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Chapter 46:
The origin of
Tennessee.—Hillsborough's Administration of the Colonies continued.
October, 1770—June, 1771.
The Colonization of the
West was one of the
great objects ever promoted by
Franklin.
No one had more vividly discerned the capacity of the
Mississippi valley not only to sustain Commonwealths, but to connect them with the world by commerce; and when the
Ministers would have rejected the
Fort Stanwix Treaty,
1 which conveyed from the Six Nations an inchoate title to the immense territory southwest of the
Ohio, his influence secured its ratification, by organizing a powerful company to plant a Province in that part of the country which lay back of
Virginia, between
the Alleghanies and a line drawn from the
Cumberland Gap to the mouth of the
Scioto.
2
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Virginia resisted the proposed limitation of her
jurisdiction, as fatal to her interests;
3 earnestly entreating an extension of her borders westward to the
Tennessee River.
It would be tedious to rehearse the earnest pleas of the Colony; the hesitations of
Hillsborough, who wished to pacify her people, and yet to confine her settlements; the entreaties of
Botetourt; the adverse Representations of the Board of Trade; the meetings of Agents with the
Beloved Men of the Cherokees.
On the seventeenth of October, two days after the death of
Botetourt, a treaty conforming to the decision of the
British cabinet, was made at the
Congress of Lochaber,
4 confining the
Ancient Dominion on the
Northwest to the mouth of the Kenawha, while on the
South it extended only to within six miles of the
Holston River.
5 The
Cherokees would willingly have ceded more land; and when in the following year the line was run by
Donelson for
Virginia, their Chief consented that it should cross from the
Holston to the
Louisa,
6 or
Kentucky River, and follow it to the
Ohio.
But the change was disapproved in
England, so that the great body of the
West, unencumbered by valid titles, was happily reserved for the self-directed emigrant.
The people of
Virginia and others were exploring and marking all the richest lands, not only on the Redstone and other waters of the
Monongahela, but along the
Ohio, as low as the little
Kenawha;
7 and
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with each year were getting further and further
down the river.
When
Washington in 1770, having established for the soldiers and officers who had established for the soldiers and officers who had served with him in the
French war, their right to two hundred thousand acres in the western valley, went to select suitable tracts, he was obliged to descend to the Great Kenawha.
As he floated in a canoe down the
Ohio, whose banks he found enlivened by innumerable turkeys and other wild fowl, with many deer browsing on the shore or stepping down to the water's edge to drink, no good land escaped his eye. Where the soil and growth of timber were most inviting, he would walk through the woods, and set his mark on a maple, or elm, a hoop-wood, or ash, as the corner of a soldier's survey;
8 for he watched over the interests of his old associates in arms as sacredly as if he had been their trustee, and never ceased his care for them, till by his exertions, and ‘by these alone,’
9 he had secured to each one of them, or if they were dead, to their heirs, the full proportion of the bounty that had been promised.
His journey to the wilderness was not without its pleasures; he amused himself with the sports of the forest, or observing new kinds of water-fowl, or taking the girth of the largest trees, one of which at a yard from the ground measured within two inches of five and forty feet. His fame had gone before him; the
Red Men received him in Council with public honors.
Nor did lie turn homewards without inquiring of
Nicholson, an Indian interpreter, and of
Conolly, an intelligent forester, the character of the country further
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west.
From these eye-witnesses he received glowing
accounts of the climate, soil, good streams and plentiful game that distinguished the
valley of the Cumberland.
There he was persuaded a new and most desirable Government might be established.
10
At that time Daniel Boon was still exploring the land of promise.
11 Of forty adventurers who from the
Clinch River plunged into the
West under the lead of
James Knox, and became renowned as ‘the
Long Hunters,’
12 some found their way down the
Cumberland to the limestone Bluff, where
Nashville stands, and where the luxuriant, gently undulating fields, covered with groves of beech and walnut, were in the undisputed possession of countless buffaloes, whose bellowings resounded from hill and forest.
13
Sometimes trappers and restless emigrants, boldest of their class, took the risk of crossing the country from
Carolina to the
Mississippi; but of those who perished by the way, no tradition preserves the names.
Others, following the natural highways of the
West, descended from
Pittsburg, and from
Red Stone Creek to Fort Natchez.
The pilot, who conducted the party of which
Samuel Wells and
John MacIntire were the Chiefs, was so attracted by the lands round the
Fort, that he promised to remove there in the spring with his wife and family, and believed a hundred families from
North Carolina14 would follow.
The zeal of hunters and emigrants outran the concessions extorted from the Board of Trade.
This
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year
James Robertson, from the home of the Regula-
tors in
North Carolina, a poor and unlettered forester, of humble birth, but of inborn nobleness of soul, cultivated maize on the
Watauga.
The frame of the heroic planter was robust; his constitution hardy; he trod the soil as if he were its rightful lord.
Intrepid, loving virtue for its own sake, and emulous of honorable fame, he had self-possession, quickness of discernment, and a sound judgment.
Wherever he was thrown, on whatever he was engaged, he knew how to use all the means within his reach, whether small or great, to their proper end; seeing at a glance their latent capacities, and devising the simplest and surest way to bring them forth; and so he became the greatest benefactor of the early settlers of
Tennessee, confirming to them peace, securing their independence, and leaving a name blessed by the esteem and love and praise of a commonwealth.
15
He was followed to the
West, by men from the same Province with himself, where the people had no respite from the insolence of mercenary attorneys and officers, and were subjected to every sort of rapine and extortion.
16 There the
Courts of law offered no redress.
17 At the inferior Courts the
Justices who themselves were implicated in the pilfering of public money, named the juries.
The
Sheriff and receivers of taxes were in arrears for near seventy thousand pounds, which they had extorted from the people, and
[
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of which more than two thirds
18 had been irretrieva-
bly embezzled.
In the northern part of the Colony, where the ownership of the soil had been reserved to one of the old proprietaries, there was no land-office
19 so that the people who were attracted by the surpassing excellence
20 of the land could not obtain freeholds.
Every art was employed to increase the expenses of suits at law; and as some of the people in their wretchedness wreaked their vengeance in acts of folly and madness, they were artfully misrepresented as enemies to the
Constitution; and the oppressor treacherously acquired the protection which was due to the oppressed.
In March, 1770, one of the associate justices reported that they could not enforce the payment of taxes.
At the
Court in September the Regulators appeared in numbers.
‘We are come down,’ they said, ‘with the design to have justice done;’ they would have business proceed, but with no attorney except the
King's; and finding that it had been resolved not to try their causes,
21 some of them pursued
Fanning and another lawyer, beat them with cowskin whips, and laid waste Fanning's house.
22
The Assembly which convened in December, at
Newbern, was chosen under a state of alarm and vague
apprehension.
Tryon had secured
Fanning a seat, by chartering the town of
Hillsborough as a borough, but the county of
Orange, selected Herman Husbands as its Representative, with great unanimity.
The
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rustic patriot possessed a good reputation and a con-
siderable estate, and was charged with no illegal act whatever; yet he was voted a disturber of the public peace; on the twentieth of December was expelled the
House;
23 and against the opinion of the Council, and notwithstanding the want of evidence,
24 that he had been even an accessory to the riots at
Hillsborough,
Tryon seized him under a warrant concerted with the
Chief Justice,
25 and kept him in prison without bail.
26
The Presbyterian party was the strongest in the
House;
27 to conciliate its power, a law was passed for endowing Queen's College in the town of
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County;
28 a deceitful act of tolerance, which was sure to be annulled by the
King in Council.
But the great object of
Tryon was the riot Act, by which it was declared a felony for more than ten men to remain assembled after being required to disperse.
For a riot committed before or after the publication of the Act, persons might be tried in any Superior Court, no matter how distant from their homes, and if within sixty days they did not make their appearance, whether with or without notice, they were to be proclaimed outlaws, and to forfeit their lives with all their property.
29 Such was the sanguinary
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method by which the wrath of
Fanning was
to be appeased.
In the wish to establish order, full license was given to the ruthlessness of revenge.
The Governor also sent letters into the neighboring counties, to ascertain how many would volunteer to serve in a military expedition against ‘the rebels;’ but the Assembly, by withholding grants of money, set itself against civil war.
Tryon's smooth exterior and determined purpose had won for him at the Colonial office the reputation of being the ablest Governor in the thirteen Colonies; the death of
Botetourt opened the way for his promotion to the chief magistracy of
New-York.
The
Earl of
Dunmore, a needy Scottish peer of the
House of Murray, passionate, narrow, and unscrupulous in his rapacity, had hardly taken possession of that Government, when he was transferred to what was esteemed the more desirable one of
Virginia.
But before he made the exchange, his avarice had involved him in a singular strife.
Fees for grants of land had swollen the emoluments of office during the short administration of
Colden;
Dunmore demanded half of them as his perquisite; and to make sure of four or five thousand pounds, prepared as Chancellor to make, in the
King's name, a peremptory award in his own favor.
He came over to amass a fortune, and in his passion for sudden gain, cared as little for the policy of the
Ministers or his instructions from the Crown, as for the rights of property, the respective limits of jurisdiction of the Colonies, or their civil and political privileges.
To get money was the rule of conduct, which included his whole administrative policy.
Dunmore did not remain in
New-York long
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enough to weary the legislature into a spirited resist-
ance.
Its members remained steadfast in their purpose to connect loyalty with their regard for American liberty.
On a charge of contempt of their authority, they kept
MacDougall30 in prison during their session; at the same time, adopting the nomination made by
Schuyler a year before,
31 they unanimously elected
Edmund Burke, for whom his own country had no employment, their Agent in
England, allowing ‘for his services at the rate of five hundred pounds per annum.’
32
This moderation might have persuaded the Ministry to conciliatory measures; it only raised a hope of producing divisions in
America, by setting one Province against another.
‘I can find bones to throw among them, to continue contention and prevent a renewal of their union,’
33 promised
Hutchinson, now happy in the assurance of receiving from the tax on tea a salary of fifteen hundred pounds for himself as Governor, while three hundred more were granted to the
Lieutenant Governor Oliver, who had long been repining at the neglect of his sufferings in behalf of the Stamp Act.
Yet
Samuel Adams did not despair.
‘In every struggle,’ said he, ‘this country will approve herself glorious in maintaining and defending her freedom;’
34 and he was sure that the unreasonableness of
Great Britain would precipitate the epoch of American Independence.
South Carolina received
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his letters, still urging union, directing attention to the
necessity, of finding some more efficacious method of redress than a bare resolution to suspend commerce, and encouraging in the ‘young men’ the ambition ‘of making themselves masters of the art military.’
35
Zeal for the cause was not wanting in the
South.
The people had their ‘tribunes’ and most determined leaders in
Thomas Lynch, praised by royalists as ‘a man of sense,’ and inflexible firmness, Christopher Gadsden, the ‘enthusiast in the cause,’ ever suspicious ‘of British moderation,’ and
John Mackenzie, whose English education at
Cambridge furnished him with arguments for the Colonies.
36
On the thirteenth of December they met the planters, merchants and mechanics of
Charleston.
Lynch, who had come fifty miles on purpose, exerted all his eloquence; and even shed tears for the expiring liberty of his country.
He was seconded by
Gadsden and
Mackenzie; but
South Carolina could neither continue non-importation alone; nor by itself devise a new system.
Its association was dissolved, like the rest; the goods of importers which had been stored by the
General Committee were delivered up, and in
Charleston, the fourth largest city in the Colonies, then having five thousand and thirty white inhabitants, with five thousand eight hundred and thirtythree blacks,
37 commerce resumed its wonted activity in every thing but tea.
38
For a moment rumors of war between Great
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Britain and the united
Kings of
France and
Spain,
gave hope of ‘happy effects.’
39 But this also failed.
England, following the impulse given by Lord Egmont during the administration of
Grenville, had taken possession of the
Falkland Islands, as forming the key to the
Pacific.
Spain, claiming all that part of the world as her own, sent a fleet of five frigates which drove the
English from their wooden block-house, and after detaining them twenty days, left them to return to
England.
The English Ministry, willing to abandon Port Egmont, demanded of the
Spanish Government a disavowal of the seizure and its temporary restoration.
Spanish pride would have rejected the terms with disdain.
‘They are the only propositions, which the
British Ministry could make;’ said
Choiseul, scoffing at the
Spanish rodomontade.
‘For heaven's sake,’ he wrote to the
French Minister at
London, ‘do the impossible; and persuade Prince Masserano to follow my instructions rather than those of his own court, which have not common sense.’
Determined to preserve peace,
Choiseul, who would not have feared war for a great cause like the emancipation of the colonial world, checked the rashness of
Spain and assumed the direction of its diplomacy.
40 But
Weymouth was haughty and unreasonable.
‘War is inevitable,’ said
Harcourt to
Choiseul.
‘If the
English are bent on war,’ wrote
Choiseul to Frances, ‘all that I can say is unavailing.
But you will be witness, that I did not
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wish it.’
41 Lord North gained honor by allowing
Weymouth to retire, and standing firmly for peace; but it was
Choiseul's moderation which prevented a rupture.
On the twenty-fourth of December the ablest French Minister of the century was dismissed from office and exiled to Chanteloupe, not because he was impassioned for war, as his enemies pretended, but because he was the friend of philosophy, freedom of industry, and colonial independence.
Thoroughly a Frenchman, as
Chatham was thoroughly an Englishman, he longed to renovate
France that she might revenge the wounds inflicted on her glory.
For this end he had sought to improve her finances, restore her marine, reform her army, and surround her by allies.
Marie Antoinette, the wife of the
Dauphin, was a pledge for the friendship of
Austria;
Prussia was conciliated; while the
Family Compact insured at
Naples and in the
Spanish peninsula the predominance of
France, which had nothing but friends from the Bosphorus to
Cadiz.
It marks the sway of philosophy that crowds paid their homage to the retiring Statesman; he was dear to the Parliaments he had defended, to men of letters he had encouraged, and to Frenchmen whose hearts beat for the honor of their land in its rivalry with
England.
His policy was so identified with the passions, the sympathies, and the culture of his country; was so thoroughly national, and so liberal,
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that it was sure to return in spite of the royalist
party and the
Court, and even though he himself was never again to be intrusted with the conduct of affairs.
The cause of royalty was, for the time, triumphant in the cabinets; and had America then risen, she would have found no friends to cheer her on.
At the same time the
British Ministry attracted to itself that part of the Opposition which was composed of
Grenville's friends.
Now that he was no more,
Suffolk became
Secretary of State, instead of
Weymouth; and Thurlow being promoted,
Wedderburn, whose ‘credit for veracity’ Lord North so lately impeached, and who in his turn had denied to that Minister ‘honor and respectability,’—refused to go upon a forlorn hope; and with unblushing effrontery, leased his powers of eloquence to the
Government in return for the office of
Solicitor General.
42 By these arrangements Lord North obtained twelve new votes.
43
But the moral power of the Ministry gained still more from the vehement clamor with which its opponents condemned the wise settlement of the question respecting the
Falkland Islands.
Sir Robert Walpole had yielded to a similar clamor, and had yet lost his place; Lord North won the praise of good men by resisting it, and securing peace without a compromise of the public dignity.
When the Administration needed for its defence no more than the exposition of the madness of modern wars
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in the brilliant and forcible language of the moralist
Johnson,
44 the applause of
Adam Smith45 was in accordance with the sentiment of the country.
This was the happiest period in the career of Lord North.
His system acquired stability in the confidence of the country; and was sure of majorities in Parliament.
No danger hung over him but from his own love of ease.
‘He was seated on the Treasury bench, between his Attorney and
Solicitor General,’ his equals in ability, but most unlike him in character;
46 and it was his fatal error that he indulged in slumber when
America required all his vigilance.
The Regulators of
North Carolina gathered toge-
ther in the woods on hearing that their Representative had been expelled and arbitrarily imprisoned, and they themselves menaced with exile or death as outlaws.
They had labored honestly for their own support; not living on the spoils of other men's labors, nor snatching the bread out of other men's hands.
They accepted the maxim, that laws, statutes and customs which are against God's law or nature, are all null; and that civil officers who, contrary to reason, exacted illegal taxes and fees from the poor industrious farmers, were guilty of a worse crime than open robbery.
They asked no more than that extortioners might be brought to fair trials, and ‘the collectors of the public money called to proper settlements
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391]
of their accounts.’
47 Honor and good faith now
prompted them to join for the rescue of Husbands.
Tryon was intimidated.
Newbern might be attacked and his newly finished palace, source of so much gratification to his vanity, of grievous taxation to the people, might be burned to the ground.
Without some manifest sanction of law he dared no longer detain in custody the sturdy
Highlander, who had come down under the safeguard of his unquestioned election to the Legislature.
Eager to take advantage of the
Riot Act, he had by special commission called the
Judges to meet at
Newbern on the sixth of February.
No sooner were they assembled, than he conspired with the
Chief Justice to get Husbands indicted for a pretended libel.
But the
Grand Jury refused to do the work assigned them; and the prisoner was set free
48.
Angry with the indocile jury, the
Governor by a new Commission, called another court for the eleventh of March; against which day he took care, by
giving the strictest orders to the Sheriffs, many of whom were defaulters, and by the indefatigable exertions of his own private
Secretary, to obtain jurors and witnesses, suited to his purpose.
49
The liberation of Husbands having stopped the march of the Regulators, it occurred to some of them on their return to visit
Salisbury Superior Court.
50 On the sixth of March, about four or five hundred of them encamped in the woods near the
Ferry, on the
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western side of the
Yadkin River. ‘The lawyers
are every thing’ they complained.
‘There should be none in the Province.’
‘We shall be forced to kill them all.’
‘There never was such an Act as the
Riot Act in the laws of
England.’
51 This was true; the Counsel to the Board of Trade, making his official report upon that law, declared its clause of outlawry ‘altogether unfit for any part of the
British empire.’
52 ‘We come,’ said the Chiefs in the Regulators' camp to an officer from
Salisbury, ‘with no intention to obstruct the
Court, or to injure the person or property of any one; but only to petition for a redress of grievances against officers taking exorbitant fees.’
‘Why then,’ it was asked, ‘are some of you armed?’
‘Our arms,’ said they, ‘are only to defend ourselves.’
They were told, that no Court would be held on account of the disturbances; but the very persons of whom they complained, finding them ‘peaceably disposed beyond expectation,’
53 agreed with them, that all differences with the officers of the county of
Rowan should be settled by arbitration on the third Tuesday in May.
The umpires being named, the Regulators marched through
Salisbury, gave three cheers, and quietly returned
54 to their farms, which were the best lands in the whole Province.
55
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But
Tryon and
Fanning were bent on revenge.
On the eleventh of March the
Court opened at
Newbern; with willing witnesses and a unanimous Grand Jury, sixty-one
56 indictments were readily found for felonies or riots, against the leading Regulators in
Orange County, who lived two hundred miles off, and many of whom had been at home during the riots of which they were accused.
By law, criminal jurisdiction belonged in the first instance to the district within which offences were charged to have been committed; every one of the indictments was illegal;
57 and yet those charged with felony must appear within sixty days, or a vain and merciless Governor will declare them outlaws.
Armed with this authority to proscribe the principal men among the Regulators,
Tryon next received the
Grand Jury at the Palace, and volunteered to them to lead troops into the western counties.
58 The obsequious body, passing beyond their proper functions, applauded his purpose; and the Council acquiesced.
To obtain the necessary funds, which the Legislature had refused to provide,
Tryon created a paper currency by drafts on the Treasury.
The Northern Treasurer declined to sanction the
illegal drafts; and in consequence, the
Eastern counties took no part in the scenes that followed; but the
Southern Treasurer complied.
From
Wilmington a body of militia under the command of
Waddel, was
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sent to
Salisbury, while
Tryon himself, having writ-
ten a harsh rebuke of the agreement in
Rowan County for arbitration, marched into
Orange County.
His progress was marked by the destruction of wheat fields and orchards, the burning of every house which was found empty; the seizure of cattle, poultry and all the produce of the plantations.
The terrified people ran together like sheep chased by a wolf; while
Tryon crossed the Eno, and the
Haw; and the men who had been indicted at
Newbern for felonies, were already advertised as outlaws, when on the evening of the fourteenth, he reached the Great Alamance.
The little army under his command was composed of one thousand and eighteen foot soldiers, and thirty light horse, besides the officers.
59 The Regulators, who had been drawn together not as insurgents but from alarm,—many, perhaps most of them without guns,—may have numbered rather more, and were encamped about five miles to the west of the stream.
They gathered round
James Hunter as their ‘general;’ and his superior capacity, and dauntless courage, won from the unorganized host implicit obedience and enthusiastic reverence.
60 They were almost in despair, lest the
Governor ‘would not lend a kind ear to the just complaints of the people.’
Still on the evening of the fifteenth they entreated, that harmony might yet be restored, that ‘the presaged tragedy of warlike marching to meet each
[
395]
other might be prevented;’ that the
Governor would give them leave to present ‘their Petition,’ and to treat for peace.
The next day
Tryon crossed Alamance River, and marched out to meet the Regulators.
As he approached,
James Hunter and
Benjamin Merrill,
61 a Captain of militia, ‘a man in general esteem for his honesty, integrity, piety and moral good life,’ received from him this answer: ‘I require you to lay down your arms, surrender up the outlawed ringleaders, submit yourselves to the laws, and rest on the lenity of the
Government.
By accepting these terms in one hour, you will prevent an effusion of blood, as you are at this time in a state of war and rebellion.’
62
The demands were utterly unjustifiable.
No one of the Regulators had been legally outlawed; or even legally indicted.
The Governor acted against law as against right; and by every rule deserved to be resisted.
Yet the Regulators reluctantly accepted the appeal to arms; for they had nothing to hope from victory itself.
Their courage was the courage of martyrs.
The action began before noon, by firing a fieldpiece into the midst of the people.
Many of the Regulators, perhaps the larger number, retired; but those who remained, disputed the field for two hours, fighting first in the open ground and then from behind trees, till at last having nearly expended their ammunition,
63 Hunter and his men were compelled to
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retreat.
64 Nine of the
King's troops were killed, and
sixty-one wounded.
65 Of the Regulators, above twenty fell in battle, besides the wounded.
66 Some prisoners were taken in the pursuit.
Before sunset,
Tryon had returned in triumph to his camp.
The next day James Few, one of the prisoners, was by the
Governor's order, hanged on a tree as an outlaw; and his parents ruined by the destruction of their estate.
Then followed one proclamation after another,
67 excepting from mercy outlaws and prisoners, and promising it to none others but those who should take an oath of allegiance, pay taxes, submit to the laws, and deliver up their arms.
After this
Tryon proceeded to the
Yadkin to join
Waddel, who had incurred some danger of being cut off.
Waddel then moved through the
Southwestern counties, unmolested, except that in Mecklenburgh his ammunition was blown up,
68 while
Tryon turned back, living at free quarters on the Regulators,
69 forcing them to contribute all kinds of provisions, and burning the houses and laying waste and destroying the plantations of every outlaw.
70
On the ninth of June he arrived at
Hillsborough, where the
Court awaited him. His first work was a proclamation inviting ‘every person’ to shoot Herman Husbands, or
James Hunter, or Redknap
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Howell, or
William Butler; and offering a hundred
pounds and a thousand acres of land, as a reward for the delivery of either of them alive or dead.
Then twelve men, taken in battle, were tried and brought in guilty of Treason; and on the nineteenth of June, six of them were hanged under the eye of the
Governor, who himself marked the place for the gallows, gave directions for clearing the field, and sketched in general orders the line of march of the army to the place of execution, with the station of each company round the gallows.
The victims died bravely.
It is yet kept in memory, how
Benjamin Merrill met his fate in the most heroic manner, sustained by the pious affection of his children, and declaring that he died at peace with his Maker, in the cause of his country.
71
The next day
Tryon, having gratified himself with the spectacle, and taking care to make the most of the confiscated lands, which were among the best on the continent, left
Hillsborough, and on the thirtieth sailed to take possession of the
Government72 of
New-York, leaving the burden of an illegally contracted debt of more than forty thousand pounds. So general was the disgust, that his successor dared not trust the people with the immediate election of a new Assembly,
73 though terror and despair had brought six thousand of the Regulators to submission.
74
The Governors of
South Carolina and of
Virginia,
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were requested not to harbor the fugitives.
But the
far wilderness offered shelter beyond the mountains, and the savages seemed comparatively mild protectors.
Without concert, instinctively impelled by discontent and the wearisomeness of life exposed to bondage, men crossed
the Alleghanies and descending into the basin of the
Tennessee, made their homes in the
valley of the Watauga.
There no lawyer followed them; there no
King's Governor came to be their
Lord; there the flag of
England never waved.
They rapidly extended their settlements; by degrees they took possession of the more romantic banks of the broader
Nollichucky, whose sparkling waters spring out of the tallest mountains in the range.
The climate was invigorating; the health-giving westerly wind blew at all seasons; in spring the wild crab apple filled the air with the sweetest of perfumes, A fertile soil gave to industry good crops of maize; the clear streams flowed pleasantly without tearing floods; where the closest thickets of spruce and rhododendron flung the cooling shade furthest over the river, trout abounded.
The elk and the red deer were not wanting in the natural parks of oak and hickory, of maple, elm, black ash, and buckeye.
Of quails and turkeys and pigeons there was no end. The golden eagle built its nest on the topmost ledge of the mountain, and might be seen wheeling in wide circles high above the pines, or dropping like a meteor upon its prey.
The black bear, whose flesh was held to be the most delicate of meats, grew so fat upon the abundant acorns and chestnuts, that he could be run down in a race of three hundred yards; and sometimes the hunters gave chase to the coward panther, strong enough to beat off twenty dogs, yet flying from
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399]
one.
Political wisdom is not sealed up in rolls and
parchments.
It welled up in the forest, like the waters from the hill side.
To acquire a peaceful title to their lands, the settlers despatched
James Robertson75 as their envoy to the Council of the Cherokees, from whom he obtained sincere promises of confidence and friendship, and a lease of the territory of the infant Colony.
For government, its members came together as brothers in convention, and already in 1772, they founded a republic by a written association,
76 appointed their own magistrates,
James Robertson among the first; framed laws for their present occasions; and ‘set to the people of
America the dangerous example of erecting themselves into a separate State, distinct from and independent of the authority’ of the
British King.
77
Fanning who followed
Tryon to the
North, extolled his patron as the ablest supporter of Government.
78 ‘I shall leave to your Lordship's reflections the tendency this expedition has had on the frontiers of every Colony in British America,’ was the self-laudatory remark of
Tryon to
Hillsborough.
79 The insolent extortioners and officers whom the Regulators had vainly sued for redress, taunted them with their ill fortune, saying, ‘Alamance is your court of record.’
80 Yet the record was not closed.
In the old counties of
Orange and
Mecklenburg, the ‘overhill’
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400]
glades of
Carolina, and the little band of moun-
taineers who planted the commonwealth of
Tennessee, a bloodthirsty Governor, in his vengeful zeal for the Crown, had treasured up wrath for the day of wrath.
Note.
The successor of
Tryon reached
Carolina in August, 1771, and drank in all the accounts of the ‘glorious spirit,’ which had defeated the Regulators near the
Alamance.
The next year he made a tour into
Orange County.
The result of his observations is best given in his own words.
extract of A Letter from
Josiah Martin [the brother of
Samuel Martin, who wounded
Wilkes in a duel in 1763,]
Governor of
North Carolina, to the
Earl of
Hillsborough,
Secretary of State for the Colonies.
* * * * My progress through this country, my
Lord, hath opened my eyes exceedingly, with respect to the commotions and discontents that have lately prevailed in it. I now see most clearly, that they have been provoked by insolence, and cruel advantages taken of the people's ignorance by mercenary tricking attorneys,
clerks, and other little officers, who have practised upon them every sort of rapine and extortion; by which having brought upon themselves their just resentment, they engaged Government in their defence by artful misrepresentations, that the vengeance the wretched people in folly and madness aimed at their heads, was directed against the constitution; and by this stratagem they threw an odium upon the injured people, that by degrees begot a prejudice, which precluded a full discovery of their grievances.
Thus, my
Lord, as far as I have been able to discover, the resentment of Government was craftily worked up against the oppressed, and the protection which the oppressors treacherously acquired, where the injured and ignorant people expected to find it, drove them to acts of desperation and confederated them in violence, which as your Lordship knows, induced bloodshed; and I verily believe necessarily.
Inquiries of this sort, my
Lord, I am sensible are invidious; nor would any thing but a sense of duty have drawn from me these opinions of the principles of the past troubles of this country. * * * *
Diligent inquiry has not as yet brought to light a copy of the written Constitution adopted by the Settlers of
Eastern Tennessee.
Its existence
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401]
was ascertained by
Haywood, the careful historian of that com-
monwealth.
Ramsey has adopted all that was preserved by
Haywood, and has added the results of his own persevering researches.
To these authorities I am able to subjoin the evidence of a contemporary witness.
In a letter from the
Governor of
Virginia to the
British Secretary of State, pleading warmly in favor of the propriety of making grants of land at the
West, in
Illinois, he derives his strongest argument from the establishment of this very Republic of
Watauga.
Extract of a letter from the
Earl of
Dunmore,
Governor of
Virginia, to the
Earl of Dartmouth,
Secretary of State.
* * * Whatever may be the law with respect to the title, there are, I think, divers reasons which should induce his majesty to comply with the petition, so far at least, as to admit the petitioners and their acquisitions, if not into this government, into some other.
For if the title should be thought defective, it would still, at such a distance from the seat of any authority, be utterly impracticable to void it, or prevent the occupying of the lands, which being known to be of an extraordinary degree of fertility, experience shows nothing (so fond as the
Americans are of migration,) can stop the concourse of people that actually begin to draw toward them; and should the petition be rejected, your lordship may assure yourself, it is no chimerical conjecture, that, so far from interrupting the progress of their settlement, it would have a direct contrary tendency, by forcing the people to adopt a form of government of their own, which it would be easy to frame in such a manner as to prove an additional encouragement to all the dissatisfied of every other government, to flock to that.
In effect, we have an example of the very case, there being actually a set of people in the back part of this colony, bordering on the
Cherokee country, who finding they could not obtain titles to the land they fancied, under any of the neighboring governments, have settled upon it without, and contented themselves with becoming in a manner tributary to the Indians, and have appointed magistrates, and framed laws for their present occasions, and to all intents and purposes, erected themselves into, though an inconsiderable, yet a separate State; the consequence of which may prove hereafter detrimental to the peace and security of the other colonies; it at least ets a dangerous example to the people of
America, of forming governments distinct from and independent of his majesty's authority. * * *