influence in his favor.
Girty, however,
could do nothing, and returned to
Waughcotomoco
another way, not wishing to see his friend under the circumstances.
They passed through
the next village.
road Kenton was attacked by an Indian,
On
the
who had
been sitting on a log smoking and directing his wife in
her labor of chopping, but who, on the approach
of the prisoner, seized the ax and dealt
Kenton such
wound him severely. He was reprimanded by those Indians who accompanied Kenton, for trying to destroy their own amusement by intera blow as to
fering with their right to
They stopped the Scioto. chief,
kill
at a village
their prisoner.
on the head waters of
Here Kenton saw the celebrated Mingo
Logan.
"
Logan's form was
striking
manly, his countenance calm and noble."
and
SIMON KENTON. " Well,
very
mad
"Yes,
young man, at
sir,
you
!
these
" said
8
young men seem
Logan,
to
in correct English.
they certainly are," answered Kenton.
"Well, don't be disheartened," said Logan.
am
a great chief.
You
go
are to
speak of burning you there, but ners to-morrow to speak
The runners were Kenton was
good
Sandusky
to
will
I
for
ners returned they were closeted
M'hom Kenton saw nothing the chief gave
him
they
send two run-
you."
with kindness,
treated
;
"I
and during their absence
sent,
many
holding
When
conversations with the friendly chief.
when
be
the run-
with Logan,
until the
of
next morning,
a piece of bread, told
him
that he was to go instantly to Sandusky, and turned
on
his
heel
naturally lost
He was
and walked away. all
An
however, interceded for him
Kenton
English Indian agent, this time,
he wished to obtain information Detroit.
giving up
this,
taken to Sandusky, and was to be burned
the following morning.
at
At
hope.
for the
saying that
conmiandant
The Indians were much opposed their victim,
and
pleasant promise to return
it
him
was only with the after
he had obtained
the information that the agent got possession of ton.
At
Detroit he
Ken-
remained a prisoner, though,
kindly treated, for almost a year.
plan to escape with
to
He
two Kentuckians.
then
laid
a
They had
TECUMSEII.
82 to
pass through a hundred miles of country
with route,
hostile
but by
Indians,
and by journeying only
taking a
filled
circuitous
at night, they arrived
at Louisville after thirty days.
In this strange adventure
Simon Kenton was times,
among
the Shawnecs,
forced to run the gauntlet eight
and was three times
tied to the stake to
be
burned.
Kenton afterwards
rose to the rank of general in
the militia, and died at the age of eighty-one, in a
populous country
where he used
to
filled
with
wander
cities
and manufactories,
as a hunter
and through which he had been led captive.
and warrior, as a
doomed
CHAPTER
IX.
WAYNE'S VICTORY OVER THE INDIANS.
The
now
country was
greatly distressed
The
Indian war on the frontier.
administration of
President Washington was severely the
opposition
The
Clair.
the defeats of
for
by the
condemned by
Harmar and
treasury was so low that the
money
which had been expended on these expeditions
amount
large
for the times
Those who had any
— was
—
greatly regretted.
liking for a military
with horror upon the Indian war.
St.
life
Soldiers
have a superstitous dread of the savages.
looked
came
to
So great
indeed was this dread that bare intelligence of the
approach of Indians would throw them into a panic.
Under
these circumstances, General
was placed "
in
command
of the North-Wcstern army.
Mad Anthony Wayne,"
as
had distinguished himself by Revolutionary War,
in
Anthony Wayne
he was often his services
called,
during the
which he had fought from the
beginning to the end.
lie
was known
as " the
hero
of Stony Point," he having stormed the fort of that
name, on the Hudson.
him
Washington now selected
to retrieve the fortunes of the
United States
in
TECUMSEH.
84 Indian
her
wars,
and
upon
impressed
his
mind
"that another defeat would be inexpressibly ruinous to the reputation of the
The
placed under
troops
new and
government."
Wayne were
General
Without
undisciplined.
^
sufficient aid,
and
with the greatest labor, he set out to instruct them
and
in military discipline,
them
to practice
especially
shooting at a target, knowing that marksmanship
in
was of the very
He
first
importance
stimulated their emulation
be contended
Indian warfare.
in
by
offering prizes to
He was
for in these rifle matches.
also
very careful to keep whisky, which he called "ardent poison," out of the reach of his camp.
In time they gave their
by
their progress,
were
impatient to
This was
not
yet
ing anxious to
commander much
and the general and be engaged permitted,
make peace
if
active
in
the
eral
overtures for peace were
Wayne, but
successes;
held
the Indians, elated
by the
Canada and
in
sei"vice.
and feeling defeat.
made through Gen-
and encouraged by the
authorities in
army
government be-
possible,
very cautious about risking another great
Many
pleasure
his
by
their brilliant
half-hostile English
the Western posts yet
British, rejected all advances.
Among other forts built by Wayne, on the spot of General Fort Recovery.
one was erected
St. Clair's defeat,
and named
WAYNE'S VICTORY. This
fort Avas attacked in the
body of Indians
large
more than
fifteen
body
summer
of 1794
by a
of various tribes, estimated at
One
hundred.
attack was Tecumseh.
this
85
of ninety riflemen and
of the Sliawnccs in
The savages
assailed a
dragoons,
who were
fifty
starting on their return after having escorted a large
amount of ensued,
in
supplies to the
An
exciting battle
officers
and men were
fort.
which many of the
be
killed before the retreat into the fort could ed.
After the troops had reached the
cers
were given up
for dead,
fort,
effect-
two
offi-
when they were
seen
running from different directions, hotly pursued by the Indians, and notwithstanding the
emy they
reached the
fort in
safety.
fire
of the en-
One
of
them
had escaped by knocking down an Indian who had captured him.
The savages continued the attack for the remainder of the day, losing many of their number by the artillery fire
from the
fort.
carried off their dead
the
exception of a few
by
During the night they the light of torches,
which were too near the
whh fort
be reached.
to
The
attack was resumed the following morning,
but resulted
in the final rout of the Indians.
Wayne had for
called
upon
tlie
governor of Kentucky
two thousand mounted volunteers.
they arrived, under the
command
In Jul}-, 1794,
of Major- General
TECUMSEII.
86 General
Scott.
Wayne now made
demonstrations
which led the enemy to believe that he intended to
moved sud-
attack the villages on the Miami, but he
denly and rapidly into the very heart of the Indian settlements on the
Grand
These lay almost
Glaize.
under the very guns of one of the frontier
by
held
"
We
:
have gained possession of the grand empo-
rium of the
hostile
Indians in the
West without
The very extensive and and gardens show the v/ork
of blood. fields
The margins the
yet
Full of exultation, the gen-
British troops.
wrote
eral
forts
tinued village for a
fields of
Au
hands.
corn
in
Glaize, appear like one con-
number
nor have
;
many
of
of those beautiful rivers, the Miamis of
Lake and the
this place
loss
highly-cultivated
of miles above and below
ever beheld such immense
I
any part of America from Canada
to Florida."
Here
—
State of Ohio
Defiance.
—Wayne
He
" But should
upon
their
war be
own
heads.
insulted with impunity.
God
I
The
built
generously
peace to the Indians.
therefore
now the and named it
part of what
the western
in
a
fort,
is
made one more
In writing of their
choice,
America
To an
this,
that
shall
offer of
he adds blood be
no longer be
all-powerful and just
commit myself and
gallant army."
Indians, assembled in great force, held a coun-
WAYNE'S VICTORY. cil,
Z'J
composed of Miami, Pottawatomie, Delaware,
Shawnee, Chippewa, Ottawa, and Seneca
was proposed
ment -that
The
This was decided
in
the negative.
plan of meeting him next day in battle was then
The Miami
discussed.
opposed "
It
General Wayne's encamp-
to attacic
night.
chiefs.
We
and favored peace.
to this,
have beaten the enemy twice under
commanders,"
said
"
he.
same good fortune always cans are
was much
chief. Little Turtle,
now
by
led
Wc
different
cannot expect the
The Ameriwho never sleeps. The
to attend us.
a chief
night and the day are alike to him
and during
;
all
the time that he has been marching upon our villages,
notwithstanding the watchfulness of our young
men, we have never been able
Think well of it
There
it.
would be prudent
The Shawnee
command strongly
him.
surprise
something whispers me,
listen to his offers
chief Blue Jacket,
of the in
to
is
to
of peace."
who had
entire
Indians in the ensuing battle, was
favor
of giving battle.
His
influence
prevailed over the wiser advice of Little Turtle.
the morning General
Wayne
whether the Indians intended of his
dians
In
advanced, not yet sure to fight or not.
A
body
men were soon fired on, however, by the Inwho were secreted in the woods and tall grass.
Tecumseh, already distinguished party of Shawnees.
At
as a brave, led a
the beginning of the action
TECUMSEH.
S8
he and two of his brothers were
Wayne
in the
advance guard.
found the ground covered with
probably the result of a tornado. ularly favorable to the Indian
fallen trees,
This was partic-
mode
of fighting.
Wayne's own account of the
In General
battle,
says that the Indians " were formed in three
he
lines,
within supporting distance of each other, and extend-
ing nearly two miles, at right angles with the river."
He the
adds
ite
"
soon discovered from the weight of
I
and the extent of
fire,
were
:
their lines, that the
ground, and endeavoring to turn our
therefore gave orders for the second to support the to gain
first,
At
route.
the
advance with
I
advance
and directed Major-General Scott
mounted
volunteers,
same time
I
up, to deliver a close
their backs, followed
by
give time to load again.
by a
circuitous
ordered the front line to
and
trailed arms,
to rouse the Indians
their coverts, at the point of the
when
left flank.
line in
and turn the right flank of the savages, with
the whole of the
from
enemy
in full force in front, in possession of their favor-
bayonet
and well-directed
;
and,
fire
on
a brisk charge, so as not to I
also ordered Captain
Mis
who commanded the legionary cavalry, to left flank of the enemy next the river, and
Campbell, turn the
which afforded a favorable ground act
in.
All
promptitude
tliese ;
for that corps to
orders were obeyed with
spirit
and
but such was the impetuosity of the
WAYNE'S VICTORY. charge by the
first
and Canadian
militia
Hnc of nifantry, that the Indians
and volunteers were driven from
their coverts in so
all
89
short a time, that although
every exertion was used by the ofhcers of the second the legion, and
line of
by Generals
mounted
Barbee, of the
Todd, and
Scott,
gain
volunteers, to
their
proper positions, yet but a part of them could get up season to participate in the action
in
being driven,
two
in
more than
through the thick woods, by
miles,
enemy
the
;
the course of one hour,
less
than
some
lime,
one-half their numbers."
During
when
in
loading his
powder and thus the
Tecumseh fought
this battle
rifle
which pressed him
whom
to
in
he met
party until
he put a bullet
lost the use of his
same time forced
for
retreat
in
gun.
before the lie
by some
at
infantry
This he did with his
front.
another company of
he urged to stand
was
flist,
saying
if
Indians,
any one
would lend him a gun he would show them how to
do
it.
With
a fowling-piece which
him he fought a give ground. a party of
make ed
while, until
compelled
again
Shawnccs
whom
close
and
fired
he
rallied
and induced to
When
the infantry press-
their
muskets
bushes, Tecumseh's party returned the retreated
to
to
This time, while falling back, he met
a stand in a thicket.
them
was handed
the
main
force
of
the
fire,
into
the
and then
Indians.
A
TECUMSEH.
90
brother of Tecumseh's, warrior,
was
killed
named Sauwaseekau,
during the day.
In this famous battle
Tecumsch was
for the first
time opposed to William Henry Harrison, afterward to
a brave
become
who was Harrison
his chief antagonist.
was then a young man of about Tecumseh's own age.
Neither of them had any part
in the
the battle, but both acted their parts well.
mense destruction of Indian
villages
followed the victory of General
and
Wayne.
plan of
An
im-
corn-fields
CHAPTER
X.
THE PEACE AT GREENVILLE— CLUE Fort Miami,
JACKPLT.
the British fort which stood in the
midst of these Indian villages, was a great provocation to the
American of an
the presence
troops,
who knew
English force was
General
chief causes of trouble.
well that
one
of the
Wayne made
connoissance in force under the very walls of the
and the English their
men from
officers
firing
with
on him.
difficulty
a refort,
restrained
Some angry
corre-
spondence ensued between the two commanders, but "
Mad Anthony Wayne
self-control,
"
and he could
was a man of coolness and that
easily see
wise to plunge the infant nation into the mother country. age, there can be
little
this
to
was not
a new war with
And, notwithstanding
his cour-
doubt that the powerful arma-
ment of Fort Miami helped him
To have
in the matter.
it
to a
prudent decision
assailed so strong a
work
as
with the means at his disposal, would have been
have risked
all
the fruits of his victory in a
most
desperate venture.
The Indians were beaten and anxious In
October,
Blue Jacket,
for peace.
the Shawnee, headed
a
TECUMSEir.
92 deputation of to General
chiefs, for the
Wayne.
purpose of bearing a flag
EngHsh agents intercepted
this
flag by inviting the chiefs of the combined army to meet them at the mouth of the Detroit River. Here
they were urged to remain
"Children: Ohio the
United
in hostihty to the
In a speech to them, Governor Simcoe said
States.
is
I
am
your right and
stiU of the I
title.
commandant of Fort Miami
:
opinion that the
have given orders to to fire
on the Amer-
icans
whenever they make
I will
go down to Quebec, and lay your grievances
before the great men.
warded will
to the King,
know
their appearance
From your
again.
thence they will be for-
father.
the result of everything
Next spring you what you and
I
will do."
The English in Canada did not know at what moment hostilities might break out again between England and the United States, and they succeeded by such persuasions
in
delaying the conclusion of peace
between the Indians and the Americans.
During the following
winter, however, parties of
Wyandots, Ottawas, Chippewas, Pottawatomies, Miamis, Delawares, and Shawnees visited
Sacs,
General
Wayne's headquarters, where they signed preliminary treaties of peace, agreeing to ville in
June, with
all
their
meet Wayne
at
Green-
sachems and war-chiefs,
to conclude a definite treaty of peace.
THE PEACE AT GREENVILLE.
93
This treaty of Greenville was of the greatest im-
By
portance to the Western country.
it
the Indians
relinquished large bodies of lands for settlement, and
the peace there established continued so long as the
memory
of Wayne's victory remained fresh in the
During the eighteen years of
minds of the savages.
peace which followed, the Western settlements were so firmly established that, on the rise of
Tccumseh and the Prophet,
position under
beyond the reach of check
for
tlie
the
possibility for
it
new op-
was quite
Indians to
any considerable time the rapid develop-
Tecumseh
ment of the West. treaty of Greenville tlements, and
;
it
heartily hated this
had given repose
had confirmed the
to the set-
of the whites to
title
the land on which new and powerful communities
had grown up.
The in
this
principal speaker on behalf of the
council
was the famous
had commanded the Indian
met Wayne
at Greenville
tardiness in not
joint
on
commander with
St. Clair.
When
he made apologies
coming sooner,
as he
he
for his
had promised,
and gave the most solemn assurance of
We
who
forces in the battle with
Wayne, and who had been a Little Turtle in the attack
Shawnees
Blue Jacket,
his sincerity.
get a curious glimpse of the relations subsisting
between the various
Indian
nations
on the second day of the council
in :
his
speech
" Brothers,
T
TECUMSEH.
94 you
hope seat
in
Wyandots
not
will
this
take
arc our
amiss
You
council.
my
Shawnces
brothers of the other nations present. I
should
next
sit
my the
that
and the Delawares our
uncles,
grandfathers, and that the
proper that
changing
know
all
my
elder
are the It is
therefore
grandfathers and
uncles."
This tribes
fictitious is
actions
among
relationship
between the various
often alluded to in the Indian trans-
quite
themselves.
At
the close of the coun-
Blue Jacket made another speech that brings out
cil
the temporary character of the authority of a war-
He began
chief
brothers present,
:
Elder brother, and you
lay
down
place myself in the rear of for the future will
all
his
my
village chiefs,
and
who
protestations of peaceful
intentions for the rest of his
the troubles fomented is
that commission,
command me."
Notwithstanding
There
my
you see me now present myself
a war- chief to
as
"
life,
he appears again
in
by Tecumseh.
a curious story that illustrates his duplic-
ity.
In the year 1800, he agreed to show to a com-
pany
a valuable
tucky River. did his
mine on the head waters of the KenBut ever
as
their eagerness increased
demands become more
was durin»
all
exorbitant.
As he
these negotiations boardincr at the ex-
pense of the company, he did not seem to be
in
any
ELUE JACKET. hurry to conclude them.
was made, and the delivered,
them.
and
him were escorted
their
bargain
and money were
in
who was
great state to
and children accompanying
their wives
They were
all
at length the
horses, goods,
Blue Jacket and another chief
associated with
Kentucky,
When
95
treated in the most flattering way,
wants were anticipated.
When
they
reached the region of the fabled mine, traveling with great secrecy, he spent
some time
humbling himself with
fasting
in
"pow-wow-ing,"
and prayer,
to get per-
mission from the Great Spirit to reveal the location of this secret wealth.
He
got but a doubtful answer
many days of fruitless search He laid the blame on his eyes, which he said were dimmed by age. He promised on his return home to send his son, who was young, and who knew the exact spot, and would in his
dreams, and after
the mine could not be found.
disclose
it
to the
company.
But the son came
not,
and the great Blue Jacket Mining Company never found
its
mine.
CHAPTER XL DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY — TECUMSEH AS A PEACE- MAKER.
We
again find
Tccumsch engaged
the spring of 1795, on Deer Creek.
he carried on It
is
more
as
hunting, in
in
This occupation
pastime
than as business.
said of him, on the authority of those captives
and half-breeds who knew him
he was not
well, that
avaricious, but that his generosity was proverbial.
The
furs that
he caught or the goods acquired by ex-
change were dispensed with a bountiful hand.
He
did not hunt for the purpose of bettering his fortunes,
but from love for
it
as a
manly and
soldierly
employ-
ment, and as a means of furnishing food to those
who were doubt
this
not able
popularity he
encamped several
to
hunt
themselves.
for
No
generous temper had much to do with the acquired
among
While
his people.
on Deer Creek, one of his brothers and
other
young Shawnees proposed
Tccumseh that they could each three days as he could.
kill
as
to
many
wager deer in
This wager was probably
the result of that vain boasting to which the Indians are greatly addicted, and which
is
not
uncommon
DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY. among
hunters of
challenge, and they
time
the
Tccnmsch accepted
kinds.
all
all
had expired, they
returned
all
The
than
twelve
Tccumseh returned
this
time he was gener-
ally confessed the greatest hunter
Wayne's was
finally
them more
while
From
with about thirty.
with the
what success they
challengers had none of
deer-skins,
the
When
repah-ed to the woods.
skins of the deer in evidence of
had had.
9/
in his nation.
treaty with the Indians of the North- West
concluded
The Indians ceded
at Greenville, in
August, 1795.
time to the whites a large
at this
tract of land in consideration of annuities.
During the summer of 1795,
body of Indian lands was exchange
in
finally
for annuities,
which a large
Tecumseh began
a new band of his own and
He
in
ceded to the whites
Wayne's council
did not attend
Greenville,
at
though he was certainly considered a man of ence
and importance
his
in
treaty Blue Jacket visited told
form
to
to call himself a chief.
nation,
influ-
for after
this
him on Deer Creek and
him the terms on which peace had been made.
In the spring of
moved
1
to the Great
796,
Tecumseh and
Miami.
ed a crop of corn, moving the next
branches of the spring and of corn.
White
summer In 1798,
his followers
In this place foil
Water, where,
they
to the
rais-
upper
during the
of 1797, they raised another crop
Tecumseh received an 5
invitation
TECUMSEH.
98
from the Delawares, part of
White River their
whom
up
Indiana, to take
in
were residing on his quarters in
This invitation was accepted,
neighborhood.
and, hke roving Shawnees that they were, the band
moved ed
Here on the White River he remain-
again.
for several years peacefully occupied in hunting.
During ence
this
time he was steadily extending his influ-
among
band of
difficulties
had grown up between the In-
Mad
on
dians and the settlers
In
River.
1799, a
was held by them near the place where
Urbana now
Shawnee
Tecumseh, who with other
stands.
chiefs
attended
kave been the principal
much admired Dechouset,
council,
this
orator,
and
eloquence.
for its
said " that he found
translate the lofty flights of
was
to his
followers.
Some council
and adding
the different tribes,
which was
The Indian eloquence
is
markable, especially for
to
The
interpreter,
very
difficult to
Shawnee language
his
mother tongue."
often very striking
its
said
speech was
Tecumseh, although he
as well acquainted with the
as with the French,
it
is
his
and
re-
poetical element, which
is
well suited to " children of nature," as they are styled.
Single sentences in
the
speeches of Indian orators
often sparkle like gems, as for instance the saying of
a
Winnebago
chief,
portraying
the wrongs of
his
people in an address to a government commissioner.
DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY. "The very
leaves
tears of pity
on us as we walk beneath."
99
"drop
of the forest," he cried,
In 1803, the inhabitants of the Scioto Valley
thrown into a panic whicli quence
to
settlers, a
Captain Herrod, one of the
allay.
man
who had no lieved
confidence
by some
to
Indian
to
fidelity it
the
was be-
a grudge against the murdered inhabitants of the Scioto Val-
however, residing
moved
in
have been the deed of a certain
The
Captain Herrod. ley,
This event put the whites,
great consternation, though
man who had
white
first
greatly beloved, was found dead and
scalped in the woods.
treaty, into
were
took Tccumsch's elo-
it
together, and in
five
and
many
fifteen
miles apart,
instances built block-
houses for protection, while the citizens of Chillicothe collected for the purpose of fortifying the town.
A
wicked and wanton
retaliation,
some white men, greatly increased willaway, a of the
Shawnee
whites,
game and
habits, brave
the panic.
Wa-
chief and an unwavering friend
was one day returning from Old
Town, where he had been off his
attempted by
and
skins.
for the
purpose of trading
He was
an Indian of sober
intelligent,
and well-known among
the whites.
He was met tler
in
appropriately
Wolf had
the
trail
by an
old hunter and set-
named Wolf and two men whom
hired to po with
him
to his farm.
Wawil-
TECUMSEH.
lOO
laway shook hands with them after their health
then proposed
and that of
cordially,
and asked
their families.
Wolf
exchange guns with the Indian.
to
While they were examining each
other's guns with
reference to an exchange, he secretly took the prim-
ing from that of the chief and returned
would not
trade.
saying he
it,
The white men then asked
if
the
Indians had begun war. "
"
said
are
now
No, no
white
men
!
Wolf asked him had
On
all if
Captain
killed
much
Wawillaway, " the Indians and one
—
all
brothers."
he had heard that the Indians Herrod.
Wawillaway seemed
surprised at this story, and doubted
being assured, however, that
was
it
its
truth.
true,
he
said,
"
May
be whisky, too much drink, was the cause
of the quarrel." " it
Herrod had no quarrel with the Indians, nor
known by whom he was "
May
killed," said
be some bad white
all
kill
Captain Her-
Wawillaway now shook
rod," suggested the Indian.
hands
man
is
Wolf
round and turned to go, when he was shot
from behind and mortally wounded by the dastardly
assailants,
The brave Shawnee turned upon his killed one of them, and wounded Wolf and
the other
man
white man.
severely before he died.
occurrence became
known
it
greatly
When
this
augmented the
DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY.
DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY. excitement.
The whites
lOI
one direction, and
fled in
the Indians, equally alarmed, in another.
In consequence of this distressing excitement
prominent
citizens
Greenville.
some
rode into the Indian country near
Here they found a
large
A
and among them Tecumseh.
body of
council
Indians,
was held
with these Indians, and the whites frankly related the circumstances connected with the death of
knowledge of these
at
with the white tions
in
things,
by the
A
agreed to return
On
this chief
white man,
their inten-
had been made
these peaceful declara-
settlers.
day was appointed when
among
at last
men and make
person to the
the people.
and declared
treaty which
Tecumseh
that place.
Herrod
The Indians denied having any
and Wawillaway.
tion of standing
all
their arrival, a
should address
who had been
An
the Indians, acted as interpreter.
mense throng gathered
to hear
all
a prisoner
im-
Tecumsch's speech,
which was, even when translated,
full
of telling and
eloquent passages.
He
spoke
in the strongest
relations existing
language of the friendly
between the Indians and their white
brethren, and of the determination
Indians to abide that
it
by
would be kept
that brotherly love
on the part of the
He hoped
this treaty forever.
inviolate
would be
time between the white
by both
as long
man and
parties,
and
and
lasting as
the Indian.
When
TECUMSEH.
T02
Tccumseh
closed, the
sachems shook hands to ex-
press the friendship and fellowship existing between
After this speech of Tecumseh,
the two people.
whose
tall,
impressed
commanding' figure and noble dignity
who saw
all
him, the people returned con-
tented to their quiet homes.
It
seems a pity that
Tecumseh should ever have held other views about the treaty at
Greenville,
than
those
expressed in
Chillicothe. It
the right and duty of the nearest of kin
is
among
the Indians, to
kill
ative, unless
he purchase
upon by the
family.
the m.urderer of his
life
tlieir rel-
at a price agreed
The two sons of Wawillaway He, vowed vengeance upon Wolf. however, moved to Kentucky, and employed an had
therefore
agent to make terms with the young men.
This jj
agent finally agreed to furnish each son with a horse, a new saddle and
on their
part,
bridle,
and a new
rifle,
and they,
though not without much debate and
agreed to bury the tomahawk and make
hesitation,
peace with the murderer and
his family forever.
At
the time fixed for the fulfillment of this con-
tract,
a large gathering of people assembled at Old
Town ley, at
to see the Indian ceremonies.
Rev.
J.
B. Fin-
one time an Indian missionary, thus describes
the scene
:
"A
were Wolf and
hollow square was formed,
his horses
in
which
and trappings and the two
i
i|
|
DEATH OF WAWILLAWAY. The
young men. claim to the
life
Indians,
in
relinquishing their
of the murderer, raised their hands
toward heaven invoking the Great
Him
that to
by
the death of their father.
full
father to the grave
him
and made them orphans.
smoked with him
of the
Great
During to
this
in
Then
the pres-
They remained
Spirit.
friends ever afterward,
Ohio
their beloved
as a brother, they lighted the calumet,
or pipe of peace, and
ence
and took Wolf by the hand
same bloody hand which sent
saluting
The
In token of their for-
to tears.
giveness, they advanced
the
life
of the most impressive solemnity, and
many were moved
—
Spirit, declaring
alone they transferred the blood and
of Wolf, forfeited
scene was
IO3
good
visited each other."
and often
year a stalwart Kentuckian came to
explore
the
lands
on
]\Iad
River.
He
stopped over night at the house of Captain Abner Barrett, living
He was
on the head waters of Buck Creek.
evidently startled to hear that there were
Indians encamped in the immediate neighborhood.
Soon
after
learning
this,
the door of the dwelling
was suddenly opened and the noble form of Tecumseh appeared.
He walked
dignity and looked around
soon
lit
in
with his usual stately
him
in silence.
upon the alarmed Kentuckian,
ing the greatest agitation.
His eye
who was show-
Tecumseh regarded him
a moment, and then turning to Barrett exclaimed,
TECUMSEH.
104 "
A
big baby
!
a big baby
to the frightened fellow
" !
He
then walked up
and patting him gently on
the shoulder repeated contemptuously, " Big baby !
big baby " increasing the alarm of the poor man, to the great
amusement of those
present.
CHAPTER THE
RISE OF
The immense
THE PROPHET.
tract of land
Mississippi rivers,
now
XII.
between the Ohio and
divided into
many
states,
con-
In
1801,
Northwestern Territory.
stituted the old
the State of Ohio was formed out of
this,
and the
Of
remainder was called the Indiana Territory.
William
territory
in the territory, first
appointed
There were then but three settlements
governor.
The
Henry Harrison was
this
and these were widely separated.
was on a grant of one hundred and
fifty
thousand acres at the Falls of the Ohio, made to General George Rogers
Clark's
troops
successful
the second, the old French settlement at Vincenncs,
and the
third, the old settlement
and Cahokia on the
between Kaskaskia
Mississippi.
The whole
of this
vast territory then contained but five thousand people. first
Tecumsch's brother, the Prophet, now
parts of his is
The
time comes into notice. life
were passed
only prominent during
prophet served scheme.
to
for the
and
in entire obscurity.
latter
He
the time his notoriety as a
further
The Prophet
earlier
is
5*
Tecumseh's ambitious
called
by many
different
TECUMSEH.
I06
names, or modifications of the same name.
His
Loud
Voice,
name was Laulewasikaw,
earlier
or the
possibly in reference to his self-assertion and boastfulness, as
Long
much
as to his really stentorian voice.
before he divulged
cumseh may have meditated
men
the red
to his followers,
it
his plan
for
Te-
gathering
into a great confederacy, driving
the
whites back across the Ohio, or at least arresting their further progress, and thus preventing that extinction
of the Indian race which he so shall
we regard him
ambition success
dreaded.
Or,
an ambitious leader whose
as
grew with
much
his
increasing
influence
and
?
In 1805, a part of the Shawnees were living at the
Tawa
villages,
Wishing
head of the Auglaize River.
at the
to unite their scattered nation,
they sent a
deputation to Tecumseh's party on White River, and to another party of
inviting
them
to
Shawnees on the Mississinnewa,
move
join their brethren.
to the
Tawa towns and
vited resolved to accept the invitation.
mediately set out ville
there
Both of the companies thus
for the
Tawa
villages,
in-
They im-
but at Green-
the two parties met, and through
Laulewasi-
kaw's influence they decided to remain at that place. It
seems
wasikaw
number
likely that
Tecumseh was behind Laule-
in this, seeing in
of his followers.
it
a chance to increase the
Laulewasikaw impressed
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET. who knew him
all
with his craftiness
;
10/
Tecumseh's
shrewdness must have been of a much deeper and
more
far-seeing kind, and
it
was hidden under a
noble dignity and reserve.
About
by
time there died an old Shawnee Indian
this
name
the
Feathers, "
of Penagashega, or The-Change-of-
who had
for
some years been engaged
the respectable calling of a prophet"
kaw,
who had
seen the old prophet's influence with
the Indians for
some
time,
now began
himself to re-
ceive communications from the Great Spirit,
nounced himself a prophet Change-of- Feathers-
name,
that
in
Laulewasi-
in
and an-
place of the departed
Prophet-wise, he assumed a
of Tenskwatawa, which signifies
Open Door." This name of deliverance to
his,
new
"The
pointed him out as a means
people, and indicated the
new
way he undertook to show forth in his teachings. The Prophet is not an uncommon institution among the Indians. Every body of Indians has its medicine-man.
somewhat higher than the man, who exorcist,
is
however, seems
Prophecy,
to
be
calling of the medicine-
a sort of juggler, superstition-monger,
and curer of diseases by means of " pow-
wows," mysterious incantations, and solemn humbuggery.
A
prophet adds to
a seer and a moral- reformer
We
this the character of
among
his people.
have already mentioned that more than a cen-
TECUMSEII.
Io8
the times of
tiny before
Tccumseh
Conestoga, part of
whom
them a venerable
prophetess,
them
During
Soangageshick,
took with
they paid
Schoolcraft's residence
the Chippewas, he found the or "
Indians at
whom they and to whom
their councils,
to all
great respect.
the
were Shawnecs, had among
widow of a man named
Strong Sky,"
who
followed the
The
profession of prophetess, or jossakeed.
keed enters a lodge which
is
among
jossa-
closed up, and from this
utters oracular things, like an ancient pythoness or a
modern " trance-medium."
Of another
Schoolcraft says that he was " a
tall,
prophet,
not portly, red-
mouthed and pucker-mouthed man, with an unusual amount of cunning and jossakeed or seer."
ham Young, and
and exercising an
and reputation
This man, Hke
Mohammed,
The
better
rolls
sea-shell.
intricate,
The white
smeared with white black surface.
I
Brig-
seer's
his
lodge,
of bark carefully and skillfully
and stained black
which was
as a
im.press
to
he " had an elaborately-built
sheathed with united,
his skill
other prophets, practiced polygamy,
having three wives. clients,
sagacity,
by
unlimited popularity
inside.
resembled
Its
the
construction,
whorls
prints of a man's clay,
of a
hand, as
if
were impressed on the
have never witnessed so complete a
piece of Indian architectural structure, nor one
worthy of the name of a temple of darkness."
more
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET. That the curious reader seer's office
was
may
understand what the
at the time of the setting
may
109
up of
"
The
how far the office of prophet was modified by him, we give another inHe stance. One Rue was made captive in 1781. Open Door," and
was
and meditating plans of
Detroit,
at
see
During the drunken
escape.
revels of the tribes gathered at
the trading-house there, an Indian lost a purse con-
Great excitement
taining ninety dollars in silver.
ensued
;
there were
many
among them, and
tions
accusations and recrimina-
the tribes
became
so far exas-
perated toward each other as to threaten the use of
when
knives and tomahawks,
made to
that there
the announcement was
was a prophet present who belonged
none of the bands engaged
in the
was immediately established, while
wrangle.
this
Order
prophet un-
Very
dertook to detect the thief by conjuration.
solemnly he unrolled a deer-skin, which he spread
upon the ground with the emptied upon
drew from this
it
a
his belt.
little
bag of
With
smoothly upon the
flesh side up.
a
skin.
fine
He
then
sand which he
magic wand he spread
The crowd were now The prophet faces.
watching with eager, awe-struck
gazed steadily
at
the sand for several moments, and
then muttered some inarticulate words. other long look, he exclaimed: the stolen treasure."
"
I
Taking an-
see the thief
The prophet was pressed
to
and tell
no
TECUMSEH,
who
the culprit was, but this he benevolently refused
to do, declaring that he feared that the information
would lead
to the extermination of
before the matter ended.
disastrous as
might produce
He
he foresaw.
was a member of a
harmony among panions
now
Rue and
com-
his
resolved to question the fortune-teller
and,
private,
but
em-
thus shrewdly restored
the Indians.
They
regarding their friends at home. in
guilty,
other than those
tribe
He
broiled in the quarrel.
results so
however, that
said,
none of those who had been accused were it
tribes
was very improper, he
It
said, to divulge a fact that
one or more
paying the
around the deer-skin.
fee,
After
seated
a
visited
him
themselves
long silence
the
prophet announced that he saw Rue's family passing
through the door-yard, and gave their number, sex,
and appearance so well
age,
him a
lieve
"
effect
eyes. "
it
intend to
to be-
will
make your
escape, and
you
soon," said the soothsayer, raising his
Looking again
You
Rue
real wizard.
You two
will
as to incline
into the
meet many
trials
sandy
future,
and hardships
he
said,
in pass-
ing over so wild a district of country, inhabited by so
many
hostile nations of Indians.
starve to death, but about the time
up
all
hope of finding game
famished .condition, succor
You
almost
you have given
to sustain
will
will
you
in
come when you
your least
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET. expect
I
it.
what
;
plenty
of
game, and
it is
can't clearly see.
I
After that you will find
be of the male sex.
It will
some wild
see dimly the carcass of
animal taken as game
1 1 I
arrive
will
safely
at
your
homes."
These things are
have indeed happened
said to
to
the fugitive captives pretty nearly according to the Indian's prophecy.
But Laulewasikaw took hints from the missionaries,
did not mutter from a darkened lodge, nor
He was
tunes with sand.
Shawnee prophet gath-
ered together quite an assembly of his
many Wyandots,
Ottawas, and
Wapakonetta, on the Auglaize River, Ohio, where he
new
made them
own
nation,
Senecas, in
at
Northern
a speech declaring his
In this address he harangued against
vocation.
witchcraft, a thing
He
Indians.
tell for-
a preaching prophet.
In November, 1805, our
with
He
and got many things from the Shakers.
said
very much that
believed in
those
all
who
by
the
practiced
it
or remained bewitched would not go to heaven or see the Great Spirit.
ness most vehemently.
become and the
He next denounced drunkenHe said that since he had
a prophet he had gone first
the Devil.
place he
Here he saw
with flames of
fire
came all
issuing
to
up
into the clouds,
was the dwelling of
who had
died drunkards,
from their mouths.
He
TECUMSEH.
112
admitted that previous to
this
he had himself been a
drunkard, but his vision had frightened him so that
He
he drank no more.
then preached with a good
deal of earnestness against Indian
women
intermarry-
ing with the whites, saying this was one of the causes
He
of their unhappiness.
property
proposed community of
—an adjustment of things which would
have suited that which
He
this indolent reformer.
Tecumseh
duty of the young
tions in the dress
preached
so constantly practiced
at all times
ishing the aged and
also
infirm.
well
— the
supporting and cher-
He denounced
innova-
and habits of the red man, and
appealed to their national pride by boasting of the superiority of the
Shawnees over any other
He
those
promised
obey
his
to
injunctions
all
who would
follow
nation.
him and
the comfort and happiness
enjoyed by their ancestors before the advent of the whites
among
them.
He
closed
by announcing the
power which had been given him by the Great to confound his enemies, to cure
all
diseases,
Spirit
and to
prevent death either from sickness or on the battlefield.
From
this
opening speech we can judge of the
nature of his teachings. trines
We
can see that his doc-
were many of them wild and
fanatical,
while
the denunciations of drunkenness and of the assumption
of the habits and dress of the whites
by
the
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET. Indians agreed with the well
The
cumseh.
shown
his
in
said to
and though
;
manner was more
a
better face
his
not attractive,
in his portrait is certainly
any other Indian.
mind
to excite the superstitious
The Prophet was even
savage.
said that his
He of
qualities
graceful than that of
Without Tecumseh's
dignity, he
certainly possessed his
His
brother.
was neither courageous,
main
characteristics
is
truthful,
He
nor above cruelty.
however, very probable that he believed even
more firmly
As
is
none of the noble
were cunning and a certain showy smartness.
is,
as it is
have possessed more persuasion and plausi-
bility.
It
is
claims to supernatural power, which
speaker than his brother
shown
opinions of Te-
natural boastfuhicss of the Prophet
were well calculated of the
known
II3
in
himself than did any of his followers.
often the case with impostors, he
ceeded
in
may have
suc-
deceiving himself more completely even
Some
of his preaching
shows the influence of the white
man's opinions
than he deceived his fellows.
upon him.
believed that he picked up
It is
scraps of his system from the Shakers, their advent into
Ohio
of Laule-
close of his administration, to his
after the
predecessor, ex-President
Wabash Prophet
who made
at this time.
President Jefferson wrote his opinion
wasikaw
some
is
Adams.
He
more rogue than
said
:
"
fool, if to
The be a
1
TECUMSEH.
1
rogue
is
not the greatest of
notice while
was
I
all
rose to
and became,
The
inquiry was
of course, a proper subject for me.
made
He
follies.
in the administration,
with diligence.
His declared object was the
reformation of his red brethren, and their return to their pristine in constant
manners of
He
living.
pretended to be
communication with the Great
he was instructed by
Him
Spirit
make known
to
by Him
dians that they were created
that
;
to the In-
distinct
from
the whites, of different natures, for different purposes,
and placed under
different circumstances,
their nature
and
from
ways of the whites
all
the
destinies
opinions of their forefathers
adapted to
they must return
that
;
and
to the habits
they must not eat the
;
and
flesh of hogs, of bullocks, of sheep, &c., the deer
the buffalo having been created for their food
;
they
must not make bread of wheat, but of Indian corn
;
they must not wear linen nor woollen, but must dress like their fathers, in
the skins and furs of animals
they must not drink ardent
spirits
member whether he extended gun and gunpowder, I
concluded from
enveloped to lead
all
in favor of the
this
that he
in their antiquities,
back
;
and
I
do not
re-
his inhibitions to the
bow and was a
arrow.
visionary,
and vainly endeavoring
his brethren to the fancied beatitudes of
their golden age.
of his making
I
many
thought there was
little
danger
proselytes from the habits and
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET.
I
i
5
comforts they had learned from the whites, to the hardships and privations of savagism, and no great
harm
if
British
he
But
did.
his followers increased until the
thought him worth corrupting, and found him
corruptible.
I
suppose his views were then changed
but his proceedings
in
consequence of them were
and are therefore un-
after I left the administration,
known
to
me
;
nor have
were the particular
acts
I
on
ever been informed what his part
an actual commencement of
which produced
hostilities
on
ours.
I
have no doubt, however, that the subsequent proceedings are but a chapter apart, like that of
and Lord Liverpool,
in
Henry
book of the Kings of
the
England."
There can be no doubt that the Prophet
With
sought the good of his people. deception,
superstition,
and
craft,
all
really
his vanity,
he no doubt be-
lieved in the beneficial tendency of the measures he
advocated. that he
This
is
quite consistent with the opinion
had ambitious projects
acter of a prophet,
in
assuming the char-
and that Tecumseh's gradually
developing schemes had
much
to
do with the Proph-
et's plans.
His influence soon began to show
young men and persons of
Many whom were
itself
followers gathered around him, most of
wild
and adventurous
tendencies from the various tribes.
It is stated that
1
TECUMSEH.
16
they entirely abstained from strong drink, and
many
in
other ways practiced their leader's precepts.
Opposition was naturally made to the innovations of the
new prophet by
the neighboring chiefs,
that he sought to undermine their power.
who
felt
An
in-
was now introduced by Tenskwatawa.
quisition
A
course of fanatical persecution for witchcraft was be-
gun, shocking indeed
only too Salem,
in
The if
in its cruelty
and
injustice,
but
much resembling something which occurred among people of our own enlightened race. was so great that
superstition of the Indians
some
the Prophet denounced
chief
who opposed
him, as a witch, a loss of reputation and perhaps of life
Several Delawares were
ensued.
An
among
the
first
woman was burned to death, being called upon many times by the Indians to give up As she was dying, her charm and medicine bag. victims.
old
she exclaimed that her grandson ing had
it
He was
camp.
He
confessed
pursued, that
charm, and by means of air,
it
who was
tied,
out hunt-
and brought into
he had borrowed the
had flown through the
over Kentucky to the banks of the Mississippi
and back again between insisted that
was chief
twilight
and bedtime.
finally released.
The
following day a very old
named Tetcboxti was sentenced
held for
He
he had returned the charm, however, and
the
purpose,
at
at a council
which he was
present.
THE RISE OF THE PROPHET. Knowing
there was no escape, he arrayed himself in
his finest clothes
of his
11/
own
and calmly
assisted in the building
In consideration of his age,
funeral pile.
the white-haired chief was treated mercifully, being killed before his
er " called
An
body was burned.
Joshua
— probably
next met the same
a Christian convert
A
fate.
old " preach-
council
—
was held over
the wife of Teteboxti and his nephew, Billy Patter-
The
son.
praying.
latter died like a Christian, singing
Preparations were then
when her
ing of Teteboxti's wife,
man
made
brother, a
young
of twenty, suddenly started up and bravely led
He
her by the hand out of the house. the
and
burn-
for the
amazed
council,
and
to the Prophet) " has killing
each
said
"
The
Devil," (alluding
come amongst
other."
He
then
returned to
us,
and we are
reseated
himself.
This seemed to awaken the Indians to a realization of what they were doing, and put a stop for a time to further persecutions it
among
the Delawares, while
gave a check to the influence of the Prophet.
CHAPTER
XIII.
THE BAND AT GREENVILLE—THE PROPHET IN COUNCIL. •
As
soon as Governor Harrison heard of
craft delusion,
this witch-
he sent to the Delaware Indians the
following " speech " or
letter,
by a
special
messen-
ger:—
"My Children My heart is my eyes are dissolved in tears at You have been
reached me.
wisdom above
with
filled
:
grief,
celebrated
for
the tribes of the red people
all
inhabit this great island.
and
the news which has
Your fame
your
who
as warriors has
extended to the remotest nations, and the wisdom of
your
chiefs has gained
fathers from
you the appellation of grand-
cause, then, docs
it
yourselves with guilt
you have
straight road
you have departed
proceed that
from the wise counsels of your
steps
From what
the neighboring tribes.
all
?
My
taken, and
and covered
fathers
children, tread
endeavor
to
which you have abandoned.
crooked, and thorny one which you arc
back the
regain the
The dark, now pur-
suing will certainly lead to endless woe and misery.
But who
is
this
pretended prophet
who
dares to speak
THE BAND AT GREENVILLE. name
in the Is
of the great Creator
he more wise and virtuous
II9
Examine him.
?
you are your-
tlian
he should be selected to convey to you
selves, that
God
the orders of your
Demand
?
him some
of
proofs at least of his being the messenger of the Deity.
If
God
has really employed
him,
doubtless authorized
him
may be known and
received as a prophet.
him
really a prophet, ask of still,
the
moon
to alter
to flow, or the
he
dead
does these things,
its
commands you in
them
out.
who
offend
power of nature not sweep
He
directed
away
if
My
?
The above
is
If
Is
!
then the Master to
punish those
the thunder and the
And
children,
He
could
\\'ith
do not believe
Creator of mankind
this
who
authorized to point
is
your own
you pursue will
is
that the Great
from the earth a whole nation
to destroy
His vengeance
you
command ?
great and good
you
doubt that "
tells
to punish with death those
His
one motion of his arm that the
from their graves.
Has He not
at
he
you may believe that he has
employ mortal man
Him ?
If
to cause the sun to stand
Wretched delusion
of Life obliged to
has
course, the rivers to cease
magic, and that he
deal
He
perform miracles that he
to rise
been sent from Cod. Spirit
to
flesh
;
has
and do not
abominable wickedness
overtake you and crush you.
addressed to you
the Seventeen Fires.
I
now speak
to
in
the
name
of
you from my-
TECUMSEII.
I20 self,
I
who
as a friend
wishes nothing more sincerely than
you prosperous and happy.
to see
Clear your eyes,
beseech you, from the mist which surrounds them.
No
longer be imposed upon by the arts of an im-
Drive him from your town, and
postor.
and harmony old
men and women
let
peace,
Let your poor
prevail amongst you.
sleep in quietness,
and banish
from their minds the dreadful idea of being burnt
own
and countrymen.
alive
by
their
you
to
stop your bloody career; and
friends
if
I
charge
you value
the friendship of your great father, the President;
you wish
to preserve the
teen Fires, that It
let
me
Fires "
good opinion of the Seven-
hear by the return of the bearer to follow
my
explain that
by
you have determined necessary to
is
meant the United
is
States,
advice." " Seventeen
which consisted
at that time of seventeen states, or council-fires
mode
the Indian
There
is
in
of speaking.
no evidence that Tecumseh was
of this persecution for witchcraft, asserts that
if
he was opposed to
it,
in favor
and one authority though
it
is
not
unlikely that he was quite willing to serve his ends
by the Prophet's The Prophet Shawnces
lost
many
at this tim.e, there
of that nation cessful in
reign of terror. followers
among
the
being only about forty
left in his village.
He was
not so suc-
gaining an ascendency among the Miamis
THE BAND AT GREENVILLE. as he
Dclawares, in whose midst he
was with the
had hvcd
some
for
121
During the year i8o6,
years.
however, the Prophet and Tecumseh were estabhshed at Greenville,
where they were
Indians, so that they
visited
again greatly augmented the
strength of their band of followers. exercised his
gifts
by very many
The Prophet
with diligence, seeing visions and
dreaming dreams.
It is
probable that he had heard
beforehand from the whites of the great eclipse of the
sun which was
to
occur in
Governor
i8o6.
Harrison's challenge that he should
work wonders
was an unfortunate one,
is
for
miracles
wrought among
people.
He
nothing
easier
ignorant and
than
credulous
boldly announced to his followers that
on a certain day he would make darkness come over the sun as proof of his supernatural power.
Accord-
ingly at the time appointed, the Prophet, standing in the midst of his party at midday, cried out,
grew dark, "Did
not prophesy truly?
I
darkness has shrouded the sun course,
made
" !
when
all
Behold!
This incident, of
a great impression on the Indian mind,
and established the
belief in his right to the claim of
intercourse with the Great Spirit.
About on the
April, 1807, great alarm began to be
frontier.
At
this
felt
time the Prophet had gath-
ered near four hundred Indians around him.
These
savages were greatly excited by religious fanaticism,
6
TECUMSEH.
122
and were ready,
it
was believed, to
which the
prise into
eral efforts
join
any enter-
brotliers should lead them.
Sev-
were made to learn the objects of the
leaders in gathering together so
without success.
many
warriors, but
Tlie Indian agent at Fort
Wayne,
William Wells, sent Anthony Shane, a half-blood
Shawnee, to them, with a request that Tecumseh and the Prophet, with two of their other chiefs, should
him
visit
to
at
them a
letter
great father,
A
in
order that he might read
which he had just received from their President of the United States.
tlie
council was called, and Shane delivered his mes-
Tecumseh, who seems now
sage.
the
Fort Wayne,
first
have
to
risen to
place in the band, leaving his brother to
play Aaron to his Moses, arose, without consulting
any other member of the
council,
assumption of kingly dignity,
said, "
Wayne, and
tell
Captain Wells
tliat
and, with an
Go
on the spot appointed by the Great and
is
Spirit
to
Fort
kindled
above
he has anything to communicate to me,
if
must come from
back
my fire
here.
I
shall
expect him
in
six
lie
days
this time,"
With
this
message Shane was obliged to return to
the Indian agent, who, not feeling inclined to wait on
Tecumseh
in person, sent
Shane back
at the appoint-
ed time with a copy of the President's communication.
The substance
of
tliis
was that they were
THE BAND AT GREENVILLE.
1
remove from where they were
desired to
23
established,
being within the hmits of the purchase from the
it
Indians.
they would
If
move beyond
the bounda-
agreed upon at the treaty of Greenville,
ries
assist-
ance would be given them by the government until
they were established
in
their
new home.
This was
carefully interpreted to the Indians at a council
all
which was assembled
for the purpose.
Tecumseh's dignity was much offended that Cap-
He
arose,
to his followers, deeply excited,
made
Wells had not visited him
tain
and turning
them
in person.
a long, fiery, and eloquent speech, in which he
spoke of the
injuries the red
men had
received from
He
the whites and of their constant encroachments. closed with these words
:
"
These lands are ours
one has a right to remove first
owners
;
will remain.
on which to
As
light our fires,
He
any."
paused a moment, and then turning with dig-
my
Fires, has
a
man
Spirit
red people
will his
nified indifference to the messenger,
" If
no the
and here
to boundaries, the Great
above knows no boundaries, nor
know
;
the Great Spirit above has appointed
this place for us
we
us,
because we were
father,
he said
the President of the
:
Seventeen
anything more to say to me, he must send
of note as his messenger.
I
will
ther intercourse with Captain Wells."
hold no fur-
TECUMSEII.
124
The Prophet then and defiant on
his
rose and spoke in the
same
own account:
Why
"
does not the President
of the Seventeen Fires send us the greatest his nation
?
can talk to him
I
him and me
ness between
my
the sun under
lofty
doing also some personal bragging
strain,
feet
—
I
nay, more,
;
in
can bring dark-
and what white
;
man
can bring
I
man
can do
this?"
The and
among
stir
at the
many
of
last
as fifteen
May
was estimated that so
it
hundred Indians had passed and
Wayne
passed Fort
the Indians Avent on increasing,
on
visits to
the Prophet.
re-
IMany
There was
of these were from very remote nations.
a great assembling of councils; messengers were sent
from tribe to
tribe with pipes
and
it
was
afoot.
English agents were also
very active object of
in assisting in
wampum,
all
was kept
this
mated by those
known
to
be
the excitement, while the entirely secret from the
Arhericans and friendly Indian
the
belts of
was evident that some uncommon movement
and
chiefs.
It
was
esti-
familiar with Indian affairs, that in
month of August
the
Prophet and Tecumsch
had gained the leadership of seven or eight hundred Indians at P'ort these were
These
Wayne and
armed with new
facts
coming
to the
ernor of Ohio, he sent
Greenville.
Mau)^ of
rifles.
knowledge of the gov-
Thomas Worthington and
THE BAND AT GREENVILLE. Duncan McArthur
1
25
to Greenville to hold a council
with the Prophet and Tecumseh, in order to inquire
what was
their intention
in
assembling so large a
of Indians within the limits of the land they
body
had already ceded
to
United States
the
in
1795.
These commissioners were courteously received, and a general council of the Indians was called, at which
Stephen Ruddell, who had lived among them seventeen
years
and understood the Shawnee tongue,
acted as interpreter.
The governor's
letter
was
first
read and interpreted in the Shawnee, Pottawatomie,
The commissioners then
and Chippewa languages.
made
a speech referring to the relations existing be-
tween the Indians and the United States Great Britain's policy toward the portance
latter,
of the Indians remaining
in the past,
and the im-
neutral in the
event of a war between these two nations.
The it
council
was continued the following day, when
was announced that the Shawnee
who was
authorized
by
all
chief,
Blue Jacket,
the Indians present to
speak for them, would answer the commissioners. " Brethren,"
said
Blue Jacket,
You
"
we
are
who heard you
yesterday.
lation, as far as
we and our connections can
who
are as follows
:
will
seated
get a true regive
it,
Shawnees, Wyandots, Pottawat-
omies, Tawas, Chippewas, Winnepaus, Malomincse,
Malockese, Secawgoes, and one more from the north
TECUMSEH.
126
Brethren, you see
of the Chippewas.
you who now speak
sitting before
"
About
which the
and
all
men
eleven
days ago we had a council at
tribe of
Wyandots, the elder brother of
the red people, spoke and said, fire,
these
all
to you.
sat
around
God had
kindled a
we
In this council
it.
talked
over the treaties with the French and the Americans.
The Wyandots
said, the
Charleston
(S.
When
side.
No man was
C).
the Americans
to pass
came
it
from either
to settle
over the
the English told the Indians to unite and drive
line,
off the French, until the
British
war came on between the
and Americans, when
King George, by and
French formerly marked a
along the Alleghany Mountains, southerly to
line
drive the
it
was
told
his officers, directed
them that
them
to unite
Americans back.
"After the treaty of peace between the English and the Americans,
the
summer
before
Wayne's army
came
out, the English held a council
dians,
and told them
if
they would unite as one man,
they might surround the Americans of
and destroy them
fire
further in the council. like to
all.
We
like
deer
in a ring
The Wyandot spoke see,
said
he, there
is
be war between the English and our white
brethren, the Americans.
wars of
Let us unite and consid-
we have undergone from interfering They have often promthe English.
er the sufferings in the
with the In-
THE TROPIIET ised to help us,
and
army
that
stand the
English
you
let
It
at last,
;
you
12/
when we could not
came upon
fort for refuge, the
in
IN COUNCIL.
us,
and went to the
English told
are painted too
with-
much,
us,
my
I
*
cannot
children.'
was then we saw the English dealt treacherously
with
We
us.
We
do not
Let
us,
of the
my
now see them going to war again. know what they are going to fight for.
brethren, not
our
was the speech
Wyandot
" Further, the little
interfere,
Wyandot Shawnee
brother, the
brothers
little
all
Now
speak to you,
at Greenville,
my
and to you
You appear
around.
Greenville to serve the verse.
said, I
to
be
at
Supreme Ruler of the Uni-
send forth your speeches to
brethren far around us, and
let
our
all
us unite to seek for
that which shall be for our eternal welfare, and unite
ourselves
in
a
band
of
brotherhood.
perpetual
These, brethren, are the sentiments of
who
sit
around you
elder brother, the their sentiments.
;
they
all
adhere to
Wyandot, has It is
all
said,
men
the
what the
and these are
not that they are afraid of
their white brethren, but that they desire peace
harmony, and not that
their white brethren
and
could
put them to great necessity, for their former arms
were bows and arrows by which they got
their liv-
ing."
The commissioners made some explanations
in
TECUMSEH.
128
They were then why the
reply to the speech of Blue Jacket,
would
told that the Prophet
Indians "
He
had established
tell
the reasons
themselves at
Greenville.
then proceeded to inform us," say the commis-
sioners in their report, " that about three years since
he became convinced of the error of
his
ways, and
that he v/ould be destroyed from the face of the earth if
he did not amend them
known
to
;
that
him what he should do
it
was soon
after
be right; that
to
time he constantly preached to his red
from that
brethren the miserable situation they were in by nature,
and endeavored
must change all
convince them that they
to
their lives, live honestly,
their dealings
;
and be
just in
kind toward one another and their
white brethren; affectionate toward their families
away
and slandering, and serve the
lying
Spirit in the
way He had
of war again
;
tomahawk
to
that the
go
to
pointed out
never think
;
Lord did not give them the
war with one another.
listen to
His red
Tawa
town,
him, but persecuted him.
This
brethren, the chiefs of the Shawnees at
would not
put
;
Great
produced a division
in
the nation
;
those
who
ad-
hered to him separated themselves from their brethren at
he
Tawa town, removed now was, and where
the above doctrine to see them.
They
all
with him, and settled where
he had constantly preached the strangers
who came
to
did not remove to this place be-
THE PROPHET cause
was
it
IN COUNCIL.
129
was a pretty place or very valuable,
neither, but because
it
was revealed
to
for
it
him that
the place was a proper one to establish his doctrines that he
meant
were not
to
adhere to them while he lived
;
they
own, nor were they taught him by
his
man, but by the Supreme Ruler of the Universe that his future
life
should prove to his brethren the
sincerity of his professions. chiefs should
go with us
He
then told us that six
to Chillicothe."
6*
CHAPTER
XIV.
TECUMSEH'S DEFIANT SPEECHES. According to the
Prophet's promise, four chiefs
Tecumseh, Blue Jacket, Roundhead, and Panther returned with the commissioners to the seat of govern-
ment
in Ohio.
Here they remained about a week,
during which time a council was held.
enough, Tecumseh,
who seems
to
Curiously-
have reserved
his
eloquence for some one of more importance than the commissioners, was the principal speaker at this conference held with the governor of Ohio.
He
at
one
In this speech he un-
time spoke for three hours.
dertook to prove the nullity of the treaties under
which the Americans claimed any land north and west of the Ohio.
He
reviewed
all
the treaties of
the whites with the Western tribes in their order, and
showed a thorough knowledge of them. their validity with great bitterness
He
denied
and scorn, and
boldly declared his intention of resisting any further
encroachments of the whites. stated his opinions, he
still
While he so frankly
disavowed any intention
of making war on the whites.
Tecumseh's eloquence
is
highly spoken
of
by
TECUMSEH'S DEFIANT SPEECHES.
who heard
those
The
"
speech.
this
the speaker was rapid and vehement
bold
and commanding;
quick, and
for utterance
cil
more
his
in
than he deemed
The governor was
his
;
manner
impassioned,
countenance indicating that
violent, his
there was something
utterance of
gestures
his
131
mind struggling
prudent to express."
it
satisfied at the close of this
coun-
was no immediate danger to be feared
that there
from these Indians
and disbanded the
at
Greenville and Fort
militia
Wayne,
which had been called into
service.
In the
fall
of 1807,
new apprehensions
arose in
man
near the
consequence of the murder of a white
Urbana now
spot where
stands,
by some
straggling
This event, and the fact that so
Indians.
dians were assembled under the
many
In-
Prophet, produced
many famThe whites made a
a great alarm on the frontier, which led to
ilies
return to Kentucky.
demand on Tecumseh and
They, however, denied any knowledge of
derers.
the
affair.
ance,
it
the Prophet for the mur-
In order to quiet the increasing disturb-
was
finally
agreed that a council should be
held at Springfield. In this council, which included in
hundred Indians, were from the north and of
sixty
or
seventy
present
that
all
nearly three
two parties
of Tecumseh,
warriors,
including
— one
consisting
Round
TECUMSEIT.
132
Between
head, Blackfish, and several other chiefs. these two
parties
some jealousy
and each
existed,
was willing that the other should be blamed with the murder. to leave their
With
The commissioners wished
the Indians
arms a few miles outside of
Springfield.
Tecumseh, who was never
ference was held in a maple
opened, the commissioners,
renewed
The con-
He
grove.
Tecumseh
and he might wish
they closed their session.
was
it
violence,
to lay aside
refused again, saying his
also his pipe,
before
After
who feared some
their efforts to induce
his arms.
any
willing to appear in
council without proper dignity, refused.
was
but
this request the northern party complied,
to use
tomahawk it
as
such
(The tomahawk
At who was among the spectators, approaching Tecumseh with great caution, handed
had a pipe-bowl on the back.)
this point a long,
lank Pennsylvanian,
him
his pipe, a
long-stemmed, dirty-looking earthen
would
deliver
it
it if
he
up the dreadful tomahawk.
The
thumb and
finger,
kingly chief took held
Tecumseh might smoke
intimating that
affair,
it
between
up, looked at
it
his
and then at the owner, who
was cautiously backing away, and then threw
it
with
an indignant sneer over his head into the bushes.
The oldest chief present, Tarfee, or the Crane, who was head chief of the Wyandots, took charge of
the
opening ceremonies
in
the
council.
The
tecumseh's defiant speeches. chiefs
and braves were seated
front
of
the
agent's
in
a
Wyandots and
semicircle
in
The peace-pipe was
stand.
The
passed round in token of good-will. of the
133
old chief
the chief of the Ottawas re-
and
plied in a conciliatory tone,
all
seemed
be
to
But un-
going on toward a peaceful termination.
happily Tecumseh's part was no longer that of peace-
The growth
maker. the
keeping alive of
whites
;
and the deep and this
of his ambitious plans involved
towards the
feeling
hostile
and no doubt the hatred of
antagonism
bitter
moment
childhood
his
manhood had
conflicts of his early in
his
mind.
left
a
Just at
made
of reconciliation he rose and
a
speech of fiery eloquence, tracking the history of the relations of the
to his
own
two races from the
time.
first
settlements
So tremendous was the
this defiant oratory, that the
younger warriors were
hardly able to keep their seats
even the old men,
who
sat
effect of
in the
council,
and
smoking, showed the
greatest excitement, so that the immediate breaking
up of the council seemed imminent.
when he had
closed, turned his
Tecumseh,
back on the agent's
stand and walked to the remotest part of the semicircle,
where he took
Here
his seat
among
the
young
braves.
again, as elsewhere, the interpreter was obliged
to confess his inability to
a foreign tongue.
put Tecumseh's speech into
There were some parts that he
TECUMSEH.
134
purposely omitted, fearing that General Simon Kenton,
who was one
oi^
the agents at this council, would
not brook words that " were so defiant, so wrathful, so denunciatory, so
full
of indignant abuse."
But
the speech was not meant for the agents, but for the
The shrewd Tecumseh knew
Indians.
that
all
of the
Indians present would give admiring reports of his gallant defiance of the whites, his
He was is
by every
ascendency would be extended
camp-fire.
Thus
other
tribes.
in
not unlike the congressman whose
made for the newspapers. The council afterward became more
and the
affair
During
was
In these
settled.
games and
Tecumseh was generally
Those who attended the council admired physical character.
conciliatory,
their stay at Springfield the Indians
themselves several times with sports.
speech
vigor almost as
much
as
his
amused athletic
victorious.
his splendid
intellectual
CHAPTER
XV.
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET. William Henry Harrison was born rison,
Vir-
His father, Benjamin Har-
year 1773.
ginia, in the
in
was one of the signers of the Declaration of
When
Independence.
sirous of joining
For
Clair.
this
very young, Harrison was de-
the Western campaign under
purpose, Washington,
an intimate friend of his
St.
who had been
gave him an appoint-
father,
ment.
He
set out, at the
age of nineteen, with the com-
mission of ensign to join the army, and arrived im-
mediately after
Wayne came
St.
Clair's defeat.
into control of the
he noticed the
spirit
When
North-Western army
and wisdom of young Harrison,
and appointed him one of
flattering
In this
his aids-de-camp.
capacity he fought in Wayne's campaign
and received
General
commendation from
in
1794,
his
com-
mander.
On left
the death of General
the
army and was appointed
Northwestern Territory.
name
to
Wayne,
He
be brought forward
in 1797,
Harrison
secretary of the
declined to allow his for the
governorship,
TECUMSEII.
136
because he was unwilling to be brought into compewith
tition
In 180 1, on the erection of
Clair.
St.
the territory of Indiana, he was appointed governor
new
of the
Indian sole
and
territory,
ex-officio superintendent of
He was made by
affairs.
commissioner
President Jefferson
for treating with the Indians.
was thus that he came
It
be so nearly connected
to
with the history of Tecumseh.
The
council with
Tecumseh
Governor Harrison, a speech,
by one
on the
general alarm
not quiet the
did
at Springfield in
in the
autumn
frontier.
of this year, sent
of the Indian agents,
named John
Connor, to the head chiefs of the Shawnees. chiefs,
The Prophet
ered.
My
Children
:
when
the speech was deliv-
listened patiently while
him
read, as follows, to
name
These
and probably Tecumseh among them, were
absent from Greenville
"
1807
it
was
in
the
:
Listen to me.
I
speak
of your father, the great chief of the Seventeen
Fires.
"
My
children,
it
is
now
tomahawk, which you had your
father, the
Greenville,
in
King
the
twelve years since the
raised
by
the advice of
of Great Britain, was buried at
presence
of that
great warrior,
General Wayne. "
My
Spirit
children,
heard
it,
you then promised, and the Great that
you would
in
future live in
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET.
137
peace and friendship with your brothers, the Ameri-
You made
cans.
that contained
a treaty witli your father, and one
number
a
of c^ood
parties to "
My
you promised
children,
any foreign
in tnat treaty to ac-
father than
Seventeen Fires, and never to
lift
who were
it.
knowledge no other
tion of
equally
things,
beneficial to all the tribes of red people
nation.
the
chief of the
listen to the
proposi-
You promised
never to
up the tomahawk against any of your
father's
give notice of any other tribe that
children,
and
to
intended
it.
Your
some-
father also promised to do
thing for you, particularly to deliver to you every
year a certain quantity of goods, to prevent any white
man from
consent,
settling
or to do
promised to run a that
on your lands without your
you any personal line
between your land and
you might know your own
;
He
injury. his,
and you were
to
so
be
permitted to live and hunt upon your father's land as
long as you behaved yourselves well.
My
children,
which of these articles has your father broken
know good
that he has observed faith.
But,
my
them
all
?
You
with the utmost
children, have you done so
Have you not always had your
ears
open
to recei\'e
bad advice from the white people bej'ond the lakes " It
My children, let us look back to
?
?
times that are past-
has been a long time since you called the King of
TECUMSEH.
138 Great Britain
You know
father.
that
it
is
the duty
of a father to watch over his children, to give them
good
and
advice,
to
do everything
make them happy. What has for
you during
pier than
?
you were before
nation stronger or
power
to
yours done
more
Are you wiser and hapyou knew him; or is your
respectable
?
No,
my
chil-
he took you by the hand when you were a
dren,
powerful tribe
you held him
;
your
friend,
filled
with thorns and
supposing he was
fast,
and he conducted you through paths briars,
and shed your blood.
Your
which tore your
in
your
He saw
you.
assist
Did he stay by
and comfort you
?
and then abandoned
into dangers
your blood flowing, and he would give
you no bandage
up your wounds.
to tie
the conduct of the
The Great
father.
and
distress
No, he led you
flesh
strength was exhausted,
and you could no longer follow him.
you
his
time that you looked up to him
tlie
and advice
for protection
in
this father of
man who
This was
called himself
your
opened your eyes; you
Spirit
heard the voice of the chief of the Seventeen Fires speaking words of peace.
him
;
you came
on the right
way
would have led deceiver
is
sufferings,
to him,
— on
He
called
you
to follow
and he once more put you
the broad, smooth road that
to happiness.
But the voice of your
again heard, and, forgetful of your former
you
are listening to him.
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET. "
My
1
your cars and mind him
children, shut
39
not,
or he will lead you to ruin and misery. "
My children,
I
have heard bad news.
The
sacred
spot where the great council-fire was kindled, around
which the Seventeen Fires and ten children
—
smoked the pipe of peace
where the Great
saw
Spirit
his red
tribes of their
that very spot
and white children
encircle themselves with the chain of friendship
that place has been selected for dark
—
and bloody
councils.
"
My children, this
have called
a
in
You
business must be stopped.
number of men from
tribes to listen to a fool,
who
the most distant
speaks not the words of
the Great Spirit, but those of the devil and of the British agents.
My children,
alarmed the white that
you
settlers
your conduct has much
They
near you.
send away those people, and
will
desire if
they
wish to have the impostor with them they can carry him. British
Let him go to the lakes
more
When
;
he can hear the
distinctly."
the reading of this speech was finished, the
Prophet dictated the following answer " Father,
am sorry that you listen to the advice You have impeached me with having
I
of bad birds.
correspondence with
and sending the country,
:
the
for Indians *
British,
and with
calling
from the most distant part of
to listen to a fool that speaks not the
TECUMSEH.
I40
words of the Great
Spirit,
but the words of the
Father, these impeachments
not true.
I
deny, and say they are
I
never had a word with the
British,
and
I
They came here them-
never sent for any Indians. selves
devil.'
and hear the words of the Great
to listen
Spirit.
" Father, I wish
you would not
the voice of bad birds that
it is
and we
;
listen
and you
the least of our idea to
will rather try to stop
any more
may
make
to
rest assured
disturbance,
any such proceedings
than to encourage them."
A man
by
the
name
of John Tanner,
who had been
taken captive by the Indians when a boy, was time
among
at this
the Chippewas, or Ojibbeways, a nation
now on Lake Superior and Lake Michigan, and known to all readers of literature as the people made famous by Longfellow's poem of
living then
as
Hiawatha.
He
gives an interesting account of the
influence of the Prophet's reputation over the superstitious
mind of the
Fie says that
Indian.
news reached
this distant
the Shawnees had received a
Great
Spirit.
A
people that
revelation from
messenger brought
this
the
piece of
information, and appeared deeply impressed with the
solemnity of his mission. first
When
he arrived he at
maintained a long and mysterious silence before
announcincr that he was the forerunner of the great
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE TROPHET. who would soon shake hands
Prophet,
I4I
with the Chip-
pewas, reveal to them his inspired character, and set forth the
new manner
after
adopt.
to
of living which they were here-
He
repeated the doctrines of the
Prophet to them, and solemnly enjoined the observ-
A
ance of his system of morals. Vv^as
made by
all
this
upon the
strong impression
Chippcwas, and a time was appointed and a
the
lodge
built, that
lodge,
the
When
in public.
"we saw
new
doctrines might be accepted
the Indians had gathered
in figure
some resemblance
sions bearing
upon
stood, attended constantly
man, and
remained no one went near
which was spread over strings of visible
mouldy and
insignia
long harangue,
new
This Avas
was under-
it.
told
all,
unknown
lodge,
all
the
After a
which the prominent features of
the
he
upon the
four strings of beads, which
were made of the
and
Four
contents.
discolored beads were
flesh
was expected
of each string at the top,
wc
of the Prophet,
were carried with much solemnity to each the
at
or raised the blanket
of his important mission. in
bed
its
But while we
revelation were stated and urged
attention of
were
its
it,
it
made
it,
slept near
and dimen-
man.
to a
accompanied by two young men, who,
night, as for a
in this
something," says Mv. Tanner, "care-
under a blanket,
fully concealed
the
men among
principal
to
man
take
in
hold
and draw them gently
TECUMSEH.
142
through
This was called shaking hands
his hand.
with the Prophet, and was considered as solemnly
engaging
obey
to
his injunctions
mission as from the Supreme.
and accept of
who
All the Indians
touched the beads had previously
killed their
dogs
they gave up their medicine bags, and showed a position
to
comply with
The
of them.
whom
of
was very
by the remotest Ojibbe-
felt
any
had
I
knowledge,
but
was not the common impression among them his
accomplishment
the
in
For less
any tendency
had
doctrines
two
or three
frequent than
and the
entire
dis-
that should be required
influence of the Prophet
sensibly and painfully
ways
all
his
any
of
years,
to
purpose.
drunkenness was
formerly,
was
aspect of things
changed by the influence of
less
that
them
unite
human
it
much
thought
of,
among them was
this mission.
But
in
time these new impressions were obliterated, medicine bags,
flints
and
steels,
the use of which had been
forbidden, were brought into use; dogs were reared,
women and
children
Shawnee Prophet was Early
in the
beaten
as
before,
and
the
despised."
year 1808, great numbers of Indians
came
flocking from the lakes to visit the Prophet.
With
the
characteristic
they prolonged their entirely exhausted.
improvidence
visit until their
of
savages,
provisions were
Their religious excitement of
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE rROPHET.
occupation of corn-raising.
43
more pro-
the previous year had interfered with the saic
1
Governor Harrison
benevolently and prudently (for hungry Indians are apt to be dangerous neighbors) ordered
who
to
carried out this order
came
be
The
Wayne.
supplied from the public stores at Fort
Indian agent
them
to the
conclusion that the Prophet's followers had no hostile designs against the United States. likely
that
the
in
It
seems very
beginning the purpose
of
Prophet was simply the establishment of a new ion,
the
relig-
with an accompanying reformation of morals,
many suggestions in a fragmentary and distorted way from the missionaries who had preached Christianity among the Indians. As with and that he got
Mohammed
and other
was an afterthought. influence of
Tecumseh
leaders, the political It
may have been
Tecumseh, about 1808,
The
visited the Mississinawa villages.
could
the rising
that gave this final bent to the
preaching of the Prophet.
trip
purpose
not be discovered, but
it
object of this
was probably
connected with his incipient scheme of uniting the Indians in a confederacy, of which he should be the leader.
The Indians
meet him and
Wabash,
An
to
in
these
towns promised to
his brother the following June,
on the
which place they had decided to move.
Indian agent, Mr. Jouctt, wrote to the governor
that he
feared this meetiner
would
result
in
some
TECUMSEH.
144 hostile
movement on
the frontier, and advised that
Prophet should be seized and imprisoned,
the
order to extinguish his influence.
in
General Harrison
rejected this proposition, probably because so violent
a measure would have precipitated
hostilities
with
Tecumseh's band.
The Pottawatomies and Kickapoos granted Tecumseh and the Prophet a
tract of land
on the Tip-
Wabash River. what is now the
pecanoe, one of the tributaries of the
To
western part of
this place, in the
Tecumseh and
State of Indiana,
their party, started to
much
to the relief,
remove
the
Prophet, with
in the spring of 1808,
no doubt, of
their civilized neigh-
The Miami and Delaware
bors in Ohio.
nations
had strong objections to their establishing themselves on the Wabash, and
set out to prevent
it.
At
this
time the number of the Prophet's immediate band
was
still
very small, there being only about forty
Shawnees and
less
than a hundred of other nations,
mostly Pottawatomies, Chippewas, Ottawas, and Winnebagoes,
Tecumseh, however, boldly met the de-
putation of chiefs from the Miamis and Delawares,
and turned them back from his settlement in Indiana. tribes,
their
purpose of stopping
They
returned to their
but with strong suspicions of the motives of
the brothers.
Tecumseh and
his brother established a village
on
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET.
145
to be known as the They now drew around them a Prophet's Town. body of Northern Indians, much to the disgust of the Miamis and Delawares. The Prophet's followers
which came
the Tippecanoe,
here, for the
first
with their
sports
began
time,
religious
to
combine warlike
over the Prophet's
gift for
Tecumseh's
exercises.
genius for war was gradually asserting
its
ascendency
exciting religious fanati-
cism.
The Prophet now announced Governor Harrison,
visit
movements and
He
said
in
that he intended to
order to
explain
his
to procure provisions for his band.
" these could not be consistently withheld
from him, since the white people had always encour-
aged him
and
it
to preach the
was
in
this
word of God
to the Indians,
holy work that he
was now
engaged." In the latter part of June, 1808, he sent a small
deputation of Indians to Vincennes with a " speech" to the governor.
This speech denied
all
the unfa-
vorable representations of his purposes which had
been
circulated, saying that
he and Tecumseh wished
to live in peace with the white
ing soon
who
to
visit
the
The messenger
bore this speech of the Prophet's, said, in a con-
ference with the governor
"
people, and promis-
governor.
I
have
now
:
listened to that
7
man upward
of three
TECUMSEH.
146 years,
advice. Spirit
our
and have never heard him give any but good He tells us that we must pray to the Great
who made
He
use.
the world and everything in
us that no
tells
plants, the trees,
could
the
whom we ought to He tells us not to lie,
Spirit, to
in all things.
to steal, nor to drink w^iisky; not to to live in peace with to
make
and the animals, but that they must
be made by the Great
pray and obey
man
for
it
mankind.
all
go
He
but
to war,
tells
us also
work and make corn." In August, the Prophet
weeks
made
his visit, staying
To prove
with Governor Harrison.
his sincerity
earnestness, he frequently addressed the Indians,
were with him
in
two
and holding frequent interviews
at Vincennes,
the
.
presence of the
and
who
governor,
dwelling upon the great evils resulting from war and the use
Harrison soon formed a very
of liquor.
favorable tested his
estimate
of
the
Prophet's
influence over his followers
talents.
He
by holding
conversations with them and offering them whisky,
which they always been interested
done
in
refused.
for the Indians,
his letters to the
and had many times urged,
in
government, the necessity for keep-
ing wiiisky from them. this
The governor had long
the discussion of what was to be
He now began
to
hope that
preacher of temperance might better their con-
dition.
.;;r|||l!!aif|liani!liir-''Xi'RV,llilK""T;a;.V«tti^il^
PORTRAIT OF THE PROPHET.
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET. Before the close of his this
"
visit,
tliat
:
first
began
practice.
Tlie
three years since
It is
:
system of rehgion which
47
the Prophet dehvered
speech before the governor
Father
1
I
now
I
white people and some of the Indians were against
me, but
among
I
had no other intention but
to introduce
the Indians those good principles of religion
which the white people
profess.
I
was spoken badly
of by the white people,
who reproached me
misleading
but
that
I
the
Indians,
was
I
him the
you intended
told
When I heard this, tell my father when I
I I
father, the
went
to see
when
settled
I
to
governor, had declared that
know,
not steal horses.
that
it
and
relate to
father,
I
if I
heard
I
the prop-
also heard that
whether Avas the
this
the land
all
Wayne was I
my
you
was God or
former
I
should
from Mr. Wells, but
I
originated with himself
The Great he had
that he evil.
my
and that you said
believed "
him and
it
on the Wabash, that
erty of the Seventeen Fires.
;
hang me.
truth.
heard,
wanted
to
intended to remember
between Vinccnnes and Fort
man
with
to say
did anything amiss.
" Father,
"
defy them
I
Spirit
told
me
to
tell
made them, and made
had placed them on
it
to
the
Indians
the world
do good and not
TECUMSEH.
148 "
told
I
all
the redskins that the
was not good, and that they ought "
but
abandon
That we ought to consider ourselves we ought to live agreeably to our
toms, the red people after their
people after theirs
;
drink whisky; that
one man,
several cus-
mode and
was not made
it
for
who knew how
the cause of
it is
as
in
it.
the white
particularly that they should not
for the white people
that
way they were to
all
them, but
to use
and
it,
the mischiefs which the In-
dians suffer, and that they must follow the directions of the Great Spirit, and
was He that made us that
bad
is
;
;
we must
listen to
determine to
Him,
listen to
as
it
nothing
do not take up the tomahawk should
be offered by the British or by the Long Knives
;
it
do
not meddle with anything that does not belong to you, but mind your
ground, that your
enough "
I
own
business and cultivate the
women and
children
may have
to live on.
now
inform you that
it
is
our Intention to
live
in peace with our father and his people forever.
"
My
to do,
I
have informed you what we mean
I call
the Great Spirit to witness the truth
father,
and
of my declaration.
The
religion
which
I
have estab-
lished for the last three years has been attended all
by
the different tribes of Indians in this part of the
world.
they are
Those Indians were once
now but one
;
they are
different people; all
determined to
GENERAL HARRISON AND THE PROPHET. what
practice
have communicated
I
come immediately from But
one.
let
We
comfort and peace.
we
Formerly, when ;
but now, since
Spirit,
"
I
we
You
are
us lay aside this character and attend
may
you
desire that
will join us
we were
lived in ignorance,
we
live in
both red and white people.
for the preservation of
ish
them, that has
to
care of our children, that they
to the
49
the Great Spirit through me.
speak to you as a warrior.
" Brother, I
1
fool-
of the Great
listen to the voice
are happy.
have listened
You have promised
what you have
to
to assist us.
I
in behalf of all the red people, to use
to prevent the sale of liquor to us.
said
now
to
us.
request you,
your exertions
We
are
all
well
pleased to hear you say that you will endeavor to
We
promote our happiness. ance that we
will follow
give you every assur-
the dictates of the
Great
Spirit.
"We
are
have shown
all
well pleased with the attention
us, also
with the good intentions of our
father, the President.
such as needles,
you
flints,
If
you give us a few
hoes, powder, etc.,
the animals that afford us meat Avith
articles,
we will
take
powder and
ball."
This speech has the characteristic Indian peroration.
A
bit of
begging
is
in
almost every speech of
the kind, and the close of this plea of the Prophet's
TECUMSEH.
I50 attests its
genuineness.
of Tcnskwatawa's
life
Nor
can one read this part
without feehng that beneath
his ignorance, persecuting fanaticism,
all
and imposture,
there was a real ambition to be a benefactor to the
Like
Indians.
many
another so-called prophet, he
did not hold out so well as he began. religion
His system of
was a farrago compounded of Indian preju-
and scraps of ideas gathered here and there
dices
from the missionaries.
But
it
seems to have been a
genuine advance on the superstitions that
gun
to supplant,
stances
it
it
had be-
and under more favorable circum-
might have been a stepping-stone
to
a
genuine enlightenment by the removal of old prejudices
and
The Prophet
and the reformation of morals.
his followers received a
supply of provisions and
returned to the Tippecanoe, leaving the governor
doubt tile
as to
whether the new
sect really
in
had any hos-
intentions toward the United States.
Harrison
believed afterward that the Indian seer had played
him
false in
this
movement, and that
this display of
piety was a mere ruse to allay his fears and put him off his Gfuard.
CHAPTER
XVI.
PLANS AND CHARACTER OF TECUMSEH. In
these events
all
Tecumseh stood
in
the back-
ground, while the Prophet seemed to be the leader.
So much was
this
so that, at the time, the Prophet
was supposed by the white people, including the governor and President Jefferson himself, to be the sole
mover of
this
excitement
among
the Indian tribes.
shown
in
Tecumseh's
greatness
than
ability to wait.
his
in
is
consciousness of talents
And
of his brother.
ing fame and
far
nothing
He must
more
have had a
transcending
the craft
yet he quietly saw the grow-
When
influence of the latter.
the
time came he asserted his ascendency, and turned
even the Prophet's fame and power to his own purpose, which
was a
of Tenskwatawa
far less practicable
—being
nothing
less
one than that than the for-
mation of a vast confederacy of the Indian tribes to the white race within limits, or,
restrain
to
force
It
was
in
them
to
retreat
his failure
to
if
possible,
beyond the Alleghanies. estimate the resources
of
the whites and the relative persistency of civiliza-
TECUMSEH.
152 tion
and savagery that the weakness of the Indian
mind shows
itself.
But the scheme of Tecumseh should be judged from his
own
standpoint.
He had
thrown under liarmar and mishes besides. combinations succeed
in
And
among
seen the whites over-
St. Clair,
and
that too without
the Indians.
bringing together
all
in
many skir-
any very large
If
now he
could
the Indians, so that
the Southern border should be harassed at the same
time that the Western border was being overwhelmed, there seemed to
Tecumseh a
great likelihood that the
whites could be finally defeated and brought to sue for peace at the
We this
hands of the Indians.
cannot give Tecumseh credit for originality in
The
scheme.
had planned a had
allied
lish,
as
idea was an old one with energetic Pontiac, before Tecumseh's birth,
Indian warriors.
similar rising against the whites,
and
himself with the French against the Eng-
Tecumseh
after this
formed an
the English against the Americans.
alliance with
But with the
Tippecanoe chieftain originated the idea of making use of religious fanaticism and superstition as a motive
to
union and action.
Tecumseh prophecy lacking in
and as
a
his ruse.
It
brother
is
hardly likely that
deliberately
adopted
Tenskwatawa, indolent and
courage, was inferior in the hunt and on
the battle-field.
What more
natural than that his
PLANS OF TECUMSEH.
53
ascendency of another
crafty spirit should seek an
kind,
I
and that the death of
his
predecessor, the
Prophet Change-of-Feathers, should have suggested
That he soon came
the means.
mission are
is
not unlikely.
common
It
Such
to believe in his
own
cases of self-delusion
enough.
seems probable that Tecumseh, ambitious of
military fame, and desirous of leading a larger
than the small
company about him, saw
band
in the flock-
ing of the tribes to the preaching of his brother the
opportunity he desired.
From
step to step his im-
agination rose to his large scheme, which was not to
form a temporary
by Pontiac and
such as had been sought
others, but a great
— an
confederation
alliance,
and permanent
empire of red men, of which he
should be the leader and emperor.
To
He
this
end he fostered
brother's
his
influence.
raised the Prophet to the highest position
and
his followers, for him,
as
added much
among
affected always the greatest respect
though he were a superior being, and to his brother's
presence and influence
power by
his
own noble
over the minds of
But though the Prophet seemed
to govern,
ruled with a quiet but imperious
will.
others.
Tecumseh
It is
probable
that he distrusted the Prophet's judgment, for,
Tenskwatawa
is
said to
though
have been a more pleasing
speaker even than Tecumseh, 7*
it
was rarely the case
TECUMSEH.
154 that he uttered a
was
word
in council
when Tecumseh
present.
Tecumseh was mind
His
despotic, but not a tyrant.
was large, foreseeing the probable destruction
of the Indian tribes through the force of civilization.
He was man
largely patriotic
— loving
all
advancement.
in battle,
a red
red people and working for their
He was
possessing a strong
brave
— not a Shawnee, but
a remarkable leader of men,
over them
influence
calm and dignified
acknowledging no man as
;
he was
every presence,
in
his superior
by
the slightest
action,
and fond of a certain regal dignity without
pomp
but he was never
;
vengeful to those
who were
Tecumseh never allowed
He
"
was near
known
to
be cruel or re-
helpless in his power. his portrait to
be painted.
six feet in stature, with a compact,
muscular frame, capable of great physical endurance. His head was of a moderate full
and
and high,
size,
with a forehead
his nose slightly aquiline, teeth large
and overhung
regular, eyes black, penetrating,
with heavy arched brows, which increased the uni-
formly grave and severe expression of his countenance. to
He
is
represented
by
those
who knew him
have been a remarkably fine-looking man, always
plain but neat in his dress,
and of a commanding
personal presence."
An
English writer on the war of
1
8 1 2 says
that
CHARACTER OF TECUMSEH. " with
Tccumseh was endowed stoutness,
and possessed
more than the usual His carriage was dig-
eyes penetrating, his countenance, even in
death, giving indications of a lofty
dians in general are the
spoil
their persons, but
had often been
quently levied subsidies to
amount, yet he preserved It
In-
Tecumseh
Clothes and other valuable his,
arti-
yet he invariably
He had
wore a deer-skin coat and pantaloons.
self
The
spirit.
as fond as other savages of
full
gaudy decoration of
was an exception. cles of
55
the agility and perseve-
all
rance of the Indian character. nified, his
I
fre-
comparatively a large
httle or
nothing for him-
was not wealth but glory that was Tecum
seh's ruling passion."
There are two
stories
with regard to the marriage
of Tecumseh, one being that he was married to several wives,
but never to more than one at a time
while the other latter
of
is
is
that he
had but one
probably the truth, for
men who knew him
all
it
his
is
The
wife.
on the testimony
life.
His marriage
took place at the age of twenty-eight, and was in
compliance with the wishes of his
friends.
Mamate, was older than
and seems to have
himself,
His
wife,
been a mediocre person, both physically and mentally.
Tecumseh's only child was a son named Pugeshashenwa, which means " A-panther-scizing-its-prcy."
Mamate
died soon after his birth, and he was
left
to
TECUMSEH.
156
the care of his aunt, Tecumsch's beloved
sister,
Te~
cumapease.
An
j
intelligent
Shawnee Avho knew Tecumsch from
childhood states that " he was kind and attentive to
com-
the aged and infirm, looking personally to their repairing their
fort,
wigwams
frail
vv^hen
winter ap-
proached, giving them skins for moccasins and cloth-
and sharing with them the choicest game which
ing,
Nor were
the woods and the seasons afforded. acts of kindness
these
bestowed exclusively on those of
rank or reputation.
On
the contrary, he
made
it
his
business to search out the humblest objects of charity
and
in
a quiet, unostentatious manner relieve their
wants." "
From
the earliest period of his
the Indian agents
who had
life,"
says one of
a great deal to do v/ith
him, " Tecumseh was distinguished for virtue, for a strict
adherence to truth, honor, and
integrity.
was sober and abstemious, never indulging
He
in
the
among
the
use of liquor or eating to excess."
A
man who
lived nearly twenty years
Indians as a prisoner, part of the time in Tecumseh's family, says, "
that gained
I
him
know
of no peculiarity about
popularity.
Plis
talents,
of deportment, and friendly disposition
the respect and regard of
consider
him
,
all
about him.
him
rectitude
commanded In short,
I
a very great as well a very good man,
CHARACTER OF TECUMSEH.
1
5/
who, had he enjoyed the advantages of a hberal education, would have done honor to any age or nation."
Benjamin Drake, "
When
from
in his
hfe of
Tecumseh, says
Burns, the poet, was suddenly transferred
his plow, in Ayrshire, to the polished circles of
Edinburgh,
his ease of
manners and nice observance
of the rules of good breeding excited
much
surprise
and became the theme of frequent conversation.
The same thing has been remarked of Tecumseh. Whether seated at the tables of Generals McArthur and Worthington, Chillicothe
in
as
1807,
he was during the council at or
brought
in
British officers of the highest rank, his
contact
from vulgarity and coarseness
entirely free
with
manners were he was
;
uniformly self-possessed and with the tact and ease of
deportment which marked the poet of the heart, and
which are zation
falsely
and
supposed to be the result of
refinement only.
He
readily
dated himself to the novelties of his
civili-
accommo-
new
position,
and seemed more amused than annoyed by them."
We his
can never
scheme
know
for a
just
when Tecumseh formed
union of the red men, to
offset
the .union of the "Seventeen Fires" of the whites;
but the plan
ernment his
now began
in various
ways.
to
reveal itself to the gov-
Operations so extensive as
could not long be entirely hidden.
He had been
TECUMSEH.
158 for
some time engaged
trying
duce them
to join
and
in visiting various tribes
by the power of
his masterful oratory to in-
For
confederacy.
his
at
least
three or four years he traveled almost ceaselessly for
the accomplishment of his purpose.
time away up
among
He was
at
one
the lakes in the remotest part
of the old Indiana Territory; at another time he was
moving through the South; and was
in that
travels of
came time.
to
What
Tecumseh
is
still
unknown world
then almost
the Mississippi.
at
lying beyond
we have
history
in the
another he
of these
merest scraps, such as
the knowledge of the whites from time to
Tirelessly he journeyed through the wilder-
ness, eloquently
he labored with
his red
brethren,
returning often to his headquarters, where the Pro-
phet reigned in his absence.
CHAPTER
XVII.
FORMATION OF TECUMSEH'S CONFEDERACY. Until
i8io,
Tecumseh seemed
strengthening his influence
out distinctly announcing
Early
in
among
be quietly
to
the tribes with-
his ultimate purpose.
by Captain
the year 1809, accompanied
Lewis, a well-known Shawnee
chief,
he attended a
Here he
council of Indians held at Sandusky. to persuade the
Wyandots and Senccas
Among
his settlement at Tippecanoe.
tried
remove
to
to
other induce-
ments, he said that the country on this river was better than
ther
what they now occupied, that
removed from the
whites,
it
however, had a suspicion that Tecumseh
meant something more than he
said,
and
their ex-
perience in Wayne's campaign had given
wholesome States.
fur-
The wary
have more game and be happier there. Indians,
was
and that they would
fear
of
rashly
The Crane, an
offending
old chief of the
them
the
a
United
Wyandots,
answered, " that he feared Tecumseh was working for
no good purpose
at
Tippecanoe
wait a few years, and then
if
;
that they
would
they found their red
TECUMSEH.
l60
brethren at that time contented and happy, they
would probably
join them."
In April, 1809, the United States agent at Fort
Wayne to
informed Governor Harrison
reports,
that,
according
the Indians had been required
by
the
Prophet to take up arms against the government,
to
exterminate the inhabitants of Vincennes and of the settlements along the Ohio
the Great Spirit,
who
disobeyed.
who It
;
this
being the order of
threatened destruction to those
was
Chip-
also reported that the
pewas, Pottawatomies, and Ottawas were deserting
Whether
the Prophet in consequence of this order. this
was true or
Tecumseh's
not,
and whether
in
any case
was
plan, or only an ambitious undertaking
of the Prophet's in Tecumseh's absence,
The
it
is
not known.
agent said that there were not more than a hun-
dred warriors remaining with the Prophet
;
but the
Governor had information that there were within fifty
miles of his headquarters four or five times that
number who were
his
devoted followers.
Harrison
immediately organized two companies of volunteer militia with
which he garrisoned Fort Knox, which
was situated within two miles of Vincennes.
If
there had been any warlike purpose on the part of
the Prophet, this
show of
force put a stop to
Indians do not often strike an guard.
enemy who
it,
for
stands on
FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERACY.
l6l
In July, the Prophet and about forty followers visited Vincennes, at that time the capital of the terri-
He meekly
tory and the residence of the governor.
denied any part
combination to attack the
the
in
He
white settlements.
claimed, indeed, that the plot
was
entirely confined to the tribes of the Mississippi
and
Illinois Rivers,
and that he had dissuaded them
from their intended
hostilities.
Governor Harrison was not again
ceived
by
the
my
he
Prophet's plausibility, for
writes to the Secretary of that
to be so easily de-
War
:
suspicions of his guilt
"I must
confess
have been rather
strengthened than diminished at every interview
have had with him since
He
his arrival.
I
acknowl-
edges that he received an invitation to war against us from the British, last
fall,
and that he was apprised
of the intention of the Sacs and Foxes, &c., early in the spring, and
was warmly
tion of his neglecting to
stances so Avhich tion,
I
to
solicited
But he could give no
league.
communicate
extremely interesting
to
to us,
me
and received a solemn assurance of
upon him.
with the
The
ject is that the
British intrigue
injunctions
result of all late
and
my
I
circum-
and towards
had a few months before directed
compliance
join their
satisfactory explana-
his atten-
his cheerful
had impressed
inquiries
on the sub-
combination was produced by influence, in anticipation of
war
TECUMSEH.
l62
with the United States. ture and ill-judged.
armed
.
.
It was,
however, prema-
The
warlike and well-
.
tribes of the Pottawatomies, Ottawas,
was, Delawares, and Miamis,
nor would have joined
I
in the
Chippe-
had
believe, neither
combination
;
and
al-
though the Kickapoos, whose warriors are better than those of any other
Wyandots excepted, of
the Prophet,
I
tribe,
much under
are
am
the remnant of the
persuaded
the influence
that
they were
never made acquainted with his intentions,
were
really hostile
In
at a
1809,
if
they
toward the United States." council
at
Greenville,
Governor
Harrison purchased a large tract of land lying on the east of the
Wabash River from
the Indian owners
—
the Miami, Eel River, Delaware, and Pottawatomie
He
tribes.
who
made
also
a treaty with the Kickapoos,
confirmed the grant and sold another large piece
When
of land.
Harrison invited
he made these
all
treaties,
Governor
Indians to be present
who were
considered to have any claim to the land.
By
April, 18 10, there
the part of the
and the Prophet were States.
A
was a general conviction on
whites that the plans of
trader
Tecumseh
really hostile to the
who had been
for
United
some time
at
Tippecanoe informed Governor Harrison that there were
at least
dred men,
in
one thousand that place
souls,
perhaps four hun-
under the control
of the
FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERACY. Prophet.
was plain that there was strong
63
hostile
toward the government among these Indians.
feeling
They
It
1
refused to
buy any ammunition from American
traders, saying that
they had a plentiful supply, and
intimated that they could get more from the English
without paying for
About
it.
the middle of
May, the governor was
in-
formed that the Prophet's followers amounted to six or eight hundred men, and that this force
was probable that
it
could be doubled from those tribes over
which the Prophet had
All this led to
influence.
much
fear for the safety of the small,
ments
in Indiana.
A
large meeting of Indians
on the
St.
Joseph's River.
exposed
was held
To
this
settle-
at this
time
meeting Gover-
nor Harrison sent an appeal through the Delawares, pointing out the inevitable destruction of those tribes
who
should take up the hatchet against their fathers,
and the great danger to the friendly
tribes
through
the difficulty of distinguishing friend from foe.
The Prophet now succeeded sessed great influence bers of
it
being
their talents
and
in
gaining the
Wyan-
This nation had alwaj-s pos-
dots over to his side.
among
the Indians, the
called " uncles," valor.
The
mem-
and venerated
for
great belt, which had
been the symbol of union between the
tribes in their
previous war, was committed to the care of this
tribe.
1
TECUMSEH.
64
They
also possessed the original
The
Greenville.
copy of the treaty of
negotiations between this tribe and
the Prophet are a good example of Indian diplomacy.
The Prophet
sent a deputation to
them saying
that
he was surprised that the Wyandots, who had always directed the councils of the Indians, in consequence of their talents
and bravery, should
sit
still
and see the
property of the Indians usurped by a part. Flattered
by
this
message, the Wyandots answered
that they had carefully preserved the belt which
merly united the Indians they
said,
one nation.
as
had remained so long
without being called
They
forgotten.
for,
This
belt,
in their possession
that they supposed
it
was
assured the Prophet that they were
glad, however, that at
last
their hearts than
As
was wanted.
it
themselves, they were tired of the situation
was nearer
for-
;
for
nothing
the union of the tribes
They looked upon everything
again as one man.
that had been done since the treaty of Greenville as
nothing
;
that they
would join with the Prophet
endeavoring to bring together
all
in
the tribes for the
purpose of stopping the encroachments of the white people, and recovering that which
had been unjustly
taken from them.
This answer was exactly according to the wishes of the Prophet. all
He
immediately circulated
the Indian nations, and
it
it
among
proved a powerful
in-
FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERACY,
The Wyan-
fluence in favor of Tecumseh's scheme.
dots soon started to
make
way they held They showed chiefs. their
165
On
a visit to Tippecanoe.
a conference with the
Miami
the great belt, and reproached
the Miamis with having united
against their Indian friends.
intimidated that they joined
with
the
whites
The Miamis were so the Wyandots on their
journey to the Prophet's Town, inviting the
Weas
to
go with them.
An
old
Piankishaw Indian named Grosble, who
was very much attached
to
Governor Harrison and
to the United States, asked at this time permission to
move beyond
the Mississippi, saying that he had
heard nothing but rumors of war
and
as
he would not engage
of danger.
He
told
it
among
the Indians,
he wished to be out
the governor that which he
heard from other sources to attack Vincennes,
in
— that the Prophet intended
and boasted that he would follow
the footsteps of the great Pontiac.
The governor had Prophet's
Town, by
stationed a person as spy at the
whom
he was now informed that
there were about three thousand
men
within thirty
who carried on a great deal of secret counseling, and who were at least resolved to prevent the survey of any land west of the Wabash miles of this place,
River.
In June, a boat was sent up the
Wabash
with
salt
TECUMSEH.
l66
The Promen who
for the Indians, as part of their annuities.
phet refused to receive the
brought
it
and the
salt,
were treated rudely and told to go back
to Vincennes.
About
when the salt was refused, the inTecumseh was among the Shawnees on
the time
defatigable
the Auglaize
among
or
;
his
own
duce them to join to
go
new
but the
leader was without hon-
people.
He
tried in vain to in-
scheme, but they even refused
his
into council with him.
The Shawnee
chiefs
on
the Auglaize had received a letter from Governor
Harrison some months previous to Tecumseh's val,
which no doubt had something This
peaceful disposition.
letter
to
arri-
do with their
Tecumseh took from
from the hand of the interpreter and scornfully
threw
it
into
the
fire,
declaring
that
if
Governor
Harrison were present he would serve him
in the
same way.
He
told the Indians that the white people
deceiving them
;
that for his
put any confidence
in
part he
the whites.
He
said that
he were dead the cause would not die with him.
he went away much
among
chief.
with his
ill
if
But
success
the Shawnees.
Tecumseh owed part,
dissatisfied
were
would never
his failure with this tribe in great
no doubt, to the influence of the great Shawnee Black Hoof
This Indian had been born
in
FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERACY. Florida,
and was old enough
moval of
Ohio
his nation to
the salt water of the ocean.
6/
1
at the time of the re-
to
remember bathing
He had
in
been present at
the defeat of Braddock, in 1755, during the French and
English war, and had been very actively engaged in all
Wayne's
the wars in Ohio until It is said that his
dians.
treaty with the In-
wisdom and energy
in
the
planning and executing of his military expeditions
was so great that he was never fight
under his
at a loss for braves to
lead.
Black Hoof had been the orator of his tribe during most of his
life,
and had fought bravely
in the
vain hope of staying the tide of white emigration to the valley of the Mississippi. defeat of the Indians
by
wise
all
after the disastrous
by Wayne, the
the experience of years,
of the futility of
He
But
old chief,
grown
became convinced
attempts to drive back the whites.
signed the treaty of Greenville, and from that
time actively opposed
all
war with the
settlers.
As
he was the head chief of the Shawnee nation, the influence of his office and of his personal
gave him a great ascendency
character
in the councils of his
people.
Every persuasion was brought
Hoof
seh on Black
but
all failed
tribe
;
remained
to induce
him
to bear
by Tecum-
to join his
scheme,
the chief and the greater part of his faithful
to the treaty of Greenville.
1
TECUMSEH.
68
In the war which
succeeded between the
was firmly attached
States and Great Britain, he
the American cause,
United
akhough he took no
to
active part
in the conflict.
Like Tecumseh,
polygamy and to
have lived
this
great chief was opposed to
the burning of prisoners. for forty years
He
is
said
with one wife, and to
have raised a large family of children, who loved and respected
and
He was
him.
sprightly
of a
conversation.
in
small, being about five
rather height.
He
cheerful
disposition
Black
Hoof was
feet eight inches in
died at Wapakonetta, Ohio, in
the age of one hundred and his death his health
ten.
Up
was good and
1831, at
to the time of
his eyesight un-
dimmed. Governor Harrison was
visited in
tation of Pottawatomie Indians,
June by a depu-
headed by the chief
Winnemac, to inform him of the result of the council held at the
St.
Joseph's of Lake Michigan.
been attended by the Delawarcs,
all
It
who were
to
had
and by
the neighboring Indians,
have gone there
for the
purpose of dissuading the Indians from joining the Prophet.
This they succeeded
nemac was
knew
in doing,
and Win-
sent to inform the governor of
of the Prophet's plans,
exertion was to be
made on
all
they
which was that every
the part of the Prophet's
party to induce the trans- Mississippi tribes to join
FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERACY, the
confederacy
Chicago,
St.
prised.
It
;
69
and that Detroit, Fort Wayne,
Louis, and Vincennes were
all
to
be sur-
was reported that the Prophet had even
suggested to his young
men
the
murder of some of
the neighboring chiefs in order that their
might be
1
free to carry
own hands
forward their purposes, 8
CHAPTER
XVIII.
EXECUTION OF LEATHERLIPS FOR WITCHCRAFT.
On
the evening of the
andots, equipped
in the
first
day of June,
six
Wy-
most warhke manner, ap-
peared at the house of a white
man on
near where the city of Columbus, Ohio,
the Scioto,
now
stands.
They were much agitated, and inquired after an old Wyandot chief named Leatherlips, whom they had
When
been seeking.
camped two
miles further up the river, they immedi-
ately started
A
they found that he was en-
saying they intended to
off,
Mr. John Sells was told of the
dians the next morning, and lips'
He came upon
camp.
were headed,
it is
visit
kill
him.
of the In-
started off for Leather-
the six warriors,
who
believed, by the chief Roundhead,
seated in council in a grove of sugar maples a short distance
from Leatherlips' lodge.
with his
arms
their midst. sent,
and
a
A
old
chief,
few white neighbors were also pre-
sullen
and
gloomy
been Leatherlips' companion,
Going up
The
tied with a slight cord, sat calmly in
to the
Indian,
who had
sat apart in the
Indians, Mr. Sells found
camp.
them
in
EXECUTION OF LEATHERLIPS. They were
earnest debate.
trying the white-haired
With
Leatherlips for witchcraft
by some of
previously charged
who beheved they had through
lost
he had been
this
the Indians present,
some of
their friends
his evil powers.
For two or three hours the council accusers spoke with
very
171
much ceremony, but
The
bitterly.
lasted.
prisoner answered
The
evidently
eloquently,
but without passion, occasionally smiling disdainfully.
The
council was closed with a sentence
Some
of the white
The
execution.
men
of death.
inquired as to the time of the
captain of the accusers pointed to
Mr. Sells asked him
the sun, indicating one o'clock.
what Leatherlips had done.
"Very bad Indian sick chief"
;
"make good
Indian," answered he;
make horse
sick
;
make
die
;
very bad
Mr. Sells tried to induce the white
men
to
interfere for the safety of the chief, but
they refused,
fearing the results of Indian animosity
on
He
protected settlements. the
life
of Leatherlips with a very fine horse, worth
three hundred dollars. at
first,
their un-
then tried to purchase
but
after a
This staggered the Indians
long council their fanatical zeal
triumphed, and the offer was refused. After the close of the council, five of the Indians
amused themselves with ning, jumping,
etc.
athletic sports,
In these,
such as run-
Roundhead took no
TECUMSEH.
1/2 part.
He now indicated
his
the hour of four as the time
Leatherlips then walked
of execution.
slowly to
camp, ate a dinner of jerked venison, washed and
dressed himself in his best apparel, which was very rich,
and
He
requested that the
him
him a very impressive
gray hair gave
ure and
His graceful
finally painted his face.
at the lodge.
had exerted himself
fig-
look.
company should draw around
He had
noticed that Mr. Sells
for him,
and now handed him a
paper, which was a recommendation from Governor Hull.
This paper was read to the company and
He
then fixed to a tree at the prisoner's desire.
shook hands
silently with the
on coming
Mr. Sells he grasped
to
whole company, but his
hand warmly,
spoke a few words in the Wyandot tongue, and
He
pointed to the sky.
then turned, and, in a voice
of wonderful strength and melody, began chanting his death-song.
He was followed by the
six warriors,
keeping time to the wild melancholy dirge with their slow steps. procession.
The white men
At about
also silently
they came upon a shallow grave. able Leatherlips kneeled to the Great Spirit.
from the
leader.
fell
into this
eighty yards from the
camp
Here the vener-
down and solemnly prayed
This was followed by a prayer
Mr. Sells
now
told
him
that
if
he
did this deed he ought at least to go beyond the limits of the white settlements.
EXECUTION OF LEATIIERLIPS. "
No
"
pleasure this
he answered sternly and
!
" no
;
bad man
good Indian
good Indian
!
;
mouth give
'fraid fire
-with
I73
much
dis-
he no go with
;
in the
dark night
he no go."
'fraid;
Mr. Sells reluctantly gave up the old man's cause.
Up
to
time
this
there
no weapon
was
visible.
Lcatherlips again sank on his knees and prayed as before.
In this position he remained, after he had
finished praying, until the fatal
blow was struck, with
a tomahawk suddenly drawn from beneath the blanket of the leader. Leatherlips, in
all his
rich clothing
and decorations,
was then buried, and the executioners returned
as
they had come. This execution
believed to
is
have taken place
It is thought that the by order of the Prophet. six Wyandots came immediately from Tippecanoe to
the banks of the Scioto. of
Whether
or not motives
policy dictated the charge of witchcraft against
Lcatherlips,
we do
not know.
that the hostile chiefs
with terror
movement
all
It is
quite possible
now found it needful to strike who held aloof from their
those leaders
CHAPTER
XIX.
MEETING OF HARRISON AND TECUMSEH AT VINCENNES. In the month of June, iSio, Governor Harrison sent
two
more
One
confidential agents to
fully if possible the
Tippecanoe to discover
designs of
the Prophet.
of these agents, a Mr. Dubois, was
He
kindly.
told the Prophet that
had sent him
to find out
United States.
He
Governor Harrison
what was the reason of
and
preparations
warlike
received
enmity against
his
told the Prophet that his
his
the
move-
ments had so alarmed the white people that warriors in
Kentucky and Indiana were arming themselves,
but that the Governor wished him to say that
was only
made
his intentions.
tend to
and
make
that
him
until there
was no more doubt of
The Prophet
said that he did not in-
war, that he had been unjustly accused,
he was fixed
commands him
and that no attempt should be
for defence,
against
this,
in that
place
of the Great Spirit.
by
the express
The agent urged
to state his complaints against the government.
The Prophet
that
replied
cheated of their lands
;
the
Indians
had
that a sale to be valid
been
must be
MEETING AT VINCENNES. by
sanctioned
all
the tribes.
that he ought to
go
1
Mr. Dubois told him
Vincennes and present
to
75
his
complaints to the governor.
The Prophet
declined doing
had been badly treated on Dubois
fearful that
in
Mr.
visit.
and Eel River out,
tribes.
and that
it.
the 4th of July, four canoes
of the
One
former
war would break
they would be involved
On
Wea
also visited the
They were
his
saying that he
this,
filled
with some
Prophet's followers descended the Wabash. canoes,
of these
came down
as
containing some
Kickapoos,
low as a settlem.ent above Vincennes,
where they stopped and attended a Shaker meeting on Sunday. their
After this act of piety they
Sabbath by stealing
A few days visiting the
told
five horses in the night.
a party of Indians
later,
wound up
who had been
Sac and Fox Indians on the Mississippi,
Governor Harrison that these
tribes
had taken up
the hatchet and said they were ready to act with the
Prophet whenever he should that a
Miami
chief,
who had been on
to the English post supplies,
"
My
desire.
at
Maiden,
It
was
also said
his annual visit
after
receiving his
was addressed thus by the English agent son,
keep your eyes fixed on me.
now up
tomahawk
is
strike
give the signal."
till I
;
:
Tvly
be you ready, but do not
Governor Harrison sent a confidential agent, Mr.
TECUMSEH.
176 Baron, with a
letter to
When
Tippecanoe.
mes-
this
Town he was received He was first conducted
senger reached the Prophet's
very dramatic fashion.
in
ceremoniously to the place where the Prophet, sur-
rounded by a number of Indians, was he was
left
Here
seated.
standing at the distance of about ten feet "
from the Indian prophet.
He
looked at me," said
Mr. Baron, " for several minutes, without speaking
knew
or making any sign of recognition, although he
me
At
well.
last
he spoke, apparently
in anger.
'For what purpose do you come here?' *
Brouilette was here
here
;
;
he was a spy.
There
too are a spy.
he was a spy.
Now is
I
!
look on
ground near the
to the
have been accustomed
to
to check his brother's fondness for stage acting,
came out of one him
now
of the lodges, greeted Mr. Baron
that his
was
life
in
asked him to state the object of his then read the following " William
!
it
stood."
Tecumseh, who seems
coldly, told
he.
You
have come.
your grave
The Prophet then pointed spot where
yoii
said
Dubois was
Henry
letter
no danger, and
visit.
Mr. Baron
:
Harrison, Governor and
Com-
mander-in-chief of the Territory of Indiana, to the
Shawnee noe
:
chief
and the Indians assembled
at
Tippeca-
Notwithstanding the improper language which
you have used towards me,
I will
endeavor to open
MEETING AT VINCENNES. your eyes
your true
to
what white men have
You ought
sonal enemy.
manner
in
which
I
to
I
77
Notwithstanding
interests.
told you,
1
am
know
not your perthis
received and treated
from
the
you on your
visit to this place.
"
Although
I
must say that you are an enemy
to
the Seventeen Fires, and
that
you have used the
greatest exertions to lead
them
[the Indians] astray.
In this you have been in some measure successful as
I
am
they are ready to
told,
raise the
;
tomahawk
against their father, yet their father, notwithstanding his
anger
their folly,
at
always ready to receive
who
children
their fault,
"
There
are
and ask is
into his
to
willing
The
little
pends on you
repent,
is
his
acknowledge
harm done, which may be
chain of friendship which united
the whites with the Indians as strong as ever.
arms those of
his forgiveness.
yet but
easily repaired.
of goodness, and
full
is
A
may
be renewed, and be
great deal of that
— the destiny of those who
work deare under
your direction depends upon the choice you
may
make
The
one
of the two roads which are before you.
is
large, open, and pleasant, and leads to peace,
and
security, trary,
happiness
;
the
other,
on the con-
narrow and crooked, and leads to misery
is
and
ruin.
that
all
Don't deceive yourselves
;
do not believe
the nations of Indians united are able to rc-
8*
TECUMSEH.
1/8 sist
the force of the Seventeen Fires.
I
know your
warriors are brave, but ours are not less
But
so.
what can a few brave warriors do against the numerable warriors of the Seventeen Fires
more numerous than you can count
blue-coats are
our hunters are
like the leaves of the forest, or the
grains of sand on the
you
the red-coats can protect
war with
moons
What Fires
If
us.
see our flag
Do
Wabash. ;
not think that
they are not able
They do not
to protect themselves. to
think of going
they did, you would
wave over
all
in a
few
the forts of Canada.
reason have you to complain of the Seventeen ?
Have they taken anything from you treaties made with
they ever violated the
men
in-
Our
?
?
Have
the
red
You say they have purchased lands from who had no right to sell them. Show that this those Show is true and the land will be instantly restored. ?
us the rightful owners. this business
;
but
if
I
have
full
power
to arrange
you would rather carry your
complaints before your great father, the President,
you
shall
means
be indulged.
I
will
immediately take
to send you, with those chiefs that
choose, to the city where your father
lives.
you may Every-
thing necessary shall be prepared for your journey,
and means taken
for
your
safe return."
The Prophet made no answer promised to send Tecumseh
to this speech,
but
to visit the governor.
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
much
Mr. Baron had however.
He
1
79
conversation with Tccumseh,
said that
he did not intend to make
war, but he solemnly declared that
it
was impossible
remain friends with the United States unless they
to
would give up the idea of making settlements further
and west, and would acknowledge the
to the north
property of "
all
Indian
The Great
tribes.
said
Spirit,"
Tecumseh,
great island to his red children
on the other
common
Western country was the
principle that the
;
"
gave
this
he placed the whites
side of the big water.
They were not
contented with their own, but came to take ours from
They have
us.
we can go no
driven us from the sea to the lakes
They have taken upon them
further.
to say this tract belongs to the Miamis, this the Dela-
wares, and so on
the
common
that
we have no
but the Great Spirit intended
;
business
belongs to other tribes us to
come
;
said,
man
sitting
but the Great Spirit ordered will stay."
however, that he was
He had
remembered him
by the
as
us
— the land
with the governor's speech. see him, but he
it
tells
all.
and here we
here,
Tecumseh
Our father upon the Wabash
property of
side of General
as
much
pleased
never been to a very
Wayne.
young
He had
never troubled the white people much, he said, but
he would now go to Vincennes and show the governor that he had been listening to bad men,
when he
I
TECUMSEH.
So
was
told that they meditated
war against the United
States.
From
we gather
Mr. Baron's report
satisfaction
and jealousy had arisen
that
in the
some
dis-
Prophet's
paradise at Tippecanoe, probably through the unv/ise over-boastfulness of the seer with regard to his divine
A
power.
Pottawatomie chief told Baron,
in
the
Prophet's presence, that he had promised them that there should be no
more deaths
at his town, but that
three Kickapoos had been buried in as
The Prophet
days.
did not understand what the chief said,
and asked Baron it
many
to repeat
it.
When
he heard what
was, he said that the Pottawatomie had lied, for no
one had "
I
died.
will
not say," the chief answered, with Indian
sarcasm, "that any have died, but
promised that none should
die,
and
I
know
I
have seen three
bodies buried within three days; but they
that
you
may have
been dogs or persons long since dead, who have been taken up to be buried over again."
Tecumseh
told Mr.
Baron that he would probably
men to Vincenncs with were fond of attending men young
bring thirty of his principal him, and as the
on such occasions, there would probably be a hundred
in
all.
The Prophet added
pect to see a great
many more
that they might ex-
than
that.
This idea did not please the governor, and he sent
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
l8l
an Indian messenger requesting that but a few should attend
Tecumsch on
his visit.
Tecumseh, however, descended the Wabash on the
1
of August,
2th
armed with
their
commander
at
with
hundred warriors,
four
tomahawks.
Captain Floyd, the
Fort Knox, describes the passing of
this chief in a letter, thus:
"Nothing new has transpired to
they passed
all
in
last,
painted in the most
were stopped
examined
pared
which
this garrison,
Vincennes, on Sunday
were
I
my
since
last letter
you except that the Shawnee Indians have come
for
at the garrison
in
case
;
three miles above
eighty canoes.
They They
terrific
manner.
by me,
for a short time.
and found them well pre-
their canoes,
war
is
of an
They were
attack.
headed by the brother of the Prophet, Tecumseh,
who perhaps saw
— about
features,
The
is
one of the
looking
finest
six feet high, straight, with
men
them
will
ever
large, fine
and altogether a daring, bold looking
governor's council with
I
fellow.
commence
to-
morrow morning." In this council, Harrison and trusted the other's
good
had intended that
it
of his
own
Tecumseh each
faith at first.
dis-
The governor
should be held on the portico
house, which was fitted up with seats for
the purpose.
Here he placed
the judges of the
himself, attended
Supreme Court, some
by
officers of the
TECUMSEH.
182
army, a sergeant with twelve
and a large number of
men from Fort Knox, At the time ap-
citizens.
who was encamped outside of the appeared with forty warriors. He approached
pointed, Tecumseh,
town,
within thirty or forty rods, and stopped.
Governor
Harrison sent out an interpreter to request him and his followers to take seats
refused to do
this,
on the
Tecumseh
portico.
saying he did not think
it
a proper
place to hold the council, and that he preferred a
grove of trees which stood a short distance from the house.
The governor answered
jection to there.
that he
had no ob-
the grove, but that there were no seats
Tecumseh
replied that
it
would only be ne-
cessary to bring out chairs enough to accommodate the white men, saying, "
on her bosom
earth
is
my mother,
and '
will
The governor were removed
The
'>
I
repose."
yielded the point, chairs and benches
to the grove, but the Indians, accord-
ing to their habit, sat upon the grass.
As Tecumseh's
speech on
this occasion
is
markable, indicating his modes of thought, passages from " Brother
:
it
I
as follows
wish you to
I will
explain
we
give
:
listen to
me
it
" Brother, since the peace
again.
As
well.
think you do not clearly understand what said to you,
very re-
I
I
i
before
\
...
was made, you have
killed
some of the Shawnees, Winncbagocs, Dclawares, and
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
1
Miamis, and you have taken our land from
do not see how we can remain tinue to do so.
do some to
if
you that arc pushing them on
You endeavor
make
to
distinctions.
them
—
common
aside
and
and
let
them consider
property of the whole
and advise them not
until
our design
The
dent.
is
reason
distinctions of Indian
we wish
their lands as
you take
;
into this
tribes
measure
accomplished we do not wish
tell
I
come
to
your invitation
to accept of
you con-
try to force the red people to
is
wish to prevent the Indians doing as
the
I
It
You
to unite,
and
us,
You
injury.
do mischief
peace
at
83
to
you
go and see the Presi-
this,
tribes
you want, by your
allotting to each
in
a
make them to war with You never see an Indian come and enmake the white people do so. You are
particular tract of land, to
each other.
deavor
to
continually driving the red people
you
when,
;
at
last,
drive them into the Great Lake, where they
will
can't either stand or walk.
"Brother, you ought to with the Indians. President 10
bad at
thing,
know what you
Perhaps
make
it
is
by
those distinctions.
and we do not
like
it.
Since
Tippecanoe we have endeavored to
tinctions
—
chief
done.
is
to destroy village chiefs,
Americans. acted
by
It
Our
warriors.
is
they
object
is
who
sell
are doing
direction of the It
my
is
a very
residence
level all dis-
by whom
all
mis-
our lands to the
to let our affairs
be trans-
1
TECUMSEH.
84
" Brother, this land that was sold and the goods
that were given for
The
treaty was
were only done by a few.
it
afterwards brought
Weas were induced
The
small numbers.
their
and the
here,
to give their consent because of
Wayne
treaty at Fort
was made through the
threats of Winncmac but in we are prepared to punish those chiefs who may come forward to propose to sell the land. If ;
future
you continue
among what
we
was glad
I
to hear
that did
sell
up a
tribes set
us you
to
at
it
will
which
show
did not
be
all
am
do not know
your speech. You said
own
you would It
it.
it.
me
not
will
not restored
is
return to our homes,
have a great council,
when we
the tribes will be present,
who
restore
was me. These
If the land
We shall
settled.
to those
sold that they
and we
had no right
what
shall
to the
will
be
to those chiefs that did sell the land to you.
I
;
will see
not alone in this determination;
mination of to me. not,
sell,
when we
will see,
claim that they set up
done
last, I
claim, but the tribes with
agree with their claim.
how
produce war
could show that the land was sold by peo-
ple that had no right to
Those
will
it
be the consequence to the white people.
will
if
purchase of them
the different tribes, and at
"Brother, that
to
it
I
will
all
is
it
the deter-
the warriors and red people that listen
now wish you appear as
if
to listen to me.
you wished me
If
you do
to kill all the
MEETING AT VINCENNES. you the
chiefs that sold I
am
authorized by
the head of them
this
;
then
I
you the land and If
all
you do not
am
I
a warrior, and
85
because I
am the
all
two or three moons
in
will call for those chiefs that sold
know what
shall
restore the land,
you
do with them.
to
will
have a hand
them.
in killing-
" Brother,
do not believe that
presents from you. take.
;
j^ou so
I tell
the tribes to do so.
meet together
warriors will
from
all
land.
1
By
you
If
I
came here
we
offer us any,
to get
will
not
taking goods from you, you will hereafter
say that with them you purchased another piece of land from
us.
.
.
.
It
has been the object of
both myself and brother to prevent the lands being sold.
Should you not return the land,
casion us to call a great council that will
Huron
been lighted, be
where the
village,
called,
at
and
" Brother,
council-fire
will oc-
it
meet
at the
has already
which those who sold the lands
shall
I
shall suffer for their conduct.
wish you would take pity on the red
people and do what
I
have requested.
If
you
will
not give up the land and do cross the boundary of
your present settlement,
it
will
produce great troubles among
us.
confidence in the white people
?
came on cross.
earth,
you
killed
be very hard, and
How When
him and
You thought he was
can
Jesus Christ
nailed
dead, but
we have
him on a
you were mis-
1
TECUMSEH.
86
You have Shakers among
taken.
you,
laugh and make light of their worship. I
have said to you
to you.
that
.
.
.
birds
who
I
Spirit
speak nothing but the truth
Brother,
you ought not
The Great
the truth.
is
has inspired me, and
and you
Everything
to
hope you
I
will confess
have listened to those bad
bring you bad news.
myself freely to you, and
if
have declared
I
any explanation should
be required from our town, send a man who can
you think proper
any
speak to
us.
presents,
and we can be convinced that they are
If
we
given through friendship alone,
As we
to give
will accept
intend to hold our council at the
lage, that
is
near the British,
us
them.
Huron
vil-
we may probably make ^
them a goods, us
Should they
visit.
we
will
offer us
not take them
any presents of
but should they offer
;
powder and the tomahawk, we
powder and
refuse
the
tomahawk.
brother, to consider everything
and that
it is
listen to
me."
the sentiment of
I
all
I
the
take
will
wish you,
have said as
true,
the red people that
All this was not calculated to promote a peaceful or friendly feeling in the council.
Each
exceedingly distrustful of the other.
Tecumseh had
awakened
in his
own mind, and
in the
side felt
minds of
his
companions, the bitterest feeling of injury from the
United States, while he had increased the suspicions
|
I
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
1
8/
of treachery on the part of the inhabitants of Vin-
who were
cennes
present.
Governor Harrison now arose and denied that the
He
Indians were one nation.
white people had cupied
all
Shawnees
come
when
that
the
America, the Miamis oc-
to
country on
the
said
the
lived in Georgia, from
Wabash, and the which place they
had been driven by the Creeks.
These lands had
been bought from the Miamis, who were the owners. It
was ridiculous to say that the Indians were If the
nation.
had meant
Great Spirit
would not have put
different
it
to
one
all
be
so,
he
tongues into their heads,
but would have taught them to speak a language that
The Miamis thought
could understand.
all
it
to
their interest to sell part of their land for a further
annuity, the
which they had
benefit of
long
for a
time experienced from the punctuality with which the Seventeen Fires had paid them.
had no
come from a
right to
control the
Miamis
The governor time to explain
and
in the disposal of their property.
sat
down,
this.
to allow the interpreter
He had
Shawnees, and had begun omies,
The Shawnees
distant country
when Tecumseh
interpreted
it
to the
to do so to the Pottawat-
rose
up and began
to
speak
very vehemently.
The
his violent gestures,
but thinking he must be making
some explanation, turned
governor was surprised
at
his attention to the friendly
1
TECUMSEH.
88
chief,
Winnemac, who was priming
which
his pistol,
he kept concealed from the Indians, but which was full
sight of the governor.
in
Just then he heard Gen-
eral Gibson, v/ho understood the
Shawnee language,
say to Lieutenant Jennings,
"Those
fellows
intend mischief; you had better
bring up the guard."
The governor looked
moment around
at the Indians,
leader
their
with
son.
He
drew
a small sword which
at that
upon Harri-
their eyes
rose immediately from his arm-chair and
hung
Captain Floyd drew a dirk and his
who
seized their arms and sprang to their feet
pistol.
were quite
at his side, while
Winnemac cocked
The unarmed citizens, of whom there a number present, laid hold of clubs and
brickbats, while Mr. Winans,
a Methodist minister,
ran to the governor's house, got a gun, and stood at the
doorway
strange scene
to
During
defend the family.
no one spoke a word.
soon came running up, and were about to the governor ordered them not to do
so,
this
The guard
when
fire,
and asked
the interpreter to explain what had happened. replied that
that
all
Tecumseh had
that the governor
that the Indians
by him and
He
interrupted him, saying
had
said
was
false,
and
had been cheated and imposed upon
the Seventeen Fires.
The governor then
told
Tecumseh
that he
was a
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
1
89
bad man, and that he would have no further communication with him, that he might go
in
safety,
he had come under protection to the coun-
since
cil-fire,
but that he must immediately leave the
neighborhood.
The
following morning
terpreter.
Tecumseh
sent for the in-
Through him he earnestly entreated the
governor to give him an opportunity to explain his action, saying that
he did not intend to attack him,
and that he had acted under the advice of white people.
The governor
at last
consented to receive the In-
dian chief, each party having the same force as before.
Harrison and his friends
took pains to be
better armed, however.
At
this
interview
ently, being cool
asked him
if
and
Tecumseh behaved very dignified.
When
differ-
the governor
he intended to prevent the survey of
the land on the Wabash, he answered that he
was
determined the old boundary should continue.
When Tecumseh Kickapoo,
finished
Pottawatomie, Ottawa,
chiefs all spoke, saying that
seh's
speaking,
Wyandot,
and Winnebago
they had joined Tecum-
confederacy, and appointed
him
their leader,
and that they would support him. Governor Harrison then told Tecumseh that as he
had been candid
in
acknowledging
his intentions,
he
TECUMSEH.
IQO
would be so a
faithful
He would
too.
send to the President
statement of what he had said
the claim to the lands in question, and
answer when he received
his
disputing
in
tell
Tecumseh
but he was sure the
it,
President would never admit them to be the property of any other than those tribes
who had
occu-
pied them since the white people came to America,
and that as they had come by chase, he might be sure that
their title
by
fair
pur-
would be supported
it
by the sword. The council then adjourned. The governor was exceedingly anxious to have a more
satisfactory conversation
accordingly went to
visit
with Tecumseh.
him
next day, accompanied only
at his
by an
talked with him for a long time.
son asked him
if
his intentions
declared in council.
were
that
;
it
if
politely,
and
Governor Harri-
were such as he had
Tecumseh
said they certainly
would make war upon the United
and
Te-
would be with great reluctance that he
he had nothing Indian lands.
encampment
interpreter.
cumseh received the governor very
He
to
States, of
whom
complain but their purchase of
He was
anxious to be their friend,
the governor would prevail upon the Presi-
dent to give up the land recently bought, and agree never to of
all
assist
make another
treaty without the consent
the tribes, he would be their faithful
them
in all their
ally,
wars with the English.
and
He
MEETING AT VINCENNES.
I91
he knew that the British were always urging
said
the Indians to for the
war
own advantage, and
for their
good of the red men
and clapped
;
his
not
hands
and imitated the halloo of a man setting a dog on to fight, to
way
represent the
the Indians on to the
which the British urged
Fires.
If
But, he
con-
friend of the
Sev-
Americans.
would rather be the
tinued, he
enteen
in
they did not comply with his
terms, however, he would be obliged
other
very
Probably
side. little
this
credulity about
was
to
all true, for
Tecumseh, and
if
take
the
there
was
he hated
the Americans, he equally despised the English.
Governor Harrison again the President of
was not the
said that
his propositions,
all
least probability that
he would
tell
but that there
he would accede to
his terms.
"Well," said Tecumseh, "as the great chief determine the matter,
I
hope the Great
is
to
Spirit will
put sense enough into his head to induce him to direct
you
to give
up
he
his
town and drink
have
to fight
it
It is true,
be injured by the war; he
off
will not
this land.
his wine, while
he
is
may
you and
so far sit
in
I will
out."
The governor then
said that
he had one thing to
request of Tecumseh, that in case
would put a stop
to that cruel
of warfare which the
it
came
to
war he
and disgraceful mode
Indians were
accustomed to
TECUMSEII.
192
wage
against
women and
were no longer
in
a situation to
very readily agreed to mise.
children,
this,
and those who
resist.
Tecumseh
and he kept
his
pro-
CHAPTER
XX.
THE LAST COUNCIL BETWEEN HARRISON AND TECUMSEH. In the
fall
of 1810, a Kickapoo chief visited the
governor and told him that the designs of Tecumseh
and the Prophet were certainly time,
At
hostile.
Governor Clark of Missouri wrote
that belts
had been sent to the
the same
to Harrison
west of the
tribes
Mississippi with an invitation to join in a
war against
the United States, which was to begin with an attack
He
on Vinccnnes.
said that the Sacs
had joined the
confederacy, and had sent a party to the English post,
Maiden, for arms and ammunition.
terpreter at Chicago also sent tribes in that part of the
mined upon war. ferent tribes
we
word
The
in-
that the Indian
country were fully deter-
In these various reports from
dif-
see the extent of Tecumseh's travels,
and of the influence he had acquired over distant Indians.
During 18 10, one of the surveyors who undertook to run the lines
Wabash was
on the new purchase of land on the
driven off
took two of his
men
by some Wea
prisoners.
9
Indians,
who
TECUMSEH.
194
Early in the spring of 1811, Governor Harrison sent a boat
up the Wabash loaded with
different Indian
on that
tribes
allowance for the Prophet's Town.
been absent
when
for
time,
on a
Tecumseh had to the lakes,
visit
The Prophet to decide what should be done. The Indians had punished themselves by
called a council
refusing to take
They
all.
any
sent
salt
word
now
they decided to seize
to the
governor not to be
;
angry with what they had done,
two thousand men salt for
dred
the
the boat arrived at Tippecanoe.
year before the
it
some
salt for
including an
river,
two
men
to feed,
for the
Prophet had
and had not received any
There were then about
years.
and Tecumseh was
at Tippecanoe,
expected with reinforcements.
These
brothers.
hundaily
facts increased
the uneasiness and alarm which had been
some time
six
felt
for
consequence of the actions of the
in
was now conjectured that an attack
It
was meditated upon Vincennes, with eight hundred or a thousand warriors, a
governor could
For making well situated.
much
larger force than the
collect.
this attack,
He was
far
Tecumseh was admirably
enough away
to avoid close
among
the tribes he
observation, centrally situated
wished to unite immediately, and placed so that high water his large glide silently
down
force, in their light canoes,
the
Wabash
in
in
could
twenty-four hours,
THE LAST COUNCIL.
I95
and appear before Vinccnnes without any warning.
For no messenger could
travel overland with equal
expedition.
Governor Harrison sent a request
ment
govern-
to the
that a regiment stationed at Pittsburg under
Boyd should be ordered
Colonel
He
to Vincennes.
also asked for authority to act offensively against the
Indians
when
it
should be discovered that their in-
tentions were decidedly hostile, believing that
it
was
best to crush an outbreak in the beginning.
There were various
little
troubles constantly aris-
ing between the settlers and the horses had been
stolen,
Some
Indians.
but four of these were re-
Some murders Pottawatomies. The
turned on application to Tecumseh.
had been committed by certain Indians
felt little
inclined to trouble themselves about
redressing these wrongs, because similar aggressions
Govern-
often took place on the part of the whites.
or Harrison says
were treated with sions
by our
;
"
I
wish
justice
citizens,
but
I
could say the Indians
and propriety on it
is
all
far otherwise.
are often abused and maltreated, and
it is
occa-
They
rare that
they obtain any satisfaction for the most unprovoked
wrongs."
by an
A
Muskoe Indian was
Italian innkeeper without
killed in
any
Vincennes
just cause.
The
governor ordered that the murderer should be apprehended, but so great was the antagonism to the
TECUMSEH.
196 Indians
among
all
classes, that
on
his trial the jury
acquitted the homicide almost without any deliberation.
About
the same time, two
Wea
Indians were badly
wounded near Vincennes by some Such
provocation.
the slightest
whites, without
exasperated
facts
the Indians, and led to their refusal to deliver up
Indians
who had committed
When
white men.
against
offences
like
made
the governor
a
demand on
who had
the Delaware Indians for White Turkey,
robbed the house of a Mr. Vawter, the chiefs refused to give
him
up another man ished
would never deliver
up, saying that they until
some of the whites were pun-
who had murdered
White Turkey
their people.
They put
to death themselves, however.
Tecumseh had returned from
In June,
the Iroquois and rison sent to
Wyandot
a visit to
Governor Har-
Indians.
him and the Prophet, along with the
other chiefs at Tippecanoe, the following speech "
Brothers
:
Listen to me.
I
:
speak to you about
matters of importance both to the white people and yourselves
what that
I
all
;
open your
shall
say.
ears, therefore,
Brothers, this
;
to
the third year
the white people in this country have been
alarmed at your proceedings
war
is
and attend
you
;
you threaten us with
invite all the tribes to the north
of you to join against
us.
and west
THE LAST COUNCIL. " Brothers, your v/arriors
here deny
but
this,
every direction sent
me word
I
who have
;
that }'0u intended
to
murder me, and
a war upon our people.
you sent
had no other evidence of your
cient.
lately sent
I
have
I
to the Pottawato-
mies and others to join }'ou for that purpose
seizing- the salt
been
lately
have received information from
also received the speech
I
but
;
up the Wabash
preparing
are
themselves,
suffi-
is
to
]iot
if
your
hostility to us,
my
Brothers, our citizens are alarmed, and
warriors
97
the tribes on the Mississippi liavc
commence
then to
1
strike
you, but to defend themselves and their Avomen and
You
children.
do
;
shall not surprise us as
you are about
a friend,
I
to undertake a
advise you to consider well of
may save us much mischief;
reflection
prevent
" ]3rothers,
it is
not yet too
men
Do you
?
that
As
a
little
;
late.
what can be the inducement
of success
handful of
it
to
act.
a great deal of trouble and
undertake an enterprise when ability
you expect
very rash
for
you
tliere is so little
really think
to
prob-
that the
you have about you are able
to contend with the Seventeen Fires, or even that the
A\hole of the tribes united coukl contend against the
Kentucky
fire
Long Kniic as
rlic)'
?
Brothers,
1
am
myself of the
fnc [Virginia and Kcntuclc}'].
hear
forth their
alone
my
voice you will see
swarms of
liunting-shirt
As
soon
them pom'ing
men.
as
muncrou$
TECUMSEH.
198 as the
mosquitoes on
shores of the Wabash.
tlie
Brothers, take care of their stings.
not our wish to hurt you
have power
do
to
Look
it.
to the south
;
and below you
to live in peace
do them
sides of the Ohio,
what
are brave men, but
tliis
satisfied that
?
—-but we wish
country are alarmed.
you have no design
mischief, or they will not lay aside
You have
arms.
by
to
their
government of
also insulted the
the United States
is
and happiness,
" Brothers, the citizens of
They must be
it
certainly
number of our
could you do against such a multitude
you
we
above and below the
on both
You
also.
did,
the
at
warriors to the east of you,
Great Miami
we
if
;
Brothers,
was
seizing the salt that
in-
tended for other tribes; satisfaction must be given for that also.
Brothers,
attended by
must not be
you
talk of
coming
your young men
all
If
so.
this,
;
me,
to see
ho\A'ever,
your intentions are good, you
have need to bring but a few of your young men with you. fer
you
to
I
must be plain with you
come
I will
not suf-
into our settlements with
such a
;
force.
" Brothers,
if
you wish
to satisfy us that
tentions arc good, follow the advice
before
:
that
is,
that one or both of
the President of the
grievances before him.
United
He
your
in-
have given you
I
you should
States and will treat
you
lay
visit
your
well, will
THE LAST COUNCIL. what you
say,
and
you have been
injured,
you
you
my
listen to
will follow
if
1
99
you can show him that receive justice.
will
advice in this respect
If
con-
will
it
vince the citizens of this country and myself that you
have no design to attack them.
Brothers, with re-
were purchased
spect to the lands that
last
fall,
can
I
enter into no negotiations Avith you on that subject the affair
is
the hands of the President.
in
wish to go and see him,
I
will
If
you
supply you with the
means.
who delivers this is one of man in whom I have en-
" Brothers, the person
my
war
tire
confidence.
it
may
a
Whatever he says
not be contained
My
to you, although
in this paper,
Tecumseh, the bearer
friend
and a brave warrior.
You
is
you may be-
comes from me.
lieve
"
He
officers.
I
hope you
arc yourself a warrior, and
esteem
for
is
a good
man
him
well.
will treat
all
such should have
each other."
Captain Wilson, the bearer of this message, was well received at Tippecanoe, and
much
Tecumseh, who had
appreciation for a brave warrior, treated
him
with particular friendship.
He sent this "Brother
answer back :
with you myself to listen to
me
I
to the
governor
:
give you a few words until
Brother, at Vinccnnes, whilst
I
I
I will
be
wish you
send you a few words, and
TECUMSEII.
200 I
hope
tlicy will case
your heart.
know you
I
women and
on your young men and young
with pity, to sec them so alarmed.
you now hope
it
be a satisfaction to you,
wash away
are like mine, to
have been
Brother,
I
wish
examine what you have from me.
to
will
look
children
circulated.
I
your intentions
these bad stories that
all
I will
if
be with you myself
in
eighteen days from this day. " Brother,
we cannot say what will become of us, management of us all at
as the Great Spirit has the his will.
I
may
not be there
come together this will
be there before the time, and
until all
I
may
hope that when we
By
these bad tales will be settled.
I hope your young men, women and children I wish you, brother, to let them know be easy.
when
I
come
to
Vincennes and see you,
peace and happiness.
settled in
only a few words to
you myself; and you
the day.
better.
let
when
Brother,
if I
less than eighteen days,
men
before
me
you know that I
to let
I
am
I will
with you
find I can will
all
be
will
Brother, these are
I
be with
can inform
be with you
send one of
in
my young
you know the time
I will
be
with you."
Early
from
in
July,
Illinois that
in that territory,
Governor Harrison received word
some murders had been committed it
He
was believed by Shawnccs.
also received information that the attack
was
to
be
THE LAST COUNCIL. begun
cover the main object, an attack
in Illinois to
on Vincenncs.
Both
to a state of alarm,
territories
were now thrown
and the inhabitants sent
War
notification to the Secretary of
protect themselves
201
if
in-
official
that they would
the government did not take
measures to protect them. In a letter
Harrison
said,
being told that
Secretary
the
to
Tecumseh
with regard to I
would not
War, Governor
of
suffer
him
only.
shall
I
not,
him a
however, depend upon
promise, but shall have the river watched
of scouts after the descent of the chief,
be followed by his warriors. will
be the
case.
signs of an Indian feat
them.
The is
I
he should
do not think
this
of an expedition, conducted toil
abandoned frequently upon the
moment
lest
a party
generally for that time to de-
The hopes
cion, their painful steps retraced,
able
by
few'
this
detection of the hostile de-
through many hundred miles of arc
Upon
come with
to
so large a force, he promised to bring with
men
"
:
expected.
and
difficulty,
slightest
suspi-
and a more favor-
With them,
the surprise of
an enemy bestows more eclat upon a warrior than the most brilliant success obtained
Tecumseh had taken Pontiac,
and
comparison
I
in
am
for
his
persuaded he
every respect
warrior."
9*
by other means.
model the celebrated Avill
bear a favorable
with that
far- famed
TECUMSEH.
202
Tecumseh made
Vincennes during the
his visit to
He
latter part of July.
could not travel without a at this
time by
thirty
were
women
arbor was built for the council.
At
this the
proper retinue, and was accompanied three hundred Indians, of
and
whom
children.
An chief
was attended by one hundred and seventy war-
riors,
without guns, but armed either with knives
and tomahawks or bows and arrows.
The governor opened ence to the murders
in Illinois
seh had created on the
He
so large a force.
Tecumseh or any of
He made
the council.
refer-
and the alarm Tecum-
Wabash by said he
his passage with
would
listen to
what
the other chiefs might have to
say about the purchase of land on the Wabash, but
he could enter into no negotiation about
it,
matter was in the hands of the President.
spoke of the seizure of the explanation. salt
had been
Tecumseh
salt,
seized, but he said
the salt was refused.
possible to please the
angry because the
was
just as
much
salt
it
and demanded an
away
He
was during
his
the spring before
said
governor:
was
it
seemed im-
it
last
refused,
displeased because
this point the council
then
replied, admitting that the
absence, and that he was also
when
as the
He
year he was
and it
this
year he
was taken. At
adjourned for the day.
When
was opened the next day a long speech was made
THE LAST COUNCIL.
203
by a Wca chief with regard to all the treaties that had been made by the governor of Indiana. The governor then told Tecumsch that
who
the two Pottawatomies
men,
it
would show him
to
sions of friendship to the
at great pains to
he Avould give up
murdered the
liad
be sincere
\\'hitc
his profes-
in
United States and of desire
Tecumsch
to preserve peace.
been
if
induce
the Northern tribes
of Indians to unite and place themselves under that the whites were alarmed
unnecessarily
measures, which meant peace.
He
States
among
had all
it,
The
Indians, he said, did not
and their white brethren ought not
As
on a
tribes of Indians to prevail
He
the Northern.
up
;
and
he had
if
to unite with
said the murderers
were not
new purchase great
settle at
at
they were, he could not deliver them
set the whites
an example of forgiveness
of injuries, and they ought to imitate him.
A
among
the Southern
visit to
upon them
he hoped that nothing would be done toward the
to
soon as the council was over, he
said he intended to set out
his town,
;
his
United
said the
complain of the Indians doing the same thing their tribes.
him
at
him the example of forming a union
set
the Fires.
complain of
had
replied that he
all
He
said
settling
until his return the following spring.
number of Indians were coming, he
said, to
Tippecanoe, and would need the land for a
hunting ground
;
and
if
they did no more injury, they
TECUMSEII.
204 might
and hogs of the white
at least kill the cattle
make
people, and that this would
he wished
all
he would
visit
remain quiet
to
disturbances, and
until his return,
the President and settle
was now
when
all difficulties
night,
and the governor closed
the council, saying that the
moon which they saw
with him.
It
would sooner
fall
to
the ground than the President
would suficr his people to be murdered with impunity, and that he would put petticoats on
warriors
his
sooner than give up a country which he had
bought from
its
true owners.
fairly
Harrison had ordered
a parade of the whole militia of the country on the
day of Tccumseh's
arrival
;
and by the maneuvering
of the garrison, in making frequent
company by than
it
another, he
made
it
reliefs
of one
appear stronger
was, and he hoped to convince the chief that
Vincennes was guarded by a vigilance that defied surprise.
A
Pottawatomie, called the Deaf Chief, fromi his
being hard of hearing, was present at
He
this
council.
told the governor, in the presence of other In-
dians, after
it
was over, that
if
he had been called
upon he would have conh-onted Tecumseh when he This was denied that his intentions were hostile. quickly reported to Tecumseh, to the
who calmly
Prophet that on his return
to
intimated
Tippecanoe the
Deaf Chief must be put out of the way.
He was
THE LAST COU^XIL.
20$
informed of his danger by a friend, but was not
on
war
his
dress, painted himself elaborately,
himself with
rifle,
The
cumseh.
in his
canoe to the camp of Te-
interpreter,
Mr. Baron, was there
The Deaf Chief
conversation with Tecumseh.
proached Tecumseh saying
it
"Here
was an I
armed
tomahawk, war-club, and scalping-
and paddled
knife,
in
lie returned to his camp, put
the least intimidated.
for
having ordered his death,
unworthy of a
act
am now,"
in
re-
said he;
warrior.
"come and
me."
kill
Tecumseh made no answer. "
You, and your men," continued the Deaf
" can
kill
the white people's hogs and call
them
Chief,
bears,
but you dare not face a warrior."
Tecumseh remained calmly omie abused him
in
every
The Pottawat-
silent.
way he
could, in order to
rouse his anger and tempt him to
fight, calling
him
a slave of the red-coats, and finally using a term of
reproach that can never be forgotten by an Indian.
Tecumseh, however, did not calm dignity,
whoop
for a
moment
lose his
and the Deaf Chief gave the war-
of defiance and paddled
off.
There
is
rea-
son to suppose that Tecumseh's orders were not dis-
obeyed, however, for the Pottawatomie was never again seen at Vincennes.
Tecumseh a
fevv^
set off
from Vincennes
days, attended
by twenty
for the
warriors.
South
in
He was
TECUMSEH.
206
now
On
Hearing the accomplishment of his great plan.
his return
from
this visit
he would have his con-
federacy formed and be ready to
act.
But Harrison
had determined not to await Tecumseh's
readiness.
CHAPTER
XXI.
GETTING READY FOR WAR. In a
letter to the
this council,
War Department
with regard to
Governor Harrison speaks of
" the
im-
obedience and respect which the followers of
plicit
Tecumsch pay
to him,"
" If
for the vicinity of the
it
were not
He
as wonderful.
says
United States,
he would perliaps be the founder of an empire that
would ties
For four years he has been
deter him.
You
stant motion.
and
in
No
glory Mexico or Peru.
rival in
see
difficul-
in
con-
him to-day on the Wabash,
a short time hear of
him on the shores of
Lake Erie or Michigan, or on the banks of the Mississippi
;
and wherever he goes he makes an impres-
sion favorable to his purpose. last
He
round to put a finishing stroke
is
now upon
the
work.
I
to his
hope, however, before his return," says the general, " that that part of the
complete
will
work which he considered
be demolished, and even
its
founda-
tion rooted up." It
appears that though the power of Tecumsch
over most of his followers was founded on their fection for him,
some were subdued by
af-
fear alone,
208
TECUMSEII.
and the moment Tecumseh had
left
Vincenncs
for
the South they took occasion to express their strong discontent.
We
have only some fragments of the history of
Tccumseh's traveler
among
Tecumseh
"
to
visit
One
Southern Indians.
the
the Creeks or IMuskogees heard that
came more than a thousand
the borders of Canada," to
visit
miles,
that nation
from
and
to
persuade them to go to war with the English against the Americans whenever he gave notice.
A
mid-
night council of the chiefs was held, an eloquent
speech was
made by Tecumseh, and
unanimously decided
to
the
Creeks
"take up the hatchet" when
he should command.
From seh's in
He sel
another writer
work with
Florida. told
them
we
get an account of
the Seminolcs and neighboring tribes
Among them
he was also successful.
that on a particular
of the "red-coats,"
for the Indians,
filled
would be
day on which they were
sticks
which he painted
certain ves-
with arms and supplies
calendar,
showing the
to strike the white settle-
This he did by making
sticks equal to the
day a
off the coast of Florida.
Tecumseh prepared them a ments.
Tccum-
red.
number
little
bundles of
Each bundle contained of days that
would pass
before the one arrived which he had indicated to
them.
Every morning they were
to
throw away a
ready for war.
gettii:g
Thus
stick.
it
came
to pass that the Scminolcs, in
the war which followed,
the
name
"Red
of
became widely known under
Sticks."
He
cautious in his operations. to
209
Tecumseh was very directed the Indians
answer any inquiry that might be made as
he had come from so
them
to
till
far,
to
why
saying that he had told
the ground, to abstain from the use of
''fire-water,"
and to
live
peaceably with the white
people.
From
Florida he journeyed to Alabama, where he the Creeks of that region.
Here we again
hear of Tecumseh working upon
the superstitious
visited
fears of the Indians.
He was
very successful until
he reached the town of Tuckabatchee, on the Tallapoosa River.
In this place he addressed the council
of the nation, and cipal chief.
met
a silent opponent in the prin-
Tecumseh divined the
Big Warrior.
ings of this chief
He
angrily stamped his feet on
the ground, and looking into the eyes of Big rior, said
War-
:
"Your blood and the
feel-
sticks,
is
white.
You have
taken
my
talk,
and the w^ampum, and the hatchet,
but you do not mean to
fight. I know the reason. You do not believe the Great Spirit has sent me. You shall know. I leave Tuckabatchee directly and shall go straight to Detroit when I arrive there, I ;
will
stamp on the ground with
my
foot,
and shake
TECUMSEH.
2IO
down
all
them, and
left
Tecumseh
the houses in Tuckabatchee." it
chanced
tract of land
in a
New
famous earthquake of
few weeks that the
Madrid,
in
which a large
on the Mississippi sank, occurred, and
demolished every house dians exclaimed,
"Tecumseh has got
How much
there
fact
know, but such a story sions of this one have
in
is
will it
The
Tuckabatchee.
in
we do
the story
Without
sufficiently riors
this
that the earthquake took
addition
coincidence
the
remarkable for Indian superstition.
took up their
rifles
not
grow, and the later ver-
De-
place on the very day of Tecumseh's arrival in troit.
In-
to Detroit!"
and
prepared
for
was
Warwar
prophets and witches became numerous, and murders were committed on the frontier.
of Indians under Little Warrior, visit to
A
company
who had been on
Tecumseh, butchered several
families in
a
Ten-
nessee on the return journey.
Tecumseh was sion,
matured
He
ver}^ successful in his
and turned toward home with for the
accomplishment of
passed through the tribes
Des Moines bash to find
Southern mis-
his plans at last
his great purpose.
in Missouri,
and on the
River, and crossed rapidly to the his capital
Wa-
destroyed and his plans come
to naught.
Tecumseh had
told
would remain a year
Governor Harrison that he in the
South.
The governor
GETTING READY FOR WAR,
211
had information, however, that Tecumsch did not
A
tend to stay more than three months.
omie
chief,
who
still
in-
Pottawat-
remained friendly to the United
he was present when a message was de-
States, said
livered to the Prophet from the agent of the English
government
to the effect that
the hatchet, and inviting
it
him
was time
to
to take
up
send to Maiden for
the supplies that were needed.
The
last
council with
Tecumsch was not
chief
had gone
to the
at all sat-
The
isfactory to the inhabitants of Indiana.
South to extend
his
great hostile
confederacy, and every bit of tidings that reached the settlements from the Indians tended to increase
the alarm.
met and
The
citizens of
Vincennes and
its
vicinity
sent memorials to the President, requesting
his protection,
and saying that
if
this
were not ac-
corded they would be obliged to defend themselves.
The
President ordered the Fourth Regiment, un-
der Colonel Boyd, to service under the governor of Indiana, but strongly impressed bility of
maintaining peace
ment did not
if
upon him the
possible.
wish, however, that
desira-
The govern-
murder or robbery
should be committed by the Indians without punish-
ment, or that a confederacy should be allowed to "avail itself of success," because of neglect in meeting
and defeating
it.
It
would have been better
to
have
extinguished Tecumseh's empire even at an earlier
TECUMSEII.
212
Every sign of weakness or
day.
demanding
all
in particular
unfortu-
the neighboring Indian tribes,
that those
citizens should
is
In August, Harrison
nate in dealing with savages. sent speeches to
tardiness
who had murdered American
be delivered up, and that the Miamis
should prove that they had no connec-
He
tion with the confederacy.
directed his agent to
use every influence to bring the Indians to a sense of duty, and to warn
tomahawk
them
that those Avho took
up the
against the United States would be se-
This brought a party of Indians
verely punished.
from the Prophet's Town,
in
September, with great
professions of peace.
About stolen,
the
same
and tracked
time, however,
some horses were
to Tippecanoe.
Here they were
returned to the pursuing party, but were again re-
by the
captured
Indians,
who seemed
to
regret
having given them up.
On in
the 26th of September,
command
of a military expedition
Tippecanoe confederacy,
camped
at a spot
left
Illinois
called
by
Here
a fort
against
the
He
en-
Vincennes.
on the Wabash where, according
to Indian tradition, a battle tlie
Governor Harrison,
had been fought between
and Iroquois Indians.
This place was
the French settlers " Bataille des Illinois."
was
built,
I'cqucst of the soldiers.
and called Fort Harrison by
GETTING READY FOR WAR.
21
The governor had sent to the Delawares asking that some of their chiefs should meet his army upon the Wabash, in order that they might act in missions
who were impHcated
to the different tribes
Prophet's confederacy. nation
who were
the
in
All the chiefs of this friendly
able to
march
with the governor's request.
out to comply
set
They had gone but
a
few miles when they were met by a party from Tippecanoe, asking "whether they would or would not join them in the war against the United States," and saying " that they had taken up the tomahawk,
and would not lay
They
and when they had tribes
which refused
to repent
to join
them Avould have cause
this,
to
Harrison to
the Delaware chiefs set out to
the Prophet.
About fired
their lives.
beaten the Americans, those
Sending a messenger
it."
inform him of visit
down but with
it
had, however, positive assurances of victory,
this
time a sentinel
in
Harrison's
camp
Avas
upon by the Indians and severely wounded.
The governor was now desirous of attacking the Prophet immediately, knowing that Tccumseh might soon return, and feeling no doubt that the Prophet
was determined on war. however, by defective
Harrison
arrangements
provisions for the expedition, and
was much annoyed.
by
was delayed, in
this
regard
to
delay he
TECUMSEH.
214
The governor had hoped that the advance of his army would frighten the Tippecanoe Indians into This, however,
submission.
was not the
case,
though
made a strong impression upon some of the tribes. The Miami chiefs started to visit the governor, and the Weas said that they would never return to the it
Prophet.
On
the 27th of October, the Delaware chiefs,
had gone
They
to
make a
visit
said that the Prophet
who
to the Prophet, returned
had insulted them, mak-
ing contemptuous remarks upon them and scoffing
The Prophet had
the governor.
bad grace, treated them them. while
They
left
ill,
received
and
him practicing
at
them with
finally
dismissed
his " infernal rites,"
he and his followers danced the war-dance
every night.
While they were there the Indians
who had wounded the sentinel in Harrison's camp The Delawares said they were Shawnees returned. and near friends of the Prophet.
The Prophet had threatened The prisoners he should take. frightened that
it
burn the
interpreters
was almost impossible
to the front of the army.
accepted an offer
to
were so
to get
The governor
made by some
first
them
therefore
of the Delawares
and the Miamis to carry a message to the Prophet's
Town.
Governor Harrison demanded of them that
Winncbagocs, Pottawatomies, and Kickapoos, who
GETTING READY FOR WAR. were
at
21 5
Tippecanoe, should return to their tribes
that stolen horses should be restored,
and murderers
of white people delivered up.
The deputation which bore returned.
It is
in the battle
fessed place.
to
this
message never
supposed that the Miamis took part
which followed,
as
they afterwards con-
having been near when the action took
CHAPTER
XXII.
THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE. On
the 29th of October, 181
1,
the
army marched
out of Fort Harrison, leaving beliind them a garrison of invahd soldiers. sisted of
Governor Harrison's
force con-
about nine hundred men, including some
volunteers from Kentucky, who, with a love of conflict
characteristic of Kentuckians,
had requested the
privilege of joining in the expedition, and
him on the way.
the Indians in journeying to Tippecanoe.
on the south-east but
it
side of the
Wabash was
was woody and very favorable
buscades.
who met
There were two routes used by
Harrison thought
The one
the shorter,
to Indian
am-
best, for this reason, to
take the route on the north-west bank of the river,
but
in
order to deceive the enemy,
who were
closely
watching him, he had the route on the south-east side of the river reconnoitered
wagon
road.
Upon
this
the
and opened
army marched
short distance, when, suddenly crossing the
they took the other route.
No
into a for a
Wabash,
signs of Indians were
seen until the troops reached a very dangerous pass at Pine Creek.
This creek ran between
hif^^h cliffs
of
THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE. rock surmounted with pine and cedar
The
trees.
on which the troops were march-
crossing of the
trail
ing was very
difficult,
and afforded a chance
few Indians to successfully oppose a large 1786, and again
21/
in
for a
force.
In
1790, the Indians had availed
themselves of this bad crossing for the purpose of resisting in the first instance
eral Clark, eral
of
and
in
The governor
Harmar's troops.
men
an expedition under Gen-
the second a detachment of Gensent out a
in the night to search for a better pass.
body
They
returned the next day and reported that they had
found a good
ford,
which had evidently been used by
the Indians, where a prairie skirted the creek.
army
crossed at this place in safety, and were
The filled
with admiration at the beauty of the great prairie,
which stretched away nearly a hundred miles to the Illinois River.
On
the night of the
5
th of
November, the troops
encamped within ten miles of the Prophet's Town. Still
no Indians were seen, although there were every-
where
traces of scouting
parties.
On
the following
day, however, within five or six miles of the town,
some
parties of Indians
ters in front of the
cate with them.
were seen, and the interpre-
army were
The
directed to
communi-
Indians gave them no answer
but threatening and insulting gestures.
When
they arrived within a mile and a half of the 10
TECUMSEH.
2l8
town, General Harrison resolved to encamp for the
He was
night. diately, sible
urged to attack the town imme-
but his instructions were to avoid war
and he also hoped
;
Indians
if
pos-
for the return of the friendly
whom he had sent to the Prophet's Town to He decided to advance, however, send-
meet him. ing
Captain
Dubois forward with a
Dubois did not succeed with the Indians, preter,
and
who
tried to cut
General Harrison
now
tacking the Indians.
of truce.
opening any negotiation
in
refused to answer his inter-
him
off
from the main army.
hesitated no longer about at-
They, however, had no thought Harrison was soon
of fighting without a surprise.
met by
flag
a deputation of three Indians, one of
was the Prophet's chief counselor.
They
whom
innocently
inquired the reason of the army's advancing upon
them.
The Prophet, they
chiefs
said,
and had sent a
if possible,
who had come
to
wished to keep peace
specific
message by the
him from the governor, but
that they had unfortunately returned on the south side of the
The gen-
Wabash, and thus missed him.
eral readily
agreed to suspend
hostilities
and
to
meet
the Indians the next day for the purpose of treating for peace.
to the
He
told the deputation that he
Wabash and encamp
army marched on toward good place
for
would go
there for the night.
The
the town in order to find a
encampment.
When
they neared the
THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE. town the order of troops was changed
prepared called
immediately-
The governor rode forward, and assured them that he
for defence.
some Indians
who
savages,
suspicious
to suit the
This maneuver
uneven character of the country. alarmed the
219
to him,
had no intentions of attacking them.
Some
were sent out
for the
and
this
itself for
on
to select
a suitable place
the night in order of battle, the
They were much
so sure of
this,
experienced
sleeping that
Some
of those
Indian ways were not
however.
strange and exciting night was this in the town
of the Indian Prophet.
vaded was a sacred of the
new
rites
spot, the very centre
were performed.
Jerusalem
religion
among
the
troops, so the
It
where
and
all its
capital
mysteri-
was, according to their
them by the Great
the Jews, the peculiar
and of patriotism.
surrounded
This place thus rudely in-
religious fanaticism,
leader, a place chosen for like
in
men
dissatisfied
there was no prospect of fighting.
who were more
ous
camp,
having been decided upon, the army settled
their arms.
A
officers
The
home
fortifications
town were impregnable Prophet told them.
Spirit
to
of
which white
And now
the
strength of their faith and of their arms was to be tested.
Had Tecumseh been at home, differently. He had left
ended
'
matters might have orders that war was
TECUMSEH.
220 to
be avoided during
absence at
his
hazards.
all
Whether- or not there had sprung up a jealousy be-
tween the brothers, apparently so firmly united, we
But
never know.
shall
would have taken more
it
magnanimity than the Prophet possessed seen with composure the rapid
rise
to
have
of Tecumseh's
fame and power, eclipsing and absorbing the glory of
He
his spiritual influence.
found himself surrounded
by impetuous warriors, among them the flower of the Winnebago braves, and his force was in no way inferior to that of the white troops
who were
rison,
were worked up
under Governor Har-
and never were Indians known
and formed a
meet the whites to agree to
then to
were
be so
to
and
fierce
Early in the evening the Indians held a coun-
brave. cil
men
His
an unfortified camp.
in
to the highest pitch of fanatical zeal,
all
retire
to
The Indian
plan.
in council the
chiefs
next day.
of Harrison's proposals.
were to
They were They were
a short distance to where their warriors
be stationed.
Two
Indians were to remain
behind and assassinate the governor.
To
this
pur-
pose some Winnebagoes had religiously devoted their lives.
The
battle
dark and cloudy
;
was then the
to begin.
moon did not in. The
a drizzling rain soon set
The
night was
rise until late,
and
Indians probably
occupied the time in war preparations, and servance of the juggling ceremonies by
in the
ob-
Vvdiich
the
THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE. Prophet so well succeeded
in
passions, while he, at the very
ance, doubtless prophesied is
said that
tions over,
exciting their savage
summit of
and boasted
his import-
as usual.
It
he concocted a composition, said incanta-
and then told
of Harrison's half
221
his followers that one-half
army was now
was crazy, and
dead, and that the other
would be a small matter
it
for the
Indians to finish their destruction with their toma-
During
hawks.
and
before
this
four
dark night the plan was changed,
o'clock
whole
the
force of
Prophet's braves were creeping through the
upon the
sentinels
grass
around the American camp.
Governor Harrison was accustomed
men
the
to arouse his
an hour before daylight and keep them on their
guard
until
7th of
November he had
On
the sun rose.
the morning of the
and was pulling
just risen
his boots before a camp-fire
and conversing with
several of his officers, while the
drummer was being
on
roused preparatory to calling
up the men.
Suddenly
a single shot was heard, followed by the wild Indian yell
which was the nightmare of
Indian country.
A
sentinel
dian creeping upon him and ately the
all
had
war-whoop sounded on
whole Tippecanoe
force,
who
slept in the
had discovered an Infired.
all
Immedi-
hands, and the
commanded by White Loon,
Stone Eater, and Winnemac, the Pottawatomie chief
who had professed
so
much
friendship for the governor,
TECUMSEH.
222
was upon them
in
an instant.
the point of attack, but the
way
Tlie guard gave
men who had been
at
sleep-
ing on their arms were immediately prepared to receive
tlie
Indians bravely, although the suddenness
of the charge was sufficient to have excited a panic.
The
camp-fires were instantly put out, in order that
the Indians might not have the assistance of their In two minutes every soldier
light.
prepared for action
and the
battle
was on
his feet
officers hurried to their posts,
;
soon raged on
in virtue of his sacred office,
all sides.
The Prophet,
and perhaps, as
of a
sham prophecy and a
not take part small
hill
in the battle,
American
sug-
bullet," did
but stationed himself on a
near at hand where he chanted a war-song,.
and presided had reason to
With
real
is
powers
gested, unwilling "to attest at once the rival
like
an
evil genius, as the Indians
think, over
tliis
soon
battle in the darkness.
characteristic fanaticism or infatuation, he
had
prophesied that the American bullets would rebound harmless from the bodies of the Indians, and that they
would be provided with
light,
while
all
would be
" thick darkness " to their enemies.
He had
dently heard of Moses and Pharaoh.
Both
were embarrassed by the
terrible darkness.
Messengers informed the Prophet soon battle
began that
most natural way.
his
He
evi-
parties
after the
followers were falling in the
sent back orders for
them
to
THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE.
223
persevere, saying that his prophecy would soon be
His wild, inspiring war-song then
fulfilled.
rose
above the crack of firearms and the Indian war-
whoop.
The drums
them
Indians to signal
use of deer hoofs instead of
an advance or retreat
certain rattling sounds.
known
to
abandoned
battle
more
making with
Never were savages
They
quite
of fighting stealthily and
Under
shelter.
fanaticism in
;
desperately.
their practice
from behind fierce
made
the influence of
the
which they had so long been
steeped, they braved the whites in open battle, rush-
ing right upon their bayonets. ulated
They were
by the superior bravery of
who were among
them.
shortly after daylight,
The
the
conflict
when with
also stim-
Winnebagoes lasted
until
a last charge the
troops succeeded in putting the Indians to flight
CHAPTER
XXIII.
INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE. During the
camp
the battle Harrison rode from one side of
to another, disposing his troops
and con-
ducting them in person so as to give the best support to the side attacked.
He was begged
expose himself so much, and his
hold of his bridle rein to detain him.
being where the
sisted in
courage and coolness did steady under this deadly night,
and
the
in
fire
was
much
fire in
to
not to
even took
officers
But he per-
hottest,
and
keep the
his
men
the darkness of the
gray dawning of that
ghastly
bloody morning.
At one
time Harrison saw an ensign, a French-
man, standing behind a
He
tree.
reproached him
with cowardice, and told him he ought to be ashamed to be
under shelter when
The Frenchman, when " I
plained bitterly. said;
"dc
move de
tree
my
here was
tree;
Toward
the
his
men were
was not behind de
I
;
how
cannot leaf close
com-
can
my
tree,"
Dere was de
was before me. position
exposed.
the battle was over,
I
help
?
I
he
tree,
cannot
position."
of the action, the
troops in
INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE.
225
charging passed over the body of a major
been
He was
killed.
lying on his face
and uniform he was much
like
who had in
;
Harrison having been seen not long before part of the
field,
person
the governor, and in that
word was soon passed along the
line that the
governor had been
killed
ute later the
men saw him
down
riding
;
but a minthe front of
their line and greeted him with cheers of joy.
And times.
him
Harrison escaped narrowly several
indeed
was part of the plan of the Indians to
It
at all
kill
Besides the conspiracy to slay
hazards.
him treacherously by
assassination in the council the
next day, there were other attempts of the same
While the troops were taking
kind.
night, three Indians
were reported
position for the
to the
governor as
having followed them, and as being within the
lines
Whether they came only as spies, or, more likely, to kill the commander, cannot be
at that time.
as
is
known. Prophet's
They were immediately
Town
sent back to the
with a message to the Prophet to
return to the governor a negro
who had
deserted
under suspicious circumstances. This negro's bullock driver
name was by
He was employed as
Ben,
the contractor.
were passing the Indian town
While the troops
to find their place of
encampment, he declared that he was not in.
Two
negroes
who were lO*
afraid to
with him doubted
go
this^
TECUMSEH.
226
and he immediately started .
to the town,
whereupon
two Indians came out and conducted him
The
in.
governor immediately directed the interpreter to the Indians and
them
tell
followed the
to send
The
they promised to do.
army denied
him back.
call
This
who had they knew of the
three Indians that
negro '2 having gone into the town, but said that he should be sent out as soon as they could reach the
But Ben did not appear
town. dark,
when
tent of the situation.
others,
until
some time
a Captain Wilson discovered
after
him near the
commander, apparently examining
He
its
seized him, and with the assistance of
dragged him up to the
that the Indians took
him
fire.
into the
The negro
town by
force,
said
and
had sent him back on the return of the three Indians
He had
from Harrison's camp.
without being challenged, he
But
report to the governor.
passed the sentinels
and had come
to
he had not been
in
said,
as
the quarters of the contractor's men, and had not
spoken to any one since
his return,
it
seemed
clear
that he was acting in the interest of the Indians. is
It
probable that he either meant to slay the governor
himself in the battle, Indians to his tent.
would not have been
or,
what
is
more
likely, to
guide
Harrison himself says that this difficult to do.
Captain Wilson
remembered seeing him throw something out of his hand when he was seized. He went to the place and
INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE.
22/
found a high cap, made to look on the outside Hke
Ben
the cap of a grenadier.
had
said that an Indian
taken away his hat and had given him this cap.
Ben was secured by General Wells and Colonel
Owen, who were
old Indian fighters, in the Indian
manner, they not having any handcuffs to put on
He was thrown on
him.
were inserted
in
his
back, then his ankles
notches cut in a
split log,
which was
then closed around them and held together by forks driven over the log into the ground
extended and
tied
to stakes.
his
;
He was
arms were
sentenced to
death for desertion, by a drum-head court-martial, held the next day, and the sentence was approved
by
the general, but never executed
negro lay
in
;
for as the
poor
uneasy position by the evening's
his
fire,
he kept turning his eyes imploringly on Harri-
son,
and the tender heart of the commander was so
much final
affected that
he could not afterward give the
order for his execution
;
but he got together
the commissioned officers, and told
decide the negro's
them they should
Some were
fate.
all
for
executing
him; and he would no doubt have been shot had not been
for
Captain Snelling,
who
pleaded
for his
" Brave comrades," he said, "let us save him. Avretch
whose
deserves life
to
die
was more
ing to spare him,
;
but as our
us
also forgive
life.
The
commander,
particularly his object,
let
it
is
him."
will-
The
TECUMSEH.
228
negro was discharged when the troops reached Vincennes.
Harrison had two horses
the one on which he
:
would have ridden during the
was white.
battle
This
white mare was saddled and bridled ready for mountIn the night she pulled up the picket to which
ing.
The
she was tied and got loose. tied
"confoundedly frightened,"
so
governor's servant
her to the wagon wheel, but
began, where he had put her.
Harrison his horse
;
was
to use Harrison's ex-
remember, when the bat-
pression, that he could not tle
the fellow
Major Taylor
and one of Harrison's
aids,
lent
who
rode a remarkably white horse, was killed before they reached the point
he was the
killed
lines,
by one
attacked.
Harrison's
loss
in
killed
was
and eighty-eight
in killed
thirty-eight dead
who had
loss equal to that
fifty,
including those
mode
hair
who
was one hundred
and wounded. The Indians battle-field,
which with
them must have made the
on the American
This large
side.
on their part was quite surprising,
ordinary
entered
for the governor.
total loss
upon the
those they carried with
loss
believed that
during the night.
and the
left
is
hat rim was perforated, and his ball
after,
died soon
It
or two Indians
and who mistook him
grazed by a
The
first
of fighting,
places and in ambuscade,
it
by is
firing
for in their
from lurking
not possible to
kill
INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE.
many
Indians.
as to
make
The
Indians chewed their bullets so
wound
a lacerated
the large proportion of the
Some
he had fixed
until
target
a great
;
made The
it.
number
A
but a
into the
rifle
ball
We
fire.
a light, remained there
made him
light
a good
Winnebago
chief also
where the American
to a fire at a point
He
had been pushed back. flint,
One
gun out of order,
of shots were fired at him,
but he escaped unhurt.
went up
attributed
died.
remonstrances of his comrades, went up
and, having
fire,
is
great daring.
finding the lock of his
in spite of the
to the
to this
;
wounded who
of the militia evinced
young man,
229
sat
killed him,
lines
there pecking his
and he
forward
fell
are sorry to have to say that a
regular soldier went out to scalp him, but the soldier
being a
New Englander did not understand the barbaHe was a long time accomplishing his
rous practice. object,
and when he returned with
he brought back also
body of the ican lines,
his
hideous trophy
his death- wound.
Though the Amer-
chief lay in close proximity to the
it
was borne
by the
off"
Indians,
and was
afterward found in the town.
The 7th.
battle
was fought
The whole
in
the early morning of the
of that day was spent in caring for
the wounded, and in fortifying the angles of the camp.
The flesh.
soldiers
had no meat
this
day but broiled horse-
TECUMSEII.
230
On
morning of the
the
General Wells, with
Sth,
the dragoons and mounted riflemen, reconnoitered the famous town, but the Prophet's capital was de-
There was found a great quantity of corn,
serted.
which was most acceptable
to the troops
hogs and some domestic
also
were somewhat more the plains which
fowl, for these Indians
civilized
we know
than the wild bands of
The pork and The town had
to-day.
fowls were kept for the wounded.
been sils
abandoned
were
new and
in
a
there were
;
panic
all
;
household
uten-
and many arms, some of which were
left,
wrapped
yet
in
the coverings
in
which
they had been imported.
The only chief with a
human being in the village was a broken leg. The General and his men
living
burned the Indian houses, destroyed brass kettles. chief,
The whites dressed
and made other provision
to say to the Indians that
if
the
their corn
and
wounds of the
for him,
and told him
they would leave the
Prophet and return to their own
tribes
they would
be forgiven. After
everything which
the
army needed was
taken, the brass kettles were destroyed and the town
was burned.
The
cumbered with wagons.
troops slowly returned, greatly en-
their
wounded, who
The governor ordered
filled
all
the
the destruction of
INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE. baggage, and set his ing
ail
his
Though
camp small
officers
the example
furniture into the parties
by throw-
fire.
of Indians
troops were not molested on
23
their
appeared, return.
the
The
Prophet's influence was broken forever, and in Te-
cumseh's absence there was none to tered savages.
rally the scat-
CHAPTER
XXIV.
TECUMSEH'S RETURN. Governor Harrison
did not strike too soon.
A few days after the battle of Tippecanoe Tecumseh town destroyed,
returned, to find his
and the Prophet
scattered,
have been
his
met
not wonder that
he reproached him with severity his
States at
command
all
to
for
The Prophet
hazards.
Sudden indeed was the disgrace.
having disre-
tried to
On
excuse
Tecumseh took him by
the hair and shook him, threatening to
his
first
keep peace with the United
himself, but the exasperated
deep
when he
and unwise regent, the Prophet,
his disobedient
garded
Great must
disappointment at the overthrow of
One does
his plans.
his followers
in disgrace.
fall
kill
him.
of Tenskwatawa, and
returning from battle the
Indians accused him of being a murderer. "
you
You told
crazy,
are a liar," said a
us
that
Winnebago
to him, "for
the white people were dead
when they were
all
in their senses
or
and fought
like the devil."
The Prophet answered been some mistake
in dejection, that there
in the
compounding of
had
his con-
TECUMSEII'S RETURN.
The
coctlon.
233
Indians bound him and threatened to
take his Hfe, but he never received any punishment at their hands,
ahhough,
tentions, they told the
what they meant larity
which
to
to
prove their peaceful
governor
do
many
He
to him.
his position as a
stories
in-
about
the popu-
lost
prophet and wonder-
worker, the spiritual superior of the warrior Tecumseh,
and the defender of Indian
had given him, and
rights,
became the mere Indian boaster be
like
;
he was found to
yEsop's braying donkey dressed in a lion's
skin.
Tecumseh's confederacy, the work of years of peril
and
difficulty,
and indeed and
his
his
seemed crushed
at the first
own immediate band was
blow;
scattered
headquarters destroyed, but the chief had
wide influence over distant
were defeated and
his
Though
tribes.
combination
stroyed, the indefatigable
in a
Tecumseh
his plans
measure de-
still
persevered
in his labor.
After leaving the scene of the battle, the Indians
had gone about twenty
miles,
to
Wildcat Creek.
Here most of them dispersed, going of their different tribes, while the for their northern
home.
to the villages
Winnebagoes started
The Prophet
sent a mes-
sage asking to be allowed to go back to his town, but the governor warned
On
the 22d of
him not
to return.
November, the annual meeting
to
TECUMSEH.
234
was
distribute annuities to the Indians
Chiefs
held.
and representatives from the Delaware, Miami, Pottawatomie, and Shawnee nations were present, while
some Indians who had fought which were
They
distributed.
Tippe-
in the battle of
canoe boldly came and asked their part
in the
goods
said that the Indians
had imprisoned the Prophet and intended to punish
him with
They succeeded
in
deceiving the
Indian agent, but their story was not
strictly in ac-
death.
cordance with
fact, for
the Prophet was at the time
enjoying his liberty at the village of Mississinewa.
The agent made
a speech to the Indians, saying that
the President wished to be friendly and at peace with
them, and would pardon them great Black in
Hoof answered
if
The
they desired.
that they
peace with the United States.
all
wished to
In this the
live
Shaw-
nees and most of the Delawares were sincere, but
The aged
the Pottawatomies had no such purpose. Little Turtle of the
peace,
Miamis was strongly
but Tccumseh
among them
had
than he did.
much
in favor of
more
Their chief aim
influence
now was
to secure their annuities.
Stone Eater, two Winnebagoes, a Kickapoo, and a Piankishaw made their appearance at Fort Harrison before
Christmas,
speech
to
the
and
delivered
commandant.
a
very
They wished
allowed to go to Vincennes and
visit
contrite to
be
the governor,
tecumseh's return. and
235
they were permitted to do.
this
story was that the Prophet
Stone Eater's
was disgraced and had
escaped to the Hurons. In the winter Governor Harrison was visited
numbers of repentant
Indians, but neither
by
Tecumseh
nor the Prophet, nor indeed any of the most hostile
made
savages,
their appearance.
Governor Harrison a
Little Turtle sent
January,
181
in
2,
was deserted by
all
letter
in
which he said that the Prophet his
band with the exception of
two camps of Shawnees which Tecumseh had just joined with but eight men.
Soon
governor received a message
after this the
from Tecumseh saying he had returned from the
South and would now
visit
the President.
The
crov-
ernor replied with a permission to go to Washington,
but said that no other Indians would be allowed to
go with him. great chief,
A
sense of pride would not allow this
who aimed
like that of the
to be ruler over a confederacy
white men, to
visit
the chief of the
Seventeen Fires without a proper retinue. seh refused to go, and this was the
last
Tecum-
of his inter-
course with Harrison.
As
the spring of
again alarmed
1
812
came
on, the frontier
was
by Indian depredations and murders.
Governor Harrison sent out Major Floyde duce the more friendly tribes to drive
off the
to in-
Prophet
TECUMSEH.
235 and other
disaffected Indians.
for a council of twelve tribes
sissinewa,
in
made
was held
tlie
you have
said to us.
your hearts
inclining
Our
selves.
it
;
We
hope
may
let
it
band were
Tecumseh
:
:
to pity us
good
;
we now
will please
we done
it,
my
people
God that he God that the
We
will
happy
in
should do
my so.
white people
not disturb them,
except when they came to
our village with the intention of destroying are
pity our-
— they never were bad.
will of
us live in peace.
neither have
Mis-
We have listened to what We thank the Great Spirit for
hearts are
was the
May at
his
Governor Harrison made war on absence
in
effect,
Wyandots.
a speech in answer as follows
Elder Brothers
"
had some
which Tecumseh and
mildly reproved by
first
Tliis
us.
We
to state to our brothers present that the
unfortunate transaction that took place between the
white people and a few of our young village,
at
our
has been settled between us and Governor
Harrison
home
men
;
and
I
will further state that
had
I
been at
there would have been no bloodshed at that
time. "
We
are sorry to find that the
same respect has
not been paid to the agreement between us and Governor Harrison by our brothers the Pottawatomies.
However, we are not accountable those over
whom
we have no
for the
control.
conduct of
Let the chiefs
TECUMSEH'S RETURN.
237
of that nation exert themselves and cause their war-
behave themselves,
riors to
as
we have and
will
con-
tinue to do ours. "
Should the bad acts of our brothers the Potta-
watomies draw on us the
ill-will
of our white brothers,
and they should come again and make an unpro-
voked attack on us men, but we
will
our
at
village,
never strike the
we
first
will die like
blow."
This exasperated the Pottawatomies, the murders which had been committed
who excused by members
of their tribe, saying they were due to the influence
Shawnee Prophet, and were committed by
of the
young men over whom they had no spoke
Tecumseh
Prophet." " It
is
true,
retorted thus:
They
—
we have endeavored to give
brothers good advice, and to
control.
contemptuous terms of the " pretended
in
if
all
our
they have not listened
we are sorry for it. We defy a living creature we ever advised any one, directly or indirectly, make war on our white brothers. It has constantly
it
to say to
been our misfortune to have our views misrepresented to
our white brethren
;
this
has been done by pre-
tended chiefs of the Pottawatomies and others, that
have been
in
the habit of selling land to the white
people that did not belong to them
Here the Delawares saying
:
called
"
Tecumseh
to
order,
TECUMSEH.
238 "
We
words. their tell
have not met .
.
guns
at this place
Our white brethren
.
in their
hands
there
;
done that
;
there was,
if
are on their feet,
no time
is
each other you have done
that both red
to hsten to such
this,
we would
and white people had
the Prophet
tell felt
for us to
and you have
the bad effects
of his counsels."
The Miamis then made threw "
all
the blame
upon the other
We hope our brothers,
nces, Kickapoos,
a speech in which they
the Pottawatomies,
and Winnebagoes,
warriors in good order, and teach respect to their
saying
tribes,
women and
will
them
:
Shaw-
keep
their
pay more
to
children than they have
done by going and murdering the innocent white people."
The Kickapoos then defended themselves in a The tone of speech, with which the council closed. the speeches was no doubt modified
all
by
the pres-
ence of white people. In June,
demanded
Tecumseh
visited
ammunition.
haughty, and he was firm evidently
felt
much
Fort Wayne, where he
His in
was
very
old opinions.
He
toward Harrison
for
bearing
his
bitterness
the part he had had in the overthrow of Tippecanoe.
The agent made him him
to
a speech, endeavoring to induce
remain at peace with the Americans, but
ammunition was refused him.
Tecumseh
said that
tecumseh's return. he would not be denied by
him he would time,
and
go.
at last
He
239
his British father,
remained thoughtful
gave a war-whoop and
left.
and
for
to
some
Tecum-
seh went immediately to Maiden, where he joined the English.
CHAPTER XXV. HULL'S SURRENDER. The
main cause of dispute between England and
America which brought about the war of 1812, was the " right of search " which England claimed over
—
American
vessels
search any
American
that
the right to stop and
ship on the high seas.
British subject found in
vessel
is,
Every
the crew of the searched
was seized and impressed
into
the English
navy.
The people two
parties.
of the United States were divided into
The war party
of the Revolution
still
nursed the bitterness
but the Federalists,
;
who opposed
war, held that the injuries of France were quite as great as those of England.
new and
And
indeed the country,
poor, was in no condition
for a
war with
Great Britain, and President Madison's better judg-
ment was against
He, however, yielded to the
it.
dominant public sentiment, which was
for war.
Eng-
land was at the time engaged in a severe struggle
with Napoleon, and
it
was urged by those who ad-
vocated war that the acquisition of the British possessions in
America would be an easy
thing.
Some
hull's surrender. concession was
and
late,
241
made on
the part of England, but too
month
of June, 18 12, war was de-
in the
clared.
In anticipation of this, a
had been raised
militia
was given
He
of this expedition
Urbana by the Fourth Regiment,
at
fought
Harrison
witli
with the militia of his
General
Hull's
force
so large
own
at
Tippecanoe. raised
territory,
about eighteen
to
much
Indians were
seh's lead,
ish
for the invasion of
General Hull, an old Revolutionary-
to
which had
The
of twelve hundred
and the governor of Michigan Territory.
was joined
This,
Ohio
in
The command
Upper Canada,
officer,
body
hundred.
Tecum-
inclined to follow
but were awe-struck by the march of
a force as that under Hull toward
America.
He
Brit-
arrived at Detroit, and soon after
crossed into Canada, issuing a boastful proclamation to the inhabitants, offering protection to those
would remain
quiet.
garrisoned, was
incompetent
now open
officer
he should have
The capture
of Maiden, weakly
to General Hull, but that
undertaking
delayed
fortified his
proclamation to take
who
this
camp and waited
until
for his
effect.
Meanwhile Tecumseh, widi a few followers
at
Mai-
den, was actively engaged on the British side.
On
the
1
2th of June, the Prophet,
to have taken into favor
whom
enough II
the chief seems
to use in
any way
TECUMSEH.
242 he could, appeared
Wayne
Fort
at
with about a
hundred Winnebagoes and Kickapoos, assuring the
Soon
agent that he was friendly.
after
The messenger had
an express from Tecumseh.
stolen a horse at the River Raisin,
and
he received
and ridden day
The message was an order from Tecum-
night.
seh to unite the Indians immediately, and send the
women and
children toward the
Tecumseh promised,
the warriors struck Vincennes. if
he lived, to meet them
The Prophet
sent
Mississippi, while
in the
Winnebago
two Kickapoos on
He
rally the Indians.
tlien
went
country.
stolen horcs to
sorrov/fully to the
agent and said that two of his bad young
men were
gone, and he was afraid they had stolen horses from
He
the whites.
sent two Indians on foot to catch
the offenders.
When at
Hull crossed into Canada, Tecumseh was
Maiden
\\dth
Pottawatomies.
was held
at
a
A
band of
thirty
council of the
Shawnees
and.
neutral Indians
Brownstown, opposite Maiden.
Tecum-
seh w-as invited to attend this council.
"No," King,
upon
my father, this
join in
A
said he;
and
"I have taken I will
shore before
any
suffer
I will
my bones to
the
bleach
recross tliat stream to
council of netrtrality."
small detachment sent out
escort the
sides with
by General Hull
to
mail and meet a convoy of provisions
hull's surrender. under Major Brush
at the
River Raisin was surprised
by about seventy Indians and ambush.
forty British soldiers in
The detachment, under Major Van Home,
retreated with considerable loss. tion in the
243
This, the
first
ac-
war of 18 12, was commanded on the part
of the British
by Tecumseh.
Meanwhile General Hull heard of the surrender of Fort Michilimackinac or Mackinaw.
This was an
important post, being the only check to the Indians of the upper lake region, and well garrisoned
it
by the United
But through some astonishing too
common
the
commandant had not
should have been
States government. neglect, such as
at this time, the garrison
so
much
as received infor-
mation of the declaration of war.
edge of the English.
fact
was
was weak, and
His
first
knowl-
was the attack made on him by the
This event so alarmed the old American
general, Hull, that he seems to have lost heart
and
head, and to have abandoned every thought of offensive operations.
It
had a very stimulant
effect
upon
Tecumseh, however, who immediately sent messengers in every direction to the Indians with the news that
Mackinaw had
fallen,
that a
detachment of
Americans had been defeated, that they would not attack Maiden, that success was certain on the part
of the English, and
if
the braves wished to share in
the plunder they must join his side immediately.
TECUMSEII.
244
The Mdians, cess,
ever susceptible to the influence of suc-
and especially to the chance
for spoils, flocked
to Maiden, and Tecumseh before long commanded a body of seven hundred magnificent warriors. It is related in the life of the
that he and his
ing to go on the winter hunt
Tecumseh
famous chief Shaubena,
band of Pottawatomies were prepar-
when two runners from
arrived at his village on the Illinois River.
One
of these
were
rings, beads,
men was a half-breed and the other a petty chief They bore a package of presents, to be distributed principally among the squaws. These seh sent the for
him and
wampum his
Tecum-
and various ornaments.
band
to
Shaubena with an
to join in the
invitation
war against the
United States, with promise of large pay.
Hunting
was abandoned, and Shaubena with twenty-two warriors started for
seh's aid,
Shaubena became Tecum-
Maiden.
and was with him
until his death.
Meanwhile General Hull's brave men were fever to attack Maiden, believing taken.
A
"
round robin
the dissatisfied nels
American
were requested
and put the next
"
it
a
could yet be
was even proposed among
soldiers,
by which
to displace their
officer in
in
rank
the colo-
weak general
in his place.
Great
was the mortification when on the 7th of August a retreat
from Canada was
ordered.
General
however, sent out a detachment of six hundred
Hull,
men
HULL to
SURRENDER.
S
open communication with Ohio
came upon a
of
large force
if
245
They
possible.
English and
Indians
under Muir and Tecumseh, behind a breastwork of
From this shelter the English fired, and American commander immediately advanced logs.
whole with
bayonets.
The English
command
Indians under Tecumseh's
Tecumseh and
tion.
the British
This was
were both wounded.
About
of Brownstown.
made
retreated
this
commander, Muir,
known
time
as the battle
Tecumseh was It
is
stubborn bravery at Brownstown
his
was the cause of
the
their posi-
a brigadier-general in the British army.
supposed that
;
held out obsti-
were nevertheless driven from
nately, but
his
upon the enemy, and then charged
line, fired
fixed
the
his appointment.
Major- General Brock, a brave and generous gen-
now
tleman, was den.
He was
Americans afterwards
as
his
successor,
despised.
hundred and Colonels
as
command of operations at Maimuch honored and respected by the in
fifty
General Proctor, was
General Hull sent out three
men on
McArthur and
the 14th of August, under Cass, to reach the
convoy
under Captain Brush. General Brock, after holding a council with Te-
cumseh, marched to Sandwich, a place opposite Detroit.
render.
He
sent a
summons
This was refused.
to
General Hull to sur-
General Brock
asked
TECUMSEII.
246
Tccumseli what kind of a country they must pass
through
they crossed to the American
if
chief took a roll of elm bark, spread
it
and fastening
stones,
there with four
it
scalping-knife and
senting
When
its hills
cross
his
came
own
to
rivers,
took his
swamps, and roads.
embark
for crossing,
Te-
motion, induced the Indians to
first.
The American army had been cisive
on the ground,
drew a map of the country, repre-
and woods,
the troops
cumseh, on
The
side.
engagement with
impatient for a de-
their enemies.
This the timid
policy of their leader had denied them.
were now anxious
at least to
of soldiers in defending the
The
soldiers
do something worthy
fort.
They were
severely
disappointed, however, for soon after the opening of
the British batteries, on the i6th of August, General
Hull surrendered, in opposition to the wishes of his officers
and men.
hearing of
it,
Colonel after,
Many
of the
men shed
and threw down their arms
tears
all
on
in rage.
McArthur's detachment returned
soon
being unable to reach their destination for want
of provisions, and having had nothing to eat for several days.
Great was their astonishment at finding
the English flag flying over Detroit, and the Indians
engaged
in killing
the cattle which had been pro-
vided for the American army.
and
his associate
Colonel McArthur
Colonel Cass, seeing no hope for
hull's surrender. them the
resistance, sent in
in
articles of
247
a flag of truce.
shown
capitulation were
to
When them,
Colonel Cass, afterward eminent in American history, thrust tears
sword
his
and broke
it
the ground
into
with indignant
to pieces.
General Brock asked Tecumsch not to allow the Indians to abuse the prisoners. "
No
much
!
to
On
" answered
Tecumseh, "
meddle with
I
despise
them too
therru"
the 17th of August, the success of the British,
which even they did not
They had recovered
call
a victory, was celebrated.
some
at this surrender
cannon taken during the Revolutionary War. pieces were
the British fired
welcomed with joy and even British celebration,
and
kisses
their fire
vessel "
answered by the English war lotte,"
These
by
The recaptured cannon were
officers.
at the
British
was
Queen Char-
which was much admired by the Western they had seen.
Some few
General
Brock was
soldiers,
being the
first
months
after
celebration
this
killed at the battle of forts fired
their
Queenstown, and the American
guns during
the respect which they
felt
his funeral for him.
in
token of
But the be-
loved brass cannon came back to the Americans in the battle of the Thames, and the also
fell
"Queen Charlotte"
into the hands of the Americans.
General Brock had been so pleased with Tecum-
TECUMSEH.
248 seh's
map-making, and with
his boldness in
the Indians to cross the Detroit River
took off his sash
body of the
in
first,
pubhc and fastened
it
that he
around the
Tecumseh evinced much
great chief
But the English commander was surprised
pleasure.
him without the sash the next day.
to see
causing
General
Brock, afraid that the chief was offended for some
why he
reason, sent his interpreter to ask
wear the
knowing tendency
politic
Tecumseh,
well the Indian love for display and the
human
in
the
ferred
The shrewd and
sash.
did not
mark
nature to jealousy, had trans-
of honor
Roundhead, who,
Wyandot
the
to
as he told the interpreter,
chief,
was an
older and abler warrior than himself
Colonel Hatch, one of the
officers in
General Hull's
army, describes Tecumseh's appearance at the time of the surrender of Detroit.
about
five feet
He
says that he was
nine inches in height, had an oval face,
a straight and handsome nose, and a beautiful mouth, " like that of traits."
Napoleon
He makes
have seen nowhere hazel, being clear
as represented in his por-
the curious statement, which else, that
when he was
— more brown than
light
plexion. Colonel
in conversation,
excited
by anger
His teeth were very white, and
or enthusiasm.
Hatch
we
Tecumseh's eyes were
and pleasant when
but " like balls of fire"
complexion
I.
asserts,
red.
was a
his
This com-
characteristic
HULL
SURRENDER.
S
of the whole Shawnee
249
He was
tribe.
in the
prime
of hfe, straight and finely formed.
The same
writer describes the modest costume in
which Tecumseh ahvays appeared.
of a hunting his
knees
;
shirt,
perfect in
with a cape and
thrown over
which descended
fit,
to
This costume was finished with a mantle of the skin
belt,
which mantle served
his left shoulder,
The edges
as a blanket.
trimmed with a leather finish
was made en-
short pantaloons, and neatly fitting leg-
and moccasins.
gins
It
of the Indian-tanned buckskin, and consisted
tirely
around
of his cape and shirt were
fringe,
his neck.
which
also served as a
In his belt were his side
arms, a silver-mounted tomahawk, and a knife in a "
leather sheath. cer,
"when
last
I
Such was
his dress," says this offi-
saw him on the 17th of August,
18 1 2, on the streets of Detroit, mutually exchang-
ing tokens of recognition as former acquaintances in years of peace, and passing on,
Indians had
and
all
he to see that his
crossed to Maiden as
commanded,
to counsel with his white allies in regard to the
next movement of the
now
really
commenced war
of 1812."
Thus ended For
his
Hull's expedition into
Upper Canada.
conduct he has been very severely censured,
and he was, no doubt,
inefficient
and cowardly.
The
only extenuations of his offence were his advanced
n*
TECUMSEH.
250 age and the
him
properly.
easily
failure
of the government to support
Though Hull
might, as
is
have taken Maiden and secured other suc-
cesses to the
American arms, Upper Canada could
not have been taken and held unless the of
believed,
command
Lake Erie had been obtained by means of a
The
old general was tried two years later
martial,
by a
fleet.
court-
He
on charges of cowardice and treason.
was found guilty of the former to be shot,
offence
and sentenced
but was pardoned by the President,
in
consideration of his age and Revolutionary service.
By
the failure of this badly planned and wretch-
edly conducted campaign, the settlements were
left
exposed to the ravages of hordes of Indians ever ready to join the victorious
side.
CHAPTER
XXVI.
AND BATTLES AT THE WESTERN
SIEGES
FORTS.
Fort Dearborn, in the
or Chicago, then a lonely post
wide wilderness, was surrounded by bands of
Tecumseh had
Pottawatomies and Winnebagoes.
been endeavoring to induce these Indians to join the English, to see
They wavered, however, and were
which side bade
fair to
be successful.
waiting
General
Hull, on hearing of the surrender of Fort Mackinaw,
ordered the garrison at Chicago to dismantle the fort
and abandon
it.
A
number of Miami Indians were Meanwhile,
sent to protect the retreating party.
though presents were goods of the
posts,
made
one of the
ridge, said, " leaden birds cars."
The evening
to the
Indians of the
chiefs,
Black Part-
had been singing
in his
before the fort was evacuated a
runner arrived from Tecumseh telling the Indians of his victory
over Major
Van Home's
treat of General Hull to Detroit,
and of the proba-
bility of the success of the English.
success decided the Indians, as to join the
British standard,
party, of the re-
This news of
Tecumseh expected,
and they commenced
TECUMSEH.
252
by
operations
women, and
attacking the party of seventy men,
way out
its
The Miamis who had undertaken Indians, now began to feel
of Fort Dearborn. its
was making
children, ^\hich
being
protection,
They
strong incHnations towards the winning side.
refused to defend the whites and soon went over to
The
the hostile Indians. ter
it
had
left
the
fort,
little
garrison, attacked af-
and knowing that there was
no escape, fought bravely, and did not surrender there were
until
threatened to
tomahawk
who was
Heald,
but few
she
" Surely
said,
Indian
whom
A
understood
tears
full in
you
will
and
cries
tomahawk
Indian
the commander's wife, Mrs.
Calmly looking the savage
and
An
alive.
already wounded.
woman,
frontier
left
not
quick-witted
Indian
nature.
the face, she smiled kill
a squaw."
The
would not have touched,
The
fate
of the prisoners was not yet decided, however.
In
dropped
his
at a bit of ridicule.
the evening a council was held, and to deliver as they
to the English
had agreed
survivors. arrived,
them
Many
commander from
and they were
The
was concluded at Detroit,
do on the surrender of the
warriors
however,
further massacre.
to
it
chief
a
distance
determined
had on
Shaubena and a num-
ber of other Indians were on the porch of the house
which contained some guard with their
rifles
of
the
prisoners,
standing
crossing the doorway.
The
AT FORT DEARBORN. Indians
hostile
outnumbered them, however,
rushed past them into the house. sitting-room
253
were soon
The
with
filled
and
parlor and
these
painted
savages with their tomahawks and scalping-knives, waiting the signal of the
men and
Meanwhile the wo-
chief.
children sat in the
little
bedroom weeping.
"We have
Black Partridge said to them,
thing in our power to save you, but
you and your
At
friends at the
moment
this
a
loud
Black Partridge ran to the
camp
done every-
now
will
be
all is lost;
slain."
war-whoop was heard.
river,
where he
called out
to the approaching canoe, "
Who
A tall
are you, friend or foe
Indian stood in the
?
"
bow
of
the boat, his
head surmounted with eagle feathers and his hand.
saying,
"I
"Then
As am
his rifle in
the boat touched shore, he sprang out,
Shauganash."
hasten to the house," said Black Partridge,
" for our friends are in danger, and you alone can
save them." Billy Caldwell, as ed, ran to the house,
Shauganash was commonly
entreating prevented the massacre. fering the in
little
call-
and by dint of threatening and After
body of survivors reached
much
suf-
civilization
safety.
Great was the disappointment of the war party the United States, aggravated
by
in
the taunts of the
TECUMSEIT.
254
opposition at the loss of
all
the outermost frontier
posts in the North-Wcst, and the utter defection of
almost
all
the Indian tribes to the English side.
aged Miami a
steadfast
who had been
Little Turtle,
chief,
the
of
friend
The
whites,
so
was dead, and
there was nothing to check the tendency of the Mi-
amis to join the
cumseh,
under the victorious lead of Te-
rest
who seemed now
in
a
fair
way
to retrieve
the fortunes of his confederacy, and to annihilate the settlements in the North-West, so that he could reestablish " the
Wayne It
old
line
of the Ohio River."
Fort
and Fort Harrison were the chief obstacles.
was accordingly planned
to
have Fort
Wayne
cap-
tured by the Pottawatomies and Ottawas, aided
by
Tecumseh and
the English, while Fort Harrison was
to be captured
by Miamis and Winnebagoes.
Tecumseh was set out in
at
September
Maiden making preparations
to
to assist in this enterprise.
Meanwhile, recruits were enlisting with great enthusiasm in Ohio and Kentucky.
The Kentucky
troops insisted that Governor Harrison should com-
mand
them.
Contrary to law, Harrison not being
a citizen of Kentucky, he was appointed brevet majorgeneral in the militia of that State.
Early in September Fort vested
by the neighboring
wood, and
its
garrison
Wayne was
Indians.
It
closely in-
was
built of
numbered about seventy men.
AT FORT WAYNE.
Some Ohio
troops
Detroit before
its
who had been
255
sent to the relief of
was known, had been ordered
loss
to
Fort Wayne, but having enlisted for the conquest of
Upper Canada, they were disheartened render, to Fort
and showed no
A
Wayne.
spirit
at Hull's sur-
endeavoring to get
in
young man by
name
the
of
who lived at Fort Wayne, was on his way to He immediplace when he heard of the siege.
Oliver,
that
Ohio
ately joined the
reaching the
fort in
militia,
but seeing no chance of
time to do any good at the pace
at which they were advancing, he returned cinnati,
siege
where he informed General Harrison of the
of Fort
that he
to Cin-
The
Wayne.
general promised
would immediately march
to
him
Oliver
its relief
then returned and overtook the Ohio troops.
Thomas Worthington, an Indian commissioner, and
Oliver, resolved to try to
garrison of the besieged
fort.
communicate with the
They persuaded
eight of the soldiers and sixteen
Among
them.
Shawnees
Indians
these
Logan, the story of whose early
was life
to
sixty-
go wath
Shawnee
the
we have
already
Previous to the breaking out of the war, Te-
given.
cumsch had
sat
by
the camp-fire with
night trying to persuade
coming
struggle, while
him
him
all
of one
to join the British in the
Logan on
his part tried to in-
duce Tecumseh to side with the Americans.
On
the second
day of the journey,
thirty-six of the
TECUMSEH.
256 relief
Not being strong
party returned to the army.
enough
to
a fight with the Indians, the re-
risk
mainder stopped within twenty-four miles of the
fort,
while Mr. Oliver, with the Indians, Logan, Captain
Johnny, and Bright Horn, endeavored
Within
garrison.
miles of the
five
to
fort,
reach the
Logan
dis-
covered that there were holes dug along the roadside.
These were used by the Indians
in
night watching,
each hole being large enough to hold a man. the road, and
gan's party therefore
left
route rode to within
half a mile of
They then
reconnoitered
to see
that
it
fort,
and having
had not yet been surrendered,
they rode rapidly toward
Meanwhile the
by another
Fort Wayne.
whether whites or
Indians were in possession of the discovered
Lo-
hostile
a plan for taking the
it.
Indian chiefs had devised
fort
by
stratagem.
During
a truce of some days they had perhaps discovered that the officer in
command. Captain Rhea, was
intoxicated and unfit for the position.
often
They gathered
the warriors into a semicircle on two sides of the fort,
while five of the chiefs, with knives and pistols
hidden beneath their blankets, started out
for the fort,
bearing a flag of truce.
These were
with the
pretended purpose of treat-
officers for the
ing with them. officers,
with
They would then the
exception
to hold a council
assassinate
of Rhea,
all
whom
the
they
AT FORT WAYNE. believed they could induce
own
save his
off of the
his
257
open the gates to
to
In consequence of the drawing
life.
savages
for
maneuver, Oliver and
this
companions found no resistance on the
the fort
by which they approached.
side of
Finding one
On
gate locked they went on to the next.
pass-
ing around an angle of the fort they came face to face with the five
chiefs,
among whom were Win-
nemac and Five Medals, bearing
The two
parties
their
white
flag.
shook hands, but the chiefs were
decidedly startled by this sudden appearance, which
meant, they did not doubt, that a large force was
Winnemac turned and went back
near at hand. his
camp.
fort,
where they were
deed arrived at
told
come
it
Oliver,
Logan, and
to stay.
—
would have been too
previous
that
They had inan opportune moment an hour
the two Indians had
later
to
His companions, howcv^er, entered the
late
and
;
for
would have been impossible
many days
to reach the
garrison through the Indian ranks.
Mr. Oliver
now wrote a
ington, and the brave rifles,
prepared
hurried despatch to Worth-
Logan and
for fresh perils.
his
men, with new
They took
the letter
They were
and started from the gate of the
fort.
immediately seen by the savages,
who pursued
flying scouts. garrison.
As
The
race
the
was eagerly watched by the
they crossed the enemy's line in safety,
TECUMSEH.
258
Logan gave a triumphant
shout, which reached the
ears of the anxious soldiers in the
The but
fort.
scouts dehvered the letter to Worthington,
Meanwhile
the troops delayed their march.
still
the Indians, encouraged at seeing no force coming,
and hoping constant
fire.
Several times the
from burning
flames
The
fire.
succeeded
garrison
in
fort
was
in
was
garrison
extinguishing
saw, at one time, that the
besiegers were preparing for fort.
wooden
The
arrows.
watchful, however, and
the
Tecumseh, kept up a
for the arrival of
some extraordinary
The Indians managed
ef-
at length to get pos-
session of a trading-house near the
From
fort.
this
they informed the garrison that they had been reinforced
with
demanded garrison,
a
British
cannon and
surrender,
promising
artillerists,
to
but threatening a massacre
forced to storm the works.
and the garrison prepared
protect if
man
they were
utmost
resistance. for incapa-
Lieutenant Curtis directed the defence. able
to
the
This demand was refused, for the
The commander having been suspended city.
and
Every
do duty was furnished with several
stands of loaded arms, arms being more abundant
than men.
They were ordered
Indians were close upon the their
guns
in
rapid
not to fort,
succession.
fire until
and then This
the
to
use
fierce
fire
forced the Indians to retreat within twenty minutes
AT FORT HARRISON. with a
loss of
non burst
eighteen warriors.
— one on the
The boasted
can-
the other on the second
first,
They had been made
fire.
259
of
wood and hooped
with iron by some ingenious EngHsh traders.
Governor Harrison overtook the sluggish troops marching
Fort Wayne, and reached
for
belea-
tlie
guered garrison on the 12th of September, two days
Tecumseh
before
in a
swamp
five
from Maiden to the
started
ance of his warriors.
assist-
The Indians gathered together
miles from the fort the
Harrison's arrival, to give
him
day before
They
battle.
discov-
ered by means of scouts that his force was too large for them, however,
and
the garrison at the
after building great fires that
fort
might think a battle was
raging, from the clouds of smoke, they fled
by
the
fort in great disorder, acting the part of a " defeated
By
force."
means they designed
this
the garrison in pursuit. ruse,
Failing in
draw out
to
this, their final
they raised the siege at Fort Wayne.
Tecumseh's plan did not succeed better Harrison.
This place was
commanded by Captain
Zachary Taylor, afterwards the hero of Buena in the
Fort
at
Vista,
Mexican War, and the twelfth President of the
United
States.
His garrison consisted of about
men, one-third of
whom
were
sick.
On
fifty
the 3d of
September a body of Kickapoo and Winnebago Indians, with their
women and
children,
came
to
Fort
TECUMSEH.
260
They requested
Harrison.
they wished to
be admitted, saying
to
and were under great
liold a council
Two young men
necessity for want of provisions.
had been
killed the
evening before near the
fort,
and
Captain Taylor was decidedly suspicious of these
He
Indians.
gave them food, but refused to open
They
the gates of the fort to them.
lingered around,
protesting their friendliness, until the next day,
they suddenly
set fire
which composed the
been
in
At
line of the fort.
time a large band of Indians, this
when
one of the block-houses
to
who
the same
had previous to
ambush, opened a rapid
on the
fire
burning block-house, and through the gap which left into
The
the
The
fort.
was now
fort
in
great danger from the breach
which the burning house would leave Captain Taylor,
tions.
cabin, with
opening.
it
garrison answered vigorously.
however,
in the fortifica-
pulled
down a
which he made a breastwork over the
The
Indians charged desperately several
times, trying to fire the other buildings
and
to get
over the breastwork, but they were bravely repulsed at every point ble,
by the
little
garrison.
however, seemed death by
hawk
to those
who remained
tried to escape at
One was
killed,
fire
inside,
So
inevita-
or the that
toma-
two men
the breach to the hostile Indians.
and the other, wounded by the In-
dians, retreated to the fort,
where he concealed him-
AT FORT HARRISON. self
behind some barrels
261
morning, when he
until
could be readmitted.
The Indians hovered around
the fort for
or eight days, but could gain nothing.
seven
Taylor im-
mediately repaired the fortifications as best he could,
and put things
The breach
in readiness for a siege.
produced by the burning of the house subjected the garrison to
more than one danger.
the provisions of the
fort,
They
likely to starve.
It
had contained
and the men seemed now
lived on
some corn
in the
several days.
Captain Taylor at
last
their
Fort Harrison, and a large body of
them attacked the settlements branch of White River. brutality
in
lines in the
The savages were much exasperated by
failure to take
had
fort for
succeeded
sending a messenger through the Indian night.
that
neighborhood of the
been cultivated
known
at
Pigeon Roost, a
Here, with an inventive
only to Indians, they massacred
twenty-one men, women, and children.
CHAPTER INCIDENTS OF THE
XXVII.
WAR—HAND TO HAND
ENCOUNTER, AND DEATH OF LOGAN. While
the army, from which so
much had been
expected, was unfortunate, the httle United States
navy, to which no one looked for success, had gained several victories on the sea.
the Constitution,
nephew of the
An
American
commanded by Captain
general,
frigate,
Hull, a
and a brave man, took the
British frigate Guerriere, while other important victories
were gained on the part of the United States
vessels.
The Americans were
much surwho had beaten
quite as
prised at this as were the English,
every other nation into acknowledging England's su-
premacy on the
seas.
Meanwhile, General
on the
New York
Van
frontier at
Rensselaer was defeated
Queenstown
and nothing was accomplished there
in
October,
during
the
whole winter. Ignorant of the wishes of the Kentucky volunteers
and the plans and promises already made the
for
them,
government appointed another old Revolutionary
officer,
General Winchester, to the
command
of the
INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.
army
and
son
succeeded
it
was with in
dissatis-
Governor Harri-
persuading them to accept the
Fort
at
Harrison immediately returned to Piqua,
where he undertook
make an
to
were much
soldiers
difficulty that
when he overtook them
strange general,
Wayne.
The
West.
in the
fied,
263
to organize a
body
of volunteers,
The government,
attack on Detroit.
however, on hearing of the previous arrangements of
gave Harrison the chief command,
the volunteers,
while that of the
left
wing was given
General Harrison busied himself provisions preparatory
An
to the
in
to Winchester.
pushing forward
retaking of Detroit
expedition under General Hopkins against
Kickapoo
villages entirely failed,
on account of the
incompetence of the guides, a deficiency supplies,
Some
and the insubordination
Indian
General
in
food
troops.
towns above Peoria were destroyed,
whom
Hopkins was
Hopkins
conducted
against the Indian towns on the
ceeded
in the
the
of
however, by Governor Edwards of the tory, with
some
to
Illinois Terri-
have co-operated.
another
Wabash.
expedition
They
suc-
destroying several of these from which the
Indians had
fled,
and among them the Prophet's Town,
on the ruins of which forty cabins had been
built.
Meanwhile Harrison could accomplish but on account of the mud, which made
it
little
impossible to
forward provisions and artillery for his expedition.
TECUMSEH.
264
The Shawnee Logan was and did great service to
acting the part of scout,
his
American
November, 1812, General Harrison
In
friends.
him
told
to re-
connoiter in the neighborhood of the Rapids of the
Maumee.
Logan took with him
comrades
his old
in
They were
danger, Captain Johnny and Bright Horn.
pursued by a body of the enemy, and made their escape with difficulty to the wing of the
command to this this
of General Winchester. his
officer
Logan reported
He was
discoveries.
time by some persons
army under
in the
army
accused at
of treachery.
This suspicion of his fidelity to the American cause so hurt the feelings of the faithful Indian that he re-
He
away.
solved to wipe
it
friend
and informed him of
He
Oliver,
consequently started
visited the
down
the
camp
his
of his
intention.
Maumee
with his
inseparable companions, Captain Johnny and Bright
They were surprised Indians, among whom was Horn.
Winnemac.
at
the
noon by a party of treacherous
boldly offered his hand to Winnemac,
him to
well,
by
of an Indian
this
who knew
saying that he was just going to the British
give information.
much
chief
Logan, with quick presence of mind,
stratagem.
Winnemac, however, was too himself to be entirely deceived
They took away
the arms of
Logan and
his
fully while
they marched toward the British
companions, and guarded them carefort at
DEATH OF LOGAN. Logan,
the Rapids.
265
succeeded
after a time,
in
im-
pressing the Indians with the idea that he was sincere
in
declaration
his
American
he had deserted the
that
Winnemac
cause.
restored to the
but the Indians
tives their arms,
Logan now
watch upon them. his captors in a fight.
cap-
kept a close
still
resolved to brave
This idea he managed to com-
municate to Captain Johnny and Bright Horn as they
marched
In
along.
order
to
reload
arms
their
quickly they stealthily put bullets in their mouths.
Captain Johnny afterward said at his side noticed the motion,
"
Me chaw heap tobac." When night came on the
of
them going
little fruit
that,
seeing the
he calmly remarked,
Indians encamped,
They
attack.
mediately.
Their
der of the party, parties treed.
Bright
some
off in search of black haws, a delicate
much esteemed
in
Indiana.
they were out of sight Logan and his the
man
killed fire
As soon as men opened
three of the Indians im-
was returned by the remain-
who were near at hand, and both
Logan now received
Horn was
also
a mortal wound.
wounded, and they mounted
two of the enemy's horses, and,
after fatally
wound-
ing two other Indians, they started for General
Win-
chester's camp, twenty-five miles away, leaving Captain
had
Johnny killed
to follow on five
foot.
This party of three
out of six or seven of the enemy, 12
266
TECUMSEH,
among whom was
the
chief,
Winnemac.
paid dearly for his honors, but great pleasure to
him
that he
it
Logan
was no doubt a
had vindicated himself
Those who had made the charge against him deeply repented
it,
and he was the
idol of the
camp during
the two days that he lived in great suffering. his death
He was
he was seen to smile
Before
in spite of his pain.
asked what he was smiling
at.
Indian- like,
he answered that he could not help laughing when
he thought of the way the scalp of the dead
in
which Bright Horn took
Winnemac, while he kept
eye on the movements of the enemy time.
at the
his
same
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
DESTRUCTION OF THE MISSISSINEWA VILLAGES— BATTLE AND MASSACRE ON THE RIVER RAISIN. In December General Harrison sent out an expedition against the
On
River.
Miami
villages
on the Mississinewa
the march of General Hopkins' force in-
to their country the
Miamis had become anxious
friendship with the United States.
ship cooled with
of the
way they
its
retreat,
But
and when
it
for
their friend-
was well out
resolved on hostility.
It
was now
highly important to defeat them in order to save Fort
Wayne
The detachment marched
from their attacks.
eighty miles over frozen ground, and arrived at the first
ready escaped. riors
Many
Indian village.
were
killed,
They were
and two others were
A
encamped
at
also
light,
village of Silver
Indians
Heels
When
destroyed.
night
men were awakened
engagement soon ensued,
the
were discov-
dawn, that being the Indian hour
fierce
al-
pursued, and eight war-
The
ered near at hand, and the fore
had
while forty-two prisoners were taken
and the town destroyed.
soldiers
of the Indians
be-
for attack.
lasting until day-
the Indians making strenuous efforts to reach
TECUMSEH.
268
and
release the
driven off
by a
captives.
But they were
them besides the bodies thrown
tribe
last
The The
into the river.
expedition was very wholesome.
effect of this
Delaware
at
charge, leaving fifteen dead behind
and
the other Indians
all
who were
friendly to the United States immediately accepted
moved
the invitation of the governor and limits of the
The in
American
within the
frontier.
troops under General Winchester were ordered
January to occupy the Rapids of the Maumee,
otherwise called the
Miami of the Lakes.
been twice before attempted. the Rapids after a severe
This had
Winchester reached
march through the snow.
Here he received messages from Frenchtown, on the River Raisin, thirty miles ahead, entreating ance.
A
assist-
party of three hundred British and Indians
had occupied the town and threatened the houses and carry
away the
to
people.
Winchester held a council of war
in
burn down Genera]
which
it
was
unanimously agreed to send forward an ample detach-
ment
to the
River Raisin.
This was a most unwise
undertaking, for Frenchtown had but eighteen miles of frozen lake between
it
as soon as he heard of
it,
might
to stop
it.
He
detachment of over
and Maiden, and Harrison, pushed forward with
all
his
was, however, too late, for a
six
hundred men marched
to
Frenchtown, surprised the British and Indians, and
MASSACRE ON THE RIVER a sharp battle
after
When to
RAISIN.
them from the town.
clrov^c
General Winchester heard of
this
Frenchtown with two hundred and
At
morning
daylight, the
269
he marched
fifty
men. he was
after his arrival,
attacked by Colonel Proctor at the head of a force of
two thousand men, the Indians being commanded by
The Americans
Roundhead and Walk-in-the- water. were taken
at a
disadvantage and
were
those
who endeavored
killed,
tomahawked by the was soon made
to escape being
Winchester himself
Indians.
prisoner.
great numbers
The
British
were repulsed,
however, by that part of the American troops which
had been encamped within the town.
They
resisted
bravely, preferring to die thus than to be massacred
by
them
glish to order
might be
Winchester was urged by the En-
the Indians.
to surrender, since the artillery
easily destroy the village,
at the
mercy
and they would then Winchester gave
of the savages.
the order, but the troops did not surrender until they
had secured a promise of protection from the
Indians.
After the surrender, General Proctor started for Maiden, leaving the
with but one
American wounded
officer as guard,
the
own wounded were
This he did not do,
and they were
most barbarously murdered by the Indians. of them were
burned
town
promising, however, to
send for them so soon as his transported.
in
alive in
the two
Most
houses
in
TECUMSEH.
270
which they had been
left,
those
who attempted
escape being pushed back into the flames. dians started for
Maiden with
all
those
The
whom
to
In-
they
judged able to walk, tomahawking them when they gave
men.
out.
The road was thus strewed with dead
Nearly three hundred perished
in the battle
and subsequently by the tomahawk and burning, besides the six
was
hundred who were taken
This
loss
httle
wonder that the
terribly felt
by
prisoners.
the Americans, and
bitterest feelings
it is
were enter-
tained toward Proctor for suffering such a massacre to take place.
abhorred
this
Even
the Indian general, Tecumseh,
savage treatment of the helpless.
he been present, the
lives of the prisoners
doubtedly have been saved.
Wabash
collecting warriors.
But he was
Had
would unstill
in the
CHAPTER XXIX. THE SIEGE OF FORT General Harrison was now all
idea of attacking
Maiden
General Winchester's loss
MEIGS. forced to give
for the present.
disaster, there
had been great
from sickness, and the term of service of most of
the troops would soon expire.
The
siege of
was wisely deferred by the government
when
the
through a
command fleet
of
stores for the
main object
which was now
next campaign.
at present
at the Rapids of the
opposite
to
was
later,
in preparation.
artillery
Fort
and military
General Harrison's
to hold this fort, situated
Maumee, or Miami of the Lakes,
where the English Fort Miami, which
proved such a temptation
to
General Wayne, had
Tecumseh, with the assistance of the Proph-
stood.
had been collecting Indians from the
tribes
Maiden
until
Lake Erie should be obtained
Meigs was the depot of the
et,
up
Besides
during the winter.
As
spring
came
different
on,
and
the ice disappeared from Lake Erie, General Harrison
was
Maiden.
in constant
expectation of an attack from
His force was
now very much reduced on
account of the expiration of the terms of service of
TECUMSEH.
2/2 his
soldiers.
What men he had worked
however, at the
In the latter
unfinished condition.
commanded by
1813, the Enghsh, Indians,
which were
fortifications,
Tecumseh,
under
still
in an
part of April,
Proctor, and die
appeared
They immediately began
Meigs.
bravely,
Fort
before
to erect three bat-
teries
on a high bank on the opposite side of the
river.
Meanwhile the engineer within Fort Meigs
had suggested a plan which General Harrison immediately accepted, to
and the whole army was turned out
work under the engineer's
immediately around the
heavy still
forest.
orders.
The ground
had been cleared of
fort
From behind
its
a few trees which were
standing, and from the trunks which lay on the
now and
ground, the Indians would getting a shot at
some of the
then succeed in
garrison.
On
of the fort the trees had not been cleared
to climb into the tree-tops
with their shots.
This
occasion that their
ened
fire,
The English had first
however, served as a
was remarked on
musketry about
finished their batteries,
of
May
they were loading and objects within the
it
this
movements were much quick-
brisk fire of
morning of the
to so
and annoy the Americans
stimulus to the militia, and
by a
away
Here the Indians were accustomed
great a distance.
"
one side
fort.
their ears."
and on the
the Americans saw that
adjusting their guns
upon
In a few minutes an im-
t J
Plahi
>.
FORT SANDUSKY ANIi KWIRONS.
'^mMfiMimsMJiiB^?if^Si¥^^^^^^^^^ FORT MEIOS AND ENVIRONS.
THE SIEGE OF FORT mense wall of
earth, as
MEIGS.
by magic,
273
Avas presented to
man
the view of the English gunners, and not a
was
tent
be seen within Fort Meigs.
to
or a
This was
the result of the engineer's scheme, and the day and
night
wall, twelve feet high,
ground fully
A
of the soldiers.
toil
grand traverse, or earth
had been
hidden from view by the
quickly
moved behind
This had been care-
tents,
For
it.
on the elevated
built
in the center of the fort.
which were now
much
not the
of
The
life.
but economically,
fort,
When
loss
the
fire
ican soldiers
for
fire
fort
was
little effect
and
days the
five
cannonaded and bombarded, with but
was returned from
ammunition was
scarce.
from the batteries slackened, the Amer-
would appear above the embankmxcnt
giving three cheers and swinging their caps in the air.
Much amusement
vv^as
created within the fort
by
the yells and demonstrations of delight on the part of the Indians
when they thought
done by the bursting of a camp. dians,
This
mode
serious
shell
and they admired
it
the
in
of fighting was
new
very much.
always called the bomb- shells " double a great respect for them.
damage was
The English
from the opposite side of the
In-
Tecumseh and
felt
tried the effect
fire
their
guns were silenced by the American
now
to the
balls,"
of a
General Green Clay was
American
fort,
but here
batteries.
near at hand with a
reinforcement of twelve hundred Kentucky volun12*
TECUMSEH.
274 teers.
It
was necessary
eighteen
in
for
him
descend the river
to
do on the
This he intended to
flats.
by
night of the 4th of May, reaching Fort Meigs
dayhght.
An
officer
and some men were sent ahead
to inform General Harrison of his intentions.
make a
son resolved to
He
Clay's arrival.
sally against the
Harri-
enemy on meet
sent Captain Hamilton to
the reinforcements with directions to General Clay to
detach about eight hundred men, which should be
landed on the
left
bank of the
to attack the English
immediately cross to the
through the
fort stood,
Meanwhile the
to land
and
way
re-
to
it
Hamilton did not
They
until after daylight.
their pilot,
to
on the side of the
fight their
Captain
Indians.
meet the reinforcements had been detained by
which they were
after fort.
mainder of the troops were
where the
cannons
batteries, spike the
and destroy the carriages,
river
where they were
river,
who
refused to pro-
ceed until morning.
When nel
General Clay approached Fort Meigs, Colo-
Dudley was detached
rison's
orders in
The remainder
of the boats were to
hind General Clay. driven ashore.
to execute General
regard to the English fall
into line be-
In attempting this they were
After some confusion and annoyance
from the Indians, General Clay landed with the
men who were
Har-
batteries.
in his
boat
They marched
fifty
to the
THE SIEGE OF FORT without
fort
under a
loss,
fire
MEIGS.
275
from Tecumseh's In-
dians and with a discharge of grape-shot from the
Enghsh
The
batteries.
in spite of a fire
rear boats effected a landing
The
from the Indians.
mediately formed and returned the
now
They
received orders from Harrison to march In open
order to the gates of the fort
by
troops im-
v'ollcy.
a detachment sent out
by
Here they were met
The
Harrison,
force
then turned and marched against Tecumseh's Indians,
who were
greatly superior In
number, but
they drove at the point of the bayonet General Harrison,
tance.
Indians
in
who were
saw that
filing
In the rear.
recall the
and another
this
de-
along the edge of the woods
mediately despatched his aid to aid's horse
dis-
danger from a body of English and
preparatory to attacking them
The
some
who was watching with a
glass the operations of the troops,
tachment was
for
whom
He
Im-
detachment.
was shot from under him, however,
officer
repeated the order.
The pursu-
ing Americans were extremely reluctant to return,
and
do
It
so.
dians,
was
witli difficulty that
they were Induced to
In their retreat they were pursued by the In-
who succeeded
in killing
more men than they
had done before during the whole Harrison could nel
now
Dudley carrying out
batteries.
The
action.
General
see the detachment under Colotheir orders at the English
general ordered a sortie under Colo-
TECUMSEH.
2/6
nel Miller against the batteries on the side of the
where the
river
ed the
fort stood.
were greatly superior
glish
in
and pressed Colonel
ed to the
forty-
and routed the enemy, although the En-
prisoners,
rallied
detachment attack-
Tliis
cannon, took about
batteries, spiked the
fort.
The enemy-
numbers.
IMiller
hard as he return-
Colonel Miller's loss was considera-
ble while the English and Indians suffered severely.
Meanwhile Colonel Dudley had landed on the opposite
side of the river,
teries,
marched two miles
and raising the Indian
As the Americans cut down greeted by
the English flag they were
shouts from the garrison of Fort Meigs.
General Harrison
now
them
signaled
their boats according to his order.
at the batteries,
place, but
however, interested
now offered
a reward to any one
and order a
dertook to do Indians in scouts.
this,
Numbers
diately rushed into the
looking at the
General Harrison
who would
cross the
late.
A
body of
upon Colonel Dudley's
fired
ordered
They remained in
Lieutenant Campbell un-
but was too
ambush had
He had
assistance.
retreat.
to retreat to
of the cannon and
spiking only a part
without destroying the carriages.
river
to the bat-
had captured them.
yell
reinforcements
to
of the eager soldiers
woods in
their
imme-
pursuit of the Indians,
leaving the remainder of the force under Colonel
Dudley
to hold the batteries.
THE SIEGE OF FORT
MEIGS.
277
Meanwhile the English gunners who had
He
supposed the attack to have been from
the main force of the American army, and diately sent for the
posite shore.
across the
on
Americans, reported to General
the attack of the Proctor.
fled
most of
his troops
Tecumseh was
river,
and,
imme-
from the op-
so eager that he
swam
following the English
force
which had already attacked Dudley,
fell
the rear of the routed Americans.
The detachment
which had pursued the Indians returned only to join in the confusion of a hopeless
men were
greater part of the
the
Colonel
Indians.
tomahawk, and
less
killed or
upon
fiercely
time
in
The captured by
Dudley himself
than two hundred
rout.
by the
fell
men
out of
eight hundred reached Fort Meigs in safety.
The American
prisoners were
taken to
the
Fort Miami, inside of which they were confined. eral Proctor allowed
tims from
among
this operation,
Gen-
the Indians to select their vic-
the
prisoners,
tomahawked, or murdered their savage taste.
Proctor
in is
whom
they shot,
any way which suited said to
have witnessed
which lasted some two hours, during
which time about twenty men were murdered.
cumseh now came down from the
batteries,
Te-
where
he had been, not knowing what was going on. British ofiicer
conduct on
old
who was
A
present described Tecumseh's
this occasion to
an American gentleman.
TECUMSEH.
2/8
He
said that suddenly a thundering voice
He
speaking in the Indian tongue.
and saw Tecumseh carry him, to
American, horse,
other
a
was heard,
looked around
riding as fast as his horse could
spot where
killing him.
two Indians had an
Tecumseh sprang from
his
and catching one Indian by the throat and the
by
the breast, threw
drew
chief then
his
them
The
to the ground.
tomahawk and
scalping-knife,
and, running between the prisoners and the Indians,
brandished the weapons madly, and dared any of the
hundreds of Indians around him to touch another His people seemed
prisoner.
Tecumseh exclaimed, " Oh,
He
what
will
become of
then inquired where
when, suddenly seeing him
demanded
of the
much
confounded.
passionately,
my
Indians !"
General
Proctor
was,
at a short distance,
he
commander why he had allowed
this massacre.
" Sir," said General Proctor, "
your Indians cannot
be commanded." "
Begone
are unfit to
"
!
chief,
sneeringly
command; go and put on
Not long attention
answered the
after
this
the
great
"
petticoats
Indian
was attracted by some one
;
to a
you " !
general's
group of
Indians with something in their midst, at which they
were looking "
Yonder
intently.
are four of your nation
who have been
THE SIEGE OF FORT
MEIGS.
279
"you may do
taken prisoners," said Colonel Elliott; with them as you think proper."
Tecumseh walked up found
and
in their
Soldier,
midst four Shawnee Indians
placed you under to
—Big Jim
and two brothers named Perry.
" Friends," said
back
company and
to the little
Tecumseh,
my
" Colonel
charge, and
Elliott has
will
I
send you
your nation with a talk to our people."
This he did, discharging them on parole not to fight again
sent
some
Shawnee to
nation,
accompany
When
messages to the chiefs of the
and dispatched two of
his followers
the released Indians.
the firing had ceased,
an English
with a flag of truce was seen crossing
He
He
during the war with the English. friendly
officer
the
river.
was met on landing by an aid-de-camp of Gen-
eral Harrison.
mand
He
said
that his object
the surrender of the
fort.
The
was
to de-
aid said that
he might as well have spared himself the trouble, but that he would report to his commander. eral Harrison,
of
the
Gen-
being anxious with regard to the
prisoners,
had
the
English
officer.
Chambers, blindfolded and admitted to the " General Proctor has directed
me
to
fate
Major
fort.
demand
the
"
He
surrender of this post," said Major Chambers.
wishes to spare the effusion of blood."
"The demand, under
present circumstances," an-
TECUMSEH.
28o
swered the general, "
As
is
a most extraordinary one.
General Proctor did not send
surrender on believed
me
determined to do
account
" General
me
that I
feelings, sir,"
bers politely remarked.
"
an
Proctor's force
him a
larger
His present
am
at a
never think of saying
Proctor could
as
to
for."
anything to wound your
Harrison,
summons
a
my duty.
message indicates an opinion of loss to
me
had supposed that he
his first arrival, I
officer,
is
body
The is
Major Cham-
character of General
well
known.
General
very respectable, and there
is
with
of Indians than has ever before
been embodied." "
I
believe
I
have a very correct idea of General
Proctor's force," said General Harrison
such as to create the sult of the contest,
hereafter to give
least
"
it
is
may be
pleased
Assure the general, however,
that he will never have this post surrendered to
upon any be
will
and his
in
terms.
not
apprehension for the re-
whatever shape he it.
;
Should
it
fall
him
into his hands,
it
a manner calculated to do him more honor,
to give
him
larger claims
upon the gratitude of
government, than any capitulation could possibly
do."
Arrangements were then made
for the
exchange
of prisoners.
An
incident
happened during
this
siege
which
THE SIEGE OF FORT shows the contempt
An
American
MEIGS.
281
which General Hull was held.
in
soldier being near the river bank,
an
English soldier called out to him " that they would better
hang out the white
flag
and surrender."
" General Hull has not arrived yet,"
American
" until he
;
answered the
comes you may save yourself
the trouble of asking for a surrender."
now amount
General Harrison's force did not
more than twelve hundred, owing engagement on the had under
of May.
5 th
command about
his
six
to
to the loss in the
General Proctor
hundred
regulars,
eight hundred Canadian militia, and about eighteen
hundred Indians. capable of
strict
The
Indians, however, were
for
now began numbers. They
subordination, and they
to desert the English cause in large
had looked
some
and they now saw
signal success at Fort Meigs,
little
chance of
It is said that
it.
General Proctor had offered large rewards the fort was taken. to
be a tool
in
in-
case
in
The Prophet, who seemed
still
his brother's hands, though he never
fought in the war, was promised Michigan Territory for himself
ised
Whether
No
and
his followers.
General Harrison, this
Tecumseh was prom-
this officer
statement be true or not
was captured. is
not known.
doubt the proud Tecumseh would have been
delighted to see in his his
if
power the man who had
dearest plans, and had ever been
foiled
his chief obsta-
TECUMSEH.
282 cle
We cannot
and antagonist.
ever,
that
treated with
Tecumseh's enemy would
mercy
if
News now reached ture of
help believing, how-
have
been
helpless in his hands.
the English forces of the cap-
Fort George, in
Upper Canada, by
the
Americans, under General Dearborn, and Proctor
began to think
it
unwise to remain longer at Fort
Meigs while Upper Canada was unprotected.
on the morning of the 9th of saw the enemy moving away.
May
Early
the Americans
CHAPTER XXX. THE SECOND ATTACK ON FORT It was with States
great
of Indians in the
constant
source
government ernor
missed
reluctance
government consented
War
the
of 1812,
of complaint
that they
that
to
it
against the
An
the English
Gov-
Missouri Territory had dis-
rangers
which the
Osage
among them-
This powerful nation was so
was much
fear of its turning
settlements.
named Robert Dickson had spring of 181 3 among the Indian
English trader
been sent tribes
American
United
having been a
against
Indians had been permitted to raise
displeased that there
the
employment
had used the savages.
Howard of the a company of
selves in his absence.
MEIGS.
in the
on the Mississippi and
Illinois
Rivers.
He
gathered together at Chicago nearly a thousand In-
among whom was a great Pottawatomie chief, named Mai -Pock, who wore a belt of scalps around dians,
his waist. all
In the months of July and
August nearly
the Indian warriors of the North and North-West
were collected around Maiden. tended
from
Brownstown
to
Their camps ex-
Detroit.
They had
TECUMSEH.
284
and as they neither hunted
their families with them,
nor planted corn, their support must have been a
The
great burden upon the English government.
main
Upper Canada
force of the British in
consisted
of these Indians. In the
month of June,
who was now
1813,
in the interior,
Meigs was again
General Harrison,
was informed that Fort Before he
be invested.
likely to
returned to his outposts he held a council with the
Seneca to the in
Delaware,
the
of
chiefs
Shawnee, Wyandot, and
These nations
tribes.
United States.
still
Harrison
which he told them that
it
remained friendly
made them was time
a speech,
for all the
neutral Indians to take the one side or the other.
He
them of a proposal
told
made
to
exchange
his
that General Proctor
American prisoners
Indians friendly to the United States,
them
that this looked as
received the
some
tomahawk
had
for the
Harrison told
though General Proctor had
hint that they were willing to take
against the United States.
ident wanted no false friends, and
if
The
up
Pres-
they wished to
prove their friendship they must either move into the interior or join him in the war. chiefs
unanimously
had been waiting Americans. est
A
agreed to do.
for
This
They
an invitation to
the
last
said
they
fight for the
speech was made by Tahe, the old-
Indian in the West.
He
spoke in behalf of
all
SECOND ATTACK ON FORT MEIGS.
285
the tribes present, and professed the greatest friendship for the United States. that he
would
mode
know when they were "you must conform to our
the Indians
let
wanted; "but,"
said
he,
You are men, women
of warfare.
prisoners,
old
General Harrison said
not to
kill
defenceless
General
or children."
Harrison then told them that he had been told that
General Proctor had promised to deliver him into the hands of
Tecumseh
if
"
attack on Fort Meigs.
taking Proctor,"
have him to treat
for
him
they succeeded
Now,
if
I
can succeed in
said General Harrison,
"
your prisoner, provided you
as a squaw,
in their
you
will
shall
agree
and only put petticoats upon
him, for he must be a coward
who would
kill
a de-
fenceless prisoner." in July, 181 3, the Indians
began to appear
the neighborhood of Fort Meigs.
They attacked
Early in
small parties
were
On
lost in
who went
out of the
fort,
and some
men
skirmishes with them.
the evening of the 20th of July, the English
and Indians, about
five
thousand strong, were again
seen approaching Fort IMeigs, of which General Clay
was now the commander.
Previous to the siege he
had busied himself with clearing
off the trees to a
greater distance, and burning the trunks which had
been
left
on the ground.
The English
forces
now
encamped below Fort Miami, and the Indians soon
286
TECUMSEH.
took possession of the woods in the rear of Fort Meigs.
Here they could ister
effect nothing, as
the grape and can-
shot from the fort kept them at a distance.
In
the night an express was sent to General Harrison to
inform him of the siege.
General Clay expected that
Most
the English would immediately erect batteries.
men were
of the
occupied through the night in
throwing up new traverses, and preparing
Those who were permitted
sistance.
On
their arms.
mounted
Indians,
the river.
It
the 23d of July,
for re-
all
to rest slept
eight
on
hundred
commanded by Tecumseh, went up
was supposed
at the fort that
Tecumseh
intended to attack Fort Winchester.
Everything still
remained quiet around Fort Meigs.
On
the evening
of the 24th, Colonel Gaines of the garrison, with two
hundred men, made a
circuit of the fort to see
English had begun to erect any batteries.
if
the
A stronger
detachment was sent from the English camp
to inter-
cept him, but he succeeded in regaining the fort before glish
he was overtaken.
moved
stood,
The next morning
to the side of the river
the
En-
on which the
fort
and encamped behind a point of woods.
movement
led
This
General Clay to suppose that they
intended to storm his position.
The rison
express from Fort Meigs found General Harat
Lower Sandusky.
movement
of
He
thought that the
Tecumseh toward Fort Winchester was
SECOND ATTACK ON FORT MEIGS.
28/
a feint to attract attention in that direction, while
Fort Stephenson, at Lower Sandusky, would prove to be
As
the real point of attack.
this post
had
been pronounced untenable and was unimportant, Harrison directed his main attention to Fort Meigs
He moved
and Upper Sandusky. to
his headquarters
Seneca Town, leaving Fort Stephenson
From
of Major Croghan.
this
in
charge
point he would be
ready to relieve either of the important posts. the express from
sent
Fort Meigs back with
message that he had not a immediately to the
sufficient force to
relief of that
would inform the governor of would soon be collected
for that
fort,
the
march
but that he
Ohio, and
purpose
He
if
the
troops
enemy
persevered.
Meanwhile Tecumseh had devised a stratagem by
means of which he hoped the
fort.
heavy
On
yell,
decoy the Americans from
the afternoon of the 26th of July, a
firing of rifles
Indian
to
and musketry, followed by the
A
was heard upon the Sandusky road.
body of Indians could be seen attacking a column
men who were
at
then rallied again, and the Indians gave way. contest
seemed
to
the intended effect
be approaching the
upon the
garrison,
arms and demanded to be led their friends.
of
one time thrown into confusion, This It
had
who seized
their
fort.
to the assistance of
Fortunately the express had arrived
TECUMSEH.
288 that
morning with Harrison's message, and General
Clay concluded that there could be no reinforcements
cannons at the
minated
On raised,
sailed
A
neighborhood.
in the
this
sham
few discharges from the
and a heavy shower of
fort
battle,
rain ter-
which had lasted an hour.
the 28th of July the siege of Fort Meigs was
and the English embarked
in their vessels
and
around into Sandusky Bay, while a number of
the Indians crossed
by
land.
CHAPTER XXXI. THE ATTACK ON FORT STEPHENSON. This movement had been
He had examined
Harrison.
found a the
in the
hill
fort,
anticipated
by General
Fort Stephenson and
neighborhood which commanded
and to which he thought of removing
Major Croghan
offered
it
to carry out this plan, but
General Harrison thought
it
would probably be
at-
tacked before the removal could be accomplished.
General Harrison was convinced that the
Major Croghan that
told
by
water,
it
ever,
if
the fort was approached
possible
artillery,
after
and he must
burning the fort
he should be attacked by
cidal to
On
if
would be presumable that the enemy
had brought heavy retreat
land,
it
effect If,
of July General
of the enemy.
his officers,
it
sui-
forces.
Harrison was in-
formed by an express from General
movement
a
how-
would be
attempt to escape through the Indian
the 29th
Clay of the
In a council held with
was decided that Fort Stephenson was
untenable, since the English could bring of battering
could
fort
the English artillery, and
not be defended against
cannon against 13
it
any number
General Harrison
TECUMSEIT.
290
immediately sent Major Croghan a peremptory order to
abandon and burn the
The
and
fort
a retreat.
effect
bearers of this message having lost their
the night,
it
did not reach Fort Stephenson
When
ty-four hours.
it
way
in
twen-
for
arrived at the fort the In-
dians v/ere already hovering about, and in a council
of officers
it
was decided
to hold the fort until further
The commander
orders should be received. post,
who was
a
nephew of
the
of the
famous General
George Rogers Clark, wrote the following note to Harrison " Sir: o'clock
:
I
have just received yours of yesterday, ten
P. M.,
me
ordering
my
make good
retreat,
to destroy this place
and
which was received too
late
We
to be carried into execution. to maintain this place,
The impudence the fact that
of this note
son, however,
It
accounted it
to
" 1
for
fall
by
into
reached General Harri-
and he did not understand
sent Colonel Wells to relieve
He
this.
Major Croghan, and
that gentleman to appear before
answer for his disobedience. factorily,
is
Major Croghan expected
the hands of the enemy.
summoned
have determined
and by heavens we can
him and
This was done
satis-
and the Major was ^x;rmitted to return
to
his post.
A
rcconnoitering party
first
discovered the ap-
proach of the enemy by water on the 31st of July.
ATTACK ON FORT STEPHENSON. They
29
returned to the fort about noon the following
day, and
a few hours afterward
it
was invested.
Major Croghan was but twenty-one years of age; he
had but one piece of
artillery, a
his garrison consisted of
The
Indians
They were
first
six-pounder, and
one hundred and sixty men.
showed themselves over the
by
greeted
the six-pounder.
hill.
Half an
hour afterward the English gunboats appeared and the Indians were seen in every direction.
The
soli-
tary six-pounder was fired at the boats a few times,
and was answered by the English
enemy low the fort
to
one piece a mile be-
effected a landing with fort.
with a
Major Chambers then approached the
flag.
meet him.
Major Croghan sent Ensign Shipp Major Chambers said that he had
structions from General Proctor to
render of the
The
artillery.
fort,
demand
the sur-
that he was anxious to prevent
the effusion of blood, which could not be done
were forced to reduce the
by
fort
Shipp answered that
tion to defend the fort,
buried themselves in
was
its
ruins,
he
com-
their determina-
which they would do
duce them to surrender. if
it
if
the large force of
regulars and Indians and the artillery under his
mand.
in-
if
they
and no force could
Major Chambers
in-
said that
the fort were taken, of which event they had no
doubt, their Indians could not be restrained from
massacring the inmates.
The Indian
agent, Dickson,
TECUMSEH.
292
who accompanied Major Chambers, then remarked that it was a pity that such a fine young man should fall
into Indian hands.
" Sir, for God's sake, surrender and prevent the
dreadful massacre that will be caused
by your
resist-
ance," he said.
Shipp answered that when the
would be none
An
to massacre.
fort
was taken there
Indian at this
mo-
ment came out of a ravine near by and attempted
to
wrest the American's sword from him, but was pre-
vented by the Englishmen, safely to the fort.
This
last
who conducted Shipp scene was believed
by
the Americans to have been a bit of stage play to illustrate the
The
point to the ensign's mind.
forces of the English
consisted of about five
hundred regulars and eight hundred Indians under Dickson. stationed
Tecumseh with two thousand Indians was on the road to Fort Meigs to intercept any
reinforcement.
The English now
fired
upon the
fort
from the
cannon on their gunboats and the piece on shore. This firing continued jor
night with
Croghan occasionally
moving
it
little effect.
Ma-
fired his little six-pounder,
from place to place to make the enemy be-
lieve that
he had more than one piece.
sparing in the use of
was
all
scarce.
it,
however, as his
The English
directed their
He was
ammunition fire
against
ATTACK ON FORT STEPHENSON. the north-western angle of the
thought from
this that
Major Croghan
fort.
they would endeavor to
a breach and storm his works at that point. the sohtary cannon secretly
where
would command
it
brasure,
293
moved
make
He had
to a block-house
this angle,
masked the em-
and loaded the gun.
Early the next morning, the English opened from their howitzer
had planted
and three six-pounders, which they
in the
woods during the
In the
night.
afternoon they again concentrated their
fire
on the
Major Croghan immediately
north-western angle.
strengthened the palisades at this point with bags of
sand and
Later the smoke of the firing had so
flour.
enveloped the
fort that
nothing could be seen from
now made toward
it.
Feints were
gle,
but the troops at the north-western angle main-
tained
their
fifty
men were
paces at this point. the fort threw
commanding
He
men.
jumped ditch
them
officer.
A
discovered within twenty
heavy
Into
caped.
of musketry from
confusion, but the
Colonel Short, soon rallied his
his
full
the
troops following
The
in vain
;
him.
When
the
masked embrasure was opened and
the cannon did such effective
but
fire
some
bravely led them to the ditch, and then
in,
was
Suddenly a body of three
position.
hundred and
the southern an-
officers
work
attempted to
that but few esrally their
they were utterly routed.
men,
TECUMSEH.
294
The
was one
loss of the httle garrison
The English
seven wounded.
came on soon
loss
the assault,
after
was
killed
and the wounded
could not be relieved completely by either those
who were
in the ditch
wall of the
He
fort.
by means also
rying away
had a ditch opened under
who were
able
The Indians succeeded in carown dead and wounded.
fort.
many
wounded
the
to
of buckets over the
the palisades, through which those
crawled into the
All
side.
able returned to the English lines.
Major Croghan conveyed water English
and
Night
great.
of their
on the morning of the
3d of
August, the English and Indians retreated.
They
Before daylight
left
a boat
stores,
some clothing and military
containing
and seventy stands of arms, while some braces
of pistols were picked up around the retreated
precipitately,
fort.
They had from
expecting an attack
General Harrison, who, however, had deferred marching to the relief of the
had only brought had been sent preparing to
early in
disappeared.
News
Harrison that the English were
retreat,
the
He
seeing that the English
light artillery with them.
to
for the fort with a
there
fort,
and he immediately
body of dragoons. morning
after
the
He
set
out
arrived
enemy had
did not pursue them, however, for
he feared an attack from Tccumsch upon Fort Meigs or upon the reinforcements which were coming from
ATTACK ON FORT STEPIIENSON. In his
Ohio.
official report,
295
General Harrison called
"a hero worthy
the youthful Major Croghan
of his
gallant uncle."
On
the day following the assault the Americans
buried
the
A small
— among —with
English dead
brave Colonel Short party of
Wyandot
in
English soldiers. in
safety, with
was the
Indians were sent
the bay as scouts after the retreat
They succeeded
whom
suitable honors.
surprising
down
of the enemy.
and capturing a few
They brought
their prisoners
back
an evident sense of deserving extra-
ordinary commendation for having abstained from cruelty.
They were
often seen
telling the story to
other warriors, and laughing over the terror of their prisoners,
who, no doubt, expected to be tomahawked
or burned.
CHAPTER XXXIL ANECDOTES OF TECUMSEH.
At
every defeat of General Proctor the Indians
became more and more siege of Fort
commander
When
dissatisfied.
the
first
Meigs was abandoned, they pressed the to
make a new
The
efibrt.
success of
the American arms in various skirmishes elsewhere
A trader at length
was kept from them. and
for this
the Indians felt
divulged
it,
he was arrested by General Proctor, but
demanded
his release,
and the commander
obliged to comply with their wishes.
The
sav-
ages at this time held secret councils, and would give the general no information of their proceedings.
After his retreat from Fort Stephenson, Proctor
and
his forces
Tecumseh with
proceeded to Maiden by water, while
of Lake Erie and met
An
American
arrested
marched around the head
his warriors
him
citizen.
by General
there.
Captain Le Croix, had been
Proctor,
and was
at this
time
secreted on board an English vessel until he could be sent to Montreal. ship for
Le
Tecumseh had an
Croix, and
his influence with
it
especial friend-
may have been
Tecumseh
that he
was
because of
seized.
Te-
ANECDOTES OF TECUMSEH.
297
cumseh, suspecting that Le Croix had been imprisoned, visited General Proctor, and asked
anything of his Proctor
He
friend.
even ordered
" If
to tell the truth.
falsehood," said Tecumseh, "
if
I,
I
he knew General
ever detect you in a
my
with
Indians, will
immediately abandon you." General Proctor acknowledged that he held Captain
Le Croix
Tecumseh then demanded
as a prisoner.
that his friend should be
and
instantly set at liberty,
the general wrote a note ordering the release of the prisoner, saying that the "
King of the Woods
"
de-
manded it, and it must be done. Tecumseh treated the American commander with A recent writer, we do. not know equal contempt. on what
authority, gives a challenge
sent to Harrison at the
ran thus
first
which Tecumseh
siege of Fort Meigs.
It
:
General PIarrison I have with me eight hundred braves. You have an equal number in your Come out with them and give me hiding place. You talked like a brave when we met at battle. "
:
Vincennes, and
I
behind logs and
Give
me
respected you in
the
but
now you
earth, like a
hide
ground-hog.
TECUMSEH."
answer.
Tecumseh was very
;
careful that his dignity as
an
Indian chief and an English general should be respected.
He knew enough 13*
of the English language
TECUMSEH.
298
to hold a conversation
on any ordinary
He
topic.
never was known, however, to use anything but the
Shawnee tongue
in council or in
English
or agents.
officers
conversing with the
Indeed he would not
whom
he
of 1812 he
al-
speak English except with those towards felt
During the
very friendly.
ways kept an
At one
War
interpreter with him.
time while the English and Indians were
encamped horseflesh
The
Maiden, provisions became scarce.
at
English soldiers were supplied with
was given
to the Indians.
salt beef,
while
Tecumsch was
incensed at this treatment of his people.
He
visited
General Proctor and complained of the arrangement
by which, he and
his
seemed
The
The commanding
men.
indifferent
to
him
general, however,
Tecumseh's
remonstrance.
chief than struck the hilt of Proctor's sword,
and touched "
considered, an insult was offered to
You
cating a
tended
his
own tomahawk,
saying with dignity,
are
Proctor— I am Tecumseh," thus
way
of settling the point
to.
if it
indi-
were not
at-
General Proctor yielded.
The Americans always had
great
Tecumseh, though he was an enemy.
confidence in
Once when
the English and Indians were encamped near the
River Raisin, some Sauks and Winnebagoes entered the house of a Mrs. Ruland and began to plunder
She immediately
sent her
little
it.
daughter to ask Te-
ANECDOTES OF TECUMSEH. cumsch
to
come
The
to her assistance.
making
council and was
a speech
when
299
was
chief
in
the child en-
tered the building and pulled the skirt of Tecumsch's
hunting- shirt, saying, "
Come
to our house, there are
Tecumseh
bad Indians there."
did not wait to finish his speech, but
walked rapidly
to the house.
At
the entrance he
met some Indians dragging a trunk knocked down the
The
tomahawk. "
Dogs
first
others prepared to
!" cried the chief, " I
Indians immediately
some English
fled,
officers
He
av/ay.
one with a blow from
his
resist.
am Tecumseh
!"
The
and Tecumseh turned upon
who were
standing near:
" You," said he, " are worse than dogs, to break
your
faith
The land,
with prisoners."
officers
immediately apologized to Mrs. Ru-
and offered
She declined
to
put a guard around her house.
this offer,
however, saying that she was
not afraid so long as that man, pointing to Tecumseh,
was
near.
After the retreat from Fort Stephenson, seh,
Tecum-
discouraged by the ill-success of the English,
and having
lost
confidence in General Proctor, as-
sembled a council of the Shawnee, Wyandot, and
Ottawa Indians who were under him, and proposed that they should to promise
abandon a struggle which seemed
them no good.
He
told
them
that
when
TECUMSEH.
30O
they had taken up the tomahawk and joined their father, the
men
King, they were promised plenty of white
to fight with
greater," said
them
;
" but the
Tecumseh,
ment of the war
;
to our
and
own all
;
we
not
commence-
country, and
let
we
should return
the Americans
come on
Tecumseh's immediate
agreed with him
in this decision,
Sioux and Chippewas, when they discovered tention,
the
first
them
went to him and
told
him
to unite with the English,
to join in the war,
leave them.
now
are ahvays sent ahead
It is better that
fight the British."
lowers
is
and we are treated by them hke
the dogs of snipe-hunters to start the game.
number
" than at the
that he
fol-
but the his in-
had been
and had induced
and now he ought not
This decided Tecumseh to remain.
to
CHAPTER
XXXIII.
PERRY'S VICTORY.
Commodore Perry had
for
some time been busy
new
superintending the building of two
Late
Erie. fleet
was
the
in
at last
summer
ready
vessels at
of 1813 the American
for action.
Perry sailed to Maiden and displayed his vessels before the English
fleet,
Tecumseh was on the time.
which was
in
Island of Bois Blanc at the
He was much dehghted when
vessels appeared, glish fleet
and
who were on
beach to witness the disappointed
American
the
told the Indians that the
would soon destroy them.
of Indians
that harbor.
The
En-
army
great
the island hastened to the
Tecumseh was much
battle.
when he saw no
The
signs of fighting.
imperious chief immediately launched his canoe and
paddled over to Maiden to inquire into visited General Proctor,
"
A
and
He
it.
said,
few days since you were boasting that you
commanded
the waters
— why
and meet the Americans
?
do you not go out See,
yonder they are
waiting for you and daring you to meet them
must and
shall
send out your
fleet
and
fight
;
you
them."
TECUMSEH.
302
When Tecumseh
returned to the island he told
the Indians, with evident mortification, that " the big
canoes of their great father were not yet ready, and
Americans must be de-
that the destruction of the
layed for a few days."
On
the
loth of September the engagement be-
tween the two
fleets
Tecumseh and
took place.
Indians witnessed this novel
mode
of warfare from
Early
the shore with the deepest interest.
morning the English
vessels
the
in the
were discovered stand-
ing out from Maiden, preparatory to giving battle to the American
fleet at
Commodore Perry wind was so
light,
Put-in-Bay. sailed out to
however, that the battle did not
begin until nearly noon. fire first,
and
it
The English
vessels
Perry's flagship was
the brave captain
by
named
Commodore
that
the " Lawrence," after
name whose
been taken by an English vessel
left
At
at
the
vessel
all
the
fire
had
mouth of
For two hours and a half the
rence " sustained nearly fleet.
opened
was much the more destructive, ow-
ing to their superiority in long guns.
Boston harbor.
The
meet them.
"
Law-
from the English
the end of this time there was nothing
of her but a battered hull, and most of her crew
were
killed or
this
time,
style.
wounded.
The wind had
increased
and the "Niagara" came up
Commodore Perry now
left
in
by
gallant
" the " Lawrence
perry's victory. in
He
charge of Lieutenant Yarnell.
cross
in
303 attempted to
an open boat to the " Niagara," standing
erect and bearing his flag, on which was the last words of Captain Lawrence, " Don't give up the
His men,
ship."
who
did not approve of the ardent
young commodore's thus making a
The remnant
him down, however.
pulled
crew upon
the "
Lawrence
their
commodore reached
Perry
now
Elliott, that
told the
target of himself,
of his
" gave three cheers
when
the " Niagara " in safety.
commander
of this ship. Captain
he feared the day was
lost,
on account of
the lighter vessels having remained so far in the rear.
Captain Elliott immediately set out
in
an open boat,
them up
and, going from vessel to vessel, brought
where they could do the most exe-
into the position
He was
cution.
thrown up by the
sailing
which struck on
through the enemy's
doing
to bear sels,
balls
all
sides of
Meanwhile Commodore Perry resolved upon
him.
in
completely drenched with water,
this,
thus bringing
upon the English
brought up by Captain
Such
a fire as
this
all
fleet,
lines,
and
succeeded
the " Niagara's "
guns
while the smaller ves-
Elliott,
did good service.
could not long be sustained
by
the English ships, and the whole fleet at last surrendered.
During the
contest, soon after Perry
the "Lawrence," her flag
had forced her
went down.
to strike, but
had
left
The English
they were themselves
TECUMSEH.
304
much
too
shattered to board her, and
Lieutenant
Yarncll soon hoisted his flag again.
After the battle was over a war of courtesy took place between the English and
American
Commodore
commander
English
swords
;
Barclay, the brave
and
fleet,
officers.
of the
his officers, refused to retain their
and Commodore Perry refused
to accept the
whom
sword of the veteran commander,
for
not but
The swords passed
feel
back and were
forth
at last
On
the
the highest respect.
many
times,
he could
and the English
officers
compelled to retain them.
day
after the battle the
English and
Amer-
icans held one funeral service over the English
They were
American dead.
buried on the shore of
Put-in-Bay, and the crews of both
The day was
ent.
calm.
guns
A
and
fleets
were pres-
pleasant and the lake was entirely
solemn dirge was played, and the minute
fired as the
slow procession of boats carried the
bodies to their graves.
General Harrison
received
at
his
headquarters,
where he had heard the cannonading, the following modest note from the young commodore, announcing the result of his "
first
battle
Dear General: We
they are ours
and a
—
two
ships,
:
have met the enemy and
two
brigs,
one schooner,
sloop.
"Yours, with great respect and esteem, "
Oliver Hazard Perry,"
perry's victory.
The
Indians did not understand the
a naval battle, and General Proctor,
305
movements of
who
doubtless
dreaded the influence of a defeat upon them, said to
Tecumseh, " sels
My fleet being
refit,
and
The
has whipped the Americans, but the ves-
much will
injured have gone to Put-in-Bay to
be here
suspicions of
in a
few days."
Tecumseh were soon aroused,
however, when he thought he perceived indications of a plan to retreat from Maiden.
CHAPTER XXXIV. BATTLE OF THE THAMES— DEATH OF TECUMSEH. Tecumseh was
doubtless a very difficult ally to
Imperious and
manage.
him
to rule,
eral
Proctor feared
dealt with icy,
and not easy
willful,
for
him
it
was natural
to submit.
outspoken disapproval, and
his
him by a cringing and maneuvering
which roused
sensitive chief
still
more
Proctor
only going to send
all
to
Gen-
pol-
the indignation of the
now
told
him that he was
his valuables
up the Thames,
where they would be met by a reinforcement and be safe.
Tecumseh, however,
mander was meditating a the
name
Proctor.
felt
sure that the
retreat.
com-
He demanded,
of his Indians, that he be heard
in
by General
Audience was granted him on the i8th of
September, and the Indian orator delivered his
last
speech, a copy of which was afterward found in General Proctor's
baggage when
it
was captured
:
" Father, listen to your children," said "
you have them
this,
all
before you.
Tecumseh The war before ;
our British father gave the hatchet to his red
children,
when our
old chiefs were alive.
They
are
DEATH OF TECUMSEH. now
307
In that war our father was thrown on
dead.
back by the Americans, and our father took
his
them by the hand without our knowledge
;
and we
are afraid that our father will do so again at this
Summer
time.
my
with
before
last,
when
came forward
I
red brethren and was ready to take up the
we were
hatchet in favor of our British father,
told
not to be in a hurry, that he had not yet determined to fight the Americans.
Listen
When war
!
was
declared our father stood up and gave us the toma-
hawk and
told us that
the Americans
he was then ready to strike
that he
;
wanted our
assistance,
and
that he would certainly get our lands back which the
Americans had taken from
us.
Listen
You
!
told
us at that time to bring forward our families to this place,
and we did so
;
and you promised
to take care
of them, and they should want for nothing while the
men would go and
fight the
enemy
that
;
we need
not trouble ourselves about the enemy's garrisons that
we knew nothing about them and
would attend told
also
your red children that you would take good
Listen
(Fort Meigs) It is
You
to that part of the business.
care of your garrison here, which glad.
that our father
!
When we
it is
true
Our
last at
wc gave you
hard to fight people
Father, listen!
were
who
fleet
made our
the Rapids
little
live like
hearts
assistance.
ground-hogs.
has gone out;
we know
TECUMSEH.
308 they have fought
we have heard
;
we know nothing
but
father with one
an arm
in a
the great guns
of what has happened to our
arm (Commodore Barclay had
Our
previous battle).
father tying
up everything and preparing
away
his intentions are.
main here and take care of our lands
You
is
made our
it
;
Our
you represent him.
the head, and
ground
;
but now, father,
are drawing back, and
we
we
pare our father's conduct to a
on
tween
its its
back, but legs
when
and runs
Wc
fat
dog
that carries
affrighted off.
must com-
it
drops
Father, listen
Americans have not yet defeated us by land
we
sure that they have done so
therefore wish to remain here
should they us,
we
will
make
and
neither ;
we
our enemy,
war (Wayne's us,
The
!
If they defeat
then retreat with our father.
Americans certainly defeated
;
its
be-
it
by water
fight
their appearance.
battle of the Rapids, last
you
see that
are sorry to see our father
doing so without seeing the enemy.
are
great
always told us you would never draw your foot
off British
tail
know
told us to re-
hearts glad to hear that was your wish.
King,
run
to
what
You always
our
to see
the other without letting his red children
father, the
gone
ships have
one way, and we are very much astonished
lost
At
the
battle), the
and when we
re-
turned to our father's fort at that place (Fort Miami), the gates were shut against
us.
We
were
afraid that
DEATH OF TECUMSEH. would now be the
it
now
but instead of that
Father,
you have got the arms and
ammunition whicli our great father sent If
them
and you
to us
lives are in the
may go and
we wish
For
welcome.
hands of the Great
Spirit.
are determined to defend our lands, and will,
his red
to
you have an idea of going away, give
children.
our
we
see our British father preparing to march out of garrison.
his
case,
309
us,
We
be His
if it
our bones upon them."
to leave
General Proctor refused to follow the advice of
Tccumseh.
It
chief called the
is
even reported that
commander
Tccumseh had hoped English his
in
"a. miserable old
:
it
squaw."
wrongs of the Indians, but extended beyond the
for white people
American nation
haughty
to obtain assistance from the
righting the
contempt
this
included the race.
Tccumseh,
though haughty and unbending, would doubtless have conducted himself differently toward a com-
mander
like
General Brock, one
who was
of inspiring respect for his courage and
mind of such an Proctor. nel
As
Indian.
Some English
it
was,
officers
capable
wisdom
in the
Tccumseh cowed
afterward told Colo-
Chambers of the American army
that Proctor
preserved a copy of Tecumseh's speech to show his officers the insolence to
mit
in
which he was forced
to sub-
order to prevent that chieftain's withdrawing
from the struggle.
TECUMSEH.
3IO Finding that retreat of the
General
Proctor
insisted
and Indian
British
forces,
upon a
Tecumseh
once more The Sioux and Chippewas again objected, and Tecumseh said that he was at home on the battle-field, threatened to leave the English service.
that he
had no
stand by them
if
fear
of death, and that
they
insisted.
The English army began
its
he would
march up the Detroit
September Maiden was
River, and on the 26th of
destroyed.
The next day Harrison and Maiden the
in the
enemy
American
on landing.
fleet,
his
army
expecting a battle with
Great was their astonishment General Harri-
at finding only the ruins of the fort.
son, with
some
and a body of volunteers,
crossed to
regulars, over
two hundred Indians,
militia, consisting
mostly of Kentucky
was desirous of immediately pursuing
General Proctor.
There was
little
hope of overtaking
him, however, for he had nearly one thousand horses, while Harrison had none.
mal could be procured. governor of Kentucky,
Only one
On
this,
indifferent ani-
Shelby, the aged
who had joined the army The deficiency was
under Harrison, was mounted.
soon supplied, however, by the arrival of Colonel
Richard M. Johnson's mounted regiment.
A
scout-
ing party sent out from this regiment had captured
an Indian,
whom
they found asleep
in a
house on the
DEATH OF TECUMSEII.
311
His name was Misselcmetaw
River Raisin.
he was
;
a chief counselor of Tccumseli and an uncle of Logan,
but more truly Indian than cither of these celebrated
men,
for
he had been engaged
He
Pigeon Roost.
who were
Indians
in
the massacre at
Colonel Johnson
told
the
that
with the English amounted
allied
about seventeen hundred, that they intended to
to
give him battle at the River Huron, and that they still
did not
know
Indian was
the fate of the English
man
a
of
some
This
fleet.
He was
intelligence.
under the impression that the Americans would put
him
and he gave
to death,
was believed
Vv'hat
among the
a frank account of the transactions since
Wayne's
treaty.
He
to
be
Indians
that the English
said
agents had given them encouragement previous to the battle of Tippecanoe
;
that
the Indians had been deceived. self in
was forsaken
in his old
now he thought
He
said that he
that
him-
age by the Great Spirit
consequence of his cruelty and wickedness. General Proctor promised Tecumseh from time to
time that he would halt and give place, then at
some other
the chief started
mark
to
upon the
that
we
shall
When this re-
British,
never return."
one
he made
retreat,
young Jim Blue Jacket:
going to follow the
battle, first at
place further on.
and
I
"We feel
are
now
well assured
3
TECUMSEH.
1
He seemed for
to feel
homesick
at leaving' the country
which he had struggled so long.
On
the retreat the
Wyandot
Walk-in-the-
chief,
water, deserted the English cause with sixty warriors.
He
visited
General
He was
peace.
Harrison
and wished
to
make
abandon Tccumseh,
told only to
and keep out of the way of the American army terms which were gladly accepted. General Proctor continued his retreat toward the
Thames.
Tecumseh was undoubtedly most impa-
At
tient for fighting.
an unfordable stream
Dalson's Farm, a place where
falls
into the
one time decided to give
Proctor, riding together in a gig,
The two
for a battle-ground. it,
Thames,
battle.
it
was
at
Tecumseh and
examined the place
generals approved of
and Proctor said that here they would either de-
feat
General Harrison
place,
bones.
or leave their
idea pleased Tecumseh, and he said "
and when he should look
it
at the
This
was a good two streams
they would remind him of the Wabash and the Tippecanoe."
mind,
General Proctor afterward changed his
however,
and
left
party to defend the pass. forces
judiciously,
Tecumseh with a
The
small
chief arranged his
and a skirmish ensued, during
which Tecumseh was wounded
in
the
arm.
The
Americans brought up ten cannons, and the Indians dispersed.
DEATH OF TECUMSEH. Battle
was
at last
313
given on the 5th of October,
near the Moravian town, a village of the Delaware Indians
who had been converted by
Tecumseh
the Moravians.
refused to retreat further, and indeed the
place was well situated for defence, protected as
was on one
side
by the
river
it
and on the other by a
marsh.
Shaubena, Tecumseh's
says that on the morn-
aid,
ing of the battle day, while Tecumseh, Billy Caldwell and himself were seated on a log near the fire,
smoking
cumseh saying
camp-
messenger came to Te-
their pipes, a
that General Proctor wished to see
him immediately.
The
chief rose and hastened to
He
Proctor's headquarters.
melancholy expression- on
soon returned with a
his face.
He was
silent
until Billy Caldwell said to him,
" Father,
Americans " Yes,
what are we
my
we will be now marching upon us.
my
do
son," answered
fore sunset
Go,
to
?
Shall
we
fight the
" ?
son
;
I
will
The English and
Tecumseh, sadly
in their
;
" be-
smoke, as they are
But the general wants you.
never see you again." Indians arranged themselves in
order of battle preparatory to meeting the Ameri-
when they should appear. The English forces were posted between the swamp and the river with their artillery. Tecumseh cans
TECUMSEH.
314 and
his
warriors were stationed
some high ground.
Tecumseh
tion
him
in
the
the chiefs
said to
who
stood around
:
"Brother warriors, we are now about an engagement from which
my
swamp on
After his Indians were in posi-
body
I
remain on the
will
Unbuckling
his
shall
to enter into
never come out of battle."
field
sword and handing
it
to
one of
the chiefs, he said, "
When my
son becomes a noted warrior and able
to wield a sword, give this to him."
General Harrison's army had risen early to resume
His army crossed
the pursuit of the flying enemy. the river where
it
was
fordable,
singular style,
in
each horseman taking one of the infantry on behind him, and the remainder crossing in canoes. the
mounted regiment came within
enemy and
it
changed
his
of the
General Harrison, on coming up
halted.
conferring
sight
When
with
Colonel
plan of battle.
Johnson,
He
suddenly
determined to try
breaking through the English lines at once with a
charge of
the
mounted
Johnson began forming
his
infantry.
general's orders, he found that there for
more than the
act
between the
first
river
When
Colonel
regiment according to the
was not room
battalion of his regiment to
and the swamp.
He
therefore
resolved to put himself at the head of his second
DEATH OF TECUMSEH. battalion,
and with
it
315
to attack the Indians
on the
The whole army advanced
other side of the marsh. until the first battalion
mounted
of
under
infantry,
Colonel Johnson's brother, was fired upon from a
This startled
distance.
some
and deliver a second
now completely
ry,
through the English into disorder.
horses and
the
line,
to load
But the mounted
fire.
infant-
charged and broke
in motion,
which was instantly thrown
The horsemen wheeled
and did such destructive work that
and
left
moment
the
right
in a
was over.
battle at this point
The
produced
The English thus had time
confusion.
struggle with the Indians was
more
obstinate.
There had been eight or nine hundred of the English troops, while there
were more than a thousand
Indians under Tecumseh's
command.
the account of the famous Black
young man fought regiment
"came
no move
until the
could sec the
at
Tecumseh's
According to
Hawk, who side, the
bravely on," but the Indians
Americans were so
flints
in their guns.
as
a
mounted
made
close that they
Then Tccumseh
sprang forward, gave the Shawnee war-whoop and This was the signal for the battle to begin.
fired.
The shout was answered from the Vv-as
fire
returned.
nearly
all
cut
the
American
line,
and
Colonel Johnson's advance guard
down by
himself severely wounded.
and he was
the
first fire,
As
the ground was un-
TECUMSEH.
3l6
favorable for fighting on horseback, the colonel order-
ed his
way
men
to
dismount and form on
a fierce conflict was
minutes,
when
couraging marsh.
"
waged
for seven
Tecumseh
Tecumseh,
of
dead, and
fell
fled
into
the
all
ran,"
was
we
Johnson was
the testimony of a Pottawatomie chief
himself too severely
wounded
or eight
more the en-
the Indians, hearing no
battle-cry
In this
foot.
to remain to the
end
of the battle, but he said to those around him, "
My
me and do
not
brave men, the battle continues; leave return until you bring
me
Commodore Perry was ing as aid to Harrison.
an account of the victory."
could take part, however.
by the
in this battle, act-
present
But few of the men on foot
The
victory was gained
regiment
single dash of Colonel Johnson's
and the death of the great Indian.
Tecumseh had been sister's
killed,
and
husband, Wasegoboah.
A
plicated discussion
was long waged
Shaubena and some
Tecumseh.
Johnson shot him with
nel
at his side bitter
as to
fell
his
and com-
who
killed
others say that Colo-
his pistol at the
moment
the chief attacked the colonel with his toma-
when hawk.
The
ical rivalries
discussion
was so aggravated by
and party bitterness
at the
polit-
time of Col-
onel Johnson's election to the vice-presidency, that it
is
The
now
to
decide the question.
conflicting testimony then
produced has hope-
quite impossible
DEATH OF TECUMSEH. For
lessly confused it
fighting
that day, skill
in
was regarded
317
prime
as a
in
Indian
qualilication
for
and men are often selected
dignified political office,
whether anybody ever did
may be doubted know who fired the shot
that killed the great chief
Those who saw him
nowadays on no
better grounds.
from the American
side, did
know known in
know him from any who saw him fall did
His death was not certainly
his slayer.
the
shot,
not
other Indian, and the Indians
not
It
American army
for a
long time.
Many
mistook the body of a gayly dressed and painted warrior for that of Tecumseh, that from this
body much of
by some American
frontier
men, who had become
as barbarous as the savages against
waged a
a shameful fact
It is
the skin was stripped
whom
they had
life-long warfare.
General Harrison did not announce the death of
Tecumseh
in
his report
of the battle, since no one
could be sure that the chief had been nel
to
Johnson had
tomahawk
him.
killed
killed.
It is
quite likely that this Indian
was none other than Tecumseh, who would ly,
Colo-
an Indian w^ho was essaying
natural-
with his quick observation, find out the leader
of this cavalry charge, and seek to
Of one
thing only are
we
kill
certain.
dressed in his simple buckskin
suit,
him.
Tecumseh, with no orna-
ment but an English medal hung about
his neck,
TECUMSEH.
3l8
was
killed
The
by
Indians recovered his
though
it
man on
horseback.
body during
the night,
a pistol shot from a
lay in the Hght of the
American camp-
fires.
He was
about forty-four years of age, and
and mind the can race.
finest flower of the aboriginal
in
body
Ameri-
CHAPTER XXXV. AFTER TECUMSEH'S DEATH. The war
continued with varying fortune for more
than a year after the defeat of Proctor
the last battle, at uary,
peace being
;
concluded by the treaty of Ghent, though
finally
1
New
Orleans, was fought in Jan-
815, after the treaty
fore the close of the
had been signed, but be-
war was known.
judge by the treaty of Ghent, the a drawn battle, none of the
brought ument.
it
War
If
practical
are to
of 18 12 was
vexed questions which
about being specifically settled
Its
we
results,
considerable and wholesome.
in that
doc-
however, were
very
Great Britain,
after
the war, though not bound by treaty to do
so,
put a
stop to the irritating and unjust practice of searching vessels
flying
the
American
Americans, from that day to
flag.
this,
And
warlike
have not dreamed
of easily conquering any part of the British provinces.
The
character of
Tecumseh had excited
the admi-
ration of the English as well as of the Americans.
The
Prince Regent, in 18 14, sent a sword to Tecumseh's
TECUMSEH.
320
Pugcshashenwa, and
son,
pension
in
upon him an annual
settled
We
consideration of his father's services.
know nothing
removed
of the son but that he
to the
Indian Territory with the remnant of the Shawnee nation.
He
did not figure as a
man
of any influence
in the later history of his people.
The Prophet ish
from the Brit-
also received a pension
government, though not
He was
for valor.
in
the neighborhood of the battle of the Thames, but
did not participate, either out of regard to his sacred character, or out of respect to the preciousncss of his life.
face,
His portraits show him to be a
man
of repulsive
having but one eye, and well calculated to im-
press the savage imagination as one
who had myste-
rious dealings with the other world.
Most of the Indians
living near the
settlements
submitted to the Americans after the battle of the
Thames.
The
tribes
have since been removed
West, and have become retaining a tribal
intermarried with
government.
them
;
to the
partly civilized, though
from
this
Many
still
whites have
admixture of white
blood and from other causes, the Indian nations have
— more
by
a gradual
absorption into the more numerous white
communi-
The moment
a half or
generally declined in numbers
ties
than from extinction.
quarter blood Indian removes from the reservation of his tribe,
he becomes to
all
intents
and purposes a
AFTER TECUMSEH'S DEATH. white man, and
in
321
two or three generations the
last
signs of Indian descent are obliterated.
The Prophet
lived for twenty- two years after the
death of Tecumseh, dying
in
1834 among
his people
Indian Territory.
He had
sunk into a great obscurity long before
his death,
new home
in their
in the
though he continued for
many
that he
had
an impostor
discredits
overthrow of the movement
For no amount of
led.
dupes eager
exercise his prophetic gifts
to
years after the
— there
follow an
to
failure
ever quite
always ignorant
are
impudent pretender or a
fanatic.
In the spring of
1
823, Isaac Harvey, a
the Society of Friends,
member
who was connected
of
with the
Friends' Mission at Wapakonetta, as superintendent
of mills, visited one day an Indian
from pulmonary consumption. of the Indian's
time face
it
who was
He
found the door
cabin shut and fastened, but after a
was opened and he saw the
downwards,
so that he
was
suffering
in
his
bared back cut
sick
man
lying
in several places,
an exhausted state from the
loss of
blood.
There was present none other than our old
friend
Tenskwatawa, the Shawnee Prophet, who was
exercising his functions as a prophet or clairvoyant doctor.
He
body
to
let
man was made in his
informed the Quaker that the
bewitched, and that these openings were
out the combustible matter that had 14*
TECUMSEH.
322
The good Quaker drove
been thrown into him.
Prophet out of the house and dressed the
sick
the
man's
wounds.
On
the following night the friendly superintendent
by some one
of the mills was awakened
wishing to get
in.
He
broken English, "They It
kill-ee
mc! they
was an Indian woman with her
Harvey took her
door
at his
heard a woman's voice crying
in
kill-ee
me!"
girl.
Mr.
little
house of the United States
to the
|
interpreter,
where she explained that a
messen-
little
ger had brought her word that the chiefs were in j
council,
and that she had certainly been condemned j
to die
on a charge of having bewitched the poor
consumptive on with knives. tect
her,
whom
the
She begged
Prophet had
and said she would do
The shrewd Quaker,
manded.
friendliness of the interpreter,
coldly, but
operated
the " Qua-ke-lee " to proall
com-
that he
not relying on the
answered the
woman
having secured another interpreter
in
the
person of the blacksmith's son, he talked with her again and finally hid her and her daughter between
two beds on a bedstead
He
in the
upper room of
his
own hands a small house. The life of Harvey's dog that had followed her. family depended, perhaps, quite as much as that of also killed with his
the Indian woman's, on their success in keeping her
hidden.
Every part of
the
Quaker's
house
was
I
AFTER TECUMSEH'S DEATH.
323
searched, even this upper room, where there stood
nothing but
this
innocent-looking bed with
the
all
covers spread. In the middle of that anxious day there
came
the house of Isaac Harvey, his friend, the chief
He
secah, otherwise called Captain Wolf.
superintendent what had happened
though he did not in the matter.
Wea-
told the
among them,
at all suspect his friend of
The Quaker
to
as
any part
earnestly remonstrated
against the Indian belief in witches and witchcraft,
and expostulated with him on the cruelty of putting people to death on an unprovcn charge of This disturbed the mind of Weasecah
this kind.
he was sur-
;
prised to find that the " Qua-ke-lee " did not agree
with him on so important a matter.
About an hour afterward he returned and expressed his belief that Harvey
knew more about
matter than he professed
As
to evade,
to.
Weasecah urged him
promising that so
to
Quaker
the tell
the
tried
what he knew,
from betraying him he would
far
defend him to the utmost of his power. It
was a desperate
resort,
but Isaac Harvey
that the case
was a desperate one.
confessing
that he
all
knew
felt
Without frankly
of the matter, he admitted
to the chief that he believed the
condemned woman
was out of the
Indians
reach of the
who were
seeking her, and that they would never see her face
TECUMSEH.
324
again unless they altogether abandoned the idea of
the case, but
tlie
Quaker added what
chief yet more, that he
had made up
up the mission and take
close
way
This was a shrewd
executing her.
of putting the
startled
mind
his
to
family and
his
go
home. After some thought, the chief proposed to Harvey that he should go with
him
direct to
the council-
He
house, where the chiefs were then in session.
thought
the
if
"
Oua-ke-lee
condemned woman, he could don
her. like
would promise the
he would be answerable to them
chiefs that
was
"
Isaac
prevail
Harvey resolved
for the
on them
to
go,
to par-
though
it
going into a den of wild beasts, thus to
brave the angry chiefs
in
council.
He
asked the
blacksmith, whose son had been his second interpreter the night before, sistance, to let the
and who had himself offered
boy go with him now.
as-
The smith
did not believe in his success, but said that he had
Harvey, and he would also go with
promised
to help
his son.
Entered now into the council-house these
four
—
the chief, Isaac
Harvey the Quaker, the black-
smith and his son. "
told
Be
still
and hear
" !
said
ke-lee,"
and of the occasion of
Indians,
some
of
whom
He
then
his friend the "
Qua-
Weasecah.
them of his interviews with
their coming.
were painted and armed
The in
a
AFTER TECUMSEH'S DEATH.
way
that
made them
now moved round
325
quite appalling to the Quaker,
talking one to another.
Harvey then addressed them through
Isaac
terpreter, telling
them with great composure
had come with Weasecah and Simmeta
woman
smith) to intercede for the
had resolved pared to
to follow their
as they
At
at their
thought
Harvey's arm and
He begged
life
was pre-
that he had no
;
—they
might do with
Weasecah took hold of
said,
Me
"
Qua-kc-lee friend."
the chiefs not to suffer their friend the
to be
mined not his
;
best.
the noble chief
this
Quaker
mercy
(the black-
but seeing they
course, he
offer himself in her stead
arms and was
him
own
his in-
that he
to
But
harmed. submit
if
they were
to the proposition,
still
deter-
he offered
instead of his friend's.
This heroic attitude of the Quaker, with the loyal
and brave feeling,
act of the chief, checked the tide of hostile
and
for a
minute
chief after chief to the
ped up "
ing,
to the
Me
declared
all
were
number of
Qua-ke-lee friend."
the
friendship.
Then
six or eight step-
The blacksmith
himself the Quaker's friend, so
good man was surrounded
last
suspense.
Quaker, each offering his hand and say-
by
Weasecah then argued with them at
in
quite
a
that
also
the
number.
eloquently, so that
whole council offered
their
hands
in
The only exception was Tenskwatawa,
TECUMSEH.
326 the Prophet,
who
sullenly
the council-house in
left
defeat. It
was hard
woman
to
she cried. to
for the
Quaker
of hiding. They kill-ee me," Even Weasccah could not persuade her "
come out
She remained
leave her place of concealment.
the Quaker's house, when she return-
several days in
ed to her own people, and lived
By
among
in peace.
of Isaac Harvey, persecution
this interference
for witchcraft
The
on the poor
to prevail
the
Shawnees was destroyed.
gradually increasing enlightenment of the nation,
under the lead of missionaries of several denominations,
has done
away with many of
their old super-
stitions.
All dreams of perpetuating savage
Civilization produces
tion to civilization are futile.
a dense population.
It is
in opposi-
life
not desirable that a savage
race which spreads itself thinly in squalid hunting
bands should possess a
country capable of
fertile
supporting a hundred times as
comfort and enlightenment of seh's impulse
was a
taken patriotism.
people
civilization.
one
in
the
Tecum-
it
was a mis-
later chiefs of the
Shawnees,
patriotic
The
many
;
but
Delawares, Wyandots, and Miamis, who saw plainly that
it
was only by learning the
arts of civilized
that their people could be saved
were wiser than
he.
life
from destruction,
But the tribute which we
al-
AFTER TECUMSEH'S DEATH. ways pay ius,
32/
to courage, eloquence, administrative gen-
and the most devoted patriotism, rightly belong
to the
great Tecumsch, who, had his lot fallen to time,
might have produced
results
more permanent than
a confederacy of sav-
ages.
It
him
in a
more favorable
is
in the
savage tribes to
fall
nature of asunder.
all
confederations of
Vainly Tecumsch
la-
bored, for the very laws of nature were against him.
But he serves
to
show how great even a savage may
be.
THE END.
APPENDIX. AUTHORITIES FOR THE LIFE OF TECUMSEH. Life of
Tecumseh and
of his Brother the Prophet.
Sketch of the Shawanoe Indians.
torical
History of the Shawnee Indians,
By Henry Harvey,
inclusive.
of Friends.
Account of
mencement of Contest
all
from the year
Member
1681
1S54
to
of the Religious Society
War
in the
Western Country, comprising a
the Transactions in that quarter, from the
Hostilities at Tippecanoe, to the
New
at
McAfee.
a
Cincinnati, iS55'
History of the Late
A
Cin-
1841.
cinnati,
full
With an His-
Ey Benjamin Drake.
Orleans
Com-
Termination of the
on the Return of Peace.
By Robert
B.
Lexington, Ky., 1S16.
Historical Narrative of the Civil
and Military Services of Major-
General William H. Harrison, and a Vindication of his Character
and Conduct as a Statesman, a
Citizen,
and
a Soldiei'.
With
a detail
of his Negotiations and AVars with the Indians, until the final Over-
throw of the celebrated Chief Tecumseh and his Brother the Prophet.
The whole
written and compiled from original and authentic docu-
ments furnished by many of the most respectable characters United tiser.
States.
By Moses Dawson,
Cincinnati,
1834.
in the
Editor of the Cincinnati Adver-
APPENDIX.
S30
Sketches of Western Adventure
Most
Interesting
West, from 1755
Incidents
:
Containing an Account of
Ey John A. McCUnig.
an Appendix
to 1794; with
Also Additional Sketches compiled by the Publishers A. McClung.
of John
tiie
Connected with the Settlement of ihe
By Henry
a Biography
:
Covington, Ky., 1872.
Waller.
[First Edition, 1832.]
Biographical Sketches of General Nathaniel Massey, General
Dun-
can McArthur, Captain William Wells, and General Simon Kenton
who were
Early Settlers in the Western Country.
Donald of Poplar Ridge, Ross County, Ohio.
A
History of
Indiana,
from
its
Earliest
By John Mc-
Dayton, O., 1S52. Explorations by Eu-
ropeans to the close of the Territorial Government in 1816; compre-
hending a History of the Discovery, Settlement, and
Civil
and Mili-
North-West of the
tary Affairs of the Territory of the United States
River Ohio, and a General View of the Progress of Public Affairs in Indiana from 1816 to 1856.
By John
B. Dillon.
Indianapolis, 1859.
Biography and History of the Indians of North America
:
a His-
tory of their Wars, with an Account of their Antiquities, Manners,
By Samuel
Customs, Religion and Laws.
G. Drake.
Boston, 1848.
[First Edition, 1832.] Life
and Services of General Anthony Wayne.
Founded on docu-
mentary and other Evidence furnished by Colonel Isaac Wayne.
H. N. Moore.
A
Memoir
Philadelphia, Leary, Getz
Hall.
Philadelphia,
Henry Harrison,
1836.
Sketches of the Civil and Military Services of William
By
rison.
Life
Charles S.
Todd and Benjamin
Drake.
and Adventures of Daniel Boone, the
Henry Har-
Cincinnati, 1840.
First Settler of
tucky, interspersed with Incidents in the Early Annals of the try.
By Timothy
Flint.
New
By
Co., 1859.
of the Public Services of William
By James
of Ohio.
&
Edition, 1868.
KenCoun-
APPENDIX. The
331
Colonial History of Vincenncs, under the French, British,
and American Governments, from
its
Territorial Administration of General
down
First Settlement
to the
William Henry Harrison, being
an Address Delivered by Judge Law, Ijefore the Vincenncs Histori-
and Antiquarian Society, February 22d, 1S39.
cal
Notes and
Wabash
Recollections of the Early Settlement of the
Sanford C. Cox.
Britain,
War
By
between the United States
blended with Anecdotes
vidual Bravery of the
American
John Lewis Thompson. Romantic Passages Slsictchcs,
Valley.
Lafayette, i860.
Historical Sketches of the Late
and Great
\Viih j\.dditional
Vincenncs, 1S5S.
Illustrations.
and Essays.
illustrative of
Soldiers, Sailors,
and
the
Indi-
Citizens.
By
Philadelphia, 1S16.
Southwestern History
in
By A.
B. Meek.
:
including Orations,
Third Edition.
Mobile,
1857-
Sketches of History, Life, and Manners in the West. Philadelphia,
Hall.
By James
1835.
History of the Indian Tribes of North America, with BiographiSketches and Anecdotes of the Principal Chiefs.
cal
Philadelphia,
1842.
A
Full and Correct Account of the Chief Military Occun-ences of
the Late rica.
War between
Great Britain and the United States of
Ame-
London, 181 8.
The History
of Kentucky:
An Account
of the
Modern Discovery,
Settlement, and Progressive Improvement, Civil and actions,
and the Present State of the Country.
Military Trans-
By Humphrey Marshall,
Frankfort, 1824,
A
Cliapter of the History of the
War
of 1S12 in the Northwest,
embracing the Surrender of the Northwestern
Army and
Fort at De-
APPENDIX.
332 troit,
August
l6,
1812, with a Description and Biographical Sketch
of the celebrated Chief Tecumseh.
By Colonel William
Stanley
Hatch, Acting Assistant Quartermaster- General of that Army. cinnati,
Cin-
1872.
Early History of Western Pennsylvania and the West, and of Western Expeditions and Campaigns from mdccliv. to mdcccxxxiii.
a Gentleman of the Bar.
Memories of Shaubena, with Incidents Relating tlement of the West.
By
Pittsburg, 1846.
By N. Matson.
to the
Early Set-
Chicago, 1S78.
Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian
Tribes of the American Frontiers.
By Henry R.
Schoolcraft.
Phila-
delphia, 1851.
Autobiography of Rev. James B. Finlcy.
A
Cincinnati, 1853.
Narrative of the Captivity and Adventures of John Tanner, dur-
ing Thirty Years' Residence
North America.
among
the Indians in the Interior of
Edited by Edwin James.
London, 1830.