Sometime around the year 1000 A.D., Leif Eiriksson
and thirty-five Vikings established a settlement at L’Anse aux Meadows on the
tip of the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland (Vinland). Leif’s brother Thorvald would be killed by the native
people they called “Skraelings.” It is
not known for sure just what the name meant, it was likely descriptive but not
necessarily complimentary.
It would be five centuries later, in 1492, that Christopher
Columbus and Martin Alonso Pinzon sighted the Bahamas. It is possible that
Columbus heard stories about those early Norse explorations and had some idea
of the approximate distance of the continents to the west. He mistakenly
assumed however that they would have to be Asia so when his expedition landed on
San Salvador he called the native Lucayan people “Indians”, because he was sure this was Indonesia.
It may have been a “New World” for these Europeans but for the millions of people
already living there it was a world their ancestors had inhabited for thousands
of years. Like the Europeans, these people had not unified into one nation,
they had formed hundreds of nations and many of those nations had histories of
long standing hatred for each other.
At first, some native people thought the strange “white” men might be gods. With care,
they would welcome them as trading partners and potential allies against old
enemies. European greed and warfare soon began to mingle with Native American blood
feuds resulting in both races committing acts of revengeful and savage
brutality that would last for hundreds of years.
The Europeans brought many new weapons but more
destructive than any of those, they brought disease and alcohol. The natives
had no immunity to European diseases that caused devastating epidemics; some
nations would lose twenty-five to fifty percent of their population. Alcoholic
beverages, such as rum and whiskey, were also unknown, and once introduced to
them a large number of Indians became highly addicted.
For the French, exploration of the new world began
with fishing in the Grand Banks. When Jacques Cartier landed on the Gaspe
Peninsula in 1534, he had a thirty foot tall cross erected and claimed the
territory for France.
One hundred and forty three years after Columbus,
explorers were still hoping to find a route to the Far East. In 1635, Champlain
sent Jean Nicolet to explore the great interior lakes. When the French
discovered “Lac Superieur” (Upper
Lake) that the Ojibwa called “Gitche
Gume” (Shining Big Sea Water), they were amazed but disappointed to find
that it was not salt. Superior is the largest of the five Great Lakes that hold
twenty percent of the world’s fresh surface water. Its’ western end is 3,500
miles from the Gaspe Peninsula, but still about 1,600 miles and a bunch of
mountains short of the Pacific.
By the mid-1600s, the fur trade had become big business
in North America. The Five Nation Iroquois who lived in what is now the State
of New York had been trading beaver pelts to the Dutch Colony of New Netherland
for European goods that included guns. The trade was so good that beaver were
now almost extinct in their homeland. In order to maintain the trade the
Iroquois looked west to the lands of other nations. From 1630 to about 1700
they would conquer and assimilate most of their fellow Iroquoian speaking
rivals in what the Europeans called the “Beaver Wars.” In 1649, the Five
Nations invaded “Huronia”, home of
the Wendat people who lived along Georgian Bay in what is today the Province of
Ontario in Canada.
Largely the French were peaceful trading partners of
the Algonquin and the Wendat who they called “Hurons” (savages) but unlike the Dutch, they had been more careful
about trading guns. With few guns, the Hurons were at a major disadvantage. The
Iroquois destroyed the Huron villages and the French Jesuit Mission of Sainte
Marie, brutally torturing and killing six of North America’s martyr saints who
had ministered and converted many of the Huron to Christianity.
The year before, La Salle had discovered the Ohio
River. In 1679, he set sail on Lake Erie to trade for furs in the first ship
ever built on the Great Lakes, the “Griffin.”
More Jesuit missions were established including Cahokia in 1699 and Kaskaskia
in 1703 both along the Mississippi River. In 1701, Cadillac had built Fort
Pontchartrain at “de troit” (the
strait) between Lakes Huron and Erie.
From about, 1660-1730, because of the Beaver Wars,
the Ohio Valley was mostly uninhabited. During the first half of the 18th
century the Iroquois, French and British would all make conflicting claims for
the region. In 1749, Celeron de Bienville proclaimed that all land drained by
the “Oyo” (Ohio River) belonged to
France and he buried seven lead markers at the mouths of strategic tributaries
to prove his claim. The French called the territory “The Province of Missilimackinac”.
For one hundred and fifty-five years, France was the
most powerful European presence on the North American continent. Now in the mid-1700s
she would again engage England in yet another struggle in their “great war for
empire”, this time in the Ohio River Valley. In 1750, the English had
established ties with the Miami Indians at a large trading community within the
Province of Missilimackinac called “Pickawillany”
near the present day city of Piqua, Ohio. Two years later the French sent Charles
Langlade with a war party of Ottawa and Ojibwa allies to destroy Pickawillany.
William Pitt became Britain’s Secretary of State in
1757 and he was determined to commit the resources needed to win the war. England prevailed and took control of Quebec
and the Province of Michilimackinac (Eng. sp.). Today all that France retains
of her once vast North American Territory are the two small rocky islands of
St. Pierre and Miquelon off the tip of Newfoundland’s Burin Peninsula.
The French had not taken the Native Peoples land,
instead they settled, often by invitation, on unoccupied land; they traded,
lived, and married with the Indians. Unlike the French, too many British and
Americans treated the Indians with little respect. Chief Pontiac, of the Ottawa,
declared “Englishmen!
Although you have conquered the French, you have not yet conquered us! We are
not your slaves! These lakes, these woods, these mountains, were left to us by
our ancestors. They are our inheritance, and we will part with them to none.”
In 1763, under Pontiac’s leadership, the Indians
captured and killed most of the British troops stationed at nine of the eleven
forts west of the Alleghenies. During “Pontiac’s
Rebellion” the British commander of Fort Pitt, Simeon Ecuyer, instigated a
plan of germ warfare by presenting gifts of small pox infected blankets to the
Indians. The tactic resulted in the death of thousands and the rebellion ended
when Colonel Henry Bouquet, a Swiss professional solider, won the “Battle of Bushy Run” twenty-five miles
south of Fort Pitt.
The Colonials had needed British protection on the
high seas and from attack by the French, but after the “French and Indian War” ended they no longer feared France. Great
Britain on the other hand had seen her national debt soar from 75 million
pounds to 133 million during the war and the newly acquired Canadian Territory
only added to the cost of governing America.
Not wanting more trouble with the Indians, English
Prime Minister Grenville decided it was best to stop settlement in the Western
Territories. Britain passed the “Quebec
Act” which expanded the old French holdings into the seaboard colonies and
bared settlement of the Ohio River Valley. This action angered many wealthy
Colonial land speculators including George Washington and started the colonies
toward revolution.
During the French and Indian war, American merchants
had continued to trade illegally with France prolonging the conflict. Furthermore,
the colonists had often been unwilling to undertake their own defense refusing
to send their militiamen on expeditions to Canada. Grenville thought it was
only fair that the Colonies pay part of the costs of the benefits they were
receiving. He levied taxes and intended that they be collected. The Colonists,
who had become almost self-governing and paid little attention to British trade
laws or taxes, suddenly found that England now wanted to rule in fact as well
as law.
After one hundred and fifty years of settlement,
animosity had grown between the American Colonies and Mother England to the
point where Englishmen now began to prepare for war with each other.
Among the eastern woodland Indian nations,
individuals did not own real estate. Land was common property, with hunting
privileges given to groups and each nation defending its own hunting grounds
against intruders. The region south of the Ohio River was such a prime hunting
ground that the various tribes came to an agreement to share its bounty. The
Shawnee who had now returned to the Ohio Valley would prove to be the most
aggressive in attempting to repel any white settlers.
The law of “primo
geniture” dictated that the full inheritance of an estate should go to the
eldest son. The main lure to come to America in the first place was the dual
attractions of land and freedom. In American colonial times, virtually everyone
was a farmer. Colonial "freeholders",
eager to obtain new land, began moving into the Indians sacred “Kah-ten-tah-the” hunting grounds. This
Wyandotte word meant “the land of
tomorrow”, what we now call Kentucky.
Most of the whites who explored Kentucky in the
early days were “long-hunters” who
would spend years hunting and collecting furs in the wilderness. One such
long-hunter was James Harrod who guided the first settlers down the rivers in
dugout canoes made from large yellow popular logs hollowed out to about a
quarter-inch in thickness. These canoes could hold six men and their gear. The
men carried seed corn, scythes, spading forks, rifles, casks of gunpowder, and
sheets of lead from which to make bullets. They established the first permanent
white settlement at “Harrod’s Town”
in 1774. Another long-hunter, Daniel Boone cut the first land route into
Kentucky. This route was known as the “Wilderness
Road”.
In 1777, Lord George Germain, England’s Secretary of
State for the American Colonies, ordered British commanders to arm the Indians
and encourage raids on the colonists and frontier settlements of the West. Many
of the same Indians who had helped the French fight the British, twenty years
earlier, would now help the British in an attempt to drive the invading
American’s from the “Can-tuc-kee” and
Ohio Valley. Raids back and forth over the Ohio River were mostly about
personal hatred and revenge. By the middle of the year only three settlements,
Harrodsburg, Boonesborough and St. Asaph’s (Logan’s Fort), remained in
Kentucky.
Defense of America’s western frontier fell to young
George Rogers Clark who planned and carried out one of the most daring and
brilliant campaigns of the Revolution. On February 25, 1779, Colonel Henry
Hamilton, in command of a far larger army, surrendered Fort Sackville at
Vincennes (Indiana). The hated “Hair
Buyer” was taken prisoner and sent east. Word of Clark’s victory led to an
amazing inflow of immigrants into Kentucky. The following year hundreds of
boatloads of settlers landed at Clark’s headquarters at the “Falls of the Ohio” (Louisville, KY).
In 1780, Captain Henry Bird led a force of 150
Redcoats and Canadian Rangers together with hundreds of allied Indians from
Detroit. They captured Martin and Ruddle’s stations in Kentucky. Three hundred
prisoners were marched back to Detroit. Those who could not keep up were
killed. Some of the survivors were sold as slaves. In August of 1781, Tories
and Canadian Iroquois led by Chief Joseph Brant ambushed a group of Pennsylvania
militia near the mouth of the Miami River who were on their way to join Clark’s
forces for an expedition to capture Detroit. Clark who seldom took Indians
prisoner or granted mercy marched up the Little Miami River to the Shawnee
village of Chilicothie and burned it. Then he moved on to the Mad River. In
November of 1782, Clark began his last campaign of the Revolution, during that
campaign Colonel Benjamin Logan was sent to burn the Indian village of New
Piqua, also known as “Standing Stone”
(Piqua, Ohio) and “Lorimer’s Post”
(Peter Loramie’s store).
At the time, Great Britain’s military was one of the
most powerful on Earth, and even though one of every three Colonists remained
loyal to England, the United States somehow miraculously won its independence.
Not solely by the skills of its own military leaders but due in large part to
the almost unbelievable ineptitude of a number of British commanders, and the
fact that England’s attention was divided by conflicts elsewhere in the World.
Due to the victories of George Rogers Clark, the
British, by the terms of the Treaty of Paris, conceded the lands on the
southern side of the Great Lakes to the Americans and no longer openly fought
with western settlers. However, the new nation was so strapped for cash that it
could not afford to maintain troops at forts such as Detroit and Mackinac (Eng.
sp. var.). So the British stayed and through agents such as Alexander McKee,
Matthew Elliot and the renegade Simon Girty, continued to encourage Indian
raids on frontier settlements by supplying guns and ammunition in exchange for
frontiersmen’s scalps.
Regardless, the number of whites south of the Ohio River
was dramatically increasing, while the number of Indians north of the river was
dramatically decreasing. About
two-thirds of the Shawnee with the aid of French-Canadian trader “Pierre Lorimer” (Peter Loramie) had
already secured a grant of land from the Spanish and moved to the Missouri
country.
Congress adopted the Northwest Ordinance in 1787,
and established the Northwest Territory in 1789. From this territory the future
states of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and that part of
Minnesota east of the Mississippi River would be carved. The Ordinance provided
that within the territory there would be support for public education, freedom
of religion, and most significantly, slavery would be forbidden. Revolutionary
War General, Arthur St. Clair, a Scotsman with a brogue so thick that those
under his command often had difficulty understanding his speech, was appointed
Governor.
During and after the Revolution, raids by the
Indians from the Miami and Shawnee villages of what would become the states of Ohio
and Indiana, and frontiersman from Kentucky, back and forth over the Ohio River
were so continuous that the region became known as the “Miami Slaughter-House”. The policy of the Congress and of the
Virginia General Assembly was to arbitrate with the Indians and seek peace.
In 1785, the Treaty of Fort McIntosh, signed with
the Delaware, Ojibwa, Ottawa, and Wyandotte established a frontier at the
Cuyahoga, Tuscarawas and Muskingum rivers. This allowed Congress to sell land
rights to the Ohio Company. By that same year, forty-two thousand settlers had already
moved into Kentucky.
Intelligence reports claimed that the Indians were
again preparing for all-out war when in fact they were not. There are those who
believe these reports were part of a plan by James Wilkinson to organize the
Kentuckians into military units without the consent or aid of Virginia. These
militia forces would give the settlers the self-confidence to demand
independence while at the same time convince the Eastern Virginians that the Kentuckians
themselves were creating the problem and thus make them glad to be rid of them.
Between the years, 1783 and 1790, 1,500 settlers were
killed in Kentucky. The federal government decided that its treaty policy had
failed and that the only way the conflicts in the Ohio Valley could be stopped
would be a military campaign against the confederated tribes.
In September of 1790, General Josiah Harmar with an
army of 1,453 men, of which 320 were regulars, the rest being composed of
militia from Pennsylvania and Kentucky, was sent to subdue the Indians.
Much of what remained of the confederated tribes
were now living in the regions of the “Glaize”
(Auglaize) river, the “Miami-of-the-Lake”
(Maumee River) and the junction of the St. Mary’s and St. Joseph which formed
the Maumee (Fort Wayne, IN). The Army
was to destroy these latter villages and subdue their inhabitants. Harmar
proved unsuitable for command of an army made up mostly of militia. Disorder
became so bad that at one point he threatened to turn his own artillery fire on
them. When the Indians killed 183 of his men and wounded another 31 he
retreated.
Militiamen enlisted for six months, no time for
proper training, but Congress thought it adequate for men who would be paid
$2.10 per month. To earn that grand sum they would have to hack their way
through the wilderness. On foot, for hundreds of miles, they fell trees, built
fortifications, lived on a limited and often poor supply of food, sleep in
tents during freezing weather, endured wild animals, insects, potential
disease, and the very real chance of being killed or worse, captured and
tortured by the Indians. The better frontier fighters, who had little faith in
St. Clair to begin with, passed on the opportunity. Most of the men who made up
the militia were either very young, very old or recruited from the floors of
local grog shops. They tended to be a bit unruly.