<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<h4>Storied Louisville—Red Indians and
white—A night on Sand Island—New
Albany—Riverside hermits—The river
falling—A deserted village—An ideal
camp.</h4>
<p><span class="smcap">Sand Island</span>, Tuesday, May 29th.—Our
Louisville host is the best living authority on
the annals of his town. It was a delight and
an inspiration to go with him, to-day, the
rounds of the historic places. Much that was
to me heretofore foggy in Louisville story was
made clear, upon becoming familiar with the
setting. The contention is made that La
Salle was here at the Falls of the Ohio, during
the closing months of 1669; but it was over a
century later, under British domination, before
a settlement was thought of. Dr. John
Connolly entertained a scheme for founding a
town at the Falls, but Lord Dunmore's War
(1774), and the Revolution quickly following,
combined to put an end to it; so that when
George Rogers Clark arrived on the scene with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page219" id="page219"></SPAN></span>
his little band of Virginian volunteers (May,
1778), en route to capture the Northwest for
the State of Virginia, he found naught but a
savage-haunted wilderness. His log fort on
Corn Island, in the midst of the rapids, served
as a base of military operations, and was the
nucleus of American settlement, although later
the inhabitants moved to the mainland, and
founded Louisville.</p>
<p>The falls at Louisville are the only considerable
obstruction to Ohio-River navigation.
At an average stage, the descent is but twenty-seven
feet in two-and-a-half miles; in high
flood, the rapids degenerate into merely swift
water, without danger to descending craft.
At ordinary height, it was the custom of pioneer
boatmen, in descending, to lighten their
craft of at least a third of the cargo, and thus
pass them down to the foot of the north-side
portage (Clarksville, Ind.), which is three-quarters
of a mile in length; going up, lightened
boats were towed against the stream. With
the advent of larger craft, a canal with locks
became necessary—the Louisville and Portland
Canal of to-day, which is operated by the general
government.</p>
<p>The action of the water, hastened by the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page220" id="page220"></SPAN></span>
destruction of trees whose roots originally
bound the loose soil, has greatly worn the
islands in the rapids. Little is now left of
historic Corn Island, and that little is, at low
water, being blasted and ground into cement
by a mill hard by on the main shore. To-day,
with a flood of nearly twenty feet above
the normal stage of the season, not much of
the island is visible,—clumps of willows and
sycamores, swayed by the rushing current,
giving a general idea of the contour. Goose
Island, although much smaller than in Clark's
day, is a considerable tract of wooded land,
with a rock foundation. Clark was once its
owner, his home being opposite on the Indiana
shore, where he had a fine view of the river,
the rapids, and the several islands. As for
Clarksville, somewhat lower down, and back
from the river a half mile, it is now but a
cluster of dwellings on the outskirts of New
Albany, a manufacturing town which is rapidly
absorbing all the neighboring territory.</p>
<p>Feeling obliged to make an early start, we
concluded to pass the night just below the
canal on Sand Island, lying between New
Albany and Louisville's noisy manufacturing
suburb, Portland. An historic spot is this
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page221" id="page221"></SPAN></span>
insular home of ours. At the treaty of Fort
Charlotte, Cornstalk told Lord Dunmore the
legend familiar among Ohio River savages—that
here, in ages past, occurred the last great
battle between the white and the red Indians.
It is one of the puzzles of the antiquarians,
this tradition that white Indians once lived in
the land, but were swept away by the reds;
Cornstalk had used it to spur his followers to
mighty deeds, it was a precedent which Pontiac
dwelt upon when organizing his conspiracy,
and King Philip is said to have been
inspired by it. But this is no place to discuss
the genesis of the tale. Suffice it, that on
Sand Island have been discovered great quantities
of ancient remains. No doubt, in its
day, it was an over-filled burying-ground.</p>
<p>Noises, far different from the clash of savage
arms, are in the air to-night. Far above
our heads a great iron bridge crosses the Ohio,
some of its piers resting on the island,—a busy
combination thoroughfare for steam and electric
railways, for pedestrians and for vehicles,
plying between New Albany and Portland.
The whirr of the trolley, the scream and rumble
of locomotives, the rattle of wagons; and
just above the island head, the burly roar of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page222" id="page222"></SPAN></span>
steamboats signaling the locks,—these are the
sounds which are prevalent. Through all this
hubbub, electric lamps are flashing, and just
now a steamer's search-light swept our island
shore, lingering for a moment upon the little
camp, doubtless while the pilot satisfied his
curiosity. Let us hope that savage warriors
never o' nights walk the earth above their
graves; for such scenes as this might well
cause those whose bones lie here to doubt
their senses.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="smcap">Near Brandenburg, Ky.</span>, Wednesday,
30th.—We stopped at New Albany, Ind. (603
miles), this morning, to stock the larder and
to forward our shore-clothes by express to
Cairo. It is a neat and busy manufacturing
town, with an excellent public market. A gala
aspect was prevalent, for it is Memorial Day;
the shops and principal buildings were gay
with bunting, and men in Grand Army uniforms
stood in knots at the street corners.</p>
<p>The broad, fertile plain on both sides of the
river, upon which Louisville and New Albany
are the principal towns, extends for eight or
nine miles below the rapids. The first hills
to approach the stream are those in Indiana.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page223" id="page223"></SPAN></span>
Salt River, some ten or twelve rods wide, enters
from the south twenty-one miles below
New Albany, between uninteresting high clay
banks, with the lazy-looking little village of
West Point, Ky., occupying a small rise of
ground just below the mouth. The Kentucky
hills come close to the bank, a mile or two
farther down, and then the familiar characteristics
of the reaches above Louisville are resumed—hills
and bottoms, sparsely settled
with ragged farmsteads, regularly alternating.</p>
<p>At five o'clock we put in at a rocky ledge
on the Indiana side, a mile-and-a-half above
Brandenburg. Behind us rises a precipitous
hill, tree-clad to the summit. The Doctor
found up there a new phlox and a pretty pink
stone-crop, to add to our herbarium, while here
as elsewhere the bignonia grows profusely in
every crevice of the rock. At dark, two ragged
and ill-smelling young shanty-boat men,
who are moored hard by, came up to see us,
and by our camp-fire to whittle chips and
drone about hard times. But at last we tired
of their idle gossip, which had in it no element
of the picturesque, and got rid of them
by hinting our desire to turn in.</p>
<p>The towns were few to-day, and small.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page224" id="page224"></SPAN></span>
Brandenburg, with eight hundred souls, was
the largest—a sleepy, ill-paved, shambling
place, with apparently nobody engaged in any
serious calling; its chief distinction is an architectural
monstrosity, which we were told is
the court-house. The little white hamlet of
New Amsterdam, Ind. (650 miles), looked
trim and bright in the midst of a green thicket.
Richardson's Landing, Ky., is a disheveled
row of old deserted houses, once used by lime-burners,
with a great barge wrecked upon the
beach. At the small, characterless Indiana
village of Leavenworth (658 miles), I sought
a traveling photographer, of whom I had been
told at Brandenburg. My quest was for a
dark-room where I might recharge my exhausted
kodak; but the man of plates had
packed up his tent and moved on—I would
no doubt find him in Alton, Ind., fifteen miles
lower down.</p>
<p>We have had stately, eroded hills, and
broad, fertile bottoms, hemming us in all day,
and marvelous ox-bows in the erratic stream.
The hillsides are heavily wooded, sometimes
the slopes coming straight down to the stony
beach, without intervening terrace; where
there are such terraces, they are narrow and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page225" id="page225"></SPAN></span>
rocky, and the homes of shanty-men; but
upon the bottoms are whitewashed dwellings
of frame or log, tenanted by a better class,
who sometimes have goodly orchards and extensive
corn-cribs. The villages are generally
in the deep-cut notches of the hills, where the
interior can be conveniently reached by a
wagon-road—a country "rumpled like this,"
they say, for ten or twelve miles back, and
then stretching off into level plains of fertility.
Now and then, a deserted cabin on the terraces,—windowless
and gaunt,—tells the story
of some "cracker" family that malaria had
killed off, or that has "pulled up stakes"
and gone to seek a better land.</p>
<p>At Leavenworth, the river, which has been
flowing northwest for thirty miles, takes a
sudden sweep to the southwest, and thenceforward
we have a rapid current. However, we
need still to ply our blades, for there is a stiff
head-wind, with an eager nip in it, to escape
which we seek the lee as often as may be,
and bask in the undisturbed sunlight. Right
glad we were, at luncheon-time, to find a
sheltered nook amidst a heap of boulders on
the Kentucky shore, and to sit on the sun-warmed
sand and drink hot tea by the side of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page226" id="page226"></SPAN></span>
a camp-fire, rejoicing in the kindness of Providence.</p>
<p>There are few houseboats, since leaving
Louisville; to-day we have seen but three or
four—one of them merrily going up stream,
under full sail. Islands, too, are few—the
Upper and Lower Blue River, a pretty pair,
being the first we have met since Sunday.
The water is falling, it now being three or
four feet below the stage of a few days since,
as can readily be seen from the broad dado of
mud left on the leaves of willows and sycamores;
while the drift, recently an ever-present
feature of the current, is rapidly lodging
in the branches of the willows and piling up
against the sand-spits; and scrawling snags
and bobbing sawyers are catching on the bars,
and being held for the next "fresh."</p>
<p>There is little life along shore, in these lower
waters. There are two lines of ever-widening,
willowed beach of rock and sand or mud;
above them, perpendicular walls of clay, which
edge either rocky terraces backed by grand
sweeps of convoluted hills,—sometimes wooded
to the top, and sometimes eroded into palisades,—or
wide-stretching bottoms given over
to small farms or maybe dense tangles of forest.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page227" id="page227"></SPAN></span>
<p>In the midst of this world of shade, nestle
the whitewashed cabins of the small tillers;
but though they swarm with children, it is not
often that the inhabitants appear by the riverside.
We catch a glimpse of them when
landing on our petty errands, we now and
then see a houseboater at his nets, and in the
villages a few lackadaisical folk are lounging
by the wharf; but as a rule, in these closing
days of our pilgrimage, we glide through what
is almost a solitude. The imagination has
not to go far afield, to rehabilitate the river
as it appeared to the earliest voyagers.</p>
<p>Late in the afternoon, as usual wishing
water and milk, we put ashore in Indiana,
where a rustic landing indicated a settlement
of some sort, although our view was confined
to a pretty, wooded bank, and an unpainted
warehouse at the top of the path. It was a
fertile bottom, a half-mile wide, and stretching
a mile or two along the river. Three
neat houses, one of them of logs, constituted
the village, and all about were grain-fields
rippled into waves by the northwest breeze.</p>
<p>The first house, a quarter of a mile inland,
I reached by a country roadway; it proved to
be the postoffice of Point Sandy. Chickens
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page228" id="page228"></SPAN></span>
clucked around me, a spaniel came fawning
for attention, a tethered cow mooed plaintively,
but no human being was visible. At
last I discovered a penciled notice pinned to
the horse-block, to the effect that the postmaster
had gone into Alton (five miles distant)
for the day; and should William Askins call
in his absence, the said Askins was to remember
that he promised to call yesterday, but
never came; and now would he be kind enough
to come without fail to-morrow before sundown,
or the postmaster would be obliged to
write that letter they had spoken about. It
was quite evident that Askins had not called;
for he surely would not have left that mysterious
notice sticking there, for all Point Sandy
to read and gossip over. It is to be hoped
that there will be no bloodshed over this
affair; across the way, in Kentucky, there
would be no doubt as to the outcome.</p>
<p>I looked at Boss, and wondered whether in
Indiana it were felony to milk another man's
cow in his absence, with no ginger jar at
hand, into which to drop a compensatory
dime. Then I saw that she was dry, and concluded
that to attempt it might be thought a
violation of ethics. The postmaster's well,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page229" id="page229"></SPAN></span>
too, proved to be a cistern,—pardon the Hibernicism,—and
so I went farther.</p>
<p>The other frame house also turned out to
be deserted, but evidently only for the day,
for the lilac bushes in the front yard were
hung with men's flannel shirts drying in the
sun. A buck goat came bleating toward me,
with many a flourish of his horns, from which
it was plain to be seen why the family wash
was not spread upon the grass. From here I
followed a narrow path through a wheat-field,
the grain up to my shoulders, toward the log
dwelling. A mangy little cur disputed my
right to knock at the door; but, flourishing
my two tin pails at him, he flew yelping to
take refuge in the hen-coop. To my summons
at the portal, there came no response,
save the mewing of the cat within. It was
clear that the people of Point Sandy were not
at home, to-day.</p>
<p>I would have retreated to the boat, but,
chancing to glance up at the overhanging hills
which edge in the bottom, saw two men sitting
on a boulder in front of a rude log hut on
the brink of a cliff, curiously watching my
movements on the plain. Thankful, now,
that the postmaster's cow had gone dry, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page230" id="page230"></SPAN></span>
that these observant mountaineers had not
had an opportunity to misinterpret my conduct,
I at once hurried toward the hill, hopeful
that at the top some bovine might be
housed, whose product could lawfully be acquired.
But after a long and laborious climb,
over shifting stones and ragged ledges, I was
met with the discouraging information that
the only cow in these parts was Hawkins'
cow, and Hawkins was the postmaster,—"down
yon, whar yew were a-read'n' th' notices
on th' hoss-block." Neither had they
any water, up there on the cliff-top—"don' use
very much, stranger; 'n' what we do, we done
git at Smithfield's, in th' log-house down yon,
'n' I reck'n their cistern's done gone dry, anyhow!"</p>
<p>"But what is the matter down there?" I
asked of the old man,—they were father and
son, this lounging pair who thus loftily sat in
judgment on the little world at their feet;
"why are all the folks away from home?"</p>
<p>He looked surprised, and took a fresh chew
while cogitating on my alarming ignorance of
Point Sandy affairs: "Why, ain' ye heared?
I thote ev'ry feller on th' river knew thet
yere—why, ol' Hawkins, his wife's brother's
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page231" id="page231"></SPAN></span>
buried in Alton to-day, 'n' th' neighbors done
gwine t' th' fun'ral. Whar your shanty-boat
been beached, thet ye ain' heared thet yere?"</p>
<p>As the sun neared the horizon, we tried
other places below, with no better success;
and two miles above Alton, Ind. (673 miles),
struck camp at sundown, without milk for our
coffee—for water, being obliged to settle and
boil the roily element which bears us onward
through the lengthening days. Were there
no hardships, this would be no pilgrimage
worthy of the name. We are out, philosophically
to take the world as it is; he who is not
content to do so, had best not stir from home.</p>
<p>But our camping-place, to-night, is ideal.
We are upon a narrow, grassy ledge; below
us, the sloping beach astrewn with jagged
rocks; behind us rises steeply a grand hillside
forest, in which lie, mantled with moss and
lichens, and deep buried in undergrowth, boulders
as large as a "cracker's" hut; romantic
glens abound, and a little run comes noisily
down a ravine hard by,—it is a witching back-door,
filled with surprises at every turn.
Beeches, elms, maples, lindens, pawpaws,
tulip trees, here attain a monster growth,—with
grape-vines, their fruit now set, hanging
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page232" id="page232"></SPAN></span>
in great festoons from the branches; and all
about, are the flowers which thrive best in
shady solitudes—wild licorice, a small green-brier,
and, although not yet in bloom, the
sessile trillium. We are thoroughly isolated;
a half-mile above us, faintly gleams a government
beacon, and we noticed on landing that
three-quarters of a mile below is a small cabin
flanking the hill. Naught disturbs our quiet,
save the calls of the birds at roosting-time, and
now and then the hoarse bellow of a passing
packet, with its legacy of boisterous wake.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page233" id="page233"></SPAN></span>
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