<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER XIII<br/> KENTUCKY'S PATH OF THORNS</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The preliminary articles of peace between
the United States and Great Britain
had been signed on the thirtieth of November,
1782; but it was not until the following
spring that the news reached Kentucky. The
northern tribes had information of the peace
quite as early; and discouraged at apparently
losing their British allies, who had fed,
clothed, armed, and paid them from headquarters
in Detroit, for a time suspended
their organized raids into Kentucky. This
welcome respite caused immigration to increase
rapidly.</p>
<p>We have seen how the old system of making
preemptions and surveys led to the overlapping
of claims, the commission of many
acts of injustice, and wide-spread confusion
in titles. Late in 1782, Colonel Thomas Marshall,
the surveyor of Fayette County, arrived
from Virginia, and began to attempt a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</SPAN></span>
straightening of the land conflict. Boone
was now not only the surveyor's deputy, but
both sheriff and county lieutenant of Fayette,
a combination of offices which he held until
his departure from Kentucky. It was his
duty as commandant to provide an escort
for Marshall through the woods to the Falls
of the Ohio, where was now the land-office.
The following order which he issued for this
guard has been preserved; it is a characteristic
sample of the many scores of letters
and other documents which have come down
to us from the old hero, who fought better
than he spelled:</p>
<p class="p2">
"Orders to Capt. Hazelrigg—your are
amedetly to order on Duty 3 of your Company
as goude [guard] to scorte Col Marshshall
to the falls of ohigho you will call on
those who was Exicused from the Shone
[Shawnese] Expedistion and those who
Come into the County after the army
Marched they are to meet at Lexinton on
Sunday next with out fale given under my
hand this 6 Day of Janury 1783.</p>
<p class="left65">
"<span class="smcap">Dnl Boone</span>"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="p2">Another specimen document of the time
has reference to the scouting which it was
necessary to maintain throughout much of
the year; for small straggling bands of the
enemy were still lurking about, eager to capture
occasional scalps, the proudest trophies
which a warrior could obtain. It also is apparently
addressed to Hazelrigg:</p>
<p class="p2">"orders the 15th feberry 1783</p>
<p>"Sir you are amedetly to Call on Duty
one thurd of our melitia as will mounted on
horse as poseble and Eight Days purvistion
to take a touere as follows Commanded by
Leut Col patison and Rendevues at Strod
[Strode's Station] on thusday the 20th from
there to March to Colkes [Calk's] Cabin
thence an Este Corse till the gat 10 miles
above the uper Blew Licks then Down to
Lickes thence to Limestown and if no Sine
[is] found a stright Corse to Eagel Crick 10
miles from the head from then home if Sine
be found the Commander to act as he thinks
most prudent as you will be the Best Judge
when on the Spot. You will first Call on all
who [were] Excused from the Expedistion
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</SPAN></span>
Except those that went to the falls with Col.
Marshall and then Call them off as they
Stand on the List here in faile not. given und
my hand</p>
<p class="left65">
"<span class="smcap">Daniel Boone</span> C Lt."</p>
<p class="p2">In March the Virginia legislature united
the three counties into the District of Kentucky,
with complete legal and military machinery;
in the latter, Benjamin Logan
ranked as senior colonel and district lieutenant.
It will be remembered that when the
over-mountain country was detached from
Fincastle, it was styled the County of Kentucky;
then the name of Kentucky was obliterated
by its division into three counties;
and now the name was revived by the creation
of the district, which in due time was
to become a State. The log-built town of
Danville was named as the capital.</p>
<p>It is estimated that during the few years
immediately following the close of the Revolutionary
War several thousand persons
came each year to Kentucky from the seaboard
States, although many of these returned
to their homes either disillusioned or
because of Indian scares. In addition to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</SPAN></span>
actual settlers, who cared for no more land
than they could use, there were merchants
who saw great profits in taking boat-loads of
goods down the Ohio or by pack-trains over
the mountains; lawyers and other young professional
men who wished to make a start in
new communities; and speculators who hoped
to make fortunes in obtaining for a song extensive
tracts of fertile wild land, which they
vainly imagined would soon be salable at
large prices for farms and town sites. Many
of the towns, although ill-kept and far from
prosperous in appearance, were fast extending
beyond their lines of palisade and boasting
of stores, law-offices, market-places, and
regular streets; Louisville had now grown
to a village of three hundred inhabitants, of
whom over a third were fighting-men. Besides
Americans, there were among the newcomers
many Germans, Scotch, and Irish,
thrifty in the order named.</p>
<p>At last Kentucky was raising produce
more than sufficient to feed her own people,
and an export trade had sprung up. Crops
were being diversified: Indian corn still remained
the staple, but there were also melons,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</SPAN></span>
pumpkins, tobacco, and orchards; besides,
great droves of horses, cattle, sheep,
and hogs, branded or otherwise marked,
ranged at large over the country, as
in old days on the Virginia and Carolina
foot-hills. Away from the settlements buffaloes
still yielded much beef, bacon was
made from bears, and venison was a staple
commodity.</p>
<p>The fur trade was chiefly carried on by
French trappers; but American hunters, like
the Boones and Kenton, still gathered peltries
from the streams and forests, and took or
sent them to the East, either up the Ohio in
bateaux or on packhorses over the mountains—paths
still continually beset by savage
assailants. Large quantities of ginseng
were also shipped to the towns on the seaboard.
Of late there had likewise developed
a considerable trade with New Orleans and
other Spanish towns down the Mississippi
River. Traders with flatboats laden with
Kentucky produce—bacon, beef, salt, and
tobacco—would descend the great waterway,
both of whose banks were audaciously
claimed by Spain as far up as the mouth of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</SPAN></span>
the Ohio, and take great risks from Indian attack
or from corrupt Spanish custom-house
officials, whom it was necessary to bribe freely
that they might not confiscate boat and
cargo. This commerce was always uncertain,
often ending in disaster, but immensely profitable
to the unprincipled men who managed
to ingratiate themselves with the Spanish authorities.</p>
<p>Boone was now in frequent demand as a
pilot and surveyor by capitalists who relied
upon his unrivaled knowledge of the country
to help them find desirable tracts of land;
often he was engaged to meet incoming parties
of immigrants over the Wilderness Road,
with a band of riflemen to guard them against
Indians, to furnish them with wild meat—for
the newcomers at first were inexpert in
killing buffaloes—and to show them the way
to their claims. He was prominent as a pioneer;
as county lieutenant he summoned his
faithful men-at-arms to repel or avenge savage
attacks; and his fame as hunter and explorer
had by this time not only become general
throughout the United States but had
even reached Europe.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</SPAN></span></p>
<p>His reputation was largely increased by
the appearance in 1784 of the so-called "autobiography."
We have seen that, although
capable of roughly expressing himself on
paper, and of making records of his rude
surveys, he was in no sense a scholar. Yet
this autobiography, although signed by himself,
is pedantic in form, and deals in words
as large and sonorous as though uttered by
the great Doctor Samuel Johnson. As a
matter of fact, it is the production of John
Filson, the first historian of Kentucky and
one of the pioneers of Cincinnati. Filson
was a schoolmaster, quite devoid of humor,
and with a strong penchant for learned
phrases. In setting down the story of
Boone's life, as related to him by the great
hunter, he made the latter talk in the first
person, in a stilted manner quite foreign
to the hardy but unlettered folk of whom
Boone was a type. Wherever Boone's memory
failed, Filson appears to have filled in
the gaps from tradition and his own imagination;
thus the autobiography is often wrong
as to facts, and possesses but minor value as
historical material. The little book was, however,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</SPAN></span>
widely circulated both at home and
abroad, and gave Boone a notoriety excelled
by few men of his day. Some years later
Byron wrote some indifferent lines upon
"General Boone of Kentucky;" the public
journals of the time had accounts of his
prowess, often grossly exaggerated; and
English travelers into the interior of America
eagerly sought the hero and told of him
in their books.</p>
<p>Yet it must be confessed that he had now
ceased to be a real leader in the affairs of
Kentucky. A kindly, simple-hearted, modest,
silent man, he had lived so long by himself
alone in the woods that he was ill fitted to
cope with the horde of speculators and other
self-seekers who were now despoiling the old
hunting-grounds to which Finley had piloted
him only fifteen years before. Of great use
to the frontier settlements as explorer, hunter,
pilot, land-seeker, surveyor, Indian fighter,
and sheriff—and, indeed, as magistrate
and legislator so long as Kentucky was a
community of riflemen—he had small capacity
for the economic and political sides of
commonwealth-building. For this reason we
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</SPAN></span>
find him hereafter, although still in middle
life, taking but slight part in the making of
Kentucky; none the less did his career
continue to be adventurous, picturesque, and
in a measure typical of the rapidly expanding
West.</p>
<p>Probably in the early spring of 1786
Boone left the neighborhood of the Kentucky
River, and for some three years dwelt at
Maysville (Limestone), still the chief gateway
to Kentucky for the crowds of immigrants
who came by water. He was there a
tavern-keeper—probably Mrs. Boone was
the actual hostess—and small river merchant.
He still frequently worked at surveying,
of course hunted and trapped as of
old, and traded up and down the Ohio River
between Maysville and Point Pleasant—the
last-named occupation a far from peaceful
one, for in those troublous times navigation
of the Ohio was akin to running the gauntlet;
savages haunted the banks, and by dint
of both strategy and open attack wrought a
heavy mortality among luckless travelers and
tradesmen. The goods which he bartered to
the Kentuckians for furs, skins, and ginseng
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</SPAN></span>
were obtained in Maryland, whither he and
his sons went with laden pack-animals, often
driving before them loose horses for sale in
the Eastern markets. Sometimes they followed
some familiar mountain road, at others
struck out over new paths, for no longer was
the Wilderness Road the only overland highway
to the West.</p>
<p>Kentucky was now pursuing a path
strewn with thorns. Northward, the British
still held the military posts on the upper
lakes, owing to the non-fulfilment of certain
stipulations in the treaty of peace. Between
these and the settlements south of the Ohio
lay a wide area populated by powerful and
hostile tribes of Indians, late allies of the
British, deadly enemies of Kentucky, and
still aided and abetted by military agents of
the king. To the South, Spain controlled the
Mississippi, the commercial highway of the
West; jealous of American growth, she
harshly denied to Kentuckians the freedom
of the river, and was accused of turning
against them and their neighbors of Tennessee
the fierce warriors of the Creek and Cherokee
tribes. On their part, the Kentuckians
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</SPAN></span>
looked with hungry eyes upon the rich lands
held by Spain.</p>
<p>Not least of Kentucky's trials was the political
discontent among her own people,
which for many years lay like a blight upon
her happiness and prosperity. Virginia's
home necessities had prevented that commonwealth
from giving much aid to the West
during the Revolution, and at its conclusion
her policy toward the Indians lacked the aggressive
vigor for which Kentuckians pleaded.
This was sufficient cause for dissatisfaction;
but to this was added another of still greater
importance. To gain the free navigation of
the Mississippi, and thus to have an outlet
to the sea, long appeared to be essential to
Western progress. At first the Eastern men
in Congress failed to realize this need,
thereby greatly exasperating the over-mountain
men. All manner of schemes were in
the air, varying with men's temperaments
and ambitions. Some, like Clark—who, by
this time had, under the influence of intemperance,
greatly fallen in popular esteem,
although not without followers—favored a
filibustering expedition against the Spanish;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</SPAN></span>
and later (1788), when this did not appear
practicable, were willing to join hands with
Spain herself in the development of the continental
interior; and later still (1793-94), to
help France oust Spain from Louisiana.
Others wished Kentucky to be an independent
State, free to conduct her own affairs
and make such foreign alliances as were
needful; but Virginia and Congress did not
release her.</p>
<p>Interwoven with this more or less secret
agitation for separating the West from the
East were the corrupt intrigues of Spain,
which might have been more successful had
she pursued a persistent policy. Her agents—among
whom were some Western pioneers
who later found difficulty in explaining their
conduct—craftily fanned the embers of discontent,
spread reports that Congress intended
to sacrifice to Spain the navigation rights
of the West, distributed bribes, and were
even accused of advising Spain to arm the
Southern Indians in order to increase popular
uneasiness over existing conditions.
Spain also offered large land grants to prominent
American borderers who should lead
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</SPAN></span>
colonies to settle beyond the Mississippi and
become her subjects—a proposition which
Clark once offered to accept, but did not;
but of which we shall see that Daniel
Boone, in his days of discontent, took advantage,
as did also a few other Kentucky
pioneers. Ultimately Congress resolved never
to abandon its claim to the Mississippi
(1787); and when the United States became
strong, and the advantages of union were
more clearly seen in the West, Kentucky became
a member of the sisterhood of States
(1792).</p>
<p>It is estimated that, between 1783 and
1790, fully fifteen hundred Kentuckians were
massacred by Indians or taken captive to
the savage towns; and the frontiers of Virginia
and Pennsylvania furnished their full
quota to the long roll of victims. It is impossible
in so small a volume as this to
mention all of even the principal incidents
in the catalogue of assaults, heroic defenses,
murders, burnings, torturings, escapes, reprisals,
and ambushes which constitute the
lurid annals of this protracted border warfare.
The reader who has followed thus far
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</SPAN></span>
this story of a strenuous life, will understand
what these meant; to what deeds of daring
they gave rise on the part of the men and
women of the border; what privation and anguish
they entailed. But let us not forget
that neither race could claim, in this titanic
struggle for the mastery of the hunting-grounds,
a monopoly of courage or of cowardice,
of brutality or of mercy. The Indians
suffered quite as keenly as the whites
in the burning of their villages, crops, and
supplies, and by the loss of life either in
battle, by stealthy attack, or by treachery.
The frontiersmen learned from the red men
the lessons of forest warfare, and often outdid
their tutors in ferocity. The contest between
civilization and savagery is, in the nature
of things, unavoidable; the result also
is foreordained. It is well for our peace of
mind that, in the dark story of the Juggernaut
car, we do not inquire too closely into
details.</p>
<p>In 1785, goaded by numerous attacks on
settlers and immigrants, Clark led a thousand
men against the tribes on the Wabash;
but by this time he had lost control of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</SPAN></span>
situation, and cowardice on the part of his
troops, combined with lack of provisions, led
to the practical failure of the expedition,
although the Indians were much frightened.</p>
<p>At the same time, Logan was more successful
in an attack on the Shawnese of the
Scioto Valley, who lost heavily in killed and
prisoners. In neither of these expeditions
does Boone appear to have taken part.</p>
<p>The year 1787 was chiefly notable, in the
history of the West, for the adoption by Congress
of the Ordinance for the government
of the Territory Northwest of the River Ohio,
wherein there dwelt perhaps seven thousand
whites, mostly unprogressive French-Canadians,
in small settlements flanking the Mississippi
and the Great Lakes, and in the Wabash
Valley. Along the Ohio were scattered
a few American hamlets, chiefly in Kentucky.
In the same year the Indian war reached
a height of fury which produced a panic
throughout the border, and frantic appeals
to Virginia, which brought insufficient aid.
Boone, now a town trustee of Maysville, was
sent to the legislature that autumn, and occupied
his seat at Richmond from October until
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</SPAN></span>
January. While there, we find him strongly
complaining that the arms sent out to Kentucky
by the State during the year were unfit
for use, the swords being without scabbards,
and the rifles without cartridge-boxes or
flints.</p>
<p>A child of the wilderness, Boone was law-abiding
and loved peace, but he chafed at
legal forms. He had, in various parts
of Kentucky, preempted much land in the
crude fashion of his day, both under the
Transylvania Company and the later statutes
of Virginia—how much, it would now be
difficult to ascertain. In his old survey-books,
still preserved in the Wisconsin State
Historical Library, one finds numerous claim
entries for himself, ranging from four hundred
to ten thousand acres each—a tract
which he called "Stockfield," near Boonesborough;
on Cartwright's Creek, a branch of
Beech Fork of Salt River; on the Licking,
Elkhorn, Boone's Creek, and elsewhere. The
following is a specimen entry, dated "Aperel
the 22 1785," recording a claim made "on
the Bank of Cantuckey"; it illustrates the
loose surveying methods of the time: "Survayd
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</SPAN></span>
for Dal Boone 5000 acres begin at Robert
Camels N E Corner at a 2 White ashes
and Buckeyes S 1200 p[oles] to 3 Shuger
trees Ealm and walnut E 666 p to 6 Shuger
trees and ash N 1200 p to a poplar and beech
W 666 p to the begining."</p>
<p>It did not occur to our easy-going hero
that any one would question his right to as
much land as he cared to hold in a wilderness
which he had done so much to bring to
the attention of the world. But claim-jumpers
were no respecters of persons. It was
discovered that Boone had carelessly failed
to make any of his preemptions according
to the letter of the law, leaving it open for
any adventurer to reenter the choice claims
which he had selected with the care of an
expert, and to treat him as an interloper.
Suits of ejectment followed one by one
(1785-98), until in the end his acres were
taken from him by the courts, and the good-hearted,
simple fellow was sent adrift in the
world absolutely landless.</p>
<p>At first, when his broad acres began to
melt away, the great hunter, careless of his
possessions, appeared to exhibit no concern;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</SPAN></span>
but the accumulation of his disasters, together
with the rapid growth of settlement
upon the hunting-grounds, and doubtless
some domestic nagging, developed within
him an intensity of depression which led him
to abandon his long-beloved Kentucky and
vow never again to dwell within her limits.
In the autumn of 1788, before his disasters
were quite complete, this resolution was carried
into effect; with wife and family, and
what few worldly goods he possessed, he removed
to Point Pleasant, at the junction of
the Great Kanawha and the Ohio—in our
day a quaint little court-house town in West
Virginia.</p>
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