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<h2> GEORGE ROGERS CLARK AND THE CONQUEST OF THE NORTHWEST </h2>
<p>Have the elder races halted?<br/>
Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the<br/>
seas?<br/>
We take up the task eternal, and the burden and the lesson,<br/>
Pioneers! O Pioneers!<br/>
All the past we leave behind,<br/>
We debouch upon a newer, mightier world, varied world;<br/>
<br/>
Fresh and strong the world we seize, world of labor and the<br/>
march,<br/>
Pioneers! O Pioneers!<br/>
We detachments steady throwing,<br/>
Down the edges, through the passes, up the mountains steep,<br/>
Conquering, holding, daring, venturing, as we go the unknown<br/>
ways,<br/>
Pioneers! O Pioneers!<br/>
<br/>
* * * * * * *<br/>
<br/>
The sachem blowing the smoke first towards the sun and then<br/>
towards the earth,<br/>
The drama of the scalp dance enacted with painted faces and<br/>
guttural exclamations,<br/>
The setting out of the war-party, the long and stealthy march,<br/>
The single file, the swinging hatchets, the surprise and<br/>
slaughter of enemies.<br/>
—Whitman.<br/></p>
<p>In 1776, when independence was declared, the United States included only
the thirteen original States on the seaboard. With the exception of a few
hunters there were no white men west of the Alleghany Mountains, and there
was not even an American hunter in the great country out of which we have
since made the States of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
All this region north of the Ohio River then formed apart of the Province
of Quebec. It was a wilderness of forests and prairies, teeming with game,
and inhabited by many warlike tribes of Indians.</p>
<p>Here and there through it were dotted quaint little towns of French
Creoles, the most important being Detroit, Vincennes on the Wabash, and
Kaskaskia and Kahokia on the Illinois. These French villages were ruled by
British officers commanding small bodies of regular soldiers or Tory
rangers and Creole partizans. The towns were completely in the power of
the British government; none of the American States had actual possession
of a foot of property in the Northwestern Territory.</p>
<p>The Northwest was acquired in the midst of the Revolution only by armed
conquest, and if it had not been so acquired, it would have remained a
part of the British Dominion of Canada.</p>
<p>The man to whom this conquest was clue was a famous backwoods leader, a
mighty hunter, a noted Indian-fighter, George Rogers Clark. He was a very
strong man, with light hair and blue eyes. He was of good Virginian
family. Early in his youth, he embarked on the adventurous career of a
backwoods surveyor, exactly as Washington and so many other young
Virginians of spirit did at that period. He traveled out to Kentucky soon
after it was founded by Boone, and lived there for a year, either at the
stations or camping by him self in the woods, surveying, hunting, and
making war against the Indians like any other settler; but all the time
his mind was bent on vaster schemes than were dreamed of by the men around
him. He had his spies out in the Northwestern Territory, and became
convinced that with a small force of resolute backwoodsmen he could
conquer it for the United States. When he went back to Virginia, Governor
Patrick Henry entered heartily into Clark's schemes and gave him authority
to fit out a force for his purpose.</p>
<p>In 1778, after encountering endless difficulties and delays, he finally
raised a hundred and fifty backwoods riflemen. In May they started down
the Ohio in flatboats to undertake the allotted task. They drifted and
rowed downstream to the Falls of the Ohio, where Clark founded a log
hamlet, which has since become the great city of Louisville.</p>
<p>Here he halted for some days and was joined by fifty or sixty volunteers;
but a number of the men deserted, and when, after an eclipse of the sun,
Clark again pushed off to go down with the current, his force was but
about one hundred and sixty riflemen. All, however, were men on whom he
could depend—men well used to frontier warfare. They were tall,
stalwart backwoodsmen, clad in the hunting-shirt and leggings that formed
the national dress of their kind, and armed with the distinctive weapon of
the backwoods, the long-barreled, small-bore rifle.</p>
<p>Before reaching the Mississippi the little flotilla landed, and Clark led
his men northward against the Illinois towns. In one of them, Kaskaskia,
dwelt the British commander of the entire district up to Detroit. The
small garrison and the Creole militia taken together outnumbered Clark's
force, and they were in close alliance with the Indians roundabout. Clark
was anxious to take the town by surprise and avoid bloodshed, as he
believed he could win over the Creoles to the American side. Marching
cautiously by night and generally hiding by day, he came to the outskirts
of the little village on the evening of July 4, and lay in the woods near
by until after nightfall.</p>
<p>Fortune favored him. That evening the officers of the garrison had given a
great ball to the mirth-loving Creoles, and almost the entire population
of the village had gathered in the fort, where the dance was held. While
the revelry was at its height, Clark and his tall backwoodsmen, treading
silently through the darkness, came into the town, surprised the sentries,
and surrounded the fort without causing any alarm.</p>
<p>All the British and French capable of bearing arms were gathered in the
fort to take part in or look on at the merrymaking. When his men were
posted Clark walked boldly forward through the open door, and, leaning
against the wall, looked at the dancers as they whirled around in the
light of the flaring torches. For some moments no one noticed him. Then an
Indian who had been lying with his chin on his hand, looking carefully
over the gaunt figure of the stranger, sprang to his feet, and uttered the
wild war-whoop. Immediately the dancing ceased and the men ran to and fro
in confusion; but Clark, stepping forward, bade them be at their ease, but
to remember that henceforth they danced under the flag of the United
States, and not under that of Great Britain.</p>
<p>The surprise was complete, and no resistance was attempted. For
twenty-four hours the Creoles were in abject terror. Then Clark summoned
their chief men together and explained that he came as their ally, and not
as their foe, and that if they would join with him they should be citizens
of the American republic, and treated in all respects on an equality with
their comrades. The Creoles, caring little for the British, and rather
fickle of nature, accepted the proposition with joy, and with the most
enthusiastic loyalty toward Clark. Not only that, but sending messengers
to their kinsmen on the Wabash, they persuaded the people of Vincennes
likewise to cast off their allegiance to the British king, and to hoist
the American flag.</p>
<p>So far, Clark had conquered with greater ease than he had dared to hope.
But when the news reached the British governor, Hamilton, at Detroit, he
at once prepared to reconquer the land. He had much greater forces at his
command than Clark had; and in the fall of that year he came down to
Vincennes by stream and portage, in a great fleet of canoes bearing five
hundred fighting men-British regulars, French partizans, and Indians. The
Vincennes Creoles refused to fight against the British, and the American
officer who had been sent thither by Clark had no alternative but to
surrender.</p>
<p>If Hamilton had then pushed on and struck Clark in Illinois, having more
than treble Clark's force, he could hardly have failed to win the victory;
but the season was late and the journey so difficult that he did not
believe it could be taken. Accordingly he disbanded the Indians and sent
some of his troops back to Detroit, announcing that when spring came he
would march against Clark in Illinois.</p>
<p>If Clark in turn had awaited the blow he would have surely met defeat; but
he was a greater man than his antagonist, and he did what the other deemed
impossible.</p>
<p>Finding that Hamilton had sent home some of his troops and dispersed all
his Indians, Clark realized that his chance was to strike before
Hamilton's soldiers assembled again in the spring. Accordingly he gathered
together the pick of his men, together with a few Creoles, one hundred and
seventy all told, and set out for Vincennes. At first the journey was easy
enough, for they passed across the snowy Illinois prairies, broken by
great reaches of lofty woods. They killed elk, buffalo, and deer for food,
there being no difficulty in getting all they wanted to eat; and at night
they built huge fires by which to sleep, and feasted "like Indian
war-dancers," as Clark said in his report.</p>
<p>But when, in the middle of February, they reached the drowned lands of the
Wabash, where the ice had just broken up and everything was flooded, the
difficulties seemed almost insuperable, and the march became painful and
laborious to a degree. All day long the troops waded in the icy water, and
at night they could with difficulty find some little hillock on which to
sleep. Only Clark's indomitable courage and cheerfulness kept the party in
heart and enabled them to persevere. However, persevere they did, and at
last, on February 23, they came in sight of the town of Vincennes. They
captured a Creole who was out shooting ducks, and from him learned that
their approach was utterly unsuspected, and that there were many Indians
in town.</p>
<p>Clark was now in some doubt as to how to make his fight. The British
regulars dwelt in a small fort at one end of the town, where they had two
light guns; but Clark feared lest, if he made a sudden night attack, the
townspeople and Indians would from sheer fright turn against him. He
accordingly arranged, just before he himself marched in, to send in the
captured duck-hunter, conveying a warning to the Indians and the Creoles
that he was about to attack the town, but that his only quarrel was with
the British, and that if the other inhabitants would stay in their own
homes they would not be molested. Sending the duck-hunter ahead, Clark
took up his march and entered the town just after nightfall. The news
conveyed by the released hunter astounded the townspeople, and they talked
it over eagerly, and were in doubt what to do. The Indians, not knowing
how great might be the force that would assail the town, at once took
refuge in the neighboring woods, while the Creoles retired to their own
houses. The British knew nothing of what had happened until the Americans
had actually entered the streets of the little village. Rushing forward,
Clark's men soon penned the regulars within their fort, where they kept
them surrounded all night. The next day a party of Indian warriors, who in
the British interest had been ravaging the settlements of Kentucky,
arrived and entered the town, ignorant that the Americans had captured it.
Marching boldly forward to the fort, they suddenly found it beleaguered,
and before they could flee they were seized by the backwoodsmen. In their
belts they carried the scalps of the slain settlers. The savages were
taken redhanded, and the American frontiersmen were in no mood to show
mercy. All the Indians were tomahawked in sight of the fort.</p>
<p>For some time the British defended themselves well; but at length their
guns were disabled, all of the gunners being picked off by the backwoods
marksmen, and finally the garrison dared not so much as appear at a
port-hole, so deadly was the fire from the long rifles. Under such
circumstances Hamilton was forced to surrender.</p>
<p>No attempt was afterward made to molest the Americans in the land they had
won, and upon the conclusion of peace the Northwest, which had been
conquered by Clark, became part of the United States.</p>
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