<h3 class="p6">CHAPTER IX<br/> THE SETTLEMENT OF KENTUCKY</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Kentucky had so long been spasmodically
occupied and battled over by Shawnese,
Iroquois, and Cherokees, that it can not be
said that any of them had well-defined rights
over its soil. Not until white men appeared
anxious to settle there did the tribes begin
to assert their respective claims, in the hope
of gaining presents at the treaties whereat
they were asked to make cessions. The
whites, on their part, when negotiating for
purchases, were well aware of the shadowy
character of these claims; but, when armed
with a signed deed of cession, they had something
tangible upon which thenceforth to
base their own claims of proprietorship.
There was therefore much insincerity upon
both sides. It is well to understand this situation
in studying the history of Kentucky
settlement.</p>
<p>Colonel Richard Henderson was one of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</SPAN></span>
principal judges in North Carolina, a scholarly,
talented man, eminent in the legal profession;
although but thirty-nine years of
age, he wielded much influence. Knowing
and respecting Daniel Boone, Henderson was
much impressed by the former's enthusiastic
reports concerning the soil, climate, and
scenery of Kentucky; and, acting solely upon
this information, resolved to establish a colony
in that attractive country. He associated
with himself three brothers, Nathaniel,
David, and Thomas Hart, the last-named of
whom in later life wrote that he "had known
Boone of old, when poverty and distress held
him fast by the hand; and in those wretched
circumstances he had ever found him a noble
and generous soul, despising everything
mean." Their proposed colony was styled
Transylvania, and the association of proprietors
the Transylvania Company.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that in the treaty
of Fort Stanwix (1768) the Iroquois of New
York had ceded to the English crown their
pretensions to lands lying between the Ohio
and the Tennessee. The Transylvania Company,
however, applied to the Cherokees, because
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</SPAN></span>
this was the tribe commanding the path
from Virginia and the Carolinas to Kentucky.
In March, 1775, a great council was held at
Sycamore Shoals, on the Watauga River, between
the company and twelve hundred
Cherokees who had been brought in for the
purpose by Boone. For $50,000 worth of
cloths, clothing, utensils, ornaments, and firearms,
the Indians ceded to Henderson and
his partners an immense grant including all
the country lying between the Kentucky and
Cumberland Rivers, also a path of approach
from the east, through Powell's Valley. At
this council were some of the most prominent
Cherokee chiefs and southwestern frontiersmen.</p>
<p>When the goods came to be distributed
among the Indians it was found that, although
they filled a large cabin and looked
very tempting in bulk, there was but little
for each warrior, and great dissatisfaction
arose. One Cherokee, whose portion was a
shirt, declared that in one day, upon this
land, he could have killed deer enough to
buy such a garment; to surrender his hunting-ground
for this trifle naturally seemed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</SPAN></span>
to him a bad bargain. For the safety of the
pioneers the chiefs could give no guarantee;
they warned Boone, who appears to have
acted as spokesman for the company, that
"a black cloud hung over this land," warpaths
crossed it from north to south, and
settlers would surely get killed; for such results
the Cherokees must not be held responsible.</p>
<p>This was not promising. Neither was
the news, now received, that Governors
Martin of North Carolina, and Dunmore
of Virginia had both of them issued proclamations
against the great purchase. The
former had called Henderson and his partners
an "infamous Company of Land
Pyrates"; and they were notified that this
movement was in violation of the king's
proclamation of 1763, forbidding Western
settlements.</p>
<p>The company, relying upon popular sympathy
and their great distance from tidewater
seats of government, proceeded without
regard to these proclamations. Boone,
at the head of a party of about thirty enlisted
men, some of them the best backwoodsmen
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</SPAN></span>
in the country,<SPAN name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</SPAN> was sent ahead to mark
a path through the forest to Kentucky River,
and there establish a capital for the new
colony. They encountered many difficulties,
especially when traveling through cane-brakes
and brush; and once, while asleep,
were attacked by Indians, who killed a negro
servant and wounded two of the party.
Boone won hearty commendation for his skill
and courage throughout the expedition,
which finally arrived at its destination on the
sixth of April. This was Big Lick, on Kentucky
River, just below the mouth of Otter
Creek. Here it was decided to build a town
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</SPAN></span>
to be called Boonesborough, to serve as the
capital of Transylvania. The site was "a
plain on the south side of the river, wherein
was a lick with sulphur springs strongly impregnated."</p>
<p>To Felix Walker, one of the pioneers, we
are indebted for the details of this notable
colonizing expedition, set forth in a narrative
which is still preserved. "On entering
the plain," he writes, "we were permitted to
view a very interesting and romantic sight.
A number of buffaloes, of all sizes, supposed
to be between two and three hundred, made
off from the lick in every direction: some
running, some walking, others loping slowly
and carelessly, with young calves playing,
skipping, and bounding through the plain.
Such a sight some of us never saw before,
nor perhaps ever may again." A fort was
commenced, and a few cabins "strung along
the river-bank;" but it was long before the
stronghold was completed, for, now that the
journey was at an end, Boone's men had become
callous to danger.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Henderson was proceeding
slowly from the settlements with thirty men
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</SPAN></span>
and several wagons loaded with goods and
tools. Delayed from many causes, they at
last felt obliged to leave the encumbering
wagons in Powell's Valley. Pushing forward,
they were almost daily met by parties
of men and boys returning home from
Kentucky bearing vague reports of Indian
forays. This resulted in Henderson losing
many of his own followers from desertion.
Arriving at Boonesborough on the twentieth
of April, the relief party was "saluted by a
running fire of about twenty-five guns."
Some of Boone's men had, in the general
uneasiness, also deserted, and others had
scattered throughout the woods, hunting,
exploring, or surveying on their own account.</p>
<p>The method of surveying then in vogue
upon the Western frontier was of the crudest,
although it must be acknowledged that
any system more formal might, at that stage
of our country's growth, have prevented
rapid settlement. Each settler or land speculator
was practically his own surveyor. With
a compass and a chain, a few hours' work
would suffice to mark the boundaries of a
thousand-acre tract. There were as yet no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</SPAN></span>
adequate maps of the country, and claims
overlapped each other in the most bewildering
manner. A speculator who "ran out"
a hundred thousand acres might, without
knowing it, include in his domain a half-dozen
claims previously surveyed by modest
settlers who wanted but a hundred acres
each. A man who paid the land-office fees
might "patent" any land he pleased and
have it recorded, the colony, and later the
State, only guaranteeing such entries as covered
land not already patented. This overlapping,
conscious or unconscious, at last became
so perplexing that thousands of vexatious
lawsuits followed, some of which are
still unsettled; and even to-day in Kentucky
there are lands whose ownership is actually
unknown, which pay no taxes and support
only squatters who can not be turned out—possibly
some of it, lying between patented
tracts, by chance has never been entered at
all. Nobody can now say. Thus it was
that we find our friend Daniel Boone quickly
transformed from a wilderness hunter
into a frontier surveyor. Before Henderson's
arrival he had laid off the town site
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</SPAN></span>
into lots of two acres each. These were now
drawn at a public lottery; while those who
wished larger tracts within the neighborhood
were able to obtain them by promising to
plant a crop of corn and pay to the Transylvania
Company a quit-rent of two English
shillings for each hundred acres.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i003" id="i003"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i003.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="506" alt="Survey Note" /> <p class="caption">A SURVEY NOTE BY BOONE.</p> <p class="caption s08">Reduced facsimile from his field-books in possession of Wisconsin State
Historical Society.</p>
</div>
<p>There were now four settlements in the
Transylvania grant: Boonesborough; Harrodsburg,
fifty miles west, with about a hundred
men; Boiling Spring, some six or seven
miles from Harrodsburg; and St. Asaph.
The crown lands to the north and east of the
Kentucky, obtained by the Fort Stanwix
treaty, contained two small settlements;
forty miles north of Boonesborough was
Hinkson's, later known as Ruddell's Station,
where were about nineteen persons; lower
down the Kentucky, also on the north side,
was Willis Lee's settlement, near the present
Frankfort; and ranging at will through the
crown lands were several small parties of
"land-jobbers," surveyors, and explorers,
laying off the claims of militia officers who
had fought in the Indian wars, and here and
there building cabins to indicate possession.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Henderson had no sooner arrived than
he prepared for a convention, at which the
people should adopt a form of government
for the colony and elect officers. This was
held at Boonesborough, in the open air, under
a gigantic elm, during the week commencing
Tuesday, the twenty-third of May. There
were eighteen delegates, representing each of
the four settlements south of the Kentucky.
Among them were Daniel and Squire Boone,
the former of whom proposed laws for the
preservation of game and for improving the
breed of horses; to the latter fell the presentation
of rules for preserving the cattle-ranges.
The compact finally agreed upon
between the colonists and the proprietors
declared "the powers of the one and the liberties
of the others," and was "the earliest
form of government in the region west of
the Alleghanies." It provided for "perfect
religious freedom and general toleration,"
militia and judicial systems, and complete
liberty on the part of the settlers to conduct
colonial affairs according to their needs.
This liberal and well-digested plan appeared
to please both Henderson and the settlers.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</SPAN></span>
But the opposition of the governors, the objections
raised by the Assembly of Virginia,
of which Kentucky was then a part,<SPAN name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</SPAN> and
finally, the outbreak of the Revolution, which
put an end to proprietary governments in
America, caused the downfall of the Transylvania
Company. The Boonesborough legislative
convention met but once more—in
December, to elect a surveyor-general.</p>
<p>The May meeting had no sooner adjourned
than Transylvania began again to
lose its population. Few of the pioneers
who had come out with Boone and Henderson,
or had since wandered into the district,
were genuine home-seekers. Many appear
to have been mere adventurers, out for the
excitement of the expedition and to satisfy
their curiosity, who either returned home or
wandered farther into the woods to seek
fresh experiences of wild life; others had
deliberately intended first to stake out claims
in the neighborhood of the new settlements
and then return home to look after their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</SPAN></span>
crops, and perhaps move to Kentucky in the
autumn; others there were who, far removed
from their families, proved restless; while
many became uneasy because of Indian outrages,
reports of which soon began to be circulated.
Henderson wrote cheerful letters to
his partners at home, describing the country
as a paradise; but by the end of June, when
Boone returned to the East for salt, Harrodsburg
and Boiling Spring were almost
deserted, while Boonesborough could muster
but ten or twelve "guns," as men or boys
capable of fighting Indians were called in
the militia rolls.</p>
<p>The infant colony of Kentucky had certainly
reached a crisis in its career. Game
was rapidly becoming more scarce, largely
because of careless, inexperienced hunters
who wounded more than they killed, and
killed more than was needed for food; the
frightened buffaloes had now receded so far
west that they were several days' journey
from Boonesborough. Yet game was still the
staff of life. Captain Floyd, the surveyor-general,
wrote to Colonel Preston: "I must
hunt or starve."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As the summer wore away and crops in the
Eastern settlements were gathered, there was
a considerable increase in the population.
Many men who, in later days, were to exert
a powerful influence in Kentucky now arrived—George
Rogers Clark, the principal
Western hero of the Revolution; Simon
Kenton, famous throughout the border as
hunter, scout, and Indian fighter; Benjamin
Logan, William Whitley, the Lewises, Campbells,
Christians, Prestons, MacDowells, McAfees,
Hite, Bowman, Randolph, Todd, McClellan,
Benton, Patterson—all of them
names familiar in Western history.</p>
<p>In the first week of September Boone arrived
with his wife and family and twenty
young men—"twenty-one guns," the report
reads; Squire and his family soon followed;
four Bryans, their brothers-in-law, came at
the head of thirty men from the Yadkin; and,
at the same time, Harrodsburg was reached
by several other families who had, like the
Boones, come on horseback through Cumberland
Gap and Powell's Valley. This powerful
reenforcement of pioneers, most of whom
proposed to stay, had largely been attracted
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</SPAN></span>
by Henderson's advertisements in Virginia
newspapers offering terms of settlement on
Transylvania lands. "Any person," said
the announcement, "who will settle on and
inhabit the same before the first day of June,
1776, shall have the privilege of taking up
and surveying for himself five hundred acres,
and for each tithable person he may carry
with him and settle there, two hundred and
fifty acres, on the payment of fifty shillings
sterling per hundred, subject to a yearly
quit-rent of two shillings, like money, to commence
in the year 1780." Toward the end
of November Henderson himself, who had
gone on a visit to Carolina, returned with
forty men, one of whom was Colonel Arthur
Campbell, a prominent settler in the Holston
Valley.</p>
<p>This increase of population, which had
been noticeable throughout the autumn and
early winter, received a sudden check, however,
two days before Christmas, when the
Indians, who had been friendly for several
months past, began again to annoy settlers,
several being either killed or carried into
captivity. This gave rise to a fresh panic,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</SPAN></span>
in the course of which many fled to the east
of the mountains.</p>
<p>During the year about five hundred persons
from the frontiers of Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and North Carolina had visited and
explored Kentucky; but now, at the close of
December, the population of all the settlements
did not aggregate over two hundred.
The recent outbreak had much to do with
this situation of affairs; but there were other
causes conspiring to disturb the minds of
the people and postpone the growth of settlement—the
clashing of interests between
the Transylvania Company and the governors
of Virginia and North Carolina, uncertainty
as to the possibilities of a general Indian
war, the threatened rupture between the
colonies and the English crown, and the
alarming scarcity of provisions and ammunition
throughout Kentucky.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, over nine hundred entries
had been made in the Transylvania land-office
at Boonesborough, embracing 560,000
acres, and most of these tracts were waiting
to be surveyed; two hundred and thirty acres
of corn had been successfully raised; horses,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</SPAN></span>
hogs, and poultry had been introduced, and
apple- and peach-trees had been started at
several settlements. The germ of a colony
was firmly planted, laws had been made,
the militia had been organized, civil and military
officers had been commissioned, and in
the face of several slight Indian attacks the
savages had been repelled and the country
maintained. Most promising of all, there
were now twelve women in the country, all
of them heads of families.</p>
<p>The principal pioneers were nearly all of
sturdy Scotch-Irish blood, men of sterling
merit, intensely devoted to the cause of
American liberty, and destined to contribute
powerfully to its aid in the great war which
had now begun, and concerning which messengers
from over the mountains had during
the year brought them scanty information.</p>
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